POC Blog

The random technotheolosophical blogging of Reid S. Monaghan

Vista...Only Six Choices

OK, I was wrong before. Microsoft will only be offering six, not eight, versions of its Windows Vista Operating System. If I could find software on the MAC that can conver MS Publisher files, I might make the big switch. Though as with such religious conversions, I need to count all the costs before putting my fingers upon the Mac keyboard. Here is the Reuters' release:

Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq:MSFT - news) plans six core offerings of its upcoming Windows Vista operating system, targeting how people use computers instead of PC hardware specifications, the company said on Monday.
Microsoft to offer 6 versions of Windows Vista - Yahoo! News

Go Heels!

North Carolina Tar Heels News, Scores, Schedule, Stats - Yahoo! Sports

North Carolina Tar Heels (21) North Carolina Tar Heels 19-6 (10-4), 2nd Atlantic Coast Conference.  My old Tarheels are hanging in there this year even with a bunch of Freshman leading the way. Not bad for a team that won it all last year and sent about everybody to the NBA!

ESV Apologetics

Visit www.esv.org to learn about the ESV Bible

Most of my friends know me to be a very bold and compassionate ESV evangelist.  In the halls where I live, work, and play I have been known to respond to the question "What translation of the Bible is that you are using?" with answers such as "The best English translation available, what else..."  Now that I have been evangelizing for the ESV for some years, not pushy or preachy of course, I now have seen someone doing excellent ESV Apologetics

Evangelism and Apologetics should ever be married in one effort, so it is great to see my brothers doing such a wonderful job defending and offering great insight into the translation of the ESV.

Anyway, I love the NASB and came to faith with the NIV...but would recommend stearing a bit clear from the TNIV.

For those interested, Daniel Wallace provides a great guide to the history of Bible translations over at Bible.org.  Just be aware, Wallace is an evangelist as well...for something known (well, mostly unknown) as the NET Bible.  No wonder, he is a freaky smart Greek scholar who is one of its translators.

Now, if you are looking for a great Bible translation that is accurate, readable, great to memorize, beautiful (O for the beauty of the Psalms), and usable at all ages....well, don't ask me for any other recommendation but the ESV.

A Review of Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by Daniel C. Dennett

There is a very interesting book review of Daniel Dennett's most recent railings against religion. See 'Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon,' by Daniel C. Dennett - The New York Times Book Review An interesting quote from the conclusion of the review:

Dennett recognizes the uses of faith, but not its reasons. In the end, his repudiation of religion is a repudiation of philosophy, which is also an affair of belief in belief. What this shallow and self-congratulatory book establishes most conclusively is that there are many spells that need to be broken.
Dennett and other naturalists have yet to face the true music of their own imploding idea. What good reason to we have to trust the musings of the meaningless mush of matter between our ears? Naturalism offers no good answer. If our brains are the result of a long, blind, material process, then we have no good reason to think that our thoughts should arrive at anything that is "true" or any real reflection of reality. Now, I am no anti-realist, as I believe our minds, our logic, transcend matter alone and our sense perceptions and rational inferences should be trusted. Not on any naturalistic worldview, but rather on one grounded in metaphysics. For indeed truth exists outside of our selves and ultimate reality, yes even God, casts a beautiful light that makes our knowledge possible. And at times our knowledge is true.

For an interesting exchange on Naturalism - see also my post on The Center for Naturalism

The Long Lost Beauty of the Fear of the Lord

So much of today’s Christian world shivers to even talk of a God that one ought to fear in any way. God is recast as the cosmic genie of toleration. Even where people retain a view of God that in some way should be feared the word is usually completed reduced to only a reverent awe for a majestic King. This of course is a very good understanding for one facet of the fear of the Lord, but I fear (sorry, I couldn’t help my self) that this misses a fuller meaning of the biblical phrase. For even in the phrase “reverence and awe” there is indeed a “fear” which goes beyond mere respect and does include an aspect of terror. Beautiful, good for us, wonderful, awe inspiring, terror that does not repel, but draws us inexorably towards God for grace. The ISBE describes the range of meaning of the term fear in the Old Testament:
From this list it is apparent that the notion of fear ranges from terror, which may be evidenced by shaking or trembling, to awe or reverence, which induces love or worship rather than terror.
Bromiley, Geoffrey W. The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, Revised, Vol. 2, Page 289, Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1988; 2002.

