G.J. Wenham suggests the nomadic lifestyle of the shepherd tended to foster mistrust in ancient societies, as plausible an explanation as any other for the low estimation of the profession in the eyes of the elite. But though the Egyptians disparaged herdsmen, God uses the term as a compliment, and he called some of the greatest men in Israel’s history from among the flock.
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Saturday, February 06, 2021
Friday, February 05, 2021
Too Hot to Handle: He Made Them Male and Female
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Roles
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, February 04, 2021
Horrific Hymnology
Moreover, if anyone did not agree with me
about their selections for congregational singing, I did not want to pass any
judgment on them. After all, we all stand or fall to our own Master. So if the
hymns and songs somebody else’s congregation wants to sing don’t square with
the sort of list I would choose, I say, “No hard feelings.” I am not the last
word in musical orthodoxy.
Labels:
Christian Music
/
Hymns
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Recycling
Wednesday, February 03, 2021
Ezekiel and the Future of Palestine
The student of history
encounters arguments for both sides, most of which transparently serve
the agendas of their writers and pass themselves off as factual while trading
largely on sentiment. But any careful reader of scripture understands that the
Jewish claim to the land of Palestine goes back a whole lot further than
May 15, 1948.
Having been unilaterally gifted the land
then called Canaan via God’s covenant with their forefather Abraham around
2000 BC, Israel has spent more time in exile from the land of promise than
actually living there.
Labels:
Ezekiel
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Israel
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Palestinians
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Prophecy
/
Recycling
Tuesday, February 02, 2021
It Ain’t Personal
Spiritual leadership is not easy.
Perhaps that’s part of
the reason so few Christians seem to seek it, especially these days. But unless
we opt out of family life and church life entirely, most of us are faced with a
certain amount of responsibility, like it or not.
Elders are leaders. And
in fact every Bible teacher, formal or otherwise, leads too. The act of writing
down or publicly giving voice to a spiritual conviction is invariably an act of
leadership that declares, “This way, not that way” or at least “This means X,
it doesn’t mean Y”, no matter how delicately or deferentially one chooses to formulate one’s opinion. In addition, all mothers and fathers lead their children,
or else their lives quickly devolve into an endless series of rather potent
miseries.
Labels:
Leadership
/
Moses
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Recycling
/
Samuel
Monday, February 01, 2021
Anonymous Asks (130)
“Should children be told Santa is fake?”
We can probably include the tooth fairy in this conversation
as well. I think it’s fairly clear that if you pick up a Hebrew or Greek
concordance, you will have great difficulty locating an equivalent for either “Santa”
or “fairy”. The Bible does not address such questions directly.
So, I am trying
to think back to my own childhood in a Christian home, asking myself how my
parents handled this ...
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Lies
/
Parenting
/
Santa Claus
Sunday, January 31, 2021
Nothing New Under the Sun
If the shifting political and social narratives of the last
several years have not convinced you that the vast majority of the general
public are being lied to deliberately and repeatedly, then probably nothing
will.
For myself, I am convinced that no matter the subject,
just about the only story that isn’t accurate in any given news cycle is the
one being told to us by politicians, corporations and media; the one which is
said to be most popularly acceptable, and the one its authors are at greatest
pains to preserve by censoring any contradictory information or expression of
opinion that might make it less persuasive.
Labels:
Acts
/
Apostle Paul
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Lies
/
Propaganda
Saturday, January 30, 2021
Mining the Minors: Jonah (19)
In the last
five months I have written slightly under 26,000 words and
19 blog posts about the book of Jonah. That’s less than many, but more
than most. Needless to say, I take the story of the rebel Israelite
prophet very seriously indeed. Jesus
viewed it as historical, and that seems to me the way it ought to be
regarded.
Nowadays we are being told Jonah is actually a comedy. My idea of comedy basically begins and ends with Dick Van Dyke and Monty Python’s Flying Circus. Jonah most definitely is not in that vein at all.
So did I miss the boat, so to speak? Is laughter really the best medicine? While the view of Jonah as satire, parody or farce is not common in the churches in which I normally circulate, a few liberal Bible scholars with degrees and big reputations have written to that effect, and we should probably take at least take a few paragraphs to consider their position.
Labels:
Humour
/
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
Friday, January 29, 2021
Too Hot to Handle: Abandoning Evangelicalism
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Division
/
Evangelicalism
/
Politics
/
Rachel Held Evans
/
Social Justice
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, January 28, 2021
Wednesday, January 27, 2021
You Worship WHAT?
