I present these thoughts from the perspective of someone who grew up in and is familiar with the academic and spiritual situation on the European continent. My observation is that many of the trends that have eroded a robust Christian influence on European culture are very much active in the Evangelical world of the US in the current situation as well ...
When my father died, I grieved. My father died on a Sunday morning, early. His hospital roommate told us that Dad had spent his last nightâthe whole nightâpraying softly for his family, person by person, before dying peacefully in the early morning. Even though weâd known that he would die soon from bone cancer, and knew that he was eager to be home with the Lord, it was still a shock. It was still too soon. Death is like that: it always surprises us and it interrupts our lives. We stop, and we grieve.
Fifteen years ago in Paris, I had a conversation with a young existentialist who said something as unflattering as it was memorable: âWhatever the world does the church does ten years later and worse.â My new friend was talking about Christian music, describing a decade lag factor, a slowness to recognize and adapt to cultural changes that, in his estimation, rendered the church musically irrelevant ...
My students in Exegesis In The Gospels (a second-year Greek course) were delighted to discover that (in the words of one news agency) âChristian conspiracy theorists have gathered clues that suggest the end of the world is nigh" ...
There is no end of opportunities to be blessed with the teaching and preaching of Godâs word. Great preachers can be heard on the radio. Podcasts can be automatically downloaded to our phones or iPads. The teaching of Godâs word is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, on cable television networks. Christian bookstores are full of books by the greatest authors of our day. Electronic books can be carried with us everywhere with ease. Churches have program after program geared toward teaching Godâs word, not to mention a worship service every week, which includes a Bible-based sermon. From the cradle to the grave, opportunities abound ...
This summer I had the privilege of attending Acton University. This week-long meeting is hosted by the Acton Institute, a think-tank âwhose mission is to promote a free and virtuous society characterized by individual liberty and sustained by religious principles.â Common themes at Acton are religious liberty, economic liberty, and natural law. Much like C.S. Lewisâ âmere christianity,â Acton seeks to promote a civil society advanced on natural law reasoning. At Acton one encounters philosophers, economists, entrepreneurs, theologians, biblical scholars, ethicists, and aid workers from around the world ...
I had the occasion to watch a six-part DVD series called PovertyCure, produced by the Acton Institute. It is indeed an eye-opening series that Iâd encourage you to watch. Each part is less than 30 minutes long and is available in the Biola Library (BV4647 .P6 P68 2012 DVD). It challenges the effectiveness of the traditional model of helping the poor through foreign aid in regions where there is wide-spread poverty and the economy is largely depressed. This aid can come in the form of government sponsored foreign aid, through global agencies such as the IMF or World Bank, and even from NGOâs (both secular and Christian). By the end of the series, I think most would at least pause to consider if âaidâ (as a âhandoutâ) helps to alleviate poverty, or whether it actually exacerbates the problem ...
En este año se celebra alrededor del mundo los 500 años del inicio de lo que se conoce como La Reforma protestante. El 31 de octubre de 1517 el monje agustino MartĂn Lutero clavĂł en la puerta de la Iglesia del Castillo en Wittenberg en Alemania 95 tesis en las que criticaba abiertamente las ventas de indulgencias de la iglesia catĂłlica romana. Lutero escogiĂł ese dĂa deliberadamente ya que era la vĂspera del DĂa de Todos los Santos y tanto la facultad de la universidad como muchos fieles asistĂan a la iglesia. Lutero inicialmente no tenĂa la intenciĂłn de romper con la iglesia romana sino enfatizar la supremacĂa del evangelio de Cristo basada en su simplicidad y a la vez en su gran profundidad ...
I just finished reading Owen Strachanâs book, Awakening the Evangelical Mind: An Intellectual History of the Neo-Evangelical Movement. He has some good words for how to keep evangelical universities, well ⊠evangelical. These three paragraphs are worth the three minutes it will take you to read them ...
Recently I was in discussion with a friend who was concerned about the tendency of some Christians to spiritualize death and dying by appeal to the afterlife. To âspiritualizeâ death and dying is to utilize spiritual beliefs to avoid dealing with unwanted feelings over the loss of a loved one. âI just try to think of how happy she is with Jesus.â âWhen we see him again in heaven it will seem like no time has passed.â âI am just glad sheâs finally at rest in Jesusâ arms.â To spiritualize death and dying in these and other ways is a defense mechanism. It is a way to defend against experiencing some painful part of reality as it actually is ...
Job interviews are a nerve-wracking ordeal. The feeling of being out of control regarding oneâs future leads to subservient postures in relationships. This was the situation the Moabite, Ruth, found herself in after returning with her mother in-law to Bethlehem (Ruth 1). However, in this amazing Biblical narrative is a posture of grace-seeking that is reminiscent of our seeking God; it is the God-action of finding favor in others that we should model in our working relationships ...
