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Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Flyover Country: 2 Thessalonians
The day of the Lord remains a touchy subject among
Christians. Some believers (I among them) look for its fulfillment at a
future date. Others insist it occurred in A.D. 70 at the destruction of
Jerusalem.
The book of 2 Thessalonians is part of this ongoing
discussion, though not directly. Because it was written prior to A.D. 70,
it cannot possibly settle the matter beyond dispute. When the apostle Paul wrote to
the Thessalonians, both purported “fulfillments” were still future.
And yet, even well before A.D. 70, some Christians were
claiming the day of the Lord had already come. That is the error Paul’s second
letter was written to refute.
Monday, December 30, 2019
Anonymous Asks (73)
Infogalactic says, “A born-again virgin is a person who, after having engaged in sexual intercourse, makes some
type of commitment not to be sexually active again ... whether for religious, moral, practical, or other reasons.”
Like many ideas floating around evangelical churches today,
the concept contains elements of both truth and error.
Sunday, December 29, 2019
Two Wrongs
I was sure I had written at length some time recently about
King Saul’s attempted ethnic cleansing of the Gibeonites and the grisly
complications it produced during the reign of his successor, but I see no
evidence of such an exercise on the blog.
2,223 posts, and no significant exploration of the
subject.* I promise I wasn’t intentionally dodging a bullet.
Well, let’s rectify that.
Saturday, December 28, 2019
Time and Chance (16)
We all know people who we think work too hard. But what is “too
hard” really? If we are honest, it’s a bit of a subjective call.
John the Baptist got by on locusts and wild honey, and was
happy with one coat of camel’s hair and a leather belt. It’s pretty clear he
didn’t have a day job. The Son of Man had nowhere to lay his head, and while he
certainly labored non-stop, it was not with a view to acquiring earthly possessions.
Still, nowhere in scripture do we find the expectation that all should live
life the way Jesus or John lived. In fact, one of
the reasons both John and the Lord Jesus were morally free to devote their
lives to their respective missions was that they had incurred no earthly
financial obligations to others.
For most of us, life is a bit more complicated. Not better,
necessarily, but certainly more complicated.
Friday, December 27, 2019
Thursday, December 26, 2019
The Least Worst Option
Christianity Today’s December 19 online edition
contains an editorial unambiguously entitled
“Trump Should Be Removed from Office”, in which Mark Galli takes aim at the President of the United States. I managed
to miss it until now. Adam Ford did not.
While Galli’s strong stand will surely generate serious
pushback from more than a few of his readers (after all, the president won 81%
of the evangelical vote in 2016), CT’s editor-in-chief had already
announced his upcoming retirement early in 2020. Thus, it will fall to Galli’s
successor to manage whatever fallout his political posturing may produce.
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
What We Don’t Know
We know it’s the celebration of the day that the Savior of the world was born. We know he was later to become a great
moral teacher. Most of us also know he was later to give up his life at
Calvary, to pay the price of our sins and to redeem us to God. And many of us
also know he was to be raised again and exalted to God’s right hand, a King to
return and reign. This is all open to us, because we have the history of it. And
while much remains for us to understand, still, much is revealed about all that.
For the rest, we wait in faith.
But at this time of year we tend to think of Jesus Christ in a different way: not as a great moral teacher, nor as the
“man of sorrows” suffering for the sins of the world, nor as the resurrected
Lord and returning Judge, but rather as a baby.
And that’s a pretty baffling thing, when you think about it.
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
My First and Last Christmas Play
I really don’t care for Christmas plays.
Choral programs are tolerable because they at least have Christmas carols, and no matter how often
those things get recycled you can’t begrudge people all their traditions. Anyway,
some of those carols are quite nice.
But the plays! How many times must I witness people flouncing
around in bathrobes, talking like no one in 1st century Israel ever did? How
many rickety mangers occupied by plastic baby dolls must one endure? In some places
they even parade up some recent mother from the congregation, towing along her
screaming newborn, and the old ladies in the front row melt. Then there’s the
angelic choir of five teenagers wrapped in shower curtains and crowned with
coat-hanger haloes …
To employ the appropriate phrase, “Oy vey.”
