I remember the moment that the gospel rocked my world…as a Christian. Sure, I had believe in Jesus and was rescued from my rebellion through him. Sure, I knew the gospel is the life-saving message that I need to share with non-Christians around me. But from that moment on I realized that the fuel for obeying God, worshiping passionately, and loving people comes from the Spirit by meditating on the gospel. I was listening Danny Brooks preach part two of an eight-part sermon series entitled The Gospel For Daily Living.

This grand overview of the gospel is such a powerful reminder of all that God is doing to save me for his glory, that I listen it it once a year. If you’re snowed in the next few days in the Washington D.C. area, click here or on a sermon below and take some time to listen to these sermons.

Here’s the first sermon in the series:

I heartily commend these sermons to you. I pray often that God’s incomparable grace through the gospel will always be the theme and song of Grace Church of Alexandria. I’m thankful to Heritage Bible Church where Dan Brooks is a elder for sponsoring and supporting our church planting efforts here inside the D.C. beltway.

My brother Nathan Matías wrote a helpful review of the book What Is A Healthy Church Member? and sent it to students at Cambridge University (UK) from where he graduated. The author of the book, Thabiti Anyabwile, used to be an elder at the church, Capitol Hill Baptist Church, that let our church plant meet there for free our first 5 months. I include this book review by him for your benefit.

Thabiti

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Greetings from Cambridge UK! One of my roles is to serve students in their Christian lives. With each new group of students, I am privileged to see wonderful developments in each studentʼs thinking, personality and character. I sometimes get to walk with them through the classic choices about career and relationships, and I also follow some of their first steps after school.

Pressure to make choices about career and lifestyle builds up with each day closer to graduation. Even though most UK graduatesʼ first job is only a stopgap, choices about where and what and whom can loom ominously, convincing us that they are the biggest, most important decisions we face.

These questions do not disappear after school. The teachings of Jesus and the apostles make it clear that “Iʼll make sure I find a good church wherever I go” fails to respond fully to the remarkable work of Christ and the Holy Spirit in our lives. But what should the church-related part of a Christianʼs lifestyle actually look like? Is there some “career path” equivalent or “lifelong learning” programme for the aims we can have in our Christian life?

The growing Christian lifestyle in community is the core topic of What is a Healthy Church Member, by Thabiti Anyabwile, former assistant pastor at Capitol Hill Baptist in Washington DC, now a pastor in the Grand Cayman Islands. It is also a book given me by my brother Jonathan. Ten years ago, he urged me, “Nathan, you are Christʼs, and should above all aspire and train to serve Him in community through His church.” Of the books he has given me toward that purpose, this is the most practical and comprehensive. At 120 pages, it is also probably the shortest.

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The earthquake that shattered the quiet afternoon yesterday in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, has brought with it death and destruction. As people who have received God’s generous mercy, let us extend Jesus’ love to the needy in Haiti. Here are three ways to pray and give:

Give To Compassion International’s Haiti Disaster Relief

You can give now to Compassion International to provide emergency food and water to families and children affected by the earthquake. Simply text “disaster” to 90999 to give $10 to Compassion or give online here.

Give to Mission For Haiti

Friends from our sponsoring church lead Mission to Haiti, a Gospel ministry in Haiti. Pray that God will keep his people in Haiti safe and that the Spirit will minister Christ’s mercy through the believers of Mission To Haiti. Give now to support their effort.

Pray For the Fairfax Urban Search & Rescue Team

Seventy-two rescue personnel from Northern Virginia and 6 rescue canines are en route to Haiti. Keep in prayer the efforts of the Fairfax Urban Search & Rescue Team, one of the first U.S. teams on the ground after the earthquake. More from their web site here. Pray that God will grant them effectiveness and strength as they rescue people from the rubble.

UPDATE – 1.14.10 – Sarah Bennett, who helps run Mission For Haiti, was in the city of Jacmel, Haiti, and has not been heard from since the earthquake. She is a faithful sister in Christ from Heritage Bible Church that sponsors our church plant. We are continuing to pray for her safety and ministry to earthquake victims.

UPDATE – 1.14.10 – We’ve heard that Sarah Bennett is alive and well. Praise the Lord!

Title: The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment
Author: Tim Challies
ISBN: 978-1-58134-909-2

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Why I Picked Up This Book

Lately God has led me through a lot of change and into increasing responsibility as a husband, discipler, and urban church planter. I’ve been asking myself, “How can I grow in maturity and wise living so I can honor God and influence others to Christ?”

Tim Challies’ book The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment has led me to the answer. Challies has lit a fire in my heart to pour over Holy Scripture more, dependently seek God’s face in prayer, and think carefully about how to lead my family and our church. In his book, I’ve found an easy-to-understand guide to discerning what is best and what is unwise. This is a great read for every teen, college student, parent, and believer who feels pressure to make life-altering decisions and who wants to know how to live wisely in our sin-cursed and increasingly complex world.

