Do you know what you believe?
Well this week as our first week at Ellerslie we developed an understandings of the basic truths of the Bible which we would claim to be the very Word of God in text. For the Bible says about itself that
“All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine (teaching), for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all god works.” (2 Timothy 3:16 – KJV)
With this as our basis, believing that the Word of God is inerrant, it is truth, and it is central because God himself declares his nature and declares his plan of salvation through Jesus Christ we built on this solid rock exploring foundational truths to Christianity.
At Ellerslie there is great diversity. Students are gathered here from nearly every evangelical denomination imaginable. Some very conservative and others from very liberal backgrounds. Yet here at Ellerslie there is unimaginable unity as we fix our teaching, discussion and study on Jesus. We stick to discussing central doctrines and are free to have our own expressions of worship, praise, prayer etc. The main thing is for us to respect all in the way we express our freedoms in Christ, and not to distract and disturb our fellow students. Seeing this unity in the body of Christ is surely a joyful experience and reviving to the soul.
At Ellerslie it has always been the commission of the men to live as men ought. To live lives of valour and honour. Men act as gentlemen and you will ALWAYS see them opening the door for each other and especially the ladies, cleaning away the dishes and taking the initiative to pray for and protect the women of our campus. Their focus is to ensure that each and every woman in the course is supported in seeing JESUS and the guys are definitely not getting in the way of that with romance or attention-seeking behaviour. It is truly an experience to live among the guys here at Ellerslie as they learn what manhood truly is. It is also an honour to see these women begin to radiate and showcase authentic beauty in this protective and empowering environment.
So what have we been learning?
For many, the word “sin” merely expressed the so-called ‘bad’ things that humans do to one another, and towards God. We dug a little deeper into what this christianese term may actually mean, and why it is so offensive to God. In medical terminology we could classify ‘sins’ not as just multiple sin but more accurately as the symptoms of a root condition, a predisposition of ‘sin’. These ‘sins’ therefore are the effects that we see within our culture. Sins of commission (what we do to God, others and ourselves), and sins of omission (what we do not do that we know we should – James 4:17) are those that stem out of the very root of this problem – the spiritual condition known as “sin”. Sin itself has often been defined as “missing the mark” finding its derivation from an archery term… but how do we miss God’s mark?
Well simply put, it is us placing “self on the throne”. When self is on the throne ruling and running our lives we miss the natural order of things and do not realise that GOD should be on the throne of our lives and that we SHOULD be taking direction from Him. Us being on the throne of our life puts us in direct rebellion to God. It could be likened to a little child going into a palace, finding the throne-room, getting up on the throne in front of the king of that nation and demanding his / her toys so that they can do what THEY want.
Apart from rebellion, there is another problem with us taking the throne of our lives. This problem is rather deceptive and subtle in its workings and the way in which it plays out in life. The problem is described in scripture as the “flesh”. No I don’t mean the largest organ of the human body which covers over bone and muscle tissue. Rather I am talking about the insidious master who actually runs your life when YOU are seated on the throne. The flesh which binds YOU to the throne and is in direct opposition to you getting down off that throne and letting Jesus come and take his rightful place instead.
I have witnessed in so many “christian’s lives” that they continue struggling with sinning and try to conquer their thoughts, tongue and actions through self effort, or even prayer. The problem for many is that ‘self’ remains on the throne and hence the desires / lusts of the flesh run rampant. And remembering that those who remain on the throne are a slave to this cruel master of the flesh, and are bound it is no wonder that so many christians feel like a failure. But “THANKS be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!” (Rom 7:25) that Jesus comes, sets us free from the bondage that keeps us on our own throne and we can step down, and allow Him the rightful place in our lives. On our throne!
