Entering into a relationship with God is
not like signing up to play for a ball team, getting initiated into a college fraternity
or joining MENSA. There are no tests to pass, no dotted lines to sign on, no secret
handshakes and no code words like “Open, Sesame” which must be spoken to allow
access to God.
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Monday, June 01, 2020
Sunday, May 31, 2020
Divine Multi-Tasking
A teacher once told me about a student who couldn’t walk and
chew gum at the same time. He didn’t mean it literally, of course; it was a
comment on the student’s intelligence. We assume the smarter a person is, the more things they are capable of doing at the same time.
A juggler keeps multiple balls in the air simultaneously.
It can be impressive to watch a skilled multi-tasker at work. But human beings
have upper limits on our juggling ability. The maximum number of items ever
juggled is either 13 or 14, depending on who you believe. The case has been
made that the laws of physics make juggling 15 items impossible. At least, nobody
alive can do it.
Labels:
Christ
/
God
/
Omniscience
/
Purpose
Saturday, May 30, 2020
Time and Chance (38)
Revelation is a glorious thing.
The phrase “through a glass darkly” is
often used to describe our current condition: we do not know everything we wish
we knew about God’s purposes for us. We would like to know more; of course we
would.
But when we apply that biblical phrase to ourselves, I believe we are erroneously putting
ourselves back twenty centuries in time and assuming ourselves to be in the same
condition as the Christians to whom Paul wrote in the mid-first century AD with
respect to the knowledge of God and his purposes.
And yet we are not in their situation. Not at all. We are much, much better off than they were.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
/
Revelation
/
Time and Chance
Friday, May 29, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: To Debate or Not to Debate
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
![]() |
Is there such a thing as too much discussion? |
“Do these squabbles speak love? Does the loud and passionate protestation about same-sex marriage draw others to Christ?”
Tom: Good questions, Immanuel Can. Is there any easy answer? Or is this
a debate where both sides may have legitimate concerns?
Labels:
Gay Marriage
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Recycling
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Tolerance
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
World Vision
Thursday, May 28, 2020
Stuck in the Middle with You
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Conservatism
/
Liberalism
/
Unity
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Anatomy of a Genocide
Serious efforts to exterminate Jews have happened more than
once, and the word of God assures us they will happen again. The book of Esther
is the story of a relatively early attempt.
The Medo-Persian empire was not Nazi Germany, and it is not
Armageddon, but there are still a few interesting things to be observed about
genocides, how such things can even come about at all, and what a persecuted (or
soon-to-be-persecuted) minority can learn from them about how best to conduct
itself in the face of overwhelming numerical opposition.
Labels:
Esther
/
Government
/
Persecution
Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Sound and Unsound
It is difficult to miss the adjective “sound” in the first
couple chapters of Titus. In fact, it occurs more times in Titus than
anywhere else in the New Testament. In instructing his younger associate, the
apostle Paul refers repeatedly to both “sound doctrine” and being “sound in the
faith”, the latter being the result of the former. Soundness was the apostle’s
desire for the Christians in Crete, and indeed for all believers everywhere.
In Greek, the word “sound” is hygiainō, which means “healthy”. It has the sense of fitness and
functionality. In Luke it is contrasted with both sickness
and injury.
Monday, May 25, 2020
Anonymous Asks (94)
“Is it possible to go a whole day without sinning?”
No.
Shortest Anonymous Asks ever.
Okay, I suppose I could elaborate a little. It is only possible to imagine you have
gone a whole day without “sinning” if your definition of sin is grossly deficient,
if you are stupifyingly un-self-aware, or maybe if you happen to be in
a coma.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Nehemiah
/
Sinlessness
Sunday, May 24, 2020
Good Applications and Bad Ones
Billy Graham noted that the character of our loved ones, friends, and acquaintances may change. Jesus does not.
TL Osborn says that because Jesus Christ does not change, you
can count on being healed from sickness, just as he healed the sick in the
first century.
