The most recent version of this post is available here.
“If you’re tempted to think God might be speaking to you, he isn’t. When God speaks, you can’t miss it.” — Greg Koukl
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Monday, June 06, 2016
Sunday, June 05, 2016
Lurking Sentimentalists Beware
At the risk of getting clobbered by the chronically sentimental,
I’d like to ask a few hard questions about a relatively recent trend within
evangelicalism. Baby dedications are now being offered as a service in churches
that claim to base their faith and practice solely on the principles and
instruction of the New Testament.
You know what I mean: special events at
which new parents “present” their baby and some designated individual asks them
on behalf of their church (in front of friends, family and brothers and sisters
in Christ) if they are willing to raise their child “in the nurture and
admonition of the Lord”, or something like it.
I find the logic baffling.
Labels:
Baby Dedication
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Ceremony
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Children
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Christening
Saturday, June 04, 2016
Quote of the Day (22)
Yup, in Canada this is
just another pylon marking our national descent on the mad Gadarene slide:
“Canada’s House of Commons has passed the government's proposed assisted suicide law.
The House of Commons voted 186-137. The law still requires Senate approval.”
The House of Commons voted 186-137. The law still requires Senate approval.”
What’s that? You say the phrase doesn’t ring a bell?
Labels:
Malcolm Muggeridge
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Quote of the Day
Friday, June 03, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: Faith in the Crosshairs
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apologetics
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Atheism
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Faith
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 02, 2016
“We Should Only Allow …”
I’m reading a twenty
year-old article on the subject of divorce written by a Christian whose
judgment and understanding of scripture I respect and whose personal conduct as
a believer is excellent.
So it’s hard to
explain why I feel a bit irked as I work my way through it. I think it has to
do with the phrase: “We should only allow …”
I wonder, who is “we”,
and what is the biblical mechanism by which we choose to “allow” or “not allow”
certain sorts of choices to be made by other believers?
Wednesday, June 01, 2016
Making Sure
People who don’t think a genuine believer
in Jesus Christ belongs irrevocably to him use a variety of verses to support their claim that it is possible to be saved and then lose
your salvation.
This isn’t a verse I’m used to seeing used
that way:
“Therefore, brothers, be all the more diligent to confirm your calling and election, for if you practice these qualities you will never fall.”
The usual suspects are full of catchy
expressions like “eternal sin”, “sin that leads to death” or even “impossible to restore them again to repentance”. Separate such phrases from their contexts and
it is possible to become quite confused and concerned about the permanence of salvation.
Labels:
2 Peter
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Assurance of Salvation
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Eternal Security
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Faith
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Works
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Angels Unawares
“Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.”
In accepting the truth
that there exists a world of spirits, a unseen reality beyond that which we can
observe and quantify, we open ourselves to a range of possibilities we are far
from equipped to explore intelligently.
How does a Christian process such a thing?
Labels:
1 Timothy
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Angels
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Faith
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Hospitality
Monday, May 30, 2016
Elders and HR Departments
![]() |
Gotcha, Mr. Employee! |
When I say “not the
result of any particular violation”, I should probably append the word “yet”
just to be safe. The number of ways one may offend in the workplace today is
truly remarkable, and there’s no guarantee I will not fall afoul of their
ever-morphing web of ultra-flexible guidelines at some point.
They’re like flypaper. I kid you not.
Sunday, May 29, 2016
Choosing Sides
I cringe when I read
it, I cringe when I read other people writing about it, and I’ll almost surely be cringing as I
write about it myself.
And yet it’s there,
and New Testament writers have no problem drawing on it for the purpose of instructing Christians, despite the fact that many of us
feel it would be awfully convenient if the chapter would simply go away.
Since it won’t, let’s look at it carefully.
Saturday, May 28, 2016
The 1830 Principle
![]() |
“Sorry, you’re just not old enough ...” |
“Rapture
doctrine did not exist before John Darby invented it in 1830 AD. Before it
‘popped into John Darby’s head’ no one had ever heard of a secret rapture doctrine.”
It’s even been picked up by Wikipedia, which I guess makes it a “thing”.
They won’t go quite so far as to say Darby invented it, but they concede that
he certainly popularized the teaching.
Labels:
Darby
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Prophecy
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Rapture
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Replacement Theology
Friday, May 27, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: With One Accord
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Tom: You and I were talking last week,
Immanuel Can, about this recent exchange of ideas I had with Crawford Paul at assemblyHUB — civilly, of course — on the subject
of worship, specifically what we refer to as the “Lord’s Supper”, that ended
with Crawford pointing out that “The topic is much bigger than this article”.
