fbpx

A Prayer about Ignoring the Zombie Apocalypse

A Prayer about Ignoring the Zombie Apocalypse

The revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show to his servants the things that must soon take place. Revelation 1:1.

Lord Jesus,

How we thank you for the book of “apocalypse”

 (the Greek word for “revelation” 

from which the title of the book of Revelation comes). 

Thanks to this book 

and to what you have revealed there, 

we can ignore strange predictions 

about Zombie apocalypses 

that serve as click-bait on our feeds. 

The one true apocalypse, 

the revelation we desperately need, 

is the “unveiling” of your goodness, 

the revealing of your trustworthy and true character. 

You are the One who has already won the war over evil, 

and the One who will finally defeat Satan 

in one last cosmic battle. 

As Pastor Scotty Smith explains, 

“God is using these vivid pictures to show us, in symbols, 

the deeper reality of how he is redeeming and restoring his world.” 

Thank you for revealing yourself in your Word. 

Draw us to study and soak 

in the good news 

you have revealed about yourself 

throughout Scripture, 

especially in Revelation. 

In your victorious name. Amen.

Read Revelation 1:1-3.

Friends, if you’re confused about the “apocalypse” and Revelation, I highly recommend Scotty Smith’s simple and readable study guide, Revelation: Hope in the Darkness

5 Story Quotes to Make You Think

5 Story Quotes to Make You Think

I’m a story lover — are you?

If you read the Living Story blog regularly, you know that it is all about that story — that is, the Story God has written into his cosmos and into our lives.

Enjoy these 5 favorite story quotes along with some reflection questions to help you think about how you are living your God-authored story. If you enjoy them, be sure to share them!

01

Eugene Peterson

Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places

How do you think a story can be an act of hospitality?

02

Dan Allender

To Be Told

What redemption story might God be telling with your life?

03

Scotty Smith

Restoring Broken Things

What role do you play as a carrier of God’s Story?

04

Rachel Remen

Kitchen Table Wisdom

Schedule a time on your calendar to tell and listen to good stories!

05

Madeleine L’Engle

Walking on Water

What does your story reveal about who and what and why you are?

Get free printable prayer worksheet and cards

4 Thoughts for Thinking about Paris

4 Thoughts for Thinking about Paris

The Paris Terror

When terror strikes and screens scream dire reports of brutal and seemingly senseless attacks on humanity, my heart usually heads in one of two directions:

  1. turn it off — the screen and my heart. Just make.it.go.away.
  2. crawl under my covers and succumb to the deep sorrow and confusion.

I’ve learned about myself that I’m fairly sensitive to news and get overwhelmed easily. I’ve also learned that there are healthier options than the basic ostrich maneuver. For me, heading to Scripture and to sturdy theological thought leaders brings comfort and courage for engaging the ravages of evil.

Here are four resources that have helped me process the Paris Terrorist Attack over the last few days.

1. Learning a little more about ISIS, jihad, and “caliphate” (a word I’d never heard before but my husband kept saying to me as if it was part of our everyday vocabulary). This helpful article by Don Carter really lays it out in a clear way that even I could comprehend:

Article about the Islamic State

2. Remembering the essence,complexity, and craziness of sin. I actually skimmed back through much of one of my favorite books this morning: Cornelius Plantinga’s Not the Way It’s Supposed to Be: A Breviary of Sin. It’s a pretty heavy read, so I’m going to give you just one quote and recommend the book to you as a thorough examination of sin, corruption, evil, and its workings in our hearts and in the world.

“…even when sin is depressingly familiar, it is never normal. It is finally unknown, irrational, alien. Sin is always a departure from the norm and is assessed accordingly. Sin is deviant and perverse, an injustice or inequity or ingratitude. Sin in the Exodus literature is disorder and disobedience. Sin is faithlessness, lawlessness, godlessness….Sinful human life is a caricature of proper human life.” (Plantinga, p. 88).

3. Reading the words and prayers of a woman who knew suffering. Amy Carmichael, the missionary to India who lived much of her life suffering from chronic illness, always invites me to wrestle and rest with God over sorrow and suffering. Here is a brief excerpt from her book Rose from Brier.

“Lord, is all well? Oh, tell me; is all well?
No voice of man can reassure the soul
When over it the waves and billows roll;
His words are like the tinkling of a bell.
Do Thou speak. Is all well?

Across the turmoil of the wind and sea,
But as it seems from somewhere near to me,
A voice I know: child, look at Calvary;
By the merits of my blood, all is well.”

4. Last, but most certainly not least, Scripture and a prayer. From Scotty Smith, who daily shares prayers that help us grapple with who God is in the midst of everyday life.

     At the end of the days I, Nebuchadnezzar, lifted my eyes to heaven, and my reason returned to me, and I blessed the Most High, and praised and honored him who lives forever, for his dominion is an everlasting dominion, and his kingdom endures from generation; all the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing, And he does according to his will among the host of heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth; and none can stay his hand or say to him, “What have you done?” Dan. 4:34-35

     Dear heavenly Father, I need to “bookmark” this passage and return to it often, for it doesn’t just tell the conversion story of a pagan King; it’s the ongoing story of my heart. Your sovereignty is our sanity; your rule is our rest; your dominion is our delight. Navel-gazing and circumstance watching, and talk-radio-fixating and political-pundit-feasting never serve us well. Scotty Smith  Read the rest of the prayer here.

