No, really. This is a useful tool, if only as a window into the mindset of active disbelievers who are expending an awful lot of time and energy trying to turn others from faith in Christ.
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Saturday, June 03, 2017
Recommend-a-blog (24)
Are you a young Christian diligent in your
pursuit of truth, burrowing into the scriptures daily and digging up every
resource you can find on the side to explain those things you encounter there
that don’t initially make perfect sense to you?
Well, I’ve got just the thing for you: it’s
a new atheist app.
No, really. This is a useful tool, if only as a window into the mindset of active disbelievers who are expending an awful lot of time and energy trying to turn others from faith in Christ.
No, really. This is a useful tool, if only as a window into the mindset of active disbelievers who are expending an awful lot of time and energy trying to turn others from faith in Christ.
Labels:
Atheism
/
Interpretation
/
Recommend-a-blog
/
Scepticism
Friday, June 02, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Why I Don’t Share My Faith
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Tom: I’ve just finished wading through a list of reasons why Christians don’t
share their faith. Here’s what Daniel Darling says keeps him from spilling what
he knows about the person of Christ to a needy world:
- We don’t share our faith because we don’t realize we have a mission
- We don’t share our faith because we misunderstand our mission
- We don’t share our faith because we misunderstand the Holy Spirit’s mission
- We don’t share our faith because we misunderstand what it means to be a friend of the world
- We don’t share our faith because we are ashamed of our identity
Immanuel Can, when I fail to share my faith, it is usually because I’m scared of messing up my next line. So I overthink it, and suddenly the conversation is over and I’ve gotten nowhere significant.
Labels:
Evangelism
/
Obedience
/
Recycling
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
Witnessing
Thursday, June 01, 2017
History Told Twice
I’ve been enjoying a
book on the gospel of Luke (see an earlier post) that draws attention to the differences between the gospel records. Not those pesky “apparent contradictions”, but just differences in content and presentation.
Each inspired record
of the life of Christ has its own theme or themes. (In other news, water is wet.)
Labels:
Chronicles
/
History
/
Kings
/
Solomon
Wednesday, May 31, 2017
Letters from the Best Man (4)
The
following is absolutely fictional and increasingly common. There is no Brad and
definitely no Jill, in case that is not obvious. There are, however, way too
many people in their position.
Dear Brad,
Firstly, I’m so glad to hear that your
elders are comfortable with you breaking bread with God’s people despite the
conflicting stories about your marriage breakdown. That’s most encouraging and
speaks well of them, I think.
Secondly, no, I’m not really all that
surprised to hear that Jill has not yet given you legal notice of pending divorce
proceedings despite what she said in the letter she left behind.
Labels:
Divorce
/
Lawsuits
/
Letters from the Best Man
/
Marriage
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
Life in Suspended Animation
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christianity
/
Faith
/
Growing Up
/
Youth
Monday, May 29, 2017
Double Jeopardy
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christianity
/
Faith
/
Growing Up
/
Youth
Sunday, May 28, 2017
Who Hardened Whose Heart?
Scripture is rife with examples of the peculiar streak of human perversity that sets itself against the will of God to the bitter end. But even with all that competition, Pharaoh and his Egyptians must surely rank in the Top Ten.
Or do they? What about this verse:
“Then Israel came to Egypt; Jacob sojourned in the land of Ham. And the Lord made his people very fruitful and made them stronger than their foes. He turned their hearts to hate his people, to deal craftily with his servants.”
On the face of it, Christian determinists would seem to have good reason to jump on the words of the Psalmist and say, “Aha, you see, it
says that God ‘turned the hearts’ of the Egyptians to hate his people. They
didn’t have a choice!”
Except they did. Let’s look at why.
Saturday, May 27, 2017
Desultory Spiritual Noises
I wrote recently about
the subject of Christian confession in connection with Peter Ditzel’s comments on
1 John 1. Confession is how believers deal with disruptions in our fellowship with God that come from our tendency to sin.
Repentance is another part of that process.
