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Friday, April 08, 2016
Thursday, April 07, 2016
Inbox: Applied Grace and the Smoking Ruins of My Life
Bernie holds forth about four causes of suffering:
- Sin in me (bad choices I make to my own detriment) — God’s purpose is discipline and correction.
- Sin around me (sins of others / fallen environment) — God’s purpose is to produce a stronger faith and, in our dissatisfaction here, a longing for our true home.
- Satan against me (the opposition made to those who are seeking to be productive for God) — “all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus ...” You know the rest. If you’re going to be productive for God, you’re going to get hit often and painfully.
- God for me (a loving Father conforming me — through suffering — to produce Christlikeness: “The fellowship of his suffering”).
Wednesday, April 06, 2016
I’ve Got What It Takes — Relatively Speaking
I can’t tell you what
sort of ideological programming a child in Ukrainian or Polish or Argentinean
or Nigerian society may be exposed to, but for years kids growing up in the
Western world have been hearing that we can do or be anything we want.
“If you can dream it, you can do it,” Walt
Disney is purported to have said. “If you think you can do it, you can,”
confirms John Burroughs. “I don't think anything is unrealistic if you believe
you can do it,” agrees Richard Evans.
In the absence of a plausible counter-narrative, children bombarded with such sentiments may absorb them uncritically.
Labels:
Christian Testimony
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Self-Examination
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Self-Image
Tuesday, April 05, 2016
Don’t Forget What You Never Knew
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Jude
Monday, April 04, 2016
Quote of the Day (20)
For anyone who missed it, after being waylaid by MSNBC’s Chris Matthews, presidential candidate Donald Trump
mused briefly about criminalizing the choice to abort a child last week, before
doing an abrupt about-face once it became clear he’d stepped into a minefield
and had, at least temporarily, united the pro- and anti-abortion crowd against himself.
Labels:
Abortion
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Donald Trump
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Quote of the Day
Sunday, April 03, 2016
Too Convenient
I’ve written about him
before. Like many others, he knows just enough about Christianity to think he
understands it; just enough to think the decision that faith in Jesus
Christ is not for him is a choice he has made intelligently on the basis of years
of shrewd observation of Christians and our various failings. And believing his understanding adequate, he has little interest in hearing any more. He’s reluctant to get into the subject with me because he has a fairly good
idea where I’ll be going.
He believes in God, he
tells me, and I have no reason to doubt it. But his version of God is vastly different from the God of the Bible.
Labels:
Christ
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Judgment
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Righteousness
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Sin
Saturday, April 02, 2016
Punishment and Deterrence
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
David
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Deterrence
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Elisha
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Justice
Friday, April 01, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: To Debate or Not to Debate
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Gay Marriage
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Tolerance
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Too Hot to Handle
/
World Vision
Thursday, March 31, 2016
One Corporate Setting
Crawford Paul says, “Home studies, conversation studies, group prayer times etc. do not fall
under that condition [the instructions of
1 Corinthians 14 and 1 Timothy 2 about church order in which women are silent and men teach and lead, Ed.] as long as the whole church is not
expected to attend or be gathered in one corporate setting. In these cases,
men and women are free to participate in those activities.”
But what scriptural authority does Crawford
have for this freedom of audible participation for both sexes in situations in
which the “whole church” is not expected to be present but any combination of its members may be? If he has any, he does not cite it.
This may be because such authority does not exist.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Church
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Corinthians
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Men's Role
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Timothy
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Women's Role
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Culture Creep
Early this year, Crawford Paul wrote about
how local churches can change to promote growth. One commenter gently took him to task:
“Post
what changes you want, and what it means to open discussions (women speaking?)
and be more specific.”
Short version: I jumped all over the commenter, who seemed generally opposed to change in the church and suggested
Mr. Paul’s posts were fostering discontent. It seemed to me he was reading
things into Crawford’s appeals for change that simply weren’t there (the
subject of women speaking was never addressed in the post). I even suggested
the commenter might be jumping at shadows.
Now I’m wondering if maybe I owe the poor
guy an apology. He may not be so paranoid after all.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Church
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Corinthians
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Culture
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Timothy
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
The Sincerest Form
![]() |
Imitation ... or caricature? |
On occasion, my brother deliberately
imitates him to humorous effect. You might think his version of my uncle exaggerated
until you hear the real thing, when it becomes clear my brother’s homage may
well not go far enough. Other times, in conversation with my uncle, one or
another of his Canadian relatives finds himself unconsciously picking up and
mimicking my uncle’s speech patterns.
