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Thursday, November 23, 2017
Wednesday, November 22, 2017
Spam for the Clergy
Ooh look, a free e-book!
I generally ignore
spam in my inbox, but this is graphically well-packaged spam disguised as free Christian reading sent to a guy who takes his best shot at posting five times a week, so why not? It’s entitled Toxic Leadership: 5 People Churches Should
Never Hire, and it purports to offer evangelical clergymen their chance to
avoid one or more of those “fatal church hiring mistakes”.
Who could pass
that up?
Also, I love the word “toxic” ...
Labels:
Church
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Clergy
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Giving
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Leadership
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (7)
Hands up if you’ve
figured out Marshall Brain’s agenda.
First clue: he’s plugging
a book entitled God is Imaginary. Second:
a lengthy post asking “Why Won’t God Heal Amputees?”
Yeah, I thought so too.
But what interests me is the passage of scripture from which Brain starts his anti-God ramble, because there’s no logical way to get
from there to where he ends up.
Labels:
Faith
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Matthew
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Prayer
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What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
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Zion
Monday, November 20, 2017
Moving in Circles
History is cyclical, nothing
is truly new, and the capacity of men and women outside of Christ for evil, self-involvement and delusional thinking is no
different today than millennia ago. That’s not what progressives teach, but it’s reality.
God repeats the same
lessons to mankind generation after generation after generation, but the penny
never drops.
In the seventh century
B.C., Isaiah watched, warned and wrote about a nation at the end of its
civilizational cycle. What he saw was not pretty, and it looks alarmingly
familiar to those watching our own culture circle the drain.
Labels:
feminism
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Isaiah
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Patriarchy
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Western Civilization
Sunday, November 19, 2017
On the Mount (5)
When God set about
creating the universe into which he eventually placed mankind, the first
thing he did was turn on the lights.
The very first.
And it wasn’t so he
could see to work. Where God is concerned, “night is bright as day”. No, it was entirely for the benefit of his creation.
Today, we take light for
granted. You want to see, you just flip a switch. Or push a button on your
cellphone, which, if you’re like me, you take to bed with you in case you
need to find your way to the bathroom in the middle of the night without
stepping on anything black, furry and alive.
Convenient, especially
for the cat. But quite a recent development.
Labels:
Light
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Matthew
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On the Mount
Saturday, November 18, 2017
The Evil That Men Do
She came through my window, crawled onto my shoulders,
head-butted me and began to purr like a broken air conditioner. She had an
obvious upper respiratory infection and one bad eye, but seemed energetic and
very sociable. Once she found the dog’s dish and began to chow down, she obdurately refused to leave.
Initially I
thought she was an outdoor kitty belonging to a neighbour, but from her
trusting nature and complete absence of interest in going anywhere near the door, I
concluded that being outdoors was not normal for her (something that was
confirmed when her former owner admitted she had been outside for only two weeks
of her life).
Still, whether the original owner (who declined to take her back) lost his cat intentionally or otherwise, her untroubled, sunny disposition suggests that he must have treated her reasonably well.
Labels:
Joseph
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Recycling
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Sovereignty
Thursday, November 16, 2017
One More Kick at the Can
Confrontation is not
easy. Not for most people at least, which is a good thing: people who lick
their chops at the thought of a good set-to are the last people who should be confronting
anyone.
My job involves the
occasional confrontation. Happily, not often; maybe three times in the fifteen
years I’ve been supervising. In our office, the kitchen is the best place to
chew someone out when you absolutely have to. It’s open and accessible so that nothing
is done behind closed doors, but far enough from the troops that nobody hears
what you’re saying — unless you intend them to.
At least that’s the
way I choose to do it. I’ve never liked the practice of running to upper
management when I have issues with the behavior of employees who report to me.
Not at first, anyway.
Labels:
Disagreement
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Elders
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Matthew
Wednesday, November 15, 2017
Who’s Running This Place Anyway?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Elders
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Leadership
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Timothy
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Titus
Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Of Words and Wording
Being a Jew, one
might expect him to quote from the Hebrew scriptures, which would surely have
been the “official” word of God in his day. But this was not always the case.
Craig Evans makes the case that the Lord often quoted from a well-known Greek translation
of the proto-Masoretic Hebrew, and even occasionally from the Aramaic
tradition.
If you find that odd,
here’s something odder: once in a while, a non-literal translation is more useful
than a literal one.
Labels:
Bible Translations
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Inspiration
Monday, November 13, 2017
The Reset Button
“Get behind me, Satan,”
said the Lord Jesus to an entirely earnest Peter.