Ideally the two go together, but they are
not identical. As Ditzel demonstrates, like repentance, confession
has both an attitudinal and an active aspect. Both involve changes of
heart and life. But while genuine repentance gives rise to confession (where
confession is appropriate), not every confession demonstrates real repentance,
as we will shortly observe.
Thankfully, the Bible
doesn’t just tell us what these things are, it also shows us what they aren’t.
Labels:
1 Samuel
/
Confession
/
Repentance
/
Saul
Friday, May 26, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Snakes, Mistakes and Better Takes
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
According to Infogalactic, the late George Went Hensley, a mover and shaker in the Holiness movement, argued that believers who truly have the Holy Spirit
within them should be able to handle rattlesnakes and any number of other
venomous serpents. David Kimbrough writes that Hensley even insisted his
congregation in rural Tennessee prove their salvation by holding a snake.
He also died after one of his snakes bit
him during a revival meeting in Florida one afternoon in July 1955. His
death was understandably ruled a suicide since he picked up the snake
voluntarily and refused treatment after the bite.
Tom: I suppose one could attribute that to a temporary failure of faith.
What do you think, IC?
Labels:
Bible Study
/
David Gooding
/
Exegesis
/
Recycling
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 25, 2017
Quote of the Day (33)
The English
Language & Usage website is a useful tool for readers who come across
words and phrases they don’t understand and can’t find an answer elsewhere.
Other users generally supply the answers they are seeking.
“So, what does it mean to come to the end
of yourself? Is it related to getting to the point where you are powerless? Or
maybe to the fact that you are sick of yourself? Am I even close?”
Now, if you’ve ever
circulated among Christians at all, you’ve almost surely encountered the
expression, but it’s my sneaking suspicion you won’t come across it elsewhere
and that if you do, it’s probably crept in quietly to secular thinking from Christian
theology.
Labels:
David Gooding
/
Dependence
/
Elijah
/
Quote of the Day
/
Trust
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
Almost But Not Quite Circular
A few weeks ago I wrote about Andy Stanley’s assertion that the Genesis account of Adam and Eve is history, not
just spiritually valuable mythology. For Andy, it is how Jesus spoke about
Adam and Eve that is definitive.
I agree with him on at least
two things: first, that Genesis is historical, and second, that the words
of Christ are of vital importance to the believer. They are there to be pored
over, memorized, analyzed with all the faculties God has given us, meditated
upon and lived out wherever they apply to our lives.
Good so far. And then, me being me, I have
to lob a monkey wrench into the machinery.
Labels:
History
/
Inspiration
/
John
/
Truth
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
Letters from the Best Man (3)
The
following is absolutely fictional and increasingly common. There is no Brad and
definitely no Jill, in case that is not obvious. There are, however, way too
many people in their position.
Dear Brad,
Your question about participating in the
Lord’s Supper during your separation from Jill is a good one, especially as the
weeks pass and your wife shows no signs of coming home or even of being willing
to talk things through with you.
Still, perhaps the answer is not quite as
complicated as you are making it.
Labels:
Divorce
/
Fellowship
/
Letters from the Best Man
/
Lord's Supper
/
Marriage
Monday, May 22, 2017
Sunday, May 21, 2017
A Better Word
“Are you washed in the blood of the lamb?”
Washed in the blood. I’ll
be frank: that’s kind of a grisly image, though a very popular one in late 19th
and 20th century hymnology. If some of our modern churchgoers cringe
at the mental picture it conjures, we can hardly blame them.
Elisha Hoffman’s lyric
presumably riffs on Revelation 7, where John sees an innumerable multitude
of worshipers in front of the throne of God and is told, “They have washed their
robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.”
In Revelation it is
the robes that are washed in the
blood, not the worshipers themselves. Hoffman probably understood this, though
his title is a bit too ambiguous for me.
What we do find much
more often in scripture is sprinkled
blood.
Labels:
Blood
/
Christ
/
Sacrifice
/
Sprinkling
Saturday, May 20, 2017
Nice Getting to Know You ...
