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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Thursday, January 14, 2021
Wednesday, January 13, 2021
Too Close to Home
Robert Barron comments on the
parable of the wedding feast in Matthew:
“Many devout believers find the brutality and violence of the story
hard to take. In a very secularized society where people have lost the sense of
God, you have to shake them into awareness with a shocking story with very
exaggeratedly-drawn characters, with macabre and violent shocking action.”
Barron goes on to tell his listeners not to interpret the
parable in a straightforward, literal way, or to compare this “crazy king” directly
to God in every respect. He suggests the Lord was just using strong language to
get our attention, to “grab us by the shoulders and shake us awake”.
Tuesday, January 12, 2021
Semi-Random Musings (22)
You really can’t make this stuff up.
As you have probably read or heard elsewhere by now, the
117th Congress got off to a rocky start January 3 with an opening prayer
that concluded with the words “amen and awoman”. Naturally the
video went viral.
Of course it did. In this emotionally-charged and
hyper-politicized environment, how could it not?
Labels:
Media
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Political Correctness
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Romans
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Semi-Random Musings
Monday, January 11, 2021
Anonymous Asks (127)
“Do illegitimate children go to heaven?”
A child is called illegitimate when born to a woman not legally
married to the father. He or she may be the product of any of a variety of
circumstances: a one night stand, a brief, broken or casual ongoing sexual relationship,
prostitution, adultery or even incest. Artificial insemination has also made it
possible for a woman to bring a child into the world without committing to a
relationship with the donor, and this option is becoming increasingly popular
in some demographics.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Illegitimacy
Sunday, January 10, 2021
The Language of the Debate (3)
You have three seconds to answer: What’s the opposite of egalitarianism?
Three ...
two ... one ... okay, all guesses should be in now. If your answer
was “complementarianism”, my first thought is that maybe you’ve been spending
too much time in the Recently Released section of your local LifeWay or Family
Christian Bookstore — except both those chains went belly-up in the last
four years and it doesn’t look like anyone is stepping up to fill their
shoes. I guess maybe you could be Reformed ...
Here’s a crazy
thought: the opposite of egalitarianism just might be biblical headship. Now there’s a dusty old concept.
Labels:
Complementarianism
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The Language of the Debate
Saturday, January 09, 2021
Mining the Minors: Jonah (16)
There is a little bit of numeric symmetry in this last
chapter of Jonah: God asks three questions, and because Jonah’s animosity
toward the people of Nineveh and his disappointment at God’s delay in judging
them are so intense, the prophet three times asks God to allow him to die.
There are also three things in chapter 4 that God is said to have “appointed”,
so there are three sets of three. Perhaps the symmetry is not so
accidental.
Needless to say, it is fairly obvious Jonah’s request to die
went ungranted, or else his story would never have been written.
Labels:
Jonah
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Mining the Minors
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Murder
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Suicide
Friday, January 08, 2021
Too Hot to Handle: Heretics Aplenty
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Heresy
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Too Hot to Handle
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Truth
Thursday, January 07, 2021
What Are We Waiting For?
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
2 Peter
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Commitment
Wednesday, January 06, 2021
A Second Opinion
One of Stand to Reason’s
most popular posts last year was a Tim Barnett article entitled “What Must
Ben Shapiro Do to Be Saved?” Barnett had been watching a 2018 YouTube interview
in which the conservative pundit Shapiro got into a lengthy discussion with Roman
Catholic bishop Robert Barron.
Shapiro and Barron found plenty of common ground, as one
might expect. Then things got interesting.
Labels:
Ben Shapiro
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Salvation
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Stand to Reason
Tuesday, January 05, 2021
Top 10 Posts of 2020
Trying to determine which ten of our 368 blog posts in 2020
drew the most eyes is not as straightforward a task as it might seem.
A post may have low numbers in its first week of
publication, then catch fire later in the year when somebody links to it on
Facebook or Twitter, or because it has a unique term in it that is being repeatedly
entered into search engines. Totaling up pageviews only tells us a post is
really popular when a few months have passed, meaning that articles written in
the last quarter of any given calendar year are hard pressed to crack a
Top 10 compiled purely by the numbers.
Sometimes, frankly, figuring out why any particular post
drew so much attention is simply impossible even when you happen to be its
author. (#6 comes to mind.)
Labels:
Coming Untrue
Monday, January 04, 2021
Anonymous Asks (126)
“Did God create a second Adam?”
This is one of those questions that presumes familiarity
with a particular New Testament passage. In this case the passage is
1 Corinthians 15, the subject of which is resurrection. It is there that
the apostle Paul writes, “The first man Adam became a
living being” (referring to a statement made way back in Genesis 2). Then
he adds this: “the
last Adam became a life-giving spirit.” Paul then goes on to contrast
this “last Adam”, who is clearly Jesus Christ, the “second man”, with the first
man, Adam, in that “The first man was from the earth, a man of dust; the second
man is from heaven.”
That’s where the language of our anonymous questioner is
coming from, and that’s our starting point. Paul calls Jesus at various times
in the passage the “last Adam”, the “second man” and the “man from heaven”.
