One of the frustrating things about Scripture is that it isn't written to gratify our curiosity.
There are many things passed over in silence that we would very much like to hear about, and so many things that seem different between the two Testaments. There is a deep unity in the character of God as revealed by the whole Bible, Old Testament and New Testament,which we can perhaps demonstrate best by looking at the hardest question of all: the morality of the conquest of Canaan. Here's what the Scripture says:
Then the LORD said to Abram, ”Know ...
The West is going through a period of religious conflict. Not the one you might be thinking of—this one has nothing to do with Islam. A thousand years ago, Franks and Saracens were fighting over a smaller issue, namely whose book was really the self-revelation of God.[1] Today's struggle is among people who identify themselves as Christians. They are fighting for the soul of the Church and the existence of historic Christianity in the West. In the balance hangs the salvation of millions of God's people. This fight is about whether God has revealed Himself at all.<< MORE >>
Do you ever wish that God would smarten up?
So many bad things happen to good people. Innocent babies get cancer. Young people get killed by drunk drivers. Wars and earthquakes and floods destroy people's homes and communities. How can we believe in a good and powerful God when all this bad stuff is going on all around us? Sin explains a lot of suffering, but knowing that doesn't blunt our sense of the injustice of it all. What is all that suffering about? Scripture provides an oblique but very profound answer: The Book of Job.
<< MORE >>Epimenides was an ancient Greek philosopher and poet from the island of Crete. Nowadays, he has three claims to fame: being quoted by St Luke;
being quoted by St. Paul; and being quoted by Aristotle. His philosophy is remembered for exactly one sentence. What he said was, 'Cretans are always liars'. Since he himself was a Cretan, with a bit
of imagination one can crispen this up to read, 'This statement is false.'
"This statement is false" : a very odd sort of sentence. If we assume it's true, it proclaims itself false, whereas if we assume it's false, we find that it agrees with us, which makes it look as though it's true....
<< MORE >>Some words are like neighbourhood children—they're vaguely familiar, but most of us
couldn't really say where they belong. "Canon" is a word like that—we recognize that
it's probably something important, but saying just what that is may be a bit harder.
Canon comes from a Greek word for a measuring stick—in its most precise meaning,
calling something canonical says that it is an established standard of comparison. In
English, the other meanings of canon are slippery. It's a poetical word, whose
overlapping meanings involve things like symmetry, beauty, and great value. Something
canonical has been refined, polished, purged of unnecessary elements until it is a thing of rare
beauty. A musical canon is a piece in which interlocking themes form a
complex and pleasing pattern, where tensions are built up and triumphantly resolved at the
ending. A lot like the Bible, actually. The Old and New Testaments are known as the
canon, in all these senses: it's a harmony and also a yardstick;....
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For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled.—Richard P. Feynman[1]
Words change their meanings over time. Often it's just the general decay of language, but sometimes deeper things are afoot. For instance, until the early 20th century, propaganda was a merely neutral term that meant `information to be disseminated'. Similarly, dogma used to mean `things the Church has established as truths about God and man'. Since then, the words have acquired less savory connotations. Propaganda we can do without, but dogma is of the greatest practical value, and needs to be recovered.
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