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Friday, October 23, 2020
Thursday, October 22, 2020
What You Don’t Know Can Kill You
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Agnosticism
/
Hebrews
/
Richard Dawkins
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Third-Tier Faith
Once in a while when confronting others with the claims of
Jesus Christ, Christians run into a response like “I truly wish I could
believe that, but I just haven’t got the faith,” or “If only I could be sure
what you’re saying is true ...”
Sound familiar? I’ve been thinking a lot about that excuse.
Labels:
Faith
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Denominations and Discernment
Discernment is a difficult quality to teach. Some people
have a great deal more of it than others. It’s a quality that seems to me increasingly
and depressingly rare.
It’s not hard to think of Christians who have known the Lord
for years, yet remain more than a little gullible and sometimes require the protection
of family and friends. You probably know some too. They like people. They think
the best of everyone. They have a tendency to be so gentle and trusting that
they fall for almost every new thing that comes along, provided it is presented
with a smile. They mistake niceness for goodness and pleasant talk for the
gospel truth.
Labels:
Denominationalism
/
Discipleship
/
Discrimination
/
Recycling
Monday, October 19, 2020
Anonymous Asks (115)
“What’s the difference between being spiritual
and being religious?”
The answer to this question very much
depends on whether we come at it from the perspective of the man in the street,
or from that of the scriptures.
The Man in the Street
The man in the street thinks a mystic
is spiritual and a priest religious. He sees the religious person as a cog in
the ecclesiastical machinery, observing traditions and doing his duty as part
of a larger religious community. The “spiritual” person, on the other hand, is
someone operating outside institutional religion; thought to be in harmony with
the natural order, and communing with the universe or some such. The religious person
would always be in church on Sunday (or Saturday), while the “spiritual” person
may or may not.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Religious
/
Spiritual
Sunday, October 18, 2020
The Commentariat Speaks (19)
Moscow, Idaho is home to Christ Church,
a conservative reformed evangelical gathering of about 900 people that has
produced an unusual number of what Wikipedia calls “institutional
projects”, including New Saint Andrews College, the Logos School, a
Christian book publisher, a scripture translation group, a three-year ministerial training program and four spin-off churches in Montana, California
and Myanmar.
Christ Church congregants form an active community of
homeschoolers and Christian businesspeople within Moscow.
Labels:
Douglas Wilson
/
Great Commission
/
The Commentariat Speaks
Saturday, October 17, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (4)
All names have some level of significance
to the people who bear them, though you may feel free to disagree if you have
been afflicted with parents who think calling a child Apple or Moon Unit is
a bright idea. Thankfully those folks are comparatively rare.
In ancient languages, most names were not
simply a pleasing combination of vowels and consonants chosen by moms and dads
who were stuck for a name they could agree on; they also signified something
else. The Lord renamed at least one of his disciples, and he did not do so
without purpose. The name Simon, which means “to hear”, was changed to Peter,
meaning a rock or stone. Much is said about that renaming in religious circles,
not all of it accurate, but it is certain that the change was significant both
to the Lord and to Peter. It redefined who he was.
Labels:
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
Nineveh
Friday, October 16, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Preaching or Peddling?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Stewardship
/
Teaching
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 15, 2020
The Atheist’s New Clothes
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Agnosticism
/
Atheism
/
Psalms
/
Richard Dawkins
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
How Saved Are You?
Most of us associate our salvation with a specific incident:
a conversation, a sudden realization, a moment in which it became clear to us
that the Lord was speaking; that God was right and we were wrong; that we were
sinners and that there was something we urgently needed to do about that. So in
our own way we cried out to God: some with tears, some more tentatively, still
not completely sure what might be involved. How much we may have fully grasped of
the role of Christ in both salvation and in the government of our lives from
then on almost certainly differed from person to person.
But my point is … it was a point in time. And if you say the
word “salvation”, that event is primarily what we think of.
An event is good. If you have one to look back on, I’m glad.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
/
Christ
/
Communion
/
Peter
/
Recycling
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
A Gap Anticipated
“All scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for
reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the
man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”
The Bible repeatedly claims to be God-breathed, both in its
component parts and in its entirety. Statements to the effect that God has
spoken are made several hundred times in the books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel
alone, and they are sprinkled liberally through the rest of the scripture. Other
writers and speakers
in the Bible
made similar
assertions
to that which Paul makes here: that the
whole thing (Law, Prophets, Psalms, Letters, Gospels) is God speaking,
right down its
glyphs and diacritics in the original languages.
Stop and think about that a moment.
