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Sunday, May 24, 2015
A Matter of Moral Indifference
The setup is this: in Capernaum, the collectors of the
temple tax approach Simon Peter to ask if Jesus is in the habit of paying it.
Presumably, like the scribes, Pharisees and Sadducees, they are
looking to catch the Lord out in some way. Or, like many officials, they are
simply being officious. Or more charitably, perhaps they are merely doing their
job.
In any case, Peter says “Yes”, the Lord pays the temple tax.
Labels:
Christ
/
Government
/
Obedience
Saturday, May 23, 2015
Friday, May 22, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: Reforming Islam
The most current version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Islam
/
Reform
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 21, 2015
Recommend-a-blog (9)
You know how it goes: you find a blog or website you enjoy, with writers who grab your attention and content you can really sink your teeth into. You devour everything you can find in their archive, bookmark it and wait expectantly for more of the same.
Then ... nothing.
Okay, this may not be everybody’s experience; not everyone reads as voraciously as I do. But if you do, you recognize the creeping feeling of disappointment when something you like doesn’t appear predictably, when the quality becomes spotty or the posts are so short they don’t even merit a “[Read More]” link.
Labels:
Frank Viola
/
Recommend-a-blog
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Circumstantial Evidence
You found and got approved for just the right apartment even
though you weren’t exactly qualified. You were admitted to the internship
program you really wanted. That girl you have your heart set on seems to be
showing the character qualities you were hoping to find.
You prayed about all these things. Must be the Lord, right?
Maybe.
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Quote of the Day (4)
If you believe the pollsters, public trust in government is at an all-time low, the influence of religion is waning, the wealth gap in America between middle-income and upper-income families is currently
the widest on record, race relations are getting worse, families are falling behind on the cost of living and almost nobody believes what they read or see in the media anymore.
Accusations from Islamic leaders that America is corrupt are
difficult to rebut when U.S. business analysts seriously contemplate whether America is as corrupt as the third world.
Labels:
David
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Psalms
/
Quote of the Day
/
Social Justice
Monday, May 18, 2015
An Exercise in Moderation
![]() |
Last Supper, Cologne Cathedral |
A diversion: I happened the other day across a Tumblr discussion
that batted around the issue of the age of the disciples.
This is a question I had never considered. I have a “default”
picture in my mind, of course, as most semi-creative people tend to, probably
comprised largely of impressions from classical art. Only three of Duccio’s apostles
in The Farewell Discourse are clean shaven; the rest range from middle-aged to positively ancient. The
disciples in Da Vinci’s ubiquitous Last Supper fare even worse: only two are without significant quantities of facial hair (and some argue
that one of these, for reasons unclear, may have been intended to represent
Mary Magdalene).
Short version: these guys look pretty weathered.
Sunday, May 17, 2015
The Symbol Is Not the Point
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Catholicism
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Dwight Longenecker
/
Ritual
/
Symbolism
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Flirting with Fatalism
I read a column this morning by popular Christian blogger Ben Corey in which he makes a spirited defense of
his support for government programs to help the poor on the basis that
Christians simply don’t given enough voluntarily to make a meaningful dent
in poverty.
It’s an interesting argument, but it begs one obvious
question.
What do we do when the poor can’t be helped?
Friday, May 15, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: The Unfair Advantage of a Loving Family
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Family
/
Leftism
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Progressivism
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Feeding the Dogs
Sometimes God is silent.
We've all experienced it. Looking for answers and receiving no immediate response. The absence of any sense of direction, often when a decision is urgently needed. A total lack of clarity. And all the comforting scriptures we quote to ourselves suddenly sound like clichés.
Those of us who have been believers for a few years may find ourselves taking our own spiritual inventory in an effort to diagnose the problem. Have I failed to confess sin? Am I perhaps asking selfishly rather than with the glory of God in mind? Am I lacking faith? Have I been persistently inconsiderate at home?
Could be, but not necessarily.
We've all experienced it. Looking for answers and receiving no immediate response. The absence of any sense of direction, often when a decision is urgently needed. A total lack of clarity. And all the comforting scriptures we quote to ourselves suddenly sound like clichés.
Those of us who have been believers for a few years may find ourselves taking our own spiritual inventory in an effort to diagnose the problem. Have I failed to confess sin? Am I perhaps asking selfishly rather than with the glory of God in mind? Am I lacking faith? Have I been persistently inconsiderate at home?
