Dec
17
2009
“Biblical concern for the poor and the oppressed is manifested through the actions of the church, not through the state. Liberalism, however, has always insisted that statist action, not ecclesiastical action, is the remedy, thus aligning itself with the Beast against the Bride. This is no small matter.”
— James B. Jordan, “The Moral Majority: An Anabaptist Critique” (a review of Robert E. Webber’s The Moral Majority: Right or Wrong?) in Christianity & Civilization #1: The Failure of American Baptist Culture. [PDF]
Comments Off | tags: Culture, James Jordan, Politics | posted in Quotes
Nov
30
2009
Doug Wilson on Twilight:
Let me take this opportunity to point out the theological logic of this whole sorry business, offered as yet another reason why Christians ought to be having nothing whatever to do with this, as I say, sorry business. After all, what sense does it make to say, “Yes, well, I know the writing is terrible, but at least it has lots of Mormon weirdness!”
So there is something of a spoiler here, so if it is your policy to avoid spoilers, then stop reading now. At the end of the series, Bella does get it in the neck, so to speak. She gets vampirized, although I don’t exactly know how, having no intention myself of reading that far. Why does that matter?
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Comments Off | tags: Culture, Doug Wilson, Genesis | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Nov
24
2009
ChristKirk in Moscow, Idaho is plowing ahead with the hard work of congregational psalm singing. If this keeps catching on, walls will come tumbling down.
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1 comment | tags: Christkirk, Culture, Doug Wilson, Music, Psalms, Worship | posted in Biblical Theology
Nov
9
2009
or The Modern Absence of Quest
A review of the movie of Maurice Sendak’s classic children’s book observed that the absence of a quest, something to be overcome or achieved, makes the film bland. It has everything else: family issues, fantastic characters and first-rate special effects. But at the end of the day, without a “holy quest” all that is left is a lot of bumming around discovering how cool the world is. Or, worse, like much modern infants’ education, how cool we are.
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1 comment | tags: Culture, Film, Peter Leithart | posted in Christian Life
Oct
30
2009
or Life in a Trinitarian Universe
Doug Jones writes:
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Comments Off | tags: Culture, Doug Jones | posted in Christian Life, Quotes
Sep
18
2009
I saw in my dream, that the Interpreter took Christian by the hand again, and led him into a very dark room, where there sat a man in an iron cage. Now the man seemed very sad. He sat with his eyes looking down to the ground, and his hands folded together, and he sighed as if his heart would break.
Then said Christian, “Who is this?”
“Talk with him and see,” said the Interpreter.
“What used you to be?” asked Christian.
“I was once a flourishing professor, both in my own eyes, and also in the eyes of others,” answered the man. “I was on my way, as I thought, to the Celestial City and I was confident that I would get there.”
“But what did you do to bring yourself to this condition?” Christian asked.
“I failed to keep watch,” the man replied. “I followed the pleasures of this world, which promised me all manner of delights. But they proved to be an empty bubble. And now I am shut up in this iron cage—a man of despair who can’t get out.”
No further explanations were given. No one said who put him there. But the Interpreter whispered to Christian:
“Bear well in mind what you have seen.” [1]
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Another thought related to the ideas in Behind Closed Doors.
The whole aim of the construction process, whether in sex, foetal development, education, business, art, music, family or state government, is the ultimate revelation of a mature glory. We are given the opportunity to create, and that involves certain God-given freedoms. If the freedoms are abused, what we construct for ourselves is a cage. Lust is a cage. A dysfunctional family or state is a cage. Enforced egalitarian socio-economics is a cage. Undisciplined children are a cage.
Jesus laid down His life for this world, and the freedoms of western culture have been a direct outcome. In its final stages, we have rebelliously inverted each of these freedoms (including the economic ones) and turned both our Christian protection (including our God-given wealth) and Christian mandate into a cage. Ancient Israel did the same. Why does this inversion process seem such a logical path for fallen human nature?
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3 comments | tags: Altar of the Abyss, Babel, Biblical worldview, Culture, Dominion Theology, Doug Wilson, Economics, Incense Altar, John Bunyan, Parenting, Politics, Postmillennialism, Solomon, Tabernacle, Worship, Worship as commerce | posted in Christian Life, Quotes
Sep
18
2009
Excerpts from Peter Leithart’s new book, Deep Exegesis: The Mystery of Reading Scripture:
“My insight, if such it is, into the workings of humour was reinforced and generalised when I watched Shrek, a movie that I now tell my students is a gold mine of hermeneutical insight. All the funny parts of that film assume that the viewer has information the movie does not provide, information from three main sources: nursery rhymes, fairy tales, and popular culture, especially movies…”
Johannine Jokes
…How does all this apply to our reading of Scripture? Scripture has the same literary properties as the texts we have been examining. Just as Eliot read Dante who read Virgil who read Homer, so Matthew had read Jeremiah, who knew Kings (or wrote it), and the writer of Kings had read the Hexateuch. Let us look at some examples. Let me tell some biblical jokes, again taken from John 9.
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Comments Off | tags: Culture, Hermeneutics, John, Joke, Peter Leithart | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Aug
28
2009
“If the academies turned out faithful women armed with Picture Bibles we would be better off than we are with you lot.”
Once upon a time, not far from here, there was a graphic designer who busted a gut for five years teaching the Bible in a local high school. He was committed to building a biblical worldview through the communication of the exciting, terrifying, comforting narratives of the Old Testament as a foundation for the gospel, to a generation starving for this stuff and filling the gap with movies and novels like Harry Potter and Twilight. After all, postmoderns love narrative.
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6 comments | tags: Biblical worldview, Compromise, Culture, Evangelicalism, Gnosticism, Satan | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life
Aug
20
2009
Peter Leithart writes:
Matthew quotes Isaiah 53:4 to explain how Jesus removes illness and uncleanness (Matthew 8:17). Jesus radiates life, and that life heals the sick and raises the dead. Jesus also accepts death and uncleanness on Himself, to be borne away on the cross. Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Culture, Peter Leithart, Temple | posted in Quotes
Aug
12
2009
or The Devil’s Marshmallow
or Dominion by Stealth
NOTE: THIS POST HAS BEEN REMIXED AND INCLUDED IN GOD’S KITCHEN.
I listened to a White Horse Inn podcast recently, titled Boredom and Entertainment.
Compared with an action-packed movie, most people would probably characterise the ministry of the word and sacrament as “boring.” So in order to reach out, should churches make their services more entertaining? Joining the panel for this discussion is Richard Winter, author of Still Bored in a Culture of Entertainment…
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2 comments | tags: Bible Matrix, Culture, Film, Postmillennialism | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Creation