Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus

Comejesus

Crossway has put out a wonderful, small book for Advent called Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus: Experiencing the Peace and Promise of Christmas . It contains 22 4-8 page readings from sermons and works of dead folks (like Martin Luther, J.C. Ryle, George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards, Charles Spurgeon, and more) and living folks (like Tim Keller, J.I. Packer, R.C. Sproul, Joni Eareckson Tada, John Piper, and others). Pick it up.

Here's an excerpt from Tim Keller's chapter, "The Gift of Christmas"...

When September 11th happened and New Yorkers started to suffer, you heard two voices. You heard the conventional moralistic voices saying, "When I see you suffer, it tells me about a judging God. You must not be living right, and so God is judging you." When they see suffering they see a judgmental God.

The secular voice said, "When I see people suffering, I see God is missing." When they see suffering they see an absent, indifferent God.

But when we see Jesus Christ dying on the cross through an act of violence and injustice, what kind of God do we see then? A condemning God? No, we see a God of love paying for sin. Do we see a missing God? Absolutely not! We see a God who is not remote but involved.

We sometimes wonder why God doesn't just end suffering. But we know that whatever the reason, it isn't one of indifference or remoteness. God so hates suffering and evil that he was willing to come into it and become enmeshed in it.

Music Monday 11.24.08

Some best of the year lists are starting to come out, like Blender's top 33 (meh) and Paste (Paste website appears to be down, but the link should work again at some point).

I can't listen to Christmas music until I've eaten Thanksgiving dinner, but the minute I belch I'm playing Dunham Van Durham's Christmas from the Heartland.  I'm a bit biased since this album's artwork is one of my photos, but it's a really enjoyable and unique Christmas album.  It may be the perfect Christmas album for use during work because there's no singing.  It has a folksy, Americana flair.  I'm telling you, I think you'll like it.

I'm checking out a bunch of new music lately, mostly due to a friend passing me some Paste magazines from a couple of months ago.  One band that has me very pumped is Right Away, Great Captain! Check them out on MySpace.  Check out their new album, The Eventually Home at Amazon.

41QPWH9EWWL._SL500_AA280_ My computer speakers have been an embarrasing part of my music enjoyment.  The built in speakers in my Gateway Notebook are terrible so I always use external speakers, which are probably 6 years old.  For a year they have been continually cutting out because of multiple frayed wire issues.  So I went to pick up another cheapo pair of externals and discovered a whole new world of computer sound systems that I didn't know existed.  Shame on me.  Thanks to some birthday money (given by people who love me!) I purchased the Logitech Z-2300 THX-Certified 200-Watt 2.1 Speaker System (click for proper response). I didn't go surround 5.1 or anything, but I can now rattle the windows upstairs with an 8-inch long-throw subwoofer (click).  One of the best purchases I've made to increase my enjoyment of great music. 

Here are two of the first songs I played to see how great this system sounds. First, Elbow: "Grounds for Divorce" (warning: come chick is dancing around in a bar)...

Radiohead: "The National Anthem"...

Frightened, Confused, and Broken Leaders

God loves reluctant leaders and, even better, he loves reluctant leaders who know they are frightened, confused, and broken.  In fact, he seems to have a special fondness for rebels and fools.  Does God choose troubled leaders because few other people are foolish enough to say yes, or does he choose weak, troubled people because they serve a unique purpose in their broken state?  The answer is yes.

Dan Allender in Leading With a Limp, p 54.

Chief-Sinner Leaders

Paul calls leaders not merely to be humble and self-effacing but to be desperate and honest.  It is not enough to be self-revealing, authentic, and transparent.  Our calling goes far beyond that.  We are called to be reluctant, limping, chief-sinner leaders, and even more, to be stories.  The word that Paul uses is that a leader is to be an 'example,' but what that implies is more than a figure on a flannel board.  He calls us to be a living portrayal of the very gospel we beseech others to believe.  And that requires a leader to see himself as being equally prone to deceive as he is to tell the truth, to manipulate as he is to bless, to cower as he is to be bold.  A leader is both a hero and a fool, a saint and a felon.

