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Thursday, May 31, 2018
Wednesday, May 30, 2018
Recommend-a-blog (28)
Adam Ford is the guy who started the Christian news satire site Babylon Bee. If you’ve
missed that so far, well, that’s probably okay, provided you have no sense of
humor. If you do, it’s a little bit like having missed Monty Python’s Flying
Circus (minus the occasional bout of virulent rudeness) in the early seventies.
Except with the Bee, more often than not there’s a sharp spiritual point to go with the guffaws.
Adam sold the Bee a month ago to concentrate on his new project, the Christian Daily Reporter,
a plain-Jane news aggregator. CDR is ... well, why don’t I let Adam tell you in
his own words?
Labels:
Internet
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Recommend-a-blog
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Revelation
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Social Media
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
A Brush Too Broad
Albert Mohler says, “The [Southern Baptist
Convention] is in the midst of its own horrifying #MeToo moment,” and adds, “The
judgment of God has come.”
It started with public outrage over some seriously bad advice in a years-old sermon illustration from the ex-president of an SBC seminary. Other comments made by Paige Patterson apparently
objectified a teenage girl, and the list has since gotten longer, as The Atlantic documents here.
Naturally, sides have been taken, and the resulting scandal threatens to tear apart the SBC. No wonder Mohler is deeply
concerned.
Labels:
Abuse
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Al Mohler
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Sexual Harassment
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Southern Baptist Convention
Monday, May 28, 2018
That Wacky Old Testament (11)
A hundred years ago the social safety net didn’t exist. The earliest U.S. government assistance
program was conceived in 1910 and most of the rest were enacted post-1935.
Sure, there have always been rich parents that coddled their children through adulthood, handing
them fully-operational businesses to destroy or trust funds to bleed dry. And
there may even have been a certain number of less-well-off parents willing to
sacrifice their meager savings on a dissolute youngster who stubbornly refused
to pull his weight and bear his family responsibilities.
But beyond the family level, no institutions existed to provide for the welfare of society at large.
There was no taxpayer-financed crutch available to help failed or unfortunate
citizens get back on their feet.
Good thing times have changed. Or maybe not.
Labels:
Deuteronomy
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Exodus
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Social Justice
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That Wacky Old Testament
Sunday, May 27, 2018
On the Mount (32)
The world is brim-full of good causes. There’s no end of
things with which a genuine altruist may busy himself in seeking to do good to
his fellow man.
In the Christian life, few truly “good” works involve status
or recognition, but those which do almost always attract the worst elements.
Simon the magician was so entranced at the prospect of being able to confer the
Holy Spirit through the laying on of hands that he begged the apostles,
“Give me this power also.” Likewise, the seven sons of the Jewish high priest Sceva got excited about driving out evil spirits.
You may remember both stories ended badly for the would-be
doers of good.
Labels:
Judgment
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Matthew
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On the Mount
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Service
Saturday, May 26, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (8)
You may not put it that way, of course. Reading the Bible may never have presented itself to you
as some kind of quest for understanding. You may think of it as just enjoying
the word of God. Or you may have been trained from childhood to read your Bible
every day “just because”, and so you keep doing it like a robot. You may do it grudgingly,
conscious that your life is insanely busy and twenty minutes every morning is often
an imposition. Or you may go to the word of God and dig through it regularly in
order to better understand yourself, your world and, most importantly, your
Lord and Savior.
Whatever your motivation, if you’re reading God’s word and trying to put its principles into practice,
you are becoming more skilled at living life every single day whether you
notice it or not.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
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Wisdom
Friday, May 25, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: From the Pit of Hell
In which our regular writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
The man who would be president, former nominee Mitt Romney, is troubled that a minister from Dallas has been asked to
open the new U.S. embassy in Jerusalem with a prayer.
Romney’s objection?
“Robert Jeffress says ‘you can’t be saved by being a Jew,’ and ‘Mormonism is a heresy
from the pit of hell.’ He’s said the same about Islam.”
Tom: Oh dear. Let’s talk a little bit about so-called religious bigotry,
IC. What do you think: is “pit of hell” maybe a tad strong?
Labels:
Ecumenicalism
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Intolerance
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Offences
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 24, 2018
Bottom of the Ninth
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Lies
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Ten Commandments
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Truth
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
That Sinking Feeling
In Luke’s gospel we read about the Lord conferring to his twelve disciples power and
authority over all demons and diseases. Thus
equipped, he then sends them out to heal and proclaim the kingdom of God. Upon their return the disciples report to him all that they
have done, which suggests at least a moderate degree of success in their
mission.
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
TLDR
Have you see that short form online? Know
what it signifies? Your kids do, guaranteed.
“TLDR”, “tl;dr” and other variants simply mean “Too Long, Didn’t Read”. They are an admission of intellectual laziness
delivered with trademark millennial bravado; a backhanded shot in the chops to
a writer who probably labored over words about to be summarily ignored. They
are also almost invariably accompanied by a disparaging comment about the thing
not-quite-read.
Farhad Manjoo over at Slate has a fascinating piece about
how people read online. The upshot: they don’t. Well, not very well at least.
