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Friday, November 06, 2020
Thursday, November 05, 2020
The Next [De]Generation
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Children
/
Commitment
Wednesday, November 04, 2020
Prophetic Trajectories in Matthew
Matthew 10 recounts the commission of the twelve disciples
to take the good news of the kingdom to all the cities of Israel.
There is a
specifically ethnic character to this set of instructions: “Go nowhere among
the Gentiles and enter no town of the Samaritans, but go rather
to the lost sheep of the house of Israel,” instructs the Lord.
At this time and for this specific purpose, the Lord equips
his servants with a
tool kit you and I do not possess in taking the message of gospel to
the world today: he “gave them authority over unclean spirits, to cast them
out, and to heal every disease and every affliction.”
Labels:
Great Tribulation
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Matthew
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Persecution
Tuesday, November 03, 2020
A Structural Analysis of Psalm 107
Sometimes the best way to understand something is to try to put it inside
your own frame of reference.
The book of Psalms is a compilation of poetry written at various times and places by a bare minimum of eight different
godly men with diverse personalities and interests.
Some were theologians writing poetry, and some were probably poets writing
theology. This means, as you would expect, that there are psalms with obvious
and ornate structures (Psalm 119 comes to mind, where the letters of the
Hebrew alphabet start each section of the psalm), as well as others that appear
to be structured very simply (Psalm 15 is a single question and its
answer) or have very little noticeable structure at all (Psalm 117, for
example, is so brief that any analysis of its structure is near-pointless).
Pattern recognition is more useful in some passages of
scripture than in others. Psalm 107 is definitely structured.
Labels:
Bible Study
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Interpretation
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Psalms
Monday, November 02, 2020
Anonymous Asks (117)
“Why should someone start believing in God?”
Not so long ago, I watched a highly educated agnostic
on YouTube argue the case that pretty lies are sometimes beneficial. His point
was basically that if what people believe causes them to do more good things
than bad, then their beliefs are a net positive for the world despite the fact
that they are out of touch with reality. He went on to say the
Christian faith is one of these things, and that it is a net positive for
societies and the individuals in them, even if it turns out to be a pretty lie.
He says Western Civilization could use more people who believe pretty lies.
There might be something to that, but it’s not an argument
a Christian is likely to make.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Belief
Sunday, November 01, 2020
An Unnecessary Insertion?
In Matthew, the Father declares that he is “well pleased”
with the Son three times.
“Three?” you say. “I can think of two.”
Sure: the baptism of the Lord Jesus and his transfiguration.
But there is a third reference to the Father’s pleasure in the Son found in
Matthew 12. It’s a familiar quote from the book of Isaiah.
“Oh, a quote. That’s
kind of cheating.”
Labels:
Christ
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Hebrews
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Isaiah
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Matthew
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Satisfaction
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (6)
It is of at least mild interest to certain commentators to note which names of God are used
by the writers of various Old Testament books. For example, it is a notable feature
of the book of Ecclesiastes that the personal name by which God makes himself
known to Israel is never used there. Given the content of Ecclesiastes, this authorial
choice makes perfect sense.
Can we deduce anything equally significant from the names of God used in the book of
Jonah? You be the judge.
Labels:
Jonah
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Mining the Minors
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Names of God
Friday, October 30, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: Worth Leaving Over
In which our regular writers toss around
subjects a little more volatile than usual.
In principle, I’m not keen on leaving churches. It happens too often and too
easily. But sometimes, there just isn’t any choice.
When
Gretta Vosper became the pastor of a West Hill United Church in Toronto, Canada in 1997, she
was not yet out of the closet about her atheism, a little bonus she didn’t disclose
from the pulpit until 2001. Amazingly, quite a few congregants hung on until
2008 when Vosper did away with the Lord’s Prayer, at which point 2/3 of the
flock made for the exits.
Tom: I’m not sure precisely where the line is,
but I’d have difficulty faulting anyone who leaves a church with an atheist
pastor, IC. From your experience, what are the ingredients that go into making
for a “time to go” decision?
Labels:
Apostasy
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Church
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Heresy
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Infinite Improbability and the Multiverse Hypothesis
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Multiverse
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Probability
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Recognizing Our Limitations
An anthropomorphism is the attribution of human motivation, characteristics or behavior to that
which is not human; in The American Heritage Dictionary, an inanimate object, an animal or some natural phenomenon.
The Bible is full of such figures of speech. One psalmist
says, “The heavens declare
the glory of God ... day to day pours out speech.”
Another records, “The mountains skipped
like rams.”
Labels:
Anthropomorphism
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Psalms
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Hyperbole and Analogy
When trying to understand individual psalms, three questions
are helpful to ask:
- How was this psalm understood by its original audience?
- To what other circumstances might this psalm legitimately apply?
- Where is Christ in this psalm; and, conversely, where is he not?
The first and third questions are easily understood, even if
it is sometimes tough sledding to find the answers to them. The second requires
a little explanation.
Labels:
Application
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Interpretation
/
Psalms
Monday, October 26, 2020
Anonymous Asks (116)
“How can you worship a God who could send your loved ones to hell?”
There is a something about the generosity of spirit in this
frequently-heard and more-frequently-unheard complaint that I would hate
to disparage. Loyalty to friends and kin is commendable, and self-sacrificial
loyalty — the sort that feels uncomfortable partaking of a good thing from
which others are excluded — is more commendable still.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Judgment
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Loyalty
Sunday, October 25, 2020
Worth Dying For
When King David wrote, “He trains
my hands for war, so that my arms can bend a bow of bronze,” the great warrior-poet
was not reaching for an apt figure of speech to describe some vigorous
spiritual exercise. He meant it absolutely literally. David had men on every
side who were trying to kill him with bows, arrows, swords and spears. His
enemies were not looking for a bracing intellectual argument; they intended to
spill David’s blood, and spill it in copious quantities.
Moreover, God was not standing aloof from David’s very
physical struggles. He was right in there equipping his servant to pierce, crush,
injure and maim his fellow man.
Labels:
Apostle Paul
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David
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Figurative Language
/
Psalms
/
Spiritual Warfare
Saturday, October 24, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (5)
The Hebrew word translated “presence” is literally
“face”
or “countenance”. It appears in every book from Genesis through Malachi, over
2,000 times in total. When used of God, as in “the presence of the Lord”,
it refers to any location in which God chooses to present himself to human
beings or any location in which he is said to make his residence.
That phrase “presence of the Lord” is used three times in
the book of Jonah, all in this first chapter.
Labels:
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
/
Presence of the Lord
Friday, October 23, 2020
Too Hot to Handle: The Numbers Game
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Abortion
/
Media
/
Too Hot to Handle
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
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Discipleship
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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
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