Archive for the ‘Commentary’ Category

Sitting on the fence

As a dyed-in-the-wool, red-blooded conservative, I have always valued decisiveness and conviction. When I vote for a politician, I want a politician in office who agrees with my policy, holds most of my opinions, and will do in office what I elected him to do. After all, I figure, I hired him, so I have [...]

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Adoption: pure and faultless religion

Since my wife and I adopted two beautiful girls several years ago into our family, I know something about being an adoptive parent. As a Christian, I know something about being an adopted child. Put the two together, and I know something about love.
What does that have to do with pure and faultless religion?
Think about [...]

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Moving the ball upfield

I’m not a big sports fan, but as Paul was fond of using analogies from the popular sports of his day, so it might be helpful for us to use them as well. Let me suggest that if our individual Christianity is a lot like running a race, I think our Christian relationships are a [...]

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Loveless unity? Impossible.

Think about the fact that it is possible to have loveless agreement on the hotbutton doctrinal issues of the day, but it is impossible to have loveless unity. Sure, it’s easier to love someone I agree with. But while I can fail to love a person I agree with, I cannot fail to love a [...]

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The semantics of immersion

Some good conversation has come up lately about baptism. For the sake of clarity, I’m simply going to refer to it as immersion, because that is what the word meant to the first century believers. Why it has been transliterated in most Bibles rather than translated into English, I don’t know. But the meaning of [...]

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Profound subtleties

Are our sins washed away when we’re added to the right body, or are we added to the right body when our sins are washed away? Do we meet together for the purpose of taking the Lord’s supper, or is edifying one another by remembering and proclaiming Jesus’ death the goal for our gathering? Do [...]

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The blame game

One thing I’ve been thinking about is where the blame lies for the current state of factionalism in Christianity. As a parent, I don’t tolerate my children blaming someone else for their own unloving actions. “He started it,” I hear. When I follow up on the story, I usually find out a little more than [...]

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Tsunamis and the God of the gap

After yesterday’s earthquake off the coast of Indonesia, I read an article quoting a scientist who stated that there was a 100% chance of a tsunami in the region:
“My personal view is that a tsunami has a 100 percent chance of happening,” US Geological Survey earthquake expert Kerry Sieh told journalists in Los Angeles.
Whoops! Now [...]

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A toothless watchdog

If creeds are so useful for the truth they may contain, but are not authoritative for our salvation, then we might as well call Moby Dick by Herman Melville a creed. Scripture is quoted in the novel, so it contains some inerrant truth, right?
People view creeds as watchdogs to protect a group from heresy, but [...]

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Sweet Fellowship

My first exposure to the singing group Acappella was their album “Sweet Fellowship” about 15 years ago or more. The title track is a great song, and very encouraging. I thought I’d post the words to it here, since the subject of fellowship features prominently around here:
Fellowshipping with one another as we’re walking in the [...]

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