My youngest son was
fired not too long ago. Well, “fired” is a harsh word for something that was actually
done with unusual politeness. The Asian manager of the donut store where he’d
been working for three weeks let him know at the end of his shift that, “Uh,
it was really nice getting to know you, but you don’t need to come back
next week.”
Hmm. Okay then.
Labels:
Church
/
Discipleship
/
Elders
/
Leadership
Friday, May 19, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Religious Freedom, Limited
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Freedom
/
Government
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 18, 2017
Letters from the Best Man (2)
The following is absolutely fictional and
increasingly common. There is no Brad and definitely no Jill, in case that is not obvious. There are, however, way too many people in their position.
Dear Brad,
Glad to hear that
Sunday did not go as badly as you thought it might. I’ve been praying and will
continue to do so.
As I mentioned in my
previous email, the elders accepting your resignation from teaching Sunday
School is normal. Don’t take it personally. They haven’t heard Jill’s side of
the story yet, and they never will if she doesn’t come back to church. Suppose
they had refused to accept your resignation out of some kind of misplaced
loyalty, then later discovered that Jill really left you because you had an
affair at work or something insane like that? I know you didn’t, but these
things do happen in the real world. They are being responsible to the Chief Shepherd and doing their jobs. The truth will come out in due course,
trust me.
Meanwhile, you’ve done
the right thing and the Lord is honored in it.
Labels:
1 Peter
/
Divorce
/
Letters from the Best Man
/
Marriage
Wednesday, May 17, 2017
The Flitting Sparrow
![]() |
Just more hot air ... |
In any case, we’re not big on curses in our modern world.
Oh, I don’t mean profanity: as a culture we’re pretty much over the top with
that, as anyone with Netflix will easily confirm. But the real deal — the
Old Testament “God is gonna getcha” kind of curse — is rare. And that’s a
good thing, I think.
All the same, some curses are very powerful indeed. One or
two are even of historic import.
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
You Don’t Want To Be ‘That Guy’
I suspect a bunch of them were kind of like we tend to be.
You know how you can sing a hymn 100 times and on the 101st time it
suddenly dawns on you what the writer was trying to communicate.
The same words were all there before; they all meant the same thing they mean when you figure
them out, but somehow you sang them over and over again from childhood without
really processing them. Maybe you were reading the music and trying to figure
out if you should go for that high note or drop down an octave for safety’s
sake; or a kid down the pew was fidgeting and kept dropping crumbs from the
cookie you wish her grandma hadn’t given her; or you were somewhere else
entirely in your own head, possibly contemplating missing the NFL pre-game show.
Whatever the distraction may have been, you sang those words
but didn’t register them. You missed the point.
I’ve certainly done it enough.
Labels:
Acts
/
David
/
Psalms
/
Recycling
/
Revelation
Monday, May 15, 2017
Letters from the Best Man (1)
The following is absolutely fictional and
increasingly common. There is no Brad and definitely no Jill, in case that is not obvious.
There are, however, way too many people in their position.
Dear Brad,
I am so deeply, deeply
sorry to hear that you and Jill have separated. Standing up for you was a
privilege and an honor. It’s been … what, almost a decade? But I still vividly
recall that crazy, way-too-lengthy conversation we had in the Four Seasons
lounge after the wedding rehearsal when everybody else had gone to bed, and I
haven’t the slightest doubt that when you took those vows before God and
everyone you love, you meant them with all your heart.
Labels:
Divorce
/
Letters from the Best Man
/
Marriage
Sunday, May 14, 2017
Two Glories
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
David
/
Glory
/
Mephibosheth
/
Worship
Saturday, May 13, 2017
Recommend-a-blog (23)
I’m a ‘Radical Anabaptist’, or at least so says Mere Orthodoxy’s political theology quiz.
Not sure quite what to think about that. I guess I’m glad to
be a radical something. These days I think I’d be more insulted to be called a moderate. And while I dislike the implicit
nod to infant baptism in the “Anabaptist” label, I am indeed a firm believer in
baptizing believers only, as readers of my baptism series (left sidebar) will confirm, and glad to take a stand on that.