We are both and to pretend otherwise is to be disingenuous.  The leader who fails to face [his] darkness must live with fear and hypocrisy.  The result will be a defensiveness that places saving face and controlling others as higher goods than blessing others and doing good work.  Clearly, the biblical model of leadership is odd, inverted, and deeply troubling.  It is so troubling that most churches, seminaries, and other religious organizations would never hire a 'chief sinner.'  The only one who thinks to do so is God.

Dan Allender in Leading With A Limp, p 57.

Lots-o-Links 11.18.08

Quick Molly & Elijah Update: Molly has had a few really great days.  Better balance, more energy, more driving with less danger, etc.  Very excited.  Maybe finally catching up on sleep is doing something.  Elijah had a 102+ fever for 6 days, which included several hours at the hospital for IV fluids, but is back to his normal self.  So glad for that.

In 2 days the Catalyst One Day Conference hits Granger, Indiana.  If you are nearby you should go.  Should be great, and I believe registration is still open.  I'm actually still considering going, but haven't decided yet.

I've been dealing with male leadership in the home with some church members recently.  Here are some complementarian resources I've found helpful on this issue from The Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood website...

    Fifty Crucial Questions (John Piper)
    Summaries of the Egalitarian and Complementarian Positions (Bruce Ware)
    We Need Some Leaders! (Bob Lepine)

Download Driscoll's Porn-Again Christian in full.

Desiring God's 2009 Pastor's Conference is on evangelism.

Tim Chester has provided a narrative statement of faith. (HT)

Resurgence; Six ways to engage culture.

Music Monday 11.17.08

RUN to Amazon and download Justice: Cross for $5. Just do it. Awesome.  Ends Thursday, I think.

Some good news for people with ears: A new Bon Iver EP comes out in January. By the way, I have a bunch of readers in Louisville, KY and Bon Iver is playing there in December at Headliners. Well worth the effort.

Here's and interview of Okkervil River in which the questions and answers take place in song.  Weird, a bit annoying, but also sorta funny and creative.

I've heard from several Reformissionary readers who have discovered Fleet Foxes here and just love 'em.  Here's a new Pitchfork interview of the Fleet Foxes, and an amazing Take Away Show...


Fleet Foxes - A Take Away Show from La Blogotheque on Vimeo.

Here's a great video and a kickin' song from the Raconteurs, "Old Enough." Crank it up!

The Raconteurs "Old Enough"

I have to admit that the literal music videos are kinda funny. My whole family enjoyed the Red Hot Chili Peppers "Under the Bridge"...

See more funny videos at Funny or Die

The End of an Era

Doc491d069217a4c916832454Mayor of Pontiac, Illinois, Scott McCoy, will not be seeking a second term.

As a small-business owner, I am the business,” he said. “I have a lot of flexibility owning my own business, but with the massive time I’ve put in [as Mayor] with the very important and demanding situations this year, it has severely impacted my business. And I have an obligation to my employees and my family.

[...]

I’ve never considered myself a politician. And all I see are politicians working hard to keep their jobs instead of doing their jobs. So, I’ll give up my job in order to be aggressive and do my job. It’s not about me, it’s about Pontiac and saving this prison!

Read the entire article.  Scott, the perks of having my brother as Mayor (that were never realized, honestly) will be sorely missed.  Glad to see you focus on what's important in your life and for our hometown.

Lots-o-Links 11.12.08

Brief Molly Update: We are not going to Chicago tomorrow for Molly's spinal tap because of Elijah's ongoing sickness. Unsure whether the next step will be the spinal or second opinion. Stay tuned and thanks for praying. By the way, we will be looking into a handicapped tag for the van as navigating 1/2 a parking lot is quite a chore for her.  But we are grateful she is going to be able to start driving a little.

Looking forward to the ESV Study Bible going mobile soon

If you have no style or need something better, here are three steps to building your individual style

Learn to give and take criticism like a man.

