POC Blog

The random technotheolosophical blogging of Reid S. Monaghan

Why I come back to the blog...

Some of you may be wondering - what gives over at the POCBlog...Reid hasn't posted anything here in almost two weeks.  Yeah, me too - I am wondering that as well except that I know precisely why I have not posted here.  To be honest, my life is full of several things these days which I truly enjoy...though I need to make more time for doing push ups (I still think this is not a challenge though).

My wife Kasey and I have been married for over twelve years and I truly enjoy her company and making her laugh.  I like throwing on an episode of our favorite SciFi show and just get lost with her in futuristic world that makes both of us go Hmm. I also have two little girls that I am seeing quite a bit more these days as my office is in my living room (seriously, my living room is an office/library).  This has made interacting with the girls more readily available for us all and quite enjoyable.  I spend less time in the car and for the most part I can still focus on work that needs to get done.  After all, when your girls make home made T-shirts that say "We Love New Jersey...Jersey Girls...Go Rutgers" you just have to shut down the e-mail, give some high fives and hugs. 


There is also this strange bouncy creature that speeds up and down the highways and byways, kitchen and hallways...having a son is more fun than I imagined and his hugs, