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Thursday, October 04, 2018
Wednesday, October 03, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (26)
If you’ve ever been part of a conversational Bible
study, you’ll probably relate to this statement: One person’s initial take on a
proverb may be vastly different from another’s.
Years ago in a small mid-week study, we
went around the room over a number of verses in Proverbs sharing what we
thought they meant. Now, differences of opinion are to be expected in
situations where there exists no real context from which to more accurately pin
down Solomon’s intended meaning. But as I digested the various subjective impressions
about the text laid out for us, there were times I was convinced we weren’t all
reading from the same book.
And of course if you really want to examine an entire range of possible interpretations
to seek out the best one, ask a woman what she thinks.
Labels:
Discretion
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
Tuesday, October 02, 2018
Anonymous Asks (7)
“If Adam and Eve had Cain and Abel, shouldn’t those be the only people on earth? Because when Cain kills Abel, Cain is scared that someone will kill him. But at that time, no one else existed. So who was Cain’s wife?”
Okay, well, let’s start by acknowledging that the Bible doesn’t give us explicit answers to many of our technical questions about the early days of the human race, especially in areas of study that are not spiritually significant. So we cannot say with any biblical authority how Cain got his wife. No Bible student can.
That said, let’s not imagine that either the human writer of Genesis or those who told the story for centuries before him were unintelligent men and women. They were not.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Book of Jubilees
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Cain's Wife
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Genesis
Monday, October 01, 2018
Apocrypha-lypso (11)
Obsessive music fans know that every artist or band has a “canon” made up of albums recognized by fans,
critics and record labels as official releases.
Once an artist becomes established, however, opportunists commonly flood the market with rough takes on familiar tunes, rejected songs from
album sessions, cover versions played once for a lark, and bootleg live tracks of questionable sound quality. While
these new offerings usually contain a few rare gems and often provide insight
into an artist’s work process, they generally do not compare favorably to music released exactly as the performer intended.
The Book of Jubilees might well be called “Outtakes from Genesis”. At least, that’s what it reads like.
Labels:
Apocrypha
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Apocrypha-lypso
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Book of Jubilees
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Genesis
Sunday, September 30, 2018
Semi-Random Musings (9)
Years ago, I attended a church where the most noticeable, likable, impressive presence was a tall,
distinguished-looking gentleman who greeted visitors warmly at the
door week after week. His family was well known and he had been associated with
the same church for decades, so his name was one with which Christians from
other churches were always most familiar.
It took me a month or two to realize that almost all the spiritual energy in that church was coming
from elsewhere.
Labels:
Interpretation
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Jeremiah
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Semi-Random Musings
Saturday, September 29, 2018
Getting Kavanaughed
We used to hear about getting “Borked”, but I think it’s about time to retire that one. Robert Bork’s
abortive Supreme Court nomination hearing was so long ago that you’d be lucky
if 5% of your audience has even the slightest idea what you’re talking about
when you trot that one out.
We should probably refer
to getting “Kavanaughed” instead. The process is exactly the same, after all.
The more things change, the more they don’t.
As the late Teddy Kennedy put it in 1987: “Robert Bork’s America is a
land in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions, blacks would sit
at segregated lunch counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in
midnight raids, schoolchildren could not be taught about evolution …”
Sound familiar? Thought so.
Labels:
Accusations
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America
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Brett Kavanaugh
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Politics
Friday, September 28, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: Beatles Buddhism
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Over the last 20 years we’ve seen all
kinds of pontificating about the threat of global warming, or climate change,
or whatever it’s being repackaged as this week. One thing we can be sure of is
that in the current economic situation, climate change is not the first thing
on the minds of most Americans. The number of U.S. citizens who consider it a
source of great worry dropped to a new low of 31% in 2014.
Given that the dire warnings of
the Warmists are going largely unheeded at present, there has been an
increasingly intense effort to reframe the climate change issue as a moral one
rather than merely a political or practical one.
Labels:
Buddhism
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Environmentalism
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Ethics
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, September 27, 2018
Theism and the Skeptics [Part 2]
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Agnosticism
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Faith
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
Anonymous Asks (6)
Well, let’s take a crack at that. First,
the apostle Paul in Ephesians:
“For by grace you have been
saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the
gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.”
Then James:
“You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone.”
I’m going to assume the bone of contention here is the two phrases “saved through FAITH” (i.e., not as a result of works)
and “justified by WORKS”. These statements appear to be contradictory.
But are they?
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Ephesians
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Faith
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James
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Works
Tuesday, September 25, 2018
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (11)
A censor librorum is a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical authority charged with the task
of reviewing texts and granting to them a decree of nihil obstat, or their church’s authoritative approval. Nihil obstat is Latin for “nothing
stands in the way”. If your commentary or explanation of church doctrine has
that declaration on it, you are good to go in the Catholic world.
Not being Roman Catholic, and because my comprehension
of Latin is pretty much limited to Veni,
vidi, vici, I had to look that up.
All to say that back in 2004, a censor librorum declared the following
explanation of Genesis 38:8-10 to be “free of doctrinal or moral errors”. Take
that for what it’s worth.
Labels:
Contraception
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Genesis
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Onan
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What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Monday, September 24, 2018
Apocrypha-lypso (10)
In this series, we have been examining ancient books which Protestants almost universally exclude from our
Old Testament canon.
So far, our Apocryphal entries have self-disqualified for five or six different reasons, including but not limited to historical inaccuracy and theological inconsistency (God is not a son of man, that he should change his mind). After all, if the Bible is God’s word, it seems obvious that documents for which
inspiration is claimed must show some fundamental consistency with the accepted
canon of scripture.
But today’s entry is neither historically dodgy nor theologically at odds with the rest of the Bible. It is one of our more credible contestants to date.
