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Thursday, September 17, 2020
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
What Does Your Proof Text Prove? (13)
“Delight yourself in the Lord, and he will give you the
desires of your heart.”
The commendably-honest Sarah Frazer acknowledges she once
believed this familiar promise in Psalm 37 meant “I can
have anything I want.” If so, that would be quite a promise, but it
would reduce God to a mere term in a larger equation, where if you treat that term
a consistent way, you can always expect a predictable outcome.
Nice deal if you can get it, but quite a comedown for the
Creator and Sustainer of the Universe to be reduced to a component of your personal math
problem.
Let’s suggest that might not be the verse’s intended meaning!
Labels:
Desire
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Psalms
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What Does Your Proof Text Prove?
Tuesday, September 15, 2020
That Guy Outside Starbucks is NOT Jesus’ Brother
God bless the poor.
In fact, I don’t even have to ask him: we’ve been told he will;
at least inasmuch as their poverty is primarily one of the spirit.
But we should pray for the poor, of course, and share as we are able. We should care, we ought to avoid partiality and we need to act. Our faith does not amount to much if it does not make us compassionate in a very practical way
toward those in need, and toward those who may have started life at a huge
disadvantage, or have encountered trials and troubles we have never
experienced.
But that guy outside Starbucks who invades your space — the one with the tatty green or brown jacket, bad breath, body odor and uncomfortable social habits — while he may be made in the image of God and deserving of whatever we
are able to do for him for that reason alone …
Sorry, that guy is just not Jesus’ “brother”.
Labels:
Mason Slater
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Matthew
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Poverty
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Recycling
Monday, September 14, 2020
Anonymous Asks (110)
“What should a believer do before he dies?”
Some denominations prescribe rituals to be administered by
the church in a man or woman’s final moments on earth, and perhaps this week’s
question is coming from someone with that sort of ecclesiastical background.
If religious routines are what the dying are calling for, we
would not wish to rob them of their comfort, but I should probably point
out that we do not find any commands at all about “last rites” in our Bibles.
The Christian is neither obligated to perform them nor to have them performed. It
may even be that the practice encourages a false sense of security about one’s relationship
to Christ and one’s eternal destiny.
That would be very unfortunate indeed. In any case, it’s not
the sort of preparation we are going to discuss today.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Death
Sunday, September 13, 2020
Act Like What You Are
Clean living requires an act of the will, and acts of the
will require a changed mindset — at least if they are going to stick for
any length of time. Down through the centuries, men and women who sought to control
their natural appetites have attempted to “live clean” with different goals in
view.
Plato taught the suppression of fleshly desires in order to
free the soul to search for knowledge. The Stoics disciplined themselves to manage their emotions in order to uphold
what they believed was the essential dignity of human nature. Kant advocated moral asceticism in hope of cultivating virtue. Monks of various religious orders idealized
poverty, fasting and celibacy as ways of expressing devotion to their gods.
Labels:
2 Corinthians
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Adoption
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Holiness
Saturday, September 12, 2020
Time and Chance (53)
With the advent of the internet, we have become all too used to people sharing their opinions
with us.
Editorializing is far from a new activity — human beings have engaged in it for millennia. What’s new is the
sheer scale of useless bloviating made possible through social media. More
information is fine, but information bereft of both authority and coherence is
not worth the effort it takes to process.
Back in Ecclesiastes, the Preacher is about to tell his readers something similar.
Labels:
Authority
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
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Wisdom
Friday, September 11, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Christian Globalist
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Globalism
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Nation
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Wednesday, September 09, 2020
If It Happens Again I’m Leaving
Doug Wilson is not the only Christian blogging about the
phenomenon of people leaving a church over the issue of compulsory mask-wearing,
but he’s probably more quoted on the subject than most. Responding in a
recent post to questions from believers frustrated by the stand their own
elders have taken over the issue, Doug has (perhaps inadvertently) opened a
larger can of worms than the mask issue itself, which is the authority of
elders to bind the consciences of those under their care over matters about
which scripture is silent.
And the mask issue is certainly that.
Labels:
Church
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COVID-19
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Douglas Wilson
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Elders
Tuesday, September 08, 2020
Inbox: ‘Systemic’ Racism
God gave a plethora of laws to Moses on Sinai, yet they did not make for a perfect society because people are not perfect. Individuals observed those laws from time to time, and in doing so, benefited from them. But on a national level, Israel would not — nay,
could not — follow those laws, notwithstanding the fact that they were
morally excellent, decent, orderly, and
taught lessons humanity absolutely needed to learn, not to mention they
pointed to Christ. So God gave them, man received them, and the result was systemic failure.
Or was it?
Labels:
Government
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Inbox
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Racism
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Repentance
Monday, September 07, 2020
Anonymous Asks (109)
“If God loves the world, why does he make people choose between loving
him back or spending eternity in hell? That sounds more like an ultimatum than
love.”
I agree: that choice does sound a bit like an
ultimatum. The Bible also frames it as a
command.
Why is that? Why is there no third option where God simply
leaves me alone to do my own thing, and I leave him alone to do his?
