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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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Thursday, August 15, 2019
Wednesday, August 14, 2019
The Right Thing to Do
My job involves the occasional visit to another office.
I make a fair number of new acquaintances this way. Names on the system
become real, flesh-and-blood co-workers with delightful qualities, quirks and
the occasional less-appealing feature, depending on the individual and the sort
of situation we have to deal with.
Generally speaking these are good experiences. It’s hard to relate
to people you don’t directly interact with.
Labels:
Humility
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Philippians
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
Faith of the Gospel
“Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that whether I come and see you or am absent, I may hear
of you that you are standing firm in one spirit, with one mind striving side by side for
the faith of the gospel, and not frightened in anything by your
opponents. This is a clear sign to them of their destruction, but of your salvation, and that from God.”
These “opponents” were primarily Jews.
Labels:
Faith
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Gospel
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Philippians
Monday, August 12, 2019
Anonymous Asks (53)
“Why should I pray if God already knows what will happen?”
Before we begin, I should point out that knowing what will happen is not the same as wanting it to happen, nor is it the same
as making it happen. In fact, some people even argue that God does not know absolutely everything that will
happen. I’m not one of them, so we won’t waste a lot of time considering that
possibility.
Nevertheless, the distinction between God knowing and God causing
is worth keeping clear in our minds when we talk about prayer.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Prayer
Sunday, August 11, 2019
Recommend-a-blog (29)
Evangelicals are under attack. The bigger the denomination,
the more resources and congregants they have, and the more formally they are constituted,
the more enthusiastically the enemy is coming at them.
The Southern Baptist Convention (15 million members) is
currently hardest hit, but that makes a certain sort of sense: they are the
second-largest Christian denomination in the U.S., and the largest Protestant
denomination. Get effective control of that behemoth and you’ve really
accomplished something.
Labels:
Apostasy
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Compromise
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Heresy
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Recommend-a-blog
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Reformation Charlotte
Saturday, August 10, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (71)
As mentioned in the previous two posts in this series, the description of an excellent wife in
Proverbs 31 is frequently dismissed by its modern critics as anachronistic.
They point to words like “distaff” and “maidens” and mockingly inquire whether
all Christian women ought to have a loom in the house and servants to
call on.
It is true that the excellent wife’s described routine is that of a fairly well-to-do Hebrew woman
some three thousand years ago. That said, it should be evident that our habits and routines declare to
the world what sort of person we are. A wife who habitually falls asleep on the
couch at 2 a.m. after a few cocktails and a movie, then struggles out of
bed bleary-eyed around noon to lounge by the pool gossiping with her
girlfriends is not simply operating on a slightly different schedule than the
home-schooling mother of three down the street. Her habits are making a
statement about her values and character.
Good character remains good character whether we see it displayed in the daily activities of
1000 BC or in those of AD 2019.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Lemuel
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Proverbs
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Wives
Friday, August 09, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: Five Bad Reasons (1)
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
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Homosexuality
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 08, 2019
Sailing the High Seas
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Andrew Klavan
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Education
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Faith
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Testimony
Wednesday, August 07, 2019
Under the Microscope
“... so that through the church the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly places.”
It matters what the church is and how it
conducts the business of God. It matters because the multifarious wisdom of God
is revealed both in what we are and in what we do. We may choose to obscure
that wisdom, or we may choose to hold it up in the light to be seen and
marveled at throughout the universe.
In short, what we are and what we do matter because we are being watched. God’s
ways are under the microscope.
Tuesday, August 06, 2019
Kissing Jesus Goodbye
Joshua Harris, pastor and author of 1997’s moderately controversial
I Kissed Dating Goodbye, on
doing much the same thing to the man he once called Lord and Savior:
“I have undergone a massive shift in regard to my faith in Jesus. The
popular phrase for this is ‘deconstruction,’ the biblical phrase is ‘falling
away.’ By all the measurements that I have for defining a Christian, I am
not a Christian. Many people tell me that there is a different way to practise
faith and I want to remain open to this, but I’m not there now.”
Put bluntly, Mr. Harris has apostatized.
Monday, August 05, 2019
Anonymous Asks (52)
“Why is the Bible so weird sometimes?”
I’d love to know what specific sort of “weird” the writer of
today’s question was thinking about. An example or two would’ve been great. Unfortunately,
when your questions come from people who have chosen to keep their identities
secret, it’s a bit of a trick to get them to clarify.
That’s okay. I’m pretty sure every reader of this column can
think of some story in the Bible, or some command in the Law of Moses, or some
principle taught by some church somewhere that seems weird to them. I can
think of dozens.
