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Monday, August 31, 2020
Anonymous Asks (108)
“Why do we follow some Levitical laws and not others?”
Whenever we associate living the Christian life with following the Law of Moses, we run the risk of becoming
very confused. Surprisingly, the relationship between Christianity and Old
Testament Judaism is still much misunderstood today, even though the matter was
conclusively sorted out very early in church history. It’s a situation made
worse today by systems of theology that conflate the church with Israel.
But if we have our theology right, we will find Christians do not “follow Levitical laws” at all.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Grace
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Law
Sunday, August 30, 2020
Incidentally …
An idle remark made in passing may tell us considerably more
about its speaker than listening to him lecture for an hour on a prepared
topic.
Likewise, it is often the case that the little “asides” made
by the writers of the New Testament in the process of teaching are as
interesting as — and sometime even more interesting than — the subjects
themselves.
Nothing in scripture is simply there to fill up space. Even
incidental comments are full of important truth.
Labels:
1 Corinthians
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Father
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Godhead
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Son
Saturday, August 29, 2020
Time and Chance (51)
As I have mentioned on more than one occasion during
our study of Ecclesiastes, the list of things its writer characterizes as “vanity”
in his thesis is lengthy. Over thirty different features of human existence are
so described, a partial list of which you can find here,
from hedonism to workaholism to discontentment and entropy.
Labels:
Age
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
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Youth
Friday, August 28, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Peasants Are Revolting
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Politics
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Responsibility
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 27, 2020
Merged into the Mob
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Collectivism
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Judgment
Wednesday, August 26, 2020
No Standing
The argument may be made that John Glover Roberts Jr.
is the most powerful man in America.
As the 17th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States, when Roberts says no, even the current president reluctantly backs down.
For that matter, lower court judges have blocked, delayed or nullified Mr. Trump’s
initiatives over the last four years on any number
of fronts.
Surprising, no?
Labels:
1 Corinthians
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Church
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Government
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Laws
Tuesday, August 25, 2020
Fake Piety
Fake piety is usually fairly transparent. Sadly, the fakely
pious are the only ones who do not know it.
Christians sometimes caution one another to be careful what
we confess, and this is not always a bad thing. A personal testimony full of interesting
and semi-scandalous details can serve as a source of enticement to those who
have little life experience, whose parents have sheltered them from the evils
in the world.
Monday, August 24, 2020
Anonymous Asks (107)
“What does the Bible say about capital punishment?”
The law of God received by Moses at Sinai gave instructions to the leaders of Israel
concerning the conduct of Israelites and the foreigners who chose to travel and
live alongside them. The penalties for religious and criminal violations of the Law
were identical for both nationals and foreigners.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Capital Punishment
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Death Penalty
Sunday, August 23, 2020
Your Church Building is NOT the House of God
I’m hearing it all the time now in public prayer: “We thank
you, Father that we are able to freely gather in the house of God” and other similar thoughts, where the words “house of God” are unquestionably being used to describe the building in which we are sitting.
A similar misconception is given voice by people who insist upon
referring to the auditorium in which a church meets as a “sanctuary”, as in (from
mother to child), “Don’t run in the sanctuary! Don’t make noise in the
sanctuary!”
These are not new Christians. It makes me wonder if they really know what the house of God is or what the term sanctuary means. I think in many cases they do, but have through inattention lapsed into language that is potentially misleading.
Labels:
Christ
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Church
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Hebrews
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House of God
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Priesthood
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Recycling
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Sanctuary
Saturday, August 22, 2020
Time and Chance (50)
Almost a year ago we started this weekly study in Ecclesiastes, and here we are in the
penultimate chapter. I have been poking along a verse or two at a time,
because it seems to me that this 3,000 year old treatise on the meaning of
life deserves our concentrated attention and rarely gets it.
