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Friday, August 04, 2017
Thursday, August 03, 2017
Unmuddling the Muddle
I don’t think it’s an overstatement to say that Christian teaching
about prophecy is a chaotic muddle.
Within Christendom, in the broadest and most general terms,
we find Preterists, Historicists, Futurists and Idealists. When we get into specific features of the prophetic calendar such as the Millennium, we fragment further into Pre-, Post-
and Amillennialists, and the Premillennialists subdivide yet further
into Pre-Tribulationists, Mid-Tribulationists and Post-Tribulationists. If I’ve
left your view out, forgive me.
You will be unsurprised to find that I have no particular
interest in trying to straighten all that out, and no patience for it even if I
had the skill.
Labels:
1 Thessalonians
/
Apostle Paul
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Culture
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Prophecy
Wednesday, August 02, 2017
My Church Must Change
There’s a thread of an
idea that pops up at the end of a previous post that I wanted to take a few
more moments to explore, since it’s been cropping up over and over again
throughout my life.
Parents love their
kids, or at least they should. In properly-functioning family units, which
would hopefully include most Christian families, parents generally fulfill their
responsibilities more consistently and effectively, though none of us can claim
to have achieved perfection in parenting. Far from it.
But some parents
cannot resist putting a finger on the scales to help their kids through life.
This is the source of all kinds of trouble.
Labels:
Change
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Church
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Elders
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Wisdom
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Youth Work
Tuesday, August 01, 2017
A Suspicious Inversion
It’s been a few years but this guy still grinds
my gears, and since he’s quite literally the poster boy for a generation — or at least for
the last administration — there is a problem with that, and I hope we can
see it.
Now, to be fair, nobody
wants to marry a guy who resolves domestic quarrels with a fist to the face.
At least, nobody normal and emotionally healthy does. But be honest here: how many women truly want to partner up with a man who possesses
neither the will nor the physical strength to act in a crisis?
That’s a different
question, isn’t it. This guy is all that in spades.
Labels:
feminism
/
Gender
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Men's Role
Monday, July 31, 2017
The Wrong Word
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christian Life
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Colossians
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Grace
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Interpretation
/
Speech
Sunday, July 30, 2017
Saturday, July 29, 2017
Inbox: Radical Pruning
“Over the past year I had to do a radical pruning of my
social media feeds and the time I spent looking at them … the constant
barrage of complaints and call-outs from Christians and non-Christians worked
up about some political / social / educational / economic
/ artistic outrage was exhausting. It was making me feel angry and
disgusted with humanity, and not in a good or holy way.”
Hey, that’s honest. And taking practical steps to solve the
problem, as this reader did, is an eminently more sensible solution than fuming
about the world and being miserable.
Friday, July 28, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: EDM in the ‘Sanctuary’
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Evangelism
/
Music
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
Worship
Thursday, July 27, 2017
Disclaimers Anonymous
More and more as I observe the life and conduct of the Lord
Jesus, I want to say less and say it better.
We Christians have, I think, a tendency to over-explain things,
especially our own thoughts and motivations, and especially what we DON’T mean
by this or that. We disclaim for good reasons and we disclaim for bad ones.
You’ve done it, I’ve done it, everybody does it. And usually
it doesn’t help one bit.
Labels:
Disclaimers
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Truth
/
Words
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
4GW and the Church
4GW is short for
Fourth-Generation Warfare, a term first used in 1989 by a team of U.S. military
analysts to describe conflict characterized, as Infogalactic puts it, by a “blurring of the lines between war and politics, combatants and civilians”.
In simplest terms, a
4G war is any conflict in which one of the actors is not a state but a
sub-population of some sort, ethnic or otherwise. 4GW’s goals are usually
complex and long term, and may be achieved through guerrilla tactics,
terrorism, psy-ops, economic pressure, media manipulation and/or other non-traditional
means.
Labels:
Church
/
Discipling
/
Evangelism
/
Tactics
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
A Giant Problem, or That Stupid Sword Again
Not Goliath, whom
David slew, but that bad habit you can’t give up, and most of the time don’t
really want to.
Somebody I know is
fighting a giant. In his thinking, maybe 5% of the time
he’s in a place where he makes an offhand remark about how he needs
to go back to church, or how he needs to start reading his Bible again, or how
he really needs God in his life. The rest of the time he’s just doing his thing
like he’s always done it, and I suspect the will and character of God are the
last things he’s thinking about. Life provides bucketloads of convenient distractions.
But can God work with
5%? I’d estimate he can. See, I’ve been there too.
Labels:
Conscience
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Conviction
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Guilt
/
Holy Spirit
/
Sin
Monday, July 24, 2017
Idolaters in the House
“Seek
the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you into exile.
Pray to the Lord for it, because if it prospers, you too will prosper.”