Second Rate Snacks = Awesome.

Saralyn really likes Practical Theology for Women by Wendy Alsup.  We have copies (unless they are sold out) on our church book table.

Ed Stetzer: Simply Missional.

Tim Chester: Creating Communities of Grace.

The Reluctant Leader

We should bless men and women who have done their level best to escape leadership but who have been compelled to return and put their hand on the tiller. We should expect anyone who remains in a formal leadership context to experience repeated bouts of flight, doubt, surrender, and return. Why would this be God's plan? Why does God love the reluctant leader? Here is one reason: the reluctant leader is not easily seduced by power, pride, or ambition.

Dan Allender in Leading With a Limp, p18.

Music Monday 11.10.08

Massive Attack has just come onto my radar, which means something is wrong with my radar. I heard of them through a KEXP live performance by Elbow. Check out some MySpace tracks. Here's "Teardrop"...

I've been diggging the new Music Tapes CD. I'll admit it struck me a bit weird at first, but it's an album made with old recording devices and strange instruments. It's worth checking out, just for the experience. Reminds me a bit of Danielson. And just maybe some of you will fall in love with it, as I am...

A little "War Song" post-election by Nudge. It's depressing, in a way I appreciate.

And lastly you may have heard of Mosaic Whispers before. They are an a capella group from Washington University in St. Louis. I've embedded their "Fix You" performance before. Here's another song I REALLY love from Imogen Heap called "Hide and Seek." First, go watch Imogen. Second, enjoy Mosaic Whispers below. They turn the lights off for effect, so it's not much to watch. But it's beautiful.

Attracting the Irreligious

Jesus's teaching consistently attracted the irreligious while offending the Bible-believing, religious people of his day. However, in the main, our churches today do not have this effect. The kind of outsiders Jesus attracted are not attracted to contemporary churches, even our most avant-garde ones. We tend to draw conservative, buttoned-down, moralistic people. The licentious and liberated or the broken and marginal avoid church. That can only mean one thing. If the preaching of our ministers and the practice of our parishioners do not have the same effect on people that Jesus had, then we must not be declaring the same message that Jesus did. If our churches aren't appealing to younger brothers, they must be more full of elder brothers than we'd like to think.

Tim Keller in The Prodigal God, 14-15.

Lots-o-Links 11.5.08

DSC_0015Quick Molly Update: Molly is about to lose it.  She is averaging somewhere around 3 hours of sleep a day or less for the last 6 weeks.  No joke.  She has maybe had two nights where she slept at least 6 hours.  She has had several nights where she didn't even doze off.  We thought it was the steroids taken in the first few weeks.  It's clear that it's so much more than that.  This morning was a breaking point.  She has gone from acting sluggish and tired to wanting to punch me in the face.  That's not all that uncommon, but it's much more than normal.  Let me explain how bad things are...

This morning we sat down to talk and she started to tear up.  I said what I always say when Molly cries, "You know, Jesus didn't cry" (my "Away in a Manger" reference).  Most of the time that makes her laugh and then we figure things out.  Not this time.  This time she barked back at me right away, "MAYBE JESUS DIDN'T CRY, BUT JESUS SLEPT!"  Touche. 

Links...

Lessons from a failed church plant (HT)

5 cool church tools

I know it's last minute, but if you are near Columbia, Missouri you need to check out Karis Church's Theology Weekend.  It's this weekend and the speaker is Bruce Ware.

Jonathan Dodson: Deacon Training I, Deacon Training II, Increase the community in missional communities, Wisdom for planters, especially bivocational

Speaking of missional communities, consider Alan Hirsch's four points: INCH

The art of thank you note writing

Election Night stuff...

I enjoyed Obama's speech last night. It gave me goosebumps. It was like a Disney moment. I watched a sea of people who had the Obama-shaped hole in their hearts filled and wondered what the next four years will look like.

I just hope that Obama doesn't continue in the direction of his voting record. It's remarkable to me and deeply ironic that our first African-American President will be our country's strongest defender of treating unborn babies as less than fully human.

