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Sunday, November 08, 2020
Nationhood and Angelic Representation
A state is a political and geopolitical entity, while a nation is a cultural and ethnic one. Or at least so says Wikipedia.
Keep this distinction in mind.
What follows is more of an intellectual exercise and a conversation provoker than a
specific meditation, but I throw it out there for those who, like me, are
intrigued by the details of scripture.
You may be familiar
with the concept of the angelic representation of people groups, which is
plainly stated for us in the book of Daniel.
Saturday, November 07, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (7)
Students of ancient religions will likely recall that the
vast majority of non-Israelites (and, frankly, far too many Israelites too) were pantheists, and that the vast majority of the
gods these people worshiped actually possessed very limited portfolios.
In the Ancient Near East, every major city had its own patron
deity. The Egyptians
had literally dozens of them, each with specific areas of responsibility. So
Montu was their god of war, Neper their god of grain, Osiris their ruler of the
underworld, Nut their sky goddess, Ash their god of the Libyan desert, and so
on. The Sumerians
had more than 3,000 deities, major and minor, including Ashur, god of wind
and Nergal, god of plagues. The gods of all major ancient religions divvied up responsibilities
over the world in this way, and the effect of this multiplicity of gods was invariably
to lessen the impressiveness of any individual deity.
Even the Canaanite god Baal, named 63 times in our Old
Testaments and a major factor in Israelite idolatry, was primarily known as a
fertility god.
How does this relate to our study of Jonah? Read on, my friend ...
Labels:
Idolatry
/
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
Friday, November 06, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Greatest Threat to Faith Today
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Internet
/
Technology
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
Worship
Thursday, November 05, 2020
The Next [De]Generation
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Children
/
Commitment
Wednesday, November 04, 2020
Prophetic Trajectories in Matthew
Matthew 10 recounts the commission of the twelve disciples
to take the good news of the kingdom to all the cities of Israel.
There is a
specifically ethnic character to this set of instructions: “Go nowhere among
the Gentiles and enter no town of the Samaritans, but go rather
to the lost sheep of the house of Israel,” instructs the Lord.
At this time and for this specific purpose, the Lord equips
his servants with a
tool kit you and I do not possess in taking the message of gospel to
the world today: he “gave them authority over unclean spirits, to cast them
out, and to heal every disease and every affliction.”
Labels:
Great Tribulation
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Matthew
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Persecution
Tuesday, November 03, 2020
A Structural Analysis of Psalm 107
Sometimes the best way to understand something is to try to put it inside
your own frame of reference.
The book of Psalms is a compilation of poetry written at various times and places by a bare minimum of eight different
godly men with diverse personalities and interests.
Some were theologians writing poetry, and some were probably poets writing
theology. This means, as you would expect, that there are psalms with obvious
and ornate structures (Psalm 119 comes to mind, where the letters of the
Hebrew alphabet start each section of the psalm), as well as others that appear
to be structured very simply (Psalm 15 is a single question and its
answer) or have very little noticeable structure at all (Psalm 117, for
example, is so brief that any analysis of its structure is near-pointless).
Pattern recognition is more useful in some passages of
scripture than in others. Psalm 107 is definitely structured.
Labels:
Bible Study
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Interpretation
/
Psalms
Monday, November 02, 2020
Anonymous Asks (117)
“Why should someone start believing in God?”
Not so long ago, I watched a highly educated agnostic
on YouTube argue the case that pretty lies are sometimes beneficial. His point
was basically that if what people believe causes them to do more good things
than bad, then their beliefs are a net positive for the world despite the fact
that they are out of touch with reality. He went on to say the
Christian faith is one of these things, and that it is a net positive for
societies and the individuals in them, even if it turns out to be a pretty lie.
He says Western Civilization could use more people who believe pretty lies.
There might be something to that, but it’s not an argument
a Christian is likely to make.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Belief
Sunday, November 01, 2020
An Unnecessary Insertion?
