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, June 05, 2020
Thursday, June 04, 2020
The Heights of Accommodation and the Depths of Evil
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Deuteronomy
/
Truth
/
Witnessing
Wednesday, June 03, 2020
Congregations in Boxes
If you are anything like me, you have probably watched no
end of amateur Christian video uploaded to YouTube in the last two months.
The medium definitely has its limitations.
Still, there is a certain amount of courage required to record your
thoughts to be replayed in a public forum. The whole thing is pretty stark: it’s
basically a person in a box. You are seriously exposed.
Labels:
Church
/
Participation
/
YouTube
Tuesday, June 02, 2020
Not Done in a Corner
From the scientific
perspective, peer review is the litmus test of reliability.
The idea is this: that in order for a newly published academic theory to have any credibility with either the
scientific community or the general public, it is necessary for
independent parties to test it: to carefully read through the documentation
that supports it; to re-calculate the mathematical formulas that lie behind it;
to examine the steps by which the theory was constructed and certify that its
conclusions were arrived at in accordance with normal scientific procedures; in
some cases even to re-perform whatever experiments are alleged to prove it and
examine their results for consistency.
You cannot do science off
in some dark corner and then refuse to allow anybody to see what you have been
up to. If you do, nobody will believe you at all.
Monday, June 01, 2020
Anonymous Asks (95)
Entering into a relationship with God is
not like signing up to play for a ball team, getting initiated into a college fraternity
or joining MENSA. There are no tests to pass, no dotted lines to sign on, no secret
handshakes and no code words like “Open, Sesame” which must be spoken to allow
access to God.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Creeds
/
Salvation
Sunday, May 31, 2020
Divine Multi-Tasking
A teacher once told me about a student who couldn’t walk and
chew gum at the same time. He didn’t mean it literally, of course; it was a
comment on the student’s intelligence. We assume the smarter a person is, the more things they are capable of doing at the same time.
A juggler keeps multiple balls in the air simultaneously.
It can be impressive to watch a skilled multi-tasker at work. But human beings
have upper limits on our juggling ability. The maximum number of items ever
juggled is either 13 or 14, depending on who you believe. The case has been
made that the laws of physics make juggling 15 items impossible. At least, nobody
alive can do it.
Labels:
Christ
/
God
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Omniscience
/
Purpose
Saturday, May 30, 2020
Time and Chance (38)
Revelation is a glorious thing.
The phrase “through a glass darkly” is
often used to describe our current condition: we do not know everything we wish
we knew about God’s purposes for us. We would like to know more; of course we
would.
But when we apply that biblical phrase to ourselves, I believe we are erroneously putting
ourselves back twenty centuries in time and assuming ourselves to be in the same
condition as the Christians to whom Paul wrote in the mid-first century AD with
respect to the knowledge of God and his purposes.
And yet we are not in their situation. Not at all. We are much, much better off than they were.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
/
Revelation
/
Time and Chance
Friday, May 29, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: To Debate or Not to Debate
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
![]() |
Is there such a thing as too much discussion? |
“Do these squabbles speak love? Does the loud and passionate protestation about same-sex marriage draw others to Christ?”
Tom: Good questions, Immanuel Can. Is there any easy answer? Or is this
a debate where both sides may have legitimate concerns?
Labels:
Gay Marriage
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Recycling
/
Tolerance
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
World Vision
Thursday, May 28, 2020
Stuck in the Middle with You
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
/
Conservatism
/
Liberalism
/
Unity
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Anatomy of a Genocide
Serious efforts to exterminate Jews have happened more than
once, and the word of God assures us they will happen again. The book of Esther
is the story of a relatively early attempt.
The Medo-Persian empire was not Nazi Germany, and it is not
Armageddon, but there are still a few interesting things to be observed about
genocides, how such things can even come about at all, and what a persecuted (or
soon-to-be-persecuted) minority can learn from them about how best to conduct
itself in the face of overwhelming numerical opposition.
Labels:
Esther
/
Government
/
Persecution
Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Sound and Unsound
It is difficult to miss the adjective “sound” in the first
couple chapters of Titus. In fact, it occurs more times in Titus than
anywhere else in the New Testament. In instructing his younger associate, the
apostle Paul refers repeatedly to both “sound doctrine” and being “sound in the
faith”, the latter being the result of the former. Soundness was the apostle’s
desire for the Christians in Crete, and indeed for all believers everywhere.
In Greek, the word “sound” is hygiainō, which means “healthy”. It has the sense of fitness and
functionality. In Luke it is contrasted with both sickness
and injury.