Where does inspiration come from? Where does the motivation to use oneâs gifts and passions to make a difference begin? Jane Goodall said, âWhat you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.â Are we the source of action or does that spark come from something else? I would like to propose God is the beginning of movements that bring change; history is the record of mankindâs response to the divine prompting ...
One summer, I drove from my parentâs home in New Jersey to where I was working in Minnesota. Somewhere in Indiana, I saw the all too familiar flashing lights of a state trooper. I was speeding, and I knew it. I was going sixty-eight in a fifty-five zone. I had a pit in my stomach. I hated the fact that I was caught. Not only does the speeding ticket cost money, but my ego took a hit as well. I was resentful. I donât like being in the wrong. More than that, I hate being held accountable when I am wrong ...
Kenneth Berding (Professor of New Testament at Talbot School of Theology) recently wrote and published The Apostolic Fathers: A Narrative Introduction. We wanted to learn more about this book, so we had Ken respond to some questions ...
The account of humanityâs creation in the image of God in Genesis 1:26-28, is specifically crafted to lead the reader to conclude that Godâs intended outcome, his purpose, for creating humanity in his image, was to create flourishing communities, not just flourishing individuals. The cultural or creation mandate as it has been calledâGodâs command to be fruitful, multiply, fill and subdue the earth, and to rule over the living things on the earthâis rightly seen as a command to fulfill Godâs intention. Humanity is to fill the earth and bring about flourishing ...
Is the church here to help me to grow in Christ as an individual? Or has God put me here to help the church grow both qualitatively and quantitatively? The easy answer is âBoth!â And thatâs not completely wrong. But the early Christians clearly prioritized the health and growth of Godâs community over the goals and desires of individual believers. This group-first mentality is not only characterized the early church, it characterized family life throughout the ancient Mediterranean world. This is why families arranged marriages. The goal of marriage in the ancient world was the not relational satisfaction of the individuals involved. It was the honor and ongoing viability of the two families who brokered the marriage. The group â in this case the family â came first ...
The recent welcome of Evangelical radio apologist, âThe Bible Answer Manâ âHank Hanegraaff, into the Greek Orthodox Church has understandably raised more than eyebrows. Questions about the differences between Protestants and Orthodox have been coming my way in the aftermath, so I want to offer to Good Book Blog readers an essay I wrote for Talbotâs Sundoulos magazine back in 2008. In it youâll find some general characteristics of the Orthodox denomination as well as key points of difference with Protestantsâsome of which converts such as Hank Hanegraaff would typically need to renounce as they formally enter Orthodoxy ...
The Bible insists that everything exists for Jesus. He is the Telos, the Goal, the Final Point where all lines converge. âBut isnât that such a strange and invisible conclusion? Doesnât such a view make Christianity fundamentally anti-science?â
When we say âHe is risen. He is risen indeed!â we are not merely stating a remarkable historical fact, not merely expressing our shared doctrine, not merely standing in line with a long tradition of hope. We are doing all of that. But we are doing more. We are joining the great protest chant against all the dehumanization, death, and decay of the present age and heralding, here and now, the subversive breaking in of the glorious age to come in the resurrected Jesus.
Israel cried out, âGive us a king!â (1 Samuel 8:6). Against his will, God gave his people what they wanted. A real superstar. Saul was the handsomest and tallest man around (9:2). That didnât work out very well, did it? It never does ...
In our day, wherever it is found, the fruits of intellectual inquiry grow from the conviction that there is such a thing as truth out there to discover. Take an axe to the existence of truth and you no longer have education, you have propaganda. Ideologies that deny the very possibility of truth can be found in many (thankfully, not all) fields of education. In the quip of postmodern philosopher, Richard Rorty, truth is simply a matter of whatever your colleagues will let you get away with saying. With no truth to seek and discover, we are left with only social constructs to endlessly dream up and deconstruct. In the words of one lamenting Harvard ÌÒ»šÊÓÆ”, âThe freedom of our day is the freedom to devote ourselves to any values we please, on the mere condition that we do not believe them to be true." When the very idea of truth is considered so out-of-fashion, schools gradually turn from the pursuit of knowledge to the business of data transfer, indoctrination, and diploma-printing ...
... Kids today are surrounded by a secularized society that bombards them with advertising, television, and social media messages. Parents are juggling demanding careers and family life in light of societal pressures to be more, do more, and have more. Our good intentions of helping, protecting, and providing for our kids can quickly turn to enabling or even disabling them. How do we help our kids grow into mature Christ followers without falling into the trap of enabling or disabling them? ...