— Jeremiah 29:7, NIV
“Never
seek their peace or prosperity …”
— Ezra 9:12, ESV
Two instructions: both from God, both to
Israel. To the casual reader they may appear to be diametrically opposed, but
they are not. The commands occur at very different times in Israel’s history
under very different circumstances, and are issued with respect to very
different groups of people.
The differences are instructive, I think.
Labels:
Church
/
Israel
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Peace
/
The Captivity
Sunday, July 23, 2017
The Castle and the Cave
It is often said that
the three enemies of the human soul are the world, the flesh and the devil. The
first and last members of this triad are instantly understood; the middle one ...
well, not always.
In the New Testament, the
word “flesh” (Gk: sarx) possesses a range of related meanings from merely natural (“the two will become one flesh”) to expressly wicked (“Now
the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery,
enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries,
dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these”).
This being the case, when we come across references
to “the flesh” we may find it helpful to ask ourselves in which sense it is
being used.
Labels:
Asceticism
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Galatians
/
Self
Saturday, July 22, 2017
I Got No Strings (Among Other Things)
In her book Sacred Psychology of Change: Life as Voyage of Transformation,
Marilyn Barrick writes this:
“As
you may remember, the wood carver, Geppetto, gazes out his window at the starry
heavens above and wishes upon a star that the puppet, Pinocchio, he has carved
and painted might be a real boy. His words have been echoed by children ever
since, ‘Star light, star bright, first star I see tonight, I wish I may, I wish
I might, have the wish I wish tonight.’ ”
Pinocchio being a children’s story, Geppetto eventually gets his wish, though
not without a fair bit of grief along the way.
In the real world getting our wishes is not so common.
Friday, July 21, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Religion by the Numbers
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Attendance
/
Church
/
Denominationalism
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, July 20, 2017
The Snare Is Broken
“We have escaped like a bird
from the snare of the fowlers;
the snare is broken,
and we have escaped!”
from the snare of the fowlers;
the snare is broken,
and we have escaped!”
The escape David refers to in Psalm 124 was a literal, physical
one, from an enemy that would have swallowed both him and his alive if it
could; an enemy with “teeth” that regarded him as “prey”. He uses metaphors in
his praise, but there was nothing metaphorical about the things from which he
escaped. Very likely it was cold steel or a slew of arrows aimed in his
direction.
The escape I’m thinking about is of a different sort.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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David
/
Freedom
/
Lies
/
Psalms
/
Recycling
/
Temptation
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
The Body and the Local Church
“It’s
very clear from scripture that the expectation of the church is that it grows (Ephesians 4)”
— Crawford Paul
This is an interesting statement, and it’s
useful in helping us to consider the difference between the Church Universal
and any given local gathering of saints, denominational or otherwise. See, I’m
not entirely sure it IS the Head of the Church’s expectation of his local churches
that they always be in a state of perpetual growth.
The letters to the seven churches in Revelation clearly contemplate local
gatherings in danger of having their lampstands removed. That’s not a good thing, but it’s a recognized reality. And even if those seven
letters hadn’t been written, human nature, history and simple observation should
probably make us reluctant to consider local churches as much more than temporary
fixtures in a much greater plan; pawns on the divine chessboard, if I can say
that without offending too many who have invested their lives in the “local testimony”.
That being the case, so much for expectations.
Labels:
Church
/
Growth
/
Numbers
/
Revelation
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
The Commentariat Speaks (11)
Cail Corishev on truth:
“I
think the rhetorically-challenged person hears ‘truth’ and thinks, ‘literal
truth in correspondence with the facts.’ In that regard, he sees a picture of
Donald Trump riding a war horse over a corpse labeled CNN while a cartoon
frog-pope waves, and sees no truth at all. Literally, nothing in that picture
is true, so that’s bad, maybe even Leftist.
But rhetorically, that picture is completely true, and a better, more
persuasive representation of the truth of that situation than you could convey
in any amount of dialectic.”
Now, like everyone else, I too can be sold
by a grand rhetorical flourish, but that’s fairly unusual. Generally I’m
inclined to skepticism. So here’s the meme to which Cail is referring.
Labels:
1 Kings
/
Donald Trump
/
The Commentariat Speaks
/
Truth
Monday, July 17, 2017
Elementary, My Dear Christian
The giving of the law
to Israel through Moses at Sinai was a truly spectacular event, attended by “blazing fire and darkness and gloom and a tempest and the sound of a trumpet and a voice whose words made
the hearers beg that no further messages be spoken to them,” as the writer to
the Hebrews so eloquently puts it.
The law that God gave
on that grand occasion is described in glowing terms by the psalmist: wondrous,
delightful, sufficient for all sorts of situations, sweeter than honey, perfect, sure, right and true. Of all legal codes by which men have ordered their
societies down through the centuries, the law of Sinai was the very best.
But law itself did not
originate at Sinai. Laws were no new thing.
Sunday, July 16, 2017
Vision, Inspiration and Leadership
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Joshua
/
Leadership
/
Moses
/
Service
/
Worship
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