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Friday, April 17, 2015
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Consensus and Truth
Truth is an interesting thing.
If every intellectual, expert and scientist in the world
could be simultaneously brought to consensus by some particular piece of
evidence, would that constitute “truth”?
More importantly, how would we know?
The climate change folks attempted to convince us their popular
theory has just about that level of consensus. Motherboard ran an article in 2014 that insisted “0.01 Percent of Climate Scientists Reject Global Warming”.
Hey, if only 1/100 of 1% of climate scientists are against global warming, that must mean everybody important is already on
board. So break out the sunblock: anyone who disagrees with us must be nuts!
Labels:
Climate Change
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Evolution
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Faith vs Science
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Science
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Babel’s Antidote
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Monsù Desiderio, The Tower of Babel |
I’m thinking about human relationships, specifically the way
we communicate.
I used to take great delight in my facility with language, a
skill developed largely because my father read to us incessantly as children:
Lewis, Tolkien and other writers consistently above our grade level. As a result,
we paid little attention to grammar lessons in school; they were largely
redundant. We didn’t need to know a word was a gerund or an adjective to use it
aptly in a sentence or to spell it correctly. Such things were innate.
You know the old saw: “To a man with a hammer, everything
looks like a nail”. I figured language was the key to pretty much everything.
If one were only logical enough, if one could only make a convincing argument,
then everything was potentially within one’s grasp. You could manipulate, coax,
coerce or persuade anyone to do just about anything you wanted.
Labels:
Babel
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Christ
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Fellowship
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Recycling
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
As Relevant as Today’s Headlines
In an opinion piece for The
Claremont Independent, Taylor Schmitt waxes eloquent about “How Campus Progressives Ruined Liberalism for the Rest of Us”.
Coming from a self-avowed leftie and supporter of the
legalization of both marijuana and gay marriage, it’s an interesting read. Mr. Schmitt is obviously not about to embrace conservatism, but his lucidity and willingness to call a spade a spade are bound to create serious distance between him and his fellow liberals.
Labels:
Isaiah
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Liberalism
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Progressivism
Monday, April 13, 2015
Nothing To Fear
Some years ago I drove through upstate New York on my way to
visit a client in Massachusetts. The road rose and fell as we wove our way
through the Adirondack Mountains and I was amused to see signs like the one
pictured on a regular basis; there were dozens of them. I wondered about them a
fair bit as we drove because really, if you’re driving a car over a mountain
pass with vertical drops on the immediate left and right side of the car and
you see a plane approaching the front windshield, well, what exactly does one
do aside from brace for impact?
Where I live and work there is not a single one of these
signs. There never has been and I dare say there never will be and the reason
is pretty simple: There are no mountains here at all. So even though it is
always good advice to be wary of low flying aircraft, the warning is only
needed and provided when there is an actual risk that there could possibly be
an impact. Seems simple enough, doesn’t it?
Labels:
Faith
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Faithfulness
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Fear
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Joshua
Sunday, April 12, 2015
Decently and in Order [Part 2]
If we’re honest, many of the conclusions generally drawn about first century church order and the way the early Christians conducted themselves when they met together are based on a verse or two here and there and the occasional example. Some things are very clear; others are mainly inference and supposition.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Church
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Corinthians
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Prophecy
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Spiritual Gifts
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Teaching
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Decently and in Order [Part 1]
Some people treat it like one, but even a cursory look
reveals it’s considerably more complex than that. It is a collection of
history, poetry, ancient law, prophecy, doctrine, personal letters and more.
Despite the fact that it is a compilation, the Bible is somewhat systematic in
the sense that there are lessons taught consecutively from Genesis to
Revelation that build on what has already been established. That should not surprise
us if we believe it to be divinely authored. The final few books (from Romans
on) are perhaps the most pointed and direct in addressing how the reader ought
to respond to it.
But its format is not “textbook-y” in the least.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Church
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Corinthians
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Spiritual Gifts
Friday, April 10, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: Forgive Us, But …
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Forgiveness
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Islam
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Repentance
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 09, 2015
Quote of the Day (1)
No. Really? A politician was wrong about something?
“George W. Bush once said, ‘God has planted in every human heart the desire to live in freedom.’ But that’s just wrong. In fact, how any man who believes in the Bible could believe that, I truly don’t know. The Bible tells how God freed his chosen people the Hebrews from Egyptian slavery. He sent them the prophet Moses, he sent them signs and wonders, he rained plagues on their enemies, he defeated the mighty pharaoh and his armies with uncanny heavenly warfare. And when the Lord was done and his chosen people were free, the chosen turned to Moses and said, in effect, ‘We’re hungry! We were better off as slaves!’ ”— Andrew Klavan
Labels:
Andrew Klavan
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Freedom
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Quote of the Day
Wednesday, April 08, 2015
It’s Not a Bug …
How many times have you made an ironic remark that sailed
right over someone’s head, said something sarcastic that much to your surprise
was taken literally, or made a joke that went over like a lead balloon?
You said one thing. A different interpretation was taken.
In the course of looking into the history of universalist
thought, I came across this statement on one of the relevant Wikipedia pages: “The Bible itself has a variety of verses that appear to be
contradictory if not given additional reader interpretation.”
That’s worth thinking about for a moment, isn’t it.
Labels:
Interpretation
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Scripture
Tuesday, April 07, 2015
Unchristian, Sure … But is it Wrong?
Strictly speaking, an unchristian thought is a desire, wish
or inclination that does not conform to the principles taught by Christ.
But the term is frequently used much more broadly in our
culture and even in religious circles to describe things
considered outright evil. If a sentiment is unchristian, the assumption is often
that it is automatically wicked, uncivilized or unconscionable.