A commenter at Christian Forums says the fact that Jesus Christ never changes means
dispensationalism is false teaching.
We all agree that “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and
forever.” However, it is evident we do not all agree about
precisely what that means.
Labels:
Application
/
Christ
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Hebrews
/
Immutability
Saturday, May 23, 2020
Time and Chance (37)
Last week we encountered
the term “vanity” for the umpteenth time in the book of Ecclesiastes, and
considered another entry in the Preacher’s list of realities he found
frustrating, and which he could not hope to understand without direct
revelation from God. In this case, he had observed that there is a species of
wicked people who move freely in polite society and who, far from being punished
for their crimes, are more often politely indulged ... and sometimes even
celebrated.
He continues this thought in the next couple of verses, in the process adding yet another “vain thing” to
his list of conundra.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Joy
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Time and Chance
Friday, May 22, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Getting Relevant
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
I heard that most young people drop out of church today, either for a short or
indefinite time, around age 18-19. I was concerned: after all, if we lose
the next generation, what’s going to happen to the church? But then I found
this glossy new resource, and it’s really helping me to understand what today’s young adults are going to
find relevant by way of spiritual stuff. I’m sharing it with you, Tom, because
I know you’ve got young-adult children of your own.
Just in time, eh?
Tom: Uh, thanks, IC, I think. Why is it that some Christians seem to think that being “relevant” actually
means “pandering” or “condescending”?
Labels:
Church
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Discipleship
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
/
Youth Work
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Contradictions and Contradistinctions
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Contradictions in Scripture
/
Jordan Peterson
/
Paradoxes
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
Everything Louder Than Everything Else
Ian Gillan of the seventies metal band Deep Purple reportedly
once asked the sound engineer mixing the band’s live album, “Could we have everything louder than
everything else?”
I’ve always loved that line. It just sounds like a title for the perfect rock and roll anthem.
But when you think about it for half a second, the request is
absurd. If the bass is louder than the high hat, the high hat cannot simultaneously
be louder than the bass. If you mix the snare drum louder than a guitar cranked
up to eleven, you cannot make that guitar louder in the sound mix without reducing
the volume of the snare. It’s absurd.
“Everything” cannot be louder than “everything else”. It
doesn’t work.
Labels:
Money
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Poverty
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Priorities
/
Recycling
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Diagnosing the Problem
“Behold, we are slaves this day ... behold, we are slaves.”
“We are offspring of Abraham and have never been enslaved to anyone.”
You can’t solve a problem unless you know what it is.
John 8:33 records a very strange statement, the second
one I have quoted above. It appears to have been made not specifically by the Pharisees
or Sadducees (though there may have been some of these present, of course), but more generally, by men who had just made a public confession of belief in Christ.
The statement was this: “We have never been enslaved to
anyone.”
Monday, May 18, 2020
Anonymous Asks (93)
“Is it wrong to wish for something?”
There was a time when the Lord Jesus wished for something
with all his heart. Luke says he prayed for it earnestly, in agony, to the
point where “his sweat became like great drops of blood falling to the ground”.
Here is what he wished for: “Father ... remove
this cup from me.”
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Prayer
Sunday, May 17, 2020
Lost Light
How does the word of God go missing among God’s people? How
does the plain teaching of scripture get overlooked for months, years and even
centuries, only to be suddenly rediscovered? You would think it impossible if
we didn’t have both historical and biblical evidence that it happens, and
happens with sad regularity.
For example, in the days of King Josiah, the Book of the Law
was found in the house of the Lord and taken to the king and read to him. When
Josiah heard the Law read, he
tore his clothes, humbled and stricken by the degree to which the people of
God had departed from his commandments and the wrath they had incurred because
of it.
Saturday, May 16, 2020
Time and Chance (36)
As mentioned in earlier
studies in Ecclesiastes, the Preacher uses the term “vanity” repeatedly. This
is usually read as an expression of disgust, as if Solomon is saying, “Pointless,
pointless ... it’s all futile and pointless,” as if the order God has set
in place since the fall of man — and it is very much evident he believes God
is behind it all — is not worth further investigation.
