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, March 09, 2018
Thursday, March 08, 2018
Wednesday, March 07, 2018
Broken Window Sins
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Consequences
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Genesis
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Hebrews
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Sin
Tuesday, March 06, 2018
Opportunity and Desire
One of Chuck Snyder’s readers shares a not-so-unusual problem:
“I believe the Spirit of God is upon me to teach the Word of God with love,
accuracy, patience and discernment to a lost and hurting world and to all who
hunger for the truth. Several years of schooling and formal study took place in
order to prepare and to show myself approved. Now, in my home church, I am
given every job and project under the sun to be responsible for, except ‘teaching
the Word of God.’ ”
I hear this sort of thing all the time: “My church doesn’t let me use my spiritual gift.”
Labels:
Church
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Service
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Spiritual Gifts
Monday, March 05, 2018
Sojourners and Citizens
Not everything about sojourning is to the
sojourner’s taste. That’s part and parcel of being on the road. As someone with
no vested interests in the society around you — as someone just passing
through — you have to kind of accept the way the locals live and occasionally
look the other way, even if what they do is more than a little cringeworthy at
times. When in Rome and all that …
In the Bible, sojourners were more refugees than tourists. Like Naomi or Jacob and his family, they were where they were
because their own nation was experiencing famine, drought or invasion. Or, like
David, Moses, Jacob (again) or Joseph and Mary, they were on the run because their king, their own people or even their family members would have been happy to see
them dead.
The Christian, too, is far from home. All believers are.
Labels:
Psalms
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Sojourners
Sunday, March 04, 2018
On the Mount (20)
The reciprocity principle is not a new
thing. It’s said to be found in some form in nearly every religion.
Perhaps the earliest written formulation occurs in the Egyptian story of The Eloquent Peasant. “Do to the doer to make him do,” the god Maat is supposed to have said, which has been generally interpreted to mean something not wildly dissimilar to the so-called Golden Rule (though we can
hardly overlook the obvious self-interest in the Egyptian version). The story predates the Law of Moses, in which Israel was commanded to
love their neighbors as themselves, by a couple hundred years.
Ah well, all truth is God’s truth, as the saying goes. In any case, ancient Egyptian wisdom is not circulating the way it
used to.
Labels:
Forgiveness
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Matthew
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On the Mount
Saturday, March 03, 2018
One Bad Idea
When humanity fell, taking all of creation with it, the cause was a woman who defied the revealed will of God … and a man too weak to either call her on it or to take responsibility
for his own sin.
A bad idea went uncontested. Today, generation after generation pays through the nose.
Again: assuming the Muslims are correct and that Ishmael is legitimately an ancestor of Muhammad, virtually every rocket launched into Israel from the Gaza Strip since 2001 can be attributed to a woman who proposed another really bad idea … and
a man too weak to call her on it.
Abraham and Sarah, the Golan Heights sends its thanks.
Labels:
Church
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Men's Role
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Obedience
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Submission
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Women's Role
Friday, March 02, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: An Undersized Eternity
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Eternity
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Heaven
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Millennium
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, March 01, 2018
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Tick Tick Tick …
In my Bible, Psalm 114 has only sixteen lines, but it makes a powerful point: Where God is personally present,
big events inevitably follow.
Now, it’s obvious that
in one sense God can be said to be present everywhere. David asks, “Where shall I flee from your presence?” The answer: Don’t bother. You can’t. God is present in the realm of the dead, in heaven and in the uttermost parts of the sea.
Holding the universe together requires that sort of presence.
But that’s not the sort of presence I’m talking about.
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
What’s Across the Finish Line?
Christianity Today’s Todd Billings on people who have “too small a view of heaven”:
“A pastor in my home state of Michigan mentioned to me that many members of his congregation assume that there will be
plenty of woods and deer in heaven. So naturally, they fantasize about shooting
a 39-point buck in the heavenly woods.”
It’s a thought provoking article, worth a few
minutes of time if only to draw attention to the extent of what seems like a
massive blind spot in modern evangelicalism.
Labels:
Eternity
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Heaven
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Hope
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Resurrection
Monday, February 26, 2018
Practical Doctrine
Ever hear Christians complain that we really need more practical platform ministry — as if they never hear any? Mostly I’ve heard it from people listening to
the same speakers I listen to; men (imperfectly but regularly) making the effort to explain how the teachings of Christ and the apostles ought to be worked out in our lives today.
I’ve also regularly heard serious Christians lament “Nobody will put up with sound doctrine anymore” — that, in effect, today’s pew-sitters want
nothing but pseudo-spiritual, life-oriented, anecdote-driven blather from the
platform instead of accurate and profound teaching.
