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ED BANGHART

declaring God's Glory
It's what you are created for.

     My 5 year-old granddaughter, Hannah, asked my wife one day, "Did God make God?" That's a profound question for such a young philosopher! Do you know how hard it is to answer that question to a 5-year old ("Well, Hannah, God created everything, but God Himself is uncreated and eternal, without beginning or end."). Hannah accepted that explanation, and I don't think  she lost any sleep over it. But it reminded me of a truth that is so easy to forget and yet is so important to remember:

    The purpose of all creation is to declare and display
                                  the glory of God.

                 God created all things for His glory.

      All of creation exists to showcase the glory of God. Man, the crowning achievement of God's creation, has been set apart to make known the glory of God and to "proclaim the excellencies of him who called us out of darkness into His marvelous light" (1 Peter 2:9).

      The psalmist, while contemplating the vastness of our universe, pens the words, "The heavens declare the glory of God..." (Psalm 19:1). When you look up at the night sky and consider the billions of stars in our galaxy and the billions of galaxies in our universe, the sheer immensity of the space-time universe we inhabit is mind-numbing. 

​      THINK ABOUT IT: we share the celestial cosmos with countless galaxies, stars and planets, supernovas, black holes, meteors, comets, and who knows what else. 

      The heavens don't just declare the glory of God, they shout it out with a deafening sound!


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     How much more should we, His people, declare and display His glory. It is the reason we exist.

Consider the following scriptures:


​"Ascribe to the Lord the GLORY due His name" 
(1 Chronicles 16:29).


"There is only one God, the Father, who created everything, and we EXIST for Him" (1 Corinthians 8:6, NLT).

"Not to us, O Lord, not to us, but  to your name be the GLORY" (Psalm 115:1).

     Everything that God does is for the sake of His great name, and to the praise of His glorious grace so that He might be our All in All--for all things are FROM Him, and THROUGH Him and TO Him (Romans 11:36:1; 1 Cor.15:28).

He is the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last,          the Beginning and the End and Everything in between.

     History is HIS STORY--the unfolding of God's eternal purpose in this present evil age. It's not about our glory, our name, our honor or our greatness. It's not about me; it's not about you; it's all about God! 

     An astronomer once quipped, "When scientists discover the center of our universe, a lot of people are going to be very disappointed that it isn't them!"

      The Bible is essentially a story about God, not a story about us. A key theme of the scriptures is the redemption of fallen mankind, however, the ultimate value of salvation is not to be seen in what we are saved FROM ; it's value is in what we are saved FOR!

Steven C. Hawthorne points out that, "The rationale for mission is the colossal worthiness of God...Since God is supreme, every creature should bow down in subjection" (Perspectives: The Story of His Glory, pg 50).

      In American culture, we have trivialized the God of transcendent glory and pushed Him out to the periphery of our lives. 

Donald W. McCullough proposes that we "Visit a church on Sunday morning and you will likely find a congregation comfortably relating to a manageable deity who fits nicely within precise doctrinal positions or who lends almighty support to social crusades...but reverence and awe have been replaced by a yawn of familiarity" (The Trivialization of God, pg 13).

God has set us apart as His people to make known His glory. His eternal purpose is to bring many sons to glory, who would share His life, His nature, His purpose and His glory.

Declaring and displaying the glory of God--it's what you were created for!

The Backward and Forward Looks

1/29/2019

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Picture
January is named after the Roman god Janus. Janus was the guardian of doors and doorways, entrances and exits, and beginnings and endings.
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JANUS HAD TWO FACES: one face always looked ahead, to the future; the other face always looked back, mindful of the past.

Janus illustrates an important truth: in order to properly relate to the present, we need to remember the past. But, at the same time, we need to look ahead to the future. We need to learn from the past without becoming imprisoned in the past. We need to prepare for the future without presuming on the future.

A RUSSIAN PROVERB SAYS:
"To forget the past is to lose an eye, but to live in the past is to lose both eyes."


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The Truth About Truth

1/23/2019

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"My Beautiful Theory was Mugged by a Gang of Ugly Facts."

Welcome to my new blog...well, it's sort of new. It keeps popping up unexpectedly under different aliases. But no more wacky and whimsical acronyms, such as Pew-U   (Pastor Ed's Weekly Update) and SPIT (Strategic Planning   & Implementation Training).

In these mostly never-before-published blogs, I will be sharing my thoughts and reflections about faith and life  (and whatever else percolates up from the murky depths of my subconscious).
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I want to invite you to join me on a zigzag journey in the upside-down world of grace--a journey of lessons learned and opportunities lost, of undeserved blessings and inexplicable suffering, of failures redeemed and hopes restored. But first, an important caveat:

WARNING: The Surgeon General has determined that this blogsite may be hazardous to your cherished ideas about life, faith and God. Theological certainties can burst like fragile soap bubbles at the touch of reality.​

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    Founding Pastor of Montclair Community Church.  Internationally unknown author and speaker.

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