Got 7 minutes?

Click here to be taken to my YouTube video update

Didn’t think so! BUT, I’m still gonna ask you to watch this video! I’ll give you a break from reading and just let you click thru to catch up with how our Team Retreat went. I’m so grateful for your prayers. We had a terrific weekend. It was our first in person retreat since May 2019! Lots of photos to show you! Thanks for watching.

Hope you have a blessed Easter! He is RISEN!

tim.perry@intervarsity.org

RE- (inductive bible study series)

It’s been really rewarding to see these study guides on the theme of redemption come together this year. Below is the first time I’ve put all ten of them in one place so they can be browsed! I’ve been writing these things since July 2021! I’ve used them in study groups this past year. Feel free to use them! Steal them. Make them your own. I wrote them using this blog as my work-space, so there’s a lot of good stuff packed in there. You’ll find at least three things in each study: a blank manuscript of the passage you can download and work with, some back-ground information that will help you mine the passage, and a surplus of inductive study questions you or a group can use to discuss it in a learning community. Click around. Send me your questions. If you want more input on how to mark-up a manuscript be sure to read the first couple of studies. IF you mark up a manuscript and want to share it on the blog, email it to me and I’ll post it! I dare you…

If you missed the report from my staff retreat, you’ll find it in the post next door. It’s a video this time! I hope you have a terrific weekend!

RE-01Ezra 3 introRestart: beginning again with nothing
RE-01Ezra 3:1-13Restart: beginning again with nothing
RE-02Isaiah 61 introRenew: righteousness and justice are coming
RE-02Isaiah 61:1-11Renew: righteousness and justice are coming
RE-03Hosea 1-3Reclaim: retrieved again from idols
RE-04Psalm 25Release: getting unstuck
RE-05Matt 5:1-16Reframe: being the right kind of person
RE-06Matt 5:17-6:4Reframe: getting back to right living
RE-07Mark 3:1-21Reclaim: belonging to the right owner
RE-08Mark 5:21-42Restore: made well again
RE-09John 3:1-21Reborn: made alive again
RE-10Revelation 21-22Conclusion: all things made new

tim.perry@intervarsity.org

Hey could you pray for our team this weekend?

Tis the season for conferences! I’m away from home for the third time this spring. This time in St. Louis for a retreat with my staff team – GFM Central. Here’s a glance at the schedule. Here’s a few things you could mention as you pray for us! Thank you.

  • Travel. People are coming from Iowa, Kansas and Denver!
  • Terrific time together! We’ve not met in person as a team since 2019!
  • Rich times in scripture and prayer.
  • Renewing friendships and partnership in the Gospel.
  • Four people (of our 11) are new to the team since we last gathered.
  • Good team-building.
  • We’re reading and discussing a book – Leadership in the Crucible of Work
  • There will be three faculty members from the St. Louis area joining us as guests.
  • Sunday we plan to celebrate Palm Sunday together.
  • Local staff will have family members joining us for Sunday worship.

I’ll give you an update after it’s all over! Keep an eye on our schedule and pray when we come to mind. Thank you so much!

All Things New – Revelation 21/22

So this series has to end somewhere. No better place than the New Jerusalem. At some point redemption stops and eternity begins. Creation. Fall. Redemption. Now at last, Fulfillment! I could have kept adding episode after episode to the RE- series till WordPress would no longer let me write posts! But after ten I think it’s time we stick a fork in it! Not that we’re done experiencing redemption and renewal. But the best place for us to bring closure to a study like this is that day when eternity crashes into time and brings history to a full stop.

Two things (more than anything else) have helped me make sense of the last two chapters of my bible. One is the observation that if you read Revelation from a bible with cross-references in the margins, you’ll discover there’s hardly a phrase in the book of Revelation that doesn’t come from Old Testament prophetic books – especially Isaiah and Ezekiel. The second thing I’ve enjoyed in recent years of reading Revelation 21 and 22 is reading Isaiah 60 in connection with these two chapters. Richard Mouw’s book When the Kings Come Marching In was such a helpful find (assigned reading for Cultural Exegesis in seminary).

If you can’t track down Mouw’s book before you dive into Rev 21/22, at least do yourself the favor of reading Isaiah 60 with one eye… and Revelation 21/22 with the other. In fact, not to put too fine of a point on it, you’ll ALSO want to take a look at Genesis 1:26-31 (where you’ll find God’s first instructions to the parents of our human family). OK! That’s it. I know it sounds like a lot of trouble, but trust me, you’ll see some interesting connections. Once you’ve done that, you know the rest of the routine. You can access some background info at the PDF link that appears in Question 7 below.

Approach

When you think about who will be in heaven and what will be in heaven, what do your thoughts drift to first? Would you be bummed out if heaven turned out to be very different from how you imagine it? Why or why not?

Everything New – Rev 21:1-7

1- Verse 4 states “the old order of things has passed away.” List everything that seems to be part of this old order.

2- What is new? How does the old relate to what is new?

3- What does it mean that God’s dwelling place is now with his people? To John’s readers what might come to mind when they think about times past when “God dwelled among his people.”

4- What do you think life in God’s presence will be like? When you imagine it, what aspects of the old order will you especially be glad to part with?

Glory of the Nations – Rev 21:22-27

5- What is old and what is new in these verses?

6- John associates light and glory. How would you define the glory of God (recall Exodus and the tabernacle)?

7- John implies that the kings of the earth will bring the glory and honor of the nations into the Holy City (Viv 24, 26). What do you think he means by the glory and honor of the nations?

8- Skim through Isaiah chapter 60. Notice the many allusions John’s apocalypse makes to Isaiah’s prophecy. How do verses 6-7 and 11-13 in particular help us understand what John is showing us in Rev 21:24-26?

9-Richard Mouw identifies the glory of the nations as the cultural works of humanity (be they art, agriculture, technology, education, medicine, law or government). Humanity’s “filling up” of the earth in response to the cultural mandate (Gen 1:28) produces works of glory that one day find their place in the Holy City. What is your response to a vision of heaven that includes redeemed works of human culture?

Servants Reigning Forever. Rev 22:1-5

10- Again let’s ask, What is new and what is old in these verses?

11- The tree of life will bring healing to the nations. What might that look like? How might that happen?

12- How do we explain the tension between servants serving and servants reigning? Usually those who reign are served by those who serve.

13- How has John’s vision challenged your imagination of heaven? How does it give shape to your hopes (and perhaps your fears)?