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Category: Spiritual Formation

  • Nell Sunukjian — 

    The custom of giving gifts at Christmas probably began when wise men arrived from the east with lavish gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh for the newborn King. These important, wealthy and educated men had traveled far with camels and servants to find and worship the newborn King of the Jews. But there were not three of them.

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    Con Campbell鈥檚 new book, Paul and Union with Christ: An Exegetical and Theological Study (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2012, 479 pages, $34.99 softcover) is one of the most important books I鈥檝e read in a long time. I predict that scholars and serious students of the Bible will be referring to this book for years to come. The reason is simple: Campbell has meticulously and even-handedly taken one of the Apostle Paul鈥檚 central themes, union with Christ, and has painstakingly examined it both through an exegetical and a theological lens.

  • Nell Sunukjian — 

    The colors and smells of fall have arrived, even here in southern California. Red, yellow, gold and peach-colored roses, fresh from my garden, are tucked into a round pumpkin. Homemade pumpkin bread, smelling of cinnamon and ginger is fresh from the oven and ready to be tucked into our mouths. Thanksgiving is almost here.

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    鈥淏ueno, pero Dios sigue estando en su trono鈥 es una frase que he escuchado bastante veces en los 煤ltimos d铆as. Los que la pronuncian generalmente lo hacen con un tono de resignaci贸n al ver que las cosas no se han dado como inicialmente esperaban. Me da la impresi贸n que recuerdan que Dios est谩 en control de las circunstancias solamente como un premio de consolaci贸n al ver que su candidato perdi贸 las elecciones o enfrentan otras decepciones en la vida. Tristemente en estos casos, estas personas se olvidan que nuestro Dios siempre es victorioso, siempre est谩 en control y que nada ni nadie obstruye su soberan铆a sobre todo. Dios no deber铆a ser el premio de consolaci贸n de los perdedores sino el premio mayor de todos los d铆as sin importar lo que est茅 sucediendo a nuestro alrededor.

  • Ben Shin — 

    Life can be busy. This just seems to be a reality of life. And especially within the Christian world, busyness sometimes seems to translate into godliness. I have known this to be true in my own life. I have the privilege to teach each week at the seminary and interact with students and colleagues regarding very important eternal matters. I also served as the lead pastor of a church on a 鈥減art-time鈥 basis. I鈥檓 married with two little boys who were always wanting daddy鈥檚 time. And I was finishing my dissertation for my doctorate. Just a little busy!

  • Nell Sunukjian — 

    How would you like to be going into exile? Leaving all you have known鈥攜our home, your beautiful yard and fields, your places of repose and safety, your income earning ability? Two of my friends are going into exile this fall. One, the pastor of a church, is being exiled by leaders who had a different 鈥榲ision鈥 for the church than he had. Never mind that he had served there faithfully for over a dozen years鈥攜es, he had preached the Word, and yes, he had visited the sick鈥攂ut, well, it wasn鈥檛 enough. He is facing the exile of not having a job, not knowing the future and not being able to see what God has ahead for him.

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    El Esp铆ritu Santo es esencial para la vida y ense帽anza cristiana. De hecho, no creo exagerar al afirmar que sin la ayuda y poder del Esp铆ritu Santo todos nuestros esfuerzos tanto para agradar a Dios como para ense帽ar a otros a hacerlo carecen de sentido y, por lo tanto, los resultados son insignificantes. Desgraciadamente, en muchas ocasiones el Esp铆ritu Santo es olvidado, minimizado o incluso relevado a solamente una teor铆a teol贸gica que creemos porque se encuentra en la Biblia, pero que no tiene ninguna relevancia en nuestra vida diaria. De hecho, llegu茅 a escuchar a un profesor de un seminario afirmar que muchos cristianos de forma pr谩ctica creen que la santa trinidad est谩 compuesta por el Padre, el Hijo y las Santas Escrituras. De esta manera, la presencia del Esp铆ritu Santo es totalmente olvidada.

  • Joy Mosbarger — 

    Halloween is not one of my favorite holidays. Somehow I seem to be lacking the creativity gene necessary to enjoy thinking up and assembling an ingenious costume. For me that process is not enjoyable; it is a laborious chore. It wasn鈥檛 always that way. Of course, as a young child, we don鈥檛 have much of a choice about whether we dress up for Halloween or what we wear. Our parents make those choices, and their primary criterion for a costume seems to be cuteness. And how hard is it to make a little child look cute?

  • Michelle Barnewall — 

    Recently I found myself thinking back to an article in Christianity Today by Philip Yancey in which he profiled the late Catholic theologian Henri Nouwen. Nouwen, a prolific and well-known spiritual writer, had taught at Notre Dame, Yale and Harvard before leaving academia to be a priest in residence for a community for the disabled in Toronto called Daybreak. On the surface, Nouwen鈥檚 decision might seem impulsive and irrational. After all, he left teaching at some of America鈥檚 premier universities to devote his time to people who did not have the ability to appreciate his tremendous intellectual gifts, who in fact could barely understand the most basic aspects of faith. But despite his academic success, Nouwen left those prestigious academic institutions because he felt that the busy schedule and intense competition were suffocating his spiritual life.

  • Mick Boersma — 

    After a Talbot chapel some time ago, in which we struggled with three or four 'glitches' in the program, my dear colleague Dennis Gaines leaned over and said to me, "I call these things weeds". Yes, weeds...those little irritations that prevent our best efforts from being the gems of perfection we designed them to be.

