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Archive for August 22nd, 2012

Chris Braun after commenting on Jonathan’s plan to engage the Philistines in a reis

You don’t know how it will turn out, but why not:

  • Accept a leadership position at church.
  • Take a missions trip.
  • Share the Gospel with a colleague.
  • Invite a neighbor to be your guest at church. Don’t make some general comment. Say, “This Sunday would you be my guest?”
  • Pray in front of your family. No guarantees someone won’t laugh.
  • Make a generous gift to God’s work. It’s risky. Why not take a chance?

Who among us wants to get to the end of life having never taken chances for the King? Better to be in the fight and lose, then grow old in comfort.

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Our thinking goes like this: If there is a God at all, He is certainly not holy. If He is perchance holy, He is not just. Even if He is both holy and just, we need not fear because His love and mercy override His holy justice. If we can stomach His holy and just character, we can rest in one thing: He cannot possess wrath.

If we think soberly for five seconds, we must see our error. If God is holy at all, if God has an ounce of justice in His character, indeed if God exists as God, how could He possibly be anything else but angry with us? We violate His holiness; we insult His justice; we make light of His grace. These things can hardly please Him.

~R.C. Sproul~, The Holiness of God (Carol Stream, IL; Tyndale House Publishers; 1998) Chapter 9: God In the Hands of Angry Sinners, via Crossquotes

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Eric Metaxas summarizes some recent findings in Middle Eastern archaeology, ones that confirm not just isolated facts in the Bible but the “big picture” of the Biblical narrative:

Israeli archaeologists recently discovered a coin, dating from the 11th century before Christ. It depicted “a man with long hair fighting a large animal with a feline tail.” Ring any Old Testament bells?

The coin was found near the Sorek River, which was the border between the ancient Israelite and Philistine territories 3,100 years ago. Sound vaguely familiar?

The archaeologists thought so, too. While Shlomo Bunimovitz and Zvi Lederman of Tel Aviv University don’t claim that the figure depicted on the coin is proof that Samson actually existed, they do see the coin as proof that stories about a Samson-like man existed independently of the Bible.

Stated differently, the story of Samson was not the literary invention of a sixth-century B.C. scribe living in Babylon, as has commonly been assumed by mainstream biblical scholarship.

Bunimovitz and Lederman made another interesting discovery: the Philistine side of the river was littered with pig bones, while there were none on the Israelite side. . . .

The findings at Sorek are only the latest in a series of archaeological discoveries that are changing the way modern historians look at biblical narratives. It’s becoming more difficult for them to maintain that the narratives are pious fictions invented long after the era being depicted.

The most famous of these discoveries is the 1994 discovery of a stele in Tel Dan bearing an inscription that contained the words “House of David.” It was the first extra-biblical evidence of the Davidic dynasty. Prior to the discovery, many scholars doubted that David ever existed, much less founded a dynasty. The discovery was so out-of-line with expectations that more than a few insisted it must be a forgery.

Today, it is clear to even the most skeptical scholar that-surprise!-there really was a David who founded a ruling dynasty. That dynasty included his son, Solomon, and evidence of Solomon’s building projects described in Second Samuel have been found by archaeologists as well.

Some of the discoveries go beyond history and tell us about Israel’s sense of what it meant to be God’s chosen people. Sites dating to before the Exile are littered with Canaanite idols, evidence of the apostasy the prophets denounced and warned would lead to disaster.

Yet there has never been a single idol found in sites dating after the Exile. Clearly, the Jews who returned from the Exile had finally, truly learned that “the Lord our God is one.”

via Archaeology and the Bible.

HT: Gene Veith

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Barry York journals a bit about the emotions and thoughts he is having sending his child off to college–away from home for the first time. Many parents can or will be able to relate to Barry.

Though I have been through it before, and it’s coming was as sure as the seasons changing, I still was not able to fend off the sadness it brings.

I’m carrying around this strange grief because my bright, bouncy, beautiful daughter is no longer here, having been transported off to college last week.  We’ve come again to that stage that all Christian parenting is inevitably heading toward.  The child whose birth you witnessed, whose birthmarks you know, whose birthdays you celebrated, has moved out and will never live the same way under your roof again.

