18
Woody Allen interviews Billy Graham
I am doing some research on Woody Allen and stumbled across this video of him interviewing Billy Graham. Billy is a marvelous example of 1 Peter 2:15:
… in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect…
14
Jesus and the Ten Commandments
I am currently reading John Frame’s The Doctrine of the Christian Life in preparation for a sermon I am giving at fixchurch (27 Sep) and Christ Church Gladesville (18 Sep) titled ‘The Desires of the Heart’. He says,
Jesus is not only a perfect law keeper, according to his humanity, but also the one we honor and worship, according to his deity, when we keep the law.[1]
That is, Jesus not only keeps each of the 10 Commandments but perfectly embodies them at every point. So,
- Jesus is the only God we are to worship (1 Tim 2:5)
- Jesus is the one perfect image of God (Col 1:15)
- Jesus is the name of the God (Phil 2:10-11)
- Jesus is our Sabbath rest (Matt 12:8)
- Jesus is our elder brother who restores us to the Father (Jn 5:19-24; Lk 15)
- Jesus is our life – he gave his life that we might live (Col 3:4, Mk 10:45)
- Jesus is our bridegroom (Eph 5:22-33)
- Jesus is the source of our inheritance (Eph 1:11)
- Jesus is God’s truth (John 14:6)
- Jesus is what we need – he satisfied the desires of our hearts (2 Cor 3:5)
[1] John M. Frame, The Doctrine of the Christian Life (Phillipsburg, N.J.: P&R Pub., 2008), 400.
9
Authenticity, Franchisee’s and the Death of Church Plants

“Authenticity is the thing consumers respond to the most,” says Diego Scotti, Vice President of Global Advertising for American Express.
Jim Gilmore writes:
In the Agrarian Economy, the dominant purchase criteria was Availability (price being set by supply-and-demand, and only influencing the quantity of materials purchased in the marketplace). In the Industrial Economy, Cost became the dominant driver of purchases as Mass Production made more and more goods affordable to the masses. In the Service Economy, Quality come to dominate, with the performance of offerings became most important as consumers increasingly rely upon others to perform certain activities on their behalf. And now, in the Experience Economy, in an increasingly unreal world of staged places and mediated events, consumers want Authenticity.
Those businesses trying to compete in the experience economy with an industrial or service economy mindset will die a painful death. Perhaps this is one of the reasons for Starbucks demise. Apart from terrible coffee they attempted to provide an experience but in a mass produced environment. It seems to me that Franchisee’s and authenticity cannot coexist. Perhaps this is a reason for the attraction to the local growers markets which are springing up all over Sydney which create an impression of being a more authentic grocery experience to Woolworths or Coles. (This is not to say that all franchisees are in decline. Last week I took my car to get new tyres from Bob Jane T-Mart. But this was because they are operating within the industrial economy where cost is the dominant driver of purchases, not the experience.)
Applied to church planting, particularly within an existing denominational structure, the team must be wary of becoming a franchisee of an organization, whether that be Anglican, Presbyterian, Acts 29, en:trust, Geneva Push etc. Whilst they will seek to learn from and be supported by their organization, embracing an organizational mindset will be disastrous. The church planting team should be thankful for their elders in the faith, but authentic to scripture, authentic to their calling and authentic to their missiological understanding of culture. The team even within a denominational setting, should see themselves as somewhat independent from the organisation. They should not be paralysed by the sluggishness with which the denomination moves towards mission. They should not expect financial investment from the organisation. They should get on with the mission, prayerful that the denomination would change, and being the kind of change that is required. Should the denomination have no cash for mission—the team will raise their own. Should the denomination have no demographical information on mission—the team will research their own. Should the denomination have no people for mission—the team will develop their own. One of the dangers of being a denominational church plant is waiting to receive strategic direction and support from the organization. Church plants will rejoice should they receive some, but get on with mission should none be provided. In doing so they will be authentic to their calling.
God help us!
4
The eucatastrophe of Man’s history
The Birth of Christ is the eucatastrophe of Man’s history. The Resurrection is the eucatastrophe of the story of the Incarnation — This story begins and ends in joy. (J. R. R. Tolkien)