Imitation may be conscious or unconscious,
but it is always an action (as
opposed to a state of mind). It is something you have to DO. Thinking about imitating
someone is not imitation.
Monday, March 28, 2016
I Found God in a Hallmark Card
![]() |
Three unfortunate Will Bowen readers commiserate ... |
“EASTER symbolizes our own capacity to transform. Our ability to die to our former selves and awaken to a whole new
life. Your ideal self lies dormant within you now ready to be called forth,
ready to shine, ready to bless your world.”
— Will Bowen
Uh, well ... not exactly.
Labels:
Easter
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Resurrection
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Will Bowen
Sunday, March 27, 2016
Quote of the Day (19)
I find the following
paragraph from C.R. Hallpike’s Do We Need God to be Good? An Anthropologist Considers the Evidence rather striking:
“This powerful and important doctrine for right
living was worked out in great philosophical detail in Greece, India, and
China; we do not find it in explicit form in the Old Testament which was not
philosophically minded, but in the New Testament St. Paul added the
religious virtues of faith, hope, and charity to the classical virtues of
justice, reasonableness, courage, and self-control.”
I’m far from agreeing
with Hallpike on everything, but he’s got me thinking with that line. The Old
Testament, he says, was “not philosophically minded”.
Labels:
C.R. Hallpike
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Faith
/
Quote of the Day
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Recommend-a-blog (18)
Larry Taunton is the
author of 2011’s well-reviewed The Grace Effect: How the Power of One Life Can Reverse the Corruption
of Unbelief and the author of the forthcoming The Faith of Christopher Hitchens, which I will probably have to purchase on the basis of the title alone.
Taunton is a Christian columnist and cultural commentator primarily known for organizing “The God Delusion Debate” with Richard Dawkins
in 2007, a discussion to which at least a million people tuned in. He was
friendly with the late Christopher Hitchens (hence the book, presumably).
He has also recently taken up blogging.
Labels:
Christopher Hitchens
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Larry Taunton
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Recommend-a-blog
Friday, March 25, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: Getting Relevant
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
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Discipleship
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Too Hot to Handle
/
Youth Work
Thursday, March 24, 2016
Who Reads Anymore?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Bible Study
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Psalms
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Reading
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Stephen Hawking
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
Cognitive Dissonance
In my neighbourhood it
has become trendy to post a blue sign on your front lawn, one that reads, “Leave
fossil fuels IN THE GROUND”. I walk by several of these each morning.
These messages adorn the snow-covered lawns of $800,000+ homes with their natural
gas furnaces blasting away in the face of our Canadian winter, their driveways
filled with SUVs and other premium fossil fuel-consuming vehicles.
Such cries for change
are eminently dismissable, their transparent virtue-signaling drowning in cognitive dissonance and unintended irony.
Labels:
Amos
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Consistency
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Good Samaritan
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James
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
No Getting Around That
Rachel Held Evans vs. John Piper? Who could
resist weighing in? Not me.
Some background: My favorite popular
Christian blogger Rachel Held Evans has been sharing with her readers how well
ditching “strict gender roles promoted by conservative evangelical culture” in
favor of “a relationship characterized by mutuality and flexibility” is working
for her and her husband Dan as they welcome their new baby into the world.
Yes, Dan is helping Rachel out by changing
diapers, doing laundry, rocking the baby and making pot after pot of coffee.
Bravo, Dan.
Labels:
John Piper
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Marriage
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Rachel Held Evans
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Slavery
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Submission
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Women's Role
Monday, March 21, 2016
Tender Sentiments and Easy Living
Oh, things certainly happen where God
dwells; events on a scale we can hardly imagine. Think of passages like “there
was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord”, or “I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven” or, best of all, “You are
my Son; today I have begotten you”. Momentous events indeed.
Still, if it is
possible to speak of a heavenly culture (or perhaps atmosphere), that culture
must, like the unchanging character of God, be impervious to trends.
Labels:
Change
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Deuteronomy
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Sentiment
/
Social Justice
Sunday, March 20, 2016
True Revolutionaries
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Relativism
/
Truth
/
Witnessing
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