“I don’t think that I’m a good Christian. I know I’m not. But even if I’m a bad one, I am one.” — Vox Day
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Saturday, July 25, 2020
Time and Chance (46)
All productivity comes with a certain element of risk.
This is true for code monkeys, spot monkeys and everyone in
between the two extremes (the code monkey being a computer programmer at his
keyboard; the spot monkey, a professional wrestler whose specialty is flying
through the air and landing on people without killing them). Too much time
pounding the keys can ruin your wrists, which everyone who has carpal tunnel
syndrome will tell you is very painful and not easy to get rid of. Then again,
a 360 off the top rope that ends on the ring apron instead of its designated
target will probably break your neck, so maybe there are worse things than sore
wrists.
For me the big job hazard is paper cuts. Lots of paper cuts.
First world problems, I know.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Risk
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Time and Chance
Friday, July 24, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Coalition of the Unwilling
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
The Gospel Coalition is an evangelical colossus, with close to 8,000 affiliated congregations
across the U.S., 65 million annual website pageviews, regular live events,
a full slate of in-house blogs and other media promoting its theological
checklist.
Tom: But one very slightly unsettling feature of TGC’s ministry, Immanuel Can, is that they seem to have little interest in engaging in the exchange of ideas, as
this Jonathan Merritt article very effectively documents.
You’re quite familiar with TGC. What do they stand for?
Labels:
Censorship
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D.A. Carson
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Disagreement
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John MacArthur
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John Piper
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Neo-Calvinism
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Recycling
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The Gospel Coalition
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, July 23, 2020
The Multicultural Road to Hell
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Ecumenicalism
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Testimony
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Witnessing
Wednesday, July 22, 2020
The Gospel in Context
Ever preached from one of these? |
Anybody who has browsed my Bible Study series is familiar with the conviction (not uniquely mine) that context may well be the single most significant tool for determining meaning available to English students of scripture. It has certainly been the most useful to me.
This is not about that. It’s about the importance of a different sort of context: situation and audience.
A few weeks ago Immanuel Can and I had occasion to discuss the subject of the gospel and what it actually is. The four Gospels themselves (of course) record the beginnings of the “good news”, but necessarily cannot fully elaborate on all its implications. It requires the rest of the New Testament to do that, but a very good starting point is a study of how the apostles actually preached it from the very beginning (up to and including Acts 13, at any rate, which is as far as I’ve currently gone in my study).
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
The Language of the Debate (1)
“Language matters because whoever controls the words
controls the conversation, because whoever controls the conversation controls
its outcome, because whoever frames the debate has already won it.” So says
writer Erica Jong, though we should probably give George Orwell credit for the
underlying concept.
Sad to say, debate is very much out of fashion in the world these
days. Online or in the streets, we go straight from perceived outrage to mob
rule with very little in between other than furious accusation, name-calling
and intimidation. The time from the trigger event to the full-blown social media
blame-and-shame frenzy may be measured in minutes. One errant tweet on a plane
and you may find yourself disemployed by the time you hit customs. Be assured no
discussion will be had.
Thankfully, that is not the way Christians do things. Not
yet anyway.
Labels:
Disagreement
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Homosexuality
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The Language of the Debate
Monday, July 20, 2020
Anonymous Asks (102)
“Do miracles still happen today?”
I guess the answer to this depends on one’s definition of a miracle. For example, some people who are enthusiastic about
children refer to the “miracle of life”. I suppose if you are using the
word in that sense, then the answer would have to be of course.
The more important thing is how the writers of the Bible use the word “miracle”.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Miracles
Sunday, July 19, 2020
Bad Ideas that Refuse to Die
What is it about bad ideas?
I’m not thinking of anything as egregious as false teaching making its way into the church, though that tends to happen on a regular basis too. No, I’m thinking more of the natural preferences and tendencies we have and assumptions we make that can hinder the work of God and drive a wedge in between believers.