What’s Inside?

Tim Challies methodically talks his readers through the need for discernment, its source, and the process of becoming a discerning believer. Chapters 1 and 2 issue a call for every believer to ground themselves deeper in God’s truth so we can navigate the times we are in. Challies alerts us that our culture, the Adversary, and even our own hearts are subtly working to push us off-track from honoring God. I was gripped by realizing how my desire to be right or viewed as competent has been an obstacle to receiving wise input in my life.

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If you are passionate for God’s glory to spread and want to gather with others looking for practical ways to advance the Gospel in our world, Student Global Impact’s National Conference is for you. Garrett Lee and I attended one of the first SGI Conferences nearly 10 years ago, and we encourage you to consider going.

SGI National Conference is three days of biblical instruction, praise and worship of God’s greatness, networking with young people involved in missions efforts, and prayer for the nations. This year’s theme is “God’s Armor: Put It On.”

10-sgi-logo-web-450xWhen: January 4-6, 2010

Where: Inter-City Baptist Church

Who: College students and young adults

How Much: Cost is $40 if you register by December 1, 2009. $50 if you register between December 1 and December 31, 2009. $60 if you register after January 2, 2010.

Register Now: Click here or Call 313.928.5222×506 (SGI Director Tim Aynes)

52% Off Gospel-Centered Books

November 4th, 2009

I just noticed this incredible deal on 13 Gospel-centered books on living the Christian life. I’ve read (and own) 9 of the titles and they’re some of the most useful books I’ve ever read. I regularly recommend them for anyone wanting to grow as a Christian and to help others change too, and several are on Grace Church of Alexandria’s recommended reading list.

Addictions: A Banquet in the Grave proved to be very useful when I saw a drug dealer come to Christ and desire to stay out of the substance abuse that had captivated him. David Powlison’s Seeing With New Eyes helped me identify patterns of sin in my life and relate the cross to them so I could find the power to change.

I re-read Paul Tripp’s Instruments In the Redeemer’s Hands once a year as a refresher on how to let other Christians in my life for my growth, and how to encourage and disciple others. Right now I’m reading through How People Change (Tim Lane & Paul Tripp) and finding awesome hope and enablement for change in my life in the central truth of the atonement–that I am “in Christ,” I am united with Christ. War of Words by Paul Tripp is a deeply convicting read that helps Christians examine our speech patterns and daily conversations to make sure they’re serving our ruler Christ and not our own agendas.

And to think, all these titles and more are available from the publisher CCEF as a set for 52% off this week! Or click on each book title to explore that book and order it individually, if you don’t want them as a set.

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Book Review: The Bruised Reed

November 3rd, 2009

Book Review: The Bruised Reed by Richard Sibbes. Reviewed by Shayne McAllister.

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Reading The Bruised Reed and the Smoking Flax by the early Puritan writer Richard Sibbes should be a priority for Christians. Have you wondered how to help the guy in your church who seems to continually beat himself up about his sin, and not see the Savior? Have you struggled with persistent sin in your own life and found little remedy? Our Men’s Community Group is reading and meditating through this book a little at a time, and it has been wonderfully convicting and helpful over the past few months.

The question this little book tries to answer is: How does Christ treat his own, the body of Christ, when we sin or feel weak? Through answering this question Sibbes also answers the application question: How are Christians to help struggling and weak Christians? How do we differentiate between the obstinate, non-repentant sinner and the Christian who sins and is bitterly remorseful over his sin but sees little way out of sin’s entrapment?

The “Good Doctor Sibbes” was an Anglican Puritan pastor and chaplain at Cambridge University for a time and a pastor in London as well. He had a keen insight into the common experience of everyday Christian life, and held up Christ at every opportunity to help his flock. This book, published in 1631, is a meditation on two parallel passages of scripture: Isaiah 42:1-4 and Matthew 12:18-21. Most specifically, he concentrates on the metaphor in Isa 42:3.

“A bruised reed he will not break, and a faintly burning wick he will not quench”

To Sibbes, this “bruised reed” was a Christian who admitted his own failing readily, and the smoking wick (or flax) was a Christian who did right, but at every turn smoke (or sin and corruption) was mingled with spiritual life (or fire). He spends the book marshaling scriptures together to show that the pattern of the Bible is that God treats his people a certain way, and we should live in light of the way God treats us, and therefore treat others as God has dealt with us.

The author also does a wonderful job of using rich metaphor to explain the scriptural principles and to give practical advice. Just as Jesus used the objects and activities around him to illustrate eternal principles, so Sibbes uses dozens of vivid illustrations from everyday life.

