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Friday, October 26, 2018
Thursday, October 25, 2018
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
A Digression About Possession and Oppression
On my way to work this morning I stopped in at my local
A&W for a breakfast burger only to find a crazy person between me and the
cash register — or at least he was behaving that way. The three uniformed
employees were huddled behind the counter hoping not to get hit, the arms and
spit were flying, and the words were coming high volume and a mile a minute. He
kept repeating that he had come from jail and was on his way back there, and he
made it all seem quite believable.
I suspect he was looking to intimidate the staff into giving
him a free meal, but his demeanor had the opposite effect: nobody dared serve
him for fear he would sit down and eat his breakfast right there, and they’d
never get rid of him.
I gave him five bucks and he went away. Having a
conversation with him was impossible. There was nowhere to fit the words in,
and he wasn’t hearing anyway.
Labels:
Demon Possession
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Demons
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Satan
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Anonymous Asks (10)
“How can we know that God is actually real?”
That’s an interesting question, and one
that can be approached from a number of angles. The most obvious angle is
scientific knowledge. Can we prove in a lab that God exists? Of course not. We
can look into a microscope or up into a night sky and witness all kinds of
evidence that points to a Creator, but can we demonstrate his existence from
these things with 100% certainty to someone who doesn’t believe?
No, we should probably concede that we can’t.
Labels:
1 John
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Anonymous Asks
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Faith
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Knowledge
Monday, October 22, 2018
Patriots and Propagandists
The lack of historical perspective and context among the general public is not a new problem. It might
be at an all-time high today, though I doubt it; the earthly
powers-that-be always have practical reasons for sowing
confusion, and the spiritual Powers-That-Be even more so.
But even if ahistoricism is not setting some kind of new record, many of us have a legitimate
concern that the media narrative currently being pushed on us is profoundly
out of step with reality. Labeling modern conservatives “Nazis”, for instance, is either naive or remarkably devious.
Either way, it is politically
useful. Not accurate, but useful.
Labels:
Conservatism
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Ezekiel
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Leftism
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Politics
Sunday, October 21, 2018
Deprived of this Grace
I’ve been struck lately by the relevance of the Lord’s kingdom
parables to the whole issue of John Calvin’s concept of election.
You may have noticed that the Lord’s disciples appear to be
not entirely comfortable with the whole ‘parables’ concept. We know this
because they have to ask the Lord to explain the parables to them,
and enthuse about it when he does. They obviously find themselves on surer ground when he speaks “plainly” than
when he tells stories that require interpretation.
But the Lord explains the reason for parables to them in this way:
“To you has been given the secret of the kingdom of
God, but for those outside everything is in parables, so that ‘they may
indeed see but not perceive, and may indeed hear but not understand, lest they should turn and be forgiven.’ ”
On the face of it, this sounds terribly determinist, doesn’t it.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Mark
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Matthew
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Neo-Calvinism
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Parables
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Recycling
Saturday, October 20, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (29)
The book of Proverbs is one of the very few places in
scripture where context is generally unimportant — even useless. For Bible
students, that makes some of the more obscure individual proverbs a little difficult
to parse: we are reduced to looking up the meanings of individual Hebrew words,
comparing turns of phrase with other Old Testament books from the same period,
or resorting to internet explanations of traditional rabbinical renderings.
Or making wild guesses. I don’t recommend that approach.
All the same, if we were to assume Solomon never groups
proverbs together by subject for effect, we would be dead wrong.
Labels:
Arrogance
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Foolishness
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
Friday, October 19, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: How Do You Read It? (4)
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
2 Chronicles
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How Do You Read It
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 18, 2018
The Butler Did It
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Dependence
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Service
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Jews and Jews
I recently watched a comedian on YouTube trying to sort out what it is exactly that
makes a Jew a Jew. Having only minimal familiarity with the Old Testament, and
possessing almost no knowledge of modern Talmudic Judaism, the poor man was
entirely at sea, and eager for somebody to explain it to him.
I don’t blame him. The term is used multiple ways by different groups with different things in mind.
Sorting out the various claims to Jewishness is not easy, and I think it’s
fair to say the vast majority of modern users of the term either get it wrong
or use it in such an ambiguous and inconsistent way that nobody really knows what
they are talking about.
The biggest contributors to this confusion, oddly enough, are a certain subset of … er … Jews.
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Anonymous Asks (9)
“In the Trinity, we know the attributes of God and Jesus, but do we really know
many about the Holy Spirit?”
No. Next question.
Kidding, of course. But the question spotlights a truth quite plain to us if we read our Bibles attentively, and
that is that not every member of the Godhead gets equal time in the scriptures.
This is, I think, by design, and has to do with the nature of the Spirit’s
work. In fact, the Lord Jesus told his disciples, “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak
on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you.”
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Godhead
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Holy Spirit
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Trinity
Monday, October 15, 2018
Not About Me
Luke records a parable Jesus told about a persistent widow and an unrighteous judge. The point to be taken from it, Luke
says, is that we “ought always to pray and not lose heart”.
I have been reading that same parable over and over for half a century as if it has to do with my personal needs of the
day, or week, or month. Persist, we have been taught, and God will give you
the thing for which you beseech him. Can we get an amen, brothers and
sisters?
One of the things it takes some people
fifty years of praying to learn is this: prayer is not all about me.