It seems a funny point of theology to fixate on, but I’ll
take it ... I guess.
Labels:
Politics
/
Rapture
/
Recommend-a-blog
/
Theology
Friday, May 12, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Unhinged Racism
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Douglas Wilson
/
Jonathan Merrick
/
Racism
/
Speech
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 11, 2017
Christian Confession: An Elaborate Fabrication?
Is it really necessary
for Christians to confess our sins in order to be forgiven them?
Peter Ditzel says no, that
being forgiven for the sins we commit from time to time as believers does not
depend on regular confession. That, he says, would be working for our forgiveness.
He is also not a fan of John MacArthur’s take on 1 John 1, which draws a distinction between
judicial and parental forgiveness that Ditzel thinks is an “elaborate
fabrication”. He sees the ongoing search for MacArthur’s “parental forgiveness”
as a Protestant form of penance.
The judicial/parental
distinction probably did not originate with MacArthur. I’ve been hearing it my
whole life. It is a very common explanation of what the apostle John has to say
about forgiveness.
But is it correct?
Labels:
1 John
/
Communion
/
Confessing
/
Fellowship
/
Forgiveness
/
Righteousness
Wednesday, May 10, 2017
Tom 1, John the Baptist 0
![]() |
Jim Plunkett when he was not winning Superbowls |
Oh, he put up a good
fight. Taking on the Jewish religious establishment was brave. Living on a diet
of locusts and wild honey was certainly evidence of great devotion to his job, not to mention that he
spent way, way less than I do on his wardrobe. Excellent stewardship there. And
that whole martyrdom thing, well ... it’s a pretty special honor to die
for what you believe. I’m not sure I’m up to that at all.
But I won anyway. How do you like them apples!
Labels:
John the Baptist
/
Kingdom
/
Matthew
Tuesday, May 09, 2017
Going Out With A Bang
Sixty-five is no
longer mandatory retirement age in Canada, so a few of the men I learned from are
still on the job, though they have definitely slowed down. Most are gone despite the change in law. Some even
took packages and opted out early. Others who thought they’d work past sixty-five
found they were running out of gas and changed their minds. Still others had unexpected
health crises or family drama.
Hey, there are no
guarantees for any of us, right?
Labels:
1 Chronicles
/
David
/
Retirement
/
Stewardship
Monday, May 08, 2017
By What Authority?
Don’t panic. Let me get going here and you’ll
soon see what I mean. And in case it doesn’t become howlingly obvious, I
promise I’ll clear it up at the end.
Ready? Here we go. So … Tish Harrison
Warren is an author and a priest in the Anglican Church in North America. She
currently serves as co-associate rector at Church of the Ascension in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I’m going to quote her a bit here, so I mention this
not at all in an attempt to disqualify what she says, but so that you can better
enjoy the many, many helpings of mouth-wateringly delicious irony she
dishes up.
You see Ms. Warren fears the Christian blogosphere is off its leash. She thinks its various Christian and heretical voices are operating without
spiritual authority and ought to be reined in.
Wow. Just … wow. Pot, meet kettle.
Sunday, May 07, 2017
Back to the Beginning
Currently, if your IQ is 132 or higher, you are in the 98th percentile for intelligence. Worldwide. Mensa has 121,000 members, but in theory its membership could be sixty or seventy million. That’s a lot of smart people.
But scripture teaches there is something significantly more important than IQ.
Saturday, May 06, 2017
Mouth Almighty
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
James
/
Negativity
/
Positivity
/
Proverbs
/
Speech
Friday, May 05, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Surveying Evangelicalism
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Evangelicalism
/
Megachurches
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 04, 2017
Institutionality and Convergence
“Convergence” is a term originally coined by John Stuart
Mill to describe the process by which a public policy consensus is reached. The
term has been reinvigorated by former World Net Daily columnist Vox Day, who
uses it to describe what happens when institutions are infiltrated and coopted
by people pursuing agendas foreign to their original purposes.