In Matthew, the Father declares that he is “well pleased”
with the Son three times.
“Three?” you say. “I can think of two.”
Sure: the baptism of the Lord Jesus and his transfiguration.
But there is a third reference to the Father’s pleasure in the Son found in
Matthew 12. It’s a familiar quote from the book of Isaiah.
“Oh, a quote. That’s
kind of cheating.”
Labels:
Christ
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Hebrews
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Isaiah
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Matthew
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Satisfaction
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (6)
It is of at least mild interest to certain commentators to note which names of God are used
by the writers of various Old Testament books. For example, it is a notable feature
of the book of Ecclesiastes that the personal name by which God makes himself
known to Israel is never used there. Given the content of Ecclesiastes, this authorial
choice makes perfect sense.
Can we deduce anything equally significant from the names of God used in the book of
Jonah? You be the judge.
Labels:
Jonah
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Mining the Minors
/
Names of God
Friday, October 30, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Worth Leaving Over
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
In principle, I’m not keen on leaving churches. It happens too often and too
easily. But sometimes, there just isn’t any choice.
When
Gretta Vosper became the pastor of a West Hill United Church in Toronto, Canada in 1997, she
was not yet out of the closet about her atheism, a little bonus she didn’t disclose
from the pulpit until 2001. Amazingly, quite a few congregants hung on until
2008 when Vosper did away with the Lord’s Prayer, at which point 2/3 of the
flock made for the exits.
Tom: I’m not sure precisely where the line is,
but I’d have difficulty faulting anyone who leaves a church with an atheist
pastor, IC. From your experience, what are the ingredients that go into making
for a “time to go” decision?
Labels:
Apostasy
/
Church
/
Heresy
/
Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Infinite Improbability and the Multiverse Hypothesis
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Multiverse
/
Probability
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Recognizing Our Limitations
An anthropomorphism is the attribution of human motivation, characteristics or behavior to that
which is not human; in The American Heritage Dictionary, an inanimate object, an animal or some natural phenomenon.
The Bible is full of such figures of speech. One psalmist
says, “The heavens declare
the glory of God ... day to day pours out speech.”
Another records, “The mountains skipped
like rams.”
Labels:
Anthropomorphism
/
Psalms
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Hyperbole and Analogy
When trying to understand individual psalms, three questions
are helpful to ask:
- How was this psalm understood by its original audience?
- To what other circumstances might this psalm legitimately apply?
- Where is Christ in this psalm; and, conversely, where is he not?
The first and third questions are easily understood, even if
it is sometimes tough sledding to find the answers to them. The second requires
a little explanation.
Labels:
Application
/
Interpretation
/
Psalms
Monday, October 26, 2020
Anonymous Asks (116)
“How can you worship a God who could send your loved ones to hell?”
There is a something about the generosity of spirit in this
frequently-heard and more-frequently-unheard complaint that I would hate
to disparage. Loyalty to friends and kin is commendable, and self-sacrificial
loyalty — the sort that feels uncomfortable partaking of a good thing from
which others are excluded — is more commendable still.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Judgment
/
Loyalty
Sunday, October 25, 2020
Worth Dying For
When King David wrote, “He trains
my hands for war, so that my arms can bend a bow of bronze,” the great warrior-poet
was not reaching for an apt figure of speech to describe some vigorous
spiritual exercise. He meant it absolutely literally. David had men on every
side who were trying to kill him with bows, arrows, swords and spears. His
enemies were not looking for a bracing intellectual argument; they intended to
spill David’s blood, and spill it in copious quantities.
Moreover, God was not standing aloof from David’s very
physical struggles. He was right in there equipping his servant to pierce, crush,
injure and maim his fellow man.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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David
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Figurative Language
/
Psalms
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Spiritual Warfare
Saturday, October 24, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (5)
The Hebrew word translated “presence” is literally
“face”
or “countenance”. It appears in every book from Genesis through Malachi, over
2,000 times in total. When used of God, as in “the presence of the Lord”,
it refers to any location in which God chooses to present himself to human
beings or any location in which he is said to make his residence.