Monday, May 21, 2018
Say Yes to the Dress
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Bride of the Lamb
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Revelation
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Romans
Sunday, May 20, 2018
On the Mount (31)
Here’s one of very few Greek words that are easily understood without consulting a concordance: pseudoprophÄ“tÄ“s, meaning “false prophets”. To call something “pseudo”
or “pseud” these days is to see right through it and recognize it as phony. The
prophētēs part kind of translates itself.
But we live in a day when, as C.S. Lewis put it, “The dwarves are for the dwarves.” We pride ourselves
on being sufficiently cynical to see through everything, to the point where
many of us see nothing at all.
Labels:
False Prophets
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Fruit
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Matthew
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On the Mount
Saturday, May 19, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (7)
Have you ever taken
one of those biological age tests that are all the rage on the internet? (Warning: most are designed to pitch you
something at the end.)
There is probably some marginal utility to such things. Obviously you have an actual age, and that age
cannot change; the year you were born is the year you were born. But the
medical reality at the root of these tests is that the number and intensity of
stressors in your daily life tend to shorten it, while the absence of such
stressors will, at very least, not make things any worse. Thus your “biological age”, as these folks define it, is something akin to your own personal doomsday clock.
Do you smoke? Lose five years. More than two drinks a day? Ooh, you’re in trouble. Hate your job
or sleep too little? Another strike or two. Depending on your situation and
habits, you may start to wonder why you haven’t keeled over already.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Jehovah
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Proverbs
Friday, May 18, 2018
Too Hot to Handle: The Greatest Threat
In which our regular
writers toss around subjects a little more volatile than usual.
Immanuel Can: Wow. Brian McLaren. I’m not the biggest fan of his work, to be sure. I read his book A New Kind of Christian, and thought it touched on quite a few important issues, but made the most unfortunate hash of them imaginable. But for charity’s sake, let’s assume that’s the ancient past, so full steam ahead.
“The greatest threat to Christianity is ... misguided Christians, just as the greatest threat to Islam is misguided Muslims and the greatest threat to Judaism is misguided Jews. Religious insiders can do harm to their religion in ways that outsiders never could. This is especially true in a pluralistic world, where religions are credible to the degree they bring benefits to outsiders.”
— Brian McLaren
What does he mean?
Labels:
Christian Testimony
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Israel
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Recycling
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Too Hot to Handle
Thursday, May 17, 2018
Brains With Feet
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Apologetics
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Holistic Faith
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Intelligence
Wednesday, May 16, 2018
Baiting and Switching
J.T. Wynn’s debut column at Stand to Reason certainly doesn’t
waste any time getting around to the really big questions; in this case, What
is Truth?
Strictly speaking, I suppose Wynn doesn’t answer the question, but that’s not really the point of
his post. In any case, his account of two teachers who conflated truth with
perception will definitely ring a bell with recent university or college grads,
and with anyone who has watched more than a few minutes of Jordan Peterson on
YouTube.
Redefining common words is a useful way to skew an argument, muddle an otherwise simple issue, or
advance an agenda. Thus Christians need to be able to identify and counter the
ol’ bait-and-switch when we run into it.
Labels:
Jordan Peterson
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Stand to Reason
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Truth
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Quote of the Day (39)
In his book Do We Need God to be Good? anthropologist C.R. Hallpike quotes mathematician Kevin Devlin:
“Whatever features of our brain enable (some of) us to do mathematics must have been
present long before we had any mathematics. Those crucial features, therefore,
must have evolved to fulfil some other purpose.”
This sort of statement is incredibly common among evolutionary psychologists and biologists, but “some other [undefined] purpose”
is pretty much the best they have to offer the world. The gaping holes in their
theoretical framework are orders of magnitude larger than the frame itself,
calling their entire dubious intellectual structure into question.
Labels:
C.R. Hallpike
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Evolution
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Jordan Peterson
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Psychology
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Quote of the Day
Monday, May 14, 2018
Achan and Eve
The most recent version of this post is available here.
Labels:
Church
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False Teachers
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Genesis
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Joshua
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Sin
Sunday, May 13, 2018
On the Mount (30)
The way is hard that leads to life. Ain’t that the
truth. Maybe in more ways than we are usually inclined to consider.
Matthew 7:13 is generally read as having to do with a man or woman’s ultimate fate: eternity in hell on the one hand;
eternal life in fellowship with God on the other. These are the highest and most
personal stakes for which human beings have ever played. In the face of everlasting
separation from God and all that is good, it should be obvious that the horrors of war, the nuclear arms
race and our current inability to cure cancer pale into comparative
insignificance.
Understandably, we will wish to choose carefully.
Labels:
John
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Life
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Matthew
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On the Mount
Saturday, May 12, 2018
How Not to Crash and Burn (6)
David Gooding has a knack for taking great
wedges of ancient text and breaking them down into manageable chunks of related
material, then dissecting those pieces line by line until we are able to think
clearly about them. That’s not unique to Gooding of course — all decent Bible
teachers do it — but I especially appreciate his sensitivity to the
natural flow of poetry, narrative or argument. I have yet to find him analyzing
a passage and think Boy, that structure
he’s describing looks awfully artificial.
To the extent we are up to the job, it’s a useful trick to imitate.
Labels:
How Not to Crash and Burn
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Proverbs
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Wisdom
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