Throughout the Old Testament the fear of the Lord is associated with many things. It means to honor God in loyalty or faithfulness, it means to respect Him and obey him and to turn away from evil. Proverbs 16:6 demonstrates this well:

By steadfast love and faithfulness iniquity is atoned for, and by the fear of the Lord one turns away from evil. Proverbs 16:6

The place of understanding that God is God, and we are a needy creature is actually the starting point for all knowledge, but practical and theoretical:

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and the knowledge of the Holy One is insight.
Proverbs 9:10
Although not the focus of the Hebrew idea, this acknowledgement of God has great implication for philosophy. It is no coincidence in the history of ideas that when man becomes a skeptic of God, empties his metaphysical closet of the belief in God, his whole project of truth and knowledge crumble under his own pitiful hand. It is a turn in the history of philosophy that is easy to spot – skepticism about God led directly to the well where knowledge itself is poisoned, with truth floating away into the abyss of the postmodern perspectivalism. When there is not a God’s eye view; there is no knowledge. If one rejects the fear of the Lord, he becomes a fool. The fear of God, living in reverence for him, and in a creaturely posture of humility has many promises associated with it. First, God’s covenant love (hesed) is firmly established with those who fear him. The greatest good for the people of God is to worship and love their God. One does not do this with the clinched fist of pride and arrogance, but rather receives it humbly on bended knee. The fear of God, leads his children to love his ways, shun evil, and receive from him a great treasure…to look upon the face of God in delight rather than expecting horrible judgment. In CS Lewis' book, the Silver Chair, Jill is stuck in a bit of a pickle. She is dying of thirst lying next to the purest, most desirable water she has ever seen. Yet, in her path is a fearful, dreadful, and beautiful Lion. Aslan, King of Narnia is before her for the first time. She comes forward slowly, even asking the question “Do you eat girls?” to which the Lion's answer is “I have eaten realms and kingdoms, boys and girls...” (loose paraphrase) If she does not come and drink she will die of thirst. If she does not come in her fear to the Lion, she will not receive the treasure she needs. Such it is with God. We need him, but we fear. We need him, but we would rather choose pride and arrogance than fear. We need him in all his terrifying glory, but we choose to re-imagine him as a small puppy on a leash to make us feel good about ourselves. Some will never come to him – others, who in fear walk towards the great Lion, will find that the awesome one, is also gracious, abounding in steadfast love, and infinitely desirable and calms our terror with arms of a Father. This morning I was reading in Hebrews 12 where I was confronted with a passage that describes in the New Testament fear of the Lord in terms of reverence and awe:
18 For you have not come to what may be touched, a blazing fire and darkness and gloom and a tempest 19 and the sound of a trumpet and a voice whose words made the hearers beg that no further messages be spoken to them. 20 For they could not endure the order that was given, “If even a beast touches the mountain, it shall be stoned.” 21 Indeed, so terrifying was the sight that Moses said, “I tremble with fear.” 22 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, 23 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, 24 and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel. 25 See that you do not refuse him who is speaking. For if they did not escape when they refused him who warned them on earth, much less will we escape if we reject him who warns from heaven. 26 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.” 27 This phrase, “Yet once more,” indicates the removal of things that are shaken—that is, things that have been made—in order that the things that cannot be shaken may remain. 28 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, 29 for our God is a consuming fire.
Let us be grateful for receiving an unshakable kingdom, one where we are called together to God into an assembly of those we are enrolled in heaven, who is called the judge of all. We are called to Jesus, who is a mediator of a new covenant, one in his own blood spilled on the earth. This blood speaks – not as the blood that cried out of sin; that of Abel, but the blood that speaks a word of forgiveness and grace to sinners before a holy God. This word, the passage tells us should not be ignored, for to ignore his word, which is both a gracious offer and a terrifying warning, is to our great peril. It is so easy today for believers to waltz in and out of the presence of God as if they are going to snuggle up to their my buddy doll in big bean bag chair. We do not get this picture of God in the Scripture. Not in Hebrews, not anywhere. Yet because God is gracious and good. Because God is holy and all together a just judge. Because God punished, broke and beat down Jesus for sins that were ours and not his own. Because God reveals himself and comes to us to be marveled at, loved and adored in the gospel, we ought to worship. Our hearts are grateful for we have received a kingdom. The giver of which is one in which we should fear, but yet be drawn to in his holy beauty and our great need. When he draws us we come. And his compulsion is our liberation

Apart from us...

