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Thursday, August 20, 2020
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Resetting our Defaults
I’ve been thinking about platform ministry. Each church has its
own default set of practices observed week after week (with the exception of churches
that meet in living rooms and basements and don’t have platforms) and, other
than in the case of brand new churches, the choices that go into how teaching
and preaching get presented are rarely conscious ones. They are more often the
result of time, tradition and imitation of formats perceived to be successful
in other churches.
Labels:
Church
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Recycling
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Spiritual Gifts
Tuesday, August 18, 2020
Recommend-a-blog (30)
Alan Shlemon at Stand to Reason has written a thought-provoking piece called “How 2020 Is
Taking a Toll on Your Soul” about the effects of the internet in the last
five months on society in general and Christians in particular. To nobody’s
surprise, in COVID lockdown we have been spending record
amounts of time online. In the UK, the highest percentage increase in time spent
online is among those over the age of 54.
As a result, I’ve felt it and I’m sure you have too: that
indefinable malaise and “inordinate pressure to say the right thing”. Shlemon
argues it’s partly a consequence of the false sense of omnipresence and omniscience
social media inspires.
Labels:
Internet
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Recommend-a-blog
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Stand to Reason
Monday, August 17, 2020
Anonymous Asks (106)
“How can Christians say their religion is the only true one?”
Over fifty years ago, a Muslim who happened to hear my father preaching asked him a question very much
like this one. After listening to Dad for a time, he inquired, “Are you
actually telling us that Jesus is the only way to God?”
Ouch.
In a Bit of a Bind
My father was in a bit of a bind in that he was at the time a guest in a foreign country. His ability
to continue freely preaching and teaching there depended to a certain extent on
not rocking the boat unnecessarily. However, this was one of those questions
that cannot be evaded, ignored or put off to a more convenient time when there
might be fewer witnesses or a less potentially hostile environment.
Faithfulness to his Master demanded a straightforward answer, and Dad gave one.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Exclusivity
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Gospel
Sunday, August 16, 2020
Acknowledging the Obvious
Why do we give God glory?
It’s a good question. I was introduced to the Christian faith as a small child, so the notion of
people gathering together to sing praises to God, to raise their hands in the
air, to pray fervently to someone they could not see, and say complimentary things about him to one another did not seem weird to me at all. It was what
I was used to, and when I was old enough to know how to imitate what these
folks were doing, I joined in too, even though at that point I had no
personal knowledge of Jesus Christ.
It was expected, so we did it.
Saturday, August 15, 2020
Time and Chance (49)
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Jeremy Bentham’s Panopticon |
It is said that every virtue carried to extremes becomes a
vice, which is probably true. Every good thing indulged in to excess does much the
same.
The previous few verses of Ecclesiastes 10 contrast a
kingdom run by self-indulgent drunks and gluttons with a kingdom administered
by wise, self-controlled princes and officials who know the proper place for leisure
and pleasure in their own lives. Obviously the citizens of the second kingdom
will have a better time of it than those of the first. The Preacher then
comments that attending to only your own desires rather than the objective
needs around you will end in disaster.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Self-Control
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Social Media
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Time and Chance
Friday, August 14, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Religious Scrupulosity
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Religious Scrupulosity
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Fake News
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
C.S. Lewis
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Media
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Prophecy
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
Two Psalms
The Psalms are not only richly poetic but deeply personal.
That may be one reason so many Christians relate to them on an emotional level.
When saying goodbye even temporarily to someone we love, the natural instinct
is to reach for a psalm. Psalms touch our hearts in ways much of the rest
of God’s word may not.
Let me be very honest about that: I suspect much
of the time the Psalms touch us so powerfully because we don’t really
understand what they are about to any great extent. Figures of speech will do
that; they universalize thoughts that may actually be quite specific. So we feel
free to grab bits and pieces of the Psalms here and there to apply to our own
experience without worrying too much whether we are violating some principle of
exegesis.
They just feel right, and so we are at home with them. Even if at one level they are not
really ours.
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Knowing Our Limitations
A few days ago we ran a post about the
will of God and the COVID-19 pandemic. In the process of researching what
God’s will meant to the Lord Jesus and his apostles, I came across a verse
that initially perplexed me, then later seemed to provide some interesting
insights into the subject. I did not bother to mention it in the COVID
post because it was one of those theological rabbit trails, heading off through
the forest from where we were at the time to somewhere entirely different. But
the questions raised by the verse certainly merit a full post’s worth of
consideration, and then some.