Monday, December 23, 2019
Sunday, December 22, 2019
The Trinity (and Other Committees)
Last week I spent a torturous hour and a half
completing an online job safety training module. Since the company I work for has more than 15 employees, provincial law requires that we have a safety committee. So every time a new
government rolls out a new initiative or an old one decides to ‘refresh’ their documentation
(code for ‘same thing, new wrapper’), the byproducts of their boardroom discussions eventually filter down to me.
I suppose if you have to be on a committee, the Job Safety Committee is the one to volunteer for. Coffee and donuts monthly for doing …
not much. Finding a spot to hang the first aid kit, I suspect. In case a paper cut really, really bleeds.
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Time and Chance (15)
The expression “keeping up with the Joneses” may have originated
with the 1913 comic strip of the same name, but more likely was coined in
reference to a family of mid-19th century New York bankers known for
their conspicuous consumption.
Either way, it means envy. If my neighbors have one, then
I must have one too ... and preferably a bigger, better and glossier
model. And to keep consuming, I need more money.
Solomon had this figured out long before there were any
Joneses to keep up with.
Friday, December 20, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: Sexual Morality and Civilization
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Thursday, December 19, 2019
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
The New New Atheism
Chris Hall of AlterNet has a special announcement to make: “Hitchens, Dawkins and Harris are old news. A totally different atheism is on the rise.”
This even newer New Atheism is all about social justice. Hall
sums it up this way:
“The activists who insist that atheism address matters of social
justice are not distracting the movement from its purpose or being divisive;
they are insisting it deliver on the promises that attracted so many of us to
it in the first place.”
If the most significant promise of atheism is social
justice, I can’t wait to see atheism try to deliver. It seems to me that an
absence of belief (or belief in an Absence), is in a pretty poor position to
promise much of anything.
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
Flyover Country: 1 Thessalonians
I’m not sure we need another ongoing series of posts at the
moment, but a couple of friends have been after me for a while to do a series where
each post summarizes a single book of the Bible in one go; an overview that would
serve to highlight their themes and most important feature(s).
I’ve resisted this initially because there are
so many such
things online
already. Then I looked more closely and realized
some are more useful than others. Some are so brief and random they might as well be tweets, and a few really are.
I’ll aspire to usefulness at least. Execution is another
story ...
Monday, December 16, 2019
Anonymous Asks (71)
“Is God mad at me?”
Hmm.
The doctrinal portion of the apostle Paul’s letter to the Romans begins with these words:
“The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all
ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth.”
Sunday, December 15, 2019
Why Didn’t Jesus Marry?
It’s the fiftieth anniversary of the Tim Rice/Andrew Lloyd
Webber rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar
in 2020. Bet you didn’t know that. I had to look it up.
For readers who weren’t around in 1970, this pithy summary from GotQuestions is pretty much
on-the-nose: “It is an attempt to rewrite history. It makes the traitor Judas
Iscariot a victim and reduces the Lord Jesus Christ to a burnt-out celebrity
who is in over his head.”
I never saw Superstar
back in the day, but a few of the older guys in my mid-’70s youth group loved
the soundtrack and played it to death at our basement get-togethers. The
experience was musically painful and theologically teeth-grinding.
Saturday, December 14, 2019
Time and Chance (14)
There is a certain apparent randomness to hurricanes, cancer
and car accidents. There is nothing at all random about oppression. Oppression
is something one human being deliberately inflicts on another, and for which
the oppressor will one day give an account.
A hurricane does not have to explain itself, or pay some
future price for the havoc and misery it has produced. An oppressor certainly
will.
Friday, December 13, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: Made for More of What?
