“Institutions are by nature large and inflexible beasts with fiefdoms that must be protected and rules that must not be broken.”
—Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, Super Freakonomics, p. 103.
by Andy Naselli
“Institutions are by nature large and inflexible beasts with fiefdoms that must be protected and rules that must not be broken.”
—Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, Super Freakonomics, p. 103.
by Andy Naselli
Mark Dever, What Is a Healthy Church?
(IX Marks; Wheaton: Crossway, 2007), p. 79:
Quick Tips: How to Find a Good Church
1. Pray.
2. Seek counsel from a godly pastor (or from elders).
3. Keep your priorities straight.
- The gospel must be truly affirmed, clearly preached, and faithfully lived out. A serious lack in any of these expressions of the gospel is very dangerous.
- The preaching must be faithful to Scripture, personally challenging, and central to the congregation’s life. You will only grow spiritually where Scripture is treated as the highest authority. [Read more…] about How to Find a Good Church
by Andy Naselli
HT: Stick World via Abraham Piper
Related: How Not to Argue about Which Bible Translation Is Best
Update on 3/31/2017: In my latest attempt to explain how to interpret and apply the Bible, I include a chapter on Bible translation (pp. 50–81).
by Andy Naselli
Tim Challies explains.
Related:
by Andy Naselli
by Andy Naselli
Robert Letham reviews Kevin Giles’s The Trinity and Subordinationism (Downers Grove: IVP, 2002) in this eight-page appendix:
Robert Letham. “Appendix 2: Kevin Giles on Subordinationism.” Pages 489–96 in The Holy Trinity: In Scripture, History, Theology, and Worship. Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian & Reformed, 2004.
Letham explains,
Kevin Giles, vicar of St. Michael’s Church in North Carlton, Australia, has for thirty years contended for the ordination of women. . . .
He targets conservative evangelicals who maintain a hierarchical view of the sexes on the basis of a presumed hierarchy of being, function, or role in the Trinity. By subordinationism he means the idea that the Son is eternally set under the Father. . . . All forms of subordinationism [Giles argues] are ruled out, both by Scripture and church tradition. From this it follows that arguments for the subordination of women cannot be buttressed by appeal to the Trinity.
Letham disagrees with Giles for three major reasons: [Read more…] about Letham Reviews Giles on Subordinationism
by Andy Naselli
I plan to leave today for an eight-day rafting trip through the Grand Canyon, so this blog will be quiet until July 18.
I’ve had several friends go on this same trip with Canyon Ministries in previous summers, and they all loved it. Some people who go on this trip are young-earth creationists, some aren’t, and some are undecided.
Here are some previous reflections on this rafting trip:
by Andy Naselli
From a funeral homily by Jack Collins:
On Saturday, I heard Jackie say, “No parent should ever have to outlive their own child.” I heard the same words from my father’s mother when my father died; and my wife and I said the same thing when we lost our first child. The pain is horrible; the loss is beyond our ability to describe.
When we feel this grief, we are feeling that it’s just not right for this to happen. We don’t want our loved ones to suffer; we don’t want to be separated from them by death. We want to be sure that they are happy, and we want to be able to enjoy their company always.
The Bible tells us that these feelings we have are right. Death and suffering are intruders in God’s good world; they don’t belong here. And the story of Adam and Eve, the first human beings, tells us how these evil things came in: When these, the parents of us all, disobeyed God, they opened the door to all manner of sin and evil, not only for themselves, but also for us.
You don’t need me to prove it; it’s all around us. It’s why we are here today.
But the Bible story doesn’t end there: instead it tells us about how God wants to help us, to heal us of what is wrong with us.
—C. John Collins, Did Adam and Eve Really Exist? Who They Were and Why You Should Care
(Wheaton: Crossway, 2011), 136. [Read more…] about Not the Way It’s Supposed to Be