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Thursday, April 04, 2019
Wednesday, April 03, 2019
Semi-Random Musings (12)
I cannot say what the process of becoming honest is like for the occasional white-liar, but people
who practice deceit definitely have great difficulty quitting.
I have probably detailed in some post or other my own experience of giving up the
practice of lying cold-turkey by forcing myself to publicly confess every
single new falsehood I uttered, and doing so the moment the words left my
lips. It involved a level of red-faced humiliation and personal exposure I was
very much unused to. Rarely was a confession received in quite the way
I expected.
I suppose all bad habits are hard to break.
Tuesday, April 02, 2019
Bit Players in an Eternal Drama
When Jacob returns to
Canaan from sojourning in Paddan-aram, along with his wives, family, servants
and flocks, he finds himself anticipating the inevitable confrontation with his
brother Esau. The same Esau whom Jacob had swindled, and from whom he had fled in fear more
than twenty years before. Esau who, it is reported, has four hundred men with him. That doesn’t
bode well. The writer of Genesis tells us “Jacob was greatly afraid and distressed.”
A reasonable reaction, all things considered.
Labels:
Esau
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Genesis
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Jacob
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Philippians
Monday, April 01, 2019
Anonymous Asks (33)
If we are speaking of suffering in general, whole books have been written in answer to this question. Our own Immanuel Can wrote
an open letter about it to conservative author Dinesh D’Souza in 2016. If you are looking for a philosophical explanation for the necessity of pain in a fallen world, you may find it there.
One thing we can be sure of: the answer is not simple. Another thing we can be sure of is that people who observe
suffering are bound to speculate about its cause. It’s human nature. Perhaps
you remember the question Jesus’ disciples asked upon encountering a blind man:
“Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents?”
They were wrong, of course. Those are far from the only two options.
Sunday, March 31, 2019
That Night
“For I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took bread …”
Well, let me take you back to that night.
Around the table were all the disciples of the Lord, and in the midst of them, the
Lord himself. It was a dinner party of sorts, a Passover seder, actually. Solemn
in the Jewish calendar, but also a time of thankfulness.
Labels:
Christ
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Lord's Supper
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Recycling
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Worship
Saturday, March 30, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (52)
“I wanted to become a corporate lawyer — had written the Law School Admissions Test, had taken two years of appropriate preliminary courses.
I wanted to learn the ways of my enemies, and embark on a political
career. This plan disintegrated. The world obviously did not need another
lawyer.”
Admittedly, you have to read between the lines there, but it sounds like it didn’t go well.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
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Testing
Friday, March 29, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: The Good, the Bad and the Godly
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apologetics
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Euthyphro
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Plato
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, March 28, 2019
Why Do Christians Disagree?
Religious skeptics, along with many sincere believers young and old, find the lack of agreement among Christians to be a most perplexing and off-putting fact.
Denominationalism is only one manifestation of its reality. Within virtually all denominations we can find numerous ‘minor’ convictions still considered significant enough by their proponents to justify breaches of fellowship with those who hold different views, amicably or otherwise.
Labels:
Corinthians
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Denominationalism
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Hebrews
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John
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Recycling
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
Between Prissiness and Profanity
I’m never sure how sorry we should feel for Esau.
I’m not troubled by the way he lost his birthright by trading it to
his brother for a bowl of lentils. That one’s all on him. Jacob was a savvy
deal-maker to be sure, but there was nothing sneaky about that particular arrangement.
The problem was Esau’s: he failed to value something very valuable indeed. He
despised his birthright. That’s just not very bright, and certainly not very spiritual.
The stolen blessing was another story. That involved some serious
connivance, misdirection and outright lying. Esau had every right to be furious.
The problem was that he was furious about the wrong thing.
Labels:
Discernment
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Esau
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Genesis
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Testimony
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Faith and Impatience
One of the major
features of the middle chapters of Genesis is a plethora of good people trying
to accomplish good things in the worst possible way.
Sarah trying to bring an heir into the world to fulfill the promises of God via the womb of her
Egyptian servant. Her husband Abraham going along, though it means infidelity to
his own wife. Scripture doesn’t tell us whether Hagar was an especially
attractive woman, so let’s give the patriarch the benefit of the doubt and just
say he unwisely capitulated to Sarah’s poorly-thought-out plan rather than to
something less honorable, like garden-variety male lust.
Then we come to Rebekah.
Monday, March 25, 2019
Anonymous Asks (32)
“I’ve read many stories and testimonies of Christian brothers and sisters, including Jesus, and almost all SKIP a portion in their
lives: the teenage years. So, how and what is an effective way to show, shine,
and represent our faith as hormonally crazy teenagers??”
There’s a very good reason many personal accounts
leave out the teen years: our teen years are frequently riddled with
embarrassing incidents we would rather not even recall, let alone repeat to
others, along with more than a few tales that might not be all that profitable in
the telling. Most of us learn by failing, and some of us learn by failing
repeatedly. Our very first attempts at anything are likely to be our absolute worst,
whether it’s witnessing or asking a girl out on a date. Who wants to hear about that?