I’ve been mulling it over ever since, so let’s lay out the
problem that occurred to me and see where it takes us ... carefully, of
course.
Labels:
Gethsemane
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Matthew
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Will of God
Monday, August 10, 2020
Anonymous Asks (105)
If I were to discuss all the different ways some of these words have been used throughout history and
all the ways they each are misused throughout Christendom, this might turn into a five-parter. So let’s
keep it simple and just try to highlight what the Bible teaches about each as
they exist in the church today.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Pastors
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Preacher
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Priests
Sunday, August 09, 2020
Saturday, August 08, 2020
Time and Chance (48)
Many years ago I had an older Scottish boss. Unstereotypically
for a Scot with an accent so thick you could make peaks in it with a spatula, he had no
problem with his staff reading a book, chatting, or idling away our shifts —
but only under one condition: all the work in the shop must be finished and out
the door first. If our salespeople failed to keep us busy, that was their
problem. If we failed to deliver their work on time, it was ours.
So play by all means,
but play after you work.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Pleasure
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Time and Chance
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Work Ethic
Friday, August 07, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Christians and Mental Health
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Biblical Counseling
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Mental Illness
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, August 06, 2020
Universal Human Rights: The Christian Legacy
There is only one reason we have human rights: God.
And it was a Christian who first discovered this and explained it to the world.
Eh?
Now, you might ask yourself this: if this is true, why was I not told? Why didn’t my teachers in high school, my instructors at college or my professors in my undergraduate explain this? Or if it’s true, then why is not every Christian trumpeting the fact from the rooftops?
The answer’s simple: Christians don’t know it, and other people don’t want to hear it.
Labels:
Christianity
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Human Rights
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John Locke
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Recycling
Wednesday, August 05, 2020
COVID-19 and the Will of God
“It was God’s will.”
Ah, the magic phrase. You hear it said by devout people at
funerals, usually with palpable resignation. “He was taken before we were
ready, and we’re all hurting, but somehow we know — though we can’t quite
see how it might be since he was such a great guy and will be so profoundly
missed — that his untimely and painful death was God’s will.”
So that’s all right then. Even if it isn’t, really.
Labels:
COVID-19
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Suffering
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Will of God
Tuesday, August 04, 2020
Marching as to War
“... making supplication for all the saints, and also
for me, that words may be given to me in opening my mouth boldly to
proclaim the mystery of the gospel ... that I may declare it
boldly, as I ought to speak.”
This is not the only time Paul asks for prayer specifically for himself and for the work he was engaged in. Colossians 4 contains
a similar request, as do both Paul’s
first and
second letters to Thessalonica. We may take it this was an apostolic custom. The writer to the Hebrews does
the same.
I wonder why.
Labels:
Ephesians
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Prayer
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Spiritual Warfare
Monday, August 03, 2020
Anonymous Asks (104)
This is an excellent question for young Christians to resolve in their hearts and heads before it
becomes emotional and personal, especially in a cultural climate where we are repeatedly told
that pre-marital sex is not only not sinful, but healthy, normal human behavior.
Chaste teenagers are currently considered more than a little defective. Heaven help you if your dedication to sexual purity lasts into your
twenties.
So why have Christians always taught that sexual purity is so important?
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Premarital Sex
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Purity
Sunday, August 02, 2020
Thank You for the Failures
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Some readers understand that concept very broadly. They see
that God “desires all people to be saved and to come to the
knowledge of the truth”, and conclude from it that God would prefer it if every
single human being on the planet were to turn from sin and self to Christ, who
is God’s only way of salvation.
This may very well be true, though I don’t think it’s
exactly what Paul was telling Timothy.
Labels:
Christ
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Hell
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Matthew
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Recycling
/
Word of God
Saturday, August 01, 2020
Time and Chance (47)
Not all fools are avowed atheists.
All serious foolishness begins with the assumption “There
is no God.” But there are different ways of denying the existence of
God in one’s heart. One way is to do it like Richard Dawkins, who says it with
a lot of pseudo-scientific bother and fuss. He can’t stop thinking about it and
trying to prove it. Then there is the functional atheist. He never tries to
talk anyone out of their belief in God, and he certainly doesn’t write books
about God’s non-existence. He may even concede that God might possibly exist,
but he lives every moment of his life as if God does not.
Either way is foolish, but at least a Dawkins recognizes the
existence of God as a problem for his worldview and is working away at coming
to grips with it. The other fellow is perhaps in a worse state, as he never
thinks about God at all.
Labels:
Ecclesiastes
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Foolishness
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Time and Chance
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