Hey, Christians and unbelievers alike quote from Ecclesiastes all the time. There’s some great stuff in there for funerals. But when
was the last time you heard even a single sermon on the book, let alone a
series? I can remember maybe two in my entire life.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Generosity
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Time and Chance
Friday, August 21, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Which Beer Do Christians Drink?
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Everybody’s favorite political football Bristol Palin has written a column on the subject
of the Guinness Beer Company and its Christian origins.
Tom: This is not the first time I’ve come across
this story, Immanuel Can. In another generation, a Christian brewer turns out
to have been the voice of moderation and societal self control. But in some
evangelical circles today, Arthur Guinness would be taken to task for corrupting the
faithful. I mean, he sold alcohol for a living!
Is there a less cartoonish and more biblical position to be taken on the subject of
alcohol consumption, IC?
Labels:
Alcohol
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Recycling
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Romans
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 20, 2020
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Resetting our Defaults
I’ve been thinking about platform ministry. Each church has its
own default set of practices observed week after week (with the exception of churches
that meet in living rooms and basements and don’t have platforms) and, other
than in the case of brand new churches, the choices that go into how teaching
and preaching get presented are rarely conscious ones. They are more often the
result of time, tradition and imitation of formats perceived to be successful
in other churches.
Labels:
Church
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Recycling
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Spiritual Gifts
Tuesday, August 18, 2020
Recommend-a-blog (30)
Alan Shlemon at Stand to Reason has written a thought-provoking piece called “How 2020 Is
Taking a Toll on Your Soul” about the effects of the internet in the last
five months on society in general and Christians in particular. To nobody’s
surprise, in COVID lockdown we have been spending record
amounts of time online. In the UK, the highest percentage increase in time spent
online is among those over the age of 54.
As a result, I’ve felt it and I’m sure you have too: that
indefinable malaise and “inordinate pressure to say the right thing”. Shlemon
argues it’s partly a consequence of the false sense of omnipresence and omniscience
social media inspires.
Labels:
Internet
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Recommend-a-blog
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Stand to Reason
Monday, August 17, 2020
Anonymous Asks (106)
“How can Christians say their religion is the only true one?”
Over fifty years ago, a Muslim who happened to hear my father preaching asked him a question very much
like this one. After listening to Dad for a time, he inquired, “Are you
actually telling us that Jesus is the only way to God?”
Ouch.
In a Bit of a Bind
My father was in a bit of a bind in that he was at the time a guest in a foreign country. His ability
to continue freely preaching and teaching there depended to a certain extent on
not rocking the boat unnecessarily. However, this was one of those questions
that cannot be evaded, ignored or put off to a more convenient time when there
might be fewer witnesses or a less potentially hostile environment.
Faithfulness to his Master demanded a straightforward answer, and Dad gave one.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Exclusivity
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Gospel
Sunday, August 16, 2020
Acknowledging the Obvious
Why do we give God glory?
It’s a good question. I was introduced to the Christian faith as a small child, so the notion of
people gathering together to sing praises to God, to raise their hands in the
air, to pray fervently to someone they could not see, and say complimentary things about him to one another did not seem weird to me at all. It was what
I was used to, and when I was old enough to know how to imitate what these
folks were doing, I joined in too, even though at that point I had no
personal knowledge of Jesus Christ.
It was expected, so we did it.
Saturday, August 15, 2020
Time and Chance (49)
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Jeremy Bentham’s Panopticon |
It is said that every virtue carried to extremes becomes a
vice, which is probably true. Every good thing indulged in to excess does much the
same.
The previous few verses of Ecclesiastes 10 contrast a
kingdom run by self-indulgent drunks and gluttons with a kingdom administered
by wise, self-controlled princes and officials who know the proper place for leisure
and pleasure in their own lives. Obviously the citizens of the second kingdom
will have a better time of it than those of the first. The Preacher then
comments that attending to only your own desires rather than the objective
needs around you will end in disaster.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Self-Control
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Social Media
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Time and Chance
Friday, August 14, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Religious Scrupulosity
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Religious Scrupulosity
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Fake News
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
C.S. Lewis
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Media
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Prophecy
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
Two Psalms
The Psalms are not only richly poetic but deeply personal.