The worst part about bad ideas is that, unlike many varieties of false or heretical teaching, they often come from good people, which makes them that much more sensitive to deal with. They are also not demonstrably sinful in most cases, making it more difficult to mount a case against them and disinclining those who harbor them to easily abandon them.
Labels:
Bible Translations
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Pastors
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Recycling
Saturday, July 18, 2020
Time and Chance (45)
Governing is tough.
Even in traditional monarchies, governance has always required a
team, the rough equivalent of a cabinet or executive; the right people in the
right combination. A king needed experienced, mature, educated men to serve as
his administrators and advisors; men able to make policy and to accurately estimate
the short- and long-term consequences of implementing it.
Finding the right people to put in secondary positions of
authority is a critical matter. It has tremendous consequences for a nation. Kingdoms
have been lost because a ruler listened to the advice of the
wrong man or
men, or refused to listen to the advice of the
right man.
Generally speaking, slaves don’t make strong candidates for
such positions, as the writer of Ecclesiastes is about to tell us.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Government
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Time and Chance
Friday, July 17, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Disconnected?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Conflict
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Elders
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, July 16, 2020
Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Mystery Beasts and Inscrutability
The forty-first chapter of the book of Job has thirty-four
verses in an English Bible. Thirty-two of those describe a mystery beast you
and I have never seen and almost surely never will. The remaining two are
about God.
I think those two are probably the point of the chapter, no?
At least it’s as good a guess as any.
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Quote of the Day (42)
It’s hard to believe how frequently “everything old is
new again”, how often “what goes around comes around”, or how reliably “the past does not repeat
itself, but it rhymes”.
Having studied the past only just a little, I have still seen enough to grudgingly
second the truism that “Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it.”
Even its slightly darker kindred observation, “Insanity is doing the same thing
over and over again and expecting different results,” though wildly overused,
has become cliché precisely because we have to acknowledge that people do this
all the time.
We really must be nuts.
Labels:
Helmut Thielicke
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History
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Quote of the Day
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Socialism
Monday, July 13, 2020
Anonymous Asks (101)
The New Testament gives us a fair bit of insight into what
forgiven people look and act like. Jesus once told a paralyzed man, “Take
heart, my son; your
sins are forgiven.” The expression he used means something like “Cheer
up!” That might be a little difficult for most paralyzed people.
But it gives us an idea what Jesus saw as the higher priority, and
what is most important in life. If we had to choose between our health and being
forgiven our sins, we would be immeasurably better off sick and forgiven than to
be healthy and remain guilty in the eyes of God.
Forgiveness matters.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Forgiveness
Sunday, July 12, 2020
Redistributionism and Jubilee
The Great Isaiah Scroll. Wrong chapter, but you get the general idea ... |
“Thank you — what a beautiful interpretation of that
passage,” gushed one reader. “I love the sense of Judaism and Christianity out
of which Bess operates. It immediately recommends itself to me as wholesome and
authentic,” enthuses another.
But despite the alleged aura of wholesomeness and authenticity, it seems to me that Bess doesn’t so
much reinterpret Luke 4 as miss its real meaning as completely as did the citizens of the Lord’s hometown of Nazareth, his original audience.
Labels:
Howard Bess
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Jubilee
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Law
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Luke
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Recycling
Saturday, July 11, 2020
Time and Chance (44)
Unless we have studied ancient languages, identifying formal
Hebrew proverbs in the text of Ecclesiastes is a bit beyond most of us. To make
it easier, my edition of the ESV has displayed roughly a quarter of the 221 English verses
in the book with hanging indents instead of regular paragraphing, so that the reader
can distinguish poetry, proverbs or quotations from the Preacher’s ongoing narrative.
The highly subjective nature of this style treatment becomes
evident when we examine the same verses in other translations.
Labels:
Bible Translations
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Ecclesiastes
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Foolishness
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Time and Chance
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Wisdom
Friday, July 10, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Unpardon Me
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Matthew, Mark and
Luke all make reference to a sin that will, in Matthew’s words “not be forgiven”. Mark calls it an “eternal sin”.