And yet, on he goes investigating anyway. Can’t be all that pointless, can it?
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
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Vanity
/
Wickedness
Friday, May 15, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Stinkin’ Selfish
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Megachurch pastor Andy Stanley inadvertently
opened a can of worms with comments he made in a sermon earlier this month:
“When I hear adults say, ‘Well, I don’t like a big church. I like about
two hundred’ or ‘I want to be able to know everybody’, I say,
‘You are so stinkin’ selfish. You care nothing about the next generation. All
you care about is you and your five friends. You don’t care about your
kids or anybody else’s kids.”
Now of course he quickly and abjectly
apologized the moment the predictable blowback started, but Stanley’s not backtracking on his
dislike of traditional-sized churches, just the ill-conceived and insulting way
he expressed it.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
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Megachurches
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
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Youth Work
Thursday, May 14, 2020
What’s Behind Faith?
— Hebrews 11:1
“I consider rationality (in a nutshell) to be: ‘an accurate apportionment of belief in a statement concerning the objective nature of reality, with respect to the available evidence.’ I can think of no better definition of faith than the exact opposite of this: ‘A grossly inaccurate apportionment of belief in a statement concerning the objective nature of reality, with respect to the available evidence.’
However, I invite those who have faith, and profess it as a virtue, to submit their definition of faith.”
— Joseph Dorrell, Ted Talks, 2012
Okay, Joseph. Let’s play.
Labels:
Faith
/
Rationalism
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Recycling
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Stating the Obvious
When you make a life-long habit out of reading other people’s
mail, strange things tend to become commonplace.
I should probably unpack that a bit.
I’m enjoying the book of Hebrews once again, as I make
my way through the New Testament in my morning reading. But the problem with
having been acquainted with the scriptures since before I could read them
for myself (and it’s not the worst problem in the world to have) is that
arguments which should puzzle any modern, thinking, Gentile reader seem perfectly normal to me. My familiarity
with the passage makes it difficult for me to be surprised by it, though it should surely surprise me.
Tuesday, May 12, 2020
Crossing the Gulf
“... with patience, bearing
with one another in love.”
Easily said, isn’t it?
“Between us and you there is a great gulf fixed.” So said
Abraham to the rich man suffering the torments of hades. That chasm is not crossable. “They which would pass from
hence to you cannot.”
Speaking naturally, there is also a great gulf fixed between
you and me. Not all of you, of course, but certainly some of you. Cross it we must. Our first step is to recognize it is there.
Labels:
Communication
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Death
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Empathy
/
Love
Monday, May 11, 2020
Anonymous Asks (92)
“Are soul mates for real?”
When Jonathan watched David slay Goliath, he recognized a
kindred spirit.
Like David, Jonathan was a brave man who trusted in God almost
to the point of recklessness. Climbing a hill fully exposed to enemy arrows
in order to take it to an enemy whose numbers dwarf your own seems like a crazy
stunt, but if the Lord has given the enemy into your hands, it’s a cinch.
Jonathan and his armor bearer had prevailed against 10:1 odds.
It’s holy conjecture, but I suspect if his father had
allowed it, Jonathan might have taken on Goliath himself. But Jonathan knew
that would never be permitted. Why would the king of Israel risk his own crown
prince in what he believed was an unwinnable duel? It would have been a huge PR
win for the Philistines and a political disaster for Saul.
