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Wednesday, March 08, 2017
Tuesday, March 07, 2017
The Change Is Gonna Do Us Good
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Change
/
Church
/
Modern Christianity
Monday, March 06, 2017
To Jezreel By Chariot
Both Jehu and David
were anointed king of Israel at God’s command. David chose to serve King Saul
faithfully until forced to flee for his life, then served God and country as he
was able while on the run until Saul met his end in battle. It took
approximately 32 years to establish David’s kingdom.
Jehu, on the other
hand, sniffed the political winds, discovered his fellow commanders all had his
back, then promptly drove his chariot to Jezreel at speed and killed not just
the king of Israel and his entire family, his friends, his priests and his inner circle, but
the visiting king of Judah to boot. His kingdom was established in a
matter of hours.
The similarities end with the anointing oil.
Labels:
2 Kings
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Donald Trump
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Elders
/
Jehu
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Leadership
Sunday, March 05, 2017
The Word, Uncontained
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“It’s got to be in here somewhere ...” |
Oh, he calls himself a Christian, make no mistake. But he insists
the Bible is “the words of men that have recorded some words of God sometimes”. So much so that the caps come out again:
“Our focus and our trust must be in Jesus, WE MUST BE LED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT OF GOD.”
Being led by the Holy Spirit with our focus on and trust in
Jesus seems a pretty good deal to me. It’s his understanding of what that means
that’s the problem.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Authority
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Peter
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Recycling
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Scripture
Saturday, March 04, 2017
Antiquated Ways of Thinking
If feminists want to minimize their own joy
in life, that’s one thing. God bless ’em and have at it. But it’s another thing
entirely when they set out to trash the culture so comprehensively that nobody else enjoys their lives either.
If you are driving into Winston-Salem from
Kernersville, about 85 miles northeast of Charlotte, N.C., expect to encounter
a billboard that reads, “Real men provide. Real women appreciate it.”
Better drive fast though: last Sunday at 11:00 a.m., the owner
of a Winston-Salem women’s boutique called Kleur organized a demonstration
against the billboard’s message and its “antiquated way of thinking”.
If that’s their metric, I’m an antique and
proud of it.
Labels:
Family
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Men's Role
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Titus
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Women's Role
Friday, March 03, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Just Another Bump in the Roe
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
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Next! Move ’em on through! |
Tom: You also might not know that by the time the
Supremes actually ruled on her case, the baby Norma McCorvey went to court to get the State’s permission to murder in her own womb was 2-1/2 years old and had been adopted. That’s
the legal system for you.
Labels:
Abortion
/
Forgiveness
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, March 02, 2017
The Divine Veto
Lately I’ve been
wondering how much latitude God gives his servants in choosing how they go
about doing his work. If you read either Testament carefully, it seems like it
could be an awful lot.
Now, bear in mind that
from John Calvin’s perspective, it is really God doing everything that is done
in the universe. I don’t think he ever used the word “pawn” (which might have
been the most honest way to describe how he thought God treats his creatures), but in
effect he taught that sentient beings, good or bad, cannot really act contrary to
the will of God. God’s determinate counsel initiates and controls every transaction in the universe — “all events whatsoever”, as Calvin put it.
I’m not operating on
that wavelength at all, so disciples of Mr. Calvin may want to take a
pass on the following musings.
Labels:
2 Kings
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Calvinism
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Determinism
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Elisha
/
Prayer
Wednesday, March 01, 2017
A Non-Binary Proposition
God took a nation for
himself from all the peoples of the earth. If you’re Israel, that’s what you might
call a mixed blessing.
On the one hand, there
was lots of good stuff that came with being uniquely God’s. As Paul puts it to
the Romans, “to [Israelites] belong the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the worship, and the promises”, and he goes on to mention the patriarchs and Messiah. Being a Jew was a
tremendous privilege.
On the other hand, as another Jew once put it, “With great power there must also come — great responsibility.”
Labels:
2 Kings
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Chosen
/
Israel
/
Sovereignty
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Out of the Closet and Out of the Sea
Globalism is out of
the closet. Finally.
For years now, politicians
from countries all over the world enraptured with the Ideology That Dared Not
Speak Its Name have pursued their dream of global government. Until the end of
last year, they were savvy enough to do it behind the scenes, giving the
occasional barely-perceptible nod to national interests in order to avoid
raising the hackles of the rank and file that their policies had impoverished and unemployed by the
millions. Attentive observers of Washington and the Eurozone noticed
something was a bit off, but recognized that being overly vocal with their
suspicions would tend to nuke their credibility with the audience that pays the bills.