That phrase “presence of the Lord” is used three times in
the book of Jonah, all in this first chapter.
Labels:
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
Presence of the Lord
Friday, October 23, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Numbers Game
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Abortion
/
Media
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 22, 2020
What You Don’t Know Can Kill You
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Agnosticism
/
Hebrews
/
Richard Dawkins
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Third-Tier Faith
Once in a while when confronting others with the claims of
Jesus Christ, Christians run into a response like “I truly wish I could
believe that, but I just haven’t got the faith,” or “If only I could be sure
what you’re saying is true ...”
Sound familiar? I’ve been thinking a lot about that excuse.
Labels:
Faith
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Denominations and Discernment
Discernment is a difficult quality to teach. Some people
have a great deal more of it than others. It’s a quality that seems to me increasingly
and depressingly rare.
It’s not hard to think of Christians who have known the Lord
for years, yet remain more than a little gullible and sometimes require the protection
of family and friends. You probably know some too. They like people. They think
the best of everyone. They have a tendency to be so gentle and trusting that
they fall for almost every new thing that comes along, provided it is presented
with a smile. They mistake niceness for goodness and pleasant talk for the
gospel truth.
Labels:
Denominationalism
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Discipleship
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Discrimination
/
Recycling
Monday, October 19, 2020
Anonymous Asks (115)
“What’s the difference between being spiritual
and being religious?”
The answer to this question very much
depends on whether we come at it from the perspective of the man in the street,
or from that of the scriptures.
The Man in the Street
The man in the street thinks a mystic
is spiritual and a priest religious. He sees the religious person as a cog in
the ecclesiastical machinery, observing traditions and doing his duty as part
of a larger religious community. The “spiritual” person, on the other hand, is
someone operating outside institutional religion; thought to be in harmony with
the natural order, and communing with the universe or some such. The religious person
would always be in church on Sunday (or Saturday), while the “spiritual” person
may or may not.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Religious
/
Spiritual
Sunday, October 18, 2020
The Commentariat Speaks (19)
Moscow, Idaho is home to Christ Church,
a conservative reformed evangelical gathering of about 900 people that has
produced an unusual number of what Wikipedia calls “institutional
projects”, including New Saint Andrews College, the Logos School, a
Christian book publisher, a scripture translation group, a three-year ministerial training program and four spin-off churches in Montana, California
and Myanmar.
Christ Church congregants form an active community of
homeschoolers and Christian businesspeople within Moscow.
Labels:
Douglas Wilson
/
Great Commission
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The Commentariat Speaks
Saturday, October 17, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (4)
All names have some level of significance
to the people who bear them, though you may feel free to disagree if you have
been afflicted with parents who think calling a child Apple or Moon Unit is
a bright idea. Thankfully those folks are comparatively rare.
In ancient languages, most names were not
simply a pleasing combination of vowels and consonants chosen by moms and dads
who were stuck for a name they could agree on; they also signified something
else. The Lord renamed at least one of his disciples, and he did not do so
without purpose. The name Simon, which means “to hear”, was changed to Peter,
meaning a rock or stone. Much is said about that renaming in religious circles,
not all of it accurate, but it is certain that the change was significant both
to the Lord and to Peter. It redefined who he was.
Labels:
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
Nineveh
Friday, October 16, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Preaching or Peddling?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Stewardship
/
Teaching
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 15, 2020
The Atheist’s New Clothes
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Agnosticism
/
Atheism
/
Psalms
/
Richard Dawkins
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
How Saved Are You?
Most of us associate our salvation with a specific incident:
a conversation, a sudden realization, a moment in which it became clear to us
that the Lord was speaking; that God was right and we were wrong; that we were
sinners and that there was something we urgently needed to do about that. So in
our own way we cried out to God: some with tears, some more tentatively, still
not completely sure what might be involved. How much we may have fully grasped of
the role of Christ in both salvation and in the government of our lives from
then on almost certainly differed from person to person.