Hebrews 11 is the listing of the faithful down through the ages who clung strong to promises of God. These were our forerunners in the faith, a great cloud of witnesses, a proverbial Hall of Faith. And what did these receive? Not all, yet everything.
39 And all these, though commended through their faith, did not receive what was promised, 40 since God had provided something better for us, that apart from us they should not be made perfect.
Hebrews chapter eleven ends with this incredible statement. The people that verse 39 is referring to as "all these" are the looming towers of biblical history; women and men who trusted God in faith throughout the ages looking forward to the coming of the Christ.

They looked forward to the promise of God - a coming kingdom, a new age of the Spirit, an inheritance with God which will not pass away with this present broken age. They were banking on a promise; no, they were banking on the faithful word of a promiser.

Did they receive it in their lifetime? No, they did not. But of such people - those who held firm to God even in the midst of the most difficult of times, God says of them in verse Hebrews 11:38. These were people of whom the world was not worthy.

God had a different plan, one which did not give them the promise right away, but rather the people of God past, would be made perfect together with the people of God present and future. All will come into the promise by faith, by the work of Christ in the fullness of time. All will be changed and perfected when God fulfills all his promises and the new Kingdom dawns.

So the faith is one of great solidarity. Women and men from all ages, all tribes and peoples, standing as one before a great and faithful promise keeping God.

For of Abraham it is said:


For he was looking forward to the city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is God.


So we look and expect together. Another city, another King, a different reality of peace, love and joy in the Holy Spirit. For He may not realize all the promises now in my life, yet many more are yet to be born who will partake in the promises. And the fulfillment we shall meet as one people. For together he has provided something better, that apart from us they should not be made perfect.

ESV Bible Online: Passage: Heb 11

Inverted Safari

For some random fun - we produced this video to encourage folks to get plugged into our Inversion community groups.
   
Here is the link to the video - It is MPEG4.

New Blog Coming Soon

We are busy working on a redesign of Power of Change Blog. We are moving to the Moveable Type platform in order to utilize blog categories and a little more robust design.



I think it will be similar to the current blog yet better looking and a bit more organized. Be ready to point your feedreader to a new address. I'll let everyone know the address when it is ready to roll. ...
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Which Windows Vista will you run? You have 8 choices

More proof that we might just have too many choices in life. Which Windows Vista will you run? You have 8 choices. - Engadget
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Piper on Church Planting

John Piper has a great exhortation online about the great need for church planting in America today. Very encouraging and worth the five minutes to read. A few highlights for me:
Third, new churches awaken and engage much of the under-used leadership potential of the saints in the older, larger churches. Many people are under-invested at Bethlehem. A new church would cry for your engagement. The need for more lay ministers in every sphere would press us all toward rigorous efforts of nurturing spiritual growth and leadership development.
Fourth, breaking free from the risk-free comfort of long-standing patterns of church life is a good thing. It’s good for your faith to be tested. It is good to take risks.
HT - Theologica
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Current Reading - Jesus Driven Ministry by Ajith Fernando

 


I just started a book entitled Jesus Driven Ministry by Ajith Fernando (Crossway, 2002) . The book is Fernando’s look at the manner of Jesus’ ministry to others primarily derived from the early chapters in Mark. Put very simply, the book is a plea for the basics of Christian ministry amidst the Western churches obsessions with therapy, marketing, and CEO style pastorates. I am three chapters in right now - and it has been very good. Fernando’s writing style is a bit like organized stream of consciousness, following a good outline, but wandering down some trails at his leisure. Some of what I have read has been a refreshing sort of thinking out loud. Having recently heard Fernando speak on similar topics, it is fun to “hear” him in my head as I read along. Here is the Table of Contents for the book. I look forward to the chapter on Discipling Young Leaders - surprisingly this can a lost art in many places which are no longer focused on raising up young men for the ministry of the gospel.

