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Kowtowing to the Crowds: Injustice and the Fear of Man
Our political leaders in the US are either spawning slander or perpetuating silence. What is a Christian to do? What does the Bible say? For one: "Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them." [Eph 5:11] Let's talk about some of the most divisive issues on the political table today.
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Prophets or Profits: My Two Cents
Prophets or profits: making sense of it all is our theme today. With many mega-churches and ministries in the U.S. holding millions in assets, how is it that we have poor members in our midst? What message are we sending the world? Jesus said that the world would recognize His own by the love we have for each other. Where is this love? Have our capitalistic values in this country doused the light we are to be? How can we be missions-minded with money-driven goals? Are we so focused on doing big ministry that we forget those right next to us who struggle in the local church body? Here is…
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On Your Honor
Honor and respect. R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Aretha Franklin belted it out. We desire to get it, but do we give it?
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Faith or Fable
Thomas said to him, "Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?" Jesus said to him, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. [John 14:5-6 ESV]
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Remember the Gospel is GOOD News
Back in 1983, I was a junior in high school, and my eclectic musical tastes ranged from hard rock to the likes of Anne Murray's "A Little Good News." This song really spoke to my heart in so many ways because even at the ripe old age of seventeen, listening to the news of foreign wars, the woes of a bad economy, the uptick of robberies, gun crime, and senseless violence--just the constant barrage of bad reports--left me feeling tense and quite dismal. I longed for good news, like Anne mentions, about things like county fairs, children playing, and people truly caring. I guess most good news is not as…
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Orthodoxy Drift: How Semantics, Euphemisms, & Coined Phrases Influence the Church–Part III
This week, I'm picking up where we left off in the last post and forging ahead to the word "works" and how the semantics behind this word has caused a wide rift between Catholic and Protestant faith traditions and also seems to be shifting to what it was never meant to define, and, therefore, twisting God's truth. As for myself, the tension between Paul and James had left me feeling very confused at one time, because my whole heart was to please the Lord, but it felt like if I "worked," or served the Lord in any way, I would displease Him, and if I did nothing, that would displease…
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Orthodoxy Drift: How Semantics, Euphemisms, & Coined Phrases Influence the Church–Part II
As promised, I'd like to continue this post I started a few weeks ago and talk about the words "faith" and "believe." There has been quite a bit of discussion already from several well-known Christian teachers who, like me, have a desire to address and correct what is called "easy believism" in the Church today. It carries with it the idea that one needs only to believe in Jesus to be saved without anything ever further required, that intellectual agreement with the truth that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and that He promises eternal life to everyone who believes on Him is all that is necessary for our…
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Orthodoxy Drift: How Semantics, Euphemisms, & Coined Phrases Influence the Church–Part I
I am going to attempt in a series of posts, relying fully on the Lord's help, to point out that many words used by the inspired authors of the bible and coined phrases in use now have experienced or are experiencing a semantic shift in today's culture, words like grace, works, freedom, and unconditional love. A semantic shift occurs when a word takes on a different connotation and meaning over time. For example, the term "gay," back in the thirteenth century, meant "lighthearted or joyful, but in the fourteenth century also took on the connotation of "bright and showy." The term "the gay '90s" refers to the 1890s period of…
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Are Christians Supposed to Make the World a Better Place?
I've often heard people, well-meaning believers in our Lord Jesus Christ, say things like: "We need to make a difference in our world, in our country, in our community, and in our homes." Or, "Let's get out there and change the world." Should we? Or do we, ever so subtly, even by something seemingly good, get sidetracked from our vocation as Christians? I often have felt a check in my spirit when I hear things like this. Up until maybe 4 or so years ago, statements like this confused and weighted me down. I would ask the Lord, "What do you want me to do? Should I start a charity…