Labels:
2 Timothy
/
Inspiration
/
Scripture
Monday, October 12, 2020
Anonymous Asks (114)
“Where did Jesus come from?”
Before there was ever a Jesus of Nazareth, there was the
Word. This is one of the names the writers of the Bible use to describe
the Pre-Incarnate Christ.
The Pre-Incarnate Word
John speaks of “the Word”, who “was
with God” and who “was
God”. The Word made all things that have been made, without
exception, which means the Word existed not just at creation, but prior to
it. Since nothing that was made was made without him, that must include Satan. Satan
is not any old created
being. He was the “anointed
guardian cherub” who served in heaven before his fall. Thus it is evident
the Word was operating in eternity well before the rest of creation was brought
into existence.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Christ
/
Incarnation
/
The Word
Sunday, October 11, 2020
Why Your View of Prophecy Matters
Does is really make much difference how you view Bible
prophecy?
Most Christians would affirm that all scripture is
God-breathed and profitable; that’s fairly fundamental. It follows that the
study of prophecy is also profitable, though whether its details are easily
deciphered or have immediate application to the lives of all readers is another
question altogether.
Labels:
Amillennialism
/
Church
/
Israel
/
Millennium
/
Premillennialism
/
Prophecy
/
Recycling
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (3)
“The word of the Lord” is an expression that occurs 242 times in the Old Testament. It is a claim
that God has spoken and a demand that he be heard. It is not the only way that
the writers of the Old Testament choose to convey the truth that God has something
to say, but it is probably their most prominent and frequent way of
expressing it.
The word of the Lord is unspeakably powerful. The psalmist records that by it
“the heavens were made”. Sometimes the word of the Lord tells great men of
great things to come. Other times it warns of impending judgment. Still other times it appears to address and correct
a small, technical injustice, or to
establish a personal relationship. It may operate on a grand scale, or intimately and personally.
Labels:
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
The Word of the Lord
Friday, October 09, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Making Tough Choices
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
Tom: Last month, IC, you and I had
a conversation in this space about what might come after the COVID crisis
for local churches, as well as for Christians generally in a transformed
economic and social environment, and I don’t want to revisit the topics we
considered at that time at any length.
But in the last week or two (assuming you are not reading this in
Sweden), you are probably hearing about significant “spikes” and “surges” in the COVID-19 infection rate wherever you live. Some people are calling it a “second wave”. The
U.K. has seen the worst surge, topping what they experienced in April and May, but
Canada is looking ugly too, as are the
U.S.,
France and especially
Spain. (I’m using the
World Health Organization (WHO) stats; graphs of confirmed cases and deaths day by day in each country are found by scrolling down below the maps.)
Labels:
Church
/
COVID-19
/
Government
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 08, 2020
A Sign From God
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Christ
/
J.G. Bellett
/
Soren Kierkegaard
Wednesday, October 07, 2020
A Unique Learning Experience
“That is not the way you learned
Christ.”
Learning Christ is not like learning Marxism or Islam or
Buddhism or Taoism. It’s not even like learning Christianity.
All religious and political movements have recognized
founders whose words are studied, analyzed, memorized and followed dutifully,
but their adherents are not “learning” Karl Marx or Muhammad ibn Abdullah
or Siddhartha Gautama or Laozi; rather, they are learning propositions and
theories these men set forth about life, the universe and the proper ordering
of society.
Some religious and political leaders succeed, at least to a
limited extent, in living out their own ideals. Others don’t do so well at that.
Either way, it is pretty hard for us to learn them, even if we are determined to try.
Tuesday, October 06, 2020
Walking Before God
When Abraham, who was still called Abram at the time, was in
his hundredth year on this planet, God appeared to him. He gave him a rather
daunting challenge: “Walk
before me,” God said, “and be blameless.”
Many good things would come of this. Years later, when
Abraham was “well advanced in years” and the fulfillment of God’s promises to
him was apparent, the patriarch would speak to his servant of “the Lord, before
whom I have
walked”.
Monday, October 05, 2020
Sunday, October 04, 2020
Mining the Minors: A Belated Explanation
Andy Stanley’s Irresistible: Reclaiming the New that Jesus Unleashed for the World (2018) was a bit of a grenade in the baptistery. In it, Stanley argued that modern, mainstream Christianity is fatally flawed, fragile and indefensible in the public square because we have anchored it to an “old covenant narrative and worldview”. Stanley contended Christians need to “unhitch” ourselves from the Old Testament to become relevant to the world.
Labels:
Andy Stanley
/
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
Old Testament
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