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Friday, November 27, 2015
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Phrases That Jump Out At You
“Yet among the mature we do impart
wisdom, although it is not a wisdom of this age or of the rulers of this
age, who are doomed to pass away. But we impart a secret and hidden
wisdom of God, which God decreed before the ages for our glory.”
The three words that stuck in my head are “for
OUR glory”.
Labels:
Corinthians
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Glory
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Resurrection
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Stray Thoughts from Romans 14
I’m struck by my own tendency to read into the text of scripture my current
circumstances and the modes of thought that dominate the age in which we live.
It’s a bad habit, but also a hard one to break.
Two weeks ago in Too Hot to Handle, Immanuel Can and I explored the meaning of the word “judge”, as in “judge not
lest you be judged”. We did not get into Romans 14, but the entire chapter
is about judging and worthy of a few extra moments of consideration.
I’d suggest you cannot properly interpret Romans 14
without trying at least a little to understand the mindset of Jews and Gentiles
in the early church and the differences between them.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Discernment
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Judging
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Romans
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Quote of the Day (12)
“I invented virtue signalling,” says James Bartholomew of The Spectator.
It may even be true. The online version of Collins Dictionary incorporated the expression earlier this year, defining virtue signalling as “activities intended to
indicate a person’s virtuousness”.
In June, Facebook introduced a “Celebrate Pride” function that allowed users all over the world to show support for gay marriage by imposing a transparent LGBT rainbow over their profile picture.
Two weeks ago, another group of ideological lock-steppers adopted the
colours of the French flag in sympathy with the victims of the Parisian massacres.
That’s virtue signalling: “Look at me! I’m
a good person!”
Labels:
Pharisees
/
Quote of the Day
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Virtue Signalling
Monday, November 23, 2015
Work Yourself Out of a Job
“I no longer have any room for work in these regions,” said the apostle Paul.
Come again? That’s a perplexing statement.
The regions to which Paul refers are, after
all, pretty large. He says he has preached to Gentiles “from Jerusalem and all the way around to Illyricum”. At its widest, Illyricum included all the territory west of Macedonia and east
of Italy extending south as far as Epirus and north through the Balkans almost
to the Danube (see map).
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Church
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Service
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Coming Up Short
When Abraham left Ur
of the Chaldeans, it doesn’t say that he took his father, but that his father Terah took him.
We don’t get an exact
age for Terah at the time he and his family left Ur with the intention of
moving to Canaan, but he had to be at least 100 years old, and possibly
quite a bit older than that. The first leg of the trip was about 600 miles, give or take, starting in
what is today Iraq. The family presumably followed the Euphrates north and west
up into present-day Turkey about 10 miles north of the Syrian border. They
stopped short of their goal in a place called Haran. That wasn’t the original
plan, but that’s what happened.
I may have it all wrong,
but I suspect the problem was Abraham’s dad.
Saturday, November 21, 2015
Friday, November 20, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: I Have My Doubts
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Doubt
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, November 19, 2015
Follow the Evidence
The justification for any course of action is often
jerry-rigged into the mission statement after the mission itself is well under
way; the why comes after the what has already been decided.
For instance, Alister McGrath points out this interesting
fact about Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis:
“Freud’s atheistic view of the origin of religion comes prior to his study of religion; it is not its consequence.”
In other words, Freud first decided on his theory then went
about doing the research to back it up, not the other way round. His theory did
not arise inductively from his studies but from his own prejudices.
Labels:
Disciples
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Peter
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Recycling
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Secular Humanism
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Sigmund Freud
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Facebooking from Nazareth
“The worst thing you can do is keep it all inside.”
“There’s too much inside yourself to keep it all cooped up and restrained.”
“There’s too much inside yourself to keep it all cooped up and restrained.”
This is the sort of advice I encounter
daily. You see it too, if you’re looking for it.
Bryant McGill claims 60 million
readers and “some of the most shared writings in social media history”. If accurate, that’s a lot of people sharing McGill’s thoughts. A Christian friend
of mine passed on one of McGill’s more cringe-worthy bromides on Facebook the other day.
Labels:
Christ
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Humility
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Social Media
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Total Disappearing Act
The limitations of the Blogger platform became evident last week when the comments on IC’s post on the subject of Total Depravity started misbehaving.
Total Depravity ended like this:
after which IC and Qman got into a lengthy exchange that Blogger truncated for us around the seventh comment. The original post and previous comments may still be read at the link above, but further comments (if there are any) may be made here.
