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Friday, January 31, 2014
Thursday, January 30, 2014
The Antidote
“And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together.”The words “hold together” here are most frequently translated “commend”, or literally “stand with”, and are used of a confirming testimony; that which supports or substantiates something that might otherwise be less solid or demonstrable. The KJV says, “in him all things consist”, which is fine, as long as we don’t conjure the image of the Lord Jesus as some vast being with everything else inside him, because that is not what the apostle is emphasizing here. Rather, he affirms here what is said in Hebrews about the Son; that he “upholds all things by the word of his power”.
(Colossians 1:17)
He is the “confirming force” of the universe; what makes all
things cohere. Not being a scientist, I’ll stop there, though I’m quite sure
scientifically trained Christians (not Christian Scientists) might have much to
say on how that works out practically.
No, I’m thinking about human relationships and the way we
communicate.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
This Explains Why the People I Work With Are Frequently Nicer Than I Am …
The Sword takes up the subject of total depravity reasonably
and biblically:
“… to suggest that there is no trace of anything good left in man at all is to contradict the Bible. The Bible teaches that we were created in the image of God (Gen 1:26-27). That isn’t a reference to our physical appearance, but to a variety of spiritual, moral, emotional, and intellectual attributes. Whatever else it means, it means that we can think, reason, create, love, etc. If “total depravity” means that man is as depraved as possible in every way, then it would mean that the image of God has been utterly obliterated and that an unsaved man retains none of it. This is patently untrue. Unsaved men can think, reason, and create. Unsaved men can even love. Although diminished and corrupted, vestiges of the image of God remain. It is for this reason that the Holy Spirit can say through Peter that Christ “called us by His own glory and excellence” (2 Pet 1:3).
Read the whole thing here, including disclaimer.
And especially “The disclaimer disclaimer”.
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Monday, January 27, 2014
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Can We Stop Using This Straw Man Now? Please?
Okay, I have just come across the second book review in as
many days which describes how, in the course of the story, a young person
involved in an evangelical Christian church is struggling with doubts and goes
to their pastor, a parent, or other trusted authority figure for advice. And
what they are told, in both these books, is “Don't question, don't think, just
pray and believe”.
To which I say, what?
Saturday, January 25, 2014
The Faithful Have Vanished
“The
faithful have vanished”, David wrote.
Not that the
faithful have been exterminated and evil has finally won the day.
Not that the
faithful have apostacized or lost their salt.
They’ve
vanished. Elvis has left the building, folks.
This is not simply David’s personal experience here. No way, not without at least some exaggeration or hyperbole. Matthew Henry says, “It is supposed that David
penned this psalm, in the latter part of Saul’s reign, when there was a general
decay of honesty and piety, when religion, truth, and righteousness, seemed
ready to expire, and every kind of wickedness was without control.”
Yeah, I
suppose. Maybe.
Friday, January 24, 2014
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Inbox: Marital Breakdown
In response to this post Tertius and Susan T. Foh seem to be in agreement. Susan’s position on Genesis 3:16 was advanced by Ted Hildebrandt in the Westminster Theological Journal. Tertius says:
I’m with Ted’s explanation; at the least there seems to be nothing in the immediate context to forbid it. Secondly, 1 Cor. 14:34-37 reinforce it, as does 1 Tim. 2:12. Thirdly, having spent some 50 or more years marriage counselling I have observed that much marital breakdown occurs when either a man fails to fulfil his role as a protector and provider or a woman competes with his leadership. She may do this by asserting her ‘rights’ or manipulating her husband into doing what she wants.
To which I can only add three more passages in the New Testament that also reinforce this interpretation, which are the subject of this coming Monday’s Bible Study 06.
The Opiate
Karl Marx once said “Religion is the opiate of the masses”.
He believed that religion was invented by wealthy men to control the poor. If
the lower classes were pacified with the promise of treasure in the afterlife,
they would not rebel against their wealthy oppressors. In this way the rich
could continue to hoard their wealth, while the poor laboured on under the
delusion that they would receive their rewards in the next life.