And I'm sorry, but Michelle Obama's dress was awful

Did you see the CNN election night hologram? Pretty cool...

Anyone miss Dan Rather? Me too...

Music Monday 11.3.08

Looking like another photo of mine will become the new album cover of Dunham Van Durham's Christmas album.  Very cool.  Love their music. The album cover will look something like this...

Christmas-from-the-Heartland_CoverA-500

Beirut is coming out with some new stuff in the late winter, early spring. Look for it. Until then...

Ryan Adams (aka Rick Moranis) plays "Fix it" on Letterman...

Wilco on The Colbert Report...

Ahh, a wonderful oldie from my college days. Back then I saw Jesus Jones and Ned's Atomic Dustbin in concert. But right here, right now, it's just a fun memory...

Molly & Chiari Update - Halloween '08

Brain(I'm trying to write in a Halloween theme, so some terminology may be a bit creepy.  But beyond the fun it's really deadly serious. Molly asked me to put the graphic up to show how things are going.)

It's a scary Halloween for the McCoy family.  It started with a phone call at the stroke of midnight.  It was Dr. Frim.  Yes, we were expecting his late call.  But midnight is very late...scary late.

Dr. Frim was following up his nurse's phone call earlier.  The MRI's of Molly's skull and brains look good.  He can't find anything wrong.  That sounds like all treats, but it's really a trick.  Seeing nothing wrong when Molly has such evil symptoms means she is running out of options.  All Dr. Frim can do create a bloody mess by slicing open the back of her neck and fixing anatomical features to aid spinal fluid flow.  After that, it's a dead end.

Here's the plan.

1. Molly will have a spinal tap to see if her body's response to surgery has increased her spinal fluid pressure.  That could be the cause a lot of her problems.  I think won't reveal anything wrong, but it's still possible and is worth trying.

2. If #1 doesn't work, Molly will get a second opinion from a pediatric neurosurgeon at the University of Wisconsin in Madison (same place where she got the MRI). Dr. Frim respects the doc there and thinks he's a good, nearby option for trying to figure out what's wrong and what to do.  Problem is, Frim is the guy people go to when other options aren't as good.  When you start at the top there are few places to go...BUT DOWN.....MUHAHAHAAAAaaaa!

3. If #2 reveals something, we do what's necessary.  If it doesn't reveal anything, the last gasp will be to have Dr. Frim hack open the back of Molly's neck again and root around looking for anything that is not noticeable on the MRI but still a problem.  It's a re-exploration of the chiari hoping to find something.  He said about 1/2 of the time he finds something that fixes some or all of the problem, which means there's a 50% chance all that will happen is I do laundry for a lot longer.  That gives me the chills.

If the surgery reveals nothing and her symptoms don't get better, Dr. Frim basically said that we are out of options.  That's a frightening, but very real, possibility. We would then start looking at other things that may help symptoms, though those will probably not help all that much.

After the phone call Molly asked me if things might get bad enough where she would have to be in a wheelchair the rest of her life.  All I could do is tell her that I don't know.  This is as down as I've been in the 1 1/2 years we've been dealing with this stuff.  We are setting up spinal tap and second opinion appointments asap.  I'll keep you up to date.

Please pray for coming appointments and possible solutions.  Pray that we would be content with whatever God does.  Pray for opportunities to minister to others through all this.

Friends of Molly McCoy

Photo_103008_003After Molly's symptoms returned from Chiari I Malformation in July, we learned soon after that she would face a second brain surgery.  It was devastating to us, but the first surgery went so well and helped so much that we anticipated good things.  As you know, things haven't gone very well.  But that isn't the point of this post.

Before the second brain surgery was even scheduled we had some folks at our local elementary school (including the principal, office workers, and teachers) told us that they were planning a benefit for Molly.  Actually I'm not sure the word "benefit" was used, but they wanted to do some sort of fundraiser to help Molly and our family.  This was completely without provocation and without sharing of any family needs by Molly or me or the kids.  