Labels:
1 Esdras
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2 Chronicles
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Apocrypha
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Apocrypha-lypso
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Ezra
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Nehemiah
Sunday, September 23, 2018
A Word of Discouragement
“If you look at most successful people, somewhere in their background there is
someone cheering for them and
believing in what they can accomplish,” says Harrison Barnes.
“Have you ever been in a situation where you really needed someone to just say the words
‘It will be okay’? Until you reach that point, you might underestimate the power of encouragement,”
say the people at SuccessStory.com.
Encouragement means
believing in people, cheering for them and getting them to think positively
about their chances of success at what they are doing. Or at least so goes the
conventional wisdom.
Naturally I disagree, or this wouldn’t be much of a post.
Labels:
Acts
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Encouragement
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Jeremiah
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Job
Saturday, September 22, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (25)
If you live long enough, you will find
there are times when a soft answer just doesn’t turn away wrath. We are living
in times like that today.
Watch carefully the next time the social
media point-and-screechers descend en masse upon an unfortunate public
figure accused of violating some new PC piety. No apology, no show of
contrition and no amount of craven deference slows down the social justice juggernaut
once it has a full head of steam. It pours out its bile until a tastier snack inadvertently
presents itself.
That doesn’t make Proverbs 15:1 incorrect. After all, it’s a proverb, not a prophecy or a doctrinal statement.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
Friday, September 21, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: The Christian Nation
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
In America is not a Christian nation: The dark capitalist roots of our country’s most destructive
myth, Andrew Aghapour quizzes Princeton professor Kevin Kruse about the “Christian
nation myth”.
As with most things in the media these days, the title is a
bit sensationalist and the substance of the article a little less dramatic.
Basically, it’s what it purports to be: the assertion that America is not and
never has been a Christian nation, with a bit of window dressing that suggests
a mini-conspiracy by businessmen and evangelicals to spread that myth.
Tom: Immanuel Can, I think we can agree that America is demonstrably not a Christian nation
today. Has it ever been?
Labels:
America
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Faith
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, September 20, 2018
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
The Burden of the Lord
In the years leading
up to the Babylonian captivity, God spoke many times through his prophets to
the people of Judah and their religious leaders. However, the message he sent them
was not to their taste. The leadership, especially the false prophets and
priests, were disinclined to accept any correction of their way of life, but were
understandably reluctant to be seen to defy God in any obvious way.
Then they discovered a
rather ingenious solution. Instead of prefacing their own declarations with “Thus
says the Lord” or some other claim to God’s final authority over the message
they brought to the people, they began instead to speak of something they
called the “burden of the Lord”. This “burden”, they claimed, came to
them in dreams, sufficiently foggy and amorphous that it was necessary for them to explain it
in their own words rather than God’s.
This approach enabled
them to claim sufficient heavenly authority to maintain their prestige and
position without obliging them to say anything difficult or truthful that might
offend their audience. It was the perfect compromise.
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Anonymous Asks (5)
A fire extinguisher is a great thing to
have in your kitchen if you have accidentally ignited the grease on the stovetop.
But when you don’t have a five foot pillar of flame shooting up to blacken the
kitchen ceiling — which is 99.99% of the time — a fire extinguisher
is a little awkward. It’s big enough that it kind of disrupts the décor, but
important enough that you don’t want to stash it at the back of a cupboard
where you can’t find it when you need it.
You may appreciate your fire extinguisher
when it saves you a visit from the fire department, but you don’t have a
relationship with your fire extinguisher.
Need I point out that God is not like a
fire extinguisher? But a lot of people treat him that way.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Bible Study
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Prayer
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Relationships
Monday, September 17, 2018
Apocrypha-lypso (9)
I once came across an online critic of the gospels who attempted
to demonstrate his Bible savvy by pointing out that one gospel records a miraculous
feeding of 5,000 while another tells of only 4,000 being fed.
“Aha! Contradiction!” cried the elated skeptic, hoping for one of those “gotcha”
moments we all enjoy from time to time.
Of course if you’re familiar with either the books of Matthew
or Mark, you’ll recall that they each contain references to both feedings.
Worse (for the critic at least), Mark records a conversation between Jesus and
his disciples that explicitly compares the two events right down to
counting the post-dinner leftovers. Jesus fed huge crowds of hungry men, women and children on at least two occasions. Two careful writers noted it.
Labels:
Apocrypha
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Apocrypha-lypso
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Bel and the Dragon
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Daniel
Sunday, September 16, 2018
Two Baptisms
Matthew’s 3rd chapter records Christ’s
baptism by John; that moment inaugurates Christ’s public ministry.
The background is simple enough: John was
performing a baptism of repentance and many queued up to take their turn under
the water. The baptism John offered was meant to signify that the recipient had
confessed and turned from his or her former sinful choices, and was now
committed to God-honoring conduct.
A baptism of repentance demonstrated in a
very public way, to a large crowd of onlookers, that you were a penitent
sinner.
Labels:
Baptism
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Christ
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John the Baptist
Saturday, September 15, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (24)
Most proverbs are by their very nature generalizations.
Two-liners are too pithy to cover every eventuality. Really, they just
give you a good sense of what the odds are that Behavior X will produce either
a favorable outcome or a bad one.
Now, for any individual sub-optimal way of doing things, there
are almost always a few rare favorable outcomes. Exceptions to the rule. People
love to point to these oddities as if they somehow invalidate the wisdom of the
sages who warn us about the consequences of bad behavior:
“My dad drank all day, every day for 40 years and his liver is just fine!”
Hey, sure, there are probably a few dads around like that.
Labels:
Consequences
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How Not to Crash and Burn
/
Proverbs
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