Through our studies this week we have seen that the ‘flesh’ has ALWAYS been at enmity with the ‘spirit’ (and / or the righteous ways of God and God’s rulership of our lives). Throughout the bible there are examples of mans self effort (flesh) and then God’s solution (spirit). This has often been called the 1st born (flesh) vs the 2nd born (spirit) because it has played out exactly that way. The 2nd born in the natural is always the supernatural solution. A couple of examples follow:
- Ishmael (Abraham’s self-solution by union with Hagar) vs Isaac (Child God had promised to Abraham and Sarah in their old age – supernatural)
- Esau (Despised his birth-right and place in Gods salvation of the world) vs Jacob (Struggled with God to get a blessing and was Gods chosen man to be the father of a nation – Israel)
- Saul (First King of Israel – the nations choice “head and shoulders above all others” but disobedient towards God – and henceforth rejected of God) vs David (A man after God’s own heart who sought God and was obedient)
- Adam (first man – rejected God and became his own God through eating the fruit) vs Jesus (the 2nd Adam – reconciled man to God through his obedience, fulfilment of the righteous law, death and resurrection).
- Old Man (Flesh – the way we live with self on the throne) vs Spirit (The way to live according to God with JESUS on the throne).
I do realise that I have just spent a HUGE chunk of this post on some of these things that we have taken hours to learn this week – actually that was just a small part of the first session (and admittedly I am not the best one to explain these things), but this is merely an expression of the many things that we are currently learning.
Other topics this week include:
- The Gospel (see video)
- Intercession (see video)
- Holiness (the #1 attribute of the person of God and how we should view him)
- Egypt, the Wilderness and the Promised land (an old testament picture of the saving work of Jesus Christ)
- Fatherhood (Can we really trust God?)
- Fact, Faith and Experience
- Okay so I really need to explain this one. Fact = Word of God, Faith = our actions / application of, Experience = experience. In our modern Christianity we often base our life, living, and salvation on what we ‘feel’, what we can ‘see’, and our past experience. Examples include prayer – we feel so defeated because it seems that God just hasn’t answered our prayers in the past, so is it really worth praying again?
The truth is that we cannot trust experience. Rather we must trust the truth found in scripture. We must learn not to look at circumstances, situations, and stories of the past, rather we must hold onto the very promises of God found in the Bible. So that when we turn away from the nagging voice of experience and fix our gaze firmly on the truth of scripture we can truly walk out the life of victory with faith in the promises of God. This confidence is based in two critical facts:
- Okay so I really need to explain this one. Fact = Word of God, Faith = our actions / application of, Experience = experience. In our modern Christianity we often base our life, living, and salvation on what we ‘feel’, what we can ‘see’, and our past experience. Examples include prayer – we feel so defeated because it seems that God just hasn’t answered our prayers in the past, so is it really worth praying again?
- The word of God is the word of God (John 17:17, 1 Thess 2:13)
- God cannot lie (Numbers 23:19; 1 Sam 15:29, Titus 1:2)
I could also write of the messages about “reckoning with truth”, “the anatomy of truth”, “the body” but you would probably be asleep.
Not that this week has been relaying any foundational doctrine (teaching) for us, but rather we have gained a deeper understanding of many facets of the gospel and Christian life. We have had the beautiful opportunity of seeing many of the other students come through times of testing what they believe or have grown up being taught and seeing Christ at the centre and clinging to him as their ‘all in all’.
What our day looks like:
- 5:30AM (Corporate Prayer)
- 6:30AM (Individual prayer and study)
- Breakfast
- 8:15AM (Corporate stillness – prayer, reading the bible, etc)
- 8:45AM (Devotional)
- 9:00AM (Corporate Worship)
- 9:30AM (Session 1 – 2 hours of intensive teaching by staff)
- Lunch
- 1:15PM (Session 2 – more teaching by staff)
- 5:45PM (Dinner)
- 7:00PM (Student Life Activities)
Yes it is a rather hectic schedule, but we have found it really beneficial.
Other Stuff:
We have also had many other joyful experiences this week including:
- Getting to know our classmates
- Welcome Banquet (a very formal affair with a wonderful message by Eric Ludy)
- Sermons of Yesteryear (This week: Paris Reidhead – Ten Shekels and a Shirt)
- Social outing to Lilly Lake (Currently frozen – Estes Park – Northern Colorado) – pictures included below
- Being invited to lunch at an Ellerslie family’s house and sharing wonderful fellowship.
- Working on our SUV that we bought… still working on it (Roy)
But a WONDERFUL first week – oh and we aren’t quite as cold and out of place as we were at first. Altitude settings have been adjusted successfully, and we there are just so many friendly people around town. We love living in Windsor.





























