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Friday, December 18, 2015
Thursday, December 17, 2015
The Greater Sin
(When considered against the backdrop of the cross of Jesus Christ they’re actually worse than
that, but this is intended to be more practical than theological.)
The thing is, not all sins are equally bad.
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Quote of the Day (13)
This is so choice that it would be a crime to let it languish in the comments on an
older post where few of our readers are likely to notice it.
Immanuel Can writes:
Immanuel Can writes:
“If you think about it, you’ll recognize what so many of the prophets, from Job to Isaiah to
Habakkuk all found: that in this world there’s no straight line between doing
the right thing or making the right choice and getting a guaranteed right
outcome. The just suffer and the wicked prosper, in many cases.”
Labels:
Free Will
/
Quote of the Day
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
Happy (Late) Anniversary to Us
I vaguely remember our
first post was in the month of December two years ago, but the specific
date has never really stuck in my mind. Were I better organized we might have done
something more memorable to mark the occasion.
Still, I wouldn’t want
to let the date pass without taking the opportunity to say thanks to our readers.
Labels:
Thanksgiving
Monday, December 14, 2015
You Are Being Manipulated
Mass immigration might
be the single most important political issue being discussed in North America
at the moment.
Perhaps you are among the
small minority of people who have never given much thought to the question of
what sort of people — and how many — ought to be allowed to acquire
citizenship in your home country. If so, this will probably not interest
you much.
But if, like many, you
have very definite answers to those questions in mind, and especially if you
are one of a growing number of Christians with the inclination to publicly
share your thoughts on the issue, I have a gentle suggestion for you:
Stop and think first.
There is a very good chance you are being manipulated.
Labels:
Immigration
/
Interpretation
Sunday, December 13, 2015
Inbox: Down the Memory Hole?
Tertius writes:
“Your chat with IC made me think of ‘I will remember their sins and lawless deeds no more.’ ”
Quite so. IC talked a little about the potential
dangers of making dogmatic theological statements on the basis of figurative
language, or what are sometimes called biblical “anthropomorphisms”. He points
out that the writers of scripture use:
“… human-style metaphors, like ‘the hand of God’, because we know what ‘hands’ are ...
not because God the Father has a physical body like ours.”
“I will remember” is another of these human-style metaphors.
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Just Do It
Everybody knows it. It’s
been Nike’s slogan since 1988. It resonates, and that’s why it’s lasted this
long. ‘God helps those who help themselves’, people are fond of saying.
Redneck translation: Git
’er done.
But generally speaking, when God sets out
to accomplish something significant, he does not “just do it”.
He could, of course.
After all, when God created our universe, he did not call upon angelic consultants.
He sought nobody’s buy-in. He simply spoke it all into being. He had no need of a
second opinion. He never does.
Labels:
Prayer
Friday, December 11, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: Open Just A Bit Too Far
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Greg Boyd
/
Neo-Calvinism
/
Open Theism
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Wednesday, December 09, 2015
Keeping It In Proportion
The late Richard Feynman was known for his theoretical work
in quantum electrodynamics and particle physics. For a scientist, Feynman had
an uncharacteristically folksy way of presenting the rationale for his
atheistic worldview:
“I can’t believe the special stories that have been made up
about our relationship to the universe at large because they seem to be too
local, too provincial.
The earth. He came to the earth. One of the aspects of God
came to the earth, mind you! And look at what’s out there. It isn’t ...
in proportion.”
But the celebrated physicist and reputed genius is far from the first intelligent person to address the pressing issue of disproportionality in the universe.
Labels:
Christ
/
Glory
/
Richard Feynman
Tuesday, December 08, 2015
Heartless
More women are abandoning their children (and
their families generally) than ever before. CNN reports it. The Huffington Post, in a piece too
appalling to link to, actually defends it. Indiana has decided to enable it, becoming the first state to install “baby boxes” at hospitals, police stations
and fire stations as an easy and anonymous way for parents to give up their infants.
Some would say men have always been quick
to stampede for the exits when things get tough, but an epidemic of wives and
mothers doing likewise is a comparatively new phenomenon. It may be the straw
that breaks Western society’s back.