  1. Identifying with People 17
  2. Empowered by the Spirit 29
  3. Affirmed by God 47
  4. Retreating from Activity 61
  5. Affirming the Will of God 73
  6. Saturated in the Word 89
  7. Facing Wild Animals 107
  8. Bearing Good News 115
  9. Growing in a Team 131
  10. Discipling Younger Leaders 153
  11. Launching Disciples into Ministry 171
  12. Ministering to the Sick and Demon-Possessed 189
  13. Visiting Homes 209
  14. Praying 225

Fernando has a very unique perspective being from Sri Lanka, a country which has been plagued by civil war for many decades. He is the president of a national evangelistic organization, a lay local church leader, and a Christian thinker. He has has written a commentary on Acts, devotional literature, as well as an excellent treatment of the person of Christ. When he calls pastors to suffer for and become weak for the sake of others, we hear it from a man who has walked in a different setting than our own. A setting where the Christian faith is a minority point of view and one that is deeply informed by the necessity of the gospel for his people. Here are a couple of articles about the Sri Lankan church:

We would do well do have ministry that is driven. Driven by humilty, service, prayer, rest, and submission to God’s Word. All with the model being that of Jesus rather than modern corporate professionals…

In

On Color


Appearances matter because God gave us eyes - which perceive color, textures, beauty. Now does color exist in things and present itself upon the soul? Or does the mind create color due to certain sensible light which reflects from the thing itself. I think both - making Aquinas and Locke Kiss :) The thing itself does not "exude" color as once thought, but it does have certain properties in itself which absorbs or repels certain wavelengths of light. These are perceived by our eyes and brains and so we experience "orange" - So a modern and premodern view of color can be perhaps reconciled. The thing does have a property of "color" but we can describe the whole process a bit more with the tools of modern understanding. Now, the postmodern view of color? A Postmodern View - Well, since there are color blind people, and people can see different colors trippin on LSD...well, there is no color, only that which you experience. And this is true for you and you can drive that way if you like. Wait a second, you better stop at the red light!!!
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Above All Earthly Powers - Video Up

The video teaser for the 2006 Desiring God National Conference is now up. One gets the feeling of a gauntlet being thrown down when watching this one. Should be an interesting time gathering of leaders. I pray this will be marked as an historic day in church history, where both mission and gospel are clarified. Where truth and culture are clarified. Where believers will come out from Christian cloisters and invade culture - without loosing our ball in the weeds. A middle road between emergent compromise and fundamentalist irrelevance is being forged in the 21st century wilderness of Western Culture. I think this conference will be of great service to the people of God. ...
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Ten Reasons to Buy Windows Vista


The Windows Vista buzz continues. Link - Ten Reasons to Buy Windows Vista - Yahoo! News
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Kill the Cartoonists?

Ministers forced out as cartoon row escalates - Yahoo! News:
"On Friday, a Pakistani Muslim cleric and his followers offered rewards amounting to more than $1 million for anyone who killed the Danish cartoonists who drew the caricatures."
What a very strange religion of peace... ...
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Album Review - Flame Rewind


Of all the cultural art forms that are being plundered and put to service for the Kingdom of God, I think I enjoy hip hop the most. Many are probably unaware of these guys, but for the past six or seven years, Cross Movement Records has been putting out doctrinally sound, theologically driven, raw beats, tight flowing hip hop music to the glory of Christ. Their most recent release, Rewind, by Flame - is one of the best yet. The lyrics show deep theological reflection, achieve magnificently what Flame's web site describes as "Distance Discipleship", and have a flow and kick to the beats that is excellent. Flame's strength is flowing theological concepts in a flavor that will connect with the streets in a bold yet compassionate fashion. He addresses several issues that trouble the church - health and wealth gospel (see the Track Rewind) and even Sabellian Modalism (an error regarding the Trinity common in Oneness Pentecostalism of our day - See his Track - The Godhead ) In a very creative track entitled Context, Flame gives a great introduction to Hermenuetics, the art and science of Biblical Interpretation. Here is a sample from the lyrics:
The first task of the interpreter is called exegesis/(extra Jesus)/ naw I said exegesis man/ it’s a Latin word don’t be scared/ matter of fact I laughed when I first heard it too/ its spelled e-x-e-g-e-s-i-s/ guarantee you learn this process and you’ll be blessed
Then the hook (chorus) flows:
With this skill this should keep you from heresy/ and keep you from going through theological therapy/, the words of God will change your life/ if you Keep the text in its context
Verse 3 has a strong exhortation as well:
What you don’t wanna do is called eisegesis/(I see Jesus)/ naw I said eisegesis man/ you a silly dude its Latin too/ and that’s just the act of when your adding to/ or the process of reading one’s own meaning/ into the text and that’s just eisegeting/ don’t fret I know these words are new/ and phrases to/ but it’s cool to go back to school/ its spell ei-se-gesis/ guarantee you learn this process and God’ll be vexed/ a text can never mean what it never meant before/ to its original reader or author/ so if you run into a difficult passage and you know the Bible never contradicts itself/ then turn the pages to a parallel passage and just let the scriptures interpret itself
Not theological baby talk - but rolled out in a cultural flavor that many a young brother will here. Other tracks of note are Give us Da Truth Part 2, Sola Scriptura, and Racial Diversity. The CD also has a fun flavor being set in a radio show format. The "commercial" is really funny. He has stepped out and brought strong lyrics into some worlds which he will find some resistance. The health/wealth false gospel is killing the church; and Flames compassion for his our African American sisters and brothers in that movement comes through. Flame has given us a great gift - even to those who do not have ears to hear hip hop. And for those of us who do - ahhh yeah...Flame is kickin my iPod. He asks us "is that in the Bible" when false teaching is flowing in the World. For that I tip my hat to a brother. May the Cross Movement Tribe increase the raw beats and the theological meats. May the Lord bless all flavors of the movement of His cross. Including the one who has chosen throw back jerseys to sunday clothes. ...
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In