Labels:
Adam
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Anonymous Asks
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Christ
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Creation
Sunday, January 03, 2021
Saying Goodbye to 2020 (and my Career as a Prophet)
Last year around this time I decided to test whether
I have the gift of prophecy, so instead of making the usual New Year’s
resolutions, I reeled off a number of what I thought were really
obvious predictions for the then-upcoming year, the vast majority of which
have been (or will shortly be) proven correct.
As I write these words, my prophetic pitch with respect
to the U.S. election is still hanging in the air over the plate, and
January looks to be a very interesting month. As to my other four predictions,
in all honesty I can hardly claim much prophetic acumen: it turns out I was
shooting fish in a barrel.
Saturday, January 02, 2021
Mining the Minors: Jonah (15)
In the last few decades, those of us who live in multicultural
societies have been thoroughly propagandized against any visible display of racial animus. The social
project of stigmatizing Western “racists” — to the point where even inadvertently
acknowledging obvious differences between people groups commonly results in
social shaming and summary disemployment — has been a great success among
liberal whites, though notably less transformative across other demographics.
Having grown up in an era largely free of war, half-lobotomized
by the steadily-mounting pressure of political correctness, more than a few of us
may have difficulty imagining a time in which intense race-consciousness might have served
the occasional useful purpose.
That would be most of the rest of human history.
Labels:
Grace
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Jonah
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Mercy
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Mining the Minors
Friday, January 01, 2021
Too Hot to Handle: Biden Our Time
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a
little more volatile than usual.
Tom: My co-writer Immanuel Can was exchanging opinions online the other day about the prospect of
a Joe Biden presidency. One commenter wrote: “You have mentioned a day of
judgment; perhaps this is how it starts.”
IC’s response: “That thought has occurred to me more than
once.”
Since the
prospect of a Biden presidency (or really a Harris presidency) has been looming
over us during this Christmas season, and since the legacy media is determined
to convince us the November election is a done deal, I’m okay with talking
about what that might mean for believers, for the U.S., and for the
world ... provided I get to say two things first about all the
white flag-waving currently going on in the conservative and Christian media.
Labels:
Democracy
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Fraud
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Joe Biden
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, December 31, 2020
Protecting People from Truth
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Truth
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Witnessing
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Non-Canonical Episodes
Did Jude have the gift of prophecy?
I wonder. It certainly seems a strong possibility. Prophecy
is not merely a feature of the Old Testament, but is also numbered with the gifts given by the Holy Spirit to the New Testament church.
Prophecy was a practical gift. In the early church it also appears
to have been a fairly common one. It did not manifest itself in the expected esoteric, oddball mutterings but rather in “upbuilding and encouragement and consolation”. In this the prophet functioned similarly to the teacher in today’s church.
Tuesday, December 29, 2020
Balancing Act
“A false balance is an abomination to the Lord, but a
just weight is his delight.”
False balances are generally associated with weights and
scales. The idea is that there is an established price quoted per pound, ounce
or liter, but when it comes time to measure out the product, the merchant has rigged
his scales so that the balance shown does not reflect the quantity being
measured, and the purchaser ends up paying for something he is not receiving.
He is being ripped off.
We may come to view being fleeced as the cost of doing
business, but the Lord loathes such practices. He calls them an abomination.
Monday, December 28, 2020
Anonymous Asks (125)
“Did Lot really have sex with his daughters?”
It may surprise you to find that Abraham’s nephew Lot is
mentioned a grand total of 111 times in the Bible. That’s not a lot
compared to David’s 1,100 or Abraham’s 293, but it’s considerably more than
Elijah, Elisha or Daniel, all of whom have major Old Testament roles.
All the same, Lot is more of what we might call a
“supporting actor” than a main character. He is best known for following his
uncle Abraham on his quest for a
city with foundations whose designer and builder is God. But if Lot is known
more for being a follower than a leader, at least he was following a spiritual
giant on a God-directed mission.
So did this godly man have sex with his daughters? Well,
yes, he did.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
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Lot
Sunday, December 27, 2020
The Commentariat Speaks (20)
Owen Cyclops is tweeting about Kirk
Cameron’s cheesy Christian Christmas movie:
“At the end there’s like a 3-4 minute hip hop breakdancing ...
thing, that’s the worst thing in the movie by far. I found this
symbolically perfect because, if every worldview has its strengths and
weaknesses, the weakness for American evangelical Christianity, speaking as an
outsider friend rather than an overly critical foe, is that it has no ‘fence’
or ‘barrier’ to keep stuff like that out, which I suppose is part of the
function of tradition in other manifestations of Christianity.”
I know nothing about Owen beyond what I’ve read in a single
Twitter thread, but one may reasonably infer that he hails from one of these “other
manifestations” of Christianity he refers to, one which offers believers the fence-like
protection of tradition.
Labels:
Bible
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The Commentariat Speaks
Saturday, December 26, 2020
Mining the Minors: Jonah (14)
As finite beings of time and space, we cannot really know
what God’s emotional life is like, or understand the way in which the Divine
Mind makes choices. To imagine we can is simply projection.
In describing these incomprehensible things for us, the
writers of the Bible have painted their picture with the very limited palette
of human language. Moreover, the Spirit of God chose ways of expressing God’s
feelings and actions that would communicate effectively to men and women of widely
different cultures across a period of thousands of years.
I think the result is marvelous. Still, there are
passages with which we struggle. The final verse of Jonah 3 may be one of them.
Labels:
Jonah
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Judgment
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Mining the Minors
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