Tuesday, February 07, 2017
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
"There is a phony faith . . ."
"There is a phony faith that wants only escape from hell, but has no desire for Christ. That kind of faith does not save. It does not produce an eager expectation for Christ to come. In fact, it would rather that Christ not come for as long as possible, so that it can have as much of this world as possible." (John Piper)
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Francis Chan on preaching/teaching
This article originally appeared in YouthWorker Journal's July 2015 issue. Francis Chan lays out a compelling yet biblically firm argument for humility, Spirit-reliance and hard work for those who are called to preach/teach God's Word. He uses 7 questions as a guide when ministering God's Word.
Friday, November 25, 2016
Yuki Nakai ~ "The Father of BJJ in Japan"
Here is a great and insightful interview by Budo Jake with Sensei Yuki Nakai-san. An amazing and thoughtful man.
Friday, November 11, 2016
Monday, November 07, 2016
Thursday, September 29, 2016
Who or what supplies your work?

Hudson Taylor, the great missionary to China, once said “God’s work done in God’s way will never lack God’s supplies.”
Saturday, June 04, 2016
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Jocko Willink's Thoughts on Fighting
Jocko Willink is a retired Navy SEAL Commander. The infamous SEAL Team 3's Commander of Task Unit Bruiser (most decorated unit ala Battle of Ramadi). Good solid thoughts and advice. IF you (the average Joe) really wanted the "most bang for your buck" (no pun intended), nothing beats a concealed carry weapon ~ "a gun trumps everything else." Other than that in order of priority, BJJ is the best one to learn, after that "Western Boxing" then Muay Thai . . . wrestling . . . from there you can branch off to different forms of weapons training (e.g. sticks & knives). Though he mentions Krav Maga, it is understood as "augmenting" one's foundational knowledge of fighting (no mention of Systema or Joe Son Do here).
Thursday, March 24, 2016
"Justice or Christ?"
John Piper insightfully reminds us that simply "doing good" or "doing more good" is not enough, justice - in and of itself - cannot be the answer for only Christ provides a complete and sufficient response to injustice and evil.
"Treating people as they deserve is not a Christian life . . . we don't get justice in the gospel, God got justice in the gospel . . . We don't get justice in the gospel, we get grace . . . Christ will be known in the culture when we treat people better than they deserve not as they deserve."
"Treating people as they deserve is not a Christian life . . . we don't get justice in the gospel, God got justice in the gospel . . . We don't get justice in the gospel, we get grace . . . Christ will be known in the culture when we treat people better than they deserve not as they deserve."
Friday, January 22, 2016
Saturday, October 24, 2015
BJJ O.G. Dirty Dozen Black Belt Chris Haueter's JKD/BJJ Rant
Chris Haueter's JKD-fueled mindset driving this great discussion captured on video. Who would've ever thought that all the secretive, Rio-nized, money-grabbing ideology would get booted by good old fashioned, American, free-market individualism?
Friday, September 11, 2015
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Thursday, June 04, 2015
Perspectives on Preaching from the Giants
I have scoured countless books and resources for better helps and tips on preaching. Some have argued that preaching could be best summed up as the explanation and application of Scripture. This view would have differing camps rooted in differing degrees regarding the percentage that one might commit to explanation or application (e.g. 75% explanation & 25% application, 25% explanation & 75% application, or whatever).
The following are two different approaches suggested by two of my heroes . . . "giants" I call them. Dr. John Piper and Dr. Timothy Keller offer their thoughts on how they approach the task of declaring the Word of God. Both are good, both offer ideas that maintain their God-given giftedness and abilities, Piper strikes me as being dynamically dependent upon the Holy Spirit while Keller is thoughtfully careful in doing all the scholarly preparation required for a skillful delivery. Both are faithful and devoted to Jesus the "craft of preaching" and also men of deep spiritual integrity and wisdom.
Piper offers his concise and weighty idea of "expository exultation" that echoes influences from the likes of Jonathan Edwards in a great snippet found over at Desiring God's site entitled "What I Mean by Preaching."
Keller, in his typical thought-out gospel-centric culturally engaging style suggests several points to how he approaches preaching. In his TGC workshop "Preaching to the Heart [Affections]," Keller notes that effective preaching (to the affections) is cultural, affectionate, imaginative, specific, wonderous, and Christocentric. Keller also draws much from his reading and understanding of Edwards in how he approaches the declaration of God's Word to God's people.
Friday, May 29, 2015
Axe Grinding like the Master . . . Dann Huff
Incredible playing by two fellow Huff aficionados . . .
UK's own Pete Sklaroff killing it with the perfect 80's track with his Huff-inspired leads.
The Italian tunes of Davide Guiso playing the unmistakable clean tone rhythm along with the tasteful lead.
UK's own Pete Sklaroff killing it with the perfect 80's track with his Huff-inspired leads.
The Italian tunes of Davide Guiso playing the unmistakable clean tone rhythm along with the tasteful lead.
Wednesday, May 06, 2015
A Helpful Video on Hermeneutics
In this day and age of relativistic, pluralistic consumerism, one may be tempted to interpret Scripture according to whatever and however they may see fit. Do I read the Scripture allegorically, morally, literally, historically-theologically or even historical-redemptively? I would argue for the last as this seems to be what the Lord also implies at the end of Luke's gospel (though both the last two seem to fit well within what might be considered "historical-redemptive").
Dr. Bryan Chapell gives a great explanation for the implications of the hermeneutic of Biblical theology in one's own study of Scripture and homiletics. This is the Desiring God link with a short blurb on the subject.
The Preacher’s Game-Changer from Desiring God on Vimeo.
Dr. Bryan Chapell gives a great explanation for the implications of the hermeneutic of Biblical theology in one's own study of Scripture and homiletics. This is the Desiring God link with a short blurb on the subject.
The Preacher’s Game-Changer from Desiring God on Vimeo.
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