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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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Friday, December 07, 2018
Wednesday, December 05, 2018
What Kind of Disciples Are You Making?
God tests men’s faith.
Women’s too. It’s what he does.
Why? Because faith is
hugely important to him. It might be the most important thing of all. As
scripture tells us, “without faith it is impossible to please him.”
Impossible. Not difficult, very difficult or in the 99th percentile of difficulty. Completely
impossible. It cannot be done. Faith is critical to any relationship with God.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
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Book Reviews
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Discipleship
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Faith
Tuesday, December 04, 2018
Unhitched and Unhinged
It is important to grasp that Andy Stanley’s desire for believers to “unhitch” our Christianity
from the Old Testament, a plea he articulates in his new book Irresistible, is not limited to how we preach the gospel. Stanley is calling for the comprehensive
abandonment of the Hebrew roots of our faith.
This is what makes his idea such a poison pill. Those who swallow it will come to regret it.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
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Book Reviews
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Discipleship
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Scripture
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Witnessing
Monday, December 03, 2018
Anonymous Asks (16)
“I have a friend at my public high school and she isn’t really walking with God
anymore and the clothes she is wearing are not God-honoring at all. She says
she is close to Him but she’s really not. What do I do?”
Of the twenty to thirty kids who came and went more-or-less
regularly from our 1980s youth group, I’m guessing perhaps 30-40% are still
walking with the Lord today. Of the remainder, some are living morally decent
but secular lives. Some would still call themselves Christians but don’t really
fellowship with other believers anymore. Some are in a major mess, or in the
process of trying to climb out of it.
Almost every serious Christian goes through this with a
close friend at one point or another. It is very discouraging to witness
someone else’s spiritual decline, especially when your own heart and life are
deeply invested in their welfare.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Backsliding
Sunday, December 02, 2018
Getting Unhitched
Andy Stanley wants us to “unhitch the old from the new”.
By “old”, he means our Old Testament. By “new”, he
means ... okay, you get that.
By “unhitch”, he means declaring the Old Testament so obsolete,
incorrect and potentially faith-destroying that we distance ourselves from it
rather than try to explain, defend or rationalize it to others.
To say the least, Stanley’s new book, Irresistible: Reclaiming the New that Jesus Unleashed for the World, is a bit of a grenade in the baptistery. It also sounds to me like a sustained argument for intellectual cowardice, but I’ll leave that to Stanley’s readers to decide.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
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Book Reviews
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Old Testament
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Witnessing
Saturday, December 01, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (35)
Our Bible’s Solomonic proverbs are roughly 3,000 years
old. The ones the king of Israel preserved from other sources are even older. Still,
many remain surprisingly useful and informative — even when we attempt to
apply them to the goings-on in a modern commercial office building.
Here are three that still work. Mostly.
Labels:
Age
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
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Relationships
Friday, November 30, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: Baptized Into What?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Baptism
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, November 29, 2018
Present Perfect
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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Christ
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Law
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Salvation
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Devout … and Out
Lydia of Thyatira was a devout woman, a worshiper of God. When the Lord opened her heart, she
became a convert to the faith. Many devout Greeks in Thessalonica were also persuaded by the message of Paul and Silas. Titius Justus was yet another devout man. He demonstrated his nascent faith by giving Paul shelter
when the apostle was opposed and reviled in Macedonia.
But not all devout people responded favorably to the gospel when it was presented to them in the first century. In Pisidian Antioch, the “devout” women served as
shock troops for the Jews persecuting Paul and Barnabas.
In ideological conflicts, we call such
people “useful idiots”. They believe in what they are doing, but are
grossly misinformed or insufficiently attentive. They are being cynically manipulated by others.
Labels:
Acts
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Devoutness
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Tribulation
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
The Merchant of Menace
We don’t get a lot of detail about pre-Genesis
Satan in our Bibles, though few things have had a more dramatic and
far-reaching influence on our world than his interference in God’s creation.
There is no straightforward literal retelling of the history of Lucifer’s
rebellion to be found in either Old Testament or New. Rather, we are treated to
a series of vignettes that cast light on various aspects of the demonic rebel
heart. They illuminate Satan’s real nature by comparing him to historic figures
and to the sort of people we know very well indeed: characters that populate our
literature and people whom we can observe all around us.
But Satan is also a deal-maker, a trafficker, a trader and a businessman. Perhaps we are less inclined to think
of these things as intrinsically evil.
