The most recent version of this post is available here.
▼
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
Monday, January 30, 2017
Ship of Fools, or The Titanic Arrogance of Postmodernity
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Sunday, January 29, 2017
The Uncompassionate Christ
“When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.”
“… and coming to his hometown he taught them in their synagogue, so that they were astonished, and said, “Where did this man get this wisdom and these mighty works?” … And he did not do many mighty works there.”
You see the problem, of course. A mere four chapters on in our narrative, the “compassionate” Jesus of Matthew 9 by-and-large withholds the benefit of his healing powers from the very people with whom he grew up.
What are we to make of this?
Saturday, January 28, 2017
The Blind Spot
If that seems an unlikely scenario, don’t laugh. It can
absolutely happen.
It’s next-to-impossible to miss when a speaker goes off the rails doctrinally from the
pulpit at 11:30 on a Sunday morning. Whether
it’s a pastor, a local Bible teacher or visiting preacher, a public pronouncement
that is wildly at odds with a church’s statement of faith will almost always
generate serious discussion and immediate blowback. If there’s any question as
to what was actually said, your soundman has probably got digital backup or
even video. One way or another, error that’s
visible and audible to all usually gets addressed.
But modern churches have a huge doctrinal blind spot.
Friday, January 27, 2017
Thursday, January 26, 2017
People Whom One Cannot Instruct
![]() |
Perhaps if we dropped this on their heads ... |
Why, you may ask?
Good question.
In an article entitled
“Personal Reflections on the History of CBMW and the State of the Gender Debate”,
Grudem asks
himself the same thing: “Why did I spend so much time on this?”
What he discovered is
that nobody’s listening. At least, nobody’s listening that wasn’t listening
already.
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
A Bowl of Fake Rights
Sure, the “right” to
almost anything, duly constitutionalized and conferred upon us by government,
can be created out of thin air provided there is sufficient public demand. But
in the absence of heavenly authority, state-enshrined rights are both morally
incoherent and logically inconsistent. In practice they are largely unenforceable.
In short, fake.
The hottest new fake
right on the block has to be the “right not to be offended”.
Tuesday, January 24, 2017
A House In Order
“Thus says the Lord, ‘Set your house in order, for you shall die; you shall not recover.’ ”
Isaiah’s prophetic directions to Hezekiah were pretty
specific to his own situation. Most of us do not get a heavenly heads-up before
our final exit from this life (although a few of us get sufficient advance warning
from circumstances and surgeons to nearly qualify).
Still, all of us would be well served to apply Isaiah’s instructions to our own situations.
Monday, January 23, 2017
Judeo-Christianity
Now, I should probably explain. For those
who don’t know, the Reformed Tradition in Judaism is the most “open” and modern
segment of the Community. Quite a number of Reformed Jews are former Gentiles,
or married to Gentiles. In fact, you could easily meet, or being going to
school with, or working with a Reformed Jew, and never know what his or her
religious practices were at all. They’re very well integrated into Western life.
The class was intended to further improve
understanding between the most tolerant Jews and the rest of our society. The rabbi
who taught the class was charming, intelligent and personable. He was also very
helpful in laying out the practices and traditions of modern Judaism to a
Gentile audience. He knew his stuff, and I liked him. (I’m sorry to say I hear
he’s passed on now.)
Sunday, January 22, 2017
The Commentariat Speaks (8)
TechCrunch editor John Biggs mourns the fact that social media is no longer a place where you can air an
opinion without fear of adverse consequences:
“Our
errant Twitter thoughts can make us targets and we often don’t know we’re being
watched. A prominent writer and friend recently mused about what would happen
if he posted some political rants. The first thing that leapt to his readers’
minds was the potential for SWATing and doxing and then a visit from the
FBI. Then, as evidenced by the above CEO example, you get fired.
Social
media has become a very real, very visceral, and very censorial force and it
can now only worsen the human condition.”
Now, none of this is news. Ironically, it’s
John Biggs’ fellow Democrat voters who fired the opening salvos in the online equivalent
of the nuclear arms race.
Saturday, January 21, 2017
I Mean It, I Swear
An international team of university researchers concludes that people who curse more are less likely to lie and may possess more
integrity than their politer peers.
What fascinates me about the study is not its rather
pedestrian conclusions, which are all too predictable given the initial assumptions of psychologist Gilad Feldman and his team. After all, garbage in, garbage out, right?
No, it’s really the assumptions they make about the
meaning of honesty that ought to cause Christians to stop and think.
