Praying the Psalms
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How can the Psalms teach us to pray? 

The Psalms are censor-free.  Completely immediate.  No censors.  No passing them through a purification filter.  If there is sludge in the pipes, the sludge is coming through.  The directness and immediacy of the Psalms is startling to modern sensibilities. 

The Psalms are concrete. Polite, passionless, generalized prayers are not what is recorded in the Psalter.  Like the incarnation of God becoming human, the Psalms teach us that you have to incarnate your experience concretely in prayer. You have to live inside your prayers.  Remember these Psalms were songs, and in the singing, there is an owning of the experience. Say your prayers out-loud if you want to pray like the Psalter.

The Psalms are conflictual.  Hatred and anger are articulated. Somehow, this is okay in the presence of God. In the Psalms, life is a battle: there are enemies, there is exile, there is mourning.  The People of God (Israel) conduct a brutal war of language in the Psalms against the enemies of life, and sometimes that enemy is identified as the silence or hiddenness of God himself. Unlike some modern notions of prayer, the Psalmist is not awash in sentimental prayers to simply give the pray-er “a romantic emotional boost” with God. Conflict is part of life. Thus, conflict is part of prayer.

The Psalms are hopeful.  The Psalms usher you into a world wherein God makes all things new.  Rage, hurt, anger — as they are vocalized and sung — slowly begin to spill forth hope.  There is hope in the praying.  God must keep his promises!  God is a Covenantal God, after all! God’s past action (the goodness of creation & deliverance from Exodus) reminds us of a future hope.  Though there is weeping for a night, hope comes in the morning. 

Pray Slowly through a Psalm

The Psalms instruct us in the way of prayer.  The Psalms teach me that prayer can be as emotional and as conflictual as life itself. Praying through the Psalms provides me with a language more hopeful (than my language) and images more beautiful about God (than my ordinary address to God). The Psalms expand my prayers like nothing else!

Pray slowly through a Psalm if you want to learn the way of prayer.

Jason Carter
Lenten Recommendations
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Lent is the 40-day period preceding Resurrection Sunday (Easter) that begins on Ash Wednesday.  This year, Ash Wednesday is February 17, 2021.  Let me give you three Lenten Recommendations as you begin your spiritual journey to the cross and resurrection on Holy Week. 

Journey to the Cross: A 40-Day Lenten Devotional by Paul David Tripp.  Tripp has a new devotional guide that has recently been released for this 2021 Lenten Season. For 40-days, Tripp begins with a “big idea” spiritual truth that guides you into a journey of meditating on grace, forgiveness, cross, prayer, reconciliation, resurrection, and other meaty topics in a highly accessible way. 

Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers by Dane Ortlund. If you still have not read this amazing book, the Lenten Season would make a perfect time. Several groups at Trinity studied the book in the Fall and found it a wonderful spiritual journey.

A Conversation with Tim Keller: On Cancer, Book Recommendations, Celebrity, and the Reformed Resurgence. The first twenty minutes of this interview with Tim Keller, especially concerning his journey with pancreatic cancer is faith-filled, hopeful, and deeply encouraging. The interview can be heard on the podcast “Life & Books & Everything” hosted by Kevin DeYoung, Collin Hansen, and Justin Taylor or downloaded from wherever you listen to your podcasts.

BONUS:  If you haven’t yet begun a Bible-reading plan for 2021, it’s not too late! The Lenten Season is a perfect time to begin new rhythms and habits.  Check out Trinity’s “Year of the Old Testament” Bible Reading Plan for 2021 as well as several other great Bible Reading Plans from this blog post from earlier in the year: “2021 Bible Reading Plans: ‘The Year of the Old Testament’”.

 

Jason Carter
Did Job's Friends Ever REALLY Comfort Him?
Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar: Did they ever really comfort Job?

Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar: Did they ever really comfort Job?

11 Now when Job's three friends heard of all this evil that had come upon him, they came each from his own place, Eliphaz the Temanite, Bildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite. They made an appointment together to come to show him sympathy and comfort him. 12 And when they saw him from a distance, they did not recognize him. And they raised their voices and wept, and they tore their robes and sprinkled dust on their heads toward heaven. 13 And they sat with him on the ground seven days and seven nights, and no one spoke a word to him, for they saw that his suffering was very great. (Job 2:11-13)

A plethora of church-centric interpretations of Job’s three friends assert that Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar were model comforters until they opened their mouths. 

Preachers and bible study leaders will typically say: “Oh look how they sat with him, they wept with him, and they practiced a ministry of presence with their friend Job in his suffering” (see Job 2:11-13).

This interpretation makes for a great teaching moment.  The bible study leader can say, “You know, the best comfort we can often give a suffering person is to say nothing – but simply weep with those who weep and give the grieving person a ministry of your presence.  Just be with the person.” All of that is very true! A ministry of presence and weeping with those who weep during times of loss, grief, and suffering is a wonderful posture for coming alongside a hurting soul.

