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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Friday, April 07, 2017
Thursday, April 06, 2017
Exit, Stage Left
The presence of Christ among his people?
Yes, that’s surely critical. That we meet in his name, according to his will and doing the things that he
himself would do if he were here with us? Yes, that is our assurance of his presence. That we follow the pattern of the early believers and commit ourselves to the
apostles’ teaching, fellowship, the breaking of bread and prayer?
Absolutely.
Question: What happens if we stop remembering
the Lord in the breaking of bread? Are we still a church any sense that matters
to God?
Labels:
Breaking of Bread
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Evangelicalism
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Revelation
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Worship
Wednesday, April 05, 2017
I’ll Tell You Later
If I want to watch a movie, I can skim Netflix and play one in seconds. It takes me longer to make
up my mind than it takes to start playing my selection once I’ve decided. If I
want to listen to the Strolling Bones’ hot new CD, I don’t have to rush to the
mall (assuming I can find a record store still in business) or wait for Amazon
to deliver it to my front door, I can stream it right now or download it from
iTunes in seconds. If I want dinner, I can microwave something in five minutes,
or, assuming I have unusual patience, have it delivered in forty-five.
Spiritual insight isn’t like that. Not at all. Sometimes God says, “I’ll tell you later.”
Labels:
Eternity
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Hezekiah
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Resurrection
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Titus
Tuesday, April 04, 2017
The Race Metaphor
Yesterday I talked a little bit about images and figurative language in scripture. I think sometimes we can end up reading more into a Bible metaphor or simile than the Spirit of God ever intended. Or we get caught up in the details of the picture itself and fail to grasp the spiritual reality it is meant to depict.
The writer to the Hebrews talks about running a race:
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so
great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us …”
Here the writer and his original Hebrew
audience (that’s the “we”; the rest of us are simply reading someone else’s
mail) are compared to men and women running a race. We do well to ask
ourselves two questions. Firstly, what is this “race” that is to be
run? Secondly, what are the specific intended points of agreement between
running and whatever it is this “race” is intended to typify?
Labels:
Faith
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Hebrews
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Interpretation
Monday, April 03, 2017
Quote of the Day (31)
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It helps to know what we’re looking at. |
A word picture is a helpful way to describe
a particular aspect of a spiritual reality. Unsurprisingly, we find the word of
God to be full of them: images from the parables of the Lord Jesus, the poetic metaphors
of the Psalms, the similes of Isaiah or the illustrations of the
apostles — lovely, practical stuff sufficiently simple and clear to
express profound truths even to our children.
Taken beyond their intended range, however,
these figures quickly devolve into goofiness and bad doctrine.
Labels:
Figurative Language
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Interpretation
/
Louis Berkhof
/
Quote of the Day
Sunday, April 02, 2017
Just Get Up
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Bible Study
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Discipline
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Self-Control
Saturday, April 01, 2017
Dawn of the Pod People
Maybe they were traveling to another galaxy in suspended
animation. Maybe they were hooked up to a computer matrix, bamboozled into
believing in a counterfeit reality. Maybe they jumped into a one-man escape capsule
to hide from aliens with freaky extensible jaws. Whatever the story logic, the
image of people in personal life support units is
near-universal in the sci-fi genre.
And hey, we’re living it.
Labels:
Culture
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Evangelism
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Modern Christianity
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Multiculturalism
Friday, March 31, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: How Do You Read It? (3)
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
How Do You Read It
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Prayer
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, March 30, 2017
Under Collective Judgment
I am not my dad. I don’t
make quite the same mistakes. I make different mistakes. Likewise, I don’t do many things half as well or
half as spiritually as my father does. We’re very different in many ways.
I’m definitely not my dad’s father. I never
knew him. Many of his ways seem foreign to me. He lived in another era,
one characterized by different assumptions and habits.
And my great-grandfather? You gotta be kidding.
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
A Horse Plunging Headlong
I’ve been listening to unhappy people this week: people that
have sinned, have hurt others and have hurt themselves.
It’s refreshing when someone gets it; when they realize that
their own choices and desires took them places they do not want to be, and that
these patterns need to be changed. It’s a good thing to see correctly the
relationship between cause and effect, between actions and consequences.
But it’s even better when it dawns that our most significant
sins are the inevitable consequence of refusing to take the Lord at his word.
Labels:
Jeremiah
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Proverbs
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Recycling
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Repentance
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Sin
Tuesday, March 28, 2017
False Unities and Lines of Division
As Christians living in a
day in which we have every possible advantage in
understanding what God has revealed of himself to mankind down through the
centuries, the importance of having our hearts and heads thoroughly marinated
in the word of God cannot be overstated.