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Tom: Immanuel Can
is sending me bad things again. And I’m not entirely sure how to respond. This
time it’s Moody Publishers’ “Post Sunday”, in which Moody extols one of its new
releases. This one is a Hannah Anderson special in which the author holds forth
on the “lameness” of the church. Okay, I can’t stop there: the church is lame (according
to Hannah) because she has crippled herself. In the words of Ms Anderson,
we have failed to equip “Bible women” because we “don’t have a vision for how God
could use them for His glory.”
Help me out here: what are “Bible women”?
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Bring on the Philistines
“Then all the tribes of Israel came to David at Hebron and said,
‘Behold, we are your bone and flesh. In times past, when Saul was king over
us, it was you who led out and brought in Israel. And the Lord said
to you, “You shall be shepherd of my people Israel, and you shall be
prince over Israel.” ’ ”
A little Bible history may remind us what a mealy-mouthed,
disingenuous endorsement this really is. At this point, David has been ruling as king over
Judah in Hebron for a full 7-1/2 years, while the tribes of Israel now
buttering him up have been engaged in bitter civil war against him, with
Ish-bosheth son of Saul as their chosen king and the tribe of Benjamin as the
power behind the throne.
Unfortunately both Ish-bosheth and his powerful and popular
general Abner are now dead. They won’t be governing anyone or delivering them
from their enemies.
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
Women in the Old Testament
If you have never studied history in any serious depth, you
might be forgiven for thinking that some of things that went on ancient
Israelite households were absolutely barbaric, that wives and daughters were
horribly oppressed, lacked agency, were regarded as mere chattel, and lived
lives of virtual slavery.
Careful attention to the text of the Old Testament shows
this was rarely the case.
Monday, December 09, 2019
Anonymous Asks (70)
“Does God love everyone?”
The answer to this
question may initially seem so obvious as to render further commentary a bit
pointless. If there is a better-known Bible verse than John 3:16,
I cannot think what it might be. Maybe a line from Psalm 23.
In any case, as the Lord told Nicodemus, “God so loved the world.”
There you are. God loves everyone. Full stop.
Or does he? And if he does, in what sense does he love everyone, and what does that mean for the
objects of his love?
Sunday, December 08, 2019
The Other Side of the Story
One thing you will likely notice as you read through the Bible’s
books of history is that they are not saturated with editorial comments. That
is to say the Holy Spirit did not prompt the writers of scripture’s various
histories to pass moral judgment on many, even most, of the events they
recounted.
There are several notable instances in which he did.
Saturday, December 07, 2019
Time and Chance (13)
What distinguishes man from other mammals?
Charles Darwin famously argued that the difference in mind between mankind and the higher animals
is one of degree and not of kind. In other words, we have all the same basic intellectual material to work with.
Humans just have more of it.
Indeed, this can seem like a tricky question if you’re asked
it in the middle of watching a YouTube video of an elephant enthusiastically
playing piano, or a setter and a pigeon who appear to be best pals. Not all
this stuff is staged.
Friday, December 06, 2019
Thursday, December 05, 2019
Wednesday, December 04, 2019
Wikipedia vs. Baptism
If there is a more misunderstood Christian practice in all
of the New Testament, I cannot think what it might be. I suspect even speaking in tongues can’t touch it with respect to the degree of confusion
produced by the teaching about it currently circulating.
How widespread and how deeply rooted are the misconceptions surrounding baptism? I suppose one might look at different denominational
opinions on the subject and assess them one by one, but I’m really more
interested in what the man on the street (and perhaps even in the pew) thinks
than in esoteric positions held by theologians that have failed to make an
impression on the masses.
Tuesday, December 03, 2019
On Incoherence
Ideological incoherence is the hallmark of the political Left.
The Right has its own problems with consistency, of course,
and they are not trivial, but it is getting increasingly difficult to keep pace
with people who maintain the right to life for murderers and roast beef
sandwiches while upholding the right to kill human babies in the womb. What can
one say about folks who maintain diversity is strength ... except when it
is ideological diversity, of course. What can we say about people who argue for
the supremacy of science ... except when genetics plainly tells us a man is
a man and a woman is a woman. Then science is right out to lunch.
