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Friday, December 08, 2017
Wednesday, December 06, 2017
There Is No ‘Plan B’
I have a friend who regularly sends me emails full of ‘Christian’
content, mostly the type of cookie-cutter platitudes and cheesy,
sentimental anecdotes popular on social media. One or two have actually been pretty decent. I have no
idea where he finds them all.
I assume he sends them my way because he knows I’m a
Christian and expects that they’d be of interest to me in the same way that,
say, NHL trade rumours interest a hockey fan, or an article on Jeff Tweedy may
interest a fan of the band Wilco. It’s a nice gesture on his part.
Tuesday, December 05, 2017
A Fistful of Jell-O
Too many times, trying
to get a handle on complex disagreements within the Body of Christ is like
trying to grab a fistful of Jell-O. And not the cubed, wobbly, gelatinous sort
either. More like the runny, near-liquid stuff that races away across the
tabletop or squirts between your fingers when you finally catch up
with it.
Good luck nailing that down.
A long-time reader
pointed me to this blog post by Barbara Roberts at A Cry for Justice,
which might well represent the quintessential runny Jell-O story.
Labels:
Abuse
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Divorce
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John MacArthur
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John Piper
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Marriage
Monday, December 04, 2017
Testimony and Evidence
No, really, it’s not.
If you want to be trusted — if you want to build confidence, and if you
want to establish a lasting relationship — you need to first express the truth in words, then you need to embody it. Or the other way round, if you
like. But when we want to send a message and have it understood, our testimony
and the evidence to back it up must go together. One or the other alone will
not cut it.
That first aspect of
communication is expressed in scripture this way: “Faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word.”
Right. Verbal expression is critical in building trust.
Labels:
Communication
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Love
Sunday, December 03, 2017
On the Mount (7)
While the prophet
Daniel revealed the coming of a “kingdom that shall never be destroyed” that was to be “given to
the people of the saints of the Most High”, John the Baptist got the job of formally announcing the arrival of the King to his nation.
If all we had to go on
was the book of Daniel, we might associate heaven’s kingdom with the power,
glory and dominance of the earthly empires that preceded it, and which it would
forever eclipse and obliterate: Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece and Rome.
That idea would not be
wrong so much as it would be incomplete.
Labels:
Daniel
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Luke
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Matthew
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On the Mount
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Zechariah
Saturday, December 02, 2017
An All-Too-Common Problem
“Fret not yourself because of evildoers; be not envious of wrongdoers!”
“Be still before the Lord and wait patiently for him; fret not yourself over the one who prospers in his way.”
“Refrain from anger, and forsake wrath! Fret not yourself; it tends only to evil.”
Three times in eight verses David reminds
his readers not to get worked up over the apparent success of people who make
their own way in life by taking moral shortcuts.
If the righteous need this many reminders, fretting
must be a very common problem, right?
Right.
Friday, December 01, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: More Than Me
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christopher Hitchens
/
Ecclesiastes
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Meaning
/
Purpose
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, November 30, 2017
Choking On Our Empathy
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Compassion
/
Empathy
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Statute of Limitations
In many countries certain
crimes have limitation periods, after which their perpetrators can be assured
they will not be prosecuted for their misconduct. The practice goes all the way
back to classical Greece prior to 400 B.C. For Athenians, every illegal act except homicide set a five-year clock ticking, at which point the guilty man or woman could heave a sigh of relief and
move on to mulling over the potential legal fallout from more recent sins.
Likewise, for obvious
reasons my insurance company does not want to be inundated with claims for covered
losses that occurred Way Back When. So if you rear-end me at a traffic light on
my way to work later today, I have precisely 365 days to initiate a claim,
after which I will have a pretty tough time collecting anything to which I
might otherwise have been entitled under the terms of my insurance agreement.
Prayer is not like
that. It has no statute of limitations.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Quiet, Not Silent
“For they do not speak peace, but against those
who are quiet in the land they devise words of deceit.”
Contentious, evil people always take advantage
of those who can’t or won’t fight back. If that’s not a universal truism, it’s
as close to one as matters.
Our political, legal and social structures
are so constructed as to allow the forceful and aggressive to dominate the peaceful.
Labels:
Christ
/
Matthew
/
Social Justice
Monday, November 27, 2017
Legitimate Usage
Here and there in my daily browsings I
stumble across atheists in the process of diligently constructing monuments to unbelief.
These often take the form of websites attempting to debunk Bible prophecy.
Two totally unscientific observations: (1) the preferred strategy of many atheists is to throw every conceivable objection at the proverbial wall in hope that one or
two will stick; and (2) most such objections arise from unfamiliarity with the text.
But not all.
Labels:
Interpretation
/
Matthew
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Prophecy
Sunday, November 26, 2017
On the Mount (6)
In my previous posts
in this series I’ve been attempting to demonstrate the extent to which the
content of the Sermon on the Mount, while often looking forward, remains inextricably
tied to the Old Testament.
But the kingdom of
heaven with which the Sermon is deeply concerned is itself a New Testament
concept — a new frame, a new way of describing the government of God on
earth. First proclaimed by John the Baptist, the kingdom occupies a central
place in the teaching of the Lord Jesus. You will not find the phrase in your
Bible prior to (or, rather remarkably, after) Matthew’s gospel, where it occurs
31 times.*
Before going much
deeper into the Sermon, we need to pause briefly to consider what “kingdom of
heaven” means.
Labels:
Daniel
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Kingdom
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Kingdom of Heaven
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Matthew
/
On the Mount
Saturday, November 25, 2017
Quote of the Day (37)
The very articulate Stefan
Molyneux hosts Freedomain Radio, the most popular philosophy show on the
Internet — not that he has a lot of competition in that department. Molyneux
has described himself as an atheist, though these days he seems more of an
agnostic than a hard-nosed denier.
Earlier this year I picked up a copy of his book Universally Preferable Behaviour: A Rational Proof of Secular Ethics, figuring I might review it here if it turned out to be of interest. The case for ethics apart from God is a tough one to make, and I was curious what sort of
evidence Molyneux might produce.
Labels:
Evidence
/
Quote of the Day
/
Stefan Molyneux
/
Truth
Friday, November 24, 2017
Too Hot to Handle: The Weight of Tradition
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Catholicism
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Evangelicalism
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Protestantism
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
Tradition
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
/
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
/
Matthew
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Prayer
/
What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
/
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
/
Isaiah
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Patriarchy
/
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
/
Matthew
/
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
/
Recycling
/
Sovereignty
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