Debate.org asked the following question: “If there is a god, does
that being necessarily deserve worship?”
Get this: 73% said no. Are you surprised?
Probably not. But ignorant as it may be, perhaps
the logic and underlying assumptions of the “no” brigade are worth a moment’s
consideration.
Tuesday, January 26, 2021
Binary Thinking
How we choose to express disagreement is often more important than what we are disagreeing about in the first place.
Some folks have a tendency to take aim
at the most ridiculous, transparently caricatured representation of the side they
oppose. I used to put it down to straw-manning. I considered people who argued this way manipulative and calculating.
Now I wonder.
Monday, January 25, 2021
Anonymous Asks (129)
“What’s the difference between encouragement and flattery?”
Years ago, I got together for coffee with an elder from a
church where I had enjoyed happy fellowship for several years. This was
not the first time and it wouldn’t be the last; he is one of those godly older
men who takes the job of shepherding very seriously indeed, and he kept track
of me long after I had moved out of town and was no longer, strictly
speaking, his “spiritual business”.
I had worn a particularly goofy, juvenile T-shirt to the
coffee shop, and as we sat down together, he shot me a wry grin and asked, “So,
when are you going to grow up?”
That was encouragement. It sure wasn’t flattery.
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Encouragement
Sunday, January 24, 2021
A Built-In Self-Destruct Button
If you have spent a lot of time reading the Old Testament
and trying to get into the mindset of the average law-abiding Jew, you probably
agree with me that Christian freedom is a marvelous thing.
The believer’s relationship to the Law of Moses is one of
the most misunderstood aspects of Christian life, notwithstanding statements like
“For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore, and do
not submit again to a yoke of slavery” and “If the Son sets you
free, you
will be free indeed.”
But freedom is not something we human beings do easily or
naturally. We prefer rule-keeping.
Labels:
Law
/
Moses
/
Ten Commandments
Saturday, January 23, 2021
Mining the Minors: Jonah (18)
When God
gives a mission to one of his servants, there is always more than
one thing going on. He is not just sending a message or getting a job done,
but also teaching his most faithful followers more about himself.
We should
expect this. He is God, after all. If anyone is equipped to play
multi-dimensional chess, it is the Divine Mind.
Labels:
Fellowship
/
Jonah
/
Mining the Minors
Friday, January 22, 2021
Too Hot to Handle: Getting Reoriented
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Homosexuality
/
Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, January 21, 2021
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
Creating Cognitive Dissonance
A little over a week ago, I was watching one of those
bog-standard political videos you find on YouTube these days: you know, the
ones where a conservative interviews a group of young Leftists without revealing
his own political leanings. He asks each interviewee a series of apparently
random questions about what they believe, after which the results are cleverly
edited together to demonstrate the rank hypocrisy of Progressivist thinking.
In this case the subjects being discussed were tolerance and
compromise, and the results were absolutely predictable. Every young Lefty
being interviewed claimed tolerance was the most important of all values
and that compromise was critical when engaging in political discourse, but of course
the moment they were given a list of specific conservative values and areas of
possible agreement with the Right, it turned out they were all hopelessly
intolerant and refused to compromise on anything at all.
“Aha!” said the conservative writers and editors.
“Hypocrisy!” Well, no. Not exactly.
Labels:
Ideology
/
Leftism
/
Progressivism
Tuesday, January 19, 2021
Not Her Voice
Everybody wants to be heard. That’s understandable.
To understand and be fully understood is one of the greatest possible states to which human beings may aspire. When perfection comes, “I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known,” says the apostle.
That suggests very strongly that those of us who have a relationship with Jesus Christ are already as fully known as we will ever need or want to be. Think about that for a bit.
Labels:
Dinah
/
Inspiration
/
Recycling
/
Scripture
Monday, January 18, 2021
Anonymous Asks (128)
“Should God choose our mate?”
That’s an interesting question, and I think the answer
may have a bit of both yes and no in it. Obvious comeback: If he did, how
would you know? What would that look like? What evidence would you need to feel
confident God had stepped into your personal circumstances and ordered your
future living arrangements?
There are definitely Christians who think this is precisely
what happens; perhaps not in every case, but at least in those where a man commits
his way to the Lord in prayer, or a woman seeks God’s will for her in the
matter of marriage. I will not argue with anyone who feels that way, but
again, that’s all it is: a feeling.
Unless of course you can produce evidence ...
Labels:
Anonymous Asks
/
Marriage
/
Will of God
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