Well, we can say Christians are probably way too much like
them for our own good.
Monday, December 02, 2019
Anonymous Asks (69)
“If it is true that ‘whoever says, “You fool!” will be liable to the hell of fire,’ then why did both Jesus and his apostles call people fools?”
Normally the questions answered in this series of posts come from anonymous sources, all of whom are (at least
to the best of my knowledge) actual people. Their problems may be real or
hypothetical (or, in at least one case, just plain old trolling), but
I answer them here because their writers make a decent effort to submit questions
we have good reason to believe might be of concern to our readers or people
they know.
In this case, I freely admit I submitted this one to myself just for the dubious pleasure of working
it through.
Sunday, December 01, 2019
The Perils of Family Ties
Most books of the Bible have themes. Commentators generally do
a decent job of teasing out the more blatant ones and turning them into book
titles or pithy summaries. Thus Psalms is “the hymnbook of the remnant”, Hebrews
is concerned with “an unshakeable kingdom” and Mark’s is said to be the “gospel
of the Servant King”. To their credit,
in many cases these diligent students of God’s word also identify and share
with us less obvious recurring patterns that could easily be missed by first,
second and even third time readers.
In the books of Samuel, one of these recurring patterns is nepotism. It might
not rate the subtitle of a commentary, but it’s there all the same, threading its
way through the stories of Samuel, Saul and David, chronicling the perils of
family ties that are just a wee bit too tight, and their potentially injurious effects on the people of God.
Once you see it, you can’t stop seeing it.
Saturday, November 30, 2019
Time and Chance (12)
Where does the concept of a final judgment come from?
If you do a Google search or consult an online concordance, you can hardly fail to notice that the vast majority of Bible verses dealing with the subject are to be found in the New Testament. Men
seem to have always taken for granted that some kind of ultimate reckoning was inevitable,
but there is a surprising dearth of clear teaching on the subject in the earliest
books of the word of God.
In fact, we do not find incontestable references to a final,
general judgment appearing in scripture much prior to the 10th century B.C.
Friday, November 29, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: How We Live and What We Believe
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Colin Perkel of The National Post
has an update here on
our old friend Gretta Vosper, the United Church minister who believes in neither God nor the Bible. She is, in
Perkel’s words, “prepared to fight an unprecedented attempt to boot her from
the pulpit for her beliefs.” Or her unbeliefs, I guess.
Tom: The attempt by the United Church to give Gretta her gold watch and wish her all the best in
her future endeavors may be unprecedented, but it’s hardly a surprise, except
perhaps in that the United Church is taking some sort of stand here about
atheism in their pulpits.
Immanuel Can, does “the idea of an interventionist,
supernatural being on which so much church doctrine is based” belong to “an
outdated world view”? More importantly, can we separate how we live from what
we believe? Gretta thinks we can and should.
Thursday, November 28, 2019
In Need of Analysis: Wake Up and Smell the Potpourri
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Inbox: Qualified Omniscience
“The word of the Lord came to Samuel: ‘I regret that I have made Saul king, for he has turned back from following me and has not performed my commandments.’ ”
“It is apparent this type of statement does not present a problem to you
but it might to the newcomer. It seems to contradict or at least not explain the
presumption or notion of God’s omniscience. How can God regret something that
he is, by definition, aware of from the beginning?”
Q’s email arrived just as I was sitting down to pick out a topic for today’s post.
We may have to change his name to “On-Cue Man”. There’s more to his missive,
including thoughts-in-progress about how such a conundrum might be resolved,
which you can find here, at the original post.
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Demons and Daily Living
Stand to Reason columnist Alan Shlemon
writes:
“To be honest, I believe in Satan and demons, but my belief in
them makes little difference in how I live. There are two reasons for
that. One, I often feel awkward talking about them for fear that people
might think I’m (spiritually) weird. Two, I don’t know exactly what they
do and what I can do to affect their activity.”