Surely a policy of benign indifference would be more loving than condemning
millions of people to a lake of fire.
I wonder what simply leaving humanity to its own devices
would look like ...
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Choices
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Hell
Sunday, September 06, 2020
Semi-Random Musings (21)
Most of our readers would not be aware that I have been
at the office almost non-stop these last few weeks as a consequence of a
plethora of COVID-related staff absences. That’s not because even a single employee
of hundreds across the globe has contracted the coronavirus — so far as
I know, they are all healthy as horses — but because almost nobody currently
working from home has any enthusiasm about returning to work in the current
environment, and the corporate powers that be are even less enthusiastic about
ordering them to do so. The vast majority of my co-workers seem content to hunker
down in their basements doing not too much of anything until sometime in Spring 2021.
Yeah, sure … that’ll be the end of it. Right.
Labels:
Choices
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Church
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COVID-19
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Semi-Random Musings
Saturday, September 05, 2020
Time and Chance (52)
Just this week, a friend of mine took his three-and-half-year-old grandson hiking through
a local terraced cemetery. As they climbed, they stopped to read a gravestone
together at every level. Recognizing the shape of the recurring word forms, the
little boy soon began to repeat phrases like “In loving memory” and “beloved
wife”.
When the two returned home to tell Grandma what they had been up to, her agitated
response was, “I hope you didn’t tell him what the numbers mean.”
Yeah, those numbers …
Labels:
Age
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
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Youth
Friday, September 04, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Chosen
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
The Chosen is a largely-crowdfunded, independent, ongoing video series which debuted on
YouTube in April 2019 with the goal of retelling the gospel stories mainly
from the perspective of their minor characters and emphasizing the
life-changing nature of their interactions with the Lord Jesus. In the words of
Josh Shepherd at Christianity Today, its creators aimed for it to be “faithful to the biblical text while gritty in tone”.
Tom: Hmm. In my opinion, the grit is definitely visible, but not necessarily
off-putting.
Labels:
The Chosen
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, September 03, 2020
Who Your Friends Are
“You are those who have stood by me in my trials.”
In my youth I had two friends with whom I was
particularly close. Both were highly talented, creative, driven and smart. It
was only a matter of time until both made good in the world and became
successful, wealthy and celebrated.
But when I met them all that was yet to come. It wasn’t
apparent yet that they were going anywhere. They were in a high-risk career
line, trying to catch that key break that many folks thought might never come.
“Get a haircut, and get a real job” was the advice they heard a lot.
Too bad for the naysayers. Both hit the big time.
Labels:
Christ
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Identity
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Soren Kierkegaard
Wednesday, September 02, 2020
Tuesday, September 01, 2020
A Sheet of Glass
Now and then when I’m unable to write a new post for one reason or another, I’ll recycle something from our archives, generally without comment. But I couldn’t help but notice that this end-of-2014 post about the suddenness with which change comes to our world was definitely NOT inadvertently prophetic. Not one bit. Really.
Last week, Matt Drudge linked to an article in The Guardian that informs us “we are
safer, richer and healthier than at any time on record”. In “Goodbye to one of the best years in history”, Fraser Nelson wraps up 2014 by reminding his readers that while it may have escaped
our notice:
- our lives now are more peaceful than at any time known to the human species;
- global capitalism has transferred wealth faster than foreign aid ever could;
- global life expectancy now stands at a new high of 71.5 years;
- traffic deaths are down by two-thirds since 1990; and
- there has never been a better reason for people the world over to wish each other a happy and prosperous new year.
While Mr. Nelson may have overlooked one or two little
atrocities here and there in his glowing report on the human condition, he makes
an effort to substantiate his claim that relatively at least we are doing
pretty well as a species.
Terrific for us, until things change. And change is coming.
Monday, August 31, 2020
Anonymous Asks (108)
“Why do we follow some Levitical laws and not others?”
Whenever we associate living the Christian life with following the Law of Moses, we run the risk of becoming
very confused. Surprisingly, the relationship between Christianity and Old
Testament Judaism is still much misunderstood today, even though the matter was
conclusively sorted out very early in church history. It’s a situation made
worse today by systems of theology that conflate the church with Israel.
But if we have our theology right, we will find Christians do not “follow Levitical laws” at all.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Grace
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Law
Sunday, August 30, 2020
Incidentally …
An idle remark made in passing may tell us considerably more
about its speaker than listening to him lecture for an hour on a prepared
topic.
Likewise, it is often the case that the little “asides” made
by the writers of the New Testament in the process of teaching are as
interesting as — and sometime even more interesting than — the subjects
themselves.
Nothing in scripture is simply there to fill up space. Even
incidental comments are full of important truth.
Labels:
1 Corinthians
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Father
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Godhead
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Son
Saturday, August 29, 2020
Time and Chance (51)
As I have mentioned on more than one occasion during
our study of Ecclesiastes, the list of things its writer characterizes as “vanity”
in his thesis is lengthy. Over thirty different features of human existence are
so described, a partial list of which you can find here,
from hedonism to workaholism to discontentment and entropy.
Labels:
Age
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Ecclesiastes
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Time and Chance
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Youth
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