Also, people who write testimonies usually
wait until they have lived a bit, which means they have also had time to forget
the things that happened long in the past, or that did not directly and
obviously contribute to the circumstances around their salvation.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Testimony
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Youth
Sunday, March 24, 2019
God, Logic and Nothing
Bestselling author David Berlinski has his own take on the famous philosophical question raised in Plato’s Euthyphro: What makes a good thing good? Two alternatives are posed: (1) the pious or holy is beloved by the gods because it is holy; or (2) the pious is holy because it is beloved of the gods.
Berlinski approaches the issue this way:
“To the question what makes the laws of moral life true, there are three answers: God, logic, and nothing. Each is inadequate.”
Now, you just know I’m going to disagree with that last statement, right?
Labels:
Atheism
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Character of God
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David Berlinski
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Euthyphro
Saturday, March 23, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (51)
Perhaps the theme of these ten verses is “things that don’t stop”. I can’t say for sure.
But it is certainly true that the simple don’t stop; they charge
right in where their wiser peers do not. The loud neighbor doesn’t stop either.
That’s why everyone hates him, despite his outwardly cheery disposition. The
search for truth never stops, thank God, and, if we’re honest, neither does
enmity in our present age. Finally, the eyes of mankind never stop in their
endless quest for satisfaction.
We will not find what we are looking for in this world.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
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Satisfaction
Friday, March 22, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: The Evolution of Morality
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Morality
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, March 21, 2019
One Wild and Awful Moment
Hidden away in the deep wilderness of Canada’s Algonquin
Park is a memorial plaque dedicated to a grandfather and a teenage grandson who
lost their lives in a storm on one of the lakes.
How it got there is a mystery to passing canoeists. The location is quite remote.
The plaque itself is of considerable size and weight,
apparently being made of bronze. Time has softened the edges of some of the
letters and greened the surface; but the plaque has not been moved since it was
put there half a century ago. It is solidly drilled into the rock face. Someone
went to a lot of work to ensure that their loved ones would not be forgotten.
Labels:
Death
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Hope
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Recycling
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Resurrection
Wednesday, March 20, 2019
No, But …
“And Abraham said to God, ‘Oh that Ishmael might live before you!’
God said, ‘No, but …’ ”
Two lines out of context. Allow me to supply some.
Abraham is once again
in conversation with God. This is the fifth time God has brought up the subject
of his covenant promises. Months or years are passing between each remarkable
event, but every time the Lord appears or speaks or encounters Abraham in a
vision, he elaborates further on what he intends to do on Abraham’s behalf. In
Genesis 12, he promises to make from him a great nation, give him a great name, bless the
whole world through him and protect him from his enemies. Each new encounter
provides details the previous ones did not.
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
The Missing Backstop
“It was I who kept you from sinning against me.”
Francis Thompson famously referred to the “Hound of Heaven”, his metaphor for a God whose hand is so relentlessly upon the affairs of a person’s
life that the divine influence can be neither evaded nor ignored.
There have been times when I too had a
very strong impression God was personally on my case, and that all my efforts
to circumvent or evade his will were doomed to end in utter futility. At other
times, his impact on my choices and the circumstances around them, if present
at all, has been incredibly subtle. Absent evidence of God’s direct involvement,
to ascribe any specific decisions I have made in this life to the
influence of providence would be, I think, quite presumptuous.
Labels:
Abraham
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Genesis
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Providence
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Sarah
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Temptation
Monday, March 18, 2019
Anonymous Asks (31)
This is a question which occurs to nearly every
young believer at one point or another. Some struggle with it more than others.
If you’ve run your question by fellow Christians, someone has probably quoted you Romans 10:9: “[I]f you
confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.”
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Assurance of Salvation
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Confidence
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Faith
Sunday, March 17, 2019
Less Different Than We Think
“My brothers, show no partiality as you hold the faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory.”
“Rich” and “poor” are relative terms. Welfare
recipients in Western society are not poor by the standards of East Africa.
Likewise, many Africans would consider our Western middle classes incredibly
rich, and yet hundreds of thousands around us are much better off than we are.
When James speaks of rich and poor, he
specifies the sort of thing he means. The contrast between these two types of men is not
merely a matter of degree; their lives are so different they might
as well be different species. The very least of it is in how they present to the world. The poor man wears shabby clothing, and not
because he didn’t bother to pick up a decent used Arrow shirt from the
local Goodwill. He simply has nothing better. There are no welfare cheques in
his future. The rich man across the way is decked out in fine garments and sports
an ostentatious gold ring. He probably dressed down for the occasion.
That paints the picture for us just fine.
Saturday, March 16, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (50)
Today’s verses are vaguely linked by the unexpected: unanticipated changes
in circumstances; sudden, radical changes in behavior; the moment when the
thing on which you have glutted yourself loses its appeal; and the moment when
you find you have become so hungry anything at all looks like food.
Hey, these things happen. We don’t always see them coming, but they happen.
Labels:
Family
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Friendship
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
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