Monday, May 25, 2020
Anonymous Asks (94)
“Is it possible to go a whole day without sinning?”
No.
Shortest Anonymous Asks ever.
Okay, I suppose I could elaborate a little. It is only possible to imagine you have
gone a whole day without “sinning” if your definition of sin is grossly deficient,
if you are stupifyingly un-self-aware, or maybe if you happen to be in
a coma.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Nehemiah
/
Sinlessness
Sunday, May 24, 2020
Good Applications and Bad Ones
Billy Graham noted that the character of our loved ones, friends, and acquaintances may change. Jesus does not.
TL Osborn says that because Jesus Christ does not change, you
can count on being healed from sickness, just as he healed the sick in the
first century.
A commenter at Christian Forums says the fact that Jesus Christ never changes means
dispensationalism is false teaching.
We all agree that “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and
forever.” However, it is evident we do not all agree about
precisely what that means.
Labels:
Application
/
Christ
/
Hebrews
/
Immutability
Saturday, May 23, 2020
Time and Chance (37)
Last week we encountered
the term “vanity” for the umpteenth time in the book of Ecclesiastes, and
considered another entry in the Preacher’s list of realities he found
frustrating, and which he could not hope to understand without direct
revelation from God. In this case, he had observed that there is a species of
wicked people who move freely in polite society and who, far from being punished
for their crimes, are more often politely indulged ... and sometimes even
celebrated.
He continues this thought in the next couple of verses, in the process adding yet another “vain thing” to
his list of conundra.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
/
Joy
/
Time and Chance
Friday, May 22, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Getting Relevant
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
I heard that most young people drop out of church today, either for a short or
indefinite time, around age 18-19. I was concerned: after all, if we lose
the next generation, what’s going to happen to the church? But then I found
this glossy new resource, and it’s really helping me to understand what today’s young adults are going to
find relevant by way of spiritual stuff. I’m sharing it with you, Tom, because
I know you’ve got young-adult children of your own.
Just in time, eh?
Tom: Uh, thanks, IC, I think. Why is it that some Christians seem to think that being “relevant” actually
means “pandering” or “condescending”?
Labels:
Church
/
Discipleship
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Recycling
/
Too Hot to Handle
/
Youth Work
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Contradictions and Contradistinctions
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Contradictions in Scripture
/
Jordan Peterson
/
Paradoxes
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
Everything Louder Than Everything Else
Ian Gillan of the seventies metal band Deep Purple reportedly
once asked the sound engineer mixing the band’s live album, “Could we have everything louder than
everything else?”
I’ve always loved that line. It just sounds like a title for the perfect rock and roll anthem.
But when you think about it for half a second, the request is
absurd. If the bass is louder than the high hat, the high hat cannot simultaneously
be louder than the bass. If you mix the snare drum louder than a guitar cranked
up to eleven, you cannot make that guitar louder in the sound mix without reducing
the volume of the snare. It’s absurd.
“Everything” cannot be louder than “everything else”. It
doesn’t work.
Labels:
Money
/
Poverty
/
Priorities
/
Recycling
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Diagnosing the Problem
“Behold, we are slaves this day ... behold, we are slaves.”
“We are offspring of Abraham and have never been enslaved to anyone.”
You can’t solve a problem unless you know what it is.
John 8:33 records a very strange statement, the second
one I have quoted above. It appears to have been made not specifically by the Pharisees
or Sadducees (though there may have been some of these present, of course), but more generally, by men who had just made a public confession of belief in Christ.
The statement was this: “We have never been enslaved to
anyone.”
Monday, May 18, 2020
Anonymous Asks (93)
“Is it wrong to wish for something?”
There was a time when the Lord Jesus wished for something
with all his heart. Luke says he prayed for it earnestly, in agony, to the
point where “his sweat became like great drops of blood falling to the ground”.
Here is what he wished for: “Father ... remove
this cup from me.”
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Prayer
Sunday, May 17, 2020
Lost Light
How does the word of God go missing among God’s people? How
does the plain teaching of scripture get overlooked for months, years and even
centuries, only to be suddenly rediscovered? You would think it impossible if
we didn’t have both historical and biblical evidence that it happens, and
happens with sad regularity.
For example, in the days of King Josiah, the Book of the Law
was found in the house of the Lord and taken to the king and read to him. When
Josiah heard the Law read, he
tore his clothes, humbled and stricken by the degree to which the people of
God had departed from his commandments and the wrath they had incurred because
of it.
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