It’s not outside the realm of possibility that both sides are making a not-entirely-scriptural distinction between doctrine and practice.
Sunday, February 25, 2018
On the Mount (19)
Some prayers are emotional; others are
cerebral. Some prayers are full of adoring worship; others pour out of deeply burdened
hearts on the brink of despair. Some prayers are thankful; others are needy.
Some prayers are so poetic you suspect they have been scripted; others are a
chaotic mess. (Those would be mine, in case you’re wondering.)
Whatever their content and whatever emotions attach to them, we can divide all prayers broadly into two categories:
personal or corporate.
Labels:
Lord's Prayer
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Matthew
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On the Mount
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Prayer
Saturday, February 24, 2018
Imprecations and Maledictions
There’s an old
eighties dirge about an abused child that starts, “My name is Luka. I live on
the second floor …”
In the real world the writer’s name was not Luka, it was Suzanne. She was majoring in English Lit. at
Barnard College and performing regularly in Greenwich Village when she penned
that hit, and the little boy she wrote about was neither abused nor even named Luka.
So much for verisimilitude.
Labels:
David
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Enemies
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Imprecatory Psalms
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Psalms
Friday, February 23, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: Sophistry
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
We’ve all seen this story before. Those of us who’ve lived long enough to remember Hal Lindsey have seen it repeatedly: a
guy who specializes in the study of prophecy and has been teaching one book of
the Bible for thirty years all over the world. His bread and butter (often
quite literally) is finding something new to say about the same old subject
that is also both current and, ideally, sensational.
Tom: And so, hot on the heels of Hanson Robotics’ press releases about their new “artificial intelligence” creation (and ‘her’ subsequent appearance on Jimmy Fallon’s show), here comes Bible teacher Mark Correll with his latest twist on prophecy: the first
beast of Revelation 13 could be … AI.
Labels:
AI
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Revelation
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Technology
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The Beast
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, February 22, 2018
Wednesday, February 21, 2018
Details, Details …
Hebrews says that God spoke by the prophets (and presumably to the prophets)
“at many times and in many ways”. Among these methods were
visions, dreams and riddles.
The apostle Peter had one such experience on the housetop of Simon the tanner while waiting for a bite to eat and praying. Luke says, “He fell into a trance.” Peter heard a voice uttering actual words (as opposed to merely receiving an impression) and saw an accompanying vision, but the end result was perplexity, not sudden clarity.
Peter had indeed witnessed something spiritually
meaningful, but had yet to find the appropriate context in which to apply the instruction
he had received.
Labels:
Acts
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Prophecy
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Revelation
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Scripture
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Testimony
Tuesday, February 20, 2018
What’s Our Excuse?
We’re getting away
from it now, in the kangaroo courts of Human Rights Tribunals and college
campus inquisitions, but due process used to be a thing.
Built into the Law of Moses were several important procedural provisions designed to ensure that
justice was done, including the oft-quoted “On the evidence of two witnesses or of three witnesses the one who is to die shall be put to death; a person shall not be put to death
on the evidence of one witness.” First century Jews applied this principle
across the board. It was the essence of fairness.
Yet we have it on the authority of several gospel writers that in the case of the Lord Jesus, the rulebook went out the window, as it did at Stephen’s trial and in
Jewish attempts to get their hands on the apostle Paul.
In first century Judea, the kangaroos were out in force.
Labels:
Acts
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Christian Testimony
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Ephesians
Monday, February 19, 2018
A Motion of No Confidence
The origins of the circumcision ritual are deeply
buried in human history. The act has come to be associated primarily with
Judaism, but there is plenty of evidence it did not begin there.
Infogalactic says, “Circumcision is the
world’s oldest planned surgical procedure.” The earliest historical record of the ritual dates from about 2400 B.C. in
Egypt, several hundred years before God introduced Abram to it.
The importance of the Genesis account lies
not in it being some kind of “first” in human history — it almost surely wasn’t —
but rather in the establishment of God’s covenant with Abram and his seed; a
covenant of which circumcision is merely a token or symbol.
Labels:
Abraham
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Circumcision
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Philippians
Sunday, February 18, 2018
On the Mount (18)
Back in 2013, Republican congressman Jeff Duncan
toured a Department of Homeland Security training facility in Maryland and
observed eight or nine IRS agents engaged in target practice with
semi-automatic Colt rifles. It later occurred to him to ask, “Why do IRS law enforcement agents need
standoff capability that you would have with a long rifle or with a weapon
similar to an AR-15?”
Good question, but it goes to the basic nature
of taxation.
Taxation is not “giving”.
Labels:
Giving
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Matthew
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On the Mount
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Stephen Colbert
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Taxation
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