I think this is fairly common among Christians. More than a
few of us would confess that the oddballs who speak constantly of
demonic oppression or the “works of Satan” spook us just a little a bit.
Does belief in demons affect how we live? Not really, at
least not in any way we’d notice. Should it? That’s another question.
Monday, November 25, 2019
Anonymous Asks (68)
“Can Christians use essential oils and aromatherapy?”
Today’s question is about a couple of modern trends, but
could well be about almost anything that is not intrinsically evil. “Can
Christians dance?” “Can Christians listen to popular music?” “Can Christian
girls wear Lululemons?” “Can Christians eat pork?”
The same biblical principles will help us with answering just about any “Can Christians [fill in the blank]?”
question.
Sunday, November 24, 2019
Grace to the Undeserving
“May the Lord be with you, as he has been with my father.”
Jonathan, son of Israel’s first king, said these words to
David, who would become Israel’s second king. If you know the story, it may
initially appear he was laying on the irony so thick it required a backhoe, or
at least a team of oxen. His father Saul had a history we might optimistically
describe as checkered: initially anointed and blessed by God, but characterized
by rebellion and self-will. Told that he was to be rejected from being king, he fought God all the way.
He never seemed to realize he was fighting a losing
battle. That tells you everything you need to know about Saul.
Saturday, November 23, 2019
Time and Chance (11)
In interpreting any given statement in Ecclesiastes, we are
wise to look carefully at the Preacher’s current train of thought. Unlike the book of
Proverbs, for the most part Ecclesiastes is not a collection of unrelated bits
of wisdom. It is primarily an orderly series of arguments and observations.
Even where the direction of the writer’s thought flow does
not immediately jump out at us and we are tempted to think he may have drifted
off topic, he inevitably loops back to his theme. It is more than likely, then,
that the meaning of any obscure thing the Preacher says may be at very least
tangentially connected to his larger subject, as opposed to coming at us right
out of the blue.
Knowing this is fairly helpful when we consider our next two verses.
Friday, November 22, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: Globalism and Censorship
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
![]() |
The tree of the knowledge of good and evil? |
[This post is slightly over four years old, but is starting to look a bit prescient in some respects and a little naive in others — Ed.]
Two legal rulings I came across this week have implications
not just for this blog, but for all Christians on the internet.
The first is a ruling from European Union regulators that
internet users in its member states have a “right to be forgotten”. Google has complied by instructing all its Blogger
users worldwide to post a notice giving EU users information about the use
of cookies on blogs originating in Canada, the US and everywhere else. In
Europe, 90,000 requests for the removal of links and stories are already
being processed and European regulators are now arguing the removals should be
global, not just in Europe.
Thursday, November 21, 2019
Ship of Fools, or The Titanic Arrogance of Postmodernity
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Wednesday, November 20, 2019
A Better Idea
In theory, all genuine believers agree God knows best. How could he not? He
made man from the dust of the earth. He
knows us inside and out. Everything we encounter in life is the direct product of interaction with
a system God created and which he
actively maintains. The New Testament even tells us that we have
a sympathetic advocate in the Lord Jesus, one who understands what it feels like to encounter
temptation. Right and wrong are not mere abstractions to him; he knows the practical and emotional cost of choosing the good, every single time.
Of course he knows best. Who could possibly argue?
And yet, when the will of God is revealed to us, almost
everyone at one time or another has a ‘better’ suggestion to offer. Our bright ideas
do not all spring from exactly the same motives, but they are inferior all the
same, sometimes appallingly so.
Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Doesn’t Always Mean What We Think It Means (4)
Sometimes Christians make arguments which are broadly correct, but wrong in the specifics. They reach the right conclusions, but
do it by wrong reasoning. More often than not, they do this by inadvertently making
false claims about the meaning of Greek or Hebrew words, usually for lack of careful
research.
