Join Ronald Kirk, author of the Christian living book, Thy Will Be Done, as he tours the blogosphere December 2 – 27, 2013 on his first virtual book tour with Pump Up Your Book!
ABOUT THY WILL BE DONE
Title: Thy Will Be Done
Genre: Christian living
Author: Ronald Kirk
Publisher: Nordskog Publishing
Pages: 256
Language: English
ISBN – 978-0988297654
The world cries out for an imaginative but realistic Biblical guide to the life foreshadowed in Christ’s model prayer. No foolish utopia, here is a powerful, comprehensive portrait of a sinful world redeemed and transformed by Christ—including the tools needed to hasten the day.
The author weaves a tapestry of possibility–Christ’s people growing as salt and light, putting flesh on the Bible’s vision of blessing in every aspect of human life and endeavor, bringing joy to all peoples and glory to the One who came to save the world.
“Ron Kirk comprehensively applies the Lordship of Christ to all areas of life” (Peter Hammond, The Reformation Society, South Africa).
Purchase your copy:
Nordskog Publishing
ABOUT RONALD KIRK
Jesus Christ confronted Ron Kirk with His salvation late in his college career at the University of California, Berkeley. Graduating in 1974, he became a professional landscape architect. In entering his first church ministry, a lack of a Biblical material on education led him to the Christian History Movement and the works of R.J. Rushdoony. Since 1980, Ron has studied and taught the Biblically and historically identified applied-faith theology and philosophy outlined in this book. Its principles have now long proven themselves in the curriculum and methods of pioneering day and home schools founded and administered by Ron. His work has been published internationally and translated into Spanish. According to Jay and Vickie Dangers of New Hope Uganda Ministries, “Through what you have imparted to us, your lives have touched thousands of people on at least four continents, probably five, and the ripple effect is continuing.”[1] Gloriously married since 1971, Ron and Christina have five beautiful children, five more beautiful sons- and daughters-in-law, and twelve beautiful grandchildren, all walking with Christ. American Heritage Christian Church ordained Ron as a minister of the Gospel in 1984. Ron has recently joined the foreign missionary staff of New Hope Uganda to assist in establishing a teachers college to supply the nation’s schools with a rigorously Biblical philosophy and practice of education.
Visit Ron online at www.getwisdom.us or like his Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/GetWisdomMakingChristianHeroesOfOrdinaryPeople
First Chapter Reveal:
Chapter
1
The Premise Jesus taught us to pray, Thy Kingdom
come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven (Matthew 6:10, kjv). This
petition by the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords was certainly no idle
religious mumble. Moreover, in Jesus’ last earthly call to men—the Great
Commission—He declared that all power and authority in heaven and Earth are
His. He delegates power to His church. He commands the church to make disciples
of all nations (Matthew 28:18-20). He empowers us to do so. We must seek men
and teach them all of Christ’s ways, to educate and train them. This is not
merely to see them saved, but to help them to become living, breathing children
of the living God, priests, and ambassadors to His Kingdom upon the whole
counsel of the Word of God.
Jesus rules and reigns at the right hand of the
Father (Acts 7:55), and will continue so until His makes His enemies His
footstool in completed reality. He governs in the middle of His enemies,
through His volunteers—the church (Psalm 110:1-3). He will so rule until the
earth is filled with the knowledge of the Lord (Habakkuk 2:14), and the
mountain made without hands, Christ’s rulership, displaces the Kingdoms of the
world and fills the whole earth (Daniel 2:35). In quoting Psalm 110 (Matthew
22:44), as done often throughout the New Testament, Christ clearly emphasizes
its importance. Jesus remains in heaven to rule, including through His church,
until the fulfillment of all things. He intends that we must be about the
business of advancing the Kingdom of Christ everywhere, in all manners of life.
Pietism
Long ago, a movement in the church known as Pietism
encouraged Christians to withdraw from society in favor of a merely personal
religion based in private worship and a few limited expressions such as church
worship, missions, evangelism, or, for some, ecstatic personal experiences.
This movement grew out of a decline in the power and purity of the Puritan
movement. Zealous Pietism rapidly grew in reaction to an increasing and
disappointing abandonment by the Puritans of their former quickened,
Scripture-commanded life. The Unitarian church and the primary contemporary
liberal Congregational denominations are the legates of debased Puritanism.
Unfortunately, little positive good has come from the Evangelical church’s
relative abandonment of society for the past two hundred years. Rather,
Christians today have increasingly withdrawn from society. We have allowed the
soil of our neighbors’ hearts to grow hardened, sterile, shallow, and choked
with weeds (Matthew 13:3-9). This is the opposite of godly love toward them.
Successful evangelism depends on good soil to
receive the Good Seed of salvation. The Good Seed must fall into the good soil
of a ready heart. In the fallen world, good soil exists only under cultivation.
Christians should exercise godliness in such a way that we benignly work the
soil of our neighbors’ hearts through godly influence, accomplished according
to our spiritual gifts. Thus inspired, we will do all we do, self-consciously,
to the glory of God (1 Corinthians 10:31), to fulfill the Great Commission of
Matthew 28.
The church today commonly underestimates the
Biblical term righteousness, limiting it to what is now often termed Christian
values. Appropriately, these values do include pro-life, family, and sexual
morality issues. Yet the Bible requires much, much more. We must love our
neighbors as ourselves. The prophet Isaiah, for example, devotes great
attention to righteousness in the form of civil justice (Isaiah 1:21).
Christians should be civil leaders, the judges of society (Isaiah 1:26-27;
33:1). True faith requires active good on behalf of the oppressed and the poor
(Isaiah 58:6-7). Of course, none of this obviates Christ, nor do we recommend a
social gospel. Rather, righteousness is the fruit of the Spirit, the effective
work of Christ in us (Ephesians 5:9). He requires an active faith of His
people—vital and involved in every sphere of life.
Thanks for hosting Ron's tour today. Wishing you and your readers a blessed Christmas season.
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