David was comparatively expendable. Saul couldn’t even put
a name to him when asked.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Relationships
/
Soul
Sunday, May 10, 2020
Semi-Random Musings (20)
Of all the books in the Bible, Esther seems to have the
least to do with 21st century Christianity. It is basically a book of
Jewish-centric history which tells how the nation of Israel (for the umpteenth time) survived
extermination at the hands of its enemies. God is not even mentioned in its
pages. The national feast inspired by the events in Esther (Purim)
is nothing like the God-ordained celebrations of Leviticus 23. Purim
commemorates the “days on which the Jews got relief from their enemies”, and is
(or at least originally was) more like today’s secularized Christmas
celebrations than any of the seven
feasts of Jehovah, all of which were rife with rich spiritual symbolism,
speaking to generations about the meaning of the death of Christ
and its consequences for mankind.
So why is Esther in our Bibles?
Labels:
Artaxerxes
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Ezra
/
Jealousy
/
Semi-Random Musings
Saturday, May 09, 2020
Time and Chance (35)
Let’s back up and remind
ourselves where we were last week in Ecclesiastes 8, because the subject
under discussion in the first five verses continues just a little longer.
The Preacher was considering
the temptations and opportunities that face people under authority in the
performance of their duties; in this case, servants of the king. There are
really only two possibilities: either the servant is doing the will of the
king, or else he is using the king’s authority as cover to promote his personal
agenda, or to advance some ideological position.
Labels:
Decision-Making
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Ecclesiastes
/
Government
/
Time and Chance
Friday, May 08, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Evaluating Virtual Church [Part 2]
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
Yesterday’s post opened with a little chart that appeared to
indicate that the longer the COVID-19 lockdowns go on, the fewer Christians are interested in playing virtual church — at least, the way we’re
currently doing it. If YouTube views are any sort of legitimate proxy by which
we can measure the interest of believers in the preaching of the word of God by
members of their local congregations, then we’re in trouble.
Tom: So what are
we doing wrong? Well, one possibility we have been speculating about is that
with all those Christian YouTube videos up there, one can always find a more
interesting subject, a more lucid speaker, or something that tickles our
itching ears.
Labels:
Church
/
COVID-19
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Too Hot to Handle
/
YouTube
Thursday, May 07, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Evaluating Virtual Church [Part 1]
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
If church is a big enough part of your life that you
normally go every Sunday, in all probability it will not have escaped your
notice that your congregation has started meeting online after some fashion or
other. Most churches I have ever been part of are doing it, and because a
bunch of them are posting their virtual Sunday morning services on YouTube,
it’s given me opportunity to check out the ministry of believers I have
not seen personally in years.
Tom: In the process, I noticed something interesting and perhaps worthy of discussion.
Labels:
Church
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COVID-19
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
YouTube
Wednesday, May 06, 2020
Tuesday, May 05, 2020
Beyond the River
The book of Ezra is written in Hebrew, but one of its most
frequently-used expressions is not Hebrew but Aramaic.
The words `abar nĕhar are translated “beyond the river” or “this side of the river” in most of our
Bibles. They occur in the sections of Ezra that contain letters written by the
enemies of the returning Jewish exiles in Jerusalem to kings of the Medo-Persian
empire, and by the functionaries of these kings in response, since Aramaic
was the language in which royal edicts were issued. The expression also occurs,
probably for the sake of consistency, in the Hebrew narrative portions of Ezra
which have to do with the contents of the letters.
Basically, “beyond the river”
means the biblical land of Israel and any of the surrounding nations over which
Israel, at the height of its powers, had influence.
Monday, May 04, 2020
Anonymous Asks (91)
Well, they say third time’s the charm. Let’s test that
theory.
This is my third attempt at answering a question which is more than loaded: subtext hangs over the post like giant flapping leather bat wings blotting out the sun. It also doesn’t help that I probably misread it first time round. I took it to mean “In what ways should a Christian child honor an abusive parent?” (a relatively easy one), when the author is far more likely asking “How can anyone possibly expect me to give honor to someone who has mistreated me so egregiously?”
Different question, right? And not so quick and easy.