But my point is … it was a point in time. And if you say the
word “salvation”, that event is primarily what we think of.
An event is good. If you have one to look back on, I’m glad.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
/
Christ
/
Communion
/
Peter
/
Recycling
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
A Gap Anticipated
“All scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for
reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the
man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”
The Bible repeatedly claims to be God-breathed, both in its
component parts and in its entirety. Statements to the effect that God has
spoken are made several hundred times in the books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel
alone, and they are sprinkled liberally through the rest of the scripture. Other
writers and speakers
in the Bible
made similar
assertions
to that which Paul makes here: that the
whole thing (Law, Prophets, Psalms, Letters, Gospels) is God speaking,
right down its
glyphs and diacritics in the original languages.
Stop and think about that a moment.
Labels:
2 Timothy
/
Inspiration
/
Scripture
Monday, October 12, 2020
Anonymous Asks (114)
“Where did Jesus come from?”
Before there was ever a Jesus of Nazareth, there was the
Word. This is one of the names the writers of the Bible use to describe
the Pre-Incarnate Christ.
The Pre-Incarnate Word
John speaks of “the Word”, who “was
with God” and who “was
God”. The Word made all things that have been made, without
exception, which means the Word existed not just at creation, but prior to
it. Since nothing that was made was made without him, that must include Satan. Satan
is not any old created
being. He was the “anointed
guardian cherub” who served in heaven before his fall. Thus it is evident
the Word was operating in eternity well before the rest of creation was brought
into existence.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Christ
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Incarnation
/
The Word
Sunday, October 11, 2020
Why Your View of Prophecy Matters
Does is really make much difference how you view Bible
prophecy?
Most Christians would affirm that all scripture is
God-breathed and profitable; that’s fairly fundamental. It follows that the
study of prophecy is also profitable, though whether its details are easily
deciphered or have immediate application to the lives of all readers is another
question altogether.
Labels:
Amillennialism
/
Church
/
Israel
/
Millennium
/
Premillennialism
/
Prophecy
/
Recycling
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (3)
“The word of the Lord” is an expression that occurs 242 times in the Old Testament. It is a claim
that God has spoken and a demand that he be heard. It is not the only way that
the writers of the Old Testament choose to convey the truth that God has something
to say, but it is probably their most prominent and frequent way of
expressing it.
The word of the Lord is unspeakably powerful. The psalmist records that by it
“the heavens were made”. Sometimes the word of the Lord tells great men of
great things to come. Other times it warns of impending judgment. Still other times it appears to address and correct
a small, technical injustice, or to
establish a personal relationship. It may operate on a grand scale, or intimately and personally.
Labels:
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
The Word of the Lord
Friday, October 09, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Making Tough Choices
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
Tom: Last month, IC, you and I had
a conversation in this space about what might come after the COVID crisis
for local churches, as well as for Christians generally in a transformed
economic and social environment, and I don’t want to revisit the topics we
considered at that time at any length.
But in the last week or two (assuming you are not reading this in
Sweden), you are probably hearing about significant “spikes” and “surges” in the COVID-19 infection rate wherever you live. Some people are calling it a “second wave”. The
U.K. has seen the worst surge, topping what they experienced in April and May, but
Canada is looking ugly too, as are the
U.S.,
France and especially
Spain. (I’m using the
World Health Organization (WHO) stats; graphs of confirmed cases and deaths day by day in each country are found by scrolling down below the maps.)
Labels:
Church
/
COVID-19
/
Government
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 08, 2020
A Sign From God
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christ
/
J.G. Bellett
/
Soren Kierkegaard
Wednesday, October 07, 2020
A Unique Learning Experience
“That is not the way you learned
Christ.”
Learning Christ is not like learning Marxism or Islam or
Buddhism or Taoism. It’s not even like learning Christianity.
