Rebecca Stark is the author of The Good Portion: Godthe second title in The Good Portion series.

The Good Portion: God explores what Scripture teaches about God in hopes that readers will see his perfection, worth, magnificence, and beauty as they study his triune nature, infinite attributes, and wondrous works. 

                     

Saturday
Dec112010

Sunday's Hymn

Gentle Mary Laid Her Child

Gentle Mary laid her Child lowly in a manger;
There He lay, the undefiled, to the world a Stranger:
Such a Babe in such a place, can He be the Savior?
Ask the saved of all the race who have found His favor.

Angels sang about His birth; wise men sought and found Him;
Heaven’s star shone brightly forth, glory all around Him:
Shepherds saw the wondrous sight, heard the angels singing;
All the plains were lit that night, all the hills were ringing.

Gentle Mary laid her Child lowly in a manger;
He is still the undefiled, but no more a stranger:
Son of God, of humble birth, beautiful the story;
Praise His Name in all the earth, hail the King of glory!

Joseph Simpson Cook

Don’t miss this piano solo by a nine-year-old girl; keep watching all the way through.

Other hymns, worship songs, sermons etc. posted today:

Have you posted a hymn (or sermon, sermon notes, prayer, etc.) today and I missed it? Let me know by leaving a link in the comments or by contacting me using the contact form linked above, and I’ll add your post to the list.

Friday
Dec102010

Christ's Nativity

How kind is heaven to man! If here
     One sinner doth amend
Straight there is joy, and every sphere
     In music doth contend;
And shall we then no voices lift?
     Are mercy, and salvation
Not worth our thanks? Is life a gift
     Of no more acceptation?
Shall He that did come down from thence,
     And here for us was slain,
Shall He be now cast off? No sense
     Of all His woes remain?
Can neither Love, nor sufferings bind?
     Are we all stone, and earth?
Neither His bloody passions mind,
     Nor one day bless His birth?
   Alas, my God! Thy birth now here
   Must not be numbered in the year.

—Henry Vaughan (1621-1695)

Thursday
Dec092010

Round the Sphere Again: Persecution

By Sword
Ligon Duncun linked to a short history of the short lives of missionaries John and Betty Stam, a piece written by their nephew Chip Stam. The Stams

were young missionaries serving with the China Inland Mission in the early 1930’s. Scarcely one year after their marriage in China, they found themselves caught up in the advance of the Communists into the town where they were living. They were captured, held for an exorbitant ransom, marched through the streets of the village, and they were beheaded.

Yesterday was the anniversary of the day in 1934 when the Stams were martyred.

(Chip Stam’s site also has a collection of correspondence from John and Betty Stam.)

By Word
Doug Wilson reminds us that “[w]hile we honor highly those who have bled for Christ, we have to acknowledge that Jesus identifies slanders and revilings as forms of persecution that His followers must endure.” Do you think we are too reluctant to put maligning words spoken against a believer into the category of persecution, perhaps because we realize how much worse it is to die for the faith? Yet God calls these things persecution. Shouldn’t we?

Recently, leaders (and others) in my church have been very publically misrepresented (See, I can’t even bring myself to use the words lied about.), because they “did not shrink back from declaring the whole counsel of God.” Reading this piece helped me see this as true persecution, which, I think, helps me acknowledge the real hurt caused by it.

Labeling what happened as persecution also helps me find hope in the whole mess, for persecution is, in that mysterious way God often works, a sign from him of salvation (see Philippians 1:27-30). Persecution also seems to be one of the ways he grows and strengthens his church.

And while I’m at it (and continuing the Thankful Thursday theme), let me say that I’m thankful for leaders who refuse to shrink back.