And in many cases, that’s quite true. But maybe not in every
case.
Is it possible, perhaps, to be “unchristian” without being
wrong?
Labels:
Corinthians
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Revelation
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Rob Bell
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Tribulation
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Universalism
Monday, April 06, 2015
Unintended Consequences
When they passed the Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) in 2007, it is quite unlikely that the U.S. congress anticipated that their little bill would trigger a cereal grain price jump of 67.4% in 2012 or that the rise in food prices would plunge nearly 70 million people into what the World Bank calls ‘extreme poverty’. The Houston Chronicle details the extent of the problem here.
Labels:
Authority
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Prayer
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Recycling
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Submission
Sunday, April 05, 2015
Christians Are Not Exempt
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If you think it looks easy, try a few lines ... |
The prosperity gospel is bunk. This is not a profound
revelation.
Anyone who pays attention to the word of God is aware that in
the ordinary course of things, we Christians are not exempt from the ills of
the world. Believers do not get a free pass on pain and suffering. God’s primary
concern for us is not that we “have a good self-image and feel right about ourselves”, notwithstanding Joel Osteen’s latest work of fiction.
Most Christians understand this in principle, but when it’s
my life that’s being put through the wringer, I may have a little more trouble
than usual believing it.
Labels:
Baruch
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Jeremiah
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Prosperity Gospel
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Suffering
Saturday, April 04, 2015
Which Jesus Do You Worship?
The world is full of frustrated people. Some of them are
even Christians. Specifically, some dissatisfied searchers are looking to
understand Jesus Christ.
Now on the surface that sounds like a very good thing, doesn’t
it? Pursuing understanding of the Lord Jesus is about the finest activity in
which a human being can be engaged, at least in my experience.
But there are ways of pursuing the knowledge of Christ that
may be quite a let-down; roads of spiritual inquiry which we may travel
only to find a dead end or a bridge out.
Labels:
Christ
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Inspiration
Friday, April 03, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: When We ALL Get to Heaven
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Faith
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Rob Bell
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Too Hot to Handle
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Universalism
Thursday, April 02, 2015
What’s at the Centre?
![]() |
What — or rather Who — controls the forces in play here? |
Or not, depending. Bear with me here.
There’s a sign outside a little old moss-covered urban
church building that I drive by on the way to work. It reads like this: “Welcome
to Jesus, the centre of the spiritual universe.”
Wednesday, April 01, 2015
The Problem with Compassion
Compassion is a fine quality. But an excess of emotion without
appropriate practical follow-up always seems to end very badly indeed.
Now I’m not talking about Leftist social engineering,
professional fundraising or the welfare state when I use the word “compassion”.
Such projects are promoted as compassionate and claim a tender-hearted motive but produce little effect. Professional fundraisers often absorb most of the funds they raise. The welfare system is so administration-heavy and fraud-ridden that handing
stacks of cash to the visibly distressed on the street might well mitigate the
effects of poverty more efficiently.
We may credit Progressives and Redistributionists with good intentions if we are being generous, but those ideologies have never been effective at producing their desired outcome —
the only metric by which we may judge the fruits of compassion.
Labels:
Christ
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Compassion
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Forgiveness
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Luke
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Matthew
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Content-Free Christianity
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Christianity ... without all the nasty Christian bits. |
Watch out: it’s catching on.
I mean, I thought Gretta Vosper was impressively brassy. (For those unfamiliar with Gretta, she’s the atheist
United Church minister and author who doesn’t believe in the historical Christ.
She has a congregation of less than 50 and thinks things are great. And don’t
forget, you can have her new book Amen
delivered to your door for just a little over Cdn$45 if you suspect she might
have something profound to say about ... not believing.)
But though she’d be content to amend the word “God” to read “good” and carry on with many of the traditional forms tweaked only slightly, at least she seems to understand that she is not a Christian.
Labels:
Atheism
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False Teachers
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John the Apostle
Monday, March 30, 2015
Enoch-in’ on Heaven’s Door
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From the 1728 Figures de la Bible illustrated by Gerard Hoet (1648–1733) |
Sorry. Dylan puns just kinda make themselves.
I may have mentioned in an earlier post that Jude has an
interesting way of referencing Old Testament stories: he seems to know
considerably more about them than the original writers told us.
One explanation is that Jude was a prophet, and in writing a
letter that was itself God-breathed and therefore not subject to the normal
limitations of knowledge under which most writers labor, he was free to
introduce entirely new revelation. Another possibility is that written or oral Jewish
religious lore was transmitted more extensively and more accurately than we
know, and that the Old Testament only contains a portion of the truth revealed
to man by God over the centuries during which it was compiled (though of course
all the necessary bits).
Sunday, March 29, 2015
A Focus On Tomorrow
In modern cultures, usually not much goes into a name. Names aren’t often chosen for their profundity. For example, Bernie means “bold as a bear”. Does that reflect my character fully? If you ask those who know me best as an adult, it probably doesn’t.
However, very often in the Bible there is additional depth to a name. Matthew 16 is a common enough example that has drawn the interest of theologians for generations; what did Peter’s naming really signify? But there are many other famous examples that are less controversial; Saul became Paul, Abram became Abraham and so on.
In each case there was a reason that someone’s name was changed and that reason is worth exploring.
However, very often in the Bible there is additional depth to a name. Matthew 16 is a common enough example that has drawn the interest of theologians for generations; what did Peter’s naming really signify? But there are many other famous examples that are less controversial; Saul became Paul, Abram became Abraham and so on.
In each case there was a reason that someone’s name was changed and that reason is worth exploring.
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