Of course, an institution may survive and even prosper for a
period of time while pursuing multiple goals. But no man can serve two masters,
and no institution can simultaneously make two non-complementary goals its holy
grail. Thus an institution can be described as fully “converged” the moment its
pursuit of its new mandate begins to make it ineffective at doing what it was
originally created to do.
Prime modern examples of the downside of convergence are tech giant Mozilla,
Marvel Comics, the NFL and ESPN. All have prioritized social justice virtue
signaling over catering to their core demographics, and each has seen its
market share shrivel because of it.
Labels:
Church
/
Satan
/
Spiritual Warfare
Wednesday, May 03, 2017
The Stuff That Matters
![]() |
The human heart (interior view) |
The terror is the
reason most of us avoid it. To be known is to expose the worst about ourselves,
so we market a more palatable package of “alternative facts” to the public,
withholding information or spinning it as required.
Man, it’s an awful lot of work.
Labels:
1 Corinthians
/
Knowledge
/
Love
/
Psalms
Tuesday, May 02, 2017
Petting a Hissing Cobra
Brad Littlejohn and Doug Wilson are currently in the middle of an interesting back-and-forth on the difficulties
that come with trying to deal with visible displays of feminine worldliness in
the church: things such as pink hair, ear-stretching plugs, yoga pants, tattoos,
body piercings and so on.
Everyone involved already seems to agree on a number of things: first, that it is unhelpful to pretend that the Law of Moses is directly relevant; second, that the New Testament does not address most of these issues in so many words — we have to get there by application from passages about
“braided hair” and “costly attire” and such things; third, that despite the fact that we
are dealing with principles rather than direct commands like “Don’t get a tattoo” or “Don’t dye your hair”, these principles cannot be handwaved away without us losing something very important; and fourth, not all such displays should be handled in precisely the same way — things like salvation, spiritual maturity, age, level of commitment, baptism, history and present circumstances absolutely come into it.
Everyone also agrees talking about the subject
is like petting a hissing cobra.
Labels:
1 Timothy
/
Clothing
/
Douglas Wilson
/
Worldliness
Monday, May 01, 2017
The Commentariat Speaks (10)
![]() |
Ministers ... er ... ministering. |
“actually we [Methodists] aren’t nearly as hung up on this as you guys are. The point
is ... regardless of how you can twist scripture ... women factually
were leaders in the apostolic church. Yes ... including pheobe [sic] and
more importantly lydia.
Not to mention Timothy’s own grandmother who paul credits.”
No scripture twisting required, but perhaps a little actual scripture reading would help.
Labels:
Acts
/
Romans
/
The Commentariat Speaks
/
Women's Role
Sunday, April 30, 2017
The House Jesus Built
If you don’t like the color of your walls, you can repaint any time you have the energy. If your
living room is too small, you can tear down the wall that separates it from the
dining room and go open concept. If you don’t like the tarmac driveway, you can
redo it with cobblestone. After all, it’s yours.
Sure, city ordinances will
probably prevent you from doing off-the-wall things like adding a
sub-sub-basement or a swimming pool in the kitchen, but the variety of family
homes in my neighbourhood is evidence that it’s the owner’s budget and imagination
that are the most common limitations on their creativity.
Saturday, April 29, 2017
The Heft and Substance of Cobweb
The other day I referenced an Andy Stanley quote about
the historicity of Adam and Eve. Andy believes Adam and Eve were historical
because Jesus believed they were historical — or so he argues.
I agree with Andy that Adam and Eve were
real, flesh-and-blood human beings, not mere symbols or allegories. Making the
first couple mythical upends a great big nasty can of worms all over the pages of
our New Testament. Let’s not do that.
Unfortunately, the way Andy has framed his argument gives it the heft and substance of cobweb.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
/
Inspiration
/
Mark
/
Matthew
Friday, April 28, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Rose-Colored Glasses
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
The inimitable Conrad Black sums up a recent conversation
with atheist and former Muslim Ayaan Hirsi Ali and reviews her latest book Heretic here.
Hirsi Ali has taken on the unenviable — and probably impossible — task of
reforming Islam from the outside.
