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Monday, August 08, 2016
Saturday, August 06, 2016
Inbox: Measuring the Wind
WD writes, “How does the Spirit work in a
person’s life and how can one know He is?” An excellent question.
It’s also a question I wouldn’t dare try to
answer in a single blog post, even if I thought myself an expert on the Holy
Spirit’s guidance, which I don’t. But our reader’s question has been lurking at
the back of my mind as I’ve worked my way through William Trotter’s little
pamphlet on worship and ministry in the Spirit.
As much as impressions may be powerful
things, I remain cautious about attributing to the Holy Spirit anything that is merely
subjective, mystical or personal.
Labels:
Church
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Corinthians
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Holy Spirit
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Inbox
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Ministry
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William Trotter
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Worship
Friday, August 05, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: The Christian Globalist
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Globalism
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Nation
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 04, 2016
The Happy Ending
“If you want a happy ending, that depends, of
course, on where you stop your story.”
— Orson
Welles
Such a
great line. If anyone knew how to tell a story, the legendary director did.
Life,
however, does not neatly and naturally subdivide itself into an introduction,
three acts and a tidy conclusion. We do not script our entrance or our
exit, and we exercise minimal control over events occurring in between.
And all of
it is very much open to interpretation.
Labels:
Corinthians
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Judgment
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Self-Examination
Wednesday, August 03, 2016
Nobody Knows Where to Look
Try this on for size:
“The Russians are accused of trying to influence an American election. And how did
they propose to disrupt our normal way of doing things over here? The
answer is obvious when you think about it. They
determined that they would tell the truth. When something
like that erupts in the middle of a presidential campaign, nobody
knows where to look.”
— Doug Wilson
Who knows what the Russians are trying to
do, or if they actually have anything at all to do with the latest WikiLeaks infodumps? This is the craziest American election to occur in my lifetime, one in which
interests are so wildly polarized that even the social and electoral havoc brought about by external meddling sounds like good news to some Americans, at least in the short term.
But more to the point, Wilson is right:
truth is a terribly disruptive element.
Labels:
Douglas Wilson
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Elections
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Truth
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WikiLeaks
Tuesday, August 02, 2016
The Commentariat Speaks (2)
“Christendom is cancer. Pure and evil cancer. It is not a religion of white people. It is an Arabian religion which was imported. There was a fantastic interview with a
Swedish woman on Red Ice Radio talking about the old gods and how they fit Sweden better because they gave role models to the people: a mother goddess, a warrior god and so forth. Christianity gives us a father figure and nothing else.”
Yes, you did read that correctly.
Labels:
Faith
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Religion
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Self-Existence
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The Commentariat Speaks
Monday, August 01, 2016
What We’re Here For
I don’t know how many
people remember Rocky (1976), the boxing
drama about a loan shark’s debt collector from the Philadelphia slums who gets
a shot at the world heavyweight championship. It was released forty years
ago, after all.
I saw it as a kid and
don’t remember being particularly impressed by the story or enthralled by the
characters. I found it all a bit grimy, if I recall. What stuck with me
about the Rocky Balboa character, though, was that he just wouldn’t stay down.
Oh, he takes a beating
alright.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Corinthians
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Suffering
Sunday, July 31, 2016
Action, Meet Consequence
Actions have consequences. My body and
yours will not last forever because “in Adam all die”. The default mode of human existence is death, and every week, month and year on our march toward futility, decrepitude and (in some cases) eternal judgment drives home that reality.
Thanks, Adam. If it’s any consolation, I
have no evidence from my own experience that I’d have done a better job as
federal head of humanity.
Labels:
Children
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Deuteronomy
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Exodus
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Ezekiel
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Judgment
Saturday, July 30, 2016
When She Leaves
This morning’s office gossip is that my co-worker’s wife has
left him. Didn’t improve my day any. But last week I replied to an email from a
Christian friend in the same boat. A month before that, I corresponded with
another believer married to a woman who had left her husband.
Researcher Shaunti Feldhahn, among others, insists the
divorce rate among regular church-goers is actually way lower than previously thought (closer to twenty percent than fifty). If so, that’s a good thing. But if we’re going to pay attention to statistics
at all, it’s hard to miss this one: 80 percent of divorces are filed by women.
The plural of anecdote is not data, but I’m sensing a trend.
Friday, July 29, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: Minding the Store [Part 2]
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Elders
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Growth
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Maturity
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Teaching
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, July 28, 2016
That Wacky Old Testament (6)
Still, when the word of God addresses any
human issue, we are ill advised to affect sensibilities more tender than the writers
of holy writ charged with the responsibility of recording the Divine Will for us in the first place.
So, notwithstanding the queasy feelings that attend any serious investigation
of the subject matter, let’s take a crack at it. Less hardy souls may feel free to pass on
this one without incurring the critical judgment of their peers.
Labels:
Deuteronomy
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Eunuchs
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That Wacky Old Testament
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Pagans and Presbyterians
So says Presbyterian gay rights enthusiast Linda
Malcor, who has taken on the unenviable task of trying to prove it.