It is true that some of the world’s religions and religious leaders have done this very thing — some even claiming to be Christians. While they urged their followers to work harder and make greater sacrifices, they themselves accumulated wealth to excess. This bad testimony alone has caused many people to agree with Karl Marx and to dismiss Christianity altogether.
It is true that some of the world’s religions and religious leaders have done this very thing — some even claiming to be Christians. While they urged their followers to work harder and make greater sacrifices, they themselves accumulated wealth to excess. This bad testimony alone has caused many people to agree with Karl Marx and to dismiss Christianity altogether.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
He Who Requires Blood
Sounds like a bad vampire movie: “He Who Requires Blood”,
though only to our modern ears, of course. The author of Psalm 9 made no such
silly Hollywood associations and neither did his original readers. The subject
was deadly serious:
“Sing praises to the Lord, who sits enthroned in Zion!
Tell among the peoples his deeds!
For he who requires blood is mindful of them;
he does not forget the cry of the afflicted.” (Psalm 9:11,12)
If you were – or are – one of the “afflicted”, this is very
good news. The word “peoples” here refers to nations. David is looking forward
to a time when the Lord Jesus will reign over the earth and will “judge the
world in righteousness” and “execute judgement for the [nations] with equity”.
He is occupied here with the absolute fairness of God’s ways
with man.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Love Is Not Enough
One of my favourite recordings ever is a tune Todd Rundgren wrote
for his band Utopia’s 1977 album, the last song on the record. Like many pop
tunes, it failed to chart or make waves (or money) until a folksy American duo
covered it in 1979 and people started to listen:
“I’ve looked high and low, I’ve been from shore to shore to shore.
If there’s a shortcut, I’d have found it. But there’s no easy way around it:
Light of the world, shine on me, love is the answer.”
To me the
more successful England Dan & John Ford Coley version misses the
point. It’s got all the same words, but none of the intensity. They sing it
sweetly, harmoniously and entirely without giving the impression that it matters. It’s full of breezy sax fills,
bright keyboard figures and strings. Even the choir in the hit version is
subdued. And without intensity, the hippified cliché of the title comes across corny
and trite (that’s my take anyway, though ‘corny and trite’ outsold ‘intense’,
so what do I know). But Rundgren’s vocal on his original has none of that flat,
overproduced perfection. He positively rips it, especially toward the gospel-inflected
end of the song where the choir kicks in with serious intent.
If it didn’t mean something to him at the time, you certainly
could’ve fooled me.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Looking Forward or Looking Back?
![]() |
By any other name, would it smell as sweet? |
But very often in the Bible however, there is additional depth to a name. Matthew 16 is a common enough example that has drawn the interest of theologians for generations; what did Peter’s naming really signify? But there are many other famous examples that are less controversial; Saul became Paul, Abram became Abraham and so on. In each case there was a reason that someone’s name was changed and that reason is worth exploring.
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Saturday, January 18, 2014
On the Unfair Maligning of Atheists
It occurred to me that a paragraph in Friday’s post probably
warrants a disclaimer or two:
“What sort of miserable, twisted personality seeks to rob another human being of all the emotional and lifestyle benefits that come with the Christian life for … for what? So the successful converts to atheism can hit the bars, brothels and the casinos and ‘eat and drink, for tomorrow we die’? So they can swell the ranks of the overweight, the suicidal and the terminally miserable? So they can help bankrupt the health care system? So they can cheat their employers, slack off and go on welfare because, hey, why not? So they can scream and wail and fall on coffins at the weddings of loved ones because that’s all, folks? So they can camp out in the cold with the Occupy gang and resent the rich and powerful because their only hope is in this life?”
I’m not for a second suggesting that all those who are not believers
in Christ end up abusing drugs, alcohol, food or the welfare system, are
extra-grief stricken at funerals, hate the rich or kill themselves.