Labels:
Islam
/
Recycling
/
Reform
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 27, 2017
A Silly Question
“Do all that is in your heart, for God is with you.”
Sounds great, doesn’t it? Especially coming
from a prophet of God. Normally I’d take Nathan’s advice to the bank. Had I been in King David’s
shoes, I’d have gotten cracking on my temple building project post-haste.
Problem is, the prophet was wrong.
Labels:
1 Chronicles
/
David
/
Prayer
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (2)
Here’s Andy Stanley’s version of a very common argument for the historicity of Adam and Eve:
“Jesus talks about Adam and Eve. And it appears to me that he believed they were
actually historical figures. And if he believed they were historical, I believe
they were historical because anybody that can predict their own death and
resurrection and pull it off — I just believe anything they say.”
Andy’s probably referencing either
Matthew 19 or Mark 10, but either way he touches on an issue that
extends well beyond the Garden of Eden.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
/
History
/
Myth
/
What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Still Ticking Boxes
A fair number, I’m
guessing. But living by the Spirit rather than by the letter of the law requires more than just ticking boxes. We cannot read instructions in the New Testament in the same way many Israelites read their law; as if, having observed all direct commands, we are now free to behave however we may please.
Life by the Spirit just doesn’t work that way.
Labels:
Corinthians
/
Grace
/
Judgment
/
Law
Monday, April 24, 2017
John Was Not Surprised
Once in a while the force of an expression gets a little buried in translation. Take this verse, for example:
“Now Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus. So, when he heard that Lazarus was ill, he stayed two days longer in the place where he was.”
Here are two related statements tied together with
the word “so”. First, we are told that Jesus loved Martha, Mary and Lazarus.
Next, we are told that Jesus deliberately took his time going to see someone he
loved who was seriously ill.
The word “so” might seem an odd way to
connect these two ideas.
Sunday, April 23, 2017
How Much Does It Have To Hurt?
It’s a good question. I have a friend who holds himself
responsible for a tragedy that occurred a few years ago. I’m not even sure he’s
actually guilty of the sin he believes he committed: when others make choices so
fast you don’t have time to think of how to respond until it’s too late, how
much responsibility is yours and how much is theirs?
The Lord knows. I wouldn’t dare guess.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
/
Corinthians
/
Forgiveness
/
Luke
/
Recycling
Saturday, April 22, 2017
Do You Want to Go Out?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christ
/
Persecution
/
Reproach
Thursday, April 20, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Rainbow Unicorns and Cosmic Heat Death
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Atheism
/
History
/
Too Hot to Handle
On Leaving One’s Glasses At Home
Gratefulness is good. It is definitely better to be thankful
than not to be thankful. The apostle Paul tells the Christians in Rome that the
wrath of God is revealed from heaven against men and women who knew God but “did not give thanks to him”.
So sure, absolutely, by all means be grateful. Appreciate
what you’ve been given.
But is thankfulness enough?
Labels:
Honour
/
John
/
Romans
/
Thanksgiving
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Front or Back Door?
There’s little profit
in speculating about the angelic constitution, but I think we can assume with
some measure of scriptural warrant that our spiritual enemies don’t get tired
out or demoralized the way human beings do. And where we age and die and pass the
torch in hope our successors will carry on what we have begun, the “cosmic powers over this present darkness” are able to gnaw away methodically at the work of God over generations.
More erosion than
explosion, if you like.
Labels:
Church
/
Liberalism
/
Satan
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Slipping or Standing
Recently we reposted Immanuel Can’s exploration of what it means to be “authentic”. IC raised a couple of very important questions:
“What does ‘authentic’ mean when you already admit you don’t even know who you are? How on earth do you find such a thing, and what happens when you can’t?”
The search for identity is not a new one. The
Woodstock generation called it “finding yourself”. But what IS “me” exactly?
Clairol, for instance, tells us their hair dye “lets me be me”, when by its very
design it does precisely the opposite: it lets me be the version of me that I
used to be before my hair turned grey. I’m not using it to be “me”, I’m using
it to pretend I’m not getting older.
That’s not authentic at all, is it?