I couldn’t agree more, so I’ve written here and here about it. But I’d really like to explore
the subject a little more with you. What appears to be eating Crawford and
others is that the traditions they have grown up with about corporate worship
appear to be just that — largely
traditional, rather than scriptural.
This is
a subject I know you love, so I wouldn’t want to leave you out.
Specifically, I’m interested in exploring our corporate freedom
in worship, but not divorcing that from the issue of our corporate
responsibilities.
Immanuel
Can: Right. Count me in. Where would you like to start?
Labels:
Church
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Fellowship
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Participation
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Worship
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Marketing Jesus
This article about effectively
marketing the church was forwarded to me by a reader along with a two-word review: “fantastically
misguided”.
“Misguided” is a good
way to put it. I think Cameron and Tara from Christ & Pop Culture are well-intentioned. They contend
that Jesus must be the focus of all attempts to promote
a church and that “church marketing strategies applied without guidance from
Scripture undermine the kingdom of God by causing Christians to alter their
identities”.
So with Christ as the focus and scripture
for guidance, what could go wrong? Lots, it seems.
Labels:
Church
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Testimony
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Witnessing
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
The Giant Reset Button
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Photo: Flattop341 |
Before the Assyrian conquest of the northern
portion of the divided kingdom in the sixth century BC, Davidson says, the Jubilee
was regularly celebrated. But a dispute over the interpretation of the words “all
who live on it” in Leviticus 25:10 has led many Jews to conclude that the festive
year of freedom may only be celebrated when all twelve tribes are living
in the Promised Land. So until the return of the ten “lost” tribes,
the Jubilee is on hold.
That may not seem a big deal today. It
would have been a huge deal to an Israelite in the years before the Assyrian
captivity.
Labels:
Corinthians
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Jubilee
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Leviticus
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Rapture
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Thessalonians
Monday, May 23, 2016
Here Comes the Baggage
Yesterday I briefly noted some of the different approaches taken within Christendom to remembering
the Lord Jesus. If you haven’t read that post first, this one will probably make less sense than it might otherwise.
The New Testament does
not lay down many hard and fast rules about the mechanics of worship, only that
we are to “remember” our Lord in the sharing of the bread and the cup and to examine ourselves prior to doing so. Arguably this is the most important part of the
Christian life. One can be as active in church as humanly possible, as diligent
and and hard-working as anyone, and even passionate about meeting with the
people of God.
Labels:
Breaking of Bread
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Communion
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Fellowship
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Participation
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Worship
Sunday, May 22, 2016
Calling an Audible
Some call it the Lord’s Supper or the Lord’s Table. Some refer to it as Communion, Holy Communion or the Eucharist. Some call it the Breaking of Bread. Some call it the Worship Service. And some would argue that not all these terms
refer to precisely the same thing.
I agree, actually, but it’s not my purpose to set out all such similarities and differences in a single blog post. My point is that, different as they may be, all these overlapping practices (rightly or wrongly) draw their scriptural authority from the words of the Lord Jesus to his disciples at their last Passover supper and the things he did there.
I agree, actually, but it’s not my purpose to set out all such similarities and differences in a single blog post. My point is that, different as they may be, all these overlapping practices (rightly or wrongly) draw their scriptural authority from the words of the Lord Jesus to his disciples at their last Passover supper and the things he did there.
Let’s concede this: whatever we call it, none
of us celebrate it precisely the way it was celebrated in the early church, and
it’s quite possible that even in the first century there was little consistency from one local church to another
in the way it was practiced.
Labels:
Communion
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Lord's Supper
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Priesthood
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Worship
Saturday, May 21, 2016
Generational Train Wreck Alert!
It’s becoming increasingly hard for me to
dismiss the conviction that this generation deserves whatever it gets.
I refuse to believe every college or university
student in the Western world is out of their minds, but the media seems bound
and determined to prove me wrong.
For these lost twenty-somethings, the
capacity to invent drama where no drama exists is apparently beyond measuring.
Their will to be miserable no matter what their circumstances seems boundless.
Their sense of entitlement and victimhood is off the charts.
Labels:
feminism
/
Social Justice
/
Timothy
Friday, May 20, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: Bucking or Buckling?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Authority
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 19, 2016
This Is Interesting ...
The giving of the Ten Commandments to Israel at Mount Sinai occurred on the
third new moon after the people of Israel had left Egypt. God addressed them directly in a thick cloud from the peak of a fiery, quaking mountain amid thunder, flashes of lightning
and the sound of a trumpet.
The people were understandably petrified.
Labels:
Exodus
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Law
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Numbers
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Sinai
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Ten Commandments
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
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