The reference has been a source of distress
down through the centuries to Christians who fear they may have committed it
and be irreversibly destined for perdition.
Tom: Personally, Immanuel Can, I’ve always thought the unpardonable sin
was lazy exegesis, but I haven’t got much scripture to back me up there.
Labels:
Blasphemy
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Luke
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Mark
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Matthew
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
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Unpardonable Sin
Thursday, July 09, 2020
Vision, Inspiration and Leadership
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Joshua
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Leadership
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Moses
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Service
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Worship
Wednesday, July 08, 2020
Quotable Quotes
I’m pretty sure that is (used to be?) a regular feature in Reader’s Digest. Anyway, they won’t mind me nicking their title ...
I had promised about two years ago to update the links page for our semi-regular Quote of the Day feature. It currently links to 41 posts with another on the way shortly. The update was to include the names of each person quoted, which seems a fairly helpful thing to do for anyone who is trying to catch up on these after the fact.
At any rate, that has finally been done. You can find the index page
here if you’re interested, or access it any time from the banner on the main page of the blog.
At your service,
Tom
Labels:
Coming Untrue
/
Quote of the Day
Which Error?
“You therefore, beloved, knowing this beforehand, take care that you are not carried away with
the
error of lawless people and lose your own stability.”
What is the “error of lawless people” to which the apostle
Peter is referring, here at the end of his second letter? When an error threatens
to carry us away and make us unstable in our faith, it would seem useful to
correctly identify it.
That said, the answer is not necessarily straightforward. The
possibilities, I think, are two.
Labels:
2 Peter
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Error
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False Teachers
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Uniformitarianism
Tuesday, July 07, 2020
Out in the Woods
Van life proponent and pseudonymic woodsman Foresty Forest comments
on some well-known people’s conjectures about the nature of reality, and his
own motivation for wandering the mountains and valleys of the more obscure
parts of Canada:
“Elon Musk, who thinks that reality is all just a simulation ...
what kind of processing power would you need to model all these rocks, texture-map
them ... what kind of computer would you need for that? That’s the question.
I started losing interest in gaming, and getting into real life
adventures.”
Labels:
Faith vs Science
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Genesis
Monday, July 06, 2020
Anonymous Asks (100)
“Can I really do all things through Christ?”
The question is a reference to a familiar Bible verse, Philippians 4:13,
which reads, “I can do all things through him who strengthens me.” It is often
quoted by sports celebrities after a win in the big game, or in other
situations where someone who has been successful wants to make sure he gives
appropriate credit to God for his help along the way.
But is that what the verse is saying: that any Christian can
become proficient in any realm whatsoever because God will make it happen? Not
really.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Philippians
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Success
Sunday, July 05, 2020
Hide and Seek
“You will ... find me, when you seek me with all your heart.”
“I was ready to be found by those who did not seek me.”
Do those two statements sound the tiniest bit contradictory? They aren’t really.
They might contradict each other if they were both promises, and both
given to exactly the same people under precisely the same circumstances, but
they are not. One is a promise; the other is simply an observation, though a
singularly important one for those it affects.
Either way, the notion that God is out there to be
found — and, even better, willing it to happen — is something about which we ought to rejoice.
Saturday, July 04, 2020
Time and Chance (43)
The so-called “golden rule of Bible
interpretation” is this: When
the plain sense of scripture makes common sense, seek no other sense.
I have heard this line attributed to a few different people, so let’s give
credit both to whoever came up with it and to those who have helpfully passed
it on.
We often find this principle provoking heartfelt agreement
among Bible teachers. It is slightly more unusual to find expositors following
it with consistency.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
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Wisdom
Friday, July 03, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Faith in the Crosshairs
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile
than usual.
The website GodIsImaginary is an interesting study.
As you might guess from the title, it’s the
work of evangelical atheists attempting to lure gullible Christians into the
spiritual equivalent of a Venus flytrap. The bait is a little bit of flattery:
“I’m going to assume you are an educated Christian”, “You are a smart person.
You know how the world works, and you know how to think critically.”