For convenience, here are the portions of the exchange that are missing:
Total Depravity ended like this:
I think we need a new term. “Total depravity” is a poor coinage, and terribly misleading, I think. I would opt for a biblical term instead. However, “dead” won’t do, unless we keep remembering that it’s a metaphor, not a total reality. The danger is that we will take that metaphor farther than the Bible takes it — which is an error comparable to adding or subtracting from scripture.
after which IC and Qman got into a lengthy exchange that Blogger truncated for us around the seventh comment. The original post and previous comments may still be read at the link above, but further comments (if there are any) may be made here.
For convenience, here are the portions of the exchange that are missing:
Labels:
Calvinism
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Total Depravity
Monday, November 16, 2015
Present Perfect
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Christ
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Law
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Salvation
Sunday, November 15, 2015
Inbox: Breeding Atheism
Mac Pier, head of a
parachurch organization in Manhattan called The New York Leadership
Center, is calling for unity in the church.
Fox News thinks Pier’s “confessions” on behalf of the church are important enough for Bill O’Reilly to spend five minutes quizzing Charles Krauthammer about the church and how its longstanding divisions are alleged to encourage atheism in the world.
Fox News thinks Pier’s “confessions” on behalf of the church are important enough for Bill O’Reilly to spend five minutes quizzing Charles Krauthammer about the church and how its longstanding divisions are alleged to encourage atheism in the world.
Our
reader Qman asks, “What’s your take, is it valid?”
Labels:
Atheism
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Church
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Denominationalism
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Inbox
/
Unity
Saturday, November 14, 2015
Stray Thoughts from Genesis 7
Yeah, yeah, I know they say it is. Wikipedia does, at least:
“A flood myth or deluge myth is
a narrative in which a great flood, usually sent by a deity or deities,
destroys civilization, often in an act of divine retribution. Parallels are often
drawn between the flood waters of these myths and the primeval waters found in
certain creation myths, as the flood waters are described as a measure for the
cleansing of humanity, in preparation for rebirth. Most flood myths also
contain a culture hero, who ‘represents the human craving for life’.”
Man, is that lame.
Friday, November 13, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: The Discipline of Discipline
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Discipline
/
Judgment
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Quote of the Day (11)
Nadim Nassar is the
only Church of England priest in Syria, and is well positioned to describe what
is currently going on there. In this CBC interview earlier this month with Michael Enright in Toronto, he lays out some of the causes behind
mass migration. Though many surging through the countries of Europe toward
Germany do not originate in Syria, it is the refugee component that gives this “immi-vasion”
its media credibility and moral authority.
It’s a complex issue
and believers all over the world are interested in what’s happening to their
brothers and sisters in Syria, because Syrian Christians are among those most
impacted by the civil war in their home country.
Labels:
Quote of the Day
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Syria
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
Monday, November 09, 2015
Rehabilitating the Proverbs 31 Wife
Poor, much-maligned
wife of the last chapter of Proverbs! Google her and see. After you get through
the usual commentary citations, much of what you find is Christians complaining:
- Complaining that the woman in King Lemuel’s acrostic poem is an anachronism. (She isn’t.)
- Complaining that the poem should have been about men instead and rewriting it for our benefit. (It wasn’t written about men. Deal with it.)
- Complaining that Proverbs 31 is not about a “real woman”, it’s about “wisdom” as a concept. (Possibly true, but irrelevant: if it’s about wisdom as a concept, it’s about how that concept looks when it is worked out in the life of a married woman.)
- Complaining that single women (like Ruth before she married Boaz) should be considered “Proverbs 31 women” too. (A single women may be all kinds of wonderful things but the one thing she cannot be is an “excellent wife”, which happens to be the subject matter of this chapter.)
- Complaining that the chapter gets used as a checklist by which modern Christian wives are judged by others.
Hmm, that last one may
have a grain of truth to it ...
Labels:
Proverbs
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Rachel Held Evans
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Relationships
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Women's Role
Sunday, November 08, 2015
Stray Thoughts from Genesis 2
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“Is that ‘Bear’ with a ‘B’, Adam?” |
Though the Lord made
Adam first, and though he tasked Adam alone with naming all the animals he had
created, it seems God always intended that Adam should have a wife. We read that he said,
“It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a helper fit
for him”.
Now God doesn’t always “say”. Much of the
time he simply thinks, and the universe is none the wiser as to what goes on in the recesses of the Infinite. God’s thoughts, one psalmist
tells us, are “very deep”. Elsewhere David says God’s thoughts toward us are “incomparable” and “too numerous to count”. He does not share all his thoughts with us. He
does not even share them all with the angels.
That should not be a big surprise. He is God,
after all.
Labels:
Adam
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Foreknowledge
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Genesis
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Prayer
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