All religious and political movements have recognized
founders whose words are studied, analyzed, memorized and followed dutifully,
but their adherents are not “learning” Karl Marx or Muhammad ibn Abdullah
or Siddhartha Gautama or Laozi; rather, they are learning propositions and
theories these men set forth about life, the universe and the proper ordering
of society.
Some religious and political leaders succeed, at least to a
limited extent, in living out their own ideals. Others don’t do so well at that.
Either way, it is pretty hard for us to learn them, even if we are determined to try.
Tuesday, October 06, 2020
Walking Before God
When Abraham, who was still called Abram at the time, was in
his hundredth year on this planet, God appeared to him. He gave him a rather
daunting challenge: “Walk
before me,” God said, “and be blameless.”
Many good things would come of this. Years later, when
Abraham was “well advanced in years” and the fulfillment of God’s promises to
him was apparent, the patriarch would speak to his servant of “the Lord, before
whom I have
walked”.
Monday, October 05, 2020
Sunday, October 04, 2020
Mining the Minors: A Belated Explanation
Andy Stanley’s Irresistible: Reclaiming the New that Jesus Unleashed for the World (2018) was a bit of a grenade in the baptistery. In it, Stanley argued that modern, mainstream Christianity is fatally flawed, fragile and indefensible in the public square because we have anchored it to an “old covenant narrative and worldview”. Stanley contended Christians need to “unhitch” ourselves from the Old Testament to become relevant to the world.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
/
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
Old Testament
Saturday, October 03, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (2)
Our Bibles do not tell us who wrote the book of Jonah. Tradition has it the account was written
by Jonah himself.
Alternatively, similarities in the narratives lead some Bible scholars to conclude the story of Jonah was written sometime in the 8th century BC by men from the same group of Hebrew scribes credited with assembling 1 and 2 Kings from a variety of other documents; documents like the
“Chronicles of Samuel the Seer”, the
“Chronicles of Nathan the Prophet”, the
“Chronicles of Gad the Seer”, the
“Prophecy of Ahijah the Shilonite”, the
“Visions of Iddo the Seer”, the
“Chronicles of Shemaiah the Prophet”, the
“Chronicles of Jehu the Son of Hanani”, the
“Story of the Book of the Kings”, and so on. These earlier documentary sources, which may or may not have been inspired by God in their entirety, later served to provide the Spirit-led editors of Kings and Chronicles with the historical details from which they drew the spiritual lessons with which we are familiar.
Labels:
Assyria
/
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
Friday, October 02, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Spare Some Change?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Change
/
Church
/
Denominationalism
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 01, 2020
Lies, Myths and Misinformation: Christianity Causes Wars
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Lies Myths & Misinformation
/
War
Wednesday, September 30, 2020
Witnessing and Misdirection
![]() |
Most falsehoods don’t come with handy labels |
Put them on the spot, and people won’t always tell the truth.
They may throw up smokescreens, use cover stories, ask questions they don’t really want answered, tell outright lies — engage in every variety of misdirection.
This comes as no surprise to anyone with the
gift of evangelism, or anyone without it who tries to talk to people about the Lord. Where the subject of faith is concerned, it takes wisdom and experience to discern what really matters.
At least initially, people tend to be least candid about the things that mean the most.
Labels:
Christ
/
Evangelism
/
Holy Spirit
/
Recycling
Tuesday, September 29, 2020
Marching to Where?
![]() |
I’m a bit cautious about the practice of grabbing verses out
of the Old Testament and some parts of the gospels for the benefit of Christians living in
the Church Age.
Notwithstanding the fact that there is centuries of
historical precedent for appropriating Israel’s promises to ourselves in
hymnology and liturgical language, this practice is quite unnecessary: the church has its own unique place and promises in the plans
of God.
Generally speaking, when we replace our own promises with those made to
national Israel, we are trading down.
Monday, September 28, 2020
Anonymous Asks (112)
“What’s the difference between reincarnation and resurrection?”
