538 results for tag: Brad Jersak
On the Grill: An Inquisition of the Sincere – Brad Jersak
On the Grill: An Inquisition of the Sincere.
Questions. Interviews, investigations, inquisitions. Grilling.
I’ve been on the grill a fair bit over the decades. Questions, so many questions. And I love questions. There is no greater favor you can do a vocational teacher than ask him or her a question.
These include the happy experiences of Q & A sessions where I really knew my material. Others were designed to be positive, yet felt stressful because the stakes involved were high: job interviews, candidacy committees or the closing viva (oral exams) for my post-graduate degree. Some ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – On Abraham’s Attempt to Sacrifice Isaac
"Woah there, big fella!"
QUESTION:
My husband and I were missionary children, and have been impacted by the perceived “child sacrifice” practices/ideology (boarding school, prioritization of ministry and the unevangelized, etc.) of the mission organization our parents worked with at the time. As adults, we find the story of God asking/demanding Abraham to sacrifice Isaac to prove his loyalty extremely troubling. Your teaching about the love of God being the nature and character of God resonates with me. I thought you might have a way to approach this story.
Response:
This is certainly an important question, probably best handled ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – “What will become of the ungodly?”
Question:
How do you understand 1 Peter 4:17-18, which reads:
17 The time has come, you see, for judgment to begin at God’s own household. And if it begins with us, what will be the end of those who do not obey the gospel? 18 And "if the righteous person is scarcely saved, where will the ungodly and the sinner appear?
I'm especially wondering about what "the judgment" that begins with the church means, but also what verse 18 could mean for "where will ... the sinner appear."
Response:
Excellent question! The best way to respond begins with the bigger picture of Peter's purpose for writing this community and what they ...
A More Christlike Word by Bradley Jersak
The third book in the “More Christlike” series by Brad Jersak
A More Christlike Word - Reading Scripture the Emmaus Way
The Scriptures are an essential aspect of the Christian faith. But we have often equated them with the living Word Himself, even elevating them above the One to whom they point. In doing so, we have distorted their central message—and our view of God. Tragically, this has caused multitudes of people unnecessary doubt, confusion, and pain in their encounters with the Scriptures.
Many people understand God as being truly loving and good. Yet, they struggle with depictions of God in Scripture as wrathful, violent, ...
Q&R with Brad: How does God interact with the universe? Control vs. Love
Question:
I am about halfway into A More Christlike God (I ordered A More Christlike Word a few months ago as well!). Your work is refreshing to my soul. In fact, I conduct research among secular, Gen Z college students, and some of your insights address precisely their struggles with the Christian faith, most notably the wrath of God and Christ pitted against the Father. Anyway, as I have been reading A More Christlike God, I’m struggling with what seems to be a contradiction of sorts, and I would greatly value your insight.
In Chapter 7 (pp. 129-32 in my copy) you discuss “secondary causes.” Here, you discuss natural ...
Q&R Dealing with Doubts – Brad Jersak
Question
I get caught up in my 5 senses. I want to move past these things and accept God and Jesus and the afterlife and in my good moments, I do. But I have these sad downturns where I question everything. How is your faith so strong? Do you ever have moments of doubt? How do you move past them or how can I build my faith up so I no longer doubt?
Response
I'd probably be a bit worried if you never had doubts. Doubts are often an invitation to bring our hard questions to God and it's exactly at those moments (or seasons) that our wrestling turns into deeper convictions. For example, those who experience suffering may have deep questions that ...
Zacheus Makes Amends – Brad Jersak
Luke 19 Jesus entered Jericho and was passing through. 2 And behold, a man called by the name of Zaccheus; he was a chief tax collector and he was rich. 3 Zaccheus was trying to see who Jesus was, and he was unable due to the crowd, because he was short in stature. 4 So he ran on ahead and climbed up a sycamore tree in order to see Him, because He was about to pass through that way. 5 And when Jesus came to the place, He looked up and said to him,“Zaccheus, hurry and come down, for today I must stay at your house.” 6 And he hurried and came down, and received ...
Q&R with Brad – What is the difference between the kingdom of God, eternal life & salvation?
Question:
I am trying to understand the difference between the “Kingdom of God”/“Kingdom of Heaven” and “salvation”. Do you have any thoughts on this?
Response:
Great question.
"Kingdom of God/heaven" is the dominant gospel of Jesus in the language of the synoptic gospels. It's a complex phrase in Jesus' teaching, as he sometimes uses it to describe his work in the world of here and now, the transformative work inside of people, and the life of the age to come. Simply put, the kingdom on earth as it is in heaven, the kingdom within you, and the kingdom yet to come.
In John's gospel, ...
Q & R: Christ in a Violent World – Brad Jersak
At CWR/PTM, we've received some excellent feedback re: our response to violence. We really do appreciate this kind of input and our readers' thoughtful questions, especially as we see our readers as partners in our ministry and its mission.
The following are some direct responses to the concerns from one of our readers, as well as a formal response.
The reader (in bold) began:
The issue of CWRm left me with some negative feelings about our response with violence based on Jesus' teaching, and your claim that Christendom is on the violent, wrong, side of the Cross.
Not very surprising, especially since it's very difficult for believ...
Thoughts in the Night on God’s Grace and Our Response – by Brad Jersak
Jet-lag woke me up again last night, but happily, instead of assaulting me with half-asleep worries or false epiphanies, the night-owl left me with a few follow-up thoughts to my article on Free Will, the Nous and Divine Judgment. For me, at least, they felt like clarifications on ye olde grace vs free will double-bind.