That may be one reason so many Christians relate to them on an emotional level.
When saying goodbye even temporarily to someone we love, the natural instinct
is to reach for a psalm. Psalms touch our hearts in ways much of the rest
of God’s word may not.
Let me be very honest about that: I suspect much
of the time the Psalms touch us so powerfully because we don’t really
understand what they are about to any great extent. Figures of speech will do
that; they universalize thoughts that may actually be quite specific. So we feel
free to grab bits and pieces of the Psalms here and there to apply to our own
experience without worrying too much whether we are violating some principle of
exegesis.
They just feel right, and so we are at home with them. Even if at one level they are not
really ours.
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Knowing Our Limitations
A few days ago we ran a post about the
will of God and the COVID-19 pandemic. In the process of researching what
God’s will meant to the Lord Jesus and his apostles, I came across a verse
that initially perplexed me, then later seemed to provide some interesting
insights into the subject. I did not bother to mention it in the COVID
post because it was one of those theological rabbit trails, heading off through
the forest from where we were at the time to somewhere entirely different. But
the questions raised by the verse certainly merit a full post’s worth of
consideration, and then some.
I’ve been mulling it over ever since, so let’s lay out the
problem that occurred to me and see where it takes us ... carefully, of
course.
Labels:
Gethsemane
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Matthew
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Will of God
Monday, August 10, 2020
Anonymous Asks (105)
If I were to discuss all the different ways some of these words have been used throughout history and
all the ways they each are misused throughout Christendom, this might turn into a five-parter. So let’s
keep it simple and just try to highlight what the Bible teaches about each as
they exist in the church today.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Pastors
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Preacher
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Priests
Sunday, August 09, 2020
Saturday, August 08, 2020
Time and Chance (48)
Many years ago I had an older Scottish boss. Unstereotypically
for a Scot with an accent so thick you could make peaks in it with a spatula, he had no
problem with his staff reading a book, chatting, or idling away our shifts —
but only under one condition: all the work in the shop must be finished and out
the door first. If our salespeople failed to keep us busy, that was their
problem. If we failed to deliver their work on time, it was ours.
So play by all means,
but play after you work.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Pleasure
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Time and Chance
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Work Ethic
Friday, August 07, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Christians and Mental Health
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Biblical Counseling
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Mental Illness
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 06, 2020
Universal Human Rights: The Christian Legacy
There is only one reason we have human rights: God.
And it was a Christian who first discovered this and explained it to the world.
Eh?
Now, you might ask yourself this: if this is true, why was I not told? Why didn’t my teachers in high school, my instructors at college or my professors in my undergraduate explain this? Or if it’s true, then why is not every Christian trumpeting the fact from the rooftops?
The answer’s simple: Christians don’t know it, and other people don’t want to hear it.
Labels:
Christianity
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Human Rights
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John Locke
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Recycling
Wednesday, August 05, 2020
COVID-19 and the Will of God
“It was God’s will.”
Ah, the magic phrase. You hear it said by devout people at
funerals, usually with palpable resignation. “He was taken before we were
ready, and we’re all hurting, but somehow we know — though we can’t quite
see how it might be since he was such a great guy and will be so profoundly
missed — that his untimely and painful death was God’s will.”
So that’s all right then. Even if it isn’t, really.
Labels:
COVID-19
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Suffering
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Will of God
Tuesday, August 04, 2020
Marching as to War
“... making supplication for all the saints, and also
for me, that words may be given to me in opening my mouth boldly to
proclaim the mystery of the gospel ... that I may declare it
boldly, as I ought to speak.”
This is not the only time Paul asks for prayer specifically for himself and for the work he was engaged in. Colossians 4 contains
a similar request, as do both Paul’s
first and
second letters to Thessalonica. We may take it this was an apostolic custom. The writer to the Hebrews does
the same.
