Pictures!
My better half and I took a walk in the woods recently. You can view the pictures from the beautiful scenery, and elsewhere, by viewing our Photo Album (link at right). Enjoy!
Labels: Art | Culture, bio, WtTS Stuff
My better half and I took a walk in the woods recently. You can view the pictures from the beautiful scenery, and elsewhere, by viewing our Photo Album (link at right). Enjoy!
Labels: Art | Culture, bio, WtTS Stuff
Describing the problems law enforcement had with Halloween partiers at last years Halloween bash at the University of Wisconsin-Lacrosse, a police chief commented that far too many of the partiers were "overly-intoxicated."
Labels: Events, WtTS Stuff
Labels: Technology
God willing, over the weekend and into next week three posts will appear, dealing with a range of subjects. And unlike the post on Mrs. Parks & Miers, this post will not attempt to weave threads together that do not exist. No, they are all separate subjects.
In all seriousness, to be thoroughly biblical and Reformed, we need to get specific. To take in the whole counsel of God as revealed in Scripture, as well as the breadth of Reformed confessions, we must believe, teach, and preach that we are justified by Christ meritoriously, we are justified by faith instrumentally, and we are justified by works evidentially.
Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.
Labels: blogging, theology, WtTS Stuff
Reading: VanHoozer, Kevin First Theology
"I don't know why I wasn't, but I didn't feel afraid. I had decided that I would have to know once and for all what rights I had as a human being and a citizen, even in Montgomery, Alabama."
Dear Mr. President,
I write to withdraw as a nominee to serve as an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court of the United States. I have been greatly honored and humbled by the confidence that you have shown in me, and have appreciated immensely your support and the support of many others... I am most grateful for the opportunity to have served your Administration and this country.
Labels: City of Man, Events, Philosophy
The church in Uzbekistan needs the prayers of believers everywhere. This church deeply loves the Lord Jesus Christ, and has several wonderful, faithful men & women of God ministering among its people.
I hear about a phenomenon of growing intensity from many angles, without necessarily coagulating them together in my neural firings of a brain. Listening to the radio (typically, Todd Friel) I hear the constant (unsubstantiated) truth proclaimed that youth, and typically "our kids," are turning more and more to Wicca. A different angle cites the popularity of Harry Potter and The (insert some mythic, Norse object/paranormal activity here) and its intrinsic evil, as well as use of real satanic spells and incantations to brainwash our children. With the Halloween season already upon us, Christians fire up various arguments for/against celebrating the "holi"day and to what extent we dress our children up. What if its a white witch? A converted elf? Does that help?
But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable angels in festal gathering, and to the assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God, the judge of all, and to the spirits of the righteous made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel. At that time his voice shook the earth, but now he has promised, "Yet once more I will shake not only the earth but also the heavens." Therefore let us be grateful for receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, and thus let us offer to God acceptable worship, with reverence and awe, for our God is a consuming fire.
Hebrews 12:22 - 29
Sola Gratia.Org, a site devoted to "Reformed Theology, Articles, Audio, and Books," looks like a very promising website. While they include several articles and audio sermons on a variety of topics (as most Reformed sites in the Reformed websphere do), they also include podcasts and links in keeping with the Reformed tradition.
Doug Wilson, in his usual Protestant wit and reductivism, has fun play with recent advocates of the "emergent" church. Dealing with a desperate need to shed "propositional truth," emergent folks make it easy to get whacked by a stick of any hue or size. Wilson is, of course, happy to oblige. Here's a great line:
Reading: JOwen's Works and WSJ
“Surely we are more brutish than any man, and have not the
understanding of a man. We neither learned wisdom, nor have the
knowledge of the holy. Who has ascended up into heaven, or
descended? who has gathered the wind in his fists? who has bound
the waters in a garment? who has established all the ends of the
earth? what is his name, and what is his Son’s name, if ye can tell,”
A few thoughts by Reformed extraordinaire Louis Berkhof, Francis Turretin, and John Owen. First, the most recent, and most systematic:
"...Was gratuitous, as depending upon a pact of gratuitous promise (by which God was bound not to man, but to himself and to his own goodness, fidelity and truth, Rom. 3:3; 2 Tim. 2:13). Therefore there was no debt (properly so called) from which man could derive a right, but only a debt of fidelity, arising out of the promise by which God demonstrated his infallible and immutable constancy of truth. If the apostle seems to acknowledge this right or debt (Rom. 4:4), it must be understood in no other than a respective sense; not as to the proportion and condignity of the duty rendered to God by man (Rom. 8:18; Lk. 17:10), but to the pact of God and justice (i.e., the fidelity of him making it).
