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“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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Thursday, March 29, 2018
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
All the Time You Need
“Those who were crucified with him also reviled him.”
How long does it take to get saved?
Some people spend their whole lives working at it. They go
to church, they provide for their families, they confess their sins, they
contribute to religious causes, they try to treat people well, they “do unto
others”. Some follow laws and religious regulations year after year.
But it’s not a trick question, nor a particularly
complicated one.
Labels:
Christ
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Crucifixion
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Faith
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Recycling
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Repentance
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
The Leaders and the Led
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Leadership
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Matthew
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Servant
Monday, March 26, 2018
The Rest of the Psalm
So said the exiles of Judah in Babylon, and they wept as they recalled it. Their real home was far away. They belonged in Zion, and their present
status was, to all appearances, quite degraded. Had things gone as they should,
God’s people would have been singing psalms in the temple courts of the great
city of Jerusalem, not sitting in servitude by the waters of Babylon.
But there they were all the same.
Sunday, March 25, 2018
On the Mount (23)
I like to think of wisdom as applied
reality: taking one’s knowledge of the actual nature of things and working that
knowledge through in a very practical way in the circumstances of life.
That sort of discernment is pictured for us
metaphorically in scripture. It is not that the Lord Jesus came so that men and
women might pay lip service to a particular series of moral data points, but that we might
make use of those facts to act in our own best interests, in the best interests
of others, and ultimately and most importantly, in accordance with the will of God.
The metaphor the Lord uses to describe
applied reality is light: “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me
will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” Being able to
see where we are going is exceedingly practical, and has tremendous value.
Labels:
Discernment
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On the Mount
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Wisdom
Saturday, March 24, 2018
Call and Response
Neil Diamond’s Sweet Caroline is not the most intuitive choice for a hockey arena anthem. It goes over so well for one reason: audience
participation.
NEIL: “Sweet Caroline ...”
18,000 FANS: Bah bah bah
NEIL: “Good times never seem so good.”
18,000 FANS: So good, so good, so good!
You get the idea. It’s call and response, and people love to join in. The “response” part was not
built into Diamond’s original lyric; it seems to have evolved over the years as
fans got increasingly comfortable with the nightly routine of familiar tunes
and started improvising on them.
Labels:
Amen
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Body of Christ
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Unity
Friday, March 23, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: Kissing Through the Fence
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
2 Corinthians
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Too Hot to Handle
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Unequal Yoke
Wednesday, March 21, 2018
Five Lessons We Can Learn from Jordan Peterson
In an excellent recent
post entitled “Masculinity Without Permission”, Doug Wilson happened to name-check Jordan Peterson as someone who, despite not
being a Christian, is actually more biblical on
the subject of masculinity than many evangelical elders.
I won’t belabor that point; it’s Doug’s, and he said it better than I can. But I will go him one
better: I think there are at least five things I’ve learned from Peterson that it
would benefit my fellow evangelicals to consider seriously.
So here goes.
Labels:
Evangelicalism
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Jordan Peterson
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Teaching
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
Heretics and Coffee
her·e·tic, noun, one who dissents from an accepted belief or doctrine
No, no. If we’re going to sling around religious terminology, we’d better consult the experts:
“Heresy is the obstinate post-baptismal denial of some truth which must be believed with divine and Catholic faith, or it is likewise an obstinate doubt concerning the same …”
— The Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC 2089)
We use the word pretty casually in Christian circles when
someone says something a little off the spiritually-beaten track, but mostly we mean it frivolously.
Labels:
Catholicism
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Heresy
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Islam
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John the Apostle
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Recycling
Monday, March 19, 2018
Third Row from the Back
Joe’s been coming to your church forever. He and his wife sit at the end of the third row from the
back, a holdover from when their kids were small and he or Cheryl might have
had occasion to escort one or the other out discreetly mid-service.
It’s fifteen years later now; the boy is off to college and the daughter is about to be. And Joe
and Cheryl still sit in the third row from the back.
More importantly, to all appearances fifteen years have changed nothing substantial in Joe’s
relationship with the Lord, and definitely nothing about how he relates to
the Lord’s people.