Labels:
Abuse
/
Anonymous Asks
/
Family
Sunday, May 03, 2020
A Nature Like Mine
James says a remarkable and encouraging thing about one of the greatest prophets of the Old Testament: a man who had conversations with God; a man who stood for God at a time when the nation of Israel had given up the worship of Jehovah for the worship of Baal and was in a state of moral decrepitude, ruled over by a king who was just about as wicked as they come; a man who ascended to heaven in a chariot rather than dying like the rest of us; and a man who would later appear and talk with the Lord Jesus on the mount of transfiguration.
What he says is this: “Elijah was a man with a nature like ours.”
Saturday, May 02, 2020
Time and Chance (34)
When we try to get some
practical help for daily living from scriptural reflections 3,000 years
old, it is obvious we are going to have to do a little bit of thinking: first,
about whether these things can be applied to our own situation at all; and secondly, assuming they can
be, what reasonable conclusions we might draw from them about our own situation.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
/
Government
/
Time and Chance
Friday, May 01, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Get Happy
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Happiness
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Smeagol on a Leash
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Hope
/
Soren Kierkegaard
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Hope, and the Problem with People
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Hope
/
Soren Kierkegaard
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Quitting Before the Final Whistle
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Hope
/
Soren Kierkegaard
Monday, April 27, 2020
Anonymous Asks (90)
“Why should I talk about my faith at school?”
Here’s a thought: maybe you shouldn’t. Or at least, maybe
you shouldn’t make some kind of formal policy out of it.
When I was growing up, we recited the Lord’s Prayer in
public schools. There was something close to a common consensus that the
Christian faith encouraged character qualities which, if not practiced by
everybody you knew, were at least almost universally acknowledged as values we’d
like our kids to have. And if helping your children learn the merits of honesty,
loyalty, hard work, persistence, hope, patience and kindness could be
accomplished by telling them stories about Jesus, most parents were okay with
sending their kids off to Sunday School too.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
School
/
Witnessing
Sunday, April 26, 2020
The Point of Faith
“I will show him how much he
must suffer for the sake of my name.”
Imagine for a second that at the time you came to Christ you
had been told that your life from this day forward was to be characterized by
people throwing rocks at you, telling lies about you, betraying you and letting you down, calling you names,
hitting you, throwing you in jail and trying to kill you. Moreover, in addition
to all the abuse you could expect as a matter of course from your fellow man
for the sake of your testimony to Christ, you could also expect more than your fair
share of all the nasty, apparently random things that happen to people the
world over: getting mugged, having to work hard, getting no sleep, getting
sick, suffering chronic pain from old injuries, lacking food and having your
transportation fail regularly in spectacular and dangerous ways.
Would that have changed anything? Might a bout of frantic
back-peddling have ensued?
In some cases, maybe.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Christ
/
Jordan Peterson
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Suffering
Saturday, April 25, 2020
Time and Chance (33)
Once upon a time, one of the richest, most powerful and wisest men in all of human history set himself the task of discovering the meaning of life. He found himself frustrated. He also recorded his search step by step for us in the book of Ecclesiastes. He added one observation to another seeking to uncover what he calls “the scheme of things”.
In doing so, oddly enough, he found himself repeatedly looking not just at the created world, or
at society, but at individual men and women. In their own existential thrashing about, the more alert unbelievers today do exactly the same thing: they look around at
others in hope of finding lives well-lived and lifestyles worth emulating — people of integrity and consistency — and, informing those qualities, perhaps some coherent explanation of our place in the universe that will satisfy their thirst for meaning and purpose.
After all, you are not terribly likely to discover a coherent worldview in a brothel or under a barroom table,
are you?
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Meaning
/
Time and Chance
Friday, April 24, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: A Methodist to Their Madness
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Denominations
/
Multi-Site Churches
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Ten Commandments That Failed
It seems morbid, perhaps, to be raising the topic of 9/11 going on two decades later. It was a
sad, bitter moment, one that we might all wish to forget.
But wisdom does not always come quickly, and events of this magnitude take a very long time to
understand. There are some things which are best left unsaid in the heat of
the moment, but are better brought slowly to the surface when due time has
passed. Such is the case with what I am writing today.
