May
15
2010
“Behold, I make all things new” is not something that
we are allowed to say—and it doesn’t work anyhow.
The Sin of the Revolutionary Mind
by Tim Nichols
We worship in heaven, and we are unified with those who join us there in worship—including those believers in other nations, and those who died long before us. This unity surpasses any earthly tie, including ties of where you were born—or when.
The saints of every age and place are Our People, and we should hear the voices of those who have gone before us. They are sinners, and they can be wrong. But so can we, and so we listen to their wise counsel, and—as always—measure everything by Scripture. We cannot be revolutionaries, because we belong to a long line of people from whom we cannot separate, even though we may want to.
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3 comments | tags: Communism, Culture, Ecclesiology, Reformation, Revolution, Tim Nichols, Worship | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Jan
21
2010
A quote from a great book I picked up today. Observations from an (atheistic, agnostic?) Roman Catholic perspective, but, as the blurb says: ‘far from losing himself in a thicket of erudition, Debray knows how to touch on the essential.’
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Comments Off | tags: Bible history, Ecclesiology, Regis Debray | posted in Quotes
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
Sep
30
2009
Roman Catholics like to remind us Protestants that the Reformation’s sola scriptura has caused unmitigated doctrinal division. Interpretation must be done in community by people who know what they are talking about.
In his talk this week (see previous post Heliocentric Preaching), Doug Wilson humourously described the “just me and my Bible” people who fail to realise that the Bible itself calls us to theology in community. We all need teachers, and the Bible is written the way it is so we are forced into some sort of discipleship. Left alone with our Bibles, we are all Ethiopian eunuchs.
So regarding sola scriptura and interpretive authority, I kind of agree with the Catholics! It has always been something done by the church community.[1]
H O W E V E R . . .
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1 comment | tags: AD70, Atonement, Church History, Compromise, Doug Wilson, Ecclesiology, Reformation, Reformers, Roman Catholicism, Tim Nichols | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Christian Life, The Last Days
Sep
23
2009
or Suckers for Systems
God chooses certain men to do great works. Their work is duplicated and multiplied in the institutions they found. When these men are gone, those who remain tend to rely on systems. The machine must be maintained for pride’s sake, regardless of whether it is being used by God or not. This violates two basic biblical principles.
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Comments Off | tags: Church Growth, Church History, Discipleship, Ecclesiology, James Jordan, Postmillennialism, Watchman Nee | posted in Christian Life, Quotes
May
11
2009
Abraham had gone to extreme measures to make sure Isaac didn’t intermarry with Canaan and pollute the promise. He sent his most faithful servant as a forerunner to find a bride for his son. Like John the Forerunner, the most faithful servant found the beautiful bride, Rebekah, by the water in a garden of God. And like Paul the apostle, the servant adorned her with gold in preparation for her presentation to the Bridegroom. Like Herod and the Jews, Laban and his mother didn’t want to let her go, and were given no choice but to bless her with their riches.
Comments Off | tags: Abraham, Ecclesiology, Herod, Isaac, John the Baptist, Laban, Paul | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus
Apr
23
2009
“…Powers don’t enjoy being exposed as frauds, and so the Church, like Jesus, has often provoked vicious opposition. But the effort of the powers to shore up their position is hopeless. The worst they can do is kill Christians, but that just means the cross gets repeated over and over, repeatedly revealing the iron fist beneath the velvet glove. Against a cruciform Church, the powers are helpless as babes.
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Comments Off | tags: Ecclesiology, Peter Leithart, Postmillennialism, Revolution | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Apr
16
2009
Garden
Christ reclaimed Adam’s garden and disarmed Satan by dying.
Land
The “son of man” (Christ’s body, the church) reclaimed Abel’s land and disarmed his Canaanite older brother in the Land by dying.
World
With the razing of Cain’s city, Jerusalem, the Christ’s Dominion expanded from Land to World, from brothers to children, from Abel to Seth. As the sons of God, we disarm the “daughters of men” culture around us by dying. We die to our predatory desires, and if necessary, we die physically as a witness. Kingdom expansion is always bought with blood. As with Job, our innocent suffering shames and disarms predatory powers and thus renews the world.
(See also Postmillennial Suffering)
Comments Off | tags: Abel, AD70, Adam, Cain, Canaanites, Crucifixion, Ecclesiology, Martyrdom, Satan, Seth, Totus Christus, Witness | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
16
2009
“Because of Christ we are thought of as fools, but Christ has made you wise. We are weak and hated, but you are powerful and respected. Even today we go hungry and thirsty and don’t have anything to wear except rags. We are mistreated and don’t have a place to live. We work hard with our own hands, and when people abuse us, we wish them well. When we suffer, we are patient. When someone curses us, we answer with kind words. Until now we are thought of as nothing more than the trash and garbage of this world.” 1 Corinthians 4:10-13
So, are God’s people to wear rags? Or should they be dressed well like Solomon or the woman in Proverbs 31? Or is that even the right question?
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Comments Off | tags: Adam, Corinthians, Daniel, Ecclesiology, Ezekiel, Ezra, Joseph, Maturity, Mordecai, Nehemiah, Noah, Paul, Proverbs, Robes, Solomon | posted in Biblical Theology, Totus Christus
Apr
15
2009
Is that all there is to it?
“Can it really be so simple?” That is the feeling we have about the church. She has been given a mission of global conquest. As Rudolf Schnackenburg has explained, “Through the Church, Christ wins increasingly his dominion over all things and draws them ever more powerfully and completely beneath himself as head… the Church’s mission is necessary and willed by Christ to bring the world of men and with this the whole of creation under his rule.” One cannot conceive of a more astounding project. Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Baptism, Ecclesiology, Holy war, Peter Leithart, Power of the Gospel, Worship | posted in Biblical Theology