Yet, the question is: does this application actually come from the text in Job 2?  

Consider that putting dust or ashes upon one’s head in the Ancient Near East was a well-attested mourning ritual for the dead:

  • When 36 Israelites were killed in battle, Joshua and the elders of Israel put dust on their heads (Joshua 7:6)

  • When 300,00 soldiers were killed and the ark of the covenant was captured, a Benjamite came to tell Eli the priest this news – alongside the news that his sons Hophni and Phineas were dead – with dust on his head (1 Sam 4:12).

  • See also 2 Samuel 3:19; 15:32; Ezek 27:30; Lam. 2:10; Daniel 9:3.

Consider also that in the Ancient Near East, the typical prescribed period of time for mourning was 7 days.

So the question becomes: when the three friends put dust on their heads (Job 2:12) and sit in silence for 7 days and 7 nights (Job 2:13), is that a comforting act of therapeutic solidarity with Job or is a premature death ritual being enacted even though Job is still alive? 

Old Testament scholar Robert Gordis says it plainly: “Putting dust on one’s head is the act of the mourner, and not of his comforters”.

David J.A. Clines writes: “Everything in their actions treats him as one already dead…It is hard to avoid the impression that such a way of showing grief would be experienced as alienating. For he is not yet dead; and although, when he opens his mouth, he will say that to be dead is his dearest desire, there must be for him a particular poignancy in seeing that fate externalized in the ritual behavior of his acquaintances.”

Job is treated as dead by his friends – while still living! Is this comforting to Job or do their actions only serve to further drive Job down the path into hopelessness and protest?

Consider further that the cast of characters in the book of Job is a portrait of simplistic extremes, almost caricatures of an epic authorial style. Job is “blameless” and the “greatest of all the peoples of the east”.  Job is fantastically wealthy, and his wife gives over-the-top zealous counsel to “curse God and die”. Does the dramatic arc of the entire narrative now drive the reader (in Job 2:11-13) to pause this rather straightforward style and toggle rather cautiously between interpreting Job’s friends as comforting and sympathetic (heroes in Job 2:11-13) and then cruel and obnoxious (enemies beginning in Job 4)?  

Or, does the entire narrative framework paint the friends in an entirely negative light from beginning to end?  That is, does the sympathetic interpretation of Job’s friends in Job 2:11-13 import a modern psychological/therapeutic reading of the text (mainly for applicational benefit) while overlooking the rather obvious cultural background of the mourning ritual that might be construed as deeply alienating by Job?[1] Especially considering that Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar are experienced by Job as deeply alienating and cruel for the rest of the book, it is probably not a far-fetched interpretation to suggest that this same alienation and cruelty may have begun already in their initial encounter in Job 2:11-13 however noble their original intentions may have been when they initially began their travels.

Considering the excesses of our modern therapeutic (church) culture, we should at least be aware of psychologizing texts of scripture for reasons of application.

Exegesis is hard work. Sometimes tentative, open-ended interpretations serve to remind us of our epistemological humility before the Word of God.

And, after Job experiences God in the whirlwind, I bet that Job himself would at least agree with that.

*****

 [1] Since Job’s children are not mentioned in the immediate context of Job 2 – or hardly the rest of the book – it seems unlikely that the friends are mourning his children but are rather responding to Job’s destitute condition (…they did not recognize him).

Jason Carter
Does Job Fear God for Naught? First Things vs. Second Things, The Book of Job, and Books on Suffering
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“Does Job Fear God for Naught?” Sermon

One of the seminal questions in the book of Job occurs in the conversation between God and Satan in the prologue: Does Job fear God for naught? (Job 1:9).

This past Sunday, I suggested that the purpose of suffering is to awaken my thirst for “First Things” (Union & Communion with God) and detach me from “Second Things” in life. What sustains us in our pursuit of God is not the blessings of God nor the felt experiences of God but a thirst for God and God alone.

Abraham Heschel once described God with these words:

God is not nice. God is not your uncle. God is an earthquake.

What happens to your faith when you experience God as an earthquake? What happens when we rediscover the nature and character of God in the Bible (and especially in the pages of the Old Testament)? We begin to have a trembling faith.  We no longer seek to domesticate God.  We abdicate all our earthly rights. We give up the illusion of control. We no longer expect the Christian life to simply be about minimizing our troubles and maximizing our blessings.

How we answer the question of our deepest thirst is pivotal and crucial to how we live the Christian life.  Is my deepest thirst for God alone (aka: “First Things”) or am I trying to satisfy my Spirit-implanted thirst for God alone with the second things of this life? 

Maybe the entire point of the Christian life is for me to put first things first, and second things second. And not allow second things to crowd out first things.

You can read the sermon Does Job Fear God for Naught? here in its entirety.

THE BOOK OF JOB

Let me recommend two non-technical books to aid a deeper study of the book of Job. Both books are especially good in tackling the crucial themes and narrative arc of the story of Job:

Job: Will You Torment a Windblown Leaf? by Bill Cotton.