Briefly, classic Calvinism creates a double-bind re: the will. If grace is a unilaterally gift given by the will of God to the elect (Calvin's irresistible grace), then human response can seem either pre-determined or unnecessary. This seems wrong to me, since clearly, the Gospel is an authentic invitation calling for a ...
Q&R: Eternal Life – now or later? Brad Jersak
Question
The more I experience this beautiful gospel, the more I feel that it’s all about NOW, the present. And trying to know the Father (eternal life) more and more and experience His love for me more and more as well as living out this Love so that others around me could get to know Him and His love for them. What are your thoughts on this?
Response
This is ESPECIALLY true in the Gospel of John where both 'perishing' and 'eternal life' are NOT treated as afterlife concerns (heaven and hell). In John's Gospel, Jesus comes to a world that is already perishing now. Christ comes because his children are in a downward ...
From Hellfire to Laundromat – Brad Jersak
TURN OR BURN BE WASHED!
“Behold, I send My messenger, and he will prepare the way before Me.And the Lord, whom you seek, will suddenly come into His temple,Even the Messenger of the covenant, whom you desire.Behold, he is coming,” says the Lord Almighty.
“But who can endure the day of His coming?And who can withstand His appearance?For He enters like a refiner’s fireAnd as soap in one’s wash!”
Malachi 3:1-2
FIRE is the dominant image for divine judgment across the Scriptures. The Fire image varies from foreign invasions to the passionate love of God for his bride. The Fire image can signal forthcoming destruction ...
Is It Possible To Be … Spiritual But Not Religious? Greg Albrecht and Brad Jersak
GREG: Is it possible to be … Spiritual But Not Religious?
I’ve previously addressed this topic in sermons and we’ve touched on it in shorter articles as well. But the question is huge because it goes to the morphing of what it means to be church and do church.
Typical 'spirituality surveys' demonstrate that many North Americans believe one can be spiritual without necessarily being religious. Of course, definitions of both words must be considered when this question is pondered. Does ‘spiritual’ refer only to one’s own inner life, or does it acknowledge a spiritual world (including a God) ...
Question & Response: How should we understand God’s ‘Sovereignty’? – with Brad Jersak
QUESTION:
Bradley, my wife and I met you recently at the Grace Conference. I asked a question about sovereignty, and your response addressed misunderstandings of what sovereignty means. Would you please elaborate and give some additional sources for me to look into. We enjoyed the conference and the material you presented. MUCH food for thought and reflection.
-- David
RESPONSE:
I cover the topic of sovereignty quite thoroughly in A More Christlike God: a More Beautiful Gospel.
I would summarize that work like this: 'Sovereignty' is a biblical synonym for governance or rulership or kingdom.
That is, sovereignty denotes the function ...
Healing our image of the Holy Spirit – Brad Jersak
Photo credit: Fr Lawrence Lew OP/Flickr
It's frustrating when our impression of the Holy Spirit of Beauty and Truth is tainted by previous, spiritually abusive associations. Sects that emphasize the work of the Spirit are as prone to spiritual striving and rigid legalism as any religious movement, despite vociferous claims to "freedom." Whether it's the "fire" of Evangelical revivalism, the Pentecostal two-step, tongues-speaking "charismania," the "prayer lines" of the renewal movement, or the politicized "prophets" who are still ranting away, I can testify firsthand that the sought-after "Presence" is not always so sweet when it blows through. ...
Q&R with Brad Jersak – “Do ECT & PSA hold any theological merit for you?”
QUESTION
Do ECT (eternal conscious torment) and PSA (penal substitutionary atonement theory) hold any theological merit for you?
RESPONSE
Only in that some of my brothers and sisters hold these views and I believe we’re meant to continue in fellowship around our shared love for Jesus. I only wish that more Christians who hold those views felt the same way. When these positions are held as essential dogmas necessary for salvation, they too easily become a cause for breaking fellowship (in the name of 'faithfulness').
QUESTION
So, is fellowship the best way to treat a theology that was born out of the Genesis 3 disease?
RESPO...
Salvation: Three Perspectives (Transactional, Unilateral, Reciprocal) – Brad Jersak
“Salvation”(Gk. soterion – Luke 2:20; 3:6; Acts 28:28; Eph. 6:17; Titus 2:11).Related to: save (sozo); savior (soter).
Remember that moment in Christian history or biblical revelation when the people of God arrived at consensus on what “salvation”meant and how it is achieved?
Me neither.
But amid the roiling ocean of competing ideas, opinions and systems, we can occasionally discern currents—popular themes surface through the cacophony and congeal into doctrinal streams. Allow me to identify three visions of salvation that compete for our attention and form our practices. Indeed, one’s image of salvation ...
A More Christlike Way – Receives Rave Reviews
Brad Jersak’s, A More Christlike Way, published by CWRpress in early 2019, continues to receive rave reviews!
Your ability to introduce the Jesus Way in the context of our current highly politicized world and highly politicized religions, offers us something important and unique. I was certainly challenged to reevaluate my own position on the left-right political spectrum in view of your important warnings against making my politics into a new religion.I don’t know if you’ll see this but I wanted to say that your book helped me a lot....I finished it about a month ago and it brought some things to light that I have held in for ...
“Why her?” On grieving the departed – Brad Jersak
"Why her?" is a common and important lament. Chris Erskine's LA column on that unanswerable question is a masterful and sensitive treatment.
"Why her?" It's a natural cry when we lose someone we love -- someone to whom we ascribe worth -- someone whose life is 'taken' from a family and a community where we still know in our hearts they are needed. It's an important cry of the heart that ought not be squished and cannot be answered ... But having been uttered, some of its toxic assumptions need a sensitive, wise response.
"Why her?" implies a kind of selection process. "Why her and not someone else?" Or "why her at this time?" ...