The concept of reincarnation is a component of many religions, the
four largest of which originated in India: Buddhism, Hinduism, Sikhism and
Jainism. Greek philosophers like Plato, Socrates and Pythagoras promoted
something similar, as do Spiritists, Theosophists and numerous smaller, tribal
societies, as well as some of the more obscure sects of the Abrahamic
religions.
Obviously then, not all believers in reincarnation believe
precisely the same things. Forgive me if I generalize a bit.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Reincarnation
/
Resurrection
Sunday, September 27, 2020
Saturday, September 26, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (1)
Christians may be sorely tempted to concede their point, or at least to downplay the necessity for a
historical Jonah. As a result, students of the Bible have taken many different
positions with respect to the historicity of the book of Jonah, and with
respect to its intended meaning. William R. Harper, editor of the October 1883
edition of The Old Testament Student, has provided an outstanding summary of ten of these positions
here.
Labels:
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
Friday, September 25, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: He Ain’t Baptist, He’s My Brother
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Tom: Quick quiz, IC: How many different local churches have you been part of? I’m not counting churches you’ve visited, but just
those you would have considered “my church” for a period of time;
churches in which it would have been notable to others if you weren’t there.
Immanuel Can: Um … rather more than most people, I suspect. I’ve been regarded, for some time, as a
regular attendee of … I make it 14. I might be missing one or two. My
youth and early adult years were marked by a lot of moving around, so it wasn’t
a product of unhappiness in most cases. How about you?
Tom: Eight. Second question: How many of those churches were in the same town as one of the others?
Labels:
Church
/
Denominationalism
/
Faithfulness
/
Recycling
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
Unity
Thursday, September 24, 2020
Between Museum and Megachurch
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Megachurches
/
Obedience
Wednesday, September 23, 2020
The Language of the Debate (2)
The Christian media urgently wants Christians to stop believing —
and even more importantly, to stop circulating — what it calls “conspiracy
theories”. I previously came across and responded to one of the earliest of these calls to cease and desist back in September of last year, and lo and behold, here are a whole bunch more folks writing almost exactly the same thing Aaron Brake wrote at Stand to Reason, and maybe even more so.
Interfaith Now says Christians “have to do better”. Christianity.com says,
“Let’s unite together in spreading God’s truth, not rumors!” Relevant magazine argues
that Christians only believe in “conspiracies” because they need
to feel like they are in control. Christianity Today insists, “Gullibility is not a spiritual gift.”
Labels:
Conspiracy
/
The Language of the Debate
Tuesday, September 22, 2020
Out of Sight, Out of Mind
My youngest son has an amazing memory for detail. If you
play him a song he’s familiar with, he can tell you when he first heard
it — year, month and sometimes day — where we were and what we were
doing at the time, and probably what video game was released that week.
I, on the other hand, can go back into the ComingUntrue archives, read a two-year-old
post, and wonder “Who wrote that?”
It was usually me.
Monday, September 21, 2020
Anonymous Asks (111)
“How often do you need to say ‘amen’?”
This is kind of a different question, because it’s really
more a matter of etiquette than morality.
Amen is one of those weird words
that is exactly the same whether you’re looking through a Greek or a Hebrew
concordance. It’s a Hebrew word that Greek-speaking Christians in the early
church picked up and used to mean the same thing it meant within Judaism. In
the King James it is often translated as “verily”. It is an affirmation of
agreement. It simply means “indeed”, “so be it” or “absolutely”. Sometimes it
means Yeah, me too. I feel that exact feeling, I think that
exact thing and I want exactly that to happen. “Amen” is
convenient shorthand for all that.
Labels:
Amen
/
Anonymous Asks
Sunday, September 20, 2020
Time and Chance: The Post-Game Show
The heavens declare
the glory of God and God’s invisible attributes have
been clearly perceived in the things that have been made; our Old and New
Testaments are in absolute agreement on this. Even if the Creator had never
uttered a word to his creatures, men would be without excuse.