There is no area of
human investigation that matters more. None.
But in a fallen world,
the word of God divides. The more we read it and follow it, the more we will
find ourselves separated from those who don’t.
Labels:
2 Kings
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Church
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Denominationalism
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Division
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Word of God
Monday, March 27, 2017
Inbox: The ‘Stealth Pastor’
After reading our recent
post on “The Role of a Senior Pastor”, David B. asks a perfectly legitimate question:
“From the ‘brethren assemblies’ perspective, what is your opinion on the ‘full time worker’?”
From any perspective, denominational or
otherwise, there’s a point well worth considering here, and that is that “a
rose by any other name would smell as sweet”. Things are what they are at their core, not merely what you label
them. A garbage dump smells like a garbage dump even if you call it a Post-Consumer Product Management Initiative.
Sometimes your nose tells you what your
eyes may not.
Sunday, March 26, 2017
Recommend-a-blog (22)
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The Tel Gezer calendar (Attribution) |
Bible Chronology Studies is a refreshing change from that sort of thing, though not necessarily in an area of study all
believers will embrace with enthusiasm. Some of us are deeply interested in
what’s “under the hood” of our Christian faith; others are just happy to turn
the key and take it up to the (legal) limit.
The website is the work of what I estimate must be thousands upon thousands of hours of
independent study by a thus-far-anonymous Christian writer (not that there’s
anything wrong with that) apparently obsessed with getting it right.
Labels:
Genealogies
/
Genesis
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Kings
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Numbers
/
Recommend-a-blog
Saturday, March 25, 2017
Living Under the Blade
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Forgiveness
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Guilt
/
Sin
Friday, March 24, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Not Quite What They Expected
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Culture
/
Donald Trump
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, March 23, 2017
Of Trees and Floods
“Then Hezekiah said to Isaiah, ‘The word of the Lord that you have spoken is good.’
For he thought, ‘Why not, if there will be peace and security in my days?’ ”
I have no clue what you’re thinking about right now. Not a one. That’s normal, I think.
Despite this, when we read novels and the writer tells us precisely what is on the mind of the protagonist, we barely notice how bizarre that is. After all, it is the author’s
story and it is his prerogative to drive its narrative or provide insight into its characters via whatever literary technique he chooses.
Not in the real world. If a news reporter presumes to inform us
what President Trump really intends when he thumbs his latest tweet into his iPhone for the nation, we rightly think she is overstepping her role just a bit. How could she possibly know for sure?
Bible history is a little different.
Wednesday, March 22, 2017
That’s MY Mail You’re Reading
RationalWiki is basically a repository of unbelief designed to show people how and where the Bible is (in their view) untrue. Somebody has gone to a lot of effort to attempt to debunk scripture and compile evidence of its alleged irrationality.
Possibly the coolest section of all is the page on ‘failed’ prophecy, which begins this way:
“Some Christians claim that fulfilled prophecies prove the Bible’s inerrancy … mainstream Christians will actually claim that, for example, the Gospels are historical evidence of Isaiah being accurate prophecy (rather than works written with a copy of Isaiah to hand to claim fulfilment of prophecy), therefore the Bible is accurate and Jesus is Lord.”
You know, I think they’re probably correct about Christians claiming such things, though they don’t provide specific examples. But they have a bigger problem: they’re reading my mail. Small wonder they’re a bit confused.
Labels:
John
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Matthew
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Prophecy
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Recycling
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Revelation
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
The Message You’re Sending
The line was penned by Sir Bob Geldof way back
in 1979, long before personal computers with memories that the average person cannot easily erase, long before the Internet, before the NSA was on your hard drive and tracking your every movement through your cell phone, before your TV started watching you while you watch it, and
before the unblinking eye in the sky that is Google Maps. It seems more than a little
prescient, but Geldof had become (briefly) famous, and the world was paying more
attention than he would have liked.
Monday, March 20, 2017
Always Ready?
The faithful are
always to be ready to give an answer to anyone who asks us why we hope in God. The apostle Peter says this is especially true when we are being attacked for our beliefs.
But some questions are
not really questions. They are not sincere inquiries. They are rhetoric,
intended to demoralize and destroy belief.
I point this out
because it’s easy not to notice. For the enthusiastic or pedantic among us,
everything is a witnessing opportunity ... even when it isn’t.
But sometimes it’s better
to be silent and let God speak.
Sunday, March 19, 2017
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