I wonder why.
Labels:
Ephesians
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Prayer
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Spiritual Warfare
Monday, August 03, 2020
Anonymous Asks (104)
This is an excellent question for young Christians to resolve in their hearts and heads before it
becomes emotional and personal, especially in a cultural climate where we are repeatedly told
that pre-marital sex is not only not sinful, but healthy, normal human behavior.
Chaste teenagers are currently considered more than a little defective. Heaven help you if your dedication to sexual purity lasts into your
twenties.
So why have Christians always taught that sexual purity is so important?
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Premarital Sex
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Purity
Sunday, August 02, 2020
Thank You for the Failures
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Some readers understand that concept very broadly. They see
that God “desires all people to be saved and to come to the
knowledge of the truth”, and conclude from it that God would prefer it if every
single human being on the planet were to turn from sin and self to Christ, who
is God’s only way of salvation.
This may very well be true, though I don’t think it’s
exactly what Paul was telling Timothy.
Labels:
Christ
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Hell
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Matthew
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Recycling
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Word of God
Saturday, August 01, 2020
Time and Chance (47)
Not all fools are avowed atheists.
All serious foolishness begins with the assumption “There
is no God.” But there are different ways of denying the existence of
God in one’s heart. One way is to do it like Richard Dawkins, who says it with
a lot of pseudo-scientific bother and fuss. He can’t stop thinking about it and
trying to prove it. Then there is the functional atheist. He never tries to
talk anyone out of their belief in God, and he certainly doesn’t write books
about God’s non-existence. He may even concede that God might possibly exist,
but he lives every moment of his life as if God does not.
Either way is foolish, but at least a Dawkins recognizes the
existence of God as a problem for his worldview and is working away at coming
to grips with it. The other fellow is perhaps in a worse state, as he never
thinks about God at all.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Foolishness
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Time and Chance
Friday, July 31, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: No-Fault Separation
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
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Leadership
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Leaving
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, July 30, 2020
Blessed are the Hated
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christian Testimony
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Hatred
/
John
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
On Knowing and Being Known
“But Jesus on his part did not entrust himself to them,
because he knew all people and needed no one to bear witness about man,
for he
himself knew what was in man.”
To really know someone and to be known by them is one of the
greatest pleasures a human being may experience in this life.
It is also absolutely terrifying.
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Praying for Catastrophe
Etymology is a really cool thing. It simply means the
history of the development of a word. An etymological study of language is one
that investigates how the words we use came to mean what they mean today: where they
originated, what they meant back then, and when and how they changed, expanded, diluted
or sometimes even reversed their meanings to become what we understand by them when
we use them today.
Lately I have been thinking about catastrophes. Did you know that originally a catastrophe was not
necessarily a bad thing?
Monday, July 27, 2020
Anonymous Asks (103)
Must I pick only one?
Okay then, but first, a word about music as worship.
I’m very glad someone actually asked this question, because it
hints at just how many evangelicals think of worship almost exclusively in
connection with congregational singing, and have not given much thought to
whether there are better ways to worship God than in the middle of belting out
a cheesy modern melody and waving your arms around ... or worse,
pummeling your drum kit.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Worship
Sunday, July 26, 2020
David’s Covenant and the Resurrection
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On Tuesday we looked at the first six public messages in the book of Acts to consider how one’s audience ought to determine the content of a gospel message, a pattern well established by the apostles in their preaching.
It seems obvious that the apostles did not simply memorize a few key points to preach about in every situation. They did not utilize a predictable series of Old Testament proof texts. They were not merely checking boxes, but responded to the needs of the particular audience to whom they were preaching.
So now here we are in Acts 13.
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
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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
/
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
/
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
/
Elders
/
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
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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
/
Luke
/
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
/
Ecclesiastes
/
Foolishness
/
Time and Chance
/
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
/
Mark
/
Matthew
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Recycling
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
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
/
Moses
/
Service
/
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
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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
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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
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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
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