We would also be hopelessly confused, frustrated, and
conflicted, grasping for an explanation of meaning and purpose that forever
eludes us, feeling the pull of eternity in bodies destined only for the grave.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
/
Revelation
/
Time and Chance
Saturday, September 19, 2020
Time and Chance (54)
We have arrived in our study of Ecclesiastes at what the Preacher calls “the end of the
matter”. The matter under consideration, if you have a long memory, was this: “What
does man gain by all the toil at which he toils under the sun?” What is the point of man’s existence? Why
are we here? This was the question he set out to answer.
Through twelve chapters, the Preacher has undertaken the task of examining the
experience of being human from every possible angle in hope of gaining insight
into its meaning and purpose, always using only what he could observe and infer
from the input of his senses. What he discovered was that when you approach the
big questions of life in that way, the experience is frustrating and the
answers elusive.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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God
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Meaning
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Time and Chance
Friday, September 18, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: After COVID
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
Immanuel Can: I’m noticing a very common
theme springing up in news organizations and on the internet right now. There
are lots of articles talking about the changes to society that will persist
after the COVID-19 crisis is over. For instance,
ABC says the major things that
will remain different will be: more automation and more work-from-home options
in employment, increased telemedicine, stricter travel regulations and precautions,
and more virtual education. Another media source predicts masks everywhere,
no more handshakes, loads of anxious parents, closer cliques, more centralized
government control, smaller cities ... and a whole bunch of other things.
All that’s speculation, of course. But some of it’s probably going to turn out
to be right.
It seems what’s missing from such articles, Tom, is any reflection on what all the
shifts will do to local congregations of Christians. Of course they will be
subject to the same changes as anyone else, for starters. But are there any
special concerns that Christians should take note of? What trends do you
see as either opportunities or ominous possibilities for Christians after COVID?
Labels:
Church
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COVID-19
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, September 17, 2020
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (13)
“Delight yourself in the Lord, and he will give you the
desires of your heart.”
The commendably-honest Sarah Frazer acknowledges she once
believed this familiar promise in Psalm 37 meant “I can
have anything I want.” If so, that would be quite a promise, but it
would reduce God to a mere term in a larger equation, where if you treat that term
a consistent way, you can always expect a predictable outcome.
Nice deal if you can get it, but quite a comedown for the
Creator and Sustainer of the Universe to be reduced to a component of your personal math
problem.
Let’s suggest that might not be the verse’s intended meaning!
Labels:
Desire
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Psalms
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What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Tuesday, September 15, 2020
That Guy Outside Starbucks is NOT Jesus’ Brother
God bless the poor.
In fact, I don’t even have to ask him: we’ve been told he will;
at least inasmuch as their poverty is primarily one of the spirit.
But we should pray for the poor, of course, and share as we are able. We should care, we ought to avoid partiality and we need to act. Our faith does not amount to much if it does not make us compassionate in a very practical way
toward those in need, and toward those who may have started life at a huge
disadvantage, or have encountered trials and troubles we have never
experienced.
But that guy outside Starbucks who invades your space — the one with the tatty green or brown jacket, bad breath, body odor and uncomfortable social habits — while he may be made in the image of God and deserving of whatever we
are able to do for him for that reason alone …
Sorry, that guy is just not Jesus’ “brother”.
Labels:
Mason Slater
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Matthew
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Poverty
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Recycling
Monday, September 14, 2020
Anonymous Asks (110)
“What should a believer do before he dies?”
Some denominations prescribe rituals to be administered by
the church in a man or woman’s final moments on earth, and perhaps this week’s
question is coming from someone with that sort of ecclesiastical background.
If religious routines are what the dying are calling for, we
would not wish to rob them of their comfort, but I should probably point
out that we do not find any commands at all about “last rites” in our Bibles.
