I had a little smile to myself. Imagine if the working hours for the ‘I am the way, the truth and the life’ Jesus were only Mon-Fri, 8am-7pm; Sat 8am-4pm; and never on Sundays. Yikes. That would cut out most of the activity considered to be Christian. No evening church meetings. No early morning personal devotions. No Sunday worship.
It took me back to when I came alive to the ‘theology of work’ movement. I was a young principal at Carey Baptist College where Derek, at the heart of this global movement, was a senior member of the faculty. I learned a lot from him – and learned to run with his ideas, one of which was never to forget, even at a seminary, the ‘other 99%’ who will never be pastors. They need to be trained for mission as well – and that is what we did. ‘Calling’ must become real for all God’s people. Derek introduced me to the two modes of the church, ‘gathered’ and ‘scattered’. It has shaped my language and convictions ever since. We had people like Pete & Shirley Hammond (editor, The Word in Life Study Bible) in our home and gurus like Paul Stevens (formerly, Regent College, Vancouver) come to teach at the college.
This post was sparked, in part, by me becoming aware of a resource from this same movement. Go to the Theology of Work website and find – completely free – The Theology of Work Bible Commentary. Bookmark it. On the way to every preaching opportunity, click on the appropriate section and deepen your connection with the ‘other 99%’.
This post was sparked, in part, by me becoming aware that an old resource, one I’d accessed for more than 15 years, had been updated. Just two nights ago. I had thought it had been discontinued – and so great is my rejoicing! Go to denverseminary.edu – click on ‘Resources’ in the drop down menu. Click on ‘Denver Journal’ and then click on ‘Current Series – volume 21, 2018’. Two resources will appear: Annotated Old Testament Bibliography – 2018 and New Testament Exegesis Bibliography – 2018.
At the beginning of both of these bibliographies, there is a long stream of more academic titles which will be of interest to some of you. But persist – because eventually you come to a list of the best commentaries on each book of the Bible. A list that is updated each and every year. Totally trustworthy. I would not dream of buying a commentary – or even using one – without consulting these lists. So many commentaries are so average and all the preacher-pastors I know live busy lives. Invest in the best with the time you have and the best is in these lists. Bookmark them. On the way to every preaching opportunity, click on the appropriate biblical book and deepen your engagement with the Word.
This post was sparked, in part, by me becoming aware that a resource, initiated by Langham Partnership New Zealand, is now almost ten years old: kiwimadepreaching.com. Quietly, slowly, perseveringly (under Geoff New’s guidance), a remarkable resource has evolved. It is kinda like an indigenous preaching movement, with all the contributors being from New Zealand. Any country, or language group, could collaborate to do something similar. If you click on the site and find the icon, on the right, with the four corners (text-preacher-world-listener). Click on any one of those corners and there will appear article after article on that theme. Dozens of them. Practical, probing reflections. They may be written by Kiwis, but they are not just for Kiwis. Bookmark it. On the way to every preaching opportunity, click on an appropriate corner and browse, broadening your understanding and skills in this ministry.
Ohh, and on that same walk around the large block in Kammanahalli, another glimpse of everyday life in India…
nice chatting
Paul
About Me

the art of unpacking
After a childhood in India, a theological training in the USA and a pastoral ministry in Southland (New Zealand), I spent twenty years in theological education in New Zealand — first at Laidlaw College and then at Carey Baptist College, where I served as principal. In 2009 I began working with Langham Partnership and since 2013 I have been the Programme Director (Langham Preaching). Through it all I've cherished the experience of the 'gracious hand of God upon me' and I've relished the opportunity to 'unpack', or exegete, all that I encounter in my walk through life with Jesus.
Recent Posts
It was my very first training seminar with Langham Preaching. April 2009. We were based at the OMF Guest House in Chiangmai, Thailand. As I wandered the property, I came across this striking quotation on one of the walls: So striking, in fact, that I stopped to take its photo! But is it really true?…
Ten years ago, Ode to Georgetown was my response to being surprised by grief when the only church I had ever pastored closed its doors. Last week brought the news that the theological college which I attended, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (TEDS), was to close most of its Chicagoland campus. I have been feeling a…
I am neither painter nor poet, musician nor actor. With Art and Music and Drama classes at school, I was present in body—but absent in spirit and skill. However, as a teacher, there has been the occasional flare of creativity in the crafting of assignments. One of my favourites is one of my first ones.…
John Stott was the first one to help me see the tension in Jesus’ teaching on salt and light. They are pictures for how his disciples are to live in society. Salt pulls them in, keeping them involved. Light holds them back, keeping them distinctive. Being light responds to ‘the danger of worldliness’, while being…
Funny about the sign and god's 'working hours', because it reminded me of the well-known psalm 121 'he who watches Israel will never slumber nor sleep' and Aaron was telling Kiri that people in the OT used to light fires to 'wake their Gods up'. So glad we don't have to wake God up to talk.
Sorry I have question unrelated to your blog. Kiri asked why we were praying for some people tonight (we were praying for some people to know him/accept the salvation message) when God already knows the future and what will happen, and we can't change that can we? Can/will God change the future just because we prayed about it? Um, so stuck on how to answer in a helpful way for a 10-year old. Advice please?
Thanks (not sure if am allowed to ask unrelated God blog questions on your platform?)
Hannah
Hi Hannah
One thing we do know is that God loves it when we turn towards him in whatever form that takes, including petition and intercession. We need to encourage our children to take things to Him – anything, everything – even when we are not totally sure how He processes things from us. But for someone who is above and beyond time and space, He will have His ways of responding graciously to a little one's prayers from within his sovereign control of the future.
I think in pictures a lot of the time. One I like is to imagine little Kiri climbing the tallest building in Invercargill and enjoying the view, feeling that she can see her whole world. So many things, so many details. Wow. What a big world it is. "I know so much. I see so much". And she does and God is with her as she does… But meanwhile God is also atop Mt Aoraki enjoying His view, seeing so much more and knowing so much more. And we learn to trust Him, at those very times when we don't know and we can't see, because we know that He knows and He sees. That is enuf for us. That picture helps me a lot and I'm a lot bigger than Kiri…and I'm almost as old as her Grandad, but I can't seem to catch up to him.
Much love to you and yours
Paul