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This book represents a very readable and non-technical commentary that provides excellent, insightful details on the book of Job while ending each section with great questions and a section for “Christian reflection”.  At 175 pages, you will have an excellent grasp on the book of Job which will provoke many deep thoughts along the way. I never recommend a commentary for easy-reading but this little book breaks the mold.

The Gospel According to Job by Mike Mason

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This book is organized in two-page reflections which makes it an easy devotional read in the mornings. J.I Packer writes, “The profundity of the insights into spiritual life that Mike Mason draws from Job is stunning.” I wholeheartedly agree. This is the book that I wish I could have written about the book of Job! 

BOOKS ON SUFFERING

The Broken Way: A Daring Path into the Abundant Life by Ann Voskamp

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Ann Voskamp is a New York Times bestselling author, and some have hailed her latest book as a modern classic on the theme of suffering and brokenness. Ann Voskamp is a master story-teller, weaving details of her own broken life throughout the book which portrays God’s abundant life that is available by following in the broken way of Jesus.

Walking with God through Pain and Suffering by Timothy Keller

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Biblical truth is weaved alongside cultural analysis in a style typical of Keller. If Voskamp engages your heart, then Keller’s book engages your head. Depending on your season of life, you may need Voskamp during one season and Keller in another.

Jason Carter
2021 Bible Reading Plans: "The Year of the Old Testament"
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Did you know? It only takes 52 hours and 20 minutes — about 1 hour per week — to read the entire Old Testament (all 39 books) from cover to cover? 52 hours is actually LESS than the average American spends watching television each month!

At Trinity Wellsprings Church, 2021 will be the “Year of the Old Testament”. Download here the OT Bible Reading Plan.

The OT Bible Reading Plan: For five days/week, you’ll read approx. 3 chapters/day from either the Pentateuch, Historical Books, Wisdom Literature, or the Prophets. Plus, you’ll also read a Psalm or a chapter of Proverbs each day. By the end of the year, you will have read every OT book of the Bible once, the book of Proverbs twice, and Psalms 1-50 twice (you’ll read Psalm 51-150 just once). In addition, this OT reading schedule will loosely correspond to the TWC preaching schedule during the year.

Other Bible Reading Plans: There are lots of great plans to help you read the Bible in 2021. To see six different plans that I recommend, see this post.

Get a Plan, Develop a Habit: One of the best ways NOT to read the Bible is to never develop a systematic plan to read the Bible. Over the years, I’ve found that the seasons of life where I aimlessly think “I’m sure I’ll read some parts of the Bible” are precisely the seasons that I end up not reading much of the Bible. On the other hand, it’s the seasons of life where I’ve developed a plan — that I know what I’m reading each morning when I wake up — that end up the most fruitful for me.

So to develop a habit (like most other things in life), you need a plan. I pray that you develop the plan that is right for you this New Year!

Jason Carter
Christmas Devotional
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The TWC 2020 Advent Devotional is here, highlighting “Names and Attributes of Jesus”.

(Pick one up at Trinity Wellsprings Church on Sunday Nov. 29th or sign up to receive daily devotionals during Advent or download the PDF or enable push notifications on the TWC Church App.)

One of the attributes of Jesus that stirs my soul is the portrait of Jesus as The One Who Wept from John 11:35. Here’s my own story with one of the shortest verses in the Bible, from Central Africa:

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A one-day year old baby in Equatorial Guinea had died. A pastor’s family was grieving. The little lifeless body lay on top of the family room coffee table under a white cloth. The young men in the family joined with the family and friends in this small home, sweating profusely and visibly dirty from digging the grave out behind the house.

The grief was palpable.

Unasked questions ricocheted throughout the home. The cause of the death? Totally unknown. The baby had just…died. No explanation. No reason. Everyone felt, I think, a profound sense vulnerability and helplessness.

And, I was supposed to say…what exactly?

This was too early, way too early, for doing theological gymnastics. If I had tried to land a double back handspring at that moment (theologically-speaking, of course!) nobody would have been helped.

So in the midst of this grief, I preached softly on one of the shortest verses in the Bible: “Jesus wept” (John 11:35).

I had unanswered questions just like everyone there. My heart was in my chest like everyone there. Tears were welling up in my eyes like everyone else. Yet, two thousand years ago, Jesus had a friend. His name was Lazarus. And Jesus loved him enough to weep at his death.

Somehow, that matters.

Those tears profoundly affected the whole village of Bethany. The people noticed: “See how he loved him!” Those tears, I believe, were the most important human tears ever shed. The tears of Jesus give us license to feel profoundly, to hurt achingly, and to lament acutely. The heart of Jesus was big enough to weep because the heart of Jesus was big enough to love.

Today, your task is simple: can you ask — indeed plead — for God to give you that kind of heart, as you follow Jesus, The One Who Wept?

Jason Carter