Even now, the fall of the World Trade Towers is not an easy subject.
Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Fifth Business
Facing pressure from his publisher to explain the meaning of his new book’s title, Canadian novelist Robertson Davies cooked up the following phony quote:
“Those roles which, being neither those of hero nor Heroine, Confidante nor Villain, but which were none the less essential to bring about the Recognition or the denouement were called the Fifth Business in drama and Opera companies organized according to the old style; the player who acted these parts was often referred to as Fifth Business.”
I read the otherwise-rather-grubby novel in my teens and the only part of it that stuck with me was the term Fifth Business. It seemed like a very apt description of a lot of people’s lives, I thought at the time.
They used to be called bit players. Nowadays we give them awards and call them character actors.
Labels:
Baptism
/
Christ
/
John the Baptist
/
Recycling
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Above My Pay Grade
“That’s above my pay grade,” said the former senator.
It was 2008. The subject was abortion. Presidential candidate Barack Obama had been asked, “At what point does a baby get human rights?”
At bare minimum, his response indicated an aversion to being
pinned down on the subject and a desire to avoid conflict over the issue as he
campaigned to be president of the United States of America. There were “larger issues” at stake, he
undoubtedly thought. He was prepared to let evil slide for the sake of what he
perceived to be the “greater good”, which presumably included his assumption of the presidency.
Monday, April 20, 2020
Anonymous Asks (89)
“Is physical healing part of Christ’s atonement?”
There is a sense in which it is. Revelation speaks of the
leaves of the tree of life, which are “for the
healing of the nations”. We also read that in the New Jerusalem, “death
shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning,
nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.”
Without the sacrifice of Christ we would have none of this to look forward to.
All our hopes for eternity are tied up in him. Everything we have now and
ever will have is a direct result of his death on the cross.
But that’s obviously not what’s being asked.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Healing
Sunday, April 19, 2020
91 and 19
You will surely remember Psalm 91.
That’s the one which begins, “He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty ...” It’s often
attributed to Moses, and is famous for being very comforting — I heard it read
at a funeral recently — and even more so for being quoted
by Satan in his temptation of the Lord Jesus.
It also includes two statements which we might be inclined
to try to apply to nasty little flu viruses that kill people, among other
things: “For he will deliver you from ... the deadly pestilence” and “no evil shall be allowed to befall you, no plague come near your tent.” On a
quick reading, it sounds as if dwelling in the shelter of the Most High and
making God our refuge is the ticket out of most of the unpleasant and disturbing
things that can happen to us in this life — not just new and virulent diseases, but
war and
wild beasts and even
unfortunate accidents — as well as being the absolute guarantee of
a long life. What a sweet spot to live in!
But does 91 really apply to COVID-19? Can Christians reasonably claim its promises in connection with the current pandemic?
I hate to be a party-pooper, but a careful reading of scripture does not
allow us to appropriate this familiar psalm for our own comfort quite so freely.
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Time and Chance (32)
“A man’s got to know his limitations.”
I have a feeling that’s an old Clint Eastwood line from somewhere. At any rate, the next six verses
of Ecclesiastes are all about human limitations in a fallen world. Verses 19
and 20 have to do with mankind’s moral limitations, verses 21-22 with our interpersonal limitations, and verses 23-34 with our philosophical limitations.
Basically, we are sinners who don’t get along. Moreover, outside of God’s word, we are incapable of
coming up with any reasonable explanation why that might be. We don’t act
right, we don’t socialize right, and we don’t think right. That’s a fairly
hefty indictment.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Morality
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Philosophy
/
Society
/
Time and Chance
Friday, April 17, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Days of Programs Past
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Too Hot to Handle
/
Youth
Thursday, April 16, 2020
A Dose of Worldliness
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christian Music
Wednesday, April 15, 2020
God’s Photo Album
The Bible is full of pictures.