Now, it may be argued that perhaps this sort of error is not
a big deal, since the listener gets to the correct place in the end regardless
of the road used to get him there. Unfortunately, one of two things occurs: (1) the
listener cannot navigate to his interpretive destination again without his
misguided mentor, or (2) he can, and in doing so he too becomes a
proponent of errors in method, if not actual errors in doctrine.
Either outcome is undesirable.
Monday, November 18, 2019
Anonymous Asks (67)
“Are intrusive thoughts sin?”
Intrusive thoughts can be distracting, distressing and very,
very hard to get rid of. They keep us from focusing on things we know are more
important, and things we really need to deal with. They raise issues we are eager to put to bed. They make us question whether we have truly forgiven
others, and whether we even have full control of our own faculties.
Intrusive thoughts are certainly a pain. But are they
sinful? Good question.
Sunday, November 17, 2019
You Could’ve Just Asked
Some people approach God as if he is mechanical rather than
personal; as if checking all the right religious boxes will get you what you
want out of him, after which you can happily go on your way until the next time
you need something.
It’s not specifically a Catholic thing, an Orthodox thing,
or a Protestant thing, but it’s definitely a thing. The tendency to view
God as a stimulus-response Being on a cosmic scale can infect even the most theoretically-liberated
evangelical heart.
Saturday, November 16, 2019
Time and Chance (10)
What does it mean that God has “put eternity into man’s
heart”? The statement is baffling and comprehensible in near-equal parts.
It is impossible to imagine mere human beings are capable of
any substantive grasp of the transcendent or even the nature of our own being. That’s
the baffling part. We are not fully equipped to understand ourselves, let alone
anything more significant. We are more animals than angels: tiny, exceedingly finite beings concerned primarily with matters of comparative
trivia.
The comprehensible part is that on some undefined level we
all understand that the Preacher’s statement is true. We know it because we feel it.
Friday, November 15, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: Nonsense That Remains Nonsense
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Thursday, November 14, 2019
Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Order in Disorder
The book of Judges records some of the most distasteful
tales in all of scripture, and does so unflinchingly and without a great deal
of unnecessary editorializing. There is much we can learn about human nature
from the first few hundred years of Israel’s possession of the land God had
promised to Abraham, almost all of it predictably bad. Few would dispute that
the book ends on the lowest of low notes, with the oft-repeated declaration
that “In those days there was no king in Israel” and the rare editorial
conclusion, “Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.”
As we might expect, everyone’s “right” turned out to be
spectacularly wrong.
Tuesday, November 12, 2019
The Point of the Exercise
It is God who confers authority, but he doesn’t do it for its own sake.
Sure, a position of authority often comes with side helpings:
popularity, riches, dignity, power, a (usually temporary) legacy ... and (in
Old Testament times at least) a bunch of wives. But these are baubles. They are
not the point of the exercise. Other things come with authority too: abuse,
rebellion, heckling and a horrible, frequently harrowing level of responsibility —
but let’s not get into those.
My point is that it is always and only the WORK that matters
to God, not the status or other benefits that authority confers.
Monday, November 11, 2019
Anonymous Asks (66)
“Did Jesus have brothers and sisters?”
I’m going to answer this as if it reads “earthly brothers and sisters”. In other words, literal
siblings, children from the womb of the same mother. We all know of situations in which the words “brothers” and “sisters”
are used figuratively in everyday language, particularly in a religious context.
In this case we will not bother talking at length about New Testament figurative
uses of “brother” or “sister”, as the answer is obvious enough to make this a
very short post indeed.
So let’s get the metaphorical usage out of the way quickly.
Sunday, November 10, 2019
Semi-Random Musings (17)
How many significant lessons have you absorbed from the
history of neighboring provinces or states back in the 1640s, and how often do
you reference them when making important decisions today? My guess would be not
too many, and not very often.