Sunday, October 14, 2018
The Other Cheek
Turning the other cheek is never all that much fun, but
lately I’ve begun to see Christian restraint as something more than merely tactical.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus famously told his followers,
“If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.”
He did not tell them why, but we may reasonably infer that,
like the instruction to love our enemies, turning the other cheek
displays our family resemblance to our heavenly Father. (And, of course, there’s the bit in there about
reward, but
the less said about that the better; we wouldn’t want to look mercenary, would we?)
Labels:
Isaiah
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Lamentations
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Matthew
Saturday, October 13, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (28)
One of the richer veins of wisdom that may
be mined throughout Proverbs has to do with wealth: specifically, how to get
it, how to keep it, and the dangers of being seen to have too much of it for
other people’s tastes.
As Solomon puts it in Ecclesiastes, “Bread is made for laughter, and wine gladdens life, and
money answers everything.” Wealth is not the ONLY answer to life’s difficulties, and it’s certainly not
the BEST answer, but in nearly every situation (even serious illness), money offers
AN answer that those without it cannot allow themselves to even consider.
Without further ado, a sampling from this week’s chapter.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Money
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Proverbs
Friday, October 12, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: Atheists in Foxholes
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Atheism
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Death
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Faith
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 11, 2018
The Preponderance of the Evidence
“They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them.”
— Abraham
Anyone familiar enough with the Bible to know whether Abraham or Moses came first has almost surely also read Jesus’ story in
Luke 16 about the rich man and Lazarus, so I won’t need to explain to you how Abraham, who
lived and died more than 400 years before Moses, could speak intelligibly about
what either Moses or the Prophets wrote.
In the Lord’s story, Abraham is speaking from Paradise to a dead man in Hades, across the great chasm that divides the two.
Labels:
Decision-Making
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Luke
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Resurrection
Wednesday, October 10, 2018
Apocrypha-lypso: The Post-Game Show
“Scripture cannot be broken,” declared the Lord Jesus. He meant the Old Testament, of course; the New
Testament had yet to be written. Today, his words legitimately apply to our
entire Bible, but we must be careful not to hurl around the word “scripture”
too casually, or to knowingly go beyond what the Lord Jesus intended when he
made this powerful and sweeping claim.
My goal in examining the Apocrypha at
length was not merely to provide light entertainment by snidely dissing books
other people have found spiritually helpful. At the outset, I expressed the hope that the
exercise would help us better define what it is about the canonical Old Testament that “distinguishes
it from all the other religious writings, folktales, stories and myths with
which human history is replete,” and I trust we’ve made good on that to
some extent.
Nevertheless, it’s sometimes useful to spell these things out rather than expecting people to read between the lines.
Labels:
Apocrypha
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Apocrypha-lypso
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Bible
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Canonicity
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Textual Criticism
Tuesday, October 09, 2018
Anonymous Asks (8)
“If God doesn’t like suicide, isn’t what Jesus did kind of like that? Did God send
His Son to be murdered?”
Hmm. Maybe I’ll go with the second question first.
Peter’s message to the Jews at Pentecost was: “This Jesus, delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God,
you crucified and killed by the hands of lawless men.” That puts the responsibility for Christ’s death
squarely where it belongs, I think: God certainly delivered him up, but it was lawless
men that crucified and killed him. We can argue that God knew in advance that
his Son would be rejected and murdered, and this is certainly true, but
everyone involved in putting the Lord Jesus to death made a personal choice, from
Pilate to Herod to the soldiers who crucified him, most especially the Jews who
cried out repeatedly for his death.
As for suicide, well, that’s another story …
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Sacrifice
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Suicide
Monday, October 08, 2018
Apocrypha-lypso (12)
Throughout this series we’ve been examining ancient books that some non-Protestant Christians feel have
been wrongly excluded from our Bibles. I’ve read, summarized and critiqued eleven
of the most popular claimants to date, but there are plenty more out there, enough
to keep me at it well into the next decade.
Tempting as that may be, I won’t go down that road for several reasons: (1) the further down
into the Apocryphal jungle you travel, the feebler and less substantive the contestants
become, such that anyone reading them with the least discernment starts to feel
like the exercise of critiquing them is something akin to clubbing baby seals
on the beach, as opposed to putting up a valiant defence against plausible
error; (2) I promised to do a 12-part series, and I plan to keep that
pledge; and (3) the reasons for excluding books from the canon begin to
repeat themselves.
We wouldn’t want that. After all, figuring out which qualities make the canon the canon is pretty much
the point of the exercise, right?
Labels:
Apocrypha
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Apocrypha-lypso
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Daniel
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Prayer of Azariah
Sunday, October 07, 2018
Specific Enough for You?
Yahoo Answers fields a tough one:
“Were all bible prophesies [sic] written years after the events took place?”
Best Answer: Yes, the ‘prophecies’ in the bible are nothing that go beyond what a kid with knowledge about the world can’t predict. [I’m pretty sure he means “can” there — Ed.] Not to mention things that have always happened.”
That “best answer” is the sort of handwaving you often get from people who haven’t actually read and studied
the later books of the Old Testament. The prophets of Israel and Judah
frequently made predictions that go well beyond “things have have always
happened”.
Labels:
Higher Criticism
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Jeremiah
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The Captivity
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