Now, illustrations — whether they are symbols, metaphors,
or even when they come in the form of full-blown parables — are not
reality, and it does us good to keep that in mind. They are useful snapshots in
which we may catch glimpses of ourselves, of God, and of spiritual truths we
might otherwise miss. To ensure we don’t, God has given them to us in a form we
can easily process and relate to, one which often stirs an emotional reaction
that can bring us to repentance, awe, appreciation or some other good state. For
example, Nathan’s story about the
poor man’s ewe lamb drove David into a righteous rage ... until he
realized the story was all about him.
Labels:
Figurative Language
/
Parables
/
Symbolism
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Can a Mormon be Saved?
In a recent post, Amy Hall at Stand to Reason entertains the possibility that some Mormons may be saved. It’s a
thoughtful piece, and Hall describes several conversations she’s had with LDS
members that are enlightening as to the differences between Mormons and Christians
in terms of our hopes, goals and understanding of Jesus Christ and what he has
done for us. In the end, she concludes a saved Mormon is theoretically possible but doubtful.
I found myself more or less agreeing with Hall: LDS theology
is pretty far removed from the Christian faith in many respects. It would be
difficult to imagine attending an LDS gathering for any great length of time
without cluing in to that fact.
Labels:
Denominations
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Orthodoxy
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Salvation
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Sects
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Stand to Reason
Monday, April 13, 2020
Anonymous Asks (88)
“What should I say when someone morally offends me?”
When you set out to correct people, one of several things may
happen: (1) they reject your advice and never think about it again; (2) they
reject your advice now, but take it to heart later when they have time to
reflect; (3) they accept your correction politely, but only in order to
get you to stop talking and go away; or (4) they accept your correction
politely and actually learn from it.
It also happens occasionally that your intended target rejects
your advice, but other people come to know of it and benefit from it. That
is not the ideal outcome, but it is still a pretty good one.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Offences
Sunday, April 12, 2020
The Fate of the Coward
We are living in scary times. People are afraid.
Biblical fear can be good or bad. Perfected
love banishes it, but in a fallen world, fully mature love is a rarity and
fear still serves the
occasional valid purpose in God’s dealings with us. For one, Christians are
encouraged to bring our pursuit of holiness to completion “in the fear
of God”. For another, fear sometimes gets your attention in a busy world when
nothing else will.
Our modern translations tell us one of the things the
miracles of Christ regularly produced was awe,
usually accompanied by giving glory to God. The word for “awe” in Greek is phobos, more commonly translated “fear”.
This is fear at its most useful.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Time and Chance (31)
Anecdotal evidence is not
conclusive in any court, but it’s still evidence. What you have observed in
this life has a profound effect on what you believe. What you think you’ve observed may have an even
greater influence on you.
So what is it that really matters? What sort of life would your neighbors call “good”? There are very few
people out there who haven’t yet decided. Some of them are making very silly
choices, but they are still making them. Having “seen everything” (in their estimation),
they are now deciding what course of action makes the most sense for them. If
you ask them nicely, they will often tell you why.
Labels:
Choices
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
Friday, April 10, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Crippling the Response
In which our regular
writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Ah, the coronavirus! I was so determined not to go there in
this space. Then it threatened to go on and on and on, and then it became such
a feature of our current media experience as to be utterly inescapable. After
that, it changed the way we do most everything, at least for the foreseeable
future. And still we left the subject alone; after all, if you want the latest
on COVID‑19, you can get that absolutely anywhere, right?
Tom: But then The New York Times started blaming
evangelicals for “crippling
our coronavirus response”, and there you are: turns out it was time to
start talking about it here. Not being an expert of any sort, I don’t want
to discuss the virus itself, where it came from, how it is spreading, and what
might be done about it; nor do I want to speculate about what the total
bill for fighting this thing will be. I simply want to talk about the
church and its response to the crisis.
