Faithmapping Quotes
Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
by
Daniel Montgomery144 ratings, 4.19 average rating, 22 reviews
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Faithmapping Quotes
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“Social media has exploded our narcissism. “Facebragging” has become a new slang term for the way that social media has enabled us to shamelessly self-promote, self-congratulate, and generally make public fools of ourselves. As Jean Twenge and W. Keith Campbell, authors of The Narcissism Epidemic, have pointed out, there’s a kind of democratization on the web, where everyone’s opinion has been elevated (or deflated) to a common level. Journalists who fight to present information with clarity and objectivity find themselves contradicted and shouted down by raging bloggers and commenters with no actual knowledge of whatever circumstance they may be reporting. Self-expression on the web has led to a sense of entitlement, a belief that “everybody’s opinion is just as valid as everyone else’s.”2 Andrew Keen refers to the phenomenon as “ignorance meets egoism, meets bad taste, meets mob rule.”3 It’s a world where the way up is to be louder, more flashy, more harsh and outspoken.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“...people who've been hit with the gospel respond naturally with radically changed lives and hearts. The church and the ministries of the church are gospel centered when they flow from hearts that are afire with wonder at the glory and grace of God, revealed in the person of Jesus.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“As Tim Keller once put it: The purpose of Sabbath is not simply to rejuvenate yourself in order to do more production, nor is it the pursuit of pleasure. The purpose of Sabbath is to enjoy your God, life in general, what you have accomplished in the world through his help, and the freedom you have in the gospel—the freedom from slavery to any material object or human expectation. The Sabbath is a sign of the hope that we have in the world to come.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“As Tim Keller once put it: The purpose of Sabbath is not simply to rejuvenate yourself in order to do more production, nor is it the pursuit of pleasure. The purpose of Sabbath is to enjoy your God, life in general, what you have accomplished in the world through his help, and the freedom you have in the gospel—the freedom from slavery to any material object or human expectation. The Sabbath is a sign of the hope that we have in the world to come.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“The gospel frees us from the search for significance in the things we do. It compels us to a life of love and forgiveness, and invites us to experience the blessing of serving others. It’s the way life was meant to”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“Today, just as in Jesus’s day, greatness means power, position. It means people serving me, and Jesus says a resounding, “No!” As an old Puritan prayer says so eloquently, we need to learn to pray: Let me learn by paradox that the way down is the way up, that to be low is to be high, that the broken heart is the healed heart, that the contrite spirit is the rejoicing spirit, that the repenting soul is the victorious soul, that to have nothing is to possess all, that to bear the cross is to wear the crown.9”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“Some false gods are made of wood. Some are bank accounts. Some are in our mirrors. False worship isn’t limited to a few moments of slavish action toward a physical thing; it’s a whole life apart from Jesus, an outpouring wasted on false kingdoms and false gods, even if that god is ourselves.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“It may require some new words, but as missiologist Ed Stetzer has said, if Christians can learn to order at Starbucks, they can probably learn to handle some theological language.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“To repent means to turn away from something and to turn toward something else. It means a reshaping of our mindset, a new way of looking at the world. It means rethinking our way of thinking and being and doing.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“The gospel is the greatest underdog story ever told.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“When we encounter the gospel, we’re fundamentally changed.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“The gospel invites us into a different way of living and being, not to prove or earn, but to enjoy.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
“Becoming like Jesus means taking on his character, his way of looking at the world, his way of loving and interacting with others. It means cultivating a relationship with God like Jesus’s own—one of intimacy, depth, and care. It means living a life that’s at war with evil’s grip on the world around us, and that certainly includes the sin in our lives, but to make sin management primary in the Christian life misses the point of the gospel. Our sins are paid for, past, present, and future, and in that freedom we can be transformed.”
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
― Faithmapping: A Gospel Atlas for Your Spiritual Journey
