Tuesday, October 30, 2007

I Knew There Was One I Forgot!

Justin Taylor had posted this at the beginning of the month, & I forgot to include it in my previous audio update.

Only two days left.


Life of David Brainerd - Free Audio download from ChristianAudio.com.

David Brainerd was a missionary to the Indians in America, and was someone who inspired the likes of Jonathan Edwards.

You'll have to sign up at the website, and it's about 9 parts, but ChristianAudio gives away a new freebie each month, so it would be worth the hassle.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Late To Church Yesterday? It Was the Satellite's Fault!

Did anyone else get head-faked by an auto-update from a satellite that wasn't reprogrammed for the new Daylight Savings Time?

I talked to two people yesterday who were--one had their phone updated, the other had their car, VCR, and I'm not sure what else.

I didn't have that excuse. I did have a major battle over pants that were slightly too big, not wanting to wear a belt, and refusing to go potty before we left for church, but I'm told that the best parents build in buffer for that kind of time.

Still beats last week, when we had one throwing up at 5 minutes before departure time.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Donut Face

I opened a seemingly innocent package of donuts last week, and this was staring back at me.




If someone could take this and mass produce it, they would make a ton of money around Halloween time.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Audio Extravaganza

The great debate between believer and atheist is available for free. Well almost.

The debate between Greg Bahnsen and atheist Gordon Stein is available from Covenant Media Foundation for two cents. Considering that people these days are more likely to walk past two pennies in the parking lot than pick them up, sounds like free to me. HT: Pulpit Live (via a link from James White ).

For the more secularly inclined, the BBC has also expanded its podcast offerings immensely. Lots o' good stuff to choose from.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Attempted Righteousness

HT to Fred Butler for pointing out this guy who spent a year trying to live "Biblically." Fred adds his thankfulness about Christ's fulfillment of those laws. (I noticed that Doug Pagitt also posted a link, but without any comment.)

A. J. Jacobs is the man in question. In the article, Newsweek characterizes The Year of Living Biblically (the name of his forthcoming book) as a year spent “carrying around a stapled list of the more than 700 rules and prohibitions identified in the Good Book,” and mentions that he “consulted with religious leaders and spent time with the Amish, Hassidic Jews and Jehovah’s Witnesses.”

I'm sure Newsweek picked this up in part because of his startling physical transformation, which you can see if you click through to the link above.

I found the article interesting, and I'll probably take a look at the book, if for no other reason than to see what rules he adopted for himself. Here's some excerpts from the Q&A part of the article.

NEWSWEEK: It’s been a little over a year since your experiment ended and you shaved your beard. How’s the life of sin?
A. J. Jacobs: It’s all right. I miss my sin-free life, but I guess I was never sin free. I was able to cut down on my coveting maybe 40 percent, but I was still a coveter. Flat-screen TVs, the front yard of my friend in the suburbs, a better cell phone, higher Amazon rankings. And that's not to mention coveting my neighbor's wife. . .

What, if any, rules are you still following?
I’m not Gandhi or Angelina Jolie, but I made some strides. The experience changed me in big ways and small ways. There’s a lot about gratefulness in the Bible, and I would say I’m more thankful. I focus on the hundred little things that go right in a day, instead of the three or four things that go wrong. And I love the Sabbath. There’s something I really like about a forced day of rest. Also, during the experiment I wore a lot of white clothes, because Ecclesiastes says let your garments always be white, and I loved it, so I look like Tom Wolfe now. Wearing white just made me happier. I couldn’t be in a bad mood walking down the street looking like I was about to play in the semifinals at Wimbledon. . .

Are you a more religious person as a result of this experiment?
Well, I don’t want to give away the ending, but let’s say I started the year as an agnostic, and now I am a reverent agnostic. Whether or not there is a God, I believe in sacredness. Rituals can be sacred, the Sabbath can be sacred however you choose to observe it. . .

What rule was the hardest to follow?
Two kinds of rules were hard. Avoiding sins we commit every day like lying, gossiping and coveting was hard, and then there were the rules that were hard to do in modern life, like stoning adulterers. But I did manage to fulfill that one. What happened was, I was in the park, dressed in my white garb, and this man in his 70s came over and asked what I was doing. I explained I was trying to follow every rule in the Bible as literally as possible, including growing my beard, not mixing fibers, stoning adulterers, and he said, “I’m an adulterer, are you going to stone me?” I said, “Yeah that would be great.” The Bible doesn’t say what size the stones have to be, so I had been carrying around these pebbles in my pocket for just such an occasion. I took the pebbles out of my pocket, and he instantly picked one up and threw it at me, so I decided, an eye for an eye, and I tossed one at him. . .

It's sad to read, because it seems he was so close to seeing the truth (I guess I never was sin free), but truth eluded him (or perhaps he eluded truth, but that's another topic).

By God's providence, I was just reading a section of The Truth War, and this passage struck me as particularly apropos.

Paul says in Romans 9:31-32 that "Israel, pursuing the law of righteousness, has not attained to the law of righteousness. Why? Because they did not seek it by faith, but as it were, by the works of the law." In other words, regardless of how meticulous they may have been in their external observance of of God's law, their unbelief was sufficient to exclude them from the kingdom. "They being ignorant of God's righteousness, and seeking to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted to the righteousness of God. For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes" (Romans 10:3-4). They doubted the truth of Christ, and that proved spiritually fatal in spite of how well they had perfected an external display of piety. (Page 33)

Being ignorant of God's righteousness, and seeking to establish their own righteousness, [they] have not submitted to the righteousness of God. That pretty well sums up every political system, worldview, philosophy, and religion on the earth.

But it gets worse. The flip side of Christ being the end of the law for those who put their faith in him, is that those who don't have faith are bound to the law, and its consequences. Paul says elsewhere in Romans that “by works of the law no human being [literally flesh] will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sin.”

And in Galatians, Paul states it even greater detail:

For all who rely on works of the law are under a curse; for it is written, “Cursed be everyone who does not abide by all things written in the Book of the Law, and do them.” Now it is evident that no one is justified before God by the law, for “The righteous shall live by faith.” But the law is not of faith, rather “The one who does them shall live by them.” Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, “Cursed is everyone who is hanged on a tree”— so that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we might receive the promised Spirit through faith. (Galatians 3:10-14, ESV).

So those who attempt to attain righteousness through the law only succeeded in bringing a curse upon themselves, and that curse is not just physical death, but spiritual death.

So I praise God not only because He sent His son to fulfill the law, and that His son's fulfillment of the law removed the requirements of the law, but even more so that it has removed the curse of the law. I don't have to keep the law, nor do I need to, because God considers my righteous by faith.

What Jacobs got out of his Year of Living Biblically was a new wardrobe, a “sabbath celebration,” and the knowledge that he couldn't really keep the law. If only he'd read finished the book, he might have seen how things will turn out, and perhaps he would have gotten much more.

Scripture quoted from the book The Truth War, by John MacArthur, was taken from the New King James Version. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Friday, October 05, 2007

Note of Congratulations

Just wanted to take a moment to congratulate my friend (and reader of this blog) Tom Nash, who recently finished reading Wayne Grudem's Systematic Theology.

Anyone familiar with that book knows it is a lengthy tome, to say the least. I am seriously impressed.

Surprisingly (or perhaps not), now that Tom is finished, he's not going to Disneyland. Rather, he's going to take a little time away from non-fiction reading to read a little Fantasy and Science Fiction.

Hopefully I will get an opportunity soon to glean a little about what he learned. When I do, I'll report back.

Once again, Tom, congrats on your accomplishment.