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  	<p>"Tight lines" is a blessing fishermen offer each other, a wish for lines taut with the weight of good fish. May God grant that the lines written here be taut with His blessings.

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          <h2 class="hdr-date-cool" width="100%">Wednesday, 29 April 2009</h2>
                
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<font size="2">As I stopped at a traffic light in Portland last week, I
found myself right next to what is becoming a more and more familiar
sight, someone holding a cardboard sign requesting assistance. At first I
was tempted to ignore the young woman, because I was out of my usual
offerings for such situations, coupons for fast food. Yet having just
come from a moving time of worship with fellow pastors, I couldn't just
ignore her. So I dug down in my pocket, rolled down the window and
reached out with a handful of change. I offer this story not because I'm
particularly proud of it, but because I think it reflects some of the
tensions in our text for this week.<br><br>
In
<a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/cgi-bin/bible?version=72&amp;passage=1+John+3:16-24">
I John 3:16-24</a>, the apostle places his emphasis on love. Truth and
love are the two great themes of this letter and over and over it
stresses the need for Christians to hold onto the truth of Jesus Christ
and to hold on to the love of Jesus Christ. In reality, the two are
inseparable.<br><br>
Verse 17 is the sort of Scripture message that helped fueled my desire
not to go by without giving the woman something. Yet I still feel
conflicted about my &quot;gift&quot; of perhaps 80 or 90 cents, which I
saw her carefully counting as I drove away. After all, I had a twenty
dollar bill in my wallet. In my heart, I wonder if should not have given
her more. That's why I'm grateful that, along with its strong call for
visible and active expression of love, the text includes verse 20,
&quot;If our hearts condemn us, we know that God is stronger than our
hearts, and he knows everything.&quot;<br><br>
I could (and sometimes do) go on and on second-guessing myself and my
motives no matter how good my actions might be. If I had given the girl
$20, I might be wondering now if I had not heavily enabled some
self-destructive behavior like drugs or alcohol. I cannot, simply through
my own good works, set my heart at rest (as verse 19 suggests). It's only
through the grace of Christ that I let go of my heart's self-condemnation
and have any confidence in my relationship with God.<br><br>
That's why the constant conjunction of truth and love is so key to John
and to our Christian lives. That's why we read in verse 23, &quot;And
this is his command: to believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and
to love one another as he commanded us.&quot; We can't have faith in the
truth of Christ without expressing it in love, but our hearts cannot rest
easy in our expressions of love without faith in the truth of Christ.
It's amazing how well the message of Scripture fits and answers the
tortured turnings of our psyches and does finally set our hearts at
rest.</font></body>
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			<td nowrap=true><em>Steve Bilynskyj @ 11:24 AM</em></td>
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          <h2 class="hdr-date-cool" width="100%">Tuesday, 21 April 2009</h2>
                
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<font size="2">My wife is always chagrined when I juxtapose two pieces of
poetry which I think express a thought from this week's text,
<a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/cgi-bin/bible?version=72&amp;passage=1+John+3:1-7">
I John 3:1-7</a>, particularly verse 2. The problem for Beth is that one
bit of lyric comes from country-western singer John Anderson: &quot;I'm
just an old chunk of coal, but I'm gonna be a diamond someday,&quot;
while the other comes from one of her favorite poets, Gerard Manley
Hopkins, who wrote:<br><br>
A beacon, an eternal beam. 'Flesh fade, and mortal trash<br>
Fall to the residuary worm; ' world's wildfire leave but ash:<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</x-tab>In a
flash, at a trumpet crash,<br>
I am all at once what Christ is, ' since he was what I am, and<br>
This Jack, joke, poor potsherd, ' patch, matchwood, immortal
diamond,<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</x-tab>Is
immortal diamond.<br><br>
Now, I freely admit that Hopkins captures a bit more of John's thought,
and a bit more eloquently, yet I still like the homely phrasing of
Anderson. In any case, Anderson's song does some justice to where John
goes with this thought that we will someday experience the glory of being
made like Christ. Anderson sings:<br><br>
I'm gonna kneel and pray every day,<br>
Lest I become vain along the way.<br><br>
and<br><br>
I'm gonna learn the best way to walk<br>
I'm gonna search and find a better way to talk<br>
I'm gonna spit and polish my old rough edged self<br>
Till I get rid of every single flaw<br><br>
What Anderson sees (in rough, coal-like sort of way) is that the promise
of diamond-hood, of being made someday like Christ, carries an ethical
dimension. We want to live in anticipation of the glory we will share in.
John says in verse 3, &quot;All who have this hope in him purify
themselves, just as he is pure.&quot;<br><br>
We struggle and strive to leave sin behind because, through grace, we
have the hope of being remade into the sort of beings God always intended
us to be. Why not begin living in some of that glory now? Why not start
moving ourselves in the right direction? Yes, until that day when see the
object of our efforts clearly, until we are face to face with Jesus, our
efforts will prove lump-like and potsherd-broken, but John sees that as
no reason not to strive now to be &quot;righteous, just as he is
righteous&quot; (v. 7).<br><br>
So greetings this week to all my fellow lumps of coal, and I look forward
to greeting your diamond sheen in our Lord's presence one
day.</font></body>
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			<td nowrap=true><em>Steve Bilynskyj @ 11:11 AM</em></td>
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          <h2 class="hdr-date-cool" width="100%">Monday, 13 April 2009</h2>
                
