Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Book: 10 Great Ideas from Church History

10 Great Ideas from Church History, by Mark Shaw, is an older book. It was published by Intervarsity Press back in 1997, which makes it “older” in modern terms of books. It’s not old like a “classic,” it’s simply been around for more than 2 decades.

Which, generally, is going to get this book circulated to the bottom of the stack as “out-of-date” and “not relevant.” This would be a shame. First of all, there’s some useful history to learn here no matter whether the ideas are out-of-date or not. We need to do better learning from our history rather than dismissing it as “not relevant.”

Back on track from the historian diatribe: Shaw presents historical examples (10 of them!) of ways that God has worked in churches in the past. Each of the examples are chosen from church events beginning with the Reformation, though he does refer to earlier times at moments throughout the book.

Shaw presents a counter to the idea that our best ideas must come from current events or the waves of popular culture. Rather, his overall premise is that we can find the wisdom we need in the ways God has worked in the past, in the wisdom that those who have gone before us have uncovered.

I would suggest that he’s right in this, though we often need to see how such crucial ideas as missions and discipleship and social action work forward into today. After all, while William Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect (such as Hannah More and Granville Sharp) were effective in abolishing slavery in the British Empire, that was a unique political entity. Today, one can see the benefit of the overall principles suggested by Shaw from Wilberforce’s action, but must find an application in a different sort of democracy.

Shaw does not fail to note some of the shortcomings of his exemplars. The ten ideas brought forward are not suggested because their originators were perfect but rather because these represent timeless needs of the church.

The idea that one should look at the past as well as the present is one of value. Christianity is rooted, after all, in historical reality and the unchanging nature of Almighty God. God has provided answers in the past, and God has not spoken only to our current generation of Christians. There is much to learn from what has been before. 

A student of church history and of ministry would learn a great deal by considering Shaw’s point. There is value in seeing how Christians have grown in truth, holiness, unity, and more throughout the 20 centuries Christianity has been in practice. The discussion questions are also valuable, and this would make a great group discussion starter for a group inside a church or for a group of pastors.

Monday, September 2, 2024

Sermon Recap for September 1 2024

 Here is what you’ll find: there is an audio player with the sermon audios built-in to it, just click to find the one you want. You’ll also find the embedded YouTube videos of each sermon.

If you’d like, you can subscribe to the audio feed here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/DougHibbardPodcast
The video is linked on my personal YouTube Page here: https://www.youtube.com/user/dheagle93
Sermons are stockpiled here: http://www.doughibbard.com/search/label/Sermons

This week started Psalm September (PsalmPseptember) 2024. I started the habit of using Psalms as a pivot in the sermon calendar a few years ago because I have a tendency to let sermon series run on, worse than I let sentences run on. By anchoring a point in the calendar to say "this goes here" is very helpful in building out that preaching plan. It doesn't stop me from preaching Psalms at other points, but also breaks up any extended theological diatribes. 

This year, we're starting at Psalm 46. 






Now, there's a good musical adaption of Psalm 46:



Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Sermon Addendum for 1 Samuel 14

This past Sunday, I wrapped up preaching on 1 Samuel (for this year). A section I skipped over was 1 Samuel 14, which is the story of Jonathan, the son of Saul, going to pick a fight with the Philistines with just his armor-bearer.

What makes this story relevant is that Saul had violated God's instruction in 1 Samuel 13 because Saul was afraid the army was deserting him and the Philistines would mop the valley floor with what he had left. So, Saul broke God's law by offering the burnt offerings to consecrate the warriors and seek God's favor in battle. Samuel arrived and rebuked Saul, and this is one of the early steps in Saul's decline as a king. 

His fear, though, is shown to be misplaced. Jonathan and his armor-bearer climb over to the Philistines, start the battle, and the people of Israel win a significant victory. In truth, the only downside of the whole situation is when Saul vows that no one should eat or drink until the battle is won. He makes this vow, pronouncing a curse on anyone who violates it!

Naturally, you cannot see everything that is happening, nor can you get the word of your vows all around the battlefield. Jonathan, who started the battle, gets hungry as he chases Philistines and comes across some honey. He eats a bit, gets his energy renewed...just in time to hear that his father has cursed those who did such a thing!

Further, after the battle, the warriors are so hungry they are eating unclean meat from animals in the aftermath of the battle. Saul does have the good sense to get involved and make sure the meat is properly served kosher so that they do not bring more judgment from God.

Then, Saul finds out that Jonathan has eaten during the battle and plans to put him to death...but the rest of the army stops him. It is, after all, hard to execute the hero.

What is relevant here?