Friday, January 17, 2014
The Ninth Circle
Maybe you’ve heard the expression ‘the Ninth Circle of Hell’
used to describe an excruciating week at the office, a brutal exam or a particularly
acrimonious divorce — hyperbolically, one hopes.
The Origin of the Expression
Over six hundred years ago, an Italian named Dante Alighieri
wrote an epic poem entitled Divine Comedy.
Inferno (Italian for ‘hell’) is the first
part of the three-part poem, and it’s from Dante’s allegorical exploration of
hell that the concept of the nine circles comes. Hell is depicted as a series
of concentric circles representing a gradual increase in wickedness — and
corresponding torment — that have their culmination at the very centre, where
Satan is held in bondage.
The Ninth Circle of Hell is reserved for the treacherous:
Cain, who killed his brother, is there in Dante’s poem, along with Mordred,
murderer of King Arthur, Brutus and Cassius, traitors to Julius Caesar, and
Judas Iscariot, betrayer of the Lord himself. Judas is charmingly pictured
being gnawed at by Satan, Satan’s claws skinning his back, in perpetual agony
for eternity.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Without Ceasing
“The Lord has heard the sound of my weeping.
The Lord has heard my plea;
The Lord accepts my prayer.” (Psalm 6:8-9)
Excuse all the posts on prayer the last while (is it
possible to be over-occupied with prayer?).
If the Psalms are any indication, David — who had his share
of troubles in his lifetime, some self-inflicted and others for which he was entirely
blameless — seems to have brought everything to the Lord as a matter of course
throughout most of his life.
I am intrigued by the explanatory sentences that appear prior to the first verse of many psalms.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Sceptics, Seekers and Opponents
Vox Day has an interesting piece on the subject of A Manual for Creating Atheists by Peter
Boghossian, a book written with the purpose of teaching, in Boghossian’s own
words, “how to talk people out of their faith”.
Day makes the point that Boghossian’s position could not be
more distant from that of an authentic sceptic in the traditional sense: “Boghossian’s
very stated purpose is in direct and explicit opposition to everything Sextus
Empiricus advises, beginning with ‘suspension of judgment’ ”. A reader imprudently
engages him on this and Day responds (with my italics):
“Scepticism does not mean ‘I am dubious about X.’ It does not mean ‘I am going to convince you that X is better than Y’. It does not mean ‘I will only believe X if there is sufficient evidence to justify it’. It means: ‘I have no opinion about either X or Y, and if you assert that X is better, I will argue that Y is better in order to produce a contradiction of equal weight and thereby allow me to suspend my judgment.’ What virtually no one who talks about scepticism seems to understand is that for the sceptic, suspension of judgment is not the method or the initial approach, it is the objective.”I had not thought of this before, but it provides a good jumping-off point for looking at the issue of how people respond to the preaching of the gospel.
— Vox Day
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
I Know
My brother prevailed upon me to read this last night and,
while heady and intellectual, I found it quite compelling. You can read the
whole thing here, but I particularly like this bit:
“… the defining feature of Theism is the Theist’s experience of an infinite but intimate God; and this sets the Theist so far from abstract epistemic neutrality that she too has every justification for weighting most of the standard budget of problems for Theism found in typical philosophy of religion basically as interesting puzzles. The epistemic reasoner is certain that the world is real, on the basis of her experience; so her question about the sceptical argument is not “I wonder whether it is sound?” but “I wonder where exactly it goes wrong?”. The Theist is certain that God is real, on the basis of her experience; so her question about anti-Theistic arguments is not whether they prove that there is no God, but how exactly they fail to prove that.”
— Timothy Chappell, Theism in historical perspective
What I like is the way Chappell distinguishes 'theists’ from 'Theists’ in that the latter don't simply believe in the idea of God, but in an “infinite and intimate” God. Of course, from that certainty naturally follows. When you speak to me of God, I’m no longer talking about an intellectual idea, I'm talking about my closest friend.