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<font size="2">O.K., I told a lawyer joke in a sermon earlier this year.
It's easy to join in the general spirit of lawyer bashing that seems so
prevalent in the popular mind. Although these days Wall Street executives
might make attorneys appear as paragons of virtue, relatively speaking.
In any case, I need to admit that, when you need one, a good lawyer is a
blessing. When it comes time to thread through web of the legal system,
you want someone both empathetic and competent on your side. You want an
attorney who shows some human concern and sympathy for your plight and
you also want someone who has the legal ability to help you. A lawyer is
sometimes called an &quot;advocate.&quot;<br><br>
&quot;Advocate&quot; in our text for this week
(<a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/cgi-bin/bible?version=72&amp;passage=1+John+1:1-2:2">
I John 1:1 - 2:2</a>) chapter 2, verse 1 is the Greek word
<i>paraclete</i>. The most familiar use of that word is in the Gospel of
John, chapter 15, where it is used of the Holy Spirit and often
translated, &quot;Comforter.&quot; But here in I John the Advocate is
Jesus. He is our Advocate when we sin.<br><br>
You might say that the whole prologue to I John is meant as an assurance
that Jesus is truly able to help us in the role of advocate. Verses 1-4
of chapter 1 are John's eyewitness testimony to having heard, seen and
touched the living Word who came down to die and to rise again and offer
eternal life. What John is proclaiming is the Easter faith that Christ is
risen, in the body, a tangible and visible declaration of eternal life.
As verse 4 says, this what makes our joy complete.<br><br>
To accept that truth of the risen Jesus and life in Him is to be brought
into fellowship with all who accept it. Yet verses 6-10 of I John 1
recognize that there is a hindrance to the completeness of our joy in
this fellowship we have with each other in the truth of Christ. We sin.
God is light, says John, and we are struggling with the darkness we bring
into our fellowship with each other in God.<br><br>
So we are assured first that Jesus Christ is who He must be in order to
help us, a human being with a body that could seen, heard and touched,
but also the divine Word of life who was with the Father before He
appeared on earth. In the traditional formula, he is truly human and
truly God. As such, He is the perfect Advocate for sinners. As a human he
understands and sympathizes with our weaknesses, as Hebrews 4:15 says. As
God he is competent to do something about our sin. He can forgive us and
free us from its grip.<br><br>
The Greek word translated &quot;atoning sacrifice&quot; in the NIV/TNIV
is <i>hilasmos</i>. It can either mean &quot;propitiation&quot; or
&quot;expiation.&quot; A propitiation is an appeasement of someone who is
angry. There is a theological tradition which sees Christ's sacrifice as
a propitiation of God's wrath on our behalf. But translated
&quot;expiation,&quot; the word can also mean the <i>removal </i>of that
which is offensive, the removal of sin. I, and our whole Covenant
theological tradition, tend toward this latter understanding. It fits
with chapter 1, verses 7 and 9. It's not just that Christ propitiates an
angry God and frees sinners from the penalty of their sins. It's that His
dying and rising actually free us from sin, purify us.<br><br>
Which all creates the tension we feel here as John talks about these
things. On the one hand, there is a strong call and expectation in 1:6
that true Christians will not sin, &quot;If we claim to have fellowship
with him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not live out the
truth.&quot; On the other hand, there is a clear recognition that
Christians will continue to sin and will continue to need an Advocate who
forgives and purifies us. So we have 1:9 and 2:2. That tension between an
ideal holiness which we seek and a realistic recognition of sinfulness
with which we struggle seems to ring exactly true with my
experience.</font></body>
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			<td nowrap=true><em>Steve Bilynskyj @ 14:17 PM</em></td>
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          <h2 class="hdr-date-cool" width="100%">Thursday, 09 April 2009</h2>
                