Jim Elliot – To Exhibit the Value of Knowing God

Jim Elliot – To Exhibit the Value of Knowing God
Born October 8th, 1927 in Portland, Oregon Died January 8th 1956 at “Palm Beach” in the Ecuadorian Rainforest

Lord make my way prosperous, not that I achieve high station, but that my life may be an exhibit to the value of knowing God.
Such was the prayer of one twenty year old named Jim. As I read about the life of Jim Elliot I searched for a title for this biography which would be appropriate to describe the man I have observed. It would have been easy to select the Elliot quote for which he has become most famous: “He is no fool who gives that which he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.” Yet that seemed an encouragement to others rather than a description of what I saw in this man. What I did see was value in a life, the great value of knowing and loving the God of the Bible. The value of knowing God was indeed fully on display in the life of Jim Elliot. So I have entitled this biography “Jim Elliot – To Exhibit the Value of Knowing God.” So it is now my prayer that the fire of the value of knowing God would be stoked hot in our own lives. To this end let us now look at the life of a man who lived and died just over fifty years ago. To read the rest, the full paper can be found here: Jim Elliot – To Exhibit the Value of Knowing God ...
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Together for the Gospel

Mark Dever describes the sort of "church growth" we all need to pray for... Together for the Gospel - More Conversions ...
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Between Two Worlds: Biblical Illiteracy 101

I know many have seen this but I felt it was worth posting. Apparently a United Church of Christ congregation had posted the words of Satan on their main web site banner: "If you, then, will worship me, it will all be yours" Luke 4:7 See Between Two Worlds: Biblical Illiteracy 101 for more on this one... ...
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Living with Jim...

I am extremely immersed today in the biography and journals of Jim Elliot. I'll have a paper on his life posted here soon. Keep a look out for that in the next few days. I made the decision early in the fall to go ahead with Elliot this year in writing a missionary biography. I went back and forth on it because I knew the movie End of the Spear would be out. I think it was the right choice for no other reason that God has used the movie, the books I have read, and the documentary to greatly bless and encourage me in these days. The journals have been very refreshing as they show the who angle of a man. The struggle as well as the conviction, the passion as well as the days of listlessness. Overall, it has been a great experience brought to my life in the proper time. Today I am marveling at how God led a man over time, through some years of certainty of call, but uncertainty of specific details. I can never get a broad view of my own life as I live it day by day, but seeing anothers life events from a broad perspective, able to see the years weave together, is a special gift. To quote John Piper "Brothers, Read Christian Biography" Brothers we are not Professionals, page 89. Elliot knew a sovereign God, who gave enough detail for today. A quick quote and then back to the writing the biography.
To dream, and want and pray, almost savagely; then to commit and wait and see Him quietly pile all dreams aside and replace them with what we could not dream, the realized Will [of God]
Jim has me swimming in good waters today ...
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