It’s quite a clever move actually. For
once, they’ve dialed back the mockery and abuse atheists can rarely resist in
the interest of catching more flies with honey.
Labels:
Apologetics
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Atheism
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Faith
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Recycling
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, July 02, 2020
The Mercy of Fire
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Judgment Seat
/
Works
Wednesday, July 01, 2020
Too Big for Its Boots
“For though we walk in the flesh, we are not waging war according to
the flesh. For the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but
have divine power to destroy strongholds. We destroy arguments
and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ.”
A “lofty opinion” is a theological argument that is too big
for its boots. The Greek word from which we get the expression is hypsōma, which means an elevated
structure. Rightly recognizing the apostle is speaking of metaphorical heights,
other English translations use the expression “pretension” or “presumption”, “proud
obstacle” or “speculation”.
Labels:
2 Corinthians
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Apologetics
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Disagreement
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Vessels of Wrath and Vessels of Mercy
We’ve been looking at the question of whether God really
prepares some people for destruction and others for glory. How and to what
extent is his sovereignty exercised within the human heart?
Romans 9 is much misunderstood where this subject is
concerned. In yesterday’s post I made the case that nothing in the first 18 verses of the chapter deals with the subject of individual salvation. Paul’s
subject there is God’s election of nations and other groups to strategic roles in human history
for his own sovereign purposes.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Election
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Recycling
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Romans
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Sovereignty
Monday, June 29, 2020
Anonymous Asks (99)
The Lord Jesus once told
a story about a man who tested three of his servants by bestowing upon them
varying degrees of privilege. To one he gave five talents of money to invest, which a marginal
note in my Bible tells me was something in the order of 100 years’ wages
for a laborer. That was a huge privilege, not to mention a mammoth
responsibility. To another servant he gave two talents, or
forty years’ wages. To a third he gave a single talent to manage, which is
still more than I make in six years.
All three servants were exceedingly privileged.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Privilege
Sunday, June 28, 2020
Right There in Front of My Face
From the Department of Missing the Obvious, let me present
John 3:16, which I have been hearing my entire life without really
hearing it.
This happens. Unfortunately it happens quite a bit. Bear
with me. Perhaps the three things I am going to share with you today about
God’s love are perfectly evident to you, and always have been.
Let’s just say they didn’t jump out at me, even though they
were always right there in front of my face.
Saturday, June 27, 2020
Time and Chance (42)
Forty-two Saturdays into
our study of Ecclesiastes, we come at last to the phrase which we have taken as
our theme: “Time and chance happen to them all.”
Why do things happen to us the way they do? Ancient mythology makes reference to three goddesses who were thought to assign individual destinies to
mortals at birth. The Greeks called them the Fates. The unsaved talk about “Lady Luck”, usually on their way to the casino, personifying an imagined force to which
nobody can really appeal, but which every gambler hopes to have on their side. Even
atheists find themselves inexplicably using the phrase “It was meant to be”, as
if a random roll of the dice could actually signify intelligent purpose.
But in a world without revelation and with no sure way to know if there is a God or how he operates,
we can only blame time and chance for the good and bad things that come
our way.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Fate
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Time and Chance
Friday, June 26, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Bucking or Buckling?
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
I promised last week we’d talk about this
subject some Friday in the future, and there’s no time like the present.
Tom: IC, we opened a can of worms on the subject of authority and just
how the Christian ought to respond to it. That’s not something evangelicals
have had to worry about too much in the West for many years, but it’s a topic
that’s becoming increasingly relevant as governments begin to encroach on the freedoms
we currently enjoy in the interest of a “just society”.
So how about it? Got any grenades to lob on this subject?
Labels:
Authority
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 25, 2020
The Train to Tribulation and the Road to Hell
In yesterday’s post we were attempting to understand the massive collectivist “winds” that are blowing across the modern world right now. The purpose was to help Christians see that these are nothing new, nothing unexpected, and nothing untypical of mankind. The language changes, maybe, but the forces at work are always the same.