At the Red Sea, shortly after the final vanquishing of the
Egyptian army, Moses and the people of Israel sang these words to the Lord: “The
peoples have heard; they tremble; pangs have seized the inhabitants of Philistia.” Perhaps at the time that was more anticipatory than precisely accurate:
Philistia was all the way across the Sinai Peninsula. It seems unlikely the
news of Pharaoh’s stunning defeat could have traveled so far so fast.
Saturday, November 09, 2019
Time and Chance (9)
The first eight verses of Ecclesiastes 3 are among the most famous in all of scripture. Go ahead, name another
#1 U.S. single with 3,000 year old lyrics. Even today, I find myself singing them in
my head rather than merely reciting them. They so obviously reflect reality that one wonders they even need to be stated, but such is the
nature of poetry. If we did not use these words, we would need others instead.
Still, there are probably one or two dusty old hippies
around who might be shocked to learn Pete Seeger was not their author.
Friday, November 08, 2019
Thursday, November 07, 2019
Wednesday, November 06, 2019
His Own Place
“Judas turned aside to go to his own place.”
I have often wondered what the apostles meant by saying that
Judas went to “his own place”.
I’m not the only one. For example, I’ve heard at least
one Bible teacher say from the platform that the apostles (or perhaps Luke,
the writer of Acts, in summing up their prayer in his own words) were sort of
hedging their bets; discreetly avoiding passing judgment on Judas’ fate since
they could not be 100% sure what had really happened to him. In this — or at
least so it is alleged — they are modeling for us Christian virtue.
I find that explanation weak tea.
Tuesday, November 05, 2019
They Did Not Know
“Now the sons of Eli were worthless men. They did not know the Lord.”
“Now Samuel did not yet know the Lord, and the word of the Lord had not yet been revealed to him.”
The first of these two editorial comments from the writer of
1 Samuel sheds a little light on an otherwise inexplicable feature of Christendom: that a non-trivial number of people who make their living from
full-time religious service are vile human beings. They care only for themselves, and in
catering to their own desires do great evil to their fellow men and women, even
casting doubt on the reality of Christ and the salvation he offers.
Monday, November 04, 2019
Anonymous Asks (65)
This is certainly a loaded question. We need to be quite clear that there is one — and only one — legitimate Christian outlet for sexual energy: a Christian marriage. The apostle Paul is
quite explicit about this. Marriage to a fellow believer is God’s remedy for the temptation toward sexual
immorality of all sorts.
As stated, our question of the day can only be answered one way: You can’t. If that sounds a tad draconian, perhaps a little perspective is in order.
Sunday, November 03, 2019
Saturday, November 02, 2019
Time and Chance (8)
Christians work not just because we are commanded to, or
because we enjoy it, or because we think toil is intrinsically meritorious. We
work because work serves a higher purpose.
One example: the apostle Paul reminded the Thessalonians, “[W]e worked night and day, that we might not be a burden to any of you, while we proclaimed to you the
gospel of God.” Paul, Silvanus and Timothy were deeply concerned about the
example they set for the people to whom they preached, and so they labored
ceaselessly to make sure their actions were consistent with their words, and
thus validated the principles and precepts they taught.
They did this, Paul says, out of affectionate desire. Their hearts were full of love, and so their toil was joyful and purposeful rather than vain and frustrating.
In this, Christians are more than a little unusual.
Friday, November 01, 2019
Thursday, October 31, 2019
Wednesday, October 30, 2019
The Purpose of the Sacrifices [Part 6]
Continuing an examination of the sacrifices of the Old
Testament. We started with what the sacrifices WERE NOT and are now examining
what they WERE.
In my last post we looked at the sacrifices as a reminder of
sins and asked why a constant reminder was necessary for God’s people.
But what other purposes did the sacrifices serve?
Tuesday, October 29, 2019
The Purpose of the Sacrifices [Part 5]
Continuing an examination of the sacrifices of the Old
Testament. We started with what the sacrifices WERE NOT and are now examining
what they WERE.
In my last post we examined the way in which the sacrifices
served the very practical purpose of providing food for God’s servants and
their families.
What other purposes did the sacrifices serve?