"If therefore upright man in that state had obtained this merit, it must not be understood properly and rigorously. Since man has all things from and owes all to God, he can seek from him nothing as his own by right, nor can God be a debtor to him--not by condignity of work and from its intrinsic value (because whatever that may be, it can bear no proportion to the infinite reward of life), but from the pact and the liberal promise of God (according to which man has the right of demanding the reward to which God had of his own accord bound himself) and in comparison with the covenant of grace (which rests upon the sole merit of Christ, by which he acquired for us the right to life)."(2)Just past the section I dealt with in an earlier post, Horton says this about the Mosaic Covenant (p. 133ff.):
This is the subtitle of a section in Michael Horton's Covenant & Eschatology.
I will not judge a person to be spiritually dead whom I have judged formerly to have had spiritual life, though I see him at present in a swoon (faint) as to all evidences of the spiritual life. And the reason why I will not judge him so is this -- because if you judge a person dead, you neglect him, you leave him; but if you judge him in a swoon, (faint) though never so dangerous, you use all means for the retrieving of his life.
This weekend is Desiring God's third annual national conference. The topic is coping with suffering in an age of the already/not yet. How does suffering coexist with the "supremacy of God in all things?" I will be working at the conference, as well as enjoying it with friends and family. I'll also try to live blog from the conference, so you can be sure to get a feel for what its like, even if you're not there. Be praying for the conference, the speakers, and those attending.
Two books that I am working through that both deal with Old Testament theology are one I'd like to highly recommend. Both books come at the Old Testament with a biblical theology stance. While all theology tries to be biblical (at least, all good theology tries to be biblical), biblical theology is an attempt to deal with the text in a certain way.
Christian theologians rarely study the Old Testament in its final Hebrew canonical form, even though this was very likely the Bible used by Jesus and the early church. However, once read as a whole, the larger structure of the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) provides a wide-angle lens' through which its contents can be viewed. In this stimulating exposition, Stephen Dempster argues that, despite its undoubted literary diversity, the Hebrew Bible possesses a remarkable structural and conceptual unity. The various genres and books are place within a comprehensive narrative framework which provides and overarching literary and historical context. The many texts contribute to this larger text, and find their meaning and significance within its story of 'dominion and dynasty', which ranges from Adam to the Son of Man to David, and to a coming Davidic king.I agree with this idea. Dempster's strenths lie in familiarity with Near-Eastern context and ancient Semitic textual interests. Weaknesses include a large debt to the current scholastic ethos. All in all, an excellent read.
At the elder council
This post is to give a quick layout of Horton's methodology as displayed in his introduction, "Before the Curtain Rises."
BeginningWithMoses.Org's blog highlights this upcoming conference and book by Dr. Sidney Greidanus.
What the The Thunder Said is a big supporter of Mozilla, an online, open source community that has produced such gems as Firefox and Thunderbird. I use many of their products: besides those two listed, Sunbird, Bugzilla, Mozilla Suite, Greasemonkey, Mozilla Minimo, and Lightning. I think they make fantastic products. For instance, Firefox is a web browser, similar to Internet Explorer. However, Mozilla Firefox takes up less space on your computer, is easier to use, has many functions yet to be developed by Microsoft (IE's creator), is much safer from viruses and pop-ups. and is free. Thunderbird is an email client, that is far superior to Microsoft's Outlook.
Reading: C. H. Spurgeon's Lectures To My Students
I'm disappointed because I expected President Bush to nominate someone with a visible and distinguished constitutionalist track record... I'm depressed... her selection will unavoidably be judged as reflecting a combination of cronyism and capitulation on the part of the president. I'm demoralized. Surely this is a pick from weakness.However, not everyone thinks that such is the case. Hugh Hewitt, for one, thinks Miers will be great. (Jay Sekulow, of the ACLJ, highly touts her and asks for more support, citing "this is the battle we've been waiting to fight" rhetoric. Ughh. I'll deal with this elsewhere.) Olasky, in what I consider a wise and fine piece of journalism/blogging, went to her pastor (why don't more think to do this!). While he supports her as a fine church member and a seemingly committed Christian, the article is definitely inconclusive.
Reading: "Prophet, Priest, King" Tabletalk