Ideas Have Consequences—Cultural Marxism Has Victims
The reason this oppressor/oppressed binary narrative is so evil is that it is substituted for Biblical one.
Of course, those with power oppress those with less. That is an obvious conclusion from biblical teaching about how the fall corrupted human nature. But the radical fall of Adam’s race transmitted his sinful nature to all humans, not just the rich. Using the oppressor/oppressed lens of Marx to interpret all of history and explain... Continue Reading
The Enchanted Realism of “All Creatures Great and Small”
An essay on television’s best show.
The five major characters of “All Creatures” are each a finely-honed individual. None of them are perfect; all of them have flaws; they all fight realistic battles. Though the show is not a Christian show in explicit form, it overlaps significantly with a Christian vision of life in a fallen world. In fact, I think... Continue Reading
Church Government in the Apostolic Period
Some thoughts on the church and church government in the apostolic period.
In the New Testament the house church was common. Judging from Paul’s references in Romans 16:5,10,11,14 & 15, there were at least five house churches in Rome, a city commonly estimated to have a population of a million. Links between these gatherings would have been close. But generally we do not find the infant churches... Continue Reading
Shepherds on the Titanic
Megan Basham may very well be right about a lot of things, but it just isn’t clear to me why anyone should be all that concerned about the deck chairs on the Titanic.
Basham has named names and provided copious footnotes detailing public comments, tweets (or now “posts”), and other bits of the record. She goes after powerful and popular figures like Tim Keller, J.D. Greear, and Rick Warren. I really have no reason to believe, however, that any of it is done in bad faith, despite accusations... Continue Reading
The Trouble with Treacherous Servants
What 2 Samuel can teach us about technology.
Indispensable servants are always at risk of becoming oppressive masters. Humanity has always known this; it is only recently that our technologies have become so useful as to replace human servants and occupy this ambivalent position, leaving their owners and users reduced to the spectacle of pathetic Ish-bosheths—unable to live with them or without them.... Continue Reading
Why Bother If It’s All Going to Burn Up Anyway?
The scoffers will be proved wrong, and Jesus will return, and it will purify this earth and all that is done on it.
Peter may have meant that the earth and all the works done on it will be exposed, in the sense of being judged, which would fit the broader context of his argument quite well. He may also have meant that the earth and all the works done on it will be refined, a quite intriguing... Continue Reading
The Autonomy Trap
Is commitment just for suckers? A conversion story.
Safety, I assumed, required freedom from others: freedom from commitment, something as close to full material and psychological autonomy as possible. But freedom from others had left me enslaved to an untethered, empty self. In these times it became obvious that the freedom I was pursuing turned out to be utter isolation. Maybe I could... Continue Reading
God Is Trustworthy Even When He Seems Absent
No scheme of man will override the providence of God for his people.
Knowing God’s providence doesn’t guarantee easy sleep. It isn’t Nyquil. We may go to bed every night feeling like the Hamans of the world will still win. Trusting in God’s providence isn’t magic. It’s a daily habit of remembering the gospel. The gospel is the greatest evidence of God’s providence. God plans, accomplishes and applies... Continue Reading
The Deeper Meaning Behind Isaiah 22:13: A Call to Repentance
The people were called to repent, for judgment was at hand.
Humanity is often guilty of mockery towards God and His providential judgments. Franz Delitzsch explained, “The sin of Jerusalem is expiated by the giving up of the sinners themselves to death.” Ironically, this prophecy becomes a warning more than an actual foretelling of an event where the Assyrians face destruction from Jerusalem. “And behold... Continue Reading
Are We the Bad Guys?
Reflections on Churchill.
It’s easier, in a sense, to accept that we were never morally good and never civilizationally great than it is to accept that we had something great, and we squandered it. But that’s the truth. Two inconceivably destructive World Wars destroyed Europe’s soul, killed off many of its best men, and devastated the old aristocracies.... Continue Reading
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 20
- 21
- 22
- 23
- 24
- …
- 132
- Next Page »