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“Any and all efforts to save yourself by doing good deeds are nothing other than splendid sins." — Douglas Wilson
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Friday, April 22, 2016
Thursday, April 21, 2016
The Disappearing Platform
There’s something wonderful about finding like-minded souls
with whom to share our beliefs and concerns.
Totalitarian regimes grasp this, so they
make it difficult for their citizens to exchange ideas, however trivial those
ideas may appear to be. Censorship in Nazi Germany was extreme and strictly enforced. Stalin sent fellow Russians to the gulags
for up to 25 years simply for telling jokes about Communist Party officials. None of this was
original to Hitler or Stalin: the second century Romans had their own secret police equivalent called the Frumentarii that not only covertly gathered military intelligence throughout the empire but
even spied on the members of the emperor’s household.
If people can’t freely and comfortably exchange
ideas, they can’t form effective political opposition, or so goes the thinking.
Labels:
Censorship
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Donald Trump
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Internet
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Social Justice
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Testimony
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
How Not To Be Forgiven
Forgiveness is the great equalizer.
In extending Christian forgiveness, we acknowledge our own ongoing sins and failures and accept back those who have sinned against us in the knowledge that we, too, will fail them tomorrow and will go on failing them until the Lord returns.
In extending Christian forgiveness, we acknowledge our own ongoing sins and failures and accept back those who have sinned against us in the knowledge that we, too, will fail them tomorrow and will go on failing them until the Lord returns.
Forgiveness makes every person my equal and everyone my
brother or sister in the only sense that equality can ever be attained on earth
and in the only sense that, from a human perspective, really matters.
But some people will not be forgiven.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Forgiveness
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James
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Progressivism
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Recycling
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
That Wacky Old Testament (1)
Taken in isolation or viewed from a
distance of several thousand years and from a completely different cultural
background, almost any Bible instruction may initially seem a little alien.
People are generally uninterested in doing historical
research or establishing cultural context before they start forming opinions.
It’s a whole lot of work … and, let’s face it, it’s fun to mock things. It
makes us feel intelligent or morally superior.
So taking a poke at certain of the Old
Testament commands that God gave through Moses to the people of Israel as “weird”
is becoming increasingly trendy.
Labels:
Beards
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Leviticus
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Mourning
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That Wacky Old Testament
Monday, April 18, 2016
The Author of Confusion
Paul Mizzi is an evangelical pastor on the largely-Catholic island of Malta. His essays on various aspects of the Christian faith may be found on the website Truth for Today.
Malta got a visit from the apostle Paul in the first century that included a number of miracles of healing (and undoubtedly the preaching of the gospel to go with them). But despite the fact
that Malta has had apostolic testimony for two thousand years, the
structure and function of their evangelical churches today seems to have more
in common with that of North American denominational Protestantism than with that
of the church of the New Testament.
In Paul Mizzi’s church
the distinction between clergy and laity is very well defined.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Church
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Participation
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Spiritual Gifts
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Teaching
Sunday, April 17, 2016
The Myth of Ideological Neutrality
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| Hmm ... which one is neutral? |
“As an open-minded nonreligious parent, it’s important to me that my daughter make
up her own mind about what to believe — independent of me,
independent of her grandparents, independent of her friends and neighbors. I
want her to learn about various systems of belief, and about science and
evidence, and then decide what seems right to her. If she changes her mind
along the way, that’s fine! As long as it’s her own inquisitiveness and
independent thought that prompts each change of heart.
You’re with me on this, right?”
No, but Wendy Thomas Russell is not alone in her
desire to step back and avoid unduly influencing the way her child forms her beliefs
about religion.
Saturday, April 16, 2016
When Life Really Hurts
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Romans
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Suffering
Friday, April 15, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: Keeping It Controversial
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Government
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Islam
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Leftism
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Persecution
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, April 14, 2016
A Better Second Fiddle
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Corinthians
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Marriage
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Rachel Held Evans
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Service
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Look At Those Goalposts Move!
In addition to
constantly meeting facts with feelings, you may have noticed that the religious
left tries to avoid addressing opposing arguments directly — a canny
strategy when one has little of substance to put forward.
Instead, by moving the
goalposts, they reframe the question under discussion so that the other side
finds itself inadvertently giving up intellectual or spiritual ground without
ever having really lost it. The issue, or at least part of it, is conceded
without any discussion at all.
The trick is to
recognize goalpost shifting when you see it and refuse to reframe.
Labels:
Homosexuality
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John Piper
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Love
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
The Twitterized Bible
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| How about that morning verse, eh? |
You know, the way Christians tend to quote scripture
in tiny fragments. He’s concerned that in doing so we’ll lose the Author’s original
meaning and not even realize it’s gone. Twitterizing is only one name for
it. Others call it “using the Bible as a medicine cabinet” or “prooftexting”.
For the most part I agree with Ben, so I’m going to tread carefully here.
After all, I have harped here about context
as the most critically important interpretive tool in the Bible student’s tool
kit so many times I’ve lost track. Taken out of their original context, verses
of holy writ may be misunderstood or have their meanings entirely inverted.
But not always.
Labels:
Context
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Interpretation
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Luke
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Matthew
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Nahum
Monday, April 11, 2016
Communicable Defilement
Yesterday I shared some thoughts about the
Levitical laws having to do with uncleanness and ritual defilement, and I applied them
to the subject of mankind’s relationship to its Creator.
Since nothing happened to Israel in a
vacuum and precious few of their laws are without some practical application to
the Christian life, today I’d like to look at the issue of ongoing defilement
and uncleanness in the era beyond the Law of Moses.
But before we do that, we need to take one
last look back at Leviticus.
Labels:
Corinthians
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Defilement
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Leviticus
Sunday, April 10, 2016
The Twelve-Year Illustration
The first two gospels tell the story of an unnamed woman who suffered from a discharge of blood for
twelve years.
Believing even the
briefest, most ephemeral contact with Jesus would heal her of her condition,
she crept up behind the Lord to touch the fringe of his robe. And we all
know the rest of the story, including the “your faith has made you well” part.
Mark records that the woman had “suffered much under many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was no better but rather grew worse”. Having spent some time in the care of doctors, I
can relate. I can more or less imagine what that might have meant for her medically.
The part of the story
I never really thought about before is what it meant for a Jewish woman socially and
religiously to be declared ritually “unclean”.
Labels:
Defilement
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Leviticus
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Mark
Saturday, April 09, 2016
Inbox: The Worst Possible Answer
Bernie continues to muse about suffering
from a biblical perspective:
- Of the four identified types of suffering [see previous post], Christians get all four (yay!), non-Christians only get the first two.
- Suffering of types two and three is not the mark of a failing Christian, it is the mark of a succeeding one. The more we do for God and the more we get serious about bringing Christ-likeness out fully, the more we will feel the knife — or, a better image — feel the weight of the cross. Opposition grows as we mature and become productive. This is (I think) why the people closest to God seem to suffer the most and endure the greatest hardships.
Labels:
Grace
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Inbox
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Richard Dawkins
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Suffering
Friday, April 08, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: Rules of Combat
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Controversy
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Debate
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Too Hot to Handle
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
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