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Sunday, July 09, 2017
Saturday, July 08, 2017
On Not Showing Up to the Conversation
Abdy is a Bible College student who feels the churches in
which he circulates are out of touch with the broader Christian community: “If
the greater Evangelical Christian world is a party, then ‘the Brethren’ are in
the corner twiddling their thumbs, waiting for it to be over.”
Now, in some quarters them’s fightin’ words, and the feedback
reflects it: “It’s so sad to read articles like this,” or “Today, [evangelicalism]
is a big mess.” Other comments are cautiously approving or even enthusiastic.
Labels:
Debate
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Denominationalism
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Ecumenicalism
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Unity
Friday, July 07, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Another Kind of Empowerment
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
feminism
/
Too Hot to Handle
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Youth
Thursday, July 06, 2017
What’s Behind Faith?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Faith
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Rationalism
Wednesday, July 05, 2017
Sound Advice from a Secular Source
![]() |
Consider the source, but not too much. |
Sometimes that works
out all right anyway, provided the instructions are general enough to apply
more broadly. For example, God told Cain, “If you do
well, will you not be accepted?” That piece of wisdom came in a specific
context to a specific person and had a specific historical meaning, but that
doesn’t mean we’re crazy to say to ourselves, “You know, things will probably
go better for me if I approach God the same way as others with whom he says he
is pleased.”
Just like Cain ought to have done … and didn’t.
Labels:
2 Chronicles
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2 Kings
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Conflict
Tuesday, July 04, 2017
Quote of the Day (34)
The late Christopher Hitchens famously
claimed men can be good without God. To prove his case he challenged his
detractors to name even one moral action performed by a believer that
could not equally have been performed by a nonbeliever.
Hitchens is dead and gone, but his claim is
not. Others continue to advance it in different ways. Stefan Molyneux explores the
subject in Universally Preferable Behaviour: A Rational Proof of Secular Ethics. Dr. Jordan Peterson, notably coy about his belief in the existence of an
actual Supreme Being, lays down a rationalistic scenario in a series of recent
lectures in which the Bible, though apparently the product of naturally evolving
morality rather than divine revelation, still serves a vital purpose in
civilizing man, providing an irreplaceable basis for social interaction and
transforming the individual.
Goodness without an actual God. Hmm. Does
that work for you?
Labels:
Atheism
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C.R. Hallpike
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Christopher Hitchens
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Jordan Peterson
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Quote of the Day
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Worldviews
Monday, July 03, 2017
On the Value of Frank Speech
The first was in a video
lecture by Dr. Jordan Peterson. Pointing to a particular vignette in the Hieronymous
Bosch triptych The Garden of Earthly
Delights, Peterson improvised:
“That’s the lion lying down with the lamb. So that’s
this idea that’s maybe projected back in time that there was a time — or
maybe will be a time — when the horrors of life are no longer necessary
for life itself to exist.
And the horrors of life are, of course, that
everything eats everything else and that everything dies and that everything’s
born and that the whole bloody place is a charnel house and it’s a catastrophe
from beginning to end.
This is the vision of it being ... other
than that.”
Boy, you could have
heard a pin drop. He had the attention of everyone in the room.
Labels:
Grace
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Hate Speech
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Language
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Speech
Sunday, July 02, 2017
If You Don’t Know, Just Say So
Some people just can’t bring themselves to say it, sadly.
This poor soul dared to pose a question on an
internet forum a while back. The silly fellow had been reading his Bible (on his own, possibly) and had the temerity to come across
this verse:
“As he said these things, a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said to him, ‘Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts at which you nursed!’ But he said, ‘Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!’ ”
Hooboy. Some people just know how to pick ’em.
Saturday, July 01, 2017
Thought Experiment #3: Consciousness and Memory
I know: heavy subject,
holy ground, tread carefully. I’m on tiptoes.
We recently ran a post from Immanuel Can on the subject of memory. He makes the case that there
are certain things Christians need to let go of and move on from in order to
stay spiritually healthy. I think he’s right about that. Now, for IC, that moving-on
process entails refusing to nurse or justify feelings of grief, bitterness or anger about things we cannot change.
We need God’s help for that, and it’s easier said than done, I know.
Labels:
God
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Memory
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The Mind
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Thought Experiment
Friday, June 30, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Invincible Girls
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Culture
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feminism
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Men's Role
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Too Hot to Handle
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Women's Role
Thursday, June 29, 2017
My Ten-Year-Old Dad
Math is a tough, tough business. Some people can’t do it at all and are, I maintain, worse off for it.
