4 Biblical Reasons I Rejected Evolution
The Span, Kinds, Goodness, & Jewel of Creation
When God looked upon the plant and animal life that He created, He saw that they were good. Good creatures do not need drastic evolutionary improvement. Furthermore, creatures that God made and called “good” do not mutate because of broken genetics, and they certainly do not die. Therefore, the Bible rejects the possibility, the assumed... Continue Reading
How to Teach God’s Commands to Children Living in a Hostile Culture
The cross is the event that should frame all of our discussions about God’s moral law.
As with the exodus, the cross is proof that God is real and powerful. He moved history in exactly the way he promised (see Isaiah 53). He raised Jesus from the dead! More than that, if he was willing to give his own Son for our good, we can trust that he is for us. He loves... Continue Reading
Evaluating the Hearts of our “Church Kids”
When we see our children exhibiting growing wisdom, we may be seeing true love for the Lord.
A child who loves God will progressively grow in true obedience to parents—generally quick to obey (without the persistent eyeroll, sigh, or stomp) because he or she desires to please the Lord. This child (though certainly not perfectly) will show honor for his or her parents through facial and vocal responses, as well as actions,... Continue Reading
How to Get a Good Conscience
Ten Suggestions as to How to get a Good Conscience.
Live as in the (more than) tangible presence of the jealous God. Remember, all things are naked and bare before Him. You cannot deceive Him, for He is infinite wisdom; you cannot flee from Him, for He is every where; you cannot bribe Him, for He is righteousness itself. Keep therefore fresh realisations of God... Continue Reading
3 Major Biblical Problems with Elihu’s Counseling of Job
What to Make of Elihu’s Counsel to Job
In light of the main message of Job and in view of a comprehensive biblical model of counseling, we can conclude that: Elihu was wrong about God, wrong about Job, and wrong to focus exclusively on confronting Job while never comforting Job. Elihu’s God is Sovereign, but not a Shepherd. Elihu relates to Job only as a... Continue Reading
Conclusion: Tips for Delighting in the Old Testament
Read the Old Testament through the Light and Lens of Christ
The OT is Christian Scripture, and we can enjoy it best when we approach it through Christ and for Christ. The OT magnifies Jesus in numerous ways, and his person and work clarify how to rightly discern the continuities and discontinuities of salvation history. Through the light and lens that Christ supplies, Christians can enjoy... Continue Reading
Talking with Kids about Gender Issues: Give Them Biblical Vocabulary
Five Key Biblical Topics about Gender
The Bible gives the true diagnosis and solution for any gender-related sin and/or suffering: heart transformation through Christ’s forgiveness and resurrection power in His Spirit, which enables our minds and beliefs to be renewed by truth, our broken hearts and distress to be healed, our gender struggles to be brought under God’s care, and ultimately... Continue Reading
Ezekiel’s Wife
The Lord said, “Son of man, behold, I am about to take the delight of your eyes away from you at a stroke; yet you shall not mourn or weep, nor shall your tears run down” (Ez. 24:16).
We don’t know her, but since God described her as the “delight of your eyes,” one can only suspect that she was indeed a delight. The word is used in a variety of places to describe precious and good things. Not the least of which, it is used to describe the Temple and its treasures.... Continue Reading
3 Things You Should Know about Jeremiah
The whole book of Jeremiah expounds two basic themes: judgment and restoration.
The book of Jeremiah, therefore, was given to help Judah navigate this dire and climactic end to their story. Even as their nation was uprooted at every level (king, temple, land, covenant), Jeremiah shows that the Lord had a redemptive purpose. He removed these shadowy gifts to prepare the way for ultimate, eschatological gifts that... Continue Reading
A Christian Futurism
It is in the practice of Christian community that, week after week and year after year, Christians are discipled in the recognition that they are not their own
It is in the practice of Christian community that, week after week and year after year, Christians are discipled in the recognition that they are not their own, and that all they have, they have first received. Their making, and their very capacity to make, is always a sheer gift. In the end, Redemer rightly... Continue Reading
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