Monday, January 13, 2014
“A Matter of Interpretation”
The existence of various denominations and sects within
Christianity has led many to conclude that there must be all sorts of different
ways to interpret the Bible. Since most Christian churches say that the Bible
is the Word of God, observers assume that every practice or belief of a
Christian church must be based on a particular interpretation of the Bible. If
another group has a different practice or belief, that must be because they
have a different interpretation. This produces the conviction in people’s minds
that the Bible does not speak clearly, and that one person’s interpretation of
it is just as good as anyone else’s. But is this true?
If everybody was really going to have any number of
different ideas about what the Bible was saying, there would be no point in
writing the Bible at all. The reason authors write books is because they
believe that they can expound their ideas clearly and have other people
understand and perhaps accept those ideas. When people read books, it shows
that they believe they will be able to understand the ideas which the author
wanted to express. We read newspaper stories and magazine articles and books of
philosophy in the belief that the clear communication of ideas is possible. We
may disagree with what we read, but that is not the same as having a “different
interpretation” of what the author was saying.
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Friday, January 10, 2014
For All People
I haven’t got any enemies. Really, I can’t think of a single
human being in that category. That’s not an indicator of an excessively
gracious or forgiving nature, by the way. It’s simply the truth.
I live in a peaceful country. There are, of course, differences of
opinion about religion, but I have never (yet) personally encountered any genuine
religious persecution. I realize this is exceptional, both in human history and in view of current conditions in the rest of the world. Try confessing
the name of Christ publicly in Iran, Egypt or Syria and see how that goes.
Even in Baghdad where, because of the US presence for over a decade one might assume it would be a little safer to identify as Christian, attacks
on two churches on Christmas day killed more than 30 worshippers.
Thursday, January 09, 2014
Wednesday, January 08, 2014
Your Father Who Is In Secret
It takes courage to stand up and pray in public if you’re
shy by nature, but only a little more than must be mustered to spill your guts
on Facebook or Twitter. And judging by the number of people doing that, it must
feel pretty good. If you’re the type of person who by nature loves to be the
centre of attention, it doesn’t take any courage at all to pray in public. It’s
like swimming to a duck.
It certainly doesn’t require faith.
It doesn’t take faith to attend church meetings or to put
money in an offering box. These things may be done for right reasons or wrong reasons. Church, or even giving, can be a habit, a social
event, a way of feeling good about oneself, a duty or an obligation imposed
by family. Such acts are done visibly and because of that, there are other possible benefits than rewards of a spiritual kind.
They don’t require faith
They don’t require faith
Tuesday, January 07, 2014
Monday, January 06, 2014
Impossible to Renew [Part 2]
Having established the context, therefore, we may move on to
a closer look at the passage in question:
“For it is impossible, in the case of those who have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly gift, and have shared in the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the age to come, and then have fallen away, to restore them again to repentance, since they are crucifying once again the Son of God to their own harm and holding him up to contempt. For land that has drunk the rain that often falls on it, and produces a crop useful to those for whose sake it is cultivated, receives a blessing from God. But if it bears thorns and thistles, it is worthless and near to being cursed, and its end is to be burned.” (Hebrews 6:4-8)This Passage does NOT Refer to Christians
Several phrases are used here which
seem to imply that the audience are believers: they have been “enlightened”, they
have “tasted the heavenly gift”, they have “shared in the Holy
Spirit”. This is strong language to use of the unsaved. Doesn’t it, then, refer to Christians? Despite the controversy on this subject, we
believe that the answer is no.
Sunday, January 05, 2014
Impossible to Renew [Part 1]
This passage in the book of Hebrews has caused consternation to many a believer, and been the source of much controversy among Christians generally:
Read superficially, it strikes fear into the heart, for it seems at first to imply that those who have put their faith in Christ for salvation can lose that salvation.