Monday, November 26, 2018
Anonymous Asks (15)
I was a missionary’s kid. My first few years of public
school were spent in another country, with a dominant culture that was anything
but North American. I missed the Beatles, Star Trek (until it was syndicated) and the Adam West Batman TV show. I missed Woodstock. I heard about the U.S. putting someone on the moon from halfway across the world and days after it
happened. I didn’t play hockey or football or baseball. When I returned to
North America, I didn’t know any of the bands that were popular and I had
an obvious British accent. I wore the wrong clothes and had the wrong
haircut. To top it off, in school I was placed with kids I was well ahead of
intellectually but well behind culturally and interpersonally.
All of this created pretty much the perfect storm of
Grade 5 nerd-dom. Socially speaking, I couldn’t do anything right in
school. Not a thing.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Self-Image
Sunday, November 25, 2018
They Ate and Drank with Him
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Acts
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Breaking of Bread
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Fellowship
Saturday, November 24, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (34)
In raising his children, my father maintained a keen sense of the big picture. He would always encourage my mother
when things seemed most hopeless. I can assure you that happened with
regularity: my father traveled, and Mom had an unvarnished, highly realistic,
frequently-reinforced view of all the basest aspects of male teen behavior.
Somehow she survived. Hope, maybe.
Labels:
Children
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Discipline
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
Friday, November 23, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: Heresy and Clerisy
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Atheism
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Gretta Vosper
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Heresy
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, November 22, 2018
Total Depravity: Can’t We Come Up With A New Term?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Neo-Calvinism
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Sin
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The Fall
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Total Depravity
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
An Iceberg in the Gulf of Mexico
I sat in an office meeting last Saturday morning listening
to my fellow managers discuss internal company changes that were, to everyone
there, more than a little disconcerting. The afternoon shift supervisor had a
clear note of panic in his tone as he anticipated what personnel moves upper
management might be contemplating.
Understandably. Nice guy, but he’s got a doctorate in
something esoteric that’s all but useless in the real world and I’m quite sure
hasn’t the slightest idea what he’ll do if he’s suddenly unemployed.
I’m not about to tell you that I’m a whole lot better
qualified myself, or that looking for another job has any great appeal to me.
In fact, there are hundreds of thousands, and I suspect millions, all across
North America who are staring down similar situations these days.
It’s not just potential unemployment that’s scary, is it.
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Having It Both Ways
Charles Cutler Torrey was an American
historian, archeologist and scholar. In 1901, he founded the American School of Archeology in Jerusalem and taught
Semitic languages at Yale for almost 30 years.
Eighty-eight years ago, Torrey’s record was as credible as any other secular authority whose job was analyzing and dating ancient
manuscripts. Then his book Pseudo-Ezekiel and the Original Prophecy (1930) was released, setting out his theory that
the canonical book of Ezekiel was actually written much later than originally thought, in the third century B.C.
Torrey’s book remains of sufficient interest that it was reprinted both in 2008 and 2013. Amazon calls it “culturally important”.
Labels:
Archeology
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Ezekiel
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Textual Criticism
Monday, November 19, 2018
Anonymous Asks (14)
“How do you stay on a spiritual high?”
Hmm. I think we might be asking the wrong question here.
Ezekiel was probably never closer to God than the day his wife died, but I suspect that day was in many ways the lowest point of his life. A “spiritual
high” it was not.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Christian Life
Sunday, November 18, 2018
Credentialism and Truth
“As they were speaking to the people, the priests and the captain of the temple and the Sadducees came upon them, greatly annoyed because they were
teaching the people and proclaiming in Jesus the
resurrection from the dead.”
The Jewish religious authorities came teeming out of the woodwork to harass the apostles for two reasons. Primarily it was the public proclamation of resurrection through Jesus that irked them. Resurrection was a huge bone of contention for Sadducees in particular, who did not believe in it. Adding the name of
Jesus to the mix, a man the authorities had only recently had put to death, only compounded the problem.
But we should not overlook Luke’s observation that they really did not like the apostles teaching the people.
Labels:
Acts
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Apostle Paul
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Authority
Saturday, November 17, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (33)
Antisocial behavior, innuendo, laziness and
false confidence: there’s a lovely quartet for you.
Misty water-colored memories. Four more ancient proverbs, each of which
reminds me of somebody I know or knew, usually more than one. Sometimes
they remind me of me. Times change, people don’t. Not really.
Thankfully we have the word of God to guide us, because not too many of us seem to learn much from history.
And they don’t really teach history anymore anyway.
Labels:
Gossip
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
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Security
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