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      <p class="item_subject">If Not . . .
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<P>
<font size="2">O.K., so I'm going to change the lectionary epistle lesson
for Easter this year. I'm on a plan to preach the epistle lessons all
year, but in the Easter cycle I'm much more excited about the text from I
Corinthians 15 that's assigned for next year (cycle C rather than this
year's B). Some of this wonderful chapter is also assigned for late
Sundays in Epiphany, which means it seldom actually appears because an
early Easter often cuts the Epiphany season short.<br><br>
So the upshot is that my text is
<a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/cgi-bin/bible?version=72&amp;passage=1+Corinthians+15:12-26">
I Corinthians 15:12-26</a>. I'd love to do the whole chapter. I read much
of it at my grandmother's funeral many years ago and I find it one of the
richest and most hopeful passages in the Bible.<br><br>
In the verses I've selected, Paul engages in what logicians call a
<i>reductio ad absurdum</i> in support of hope for the general
resurrection. <i>Reductio</i> arguments begin by hypothesizing the
opposite of that which you wish to demonstrate. Thus beginning in verse
13, Paul engages in a series of "if-then" conditionals,
designed to show that if one assumes that there is no resurrection of the
dead, the resulting conclusion is that the whole Christian faith is
absurd.<br><br>
The argument unwinds like this:<br><br>
v. 13 If there is no resurrection of the dead,<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</X-TAB>then
Christ has not been raised.<br>
v. 14 If Christ has not been raised,<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</X-TAB>our
preaching is useless and so is your faith.<br>
v.15 If Christ has not been raised,<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</X-TAB>we are
liars about God (for we testified that Christ was raised).<br>
v. 16 If the dead are not raised,<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</X-TAB>Christ has
not been raised either.<br>
v. 17 If Christ has not been raised,<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</X-TAB>your faith
is futile,<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</X-TAB>and 
you are still in your sins.<BR>    
      v. 18 Then those who have fallen asleep
in Christ are lost.</font><FONT size=2> 
    <br>
v. 19 If only for this life we have hope in Christ (i.e., no hope of
resurrection),<br>
<x-tab>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</X-TAB>we are to
pitied more than all others.<br><br>
There's a number of fascinating things about this logic. It's not the
tight sequence of an analytic philosophical argument, but we can discern
one main stream of inference:<br><br>
If the dead will not be raised,<br>
then Christ has not been raised.<br>
If Christ has not been raised,<br>
then our faith is [a lie, futile, a failure (to forgive or 
save), pitiful, i.e., absurd].</FONT></P>
<P><FONT size=2>The basic argument is that denying resurrection of our bodies 
leads to denying the resurrection of Christ, which leads to the conclusion that 
Christian faith is pointless, which no believer wants to suggest. So no 
true&nbsp;believer can, with rational consistency, deny the resurrection of the
dead.<br><br>
There's no proof or evidence for Christ's resurrection in this argument.
Paul did that business, and very well, in the verses I skipped, 1-11.
Here he's more intent on showing how central the doctrine of bodily
resurrection is to the Christian faith. Without it, the whole structure
of Christian belief collapses into absurdity, like a house of
cards.<br><br>
Another interesting dimension is that v. 17 suggests that a doctrinal
focus on the Cross as the instrument of forgiveness may be a bit
unbalanced. Without Christ's resurrection, we are still "in our
sins." His death alone does not atone. The work of atonement is only
completed in His rising. And presumably, then, we are not really
"saved" until our bodies are raised.<br><br>
Which all brings us to what good Christian doctrine has always
affirmed--and what N. T. Wright has correctly seen as necessary to
strongly reaffirm (see
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Surprised-Hope-Rethinking-Resurrection-Mission/dp/0061551821/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1239298018&amp;sr=8-1">
<i>Surprised by Hope</a></I>)--that our hope in Christ is for the raising
of our bodies like Christ was raised. Any other hope, going to heaven,
for instance, is merely temporary, and not the ultimate Christian hope.
As Wright forcefully suggests, this forces the Christian mission to
include directions that may have been neglected, i.e., care for people's
physical well-being and care for the physical world.<br><br>
If, as verse 20 says, "Christ has indeed been raised from the dead,
the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep," then our mission
and hope is not to save people's souls out of this world. As Wright
argues, and Paul makes clear here, hope for just "going to
heaven" makes hash of the Christian faith. Though we go to heaven
for awhile, it's not our final hope. It's a literally immaterial hope
that in the end has no substance at all if it's turned into our final
hope. "If the dead are not raised, Christ has not been raised, and
if Christ is not raised, our faith is futile."<br><br>
Our hope and purpose is to participate in Christ's resurrection, first in
working toward His redemption of the whole physical order, and then in
the raising of our own bodies. Our goal is to make both us and our world
ready to live as a new creation, a new <i>physical</i> creation that
remains in continuity with the old one. Our hope is that the dead will be
raised right along with Jesus. Nothing else is worth preaching this
Sunday.<br><br>
Read <i>The Last Battle </i>or <i>The Great Divorce</i> by C. S. Lewis. It's all there. Of 
course, it was already all there in Scripture, if we would just pay 
attention.</FONT></P></body>
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			<td nowrap=true><em>Steve Bilynskyj @ 10:59 AM</em></td>
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          <h2 class="hdr-date-cool" width="100%">Wednesday, 01 April 2009</h2>
                
