Jun
11
2010
I’m sure I’ve seen the same look in Doug Wilson’s eyes.
The Bible and only the Bible is the ultimate and infallible spiritual authority in the lives of believers. We have fought a series of skirmishes over the infallibility of Scripture.
But, who today believes as Calvin did? Who today treats the Bible as Calvin did? Who today thinks that the Bible opened in the pulpit is a lit stick of dynamite, one that mere mortals are ordained to just throw out into the world? How many preachers have sermons on file that they would not dare to preach without purchasing some extra life insurance first?
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Comments Off | tags: Calvin, Doug Wilson, Paul, Spurgeon | posted in Quotes
Jun
8
2010
“Then all the people shouted with a great shout, when they praised the LORD, because the foundation of the house of the LORD was laid. But many of the priests and Levites and heads of the fathers’ houses, old men who had seen the first temple, wept with a loud voice when the foundation of this temple was laid before their eyes.” Ezra 3:11-12
Doug Wilson writes (Less Glory Is More):
The Bible teaches us that the times of the new covenant are attended with a greater glory than the old covenant, as well as with a greater simplicity. In effect, that simplicity is part of the glory.
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2 comments | tags: AD70, Communion, Covenant Theology, Doug Wilson, Ezekiel's Temple, Ezra, Solomon, Totus Christus | posted in Quotes, The Last Days, The Restoration Era
May
24
2010
“So he drove out the man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life.” Genesis 3:24
“And Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, took either of them his censer, and put fire therein, and put incense thereon, and offered strange fire before the LORD, which he commanded them not. And there went out fire from the LORD, and devoured them, and they died before the LORD.” Leviticus 10:1-2
From Doug Wilson, Cutting Off The Buttons:
The world around us is an unfolding story. The world around us is not a plastic diorama behind the glass in a museum. The kind of objective truth that the faithful Christian insists upon is not to be found in plastic objects that never move, even if their immobility might be a catechetical aid to the bus tours of schoolchildren who come through.
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Comments Off | tags: Compromise, Culture, Doug Wilson, Genesis, Leviticus | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
May
20
2010
“God is up to something, and He is taking us all the way through.”
“Now this is the main point of the things we are saying: We have such a High Priest, who is seated at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens…” Hebrews 8:1
Conservative Christian people know and understand that we deserve to be brought low. We know and understand the Law of God. We know our own sinfulness. We are very aware of how we fall short in many ways. We know that the holiness of God casts us down. This is all good, as far as it goes. This is healthy, as far as it goes. This is much needed in our day, as far as it goes. But we need to follow God’s purposes all the way out.
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Comments Off | tags: Ascension, Crucifixion, Doug Wilson, Faith, Paul, Power of the Gospel, Resurrection | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
May
15
2010
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More on a “temporary” New Jerusalem…
We are establishing the colonies of heaven here, now. When we die, we get the privilege of visiting the heavenly motherland, which is quite different from moving there permanently. After this brief visit, the Lord will bring us back here for the final and great transformation of the colonists (and the colonies). In short, our time in heaven is the intermediate state. It is not the case that our time here is the intermediate state. There is an old folk song that says, “This world is not my home, I’m just passing through.” This captures the mistake almost perfectly. But as the saints gather in heaven—which is the real intermediate state—the growing question is, “When do we get to go back home?” And so this means that heaven is the place that we are just passing through.
— Doug Wilson, Heaven Misplaced, p. 24.
2 comments | tags: Doug Wilson, Postmillennialism | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Apologetics, Biblical Theology, Quotes, The Restoration Era, Totus Christus
Mar
19
2010
There’s nothing better than theologians who basically agree on lots debating the finer points. Jordan and Wilson have different ideas on what a classical education should consist of. Somehow, I agree with both of them. Typical fanboy. You can watch the video here.
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Comments Off | tags: Doug Wilson, James Jordan, Totus Christus | posted in Christian Life, Totus Christus
Feb
6
2010
or What’s Wrong with this Picture?
“When I began to edit the film, something happened. I found I was being educated. And not just with arguments. I was watching a Christian life. I was seeing a Christian man.” —Darren Doane
Just watched The History Boys, a film based on an entertaining but self-indulgent West End play by Alan Bennett. Despite the fact that under Course Language and Sexual References it should also have a “gay theme” warning (but I guess that’s not politically correct), the film is hysterical is places and unwittingly highlights a fatal flaw in our culture.
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2 comments | tags: Christopher Hitchens, Culture, Darren Doane, Doug Wilson, Film, Masculinity, Parenting | posted in Christian Life, Ethics, Quotes
Feb
2
2010
“Idolatry is the attempt to squeeze out of a finite thing what only the infinite can provide. When we turn away from what the infinite God has supplied for us, we are forced to try to get more from the rest of the world than it can possibly provide. This is because God has set eternity in our hearts, and we seek out eternal things wherever we go, whatever we do.”
—Doug Wilson
Comments Off | tags: Doug Wilson | posted in Christian Life, Quotes
Jan
26
2010
or James Jordan’s Big Hammer
“My God, it’s full of stars!”
One of the reasons I appreciate James Jordan is his ability to identify the “universals” in Scripture. Understanding these recurring themes answers many questions and solves many mysteries. These universal “roles” and events all point forward to the events of the first century. For instance, we cannot understand what the apostles meant by the phrase “the sons of God” without checking its history in the Old Testament. [1]
The danger with dealing in all the “big picture” stuff is that it can become self-serving. The heart is deceitfully wicked, and theology can become a kind of escapism, an ideology. Like the worst of the 20th century’s political ideologies, it can be divorced from reality so that in practice it rides roughshod over people to achieve its goals. Any big theology must maintain a big pastoral heart.
[This post has been refined and included in Sweet Counsel: Essays to Brighten the Eyes.]
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2 comments | tags: Doug Wilson, James Jordan, Literary Structure, Postmillennialism, Typology | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life
Jan
20
2010
Here’s a charming quote discovered and posted by Doug Wilson over a year ago. Being exactly the opposite of the so-called “party” image portrayed on TV and in glossy mags, it kind of stuck with me. It is not sinful like they are, yet it is so “incorrect” that it must be true.
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2 comments | tags: David, Doug Wilson, Ecclesiology, Esther, Food laws, Postmillennialism, Robert Farrar Capon, Saul, Solomon | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life