Labels:
Babel
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Collectivism
Wednesday, June 24, 2020
Let’s Get Together and …
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Babel
/
Collectivism
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (12)
“If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching,
do not receive him into your house or give him any greeting, for whoever
greets him takes part in his wicked works.”
Growing up in an evangelical community, it was understood
that Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses were not
our fellow believers. These groups were commonly referred to as cults, and considered spiritually dangerous. Pairs of these odd-looking “missionaries”
would occasionally make their way through our neighborhood from house to house
ringing doorbells and soliciting opportunities to talk to people about the tenets of their belief system. On
more than one occasion I heard this verse from 2 John applied as a
warning about them: “Do not receive them into your house or give them any
greeting.”
As a result, when I was home alone and saw through the
peephole of our front door two pasty white guys in matching snappy haircuts, bleached
shirts, neatly pressed dress slacks and sensible shoes, I promptly made
myself scarce for fear of violating John’s instruction. Hey, the word “Hello” might
accidentally slip from my lips and cause me to “take part in their wicked works”.
Is that really the sort of thing John had in mind?
Labels:
2 John
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Separation
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Testimony
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What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Monday, June 22, 2020
Anonymous Asks (98)
“Are Christians supposed to be perfect?”
We all know Christians sin. This is the reality we live
with. I was just making another pass through the apostle John’s first letter, where
we find these familiar words: “If we say we have no sin, we
deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” Whatever might be the
expectation of us, and whoever might be expecting it, the fact is that we fail,
and fail with some regularity. The longer we walk with Christ and the better we
know his word and his character, the more clearly we will see our own spiritual inadequacy.
So any Christian who claims sinlessness is lying, not just to the world, but
more importantly to himself.
That is what is actually happening in our lives, but what is supposed to be happening?
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Perfection
Sunday, June 21, 2020
A Little Monday Morning Quarterback
Have you ever been in a disagreement that got out of
control? I have.
People are different. Some respond to criticism by trying to
placate the other side, even groveling if necessary. They are willing to cede
any intellectual or moral position in hopes of ending the argument, even when they believe they are in the right. They take the proverbial knee ... or occasionally the literal knee.
Others fume and fuss and become emotional when the logic of
a critique disturbs their received worldview. They take correction personally,
as a negative commentary on their character rather than a learning opportunity.
Easily baited into debating hypotheticals, they can even find themselves arguing
positions they don’t really believe because they are so caught up in trying to “win”.
Labels:
Disagreement
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Job
/
Wisdom
Saturday, June 20, 2020
Time and Chance (41)
Bible readers whose systematic
theology requires them to downplay or overlook the distinctions scripture makes
between the Old and New Covenants are faced with more than the occasional
conundrum in interpreting Ecclesiastes. And yet any number of older
commentators read and exposit the book as if its primary value is as
directly-applicable advice to modern Christians.
It most surely is not.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Life
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Pleasure
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Time and Chance
Friday, June 19, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Empty-Somethings
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
The Telegraph reports an Italian court has ordered a divorced father to pay child support for his 28-year-old son, who has already
meandered through one degree in literature and has now enrolled in a
post-graduate course in experimental cinema.
Tom: I bring this up, Immanuel Can, because this is not an isolated case.
Most parents have not been nailed for child support, but many all over the
world have their adult sons and daughters living in their homes well into their
thirties and beyond.
The phenomenon has a
name in Italy. They call it bamboccioni, which essentially means
“chubby children”. You had what I thought was a better idea, IC. How about “empty-somethings”?
Labels:
Adulthood
/
Education
/
Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 18, 2020
Even More Offensive
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christ
/
Offences
/
Soren Kierkegaard
Wednesday, June 17, 2020
Of Meth Heads and Christ Figures
People are complicated, Christians included. They are not
all one thing, either good or bad.
Friends of whom I once thought very highly have later shown
the world sides of themselves I never knew existed, betraying and
deceiving loved ones, harboring unimagined secrets and bad habits, or getting
involved in situations that seem incomprehensible to those who thought they
knew them. Equally, people who lived quite openly and despicably in sin have on
occasion shown evidence of tenderness, affection or intelligence I never
thought possible for them.
