The most recent version of this post is available here.
- Home
- What We’re Doing Here
- F A Q
- 119
- Anonymous Asks
- Book Reviews
- The Commentariat Speaks
- Doesn’t Always Mean What We Think It Means
- Flyover Country
- How Not to Crash and Burn
- Inbox
- Just Church
- The Language of the Debate
- Mining the Minors
- No King in Israel
- On the Mount
- Quote of the Day
- Recommend-a-blog
- Semi-Random Musings
- That Wacky Old Testament
- Time and Chance
- What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Thursday, June 20, 2019
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Inbox: Is Socialism Biblical?
Jeff says:
“Hey, long time lurker of your site here. With all the recent debate in the US about the ‘Green New Deal’ and ‘democratic socialists’,
I was curious about what your thoughts are regarding socialism and
capitalism from a biblical perspective. I immediately think about the year
of Jubilee in Leviticus 25:8-13 and about the early church described
in Acts.”
Well, we love long time lurkers. We have a bunch. Thanks for a great question, Jeff. Here goes …
Labels:
Capitalism
/
Inbox
/
Jubilee
/
Socialism
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
The View from Eternity
This is not without reason. God and man come at things from vastly different perspectives. Two of
the most common features of online discourse about God are befuddlement and
frustration. “How can a loving God permit this or that?” “How could God command genocide?” “Why animal
sacrifices? Doesn’t God care about his creation?” “Why does the Law of Moses
contain so many weird and apparently pointless rules if God was really behind
it?” “Why would God say two people who love each other cannot be together?”
For older Christians these can be challenging questions.
Labels:
Character of God
/
Questions
/
Witnessing
Monday, June 17, 2019
Anonymous Asks (45)
It very much depends on what you mean by “nice”. Christians often confuse being nice with
being good. But the word “nice” is never used in our English Bibles.*
There are solid reasons for this. “Nice” is an awkward word, very much open to being misinterpreted. I can understand why Bible translators would make an effort to avoid its potential ambiguities. Its
original meaning (now obsolete) was “wanton” or “dissolute”. Later, it came to mean “fastidious” or “exacting”. (For example, to make a “nice” distinction was to make a distinction so subtle that a lot of people would fail to grasp it.) All these historic ways of using “nice” are various degrees of negative.
Today, “nice” has come to mean “pleasing”, “agreeable” or “polite”. That is probably the way
you are using it. Let’s go with that.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Christian Testimony
/
Goodness
Sunday, June 16, 2019
The Day of Big Things
A handful of times
throughout our earth’s history God has made major public statements. Big things.
The Bible records a number of these great and unambiguous events: the Flood; the destruction of
Sodom and Gomorrah; and Israel’s delivery from Egypt, passage through the Red
Sea and miraculous conquest of Canaan. Even when Israel and Judah went into
their various captivities, God still made appearances to miraculously shut the
mouths of lions, walk around in fiery furnaces and write on the walls of pagan
kings.
Then came the first century miracles of Jesus, and later his apostles. Big things.
Labels:
2 Thessalonians
/
Faithfulness
/
Judgment
/
Service
/
Zechariah
Saturday, June 15, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (63)
I was originally planning to zip through these last few verses of Proverbs, but I find
myself enjoying them too much to rush through them, even as I remain perplexed
as to their full meaning in more than a few cases. I suppose it helps that
they are among the least-examined verses of scripture I’ve ever encountered.
New territory is always interesting.
So … horrors and marvels, here we go.
Labels:
Agur
/
How Not to Crash and Burn
/
Proverbs
Friday, June 14, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: When We ALL Get to Heaven
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Faith
/
Rob Bell
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
Universalism
Thursday, June 13, 2019
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
More Teaching Won’t Help
Yesterday I drew attention
to what at first glance might appear to be an imbalance in the teaching of the
book of Proverbs. Solomon gives many dire warnings about “women on the make” to
young men, but no warnings at all to young women concerning the dangers of
lustful men.
This was not because God is uninterested in maintaining the virtue of women, as we will see shortly.
However, ancient Eastern societies, and especially Israel, had a culture of built-in
familial and legal protections for ordinary women which made them difficult for
men on the prowl to access or seduce, and this without imposing on them pillbox-style
face-coverings and body bags.
And of course there was no internet in those days. Where temptation is concerned, that was far from
a negative.
Labels:
1 Corinthians
/
Proverbs
/
Temptation
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Discriminating Against the Adulteress
Modern readers flipping the pages of Proverbs would have to be incredibly inattentive to fail
to notice that the warnings about lapsing into sexual sin are ... all
directed at men.
In fact, where adultery is concerned, it could be argued that Solomon viewed women of a
certain sort as cunning predators and men as their potential victims. Foolish
and gullible victims, certainly. Unknowing and uncaring of the consequences of
their actions, definitely. But victims all the same ... even though we
know it takes two to tango, right?
Where are the parallel passages warning
young Hebrew women against the prowling adulterer with lust in his eyes? Why,
they are nowhere to be found.