What we might call natural affection is rapidly
becoming a thing of the past. The world around us is increasingly
heartless.
Monday, December 07, 2015
Close Encounters of the Philosophical Kind
Eric English is emerging. We’re not altogether sure what he’s
emerging into, and it actually seems to be kind of intangible. I’m trying to
grab onto it, and it’s floating away even as I type. Its essence is something like this:
“The WORD OF GOD is a moment that a human being encounters.”
I hope I’m not misrepresenting Mr. English’s position. He starts from the claim that the Bible is not the word of God, and that to assert that the Bible is God’s word is to diminish what it means to possess the ‘word of God’.
Labels:
Christ
/
Inspiration
/
Recycling
/
Scripture
Sunday, December 06, 2015
Who Is Being Tested Here?
Carol Delaney, an anthropologist at Stanford who doesn’t believe in God, is trying to analyze the story of Abraham’s near-sacrifice of Isaac.
How might such an endeavour go
wrong? Let me count the ways ...
A Prior Note About Motivation
When digging up Delaney’s
paper I could not help but notice that nearly everyone else who has published
something on this subject starts with the question “Why did God ask Abraham to sacrifice
his son?” With all respect, that’s grabbing the wrong end of the stick. Or really,
asking the unanswerable.
Saturday, December 05, 2015
Below the Surface
A few thoughts for our
Christian readers that I’ve condensed (and hopefully not distorted too badly) from
R’B’s excellent series on interpreting scripture via the Jewish perspective. The
original posts may be found here, here, here and here.
Orthodox Judaism seeks
to understand the first five books of our Old Testament (for them, the Torah) on four levels. These
principles may also be applied to the rest of the scriptures.
Having read about schools
of thought like Kabbalah, which
originated in Judaism, I feared rabbinical
exegesis might be a bit wacky and mystical. For the most part that does not appear
to be the case.
Labels:
Hebrew
/
Interpretation
/
Judaism
/
Scripture
Friday, December 04, 2015
Too Hot to Handle: Five Questions About the Next Generation
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Discipleship
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, December 03, 2015
Is Your Faith Boring You?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Luke
/
Meditation
/
Psalms
Wednesday, December 02, 2015
Doing It My Way
“For
what is a man, what has he got?
If not himself, then he has naught
To say the things he truly feels
To say the things he truly feels
And
not the words of one who kneels
The record shows I took the blows
The record shows I took the blows
And
did it my way.”
— Paul Anka
Individualism is the
spirit of this present age. And actually, that is not an unmitigated evil.
I used to think it was. When
I was young Christian and more inclined to overreact, I found Anka’s lyrics,
popularized by Frank Sinatra and Elvis Presley, more than a little
cringe-worthy. I can’t take credit for the impulse since it almost surely came by
osmosis from a church environment that tended to read the worst possible motives
into every pronouncement of popular culture. Looking back on it, it seems to me
the reaction of older Christians to the observations of the pop philosophers of
my teen years was generally spot-on, if ever-so-slightly paranoid at times.
But not always.
Labels:
David
/
Individualism
/
Jonathan
/
Ruth
Tuesday, December 01, 2015
It Makes A Good Headline, But ...
In a post entitled There Was Room at the Inn, Rachel Held Evans is off and running again, this time about Syrian refugees and
how their situation is morally equivalent to that of Mary and Joseph long ago
in Bethlehem when a child was born who would change the world forever.
For Evans, saying no
to having Syrians resettled in your neighbourhood is like turning away the
Lord Jesus.
Could we have another
spoonful of cheesy rhetoric, please?
Labels:
Christ
/
Immigration
/
Luke
/
Matthew
/
Rachel Held Evans
Monday, November 30, 2015
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Recommend-a-blog (15)
Wikipedia calls him “an important leader in early Christianity”; important, I guess, in the sense that his theology got him denounced by the
church fathers of his day. Often described as a Gnostic, he is said to have
rejected the deity described in the Hebrew scriptures and to have affirmed
instead that the true God was the “Father” referred to by the Lord Jesus.
In this he
foreshadowed many today who have difficulty reconciling the God of the Old
Testament with the God of the New.
Labels:
Interpretation
/
Marcion
/
Midrash
/
Recommend-a-blog
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