I can’t stop doing it,
and sometimes that’s its own can of worms.
So take the first
verses of 2 Chronicles 28 and 29 — please! — in which we
discover that when we do a little simple addition and subtraction, it turns out
King Ahaz fathered his son Hezekiah at the ripe old age of — wait for
it — ten.
Drum roll please.
Labels:
2 Chronicles
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Contradictions in Scripture
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Hezekiah
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
No Quick Fix
“Toymaker
Mattel’s Ken dolls now come in three different body types: broad, slim and
original. There are new cultural tweaks, too: An African-American Ken comes
with cornrows, an Asian Ken rocks a sharp, design-director look and
another version of the figure sports a man bun.”
Not quite so promoted but also available:
the “broad” version, a 40-ish Ken doll that looks like a slightly
better-dressed version of every dad you know, complete with flagging physique.
If they were selling these things to boys, they’d offer a couch, big-screen TV and a Denver Broncos jersey as accessories. But since they’re still primarily marketed to girls, I suppose an authentic Ken Sr. ought to come with lawnmower and a pair of garbage bags to lug to the curb on Tuesday morning.
Tuesday, June 27, 2017
The Haunting of the Past
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Forgiveness
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Memory
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Ravi Zacharias
Monday, June 26, 2017
Letters from the Best Man (6)
The following is
absolutely fictional and increasingly common. There is no Brad and definitely
no Jill, in case that is not obvious. There are, however, way too many people
in their position.
Dear Brad,
I was just thinking of you this morning, and voila! there goes my email notification.
Funny how that works.
Your question is not exactly a surprise. Still, I wasn’t
about to bring up the subject until you did. But you’re nine months into your
separation from Jill and as you say, it looks as if she will almost surely file
for divorce at the one year mark. While you’re a long way from considering
remarriage at this point, I agree that it makes sense to get your ducks in a
row, so to speak, about what the scriptures say concerning the end of a
marriage before emotions cloud the issue.
Labels:
Divorce
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Hosea
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Letters from the Best Man
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Malachi
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Marriage
Sunday, June 25, 2017
Libels and Labels
This is not without good reason, I think. In bringing the animals to Adam to see what labels he would put on them, God dignified both, granting the man
authority and the animals identity. It was also an immensely practical thing to
do. Imagine the complexity of having to forever refer to “that big leathery
thing with tusks and a hose for a nose” or “the small furry black thing that
lives in my house that is not the same as the slightly larger small furry black thing”.
You can see why we have taken to labeling
things like fish to water. It simplifies life.
Labels:
Interpretation
/
Meaning
Saturday, June 24, 2017
An Open Letter to Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
I’ve been enjoying
immensely your online lecture series on The Psychological Significance of the Biblical Stories. Hearing you reframe these familiar truths and ancient tropes in the terminology
of psychology and mythology — and occasionally in plain secular language, rather
than religiously and liturgically — has lit up the OT landscape for me in a
new way. As you mentioned in your fourth lecture, a hypothesis that works itself
out in human experience on multiple levels is that much more likely to
represent the real state of things.
Labels:
Exodus
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Jordan Peterson
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Moses
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Sinai
Friday, June 23, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Choosing a Church
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Doctrine
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 22, 2017
Humility and Compromise
Most Christians would agree humility is a goal genuinely worth pursuing. After all, it is
our Lord himself who both modeled it for us and
encouraged us to behave humbly toward one another.
Paul picks up this theme and runs with it, declaring that disciples of the
Lord Jesus are to, “Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus.” Religious habits that promote personal exaltation over others are not Christian habits.
So why is it so many of us confuse humility
with taking a “live and let live” attitude toward inferior teaching in our churches?
Labels:
2 Chronicles
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Compromise
/
Humility
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Joash
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
Semi-Random Musings (1)
My workplace isn’t a complete and utter hive of
political correctness like so many major corporations today, but that’s sure not for lack of trying.
In our case the issue is economics rather
than ideology. It has been deemed insufficiently cost-effective to put a
dedicated Human Resources rep in what is really only a regional satellite
office, so instead we are PC-policed from over a thousand miles away. Which
means we aren’t, really.
That would be a nice benefit if we were
free to enjoy it. But we aren’t. Somehow, without any discussion of the
subject, we have managed to begin policing each other … for free.
Labels:
2 Chronicles
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Athaliah
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Jezebel
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Political Correctness
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Prayer
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Semi-Random Musings
Tuesday, June 20, 2017
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