I know all the comforts that will be offered and even jokes that will be made, so do not bother writing them in the comment section.  I’m a little touchy right now. Besides, I’ve heard them already, be it from well-meaning friends or the hollow words rolling around in my own mind that I use to try to comfort myself.  Here’s how the mental battle goes. . .

Keep reading “A Strange Grief” 

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I think this will be my last post on the Olympics (until the 2014 Winter Games).  But Theologically Driven shared a lesson from the Olympics I think worth passing on. It has to do with those gymnasts who have to stick the landing or they suffer a deduction in their score.

Matt Owen shares two lessons briefly from the perfection demanded at the Olympics:

1.  Success Does Not Depend on Our Performance

We can be glad that our performance is not the criterion by which we will be judged. Though the Olympic quest is the pursuit of perfection, that pursuit, in most cases, is never fully realized. For the gymnast, even the slightest variation from the routine—an arm extended to regain balance or an improperly pointed toe—results in a deduction. Success or failure is judged based on that single performance, and even the most brilliant of routines can be undone by the slightest hop on the dismount. When it comes to our moral performance, our standing before God, the hard truth is that none of us can stick the landing. Many people, including Christians, live their lives trying to earn, through the strength of their performance, the favor of the only Judge who really matters. Yet, mercifully, this Judge will not render a verdict based on our performance; after all, he employs a standard that demands a flawless performance, every time, for a lifetime. The holy standard to which we are held does not take into account our moral performance as it relates to the difficulty of our circumstances or our rank in the field. The standard is the holy Judge himself and with that standard we all miss the mark (Rom 3:23). There is good news in all this, however: Jesus hit the mark; he stuck the landing for you. You can take heart because your reward from this Judge is not based on your performance, but on the perfect righteous character of Jesus who grants that perfect record to all who receive it in faith.

2.  Jesus’ Success Encourages Our Performance

Not only does Jesus impute his perfect score of righteousness to us, but his success is the very thing that presently fuels our performance. Imagine the difference in approach if an Olympic gymnast took the floor, knowing that she had already been awarded a perfect score. No longer would she fear the deductions of the judges, the expectations of the crowd, or the presence of her own shortcomings. She could perform with confidence, knowing that the outcome had already been determined. While it would be ludicrous for the Olympic judges to render a score prior to the athlete’s performance, this is precisely the promise of the gospel. Only in this message of good news does the Judge render a verdict prior to the performance. How different a situation it is when we perform, not to earn the favor of the Judge but in the freedom of knowing we already have that perfect score. Knowing this frees us from the debilitating fear of failure. No longer do we labor under the harsh view of a Judge deducting point after point for every misstep. With the perfect score already given, we are freed to do with confidence the “good works which God has prepared in advance for us to do” (Eph 2:10). We can yield “every part of [ourselves] to him as an instrument of righteousness” (Eph 2:13) because we have already received “God’s abundant provision of grace and of the gift of righteousness” (Rom 5:17).

Olympic success or failure is often measured on the strength of a single performance. So it is for us, but that performance is not our own; it belongs to the one who lived the life we should have lived. How disheartening it must be for some of these competitors who ultimately fail at their only opportunity for Olympic success. You and I will never stick the landing, but due to Jesus’ success, we can run the race set before us and, in time, become like the One who has already run ahead (Heb 12:1–2).

Read more at “Could You Stick that Landing?”

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“God puts on a minor display of his strength and splendor every morning as he brings the sun up over the horizon — 865,000 miles thick, 1.3 million times heavier than the earth, blazing on its cool edges at one million degrees Centigrade! Every morning has its opening ceremonies to thrill us with the power and the glory of God and fill us with hope that one day we will enter a land where all the wonders that have inspired us on this little earth will be like blurry dots in comparison with the magnificence of God’s eternal closing ceremonies.

“And every night God puts out a little puppet show of his majesty in the sky, with Perseus and Andromeda and Hercules and Orion and Leo the Lion and Draco the Dragon sporting about in the local galaxy 100,000 light years across.

“Day to day pours forth speech, and night to night declares knowledge.” And what they teach so forcefully is that God is infinite in power. Nothing that has ever awed you can compare to him. He is God Almighty! Nothing can stay his hand. He does whatever he pleases. He is the Potter and the universe is his clay.”

–John Piper.

More here from David Mathis on “An Olympic Lesson in God’s Omnipotence”

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