What about you? What helps you process the unsettling news of recent days?

Sign Up for the Advent E-Course Today

Receive your first devotional next week, in time to help you find rest at Thanksgiving!

Scenic Highway, Floods, and Other Wreckage

Scenic Highway is in a ditch. Or, is that, Scenic Highway is a ditch? Ditch, as defined years ago by my teenage daughters refers to a difficult-to-repair mess, such as a hopelessly bad hair day, as in, “My hair is in a ditch.” 

Perhaps you’ve seen dramatic photos of the portions of this — well — scenic highway in Pensacola, Florida, that collapsed after a mostly unexpected deluge dumped 26 inches of rain in a 24 hour period and zinged over 50,000 strikes of lightning.

Late yesterday afternoon, I turned onto this highway, the only route out of our neighborhood, and was met by one of those huge portable digital road signs:  “Road Closed, 1 mile,” it said. For 22 years I have driven on this gorgeous stretch by the bay, often four or more times a day, taking my kids to school, running errands, going to church. It never occurred to me as I was driving on it that it could drop out from under me.

As you probably know, many landscapes and lives have been rearranged by this week’s storms — tornadoes have ripped through Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alabama, leaving at least 38 people dead and many more homes wrecked. A University of Alabama swimmer died saving his girlfriend from a retaining wall felled by the storm. This morning, weather.com is leading off with a photo of a road in Baltimore that sank under the weight of the storm.

What do we do when a hunk of road drops 40 feet into the bay? What do we do when a jail explodes because of the issues with gas in the aftermath of the storm (this news just in)? What do we do when the landscape of our lives is wrecked?

There are no how-to or 4-step solutions for living with such hard stories. There is, however, a gospel call to live with hope. Here are a few thoughts about what that looks like:

  1. Grieve with the hope of the “one day.” We can weep because Jesus wept. We can grieve because Jesus is a man “acquainted with grief” (Is. 53:3-4). Even as we weep, we know there is a day when there will be no more tears. There is a day, when, as Sally Lloyd-Jones writes in the Jesus Storybook Bible, “everything sad will come untrue.” (Rev. 21:4).
  2. Remember our rescue stories. Yesterday, as I was feeling sad about Pensacola’s losses, I revisited stories I wrote about our previous recoveries from hurricanes. One told about how our son wanted to be a “workerman” like those repairing our house. We gave him a toolbelt, and with a little help from family and friends, he built a fort in the next-door spare lot cleared by the hurricane.
  3. “Restore broken things” (Title of a classic by Scotty Smith and Stephen Curtis Chapman).
  • Pray. The first and most obvious thing we can do is pray. Honestly, to me, a woman of action:-), that effort sometimes seems paltry and small. God doesn’t seem to view it that way. We lift our prayers, and we wait. And one day we may see God restoring — not always in the way we would (surprise, surprise:-) — but by doing something beyond our imagining (Eph. 3:14).
  • Act. What particular ways might God be calling us to be part of “making all things new”? Cooking, cleaning, comforting? Or, if we are the ones suffering the effects of the storm, our restoration act might be receiving the kindness of others.
  1. Look for signs of life around you. It’s a gray and gloomy day, but outside my window, birds of every color and variety are coming and going, pecking a hole in my neighbor’s yard worthy of a digging dog. They are feasting away after a day of fast (I’m just guessing here:-) and they remind me that one day…

“The Lord will make for all people a feast of rich food…”
“He will swallow up death forever, and he will wipe away tears from all faces.” Is. 25:6, 8

Un-Intimidating Revelation

For the last eight weeks, we have been doing a mini hermeneutics course in our high school seniors Sunday school class. We’ve covered genres, themes, and keys to interpretation in the hopes that they will feel more confident as they approach Scripture study. This Sunday is the last Sunday, so you guessed it, it’s time to approach the ‘scary’ Revelation. True, wars, whores, strange beasts and fiery dragons are the stuff that nightmares are made of. Not to mention, we’re not all that comfortable with uncertainty, and the numerous symbols and visions don’t lend themselves to easy interpretation. And of course, that many mini-battles over millennialism aren’t that pretty either.
And yet, I volunteered to lead this study, because I am so passionate that this is a book of hope about Jesus Christ, and people should not only not avoid it, but should study and enjoy it. The most helpful resource has been Scotty Smith and Michael Card’s book, .The subtitle says it all: “eternal encouragement from the book of Revelation.” In these last days, which had been lasting for a long time, we all need encouragement to persevere through life in a broken world. Revelation tells us the end of the story, and it is good. The day is coming, a city is coming, when and where a wildly varied fellowship of believers, Jesus’ name tattooed on our foreheads (okay, maybe that’s just a symbol, but who knows?), will dwell with God forever, freed from sin, sickness, and sorrow to finally live as we were created to do. It’s a really good story. Why not read it again for the very first time?
PS. Stay tuned: I’ll post my notes for the seniors here tomorrow.

Pin It on Pinterest