People are complicated, and they will surprise you.
Labels:
Christianity Today
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Media
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Racism
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Call and Answer
As I have probably mentioned from time to time, it is my
habit every morning to try to read one chapter of the Old Testament and one
chapter of the New. Other Christians I know do much the same thing. More
than once we have found ourselves sharing with one another how remarkably one
passage seems to dovetail with another.
Coincidence? Perhaps. But the unity of scripture is a real
phenomenon, and it should not surprise us when that inherent thematic oneness expresses itself in remarkable ways. This morning it is in the form of a call
and answer.
Labels:
Job
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John
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Reconciliation
/
Resurrection
Monday, June 15, 2020
Anonymous Asks (97)
“Does God make mistakes?”
The Song of Moses says this about God: “The Rock, his work is perfect, for all his ways are justice.” David wrote, “This God — his way is perfect; the word of the Lord proves true.” Another psalm says the Lord’s understanding is
“beyond measure”. The prophet Isaiah said, “O Lord, you have done wonderful things, plans formed of old,
faithful and sure.” Even the pagan prophet Balaam was forced to concede that “God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind. Has he said, and will he not do it? Or has he spoken, and will he not fulfill it?”
Does this sound like Someone who makes mistakes? The writers
of scripture claim our God is morally impeccable, utterly reliable, and acts in
absolute harmony with reality. If we accept their testimony then, no, God does
not make mistakes.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Character of God
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Choices
/
Error
Sunday, June 14, 2020
More Than Accurate
“My anger burns against you and against your two friends, for
you have not spoken of me what is right.”
In his first letter to the churches in Corinth, as he so
often does, Paul appeals to the authority of the Old Testament in making his
argument. He says, “For
it is written.” Apparently that settles the matter.
Incidentally, Paul is quoting from the book of Job. The
text at the top of this post comes from Job as well.
Labels:
Correction
/
God
/
Job
Saturday, June 13, 2020
Time and Chance (40)
The writer to the Hebrews
notes that one of the Lord’s objectives in his incarnation was to “deliver all those
who through fear of death were subject to lifelong slavery”.
That slave metaphor is not particularly flattering. And yet we can see a slave’s mentality at work in
Ecclesiastes. Solomon, the Preacher, has lived his life making decisions for
everyone else around him. He has been the greatest king of his generation;
autonomous, powerful, captain of his own destiny. As he considers his own
looming demise, he cannot stop obsessing about the various ways in which his
own agency is being gradually stripped from him as he ages. This, he says, is “vanity”
and “a great evil”. Death is the great leveler of humanity, and the Preacher
does not look forward to being leveled.
That preoccupation is a form of slavery, one from which only Christ can free us.
Labels:
Death
/
Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
Friday, June 12, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Evolving Christianity
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Evolution
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 11, 2020
Offensive Christianity
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Doubt
/
Soren Kierkegaard
Wednesday, June 10, 2020
Who Does the Washing?
“If I do not wash you, you
have no share with me.”
A very simple thought this morning, but perhaps an important
one.
It is helpful to recognize what is being symbolized in our Lord’s
marvelous display of love and humility at the very beginning of John 13. When
Jesus washes the feet of his disciples, the spiritual issue being addressed is not their eternal salvation. Judas had
his feet washed right along with the rest of the disciples, and subsequently
went to “his own place”. So the “share” at stake in allowing the Lord to wash
our feet is not our “heavenly portion”. Salvation is settled separately, as
Jesus told Peter: “The one who has bathed does not need to wash, except
for his feet, but is completely clean. And you are clean, but not
every one of you.”
One man had his feet washed who had never consented to take
a bath: Judas. His footwashing did not help him in any way, shape or form. He
went right out and betrayed the Lord only moments later. If anything, the
footwashing he had received testified against him.