Hey, even political
commentators have to eat, right?
Labels:
Daniel
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Donald Trump
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Globalism
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Prophecy
/
Revelation
Monday, February 27, 2017
A Man Without A Clue
The first twenty-nine chapters of the book of Proverbs set
out the compiled wisdom of Solomon. Obviously not all of it; we’re told he
wrote 3,000 proverbs and an additional 1,005 songs, so this is the tip of a
large iceberg. It’s a pretty impressive resume by any standard.
Agur son of Jakeh, on the other hand, rates a mere 33 verses, most of which he gives over to the making of lists: “Here are four things that are small but wise …”, “Here are three things that shake the earth …”, “Here are three things that are very stately …” and so on.
While it is certainly the inspired word of God, I’m not sure
the average observation attributed to Agur stacks up with those of the great
king of Israel.
I will tell you this though: he had a few good lines in him.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
In Need of Analysis: Wake Up and Smell the Potpourri
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Chameleon Christianity
/
Dick Keyes
/
In Need of Analysis
Saturday, February 25, 2017
Friday, February 24, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Different Ways to Die in the Dark
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Hedonism
/
Islam
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, February 23, 2017
Perception Is Not Reality
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Perception can be fantasyland |
The line has been
attributed to eighties political strategist Lee Atwater. I dislike it
thoroughly: communication is tough enough without deliberately eroding the
meaning of words. Our general failure to apply our critical faculties to aphorisms
like Atwater’s simply accelerates the disintegration of language into
meaningless babble.
I’m not kidding. Hey, we’re talking about the nature of reality here.
Labels:
Romans
/
Spiritual Gifts
/
Teaching
/
Truth
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
That Wacky Old Testament (10)
The book of
2 Kings starts with a bang — or at least with fire from heaven, which
is plenty eventful enough for most of us.
The prophet Elijah has
just passed on another of his many messages from God, this one to the effect
that the illness suffered by wicked King Ahaziah will surely result in his
death. Ahaziah is understandably less than thrilled to receive this news. He
sends a military unit of fifty men with their captain to bring Elijah back to
Samaria, where he lies bedridden, presumably in hope of intimidating the
prophet into foretelling a fate more to his taste.
The captain is insufficiently
deferential to the prophet, who promptly calls down fire from heaven on him and
on his soldiers.
Labels:
2 Kings
/
Elijah
/
Judgment
/
That Wacky Old Testament
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Sovereignty in Action
Our Calvinist friends
tell us God is sovereign, and I would be the last to disagree with them. Of
course, we define “sovereignty” a little differently.
I think it’s possible
to believe that God is King of Everything without believing he personally ordains every
act that takes place within his kingdom. John Calvin, on the other
hand, was convinced that “all
events whatsoever are governed by the secret counsel of God” and that “nothing
happens without his counsel”. Words like counsel and government imply not
just knowledge but personal direction.
But if God is behind every single event that
takes place in the universe, then why do the scriptures constantly single out
certain events to assure us that it was God who did them? I mean, he does
EVERYTHING, right?
Monday, February 20, 2017
Media and the Gospel
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Evangelism
/
Gospel
/
Relationships
Sunday, February 19, 2017
The Best Move
One of Satan’s most effective and longstanding cons is
getting people moving when they really ought to stand still. He did it
with Eve, didn’t he? That tree in the middle of the garden was good for food,
and it was a delight to the eyes, and to be desired to make one wise.
Thing is, it was just as good for food the day before. It
was just as delightful to the eyes three weeks before that. The wisdom it
conferred would be the same yesterday, today or tomorrow. There was exactly
zero urgency about having a bite of its fruit right then. None whatsoever. Nobody was
going to starve, and that exceptionally desirable tree was not going anywhere.
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Playing Word Games
Keeping laws cannot
save us, as we were reminded earlier this week. God gave his law to Israel for the purpose of demonstrating to mankind our total inability to consistently abide by whatever rules we might make for ourselves, not so
that we could accumulate sufficient spiritual brownie points to inspire St. Peter
to open the gate of heaven just a crack and let us squeak through.
That being understood,
laws still serve a very useful purpose. They cannot by themselves reclaim a
single lost human heart, but a society in which the majority of citizens
recognize and respect the rule of law will do notably better over the long term
than a society that operates only on the principle of the will to power.
We are currently
observing the abandonment of the rule of law south of the (Canadian) border.
Labels:
1 Kings
/
Donald Trump
/
Interpretation
/
Law
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