Kevin DeYoung, senior pastor of University Reformed Church in East Lansing, Michigan, reflects on “worldliness in entertainment” as a “high place.”
Tony Payne: “On Being Generous”
Tony Payne, publishing director at Matthias Media and a Sydney Anglican Evangelical, explains why he is generous to fundamentalists but not to “those who have given up on the fundamentals and who seek to teach others likewise.”
- The former, he argues, are orthodox believers (albeit ones, from his perspective, who “may be or think or do all sorts of things that we find strange, unattractive or even distasteful”).
- The latter, he argues, are people whom the NT urges him to fight.
Manhunt
Justin Taylor just posted on this book:
James L. Swanson, Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer. New York: William Morrow, 2006. 448 pp. Available in the following formats: paperback, hardcover, Kindle, audio CD, and audio download.
Jenni and I loved listening to the nine-hour (abridged) audio book last month (HT to JT again for recommending it to me!). It was so fascinating that we ended up listening to the whole audio book in just two evenings!
Theological Pride
“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” –Jesus (Matt 5:3)
Poverty of spirit is the personal acknowledgment of spiritual bankruptcy. It is the conscious confession of unworth before God. As such, it is the deepest form of repentance. . . .
Poverty of spirit cannot be artificially induced by self-hatred. Still less does it have in common with showy humility. It cannot be aped successfully by the spiritually haughty who covet its qualities. Such efforts may achieve token success before peers; they never deceive God. Indeed, most of us are repulsed by sham humility, whether our own or that of others.
I suspect that there is no pride more deadly than that which finds its roots in great learning, great external piety, or a showy defense of orthodoxy. My suspicion does not call into question the value of learning, piety, or orthodoxy; rather, it exposes professing believers to the full glare of this beatitude. Pride based on genuine virtues has the greatest potential for self-deception; but our Lord will allow none of it. Poverty of spirit he insists on—a full, honest, factual, conscious, and conscientious recognition before God of personal moral unworth. It is, as I have said, the deepest form of repentance.
–D. A. Carson, Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount and His Confrontation with the World: An Exposition of Matthew 5–10 (Grand Rapids: Global Christian Publishers, 1999), 18 (emphasis added; originally preached in 1975 and published in 1978).
Related: Doug Moo on Theological Humility
Safely Home
This week my wife and I listened to the audio book of Randy Alcorn‘s novel Safely Home (Tyndale House, 2001). We finished the six audio CDs last night after our church’s cross-centered Good Friday service. The novel is excellent, and it was a means of grace for both of us. It helped broaden our horizons on multiple levels (e.g., re persecution of Christians in China in particular and a heavenly perspective on persecution in general). Highly recommended.
It’s available in the following formats: paperback, hardcover, Kindle, audio download, and audio CD.
Related resources:
- introduction to the novel
- excerpt: chapter 1
- discussion questions
- a biographical note from Randy (including this: “100% of royalties from Safely Home will go to help persecuted Christians and to spread the gospel in their countries.”)
- articles on China (including this: “Is there still persecution of Christians in China today?“)
- articles on the persecuted church
- readers’ responses
- a 43-second clip of Randy talking about the book:
Coming Soon: Logos 4.0
Bob Pritchett, founder and president/CEO of Logos Bible Software, just posted this in the newsgroups:
Logos 4.0…
…keeps what you love about Logos Bible Software
…gets rid of what annoys you in Logos Bible Software
…puts things where you’d expect them
…is still in development
…reflects an obsession on ease-of-use
…remembers things
…helps you share the fruit of your study with students and congregations
…has simpler menus
…comes with massive, hand-edited data sets
…favors direct manipulation over large settings panels
…is the iPhone of Bible software
…gives more screen space to content
…searches with the speed and ease of Google
…searches just your quality content (not the morass Google has to wade through)
…works well with multiple monitors
…makes smart guesses about what you are looking for
…looks very cool
…is under tight wrap until “the big moment.”
HT: Phil Gons
It Is Finished
That’s what Jesus said on the cross some 1,980 years ago.
That’s why “Holy Week” pictures like these are so sad.
Comment 66 is mine:
Thanks for the quality photos. As usual, they are first-class. I profit immensely from looking at the photos posted here each week.
The actions captured in these photos, however, simultaneously sadden and infuriate me. This is not pure Christianity as found in the Old and New Testaments. These are warped traditions that have turned the good news about Jesus Christ on its head.
For an explanation of why Jesus died (and why acts like self-inflicted wounds are not only unnecessary but actually offensive to God), see John Piper’s book The Passion of Jesus Christ: Fifty Reasons Why He Came to Die. Free PDF here.
In the Zone
Good word from Matt Perman: “What’s at Stake with Multitasking?”
In short:
So what happens if you multitask? You will never get into the zone. And if you never get into the zone, you will miss out on the best and most productive experience in work.