The Christian is neither obligated to perform them nor to have them performed. It
may even be that the practice encourages a false sense of security about one’s relationship
to Christ and one’s eternal destiny.
That would be very unfortunate indeed. In any case, it’s not
the sort of preparation we are going to discuss today.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Death
Sunday, September 13, 2020
Act Like What You Are
Clean living requires an act of the will, and acts of the
will require a changed mindset — at least if they are going to stick for
any length of time. Down through the centuries, men and women who sought to control
their natural appetites have attempted to “live clean” with different goals in
view.
Plato taught the suppression of fleshly desires in order to
free the soul to search for knowledge. The Stoics disciplined themselves to manage their emotions in order to uphold
what they believed was the essential dignity of human nature. Kant advocated moral asceticism in hope of cultivating virtue. Monks of various religious orders idealized
poverty, fasting and celibacy as ways of expressing devotion to their gods.
Labels:
2 Corinthians
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Adoption
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Holiness
Saturday, September 12, 2020
Time and Chance (53)
With the advent of the internet, we have become all too used to people sharing their opinions
with us.
Editorializing is far from a new activity — human beings have engaged in it for millennia. What’s new is the
sheer scale of useless bloviating made possible through social media. More
information is fine, but information bereft of both authority and coherence is
not worth the effort it takes to process.
Back in Ecclesiastes, the Preacher is about to tell his readers something similar.
Labels:
Authority
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
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Wisdom
Friday, September 11, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Christian Globalist
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Globalism
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Nation
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Wednesday, September 09, 2020
If It Happens Again I’m Leaving
Doug Wilson is not the only Christian blogging about the
phenomenon of people leaving a church over the issue of compulsory mask-wearing,
but he’s probably more quoted on the subject than most. Responding in a
recent post to questions from believers frustrated by the stand their own
elders have taken over the issue, Doug has (perhaps inadvertently) opened a
larger can of worms than the mask issue itself, which is the authority of
elders to bind the consciences of those under their care over matters about
which scripture is silent.
And the mask issue is certainly that.
Labels:
Church
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COVID-19
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Douglas Wilson
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Elders
Tuesday, September 08, 2020
Inbox: ‘Systemic’ Racism
God gave a plethora of laws to Moses on Sinai, yet they did not make for a perfect society because people are not perfect. Individuals observed those laws from time to time, and in doing so, benefited from them. But on a national level, Israel would not — nay,
could not — follow those laws, notwithstanding the fact that they were
morally excellent, decent, orderly, and
taught lessons humanity absolutely needed to learn, not to mention they
pointed to Christ. So God gave them, man received them, and the result was systemic failure.
Or was it?
Labels:
Government
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Inbox
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Racism
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Repentance
Monday, September 07, 2020
Anonymous Asks (109)
“If God loves the world, why does he make people choose between loving
him back or spending eternity in hell? That sounds more like an ultimatum than
love.”
I agree: that choice does sound a bit like an
ultimatum. The Bible also frames it as a
command.
Why is that? Why is there no third option where God simply
leaves me alone to do my own thing, and I leave him alone to do his?
Surely a policy of benign indifference would be more loving than condemning
millions of people to a lake of fire.
I wonder what simply leaving humanity to its own devices
would look like ...
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Choices
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Hell
Sunday, September 06, 2020
Semi-Random Musings (21)
Most of our readers would not be aware that I have been
at the office almost non-stop these last few weeks as a consequence of a
plethora of COVID-related staff absences. That’s not because even a single employee
of hundreds across the globe has contracted the coronavirus — so far as
I know, they are all healthy as horses — but because almost nobody currently
working from home has any enthusiasm about returning to work in the current
environment, and the corporate powers that be are even less enthusiastic about
ordering them to do so. The vast majority of my co-workers seem content to hunker
down in their basements doing not too much of anything until sometime in Spring 2021.
Yeah, sure … that’ll be the end of it. Right.
Labels:
Choices
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Church
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COVID-19
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Semi-Random Musings
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