Why? Because apparently the word no longer means what it
once did.
Ugh. Not again.
Friday, January 20, 2017
Thursday, January 19, 2017
That Wacky Old Testament (7)
There’s
nothing particularly “wacky” about the events of 2 Samuel 21, which
involve the capital punishment of seven Israelites for nothing more offensive than being blood relatives of the former King Saul.
A story like this may raise questions in our minds about the fairness of Israel’s
law, and thus the fairness of God himself.
I
had two major goals in mind in introducing our irregular but ongoing “Wacky Old
Testament” series: (1) to set some of the more perplexing commands and
events of the Old Testament in their historical context, thus making them more comprehensible
to the modern reader; and (2) to demonstrate the consistency of God’s character
from Testament to Testament. It may be trendy to portray Jesus as gentle and
loving, and Jehovah (or YHWH) as barbaric and bloody, but neither portrayal is
exactly on the nose.
Let’s
see if for once I’ve bitten off more than I can chew.
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Getting What We Deserve
Poor leaders. First we
put them on pedestals. Then we have a go at the pedestals with sledgehammers.
Leaders ride waves of
popularity and drown in waves of rejection. Often the trends of public opinion are
neither predictable nor rational. I know of exactly three people who, months
beforehand, accurately forecast the rise of Donald J. Trump to the presidency.
Everybody else just hoped — or much more frequently, snickered.
But when things go
wrong, it is not always just bad leadership that is to blame.
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Quote of the Day (30)
If you’ve been reading here for any length
of time, you’ve almost surely noticed that in attempting to understand the
meaning of the any given Bible text, I am reluctant to allow too much weight to
the opinion of historians.
This is not because I automatically suspect
all historians of having agendas, even though the politicization of history is
arguably more pervasive than the politicization of science. Science deals (or
ought to deal) in events we can replicate experimentally, and should in theory
be far less likely to cede territory to the circumscriptions of PC ideologues
than should the humanities.
But practitioners of the hard sciences are now
demonstrating almost daily that even they cannot always be trusted to stick to
the facts. It would be imprudent for us to exercise greater faith in
historians, notwithstanding their relabeling of history as a “social science”.
Monday, January 16, 2017
Sunday, January 15, 2017
Saturday, January 14, 2017
Hobbits In a Land of Dragons
We are hobbits in a
land of dragons.
(Properly, I suppose, we should say, “in the land of THE dragon,” but since Satan has innumerable minions doing his bidding, we would not be out of line to assume they are of similar character.)
(Properly, I suppose, we should say, “in the land of THE dragon,” but since Satan has innumerable minions doing his bidding, we would not be out of line to assume they are of similar character.)
It’s impossible to
know precisely how much of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth was intended to
allegorize the Christian experience, and in the end the answer is unimportant.
Tolkien’s faith, like that of any believing writer, informed both the plot of his
epic fantasy and his imaginary characters, intentionally or otherwise. At least
in part he wrote what he knew, and it seems to me that one of the things he
knew best was salt-of-the-earth, slightly out-of-touch, decent, ordinary men
and women going about their business without ruffling a lot of feathers.
Not that there’s
anything wrong with that.
Friday, January 13, 2017
Thursday, January 12, 2017
Joy In Action
The precise linguistic distinction between
joy and rejoicing is a matter I’ll leave to others, but it is fair to say that
joy is most often understood to be an inward response of the spirit, a feeling
we may or may not have.
So it is that David can say, “Restore unto
me the joy of your salvation.” David rightly recognizes that a full and trusting reliance
on God ought to produce an inward joy, a joy which sin mutes. So too in the New
Testament we read, “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.”
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Tuesday, January 10, 2017
Practical Doctrine, and Other Clarifications
![]() |
The sermon didn’t really go on until 2:00. It just felt that way. |
I must confess that at
the time I was a little unsympathetic. I figured it was kind of a “girl way” of conceding
they weren’t spiritually up to the job of making the effort to decipher what
the speaker was saying. You know, like “We don’t do math.” That kind of thing.
I thought, “Why don’t you just ask your husbands at home then?”
I wasn’t always as
nice as I am today. Hard to believe, I know.