Could be, but not necessarily.
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Human Nature Is What It Is
The false prophets condemned by God through Ezekiel are an
interesting bunch — and not just because they were ancient, mysterious wise men believed by many to be heralds of truth when in fact they were spinning webs of lies
that affected thousands.
No, they interest me because they remind me of people I
know. Circumstances change. History moves on. But fallen human nature does not
improve itself, even thousands of years later. Many of these false prophets could
make a decent living today: as religious gurus, philosophers, authors and respected
media figures.
And not all of them seemed aware that their pronouncements
were untrue.
Labels:
Ezekiel
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False Teachers
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Lies
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Getting Sucked In
As a Christian, how do you know when an argument is not
worth getting sucked into?
The titular head of Roman Catholicism clearly doesn’t. Feminists, the media and the political Left (admittedly there is some redundancy in those categories) walked him right into five miles of social justice quicksand when he felt compelled recently to weigh in on the subject of equality.
Labels:
Abortion
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Church
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feminism
/
Government
Monday, May 11, 2015
Running is No Solution
You remember the line, I’m sure.
You’re a teenager and you’ve just gotten deeply invested in
a relationship that you are convinced is the real deal. Everything is going
swimmingly, and then he or she says those dreaded words:
“I think we need to take some time …”
The desire for time and space apart may be framed in all
manner of imaginative ways: “I was on the rebound”, “It’s too soon”, “My
parents don’t approve” or “I have to concentrate on school right now”. The inexperienced
take it at face value, or at least try to. But those of us who have heard
it before know exactly what it means.
It means you’re done.
Labels:
Church
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Relationships
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Sin
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Recommend-a-blog (8)
I am completely unfamiliar with Mr. Lawrenz. Other than this single blog post at BibleGateway.com, I have not read anything he has written, so take the following for whatever it
is worth.
Labels:
Hal Lindsey
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Prophecy
/
Recommend-a-blog
Saturday, May 09, 2015
Franchising the Gospel
Or really, it looks like any corporation with franchises all over the continent. All its churches use common fonts, a common
logo and similar website designs. They’ve applied for a Canadian trademark and they’re opening a training centre for church planting in Europe this fall, where they already have a presence.
It ain’t Burger King, but this is a franchise.
Labels:
Church
/
Gospel
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Multi-Site Churches
Friday, May 08, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: The Christian Nation
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
America
/
Faith
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 07, 2015
Painting A Target
If you haven’t read it, Bernie’s previous post on this
subject, Reading the Tea Leaves, may be found here.
There remains among many the rosy view that life for the
church in North America will continue as it seemingly always has done. There
certainly was a time in the not-too-distant past in which church attendance was
commonplace, prayer at schools or before city council meetings was far from
unusual and the public square welcomed, if not encouraged, Christian ideals and
ideas. In those days, only a generation or so ago, a politician was respected
for his or her beliefs rather than derided. Today — in Ontario at least —
the political litmus test for a candidate is whether or not they marched in the
last Gay Pride parade.
It isn’t even worth discussing what happened or why it
happened — but those halcyon days where faith and unbelief could co-exist
peacefully are very much gone.
Labels:
Church
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Government
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Persecution
Wednesday, May 06, 2015
The Obvious Answer …
… is not always the correct one. We all make assumptions.
With our limited grasp of the big picture, we take many things for granted.
Ezekiel did this. He saw a man — an elder, a symbol of
authority in Israel — struck down before his eyes. Pelatiah the son of
Benaiah died. It appears the man keeled over right when Ezekiel was in the middle of prophesying about his wickedness.
Tuesday, May 05, 2015
Is Your Church Irrelevant?
As Jesus died, the heavy, ornamented curtain of the innermost
sanctuary in Jerusalem’s temple was violently and miraculously ripped in two from the top down. In that single moment in time the religion of Judaism became utterly irrelevant
to the plans and purposes of God for centuries to come.
Nobody knew that, of course. Not at first.
Things carried on just as they had before the Jewish religious
authorities conspired to crucify God’s son. The temple services took place as
usual. We’re not told, but it’s almost inevitable that temple servants, blissfully
unaware of the significance of the miracle in front of them in all its profound and wonderful symbolism and determined to maintain a 420-year tradition, took the torn curtain, repaired and restored it to its place.
Labels:
Christ
/
Church
/
Obedience
/
Revelation
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