Jan
29
2014
Looking God in the Eye
The history of mankind is one of good gifts turned into idols. Blessings abused become curses in the hands of those who won’t look God in the eye.
For those of us who know the Bible, the idolatries become more subtle. This was the case for the Pharisees. The exile had purified Israel of old-school idolatry, so she invented a new school: an elitism bound by an Abrahamic heritage and energized by the abuse of Moses and the Law as a means of salvation: heritage instead of faith; obligation instead of salvation. The good things given as gifts once again became the gods.
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2 comments | tags: Baptism, Communion, Covenant Theology, Federal Vision | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, The Last Days
Nov
26
2013
or Nailed to the Mast
Rachel Held Evans is a writer who likes the challenge of “asking tough questions about Christianity in the context of the Bible Belt” while consulting the howling void of modern culture for the answers. That is indeed a challenge. She takes Christians to task for referring to the de-Christianizing of Christmas as “persecution”, offering a helpful chart.
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Comments Off | tags: AD70, Christmas, Doug Wilson, Esther, Mordecai, Paul, Persecution | posted in Apologetics, Christian Life, Ethics, Quotes
Nov
21
2013
“Things ain’t cookin’ in my kitchen
Strange affliction wash over me
Julius Caesar and the Roman Empire
Couldn’t conquer the blue sky…” [1]
Today, the Australian government’s carbon tax repeal bills cleared Parliament’s lower house. They will be voted upon in the Senate next year. To see this reported as an act of climate vandalism by the media isn’t a surprise. What is surprising is the consternation of many Christians.
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5 comments | tags: Covenant Theology, Culture, Economics, Flood, Gary North, Genesis, Postmillennialism, Tas Walker | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Creation, Ethics
Nov
16
2013
How to Fulfill the Law
“…men are enthroned as elohim (judicial ‘gods’) but not as God intended. Those who sit in the seat of Moses often lack his meekness before God, and their rule is like that of Lamech. Their seventy times seven ‘fulfilling of the Law’ is vengeance not forgiveness.”
We continue with the Deuteronomy section of Galatians, which has seven cycles. Paul moves from an Ascension/Firstfruits motif to an Testing/Pentecost motif. Being the center of this final group of cycles, and at the center of its Ethics cycles, here we have its turning point. The first half of this cycle is about sacrificial binding. The last half is about being loosed on account of the sacrifice.
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Comments Off | tags: Galatians, Literary Structure, Paul | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Ethics
Sep
25
2013
“The serious magical endeavour and the serious scientific endeavour are twins: one was sickly and died, the other strong and throve. But they were twins. They were born of the same impulse.”
The Dangerous Trajectory of Those Who Seek to Be Gods
An excerpt from Joe Rigney’s new book, Live Like a Narnian: Christian Discipleship in
Lewis’s Chronicles.
Reading Lewis today, it’s easy to believe that he was a prophet (or at least the son of a prophet). His analysis of education, government, culture, society, and the church has proved to be unusually prescient. One of the chief reasons for this is that Lewis understood the deep reality of narrative, of story, of progression and trajectory.
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Comments Off | tags: C. S. Lewis, Culture, Evolution, Joe Rigney | posted in Apologetics, Christian Life, Quotes
Sep
6
2013
[A helpful review (of sorts) of God’s Kitchen by Dave Bish.]
I’ve been reading Michael Bull’s book God’s Kitchen since a kind brother bought it for me recently.
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7 comments | tags: God's Kitchen | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Quotes
Aug
1
2013
“Every conception and form of liturgy that focuses on man will eventually degenerate into intellectual or psychological manipulation.”
More from Jeff Meyers on The Lord’s Service.
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2 comments | tags: Ecclesiology, Jeff Meyers, Worship | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Quotes
Jul
16
2013
“When Moses slew the Egyptian, he was doing the will of God but not with the power of God.”
Numbers 12:3 says that Moses was the meekest man “on the face of the ground [adamah].”
Psalm 37:11 says the meek will inherit the Land [eretz] and delight in abundant prosperity.
Isaiah 11:4 says that
with righteousness [God] shall judge the poor,
and decide with equity for the meek of the Land;
and he shall strike the Land with the rod of his mouth,
and with the breath of his lips she shall kill the wicked.
Firstly, what is meekness? And secondly, why is it connected to “face of the ground” (Adam), or Land?
This post has been slain and resurrected for inclusion in my 2015 book of essays, Inquietude.
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Comments Off | tags: Ascension, Firstfruits, Genesis, Herod, Isaiah, James Jordan, Matthew, Moses, Pharaoh, Tabernacle | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Ethics, Quotes, The Last Days
Jul
5
2013
or A Kingdom Mind
The best part of the Avengers movie for me was the infighting among the super heroes, and how the conflict disappeared once they had a common enemy. Each hero was unique, with his or her special skills. As in any relationship, marriage, community or committee, the differences are misinterpreted as sources of conflict and competition instead of complementary strengths. Once the heroes were out on the ground, the comical infighting (and misuse of gifts) ceased, and they started operating like the well-tuned orchestra they were designed to be.
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2 comments | tags: Baptism, Covenant Theology, Ecclesiology, Music, Peter Leithart | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Quotes
Jun
27
2013
So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. (Romans 7:21-23)
Interpreters debate the meaning of Paul’s words in Romans 7:14-25. Are we to apply these statements to a Christian or a non-Christian? Could a Christian utter these words? Perhaps a better question is, are these the words of an unregenerate man?
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Comments Off | tags: Numbers, Paul, Romans | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Ethics, The Last Days