Monday, January 09, 2017
Confounding Expectations
The meme tweaks the
Powers That Be for their persistent unwillingness to attribute terror attacks throughout
the West to their actual cause — Islamic jihad. As each new incident breaks, TradMedia, Lefty virtue signalers
and our designated Elected Obscurantists one-up each other in cheerful
speculation that THIS TIME it’s one of those dreaded neo-Nazis they’re always
carping on about. And each time, greater numbers of perfectly normal news buffs
with working memories and the ability to process reality without the aid of a PC
filter respond with bemused mockery: “Aaaaaaand ... it’s Muslims.” Which to
date it is.
During the reign of
King David of Israel, there was probably a similar chorus: “Aaaaaaand ... it’s
the Benjaminites.” Because it always was.
Sometimes we develop
expectations about others for very good reasons.
Sunday, January 08, 2017
Exam Return
A little earlier I had been listening to a meditation on the way the Lord Jesus communicated truth to his disciples. On a number
of occasions the speaker recognized in the Lord’s technique what he called the “Teach-Test” method, and
gave a few examples that seemed to bear out what he was saying.
Good enough so far.
Saturday, January 07, 2017
Ask Not For Whom Rob Bell Tolls
Universalists, as I mentioned in a previous post, are people who wrongly believe everyone, no matter how willfully and
determinately wicked, will eventually be saved.
Popular pastor/author Rob Bell has been called a
universalist, though I don’t believe he describes himself that way. His book Love Wins is arguably the most well-read
recent exploration of the subject, stirring up a fair bit of evangelical dust upon its release in 2011. However, if you want to argue fine points of universalist
doctrine (or even broad strokes), Bell’s not your guy. Even his most ardent
supporters (like Greg Boyd) admit Bell prefers asking questions to providing stringent proofs, and is more
of a “poet/artist/dramatist” with a “fantastic gift for communicating in ways
that inspire creativity and provoke thought” than an actual Bible teacher.
Too bad, really. Those of us waiting for a well-reasoned, serious
defense of universalism from scripture will continue to keep our eyes peeled.
Friday, January 06, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: He Made Them Male and Female
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Thursday, January 05, 2017
Not a Fairy Tale
Comedian Linda Beatty has a weekly atheist comedy web show called The Bible and Other Fairy Tales, from which we may safely conclude Linda, like many other atheists, has never actually
read the Old Testament.
The real Bible is full of people displaying
contradictory, often self-defeating behavior. There are few squeaky-clean Cinderella
types, and few transparently evil stepsisters. Rarely are its characters
utterly and irredeemably wicked. Rarely are they entirely faithful, wise and
obedient. They are real, flawed human beings, driven by their passions, often
displaying surprising decency or brutal inhumanity within a few paragraphs of
each other.
Fairy tales these are not.
Wednesday, January 04, 2017
The Commentariat Speaks (7)
“ ‘The
Bible was codified and given to the world by the Catholic Council of Nicaea in
the 4th century. It’s indisputable. The Catholic Church gave us the Bible.’
‘Er ... so what? Think God couldn’t have managed if they didn’t?’ ”
— Exchange in a website commentary
Miracles are rare things. If they weren’t,
more people would believe in them. How many have there been? Christian Answers lists 124, some of which I think are a little dubious. About Religion lists 37 different miracles attributed to the Lord Jesus, but we
know he did many more. When Jesus went through Galilee healing “every disease and every affliction among the people”, that had to seriously bump up the number.
The answer is probably in the tens of thousands.
Tuesday, January 03, 2017
Lies That Sound Like Truth
It’s getting harder
and harder to figure out what’s really going on, isn’t it? This week, I’ve tried to navigate my way through two very different propaganda minefields.
The first is a brief speech from President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin in which he lectures the West on its departure from Christian morality. Pure,
ironic gold.
The second is an uncharacteristic opinion piece from the pen of Lefty billionaire and master manipulator George Soros, who usually lurks in the shadows behind paid
political operatives when trying to tip the scales of American public opinion. But nobody flushed
more money down the drain in November’s election than George Soros, and in this op-ed he purports to tell us why.
Both Putin and Soros assure
us they are determined to save Western civilization — by precisely opposite means.
Monday, January 02, 2017
Sunday, January 01, 2017
Forever Doesn’t Mean Forever Anymore
Universalists are a funny bunch. They’d like everyone, no matter how willfully and resolutely horrible, to be saved in the end. Not a bad desire, in one sense. It certainly appears a loving and even-handed approach, provided we don’t apply a microscope to it and examine its implications too carefully.
So universalists read scripture to conform with their fantasy, redefining words as necessary and explaining the meaning of difficult verses in what seem to me to be very unnatural ways.
Thing is, they’re not always wrong.