Malcor’s effort is herculean: she lists
every reference to the word “abomination” (Hebrew to'ebah) in six different English translations and even provides a
search tool so you can duplicate her results yourself if you wish.
Unfortunately I’m at a loss what Malcor
expects Christians to do with her conclusions.
Labels:
Abomination
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Homosexuality
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Leviticus
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Clinging to Dust
The movies, sports, TV shows and entertainment pastimes I enjoy today can be evaluated as to their importance by comparing them with those I enjoyed 10 years ago, or 20. Can I even remember what I watched, sat through or read back then? How much that was really useful have I retained from any of it, and how much of it would I revisit if I could? Did I learn any lessons worth hanging onto from any of it? One or two, I would like to hope.
But most of it was dust.
Labels:
Matthew Henry
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Psalms
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Recycling
Monday, July 25, 2016
That Wacky Old Testament (5)
Mothers have this thing about their sons.
It’s natural, it’s powerful and it’s often entirely irrational.
Take, for instance, the mother of the
Palestinian terrorist who killed an Israeli teen asleep in her own bed. Mom
says her son was “a hero” who made her “proud”.
Okay, that’s a little extreme. But the
mother of the Bataclan bomber who inadvertently self-detonated told reporters
her son never meant to hurt anyone and may have been “stressed”.
Labels:
Children
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Deuteronomy
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Law
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That Wacky Old Testament
Sunday, July 24, 2016
Blissful Incoherence
Work with me here: the secularist mindset
prizes this life — and this life only — since it cannot reasonably
contemplate any other.
Further, having dismissed notions of God,
sin, righteousness and judgment, the worldview that begins from an evolutionary
viewpoint is unconcerned with the moral quality of the lives it seeks to
preserve. It only matters that life exists, and therefore the taking of it is always
“wrong”. This despite a couple of glaring logical inconsistencies: (1) in
a random universe with no Creator, nothing can be objectively immoral, only
inconvenient or undesirable; and (2) many of the same folks who deplore
capital punishment are perfectly fine with the taking of innocent life in and
outside the womb.
Labels:
Abortion
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Deuteronomy
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Murder
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Social Justice
Saturday, July 23, 2016
The Commentariat Speaks (1)
As long as it lasts, the phenomenon of blog
commentary has provided us with a whole new way of engaging with one another.
Sure, it’s a style of interaction with inherent limitations and attendant
frustrations, but it has its moments now and then.
On the downside, reaction to blog posts is
rarely deep or seriously considered, can be kneejerky and emotional, and is
easily lost in a growing stream of similar reflexive expressions that disappear
from view and public consciousness as quickly as the blog’s author can bang out
something new for his/her readers to huff and puff about. Further,
having expressed an opinion, a commenter often wanders off to Internet Parts
Unknown, to work or to bed, leaving readers unable to ask, “Hey, wait, what did
you mean by THAT?”
Labels:
Romans
/
The Commentariat Speaks
Friday, July 22, 2016
Too Hot to Handle: Minding the Store [Part 1]
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Elders
/
Growth
/
Maturity
/
Teaching
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, July 21, 2016
Golden Calves and Sacred Cows
![]() |
Just another divine bovine ... |
That alone doesn’t necessarily make today’s churches “wrong”:
both local autonomy and format flexibility are built into the New Testament
church. Thus some of today’s churches may be most accurately described in the
words of a local city building inspector who referred to a nearby triplex as “legal
non-conforming”.
Labels:
Church
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Corinthians
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Teaching
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Worship
Wednesday, July 20, 2016
He May Be Right, But ...
“Great as the harvest of sin has been, we believe that the saved shall vastly
outnumber the lost. Nothing less will satisfy Christ. Remember that in the
first age, before mention is made of the latter triumphs of the Gospel, John
beheld in heaven a multitude which no man could number. This was but the
first-fruit sheaf; let who will compute the full measure of the harvest!”
— F.B. Meyer, Christ in Isaiah
I’ve heard this one
before, and Meyer may well be correct. Who can say? Perhaps in the end more human
beings will be saved than lost. Love certainly likes to hope so.
Labels:
F.B. Meyer
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Judas
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Moses
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Salvation
Tuesday, July 19, 2016
Recommend-a-blog (20)
Sarah Salviander, PhD is
a physicist, Astronomer at the University of Texas, Christian apologist and writer
of homeschooling curriculum and science fiction. Her blog is called SixDay Science.
She is also a former
atheist, the child of socialists who were diligent about not exposing their
daughter to religion in her formative years. In Sarah’s first 25 years of
life, she says she met exactly three self-identified Christians.
I trust that’s not
true of everyone growing up in British Columbia. Canada is most definitely
post-Christian, but I hope we’re not THAT post-Christian.
Labels:
Faith vs Science
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Home Schooling
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Recommend-a-blog
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Sarah Salviander
/
Science
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