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      <p class="item_subject">Humble Savior
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<font size="2">He always showed up at the church door with a wad of trash
in his hand. No, he was not some derelict, but one of our men who simply
appointed himself to walk our grounds upon arriving and pick up any
litter he found before he came in to worship. He asked no recognition for
this or for many of the other small and often anonymous acts of service
he offered over the years.<br><br>
My trash-gathering friend understood our text this week,
<a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/cgi-bin/bible?version=72&amp;passage=Philippians+2:5-11">
Philippians 2:5-11</a>, and the whole general thrust of the Palm Sunday
story which shows us Jesus' own humility. I find this message about Jesus
and the examples of several genuinely humble saints I've known to be
terribly challenging to my own life and attitude. As I consider once
again Paul's direction to have, in my relationships with others,
&quot;the same mind as was in Christ Jesus,&quot; I am humbled by my lack
of humility.<br><br>
It feels like the Church as a whole may currently be blessed with new
opportunities to be humbled in service to each other and to our world. A
Gospel message sounding notes of power or victory seems a bit discordant
with the present time. Finding opportunities to offer the grace of Jesus
coupled with unaffected and humble service seems more in harmony with
what folks need to hear right now.<br><br>
As I think about this text and our Lord's humbling of Himself in order to
save us, I would especially be glad to hear from others your own stories
of Christians you know who have been examples of humility and service.
May Holy Week renew in us all the desire to have the mind of
Christ.</font></body>
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			<td nowrap=true><em>Steve Bilynskyj @ 12:08 PM</em></td>
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        <dt class="profile-img"><img src="your_photo.jpg" width="80"  alt="" /></dt>
        <dd class="profile-data"><strong>Name:</strong> Steve Bilynskyj</dd>
        <dd class="profile-data"><strong>Visitors: 69258</strong></dd>
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      <p class="profile-textblock">I am the pastor of <a href="http://www.valleycovenant.org">Valley Covenant Church</a> in Eugene, Oregon. I love to flyfish and hike along the beautiful rivers in our area. I welcome your comments as I share sermon work in progress and occasional other thoughts.
Thank you for visiting this blog. I invite you also to visit <a href="http://www.bilynskyj.com">my web page.</a>
<br>In Christ,
<br>Pastor Steve Bilynskyj

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