First: sometimes our fears feel very real, but they are less than we think. Saul feared losing the battle, and that fear drove him to disobedience. Jonathan proves this fear was wrong--even though it was grounded in logic and normal situations, it was not quite as bad as Saul thought.

Second: vows that you make before the Lord God should only include yourself. You ought not vow that others will do something. That's not in your rights, even if it is within your power to try and enforce compliance.

Third: bad vows should be abandoned. Seriously: Jephthah in Judges and Saul here show us that rash vows are destructive. Destructive to trust, destructive to faith, destructive to lives.

There's a whole sermon there, but something to keep in mind: through all of this, following God's commands would have made it simpler. And trusting God's promises to deliver would have alleviated a great deal of stress.

That's a lesson worth remembering.

Monday, August 26, 2024

Sermon Recap for August 25 2024

 Here is what you’ll find: there is an audio player with the sermon audios built-in to it, just click to find the one you want. You’ll also find the embedded YouTube videos of each sermon.

If you’d like, you can subscribe to the audio feed here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/DougHibbardPodcast
The video is linked on my personal YouTube Page here: https://www.youtube.com/user/dheagle93
Sermons are stockpiled here: http://www.doughibbard.com/search/label/Sermons

This Sunday wrapped up the short series I was doing in 1 Samuel. I wanted to go through some of Saul's introductory material. I didn't want to dig through all of the 1 and 2 Samuel and track the history of Israel's move into monarchy completely. 

Next week, it's Psalm Pseptember time.





Monday, August 19, 2024

Sermon Recap for August 18 2024

 Here is what you’ll find: there is an audio player with the sermon audios built-in to it, just click to find the one you want. You’ll also find the embedded YouTube videos of each sermon.

If you’d like, you can subscribe to the audio feed here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/DougHibbardPodcast
The video is linked on my personal YouTube Page here: https://www.youtube.com/user/






Monday, August 12, 2024

Sermon Recap for August 11 2024

 Here is what you’ll find: there is an audio player with the sermon audios built-in to it, just click to find the one you want. You’ll also find the embedded YouTube videos of each sermon.

If you’d like, you can subscribe to the audio feed here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/DougHibbardPodcast
The video is linked on my personal YouTube Page here: https://www.youtube.com/user/dheagle93
Sermons are stockpiled here: http://www.doughibbard.com/search/label/Sermons






Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Sermon Extension: Lord's Supper Thoughts August 2024

This week's sermon wasn't really one that I think there are details or rabbit trails that had to be left aside to stay on track. Instead, we were observing the Lord's Supper. Rather than rehash the details, instead I would point you here to different types of sermons.

Some sermons are meant to push ahead and plow new ground. By that, not new Scripture, but rather introduce new concepts to the congregation. The way I understand preaching, that comes in helping people see the connection between the timeless truth of the text and a current application of that timeless truth. A good example would be revisiting the truth of James 1:27 about caring for orphans, connecting that application to the idea that we ought to be personally involved in such things, and showing a new pathway to meet needs for orphans in the community. It's a timeless truth connecting to a "new" application.

(After all, there's not 'new' truth in the text. There may be truths that we haven't talked much about or have overlooked, but it's all been there since the beginning.)

Some sermons are meant to push hard against a known problem, revisiting a well-known truth and a well-known application, but seeing that the congregation just, well, is not doing what the text says to do. An example would be found in the timeless truth that God's love is for all people and that eternity sees "every tribe, tongue, and nation" gathered around the throne in worship, which then helps us to see that judging some races as "not as good as us" is sinful. If racism is cropping back up, the sermons that push back are coming up again. It's a reminder, perhaps a rebuke.

Other times, though, the reminder sermon is more encouraging. The well-known truth is that God loves you and will never leave you alone. The application of this timeless truth is to trust in God as everything else goes crazy, and that we should be there to encourage and support one another. As plants close and jobs disappear, as chaos develops around us, that's easy to forget. So we need that reminder.

Lord's Supper Sundays hit another reminder: a time for reflection, a time for remembering all that has gone before us. A time for remembering that we are not the only Christians nor even the first Christians! Instead, we can remember that we are part of two thousand years of the work of God in this world.

And that's more what the focus was: a bit more introspective and contemplative. Now, whether or not it came out that way is another story! But that was the goal--every sermon seeks to accomplish a purpose. Communicating the basics of the Gospel should always be part of the goal: that Jesus died, Jesus rose, Jesus ascended, Jesus is coming back. There are, however, additional purposes.


One thing I've seen some preachers talk about is the value of doing a feedback group of mature church members, but I've so far not found a good way to approach that.



Book: 10 Great Ideas from Church History

10 Great Ideas from Church History , by Mark Shaw, is an older book. It was published by Intervarsity Press back in 1997, which makes it “ol...