The most recent version of this post is available here.
“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, July 05, 2019
Thursday, July 04, 2019
Straight Talk
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Conscience
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John the Baptist
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Judgment
Wednesday, July 03, 2019
Conspiracy Theory
I’ve been enjoying the account of the conversion of Saul of Tarsus, who became the apostle Paul, the writer of many books in the New Testament. The book of Acts tells Paul’s story several times, each version bringing out new details not recorded in the others.
Atheists and detractors like to point out alleged contradictions in scripture; anything that might be interpreted, however implausibly, with sufficient elasticity as to make less than perfect, logical sense of the biblical narrative. Such things are accounted for variously as factual mistakes, copyist’s errors or conspiracies among believers to commit pious fraud.
TheThinkingAtheist.com is a great place to go if you want to see the sort of thing that passes for Bible criticism among those who have already made up their minds before reading a single verse.
Labels:
Acts
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Apostle Paul
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Contradictions in Scripture
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Recycling
Tuesday, July 02, 2019
Quote of the Day (41)
In a week when the usual suspects have been howling for a “disproportionate response” to the downing
of a U.S. navy spy drone, it’s refreshing to find a commentator who prefers violent
provocations be met with no response at all.
Don’t worry, this is not about the Strait of Hormuz or what constitutes Iranian airspace. The
provocation is storyline-only, and the response to it is disproportionate only
if you fail to consider the circumstances in which it occurs.
Labels:
Kingdom
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Matthew
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Parables
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Quote of the Day
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William MacDonald
Monday, July 01, 2019
Anonymous Asks (47)
If we are going to consider how it was that people were able
to live to exceptional ages in the early chapters of Genesis (930 years
for Adam, 912 for Seth, 969 for Methuselah, which is the highest recorded, and
so on), we had better first ask the question, “Did they really?”
After all, some Bible students believe they did not.
I think they’re wrong, but we should at least let them weigh in.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Genealogies
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Genesis
Sunday, June 30, 2019
Immanentizing the Eschaton
Let’s get this out of the way right up front: when you hear that someone is trying to “immanentize
the eschaton”, it’s simply educated jargon. It’s a more confusing way of claiming
they are trying to bring on the end times. I expect it’s intended to leave
us midwits scratching our heads in perplexity, but who knows? The accusation
has been leveled against utopian secularists and evangelical Christians alike.
Most recently I found it in Infogalactic’s entry on
Postmillennialism, which I was discussing in
this space just the other day: “It [postmillennialism, especially reconstructionist postmillennialism] has been criticized by 20th
century religious conservatives as an attempt to immanentize the eschaton.”
Labels:
Gospel
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Politics
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Postmillennialism
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Prophecy
Saturday, June 29, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (65)
As we have noted in previous installments, there are different kinds of proverbs. One very common
sort is the command. An example: “Do
not add to his words lest he rebuke you.” Another is the warning: “The eye that mocks a father ... will be eaten by
vultures.” A third is the appeal: “Give me neither poverty nor
riches.” All these teach us in different ways.
Agur’s favorite type of proverb was none of
the above. More than anything else, Agur was a keen student of the natural
world. His proverbs are primarily observational.
He may draw the occasional moral conclusion explicitly, but for the most part
he simply tells us how things are and lets us chew on that for a bit.
It’s not a bad strategy. I’ve been enjoying it.
Labels:
Agur
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
Friday, June 28, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: The Whole of the Law
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Aleister Crowley
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Law
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Love
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Occultism
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 27, 2019
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
Unhobbling Don Quixote’s Horse
In a couple of earlier posts this week I looked at some of the differences between the premillennial and
amillennial schools of thought about Bible prophecy. You can find them here
and here if you’re interested.
All beliefs about prophecy have practical
implications of one sort or another, but the one most likely to ruffle feathers
in the here-and-now, I think, is postmillennialism. That makes it worth
chewing over a little.
Labels:
Douglas Wilson
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Islam
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Politics
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Polygamy
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Postmillennialism
Tuesday, June 25, 2019
A Cup of Weak Tea
“Facts don’t care
about your feelings,” Ben Shapiro is fond of saying. Unlike much of his recent book
The Right Side of History, that
statement is fairly accurate.
But facts also don’t
care about your eschatology. Not a bit. Premillennialist Bible teachers and
popular writers who make careers out of dogmatically applying specific prophecies
to current events tend to find this to their chagrin — well-known date-setter
Harold Camping being one recent example.
Facts take no joy in embarrassing the likes of Camping. They are not mean-spirited. They simply are
what they are.
Labels:
Amillennialism
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Book Reviews
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Kim Riddlebarger
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Revelation
Monday, June 24, 2019
Anonymous Asks (46)
No ghosts, but if you’re not familiar with
the concept of worshiping God in spirit, maybe it can be a bit confusing.
Jesus said God the Father is looking for people who will worship him
“in spirit and in truth”. That became possible when the Father sent the Son into the world to
reveal God to mankind.
To understand the meaning of worshiping in
spirit, we need to understand a little bit about the alternative.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Spirit
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Worship
Sunday, June 23, 2019
Don’t Stop Now, You’re Almost There
The devil may be in the details, but far-reaching doctrinal errors are all in the broad strokes and
almost never in the minutia. I’m becoming convinced of it.
My test case at the moment is the expanded edition of Kim Riddlebarger’s A Case for
Amillennialism: Understanding the End Times (2013), in the
event you’re wondering. But I have found the same thing with several books I’ve
read recently: they advance a fundamentally flawed major premise. Once you’ve
done that, you can pile up the proof texts to highest heaven without
successfully proving anything. Your original, glaring defect of thought makes
them all irrelevant to the greater argument.
Labels:
Amillennialism
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Book Reviews
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Kim Riddlebarger
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Premillennialism
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Prophecy
Saturday, June 22, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (64)
Psychology Today analyzes
excuses for adultery. Here’s one of the more spectacularly trivial:
“Adultery may be the lightning conductor of modern indignation, but are there not other, subtler ways of betraying a person than
by sleeping with someone outside the couple; by omitting to listen, by
forgetting to evolve and enchant, or more generally and blamelessly, by simply
being one’s own limited self?”
I must admit, that one’s a beauty: “My wife failed to evolve and enchant me, so I was compelled to explore my options.
There was really nothing else for it.”
What do you think, gents? Have you been “evolving
and enchanting” fast enough for your wife?
Labels:
Adultery
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Agur
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
Friday, June 21, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: Screened Out
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Technology
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, June 20, 2019
Mastering the Pastor Disaster
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Clergy
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Elders
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Leadership
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Pastors
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
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Inbox
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Jubilee
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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
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Questions
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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
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Christian Testimony
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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
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Faithfulness
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Judgment
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Service
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Zechariah
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