It sounds a little unkind, but Peter was in need of serious correction. In that moment he was
thinking naturally rather than spiritually: all his standard
defaults had kicked in. In the realm of ordinary human logic, death and
suffering are things to be avoided under virtually every circumstance.
Peter could not conceive of any higher good
such things might make possible.
Sunday, November 12, 2017
On the Mount (4)
“Until about 100 years ago,” says author Mark
Kurlansky, “salt was one of the most sought-after commodities in human history.” Not so much today. The modern Western diet includes an average of 10 grams of sodium chloride a day, mostly from processed food,
and we are frequently urged to cut back on our intake.
Salt is cheap, and it’s everywhere.
Because of this, our own eating habits are probably
not the best place to start meditating on the meaning of the salt metaphor from
the Sermon on the Mount.
Labels:
Matthew
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On the Mount
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Salt
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Testimony
Saturday, November 11, 2017
Friday, November 10, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: What Gives?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Giving
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Stewardship
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Too Hot to Handle
Wednesday, November 08, 2017
Subhumanity and Satisfaction
“Deliver my soul … from men of the world whose portion is in this life. You
fill their womb with treasure; they are satisfied with children, and they leave their abundance to their
infants.
As for me, I shall behold your face in righteousness; when I awake, I shall be satisfied with your likeness.”
David spends a portion of the 17th Psalm
asking God to deliver him from wicked men and deadly enemies. But he finishes his
meditation by asking for deliverance from a third, arguably less offensive group.
This last crowd sounds awfully familiar. Basically,
it’s everyone who simply doesn’t appreciate the value of knowing God.
Labels:
1 Corinthians
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Communion
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David
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Psalms
Tuesday, November 07, 2017
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (6)
“Future catholicity is set before us in the New Testament (Eph. 4:12-13), and anyone who kicks at
that is kicking against God’s revealed purposes for the history of the church.
Peter [Leithart] and I agree on the eventual reunion of all
believers. It is just that Peter thinks it should have happened by now, and my
best guess is that we are looking at another couple thousand years, right on
schedule.”
Future catholicity. The eventual reunion of all believers.
Really? Is THAT what the apostle had in mind?
Monday, November 06, 2017
On the Mount (3)
I’m working my way through Matthew 5-7
in an attempt to process the words of the Lord Jesus from some approximation of
the cultural and religious perspective of his original audience.
As established in my first two posts on the subject, the evidence is pretty overwhelming that most of the ears that took in
the Sermon on the Mount were Jewish ears. Any Gentiles in that crowd were
either proselytes of Judaism, or on their way to becoming proselytes, or else
outside the community of the faithful just listening in. In those days, if you
wanted to draw near to God, or even to obtain more accurate information about
him, no better means existed than studying and obeying the Law of Moses.
Other generalizations could be made about
the crowd that gathered to hear the Sermon, but let’s consider those when we
reach the relevant portions of the Lord’s discourse.
Labels:
Beatitudes
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Matthew
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On the Mount
Sunday, November 05, 2017
Above Our Pay Grade
Q: “O Lord, who shall sojourn in
your tent? Who shall dwell on your holy hill?”
A: “[He] in whose eyes a vile person is despised, but who honors those who fear the Lord.”
That’s interesting, don’t you think?
Labels:
David
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Enemies
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Forgiveness
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Love
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Psalms
Saturday, November 04, 2017
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (5)
David Brainerd is a little worked up,
asking “Can anyone defend Paul’s misuse of scripture in Romans 3?”
He’s referring to verses 10 through 18, in
which Paul strings together a lengthy series of Old Testament quotes in order
to demonstrate that both Jews and Greeks alike are under sin.
Mr. Brainerd’s beef is that in their original
contexts, none of these verses prove what Paul says they prove. Is he right?
Labels:
Isaiah
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Psalms
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Romans
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What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Friday, November 03, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: Witnessing as Hate Speech
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Too Hot to Handle
/
Witnessing
Wednesday, November 01, 2017
On the Mount (2)
In this series of posts I’m working my way
through Matthew 5-7 attempting (however feebly) to hear the words of
Christ from the same cultural and religious perspective as the Lord’s original
audience.
Since I’m not William MacDonald, and since
this is a blog post rather than an exhaustive commentary, I make no apology for
skipping lightly over some sections of the Sermon and dwelling at length on
others as they may currently interest me.
All I can really promise you is that it’ll
be consecutive and that it’ll be as Jewish as I can make it, and with
any luck almost as Jewish as it actually is.
Ready? Let’s go.
Labels:
Christ
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Galilee
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Judaism
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Matthew
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On the Mount
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