  • Joy Mosbarger — 

    A few weeks ago during the Scripture reading in church I was captivated by one of the verses read. It captured my thoughts to such an extent that I had a difficult time concentrating on the sermon. The words of the verse resonated in a deep place in my heart. The verse was John 14:5. In verses 1-3, Jesus is talking about going to prepare a place for the disciples in his Father鈥檚 house, a place where they will always be with him. Verse 5 is Thomas鈥檚 response to Jesus鈥 words in verse 4 where Jesus says, 鈥淎nd you know where I am going and how to get there鈥 (NLT). In his candid frustration, Thomas bursts out with this reaction: 鈥溾楴o, we don鈥檛 know, Lord,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淲e haven鈥檛 any idea where you are going, so how can we know the way?鈥欌

  • John McKinley — 

    Jack Wilson had always enjoyed being in the open air where he could stretch his lungs and move his twenty-five year-old limbs freely. Today, however, Jack imagined he was in the fourteenth century while he pedaled the five miles to his school when a brown Buick slammed into his bicycle from behind. The impact threw him ten feet towards the gutter where he pulled his face to his knees and protectively clutched his head, unaware of the blood. Then Jack was out.

  • Nell Sunukjian — 

    I wince when I look at the photo. Don and I are standing in the sun with our firstborn son, flanked by Don鈥檚 elderly grandparents. Grandpa has just lifted up our son toward heaven to give thanks. All of us are beaming with joy. And I am wearing a very short dress.

  • Octavio Esqueda — 

    鈥淓l que espera, desespera鈥 dice un refr谩n popular. Esperar algo no es satisfactorio para nadie y en ocasiones las salas de espera en oficinas y consultorios se convierten en salas de tortura para muchos que, como yo, son impacientes y perciben el tiempo de espera como un tiempo perdido. Esta creencia com煤n puede percibir a la esperanza como algo negativo y algo no muy deseado.

  • Clinton E. Arnold — 

    Since becoming Dean, I have been repeatedly asked, 鈥渨hat is your vision for Talbot?鈥 The following is a concise summary my convocation address that was delivered September 3, 2012 in which I address this question.

  • Ashish Naidu — 

    I am delighted to announce the recent publication of my monograph titled, Transformed in Christ: Christology and the Christian Life in John Chrysostom, in the Princeton Theological Monograph Series, by Pickwick Publications (Imprint of Wipf and Stock).

  • Joe Hellerman — 

    The selfless, other-centered behavior of Christ, as portrayed in Philippians 2, is striking, whatever your cultural perspective. The following contrast shows just how radically counter-cultural Christ鈥檚 attitude toward his divine prerogatives was for those who ascended to the heights of secular power in the ancient world.

  • Joe Hellerman — 

    I turn sixty years old this October. Talbot School of Theology has kindly given me the Fall semester off to mourn this milestone in my life. But what鈥檚 to mourn? I鈥檓 just that much closer to seeing Jesus face-to-face! So, I decided, instead, to celebrate my chronological landmark.

  • Kenneth Way — 

    I want to announce a new resource, as well as make a shameless plug, for small group Bible studies and Sunday School classes. It鈥檚 a DVD providing four 15-minute sessions about the book of Psalms. It is part of the new Deepening Life Together video series published by Baker Books, LifeTogether and Lamplighter Media.

  • Nell Sunukjian — 

    Reading the Bible. It sounds so simple. Just read the Bible every day, or at least read it regularly for nourishment and insight and communication with God. But how do we do it? In a time when the lack of Biblical knowledge extends from the average churchgoer to students entering 色中色论坛, reading the Bible is more necessary than ever. But it鈥檚 harder than we thought.

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    Do you remember the 鈥渏ust say no to drugs鈥 campaign waged a number of years ago? (The slogan 鈥渏ust say no鈥 continues to be used in schools across the country.) The assumption of the slogan was that kids could simply say 鈥渘o鈥 whenever faced with temptation. Is that true? Can we simply say 鈥渘o鈥 whenever we are tempted?

  • Joanne Jung — 

    My article, "Building a Better Small Group," was just posted by The Gospel Coalition.

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    I have recently been convicted about the content of my praying. This has come about especially through meditating on the prayers of the Apostle Paul. What were the subjects that he thought worthwhile to focus on when he prayed? How do his prayer burdens compare to my own (sometimes insipid and paltry) prayers? I just got another challenge in this area today reading once again through 1 Clement in preparation for the Apostolic Fathers class I鈥檓 teaching right now. 1 Clement is a lengthy letter written by the church in Rome to the church in Corinth (probably by the hand of either a secretary or a church leader named 鈥淐lement鈥) at the end of the first century. Included at the tail end of this letter is a deep, passionate, and wide-ranging prayer (including prayer for governmental leaders during a period of persecution). If you have ever benefitted from praying in concert with devout Christians of earlier centuries (and you won鈥檛 find any document earlier than 1 Clement outside of the Bible), you may find some real spiritual benefit in praying this prayer.

  • Michelle Barnewall — 

    In The Spirit of the Disciplines, Dallas Willard identifies what he calls 鈥渄isciplines of engagement鈥 and 鈥渄isciplines of abstinence.鈥 Examples of disciplines of abstinence including fasting, solitude, silence and frugality, while disciplines of engagement include study, worship, service, prayer, and fellowship.

  • Kenneth Berding — 

    "Father, make of me a crisis man. Bring those I contact to decision. Let me not be a milepost on a single road; make me a for, that men must turn one way or another on facing Christ in me." Ever since I read Jim Elliot's journal as a young college student and discovered this quote...