Labels:
Authenticity
/
Character
/
Gift
/
Personality
Monday, April 17, 2017
Quote of the Day (32)
There was no hope of
improving him through education, no chance that a good example might nudge him
in the right direction — in fact, everything around him seemed to be
pushing him the wrong way entirely. Nobody could reasonable expect that left
to his own devices he might eventually turn out to be a decent bloke after all.
But God had something
in mind for that guy.
Labels:
Christ
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Death
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Quote of the Day
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Resurrection
Didn’t See THAT Coming
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Photo: Seth Lemmons |
If you have a modern
translation of the New Testament, you’ll find John 5:4 appears to have
gone AWOL.
The missing text was
there in my youth. I remember it vaguely from my first King James. The NASB and
some older versions still retain it in square brackets for the three people in the world with worse memories than me. But having
collected and compared early versions of that passage from all over the Middle
East, modern scholars have concluded the verse-and-a-half was not part of divine revelation, but rather a parenthetical explanation added later on by a helpful scribe,
originally tagged with asterisks (yes, they really used those back then).
If so, of course, they
are correct in removing or flagging the text, but I have always found it
useful in understanding the passage.
Labels:
John
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Michael Heiser
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Prayer
Sunday, April 16, 2017
Saturday, April 15, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Let’s Get Together
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
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Communion
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Fellowship
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Too Hot to Handle
Friday, April 14, 2017
Whistling Past the Graveyard
I don’t suspect I’m overly morbid, nor is dwelling on the reality of death something I particularly enjoy. Nonetheless, the happy decades in which I attended mostly weddings are diminishing into obscurity in the rear-view mirror and ahead of me looms a rather dismal string of unwished-for funerals — with my own being perhaps the crowning conclusion.
What are we to make of this thing called death that awaits us all? How should we think of it? There are two broad strategies most people embrace.
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Things You Don’t Know You Know
It was entirely ingenuous, I think. There was nothing
calculating about the teenage girl who asked it. I don’t think she was looking
for a pass on any particular sin; she was just curious how God works.
It was Sunday School, and I was discussing Matthew 5:28 —
the part where the Lord says, “Everyone who looks at a woman with lustful
intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart.” I wasn’t trying
to be especially relevant or anything, but you know teenagers.
So she says, “But if you’re already guilty before God just
from looking, why wouldn’t you just go ahead and act on it then?”
Good question.
Labels:
Consequences
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Lust
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Matthew
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Sin
Wednesday, April 12, 2017
Authentic Me
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Authenticity
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Christianity
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
Does God Need An Editor?
For a new believer taking his first pass through the Bible, nothing tests one’s faith in the words
“all scripture is ... profitable” like the first nine chapters of Chronicles.
Even to scholars, these passages are formidable. If there is anywhere in scripture with more unpronounceable Hebrew names per square inch of text, I have yet to come across it. Try reading just one chapter aloud and you’ll see what I mean. And hey, let’s
get real here: exactly how does it help me as a struggling Christian to know that Tarshish and Ahishahar were both sons of Bilhan?
It almost makes one wonder if God’s word might have benefited from a slightly more ruthless editor.
Almost.
Labels:
1 Chronicles
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Genealogies
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Israel
Monday, April 10, 2017
The Good Wine
“Everyone serves the good wine first, and when people have drunk freely, then the poor
wine. But you have kept the good wine until now.”
The system is a cheat. Not news, I know.
Apart from Christ, people inevitably act in
what they perceive to be their own best interests, and never mind the rest of
us. The master of the feast at the wedding in Cana was telling the bridegroom
the oldest tale in the human storybook.
Labels:
Faithfulness
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John
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Truth
Sunday, April 09, 2017
Yet Another Rigged Election
It’s a good question.
Most Christians accept that God is, by definition, able to
control all that he creates down to the last detail; it is difficult to read
the Bible and come away with any other picture of him. But the question of how
and to what extent his sovereignty is exercised within the human heart is what
generally divides believers.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Election
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Recycling
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Romans
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Sovereignty
Saturday, April 08, 2017
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (1)
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Someone just murdered my favourite verse ... |
Writing four to five blog posts every week for more than
three years involves a fair bit of research, as you might imagine. I don’t keep
track, but I suspect I average as many as ten hours a week just looking
things up, whether it’s Greek or Hebrew in Strong’s, cross-checking other
people’s statements of fact, or looking up verses that others have quoted as
evidence of this or that. Hey, I’m not complaining; I benefit greatly from
the exercise.
But one thing I notice is that way too often Christian
writers cite proof texts that have little or nothing to do with what they are
alleged to demonstrate.
Labels:
Communion
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Corinthians
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Lord's Supper
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What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Friday, April 07, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: The Unfair Advantage of a Loving Family
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Family
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Leftism
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Progressivism
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 06, 2017
Exit, Stage Left
The presence of Christ among his people?
Yes, that’s surely critical. That we meet in his name, according to his will and doing the things that he
himself would do if he were here with us? Yes, that is our assurance of his presence. That we follow the pattern of the early believers and commit ourselves to the
apostles’ teaching, fellowship, the breaking of bread and prayer?
Absolutely.
Question: What happens if we stop remembering
the Lord in the breaking of bread? Are we still a church any sense that matters
to God?
Labels:
Breaking of Bread
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Evangelicalism
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Revelation
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Worship
Wednesday, April 05, 2017
I’ll Tell You Later
If I want to watch a movie, I can skim Netflix and play one in seconds. It takes me longer to make
up my mind than it takes to start playing my selection once I’ve decided. If I
want to listen to the Strolling Bones’ hot new CD, I don’t have to rush to the
mall (assuming I can find a record store still in business) or wait for Amazon
to deliver it to my front door, I can stream it right now or download it from
iTunes in seconds. If I want dinner, I can microwave something in five minutes,
or, assuming I have unusual patience, have it delivered in forty-five.
Spiritual insight isn’t like that. Not at all. Sometimes God says, “I’ll tell you later.”
Labels:
Eternity
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Hezekiah
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Resurrection
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Titus
Tuesday, April 04, 2017
The Race Metaphor
Yesterday I talked a little bit about images and figurative language in scripture. I think sometimes we can end up reading more into a Bible metaphor or simile than the Spirit of God ever intended. Or we get caught up in the details of the picture itself and fail to grasp the spiritual reality it is meant to depict.
The writer to the Hebrews talks about running a race:
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so
great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us …”
Here the writer and his original Hebrew
audience (that’s the “we”; the rest of us are simply reading someone else’s
mail) are compared to men and women running a race. We do well to ask
ourselves two questions. Firstly, what is this “race” that is to be
run? Secondly, what are the specific intended points of agreement between
running and whatever it is this “race” is intended to typify?
Labels:
Faith
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Hebrews
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Interpretation
Monday, April 03, 2017
Quote of the Day (31)
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It helps to know what we’re looking at. |
A word picture is a helpful way to describe
a particular aspect of a spiritual reality. Unsurprisingly, we find the word of
God to be full of them: images from the parables of the Lord Jesus, the poetic metaphors
of the Psalms, the similes of Isaiah or the illustrations of the
apostles — lovely, practical stuff sufficiently simple and clear to
express profound truths even to our children.
Taken beyond their intended range, however,
these figures quickly devolve into goofiness and bad doctrine.
Labels:
Figurative Language
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Interpretation
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Louis Berkhof
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Quote of the Day
Sunday, April 02, 2017
Just Get Up
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Bible Study
/
Discipline
/
Self-Control
Saturday, April 01, 2017
Dawn of the Pod People
Maybe they were traveling to another galaxy in suspended
animation. Maybe they were hooked up to a computer matrix, bamboozled into
believing in a counterfeit reality. Maybe they jumped into a one-man escape capsule
to hide from aliens with freaky extensible jaws. Whatever the story logic, the
image of people in personal life support units is
near-universal in the sci-fi genre.
And hey, we’re living it.
Labels:
Culture
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Evangelism
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Modern Christianity
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Multiculturalism
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