There’s lots of “weird” in the Bible, but the problem is not
always the Bible. Most of the time it’s us.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Bible
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Old Testament
Sunday, August 04, 2019
Sheep Without Shepherds
The first and last recorded requests Moses ever made
of his God are almost identical. Both may be summed up in the words “Oh, my
Lord, please send someone else.”
The first time he said it, it was very likely out of a justifiable sense of personal inadequacy. He was a mere man — a lowly
shepherd, of all things — confronted with the spectacle of flaming foliage in which burned
the presence of the Eternal God. For Moses, “Please send someone else” really
meant “Surely, O Lord, you must be able to find someone more qualified than
I am.” Moses wasn’t a lazy man by any stretch, but the scope of the task
with which he was presented was breathtaking.
Not everyone might have answered God
exactly as Moses did, but any sensible soul would have felt his legitimate
apprehension.
Saturday, August 03, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (70)
The Oracle of King Lemuel (Proverbs 31:10-31)
Poor, much-maligned wife of the last chapter of Proverbs! Google her and see. After you get through the usual spate of citations from major commentaries, much of what you find is Christians complaining.
Labels:
Excellence
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How Not to Crash and Burn
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Lemuel
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Wives
Friday, August 02, 2019
Too Hot to Handle: Over the Target
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Authenticity
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Churchianity
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 01, 2019
Wedded Blitz
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Commitment
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Marriage
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Weddings
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Semi-Random Musings (14)
Numbers 4 states repeatedly that only men from the tribe of
Levi between the ages of thirty and fifty were to be engaged in the service of
the tabernacle. Upon reaching fifty, they were to “withdraw from the duty of
the service and serve no more.”
On this basis I have heard it suggested that local
church elders should be careful not to stay in the saddle too long, and that
age fifty is a logical time to pass the torch to the next generation. Presumably then, these men — still fifteen years too young to collect a government pension —
should make their way back to the pews to spend their next thirty or forty years grinding their teeth at the spectacle of younger men making all the mistakes they have learned to avoid. Or else start
spending all their winters in Florida.
This cannot be quite right. It isn’t.
Labels:
Elders
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Numbers
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Questions
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Semi-Random Musings
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Titus
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Those Latter Days
While every Christian thinks it desirable for individual
Jews to be brought into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ through faith,
I continue to be astounded at the number of evangelicals who reject the
possibility of any future blessing for Israel as a nation. The number of expositors and online commentators who
insist that the Old Testament prophecies of future glory for Israel have either
been abrogated once and for all when Israel crucified its Messiah, completely
fulfilled in the Church, or both, is truly mind-boggling.
In some hopefully rare instances, the popularity of this
prophetic view is probably a natural by-product of the anti-Semitic spirit that
has always been at work in the world. Jews have been hated and persecuted for
centuries, many times without any cause at all. Sadly, that is no new thing, even
among Christians. One hates to think Judenhass
would poison anyone’s eschatology, but history tells us we cannot entirely rule
it out.
Labels:
Israel
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Numbers
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Supersessionism
Monday, July 29, 2019
Anonymous Asks (51)
On one level this question is almost too basic. The weakest,
newest Christians have heard “Love your enemies and pray for those who
persecute you.” Even raw pagans know we Christians believe that.
Thus if we try to deal with the question as written, the
correct answer is a single word: love. That doesn’t make for much of a
blog post.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Forgiveness
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Love
/
Pain
Sunday, July 28, 2019
The True Church
The world is full of religious
people who don’t have any use for actual instruction from God. When we come
across them today, we should not be surprised. They have been around since the
very beginning of human history. They like the trappings of institutionalized religiosity
but have no use for the spiritual reality these forms and conventions too
easily conceal.
Cain was no atheist, no secular man. He observed the formalities. He made offerings to God. He spoke
to God directly, and God spoke to him both before and after he murdered his
brother, giving moral instruction where both surely knew it would never be heeded.
It didn’t help Cain any, but you can’t say God didn’t try.
Saturday, July 27, 2019
How Not to Crash and Burn (69)
Quick quiz: whose oracle is this? Why, it’s King Lemuel’s, as taught to him by his
mother. This fact is unequivocally established in the very first verse. The words express her beliefs; the good king simply put them on paper for the rest of us.
This fact is central to any un-triggered reading of the passage: a woman taught her son which character qualities and habits define an excellent
wife and make for a happy home. Lemuel’s mother does not insist he exclude
women from consideration who do not measure up to her lofty standards. She
doesn’t have to. Her preference is very evident.
In short, these verses cannot easily be dismissed as the misogynist rantings of the evil patriarchy; at least not if we
believe in the inspiration of scripture.
Some women really hate that.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
/
Lemuel
/
Proverbs
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Wives
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