Labels:
Church
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Defilement
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Service
Sunday, March 18, 2018
On the Mount (22)
Towards the end of the children of Israel’s
multi-century sojourn in Egypt, they were enslaved by a king with no appreciation for the history his people shared with the Hebrew minority living among them, and
no understanding of how Israel’s presence in his land had been of unprecedented
benefit to his nation. So Pharaoh used force to put God’s people to work, and
they built him his legendary treasure cities, places where the king could store up his excess goods against the remote possibility of bad times.
The irony is that it was Joseph, a son of Israel, who had first taught the Pharaohs the principle of laying up excess wealth as insurance against those all-too-frequent “evil days”.
Labels:
Gideon
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Joseph
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Matthew
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On the Mount
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Priorities
Saturday, March 17, 2018
Recommend-a-blog (25)
Those of you who think we shouldn’t have favorite books and especially favorite Gospels are, of
course, welcome to make the requisite harumph-ing noises, but a greater number of readers are probably quietly affirming, “Yeah,
me too.” And of course in finding particular delight in John, I am not in the
least disparaging Matthew, Mark or Luke, all of whom wrote with specific
purposes, intended audiences and special emphases, and each of whom is tremendously
edifying in his own particular way.
But John is just different.
Labels:
Gospels
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John
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Recommend-a-blog
Friday, March 16, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: Crashing and Burning
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Forgiveness
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Sin
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, March 15, 2018
Time to Face the Music
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christian Music
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Hymns
Horrific Hymnology
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christian Music
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Hymns
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Who’s Got the Microphone?
One natural follow-up question from Saturday’s post on the subject of roles is this: “Did
women ever prophesy in New Testament church meetings?”
I ask it largely out of curiosity: even a crystal-clear scriptural example of a prophetess addressing
both men and women in a congregation (assuming we could find one, and we can’t)
would not really help us toward working out our own roles in a day in which we
are no longer able to prophesy in the specific sense in which Paul uses the word.
Labels:
1 Corinthians
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Prophecy
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Women's Role
Tuesday, March 13, 2018
Future Harvest, Present Grace
Fox Business says one reason a significant
number of Millennials struggle to find work is that self-control is still considered a major workplace asset. Rightly or wrongly, employers tend to associate that quality with older
workers.
Self-control is the ability to subdue our impulses in order to achieve longer-term goals; to do the necessary things
even when our emotions get in the way — not a priority much stressed in the last few generations.
Karl Moore notes, “Millennials value emotion. They are
taught in high school and university a Postmodern worldview which puts thought
[and] emotions on nearly the same plane.”
Well, if how I feel is going to dictate
what I do today, I should not be surprised to find at the end of the day that I haven’t got a whole lot done. And that is a problem.
Labels:
Grace
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Psalms
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Self-Control
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Titus
Monday, March 12, 2018
Evil in Unexpected Places
― Thomas Ligotti
Ligotti’s statement may or may not be true, but there is something to be said for people who live consistently.
Those who have become disillusioned by the behavior of Christians are among the most intensely disillusioned people I have
ever met. How do you initiate any kind of dialogue with someone completely convinced
he has taken the measure of your faith and found it wanting?
Sunday, March 11, 2018
On the Mount (21)
It’s going out of style now, but in times
past a man proposing marriage would get down on one knee in front of his
intended and ask for her hand.
As anyone who has ever googled “Marriage
proposals gone wrong” can attest, that sort of thing can be risky business. The
man usually makes the sacrifice of purchasing an expensive ring, then goes
about proclaiming his love, most often in public, making himself visibly (not
to mention emotionally) vulnerable and taking the chance that his request may be
denied and his efforts come to nothing.
Sacrifice and humiliation. Interesting combination. But if you want something badly enough, maybe a little humiliation
is no big deal.
Old Testament fasting was a little bit like that.
Labels:
Fasting
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Matthew
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On the Mount
Saturday, March 10, 2018
Mind the Ditches
The folks at the assemblyHUB website have embarked on an initiative to reexamine the
biblical roles of men and women in the church, the world and the home (WAMS 2018). To date, Bernadette Veenstra (twice),
Crawford Paul and others have weighed in on issues like complementary gender roles, women usurping
authority and women’s silence in the churches.
For reasons I will get to shortly, I find myself less than delighted.
Labels:
Church
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Men's Role
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Women's Role
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