The best parts of this book are the pithy gems of wisdom hidden in just about every paragraph. For example:

“It would be a good contest amongst Christians, one to labor to give no offence, and the other to labor to take none. The best men are severe to themselves, tender over others.”

What a wonderful idea–on the one hand we should not be unnecessarily offensive, and on other when a Christian brother offends you, question why you do take offense!

Sibbes is also simple. The best writers in the world are not those who use flowery language to explain some supposed new truth. The best writers in the world write like this:

“Truth fears nothing so much as concealment, and desires nothing so much as clearly to be laid open to the view of all. When it is most unadorned, it is most lovely and powerful.”

My intention in the future is to share more of what we’re learning from The Bruised Reed. You can read it online here or buy it very inexpensively here.

A Proverbs Driven Life
Normally the latest fiction hardcover by John Grisham or Vince Flynn would keep me up late at night, not a guide through the book of Proverbs. But I just couldn’t put down A Proverbs Driven Life by Anthony Selvaggio, and I commend it to you. Selvaggio guides readers on how to understand and benefit from the book of Proverbs, a treasure-house of wisdom for daily living.

The book of Proverbs can be hard to relate to our modern, technology-filled lives, but Selvaggio gives an effective blueprint for living out the Old Testament’s wisdom literature in the 21st century. His writing is engaging and practical, drawing vivid illustrations from his life and from experiences we all have had. As I read, my heart was filled with hope that I too can grow in honoring God by how I live, for Selvaggio constantly shows how Proverbs points ahead to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ as the motivation and power for change.

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What You’ll Find In This Book
Part One, the first two chapters, make Proverbs accessible by giving tips for reading this ancient writing that is part of the Bible. Part Two challenges the hectic, fast-paced lives we lived by giving God’s perspective on work, laziness, and rest. Recognizing why God provides wealth and how to use our money for redemptive living is the focus of Part Three.

“Like Sam To Frodo” in Part Four offers helpful advice on building and growing friendships for God’s kingdom. The last sections, Parts Five and Six give practical examples from Proverbs on how to have a rewarding marriage, how to avoid sexual temptations that can overtake us, and how parents can rely on God’s empowering grace to disciple their children.

Why Read This Book?
I’ve found that Selvaggio’s book intersects with my everyday life. I’ve seen how the Cross should shape my words, my marriage, my work, my view of money. Particularly, I’ve discovered how God expects me to take time to rest genuinely from my busy lifestyle. My wife Christy can attest to the value of this book by how it’s helped me adjust and slow the pace at which we live.

At first, I was gently surprised that, at times, the book wanders away so much from the book of Proverbs and into other books of the Bible. But this is a strength because it applies Proverbs to our daily lives by drawing on the rest of the Bible to reinforce and illustrate what Proverbs is urging. Selvaggio’s writing is easy to digest and relate to our lives, especially because he gives purpose statements for every chapter and every section. I encourage you to pick up a copy.

A Biblical View of Work

July 12th, 2009

Sermon Title: A Biblical View of Work
Sermon Text:
Ecclesiastes 2:24-25; Colossians 3:22-24; Titus 2:9-10
Series:
A Biblical View of Work & Rest
Speaker:
Jonathan Matías, Pastor
Date Preached:
July 12, 2009

I’m almost done reading A Gospel Primer For Christians. The cover is painful to look at, but inside, its pages are filled with a roadmap for Christians to find incredible hope in the Gospel. I make light of the cover, but mostly just to get your attention. For when I first opened it, I never expected to be drawn in so deeply to enjoying the Gospel like it has helped me!

The Gospel has been ever-present in my life since an early age, growing up with my parents who were missionaries and church planters. But I’m still in desperate need of seeing afresh how Christ’s work on the cross conveys astounding present benefits to me as a Christian, benefits I forget, leading to needless confusion and discouragement in my life.

The Gospel isn’t just for those who don’t know God yet. It’s jam-packed with the truths that will motivate me to serve God today and grant my soul deepest satisfied in God himself.

You prefer poetry or narrative? Milton Vincent retells the benefits of the Gospel in each of these ways. He went through a season of life where he exhausted himself in an ongoing struggle with guilt from his sin. Then when he rediscovered the person and work of Jesus Christ as encapsulated in the Gospel, Milton says,

“I could hardly believe my good fortune. I drank in the doctrine of my justification like a thirsty man drinking a tall glass of water in the desert. The way those truths put my soul at rest was indescribable” (p. 95).

The author is honest about wresting as a Christian with pride, doubt, fear, ongoing temptation, and spiritual laziness. His transparency is a window for us to gaze into his life and see how the Gospel can be applied to these same struggles in our own lives.

I’ll be re-reading A Gospel Primer For Christians once a year to find the same liberating and motivating realities that Milton Vincent finds in the Gospel. Why not do the same? It’s available here.

Thanks to John Gardner for giving Christy and me a copy of this book by his brother-in-law.

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