Intellectual Excercises
The goal of God's revelation is the utter absorption of the mind of the new humanity in the contemplation and adoration of the eternal God.
The issues raised by the Christian faith are not (of course) merely academic. They are issues of life and death. But they are intellectual, for they have to do with the truth. And the best academic traits—patience, fairness, orderliness, clarity—are graces that the Church ought to covet. The idea that the Christian faith is... Continue Reading
Ready…Steady…Go!
The proof and fruit of saving grace is sanctified hearts in ready, faithful, servants.
Are we not examples to the flock that we feed? Should we not be at the front of the queue in visiting persecuted believers, tending the sick, clothing the naked, welcoming immigrants, supplying hungry Christians, or helping those who struggle while engaged in Kingdom business? In my personal devotions this morning I was forcibly... Continue Reading
Your Listening Habits Are Harming Your Relationship with God
No one is listening, even though most people are talking, texting, or typing.
We need daily time with God in his Word and in prayer, as well as time with God’s people (Heb. 10:25). We need time to hear God’s story to teach us about how things really are. We need time to turn off the noise and listen to his goodness again—first, in his Word and second,... Continue Reading
How Does Jesus’ Temptation Link Him to Israel?
He came to do what Israel had failed to do.
No sooner had God brought His son (Ex. 4:22), Israel, out of Egypt and through the waters that He brought him into the wilderness for forty years—to be tested by Him and tempted by the evil one. In similar fashion, after bringing Jesus up out of Egypt (Matt. 2:15) and through the waters of baptism,... Continue Reading
There Are No Extraordinary Means
Ordinary means are so much better.
Recently in my reading I came across this sentence from a theologian and it stopped me in my tracks: “There are no extraordinary means of grace in the Christian life.” I lingered over that line for a while as it delivered a broadside to most of my Christian walk. How many years have I spent... Continue Reading
Were the Gospels Meant to Be Taken as Historical Testimony?
If the most comprehensive accounts of the life of Jesus were never intended to provide us with historical testimony, any further discussion about the resurrection of Jesus or the trustworthiness of the Bible is pointless.
No one denies that the earliest records of the life of Jesus were based on the testimonies of women and men who had committed themselves to follow Jesus—but a text doesn’t become unhistorical simply because it happens to be a testimony as well. The crucial question isn’t whether testimonies from believers in Jesus were some... Continue Reading
Who’s Afraid of John Calvin? Answer: Thomas Jefferson
Jefferson and his relationship to Calvinism seem worth revisiting in light of the ongoing conversation regarding Christianity and the civil order among conservative Christian intellectuals.
[Jefferson] hated Calvin for many reasons, but he held an especially impassioned loathing for the French Reformer’s throaty trinitarianism and the doctrine of election. Calvin, in Jefferson’s reading of history, represented the clearest intellectual successor to the medieval Christian order he despised. He compared what he called the “simple” doctrines of Jesus—his phrase for Unitarianism—with... Continue Reading
A Hermeneutic of Surrender
Obedience is hard work.
Affirming belief in the inerrancy of Scripture is no substitute for living out the authority of Scripture. While we do well to continue refuting the skeptics of Scripture, our ultimate aim must always be obedience. This, after all, is what true scholarship is about—knowledge so well understood that it cannot be help influence life. The... Continue Reading
The Ten Commandments: The Fifth
“Honor your father and mother, that your days may be long in the land that the LORD your God is giving you.”
The Hebrew word is kabod and means heavy. In other words, the person who is to be honored must be accorded weight. Now, it helps if a parent actually has weighty things to say! You can see how the role of the parent and the honor a child is to give work in tandem. The... Continue Reading
Not Just Me and My Bible
What "Sola Scriptura" Doesn’t Mean
Although we cannot benefit from the testimonies and insights of Christians who have not yet lived, we would be foolish to ignore those who have come before us. Bernard of Chartres (d. circa 1124) famously said that we stand on the shoulders of giants—in other words, the body benefits from the exegetical insights, the doctrinal... Continue Reading
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