“For it is impossible, in the case of those who have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly gift, and have shared in the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the age to come, and then have fallen away, to restore them again to repentance, since they are crucifying once again the Son of God to their own harm and holding him up to contempt. For land that has drunk the rain that often falls on it, and produces a crop useful to those for whose sake it is cultivated, receives a blessing from God. But if it bears thorns and thistles, it is worthless and near to being cursed, and its end is to be burned.” (Hebrews 6:4-8)Eternal Insecurity
Read superficially, it strikes fear into the heart, for it seems at first to imply that those who have put their faith in Christ for salvation can lose that salvation.
Saturday, January 04, 2014
Unintended Consequences
When they passed The Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA)
in 2007, it is quite unlikely that the U.S. congress anticipated that their
little bill would trigger a cereal grain price jump of 67.4% in 2012 over 2011,
or that the rise in food prices would plunge nearly 70 million people into
what the World Bank calls ‘extreme poverty’. The Houston Chronicle details the
extent of the problem here.
Good Intentions
What prompted the EISA? We are told it was the desire to reduce
dependency on foreign oil, scale back greenhouse gas emissions and keep the
price of gas down. None of these are bad ideas. While I am as easily attracted
to conspiracy theories as the next guy, I doubt the average elected
representative planned on starving the third world to reduce U.S. gas prices.
But the unintended consequences of the Act have caused and
continue to cause near-incalculable damage.
Friday, January 03, 2014
Get with the Program(ming)
I've been looking at inline scripture references most of my life. You know what I mean: they look like this (Gal. 3:2).
From now on, at least in everything I post, they'll look a bit more like this. Unless of course the significance of the quote warrants that it be handled:
Online resources have made it redundant to insert inline references. Ordinarily I'd say let's put them there anyway "just in case". But I've always found they take me out of the writer's train of thought. And when anything is a hurdle to comprehension, we welcome its banishment.
So if you want to see a proof text from now on, click away.
From now on, at least in everything I post, they'll look a bit more like this. Unless of course the significance of the quote warrants that it be handled:
"Like this, and this, and this."in which case it will be quoted in full. Usually when I post, from the English Standard Version.
Online resources have made it redundant to insert inline references. Ordinarily I'd say let's put them there anyway "just in case". But I've always found they take me out of the writer's train of thought. And when anything is a hurdle to comprehension, we welcome its banishment.
So if you want to see a proof text from now on, click away.
In Need of Analysis: What Makes a Good Hymn?
It’s a question about which I have lots of ideas and few
definitive answers.
Instinctively I am drawn to lyrical authenticity, biblical
content, three to four verses max (or my voice wears out) and a decent melody, not so quick or difficult that the average person can’t
sing it. That’s important, I think. Take On Me, for instance, is a pretty pop song by the Norwegian band a-ha, with a soaring chorus. As the melody of a hymn it would be excruciating.
I dislike dirges and choruses that sound cheesy or dated to
me. I dislike anything trite. If it sounds like a sales pitch, a pep rally, or
frivolous, I’d rather not, thanks.
Thursday, January 02, 2014
Inbox: How Can God Allow Evil?
A reader emails a thought on a post earlier this week:
“There’s more to be said on this subject: What would a situation look like in which human beings were fallen, but creation itself was not? Or what would a situation look like wherein evil type 1 (human evil) would be present but evil type 2 (i.e. ‘natural’ evils like earthquakes and cancer) were not possible?
Wednesday, January 01, 2014
How Can God Allow Evil?
People who wonder how a loving God could allow people to go
to hell often pose this question as well. But the very act of asking it
defeats the argument, for the first question assumes that God judges too
harshly, the other that He does not judge harshly enough!
Where Evil Grows
Where Evil Grows
Evil does not float around unattached, like a big black
cloud over the earth. Rather, evil originates in men’s hearts and is committed by men. Sin and death came into
the world when Adam disobeyed God in Eden. God could have destroyed mankind
then, but He chose to redeem us instead.