Labels:
Adultery
/
Discimination
/
Proverbs
Monday, June 10, 2019
Anonymous Asks (44)
“If you are not a Christian and believe that Jesus died on the cross to relieve us of our sins, can you still go to heaven?”
There is a significant difference between believing about someone and believing in someone.
The book of James points out that even demons get some of their facts right. They are
strict monotheists, for one. Mark’s gospel records that unclean spirits repeatedly fell down before
Jesus and cried out, “You are the Son of God.” In that respect, the demons were better theologians than the Pharisees, who hotly
disputed that very issue.
However, believing something correct about Jesus — even something very
important indeed — doesn’t mean demons are on their way to heaven. Far
from it.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Lordship
/
Salvation
Sunday, June 09, 2019
Semi-Random Musings (13)
“Go, tell his disciples and Peter …”
The earliest manuscripts of the gospel of
Mark end with a “young man” (read: angel) instructing three terrified women at the
open tomb of the Lord Jesus to go and share the news that while Jesus of
Nazareth had died and been buried, Christ the Lord had risen and planned to
meet with his followers once more.
No wonder they trembled.
Labels:
Grace
/
Peter
/
Semi-Random Musings
Saturday, June 08, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (62)
Entropy is pretty much the governing
principle of our present universe. Systems and sub-systems are not
independently or permanently functional. They require replenishing from other
sources.
The earth cannot
survive without sunlight. The sun could not warm the earth were it not fueled by
both hydrogen and helium. And without the collapsing clouds of interstellar gas
and dust we call nebulae, there would be no stars.
Labels:
Agur
/
How Not to Crash and Burn
/
Proverbs
/
Satisfaction
Friday, June 07, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: The Church and Fatherhood
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Family
/
Fatherhood
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 06, 2019
The Pastor of Disaster
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Clergy
/
Leadership
/
Pastors
Wednesday, June 05, 2019
The Commentariat Speaks (15)
“Why is there not an option to fully bow out? Neither Heaven or Hell, just
non-existence?”
Doug’s own response is brief and related to the need for God’s holy justice to be displayed. I agree, and I’m not sure I can offer anything more
profound in terms of an answer, but I was sufficiently taken with the
question that I felt the need to explore it a little here.
It’s my observation that the sorts of questions we ask about God often say more about us than they
say about him.
Labels:
Justice
/
The Commentariat Speaks
Tuesday, June 04, 2019
Quote of the Day (40)
“Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?” The book of Acts begins with this question.
Jesus does not answer it directly. Instead, the Lord draws his disciples’ attention away from Israel’s
earthly kingdom and redirects it to their mission promoting his spiritual
kingdom in this present age. After this, he is taken up into glory.
Some read this to mean there will be no
restoration to national prominence for the Jews. Others believe the restoration of
the kingdom to Israel is fulfilled in the Church’s present ministry on earth.
Labels:
Acts
/
David Gooding
/
Kingdom
/
Quote of the Day
Monday, June 03, 2019
Anonymous Asks (43)
More than a few Christians have a strong aversion to neo-Calvinist determinism. They don’t agree with the teaching that
God micromanages the universe, controlling and pre-arranging everything that
happens within it, including the choices made by all created beings.
I don’t blame them. I don’t like that idea much either, and I don’t think it’s an accurate representation
of what the Bible teaches about either God’s sovereignty or human choice. Giving
us a Bible full of commands seems an unlikely thing for God to have done if our
responses to him are all predetermined.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Neo-Calvinism
/
Omniscience
/
Prophecy
Sunday, June 02, 2019
The Divine Memory
“I will not remember your sins.”
Some people teach that God’s knowledge is
limited. They rely on verses like the one I have just quoted to make the
case that there are boundaries to the Infinite, self-imposed or otherwise.
We may disagree with them, but they bring up a point worth examining, and that is
this: What does it mean that God does not “remember” the sins of his people?
After all, it’s a promise, and we know we can
put our confidence in God’s promises. That being the case, we might be wise to figure
out what exactly it is that God is promising.
Labels:
God
/
Memory
/
Omniscience
Saturday, June 01, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (61)
The remainder of Proverbs 30 is made up of a series of individual sayings irregularly interspersed
with six lists of four things Agur has observed in the natural world and in the
world of human interaction. As I have mentioned, these groups of four are often referred to as quaternions or tetrastiches. We have already encountered one in Agur’s introduction. The resulting verses are a peculiar arrangement; not entirely regular, but not quite random either.
Unlike some of Solomon’s longer assembled proverbs, Agur’s lists do not seem to have a single, powerful
point to which they are building. The fourth item on each of his lists usually appears
no more significant or insignificant than the others. As the Pulpit Commentary
puts it, “the conclusion is wanting.” We must attempt to elicit one for
ourselves.
Notwithstanding some of the more astute observations we find here, it’s a curious chapter, and one
whose point always perplexed me as a child.
Labels:
Agur
/
How Not to Crash and Burn
/
Proverbs
Subscribe to:
Posts
(
Atom
)