Labels:
Defilement
/
John
/
Washing
Tuesday, June 09, 2020
Unhelpful Friends and Uneasy Times
When Job’s three friends came to show him sympathy in his
time of distress, they wept, tore their robes and sat with him on the ground
seven days and seven nights, and no
one spoke a word to him because they saw that his suffering was very great.
The week of silence was a genuine gesture of solidarity and
goodwill, but everything Job’s friends did from that point on was a bit of a
bust. Why? Because they opened their mouths and started talking — and
arguing at great length — about something they weren’t going through and
clearly didn’t understand.
We Christians may be at risk of doing much the same thing
with respect to the current racial tensions in the U.S.
Monday, June 08, 2020
Anonymous Asks (96)
“How can I avoid the appearance of evil?”
Let me take a wild guess here: you read from the King James
Version of the Bible.
Actually, it’s not really that wild a guess. If we use the
very convenient BibleHub website to take a
look at a broad
spectrum of English translations of 1 Thessalonians 5:22 (which
is where the phrase “the appearance of evil” originates), we find only six of the
28 versions listed there translate it that way, and three of those are King
James variants. Of those six, the KJV is by far the most widely read, so this
rendering of the verse is still very common today despite being more than a
little misleading to modern readers.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Appearances
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Bible Translations
Sunday, June 07, 2020
Christ-Plus®
In the upper room, Jesus sets out God’s program for his
disciples. The Son of Man is to be glorified, and God glorified in him. This necessitates
him going away, first to the cross, and then to the Father, where he intends to
make his preparations to receive his disciples, and then return for them. Only
three things are really required of the disciples in all this: believe,
love
one another, and wait
patiently for his promised return.
This is God’s program in a nutshell. Unsurprisingly, three
of the Lord’s disciples voice objections to it, and offer subtle improvements
to make it more palatable to them.
Saturday, June 06, 2020
Time and Chance (39)
If you’re counting, the words “dead” and “die”
occur six times apiece, “dust” and “death” three times, “one place” (guess
where?) twice, and “Sheol”, “burial” and “stillborn” once each.
To top it all off, the infamous chapter 12 contains such an impressive stack of poetic aging-and-death
metaphors that the first thing most Christians do upon finishing the book is
scramble to the New Testament post-haste in search of something to wash the
taste out of their mouths. I find the
last
nine verses of Romans 8 usually do nicely.
Labels:
Death
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
Friday, June 05, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Rules of Combat
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Controversy
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Debate
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 04, 2020
The Heights of Accommodation and the Depths of Evil
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Deuteronomy
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Truth
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Witnessing
Wednesday, June 03, 2020
Congregations in Boxes
If you are anything like me, you have probably watched no
end of amateur Christian video uploaded to YouTube in the last two months.
The medium definitely has its limitations.
Still, there is a certain amount of courage required to record your
thoughts to be replayed in a public forum. The whole thing is pretty stark: it’s
basically a person in a box. You are seriously exposed.
Labels:
Church
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Participation
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YouTube
Tuesday, June 02, 2020
Not Done in a Corner
From the scientific
perspective, peer review is the litmus test of reliability.
The idea is this: that in order for a newly published academic theory to have any credibility with either the
scientific community or the general public, it is necessary for
independent parties to test it: to carefully read through the documentation
that supports it; to re-calculate the mathematical formulas that lie behind it;
to examine the steps by which the theory was constructed and certify that its
conclusions were arrived at in accordance with normal scientific procedures; in
some cases even to re-perform whatever experiments are alleged to prove it and
examine their results for consistency.
You cannot do science off
in some dark corner and then refuse to allow anybody to see what you have been
up to. If you do, nobody will believe you at all.
Monday, June 01, 2020
Anonymous Asks (95)
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.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Creeds
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Salvation
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
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God
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Omniscience
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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
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Revelation
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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
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Too Hot to Handle
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World Vision
Thursday, May 28, 2020
Stuck in the Middle with You
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
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Conservatism
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Liberalism
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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
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Government
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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
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Nehemiah
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Sinlessness
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