Molly has invested much in the local schools and everyone there loves her.  Among other things she has served in the Parent Teacher Organization, heads up Market Day sales and distribution, has helped in every classroom of every kid in significant ways, and is the queen of giving scrumptious baked good for every single holiday to all the kids' teachers, the principal, the office workers, even the janitors!  Everyone there knows that Molly has no agenda but to love them and appreciate them and bless them and befriend them.  And now many of them have become good friends and chose to bless her right back.

After much work on their part they chose to start a "Friends of Molly McCoy" organization and develop a benefit dinner, which took place on October 23rd.  They initially hoped to get several hundred dollars to help with gas money and hotel and things like that. But this became bigger than anyone expected. 

Photo_103008_001 It started with a few friends at the elementary school.  Then new people joined up to organize and pull off the event, including some church members and other school teachers and workers.  Danny's teacher served food at the dinner.  Elijah's teacher helped organize the whole event and served at it.  Jack's teacher helped serve food and even was going around the school days before with a jug for people to donate money.  Even a teacher of Sarah's who has been very sick with her first pregnancy was there to serve food.  PTO friends served and donated much.  Several moms of other students got involved, including the notorious Woodstock "Mommy Mafia."  Don't ask. 

Everything they needed in planning the event was donated. The local Lutheran church hosted the event for free.  The food was all donated, including delicious spaghetti from Papa Saverios in Huntley, IL.  The former PTO president had shirts created with Molly's photo printed on it with "Friends of Molly McCoy."  All of the workers at the dinner were given a shirt.  Our worship leader donated his time to play music during the dinner.  People came to set up, tear down, clean up, serve food, prepare dozens and dozens of "take out" orders for those who didn't have time to sit and eat.  The event was advertised in many ways including all schools involved passing out event fliers to all parents and putting fliers up around town.

And what all of these friends of Molly did was bring in hundreds of people at $10 a plate ($5 for kids) and a lot more money than anyone expected!  It was unbelievable.  And there was even a 50/50 raffle that one of the workers won.  She immediately gave her 1/2 back to us. We saw church members there, our soccer team , former coaches from baseball teams, people from Molly's gym, the McHenry County College basketball team (coach is the elementary school gym teacher), and many others from various areas of life.

Today the three key organizers of the benefit from the elementary school came by and gave us a check for well over anything any of us expected.  We are just blown away, and I think they are too.

Add to all this a few other things I don't want to fail to mention.  We have continued to get meals by church and community friends on a regular basis.  Joe Thorn's church provided three big coolers full of frozen meals and a bunch of money for food.  We have also received money prior to and after the surgery from church members, community friends, parents of church members, people we don't really know, and our mechanic.  We've had a couple of teachers pay to have our house cleaned, which is going to happen soon.  Elijah's soccer coach helped organize donations through the soccer league.  They collected much of it from team parents and a paint jug with Molly's name on it.  Again, unbelievable. 

We know we probably missed some things we could mention here.  This isn't so much our "thank you" to those involved, though we say THANK YOU!, and are trying to do that in person and through personal notes.  This post is a public expression of gratitude to God for what He has done.  He has shown his blessing and grace in remarkable ways these last several weeks.  And I want to end by saying that I have learned about how to be invested in a community of people through my wife more than anyone. Thanks for your faithfulness to me, our family, our community, and especially our God.  I love you.

Spurgeon on Suffering, via Piper

SpurgeonJohn Piper's verbal biographies are wonderful.  I'm listening again to his bio of Spurgeon and just had to throw up a few quotes.  They are rocking me today in the midst of all the stuff our family is going through.  Here's the Piper audio, and the manuscript.

It would be a very sharp and trying experience to me to think that I have an affliction which God never sent me, that the bitter cup was never filled by his hand, that my trials were never measured out by him, nor sent to me by his arrangement of their weight and quantity.

Another...

I dare say the greatest earthly blessing that God can give to any of us is health, with the exception of sickness ... If some men, that I know of could only be favoured with a month of rheumatism, it would, by God's grace mellow them marvelously.