Labels:
Authority
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COVID-19
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Obedience
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 09, 2020
The Beautiful and the Not-So-Good
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Beauty
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Book Reviews
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Christianity Today
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Mark Galli
Wednesday, April 08, 2020
Word for Word
“If you don’t have access to the original language, stick with a
word-for-word translation like the NASB ...”
There is a common misconception, usually among those who are
only familiar with a single language, that it is possible to translate Hebrew
or Greek — or any other language, for that matter — word for word. I used
to believe it myself. It is not the case, and the translators of the NASB would
tell you themselves that they have not attempted any such thing.
Labels:
Bible Translations
Tuesday, April 07, 2020
A Tale of Two Rebukes
One generation and three chapters of holy scripture apart,
two powerful men experienced God’s correction. One handled it right. One
didn’t.
Both were good men with a notable character flaw. One
accepted instruction, while the other became offended and died obdurate.
Perhaps in comparing their stories we may see ourselves in
one or the other.
Labels:
2 Chronicles
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Correction
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Humility
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Pride
Monday, April 06, 2020
Anonymous Asks (87)
“Are our dreams from God?”
There are all kinds of theories about what dreams are, what
they mean, and the purpose they serve for human beings. One theory is that dreams
are our brains attempting to derive meaning from meaningless stimuli,
attempting to create order out of chaos. Sigmund Freud saw them as a window
into the unconscious. Psychologist Rosalind Cartwright says dreams “help
us process new, emotionally important information and add it to our conceptual
memory system”. Sleep scientist Robert Stickgold says there is “precious little
on which dream researchers agree”.
That about sums it up. From a scientific
perspective, the answer is that we don’t know what purpose dreams serve, or if
they mean anything at all. Where dreams are concerned, we cannot be certain
about much of anything.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Dreams
Sunday, April 05, 2020
Tyrants and Pushovers
Nobody likes a tyrant. I don’t imagine anyone ever did even
when, as is so often claimed today, tyranny was the defining feature of
patriarchal leadership in the secular world, in church government, and even
sometimes within families. At least this is what we are led to believe.
I have no doubt a significant number of the horror stories
about the abusive leadership of times past are perfectly true, and should serve
us well as cautionary tales. But I very much doubt all of them are.
Labels:
Elder
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Leadership
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Servant
Saturday, April 04, 2020
Time and Chance (30)
Much of what we read in
our Bibles is not what we might call “inspired”: the choice of English words
made by translators; the marginal commentary; beginnings and ends of verses;
chapter and passage headings ... all these things were simply not
subjected to the same level of divine control which the writers of scripture
claim for the Greek and Hebrew text itself.
This being the case, once in a blue moon something done by a translator or publishing house works against
our ability to discern the meaning of a text. One of my brothers is fond of
pointing out how many times a chapter division in our English Bibles has obscured
his understanding of a passage which should rightly flow right on without pause,
and did so in its original form. Sometimes the answer to a question posed at
the end of chapter 3 (where you probably stopped your daily reading) is to
be found three verses into chapter 4 (where you have probably
forgotten what it is answering by the time you read it tomorrow).
Labels:
Adversity
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
Friday, April 03, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Rapture and the Wrath of God
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Dispensationalism
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Premillennialism
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Rapture
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Revelation
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 02, 2020
Youth Problems Part 2: Life in Suspended Animation
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christianity
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Faith
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Growing Up
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Youth
Wednesday, April 01, 2020
Doesn’t Always Mean What We Think It Means (6)
We have been talking about brothers and brotherhood.
Brothers share DNA, parents, history, culture and sometimes values.
Ideally at least, brothers feel a sense of high obligation to one another and
always have each other’s backs.
Other than in rare cases of Solomonic excess, one only has a
few literal siblings. All others are only “brothers” in a figurative sense. On
the basis of the Old Testament, I have compared brotherhood to the layers
of an onion, in which the highest level of responsibility lies toward those at
the center of our lives and radiates out through the “layers” of immediate
family, then extended family, tribe and nation.
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