Think

Typically, reading anything written by John Piper is like eating spinach. I know it’s good for me, but I don’t particularly like the taste or texture. Piper’s book Think is different. It’s smaller than other books of his that I’ve chomped through and it’s more personal and “on the street”, something I can more easily identify with. Ironically, I think because he gets fairly personal and less heady in this book, I am able to more easily connect with it.

Here are a couple excerpts that I really like:

  • [This book is] mainly for the Christian – in or out of school – who wants to know God better, love him more, and care about people. (p 16)
  • It’s about using the means God has given us to know him, love him, and serve people. Thinking is one of those means. I would like to encourage you to think, but not to be too impressed with yourself when you do. (p 17)
  • …the serious thinkers may be humble. And the careless mystics may be arrogant. The aim of this book is to encourage serious, faithful, humble thinking that leads to true knowledge of God, which leads to loving him, which overflows in loving others. (p 20)
  • Without a profound work of grace in the heart, thinking puffs up. But with that grace, thinking opens the door of humble knowledge. And that knowledge is the fuel of the fire of love for God and man. (p 21)
  • Some of my notions about God went up in the flames of biblical truth. (p 26)
  • …the soul would have no rainbow if the eye had no tears. Some joys are only possible on the other side of sorrow. (p 26)
  • …all training is painful and frustrating on the way to skills that later become second nature and lead to greater joy. The person who will not embrace the pain and frustration will remain at lower levels of achievement and joy. (p 47)
  • …the golden rule of reading implies: work hard with your mind to understand what an author intended to convey. (p 45)

I like the recurring theme: know God better, which leads to loving him more, which leads to loving people in deeper and more God-like ways.

Excerpt from The Reason for God

“The Bible tells us that God did not originally make the world to have disease, hunger, and death in it. Jesus has come to redeem where it is wrong and heal the world where it is broken. His miracles are not just proofs that he has power but also wonderful foretastes of what he is going to do with that power. Jesus’ miracles are not just a challenge to our minds, but a promise to our hearts, that the world we all want is coming.” (p 99)

Tim Keller

Excerpts from The Praying Life

Imbedded in the idea of prayer is a richly textured view of the world where all of life is organized around invisible bonds or covenants that knit us together. Instead of a fixed world, we live in our Father’s world, a world built for divine relationships between people where, because of the Good News, tragedies become comedies and hope is born.

~ Paul E. Miller (p 217)

Developing an eye for Jesus

I’ve been reading a book by Paul E. Miller called The Praying Life and it is fabulous. It has changed the way I view prayer and it has deepened my walk with God. Every chapter is rich in truth and Miller’s writing style is simple but poetic. I think I’ve underlined practically the whole book. 
One chapter called “Developing an eye for Jesus” talks about looking for God at work in a cynical world. In this chapter (and throughout the book) the author not only confronts the world’s cynicism but also believers’ cynicism in how they’ve forgotten to watch for God in our every day lives. 
Here are some quotes from the chapter: 
“Cynicism looks in the wrong direction. It looks for the cracks in Christianity instead of looking for the presence of Jesus. It is an orientation of the heart… Jesus never used his power to show off. He used his power for love. So he wasn’t immensely noticeable… Humility makes you disappear, which is why we avoid it… The presence of Jesus, the only truly authentic person who ever lived, would reveal itself in the restoration of authenticity in people… When we look for Jesus we can find him, even in seemingly mundane encounters… With a little conscious reflection, it is easy to see the beauty of Jesus… Because he keeps his eye on the present work of Jesus, Paul is not overcome by evil but overcomes evil with good. Goodness infests Paul’s prayer life. He is living out the gospel. Even as God has extended grace to Paul, so Paul extends grace to the Corinthians. He looks at the church through rose-colored glasses, tinted with the blood of his Saviour… Christians aren’t superior, but our Saviour is. He makes the difference. He is alive and well in his church.”

Just Do Something

I highly recommend this book: Just Do Something by Kevin DeYoung.

The book’s premise is that instead of asking God for His specific will in whether or not you should be a doctor or lawyer or janitor or mechanic or pastor or and the list goes on, you should ask God how you can be His follower, do His work, become more holy, more like Christ in the context of your vocation, whatever it may be that you choose to do.

DeYoung goes on to say in the book (paraphrasing): God is not this “sneaky God” who has a specific will for you, but won’t let you find it out and likes to watch you agonize over finding out what His will is. Instead, He is a God who cares immensely for you, provides abundantly for you, and is waiting for you to Just Do Something in His Kingdom. There’s lots of work to be done – so get on with it!

Narnia

But when he said “Yes”, he thought of his Mother, and he thought of the great hopes he had had, and how they were all dying away, and a lump came in his throat and tears in his eyes, and he blurted out:

“But please, please-won’t you-can’t you give me something that will cure Mother?” Up till then he had been looking at the Lion’s great feet and the huge claws on them; now, in his despair, he looked up at its face.

What he saw surprised him as much as anything in his whole life. For the tawny face was bent down near his own and (wonder of wonders) great shining tears stood in the Lion’s eyes. They were such big, bright tears compared with Digory’s own that for a moment he felt as if the Lion must really be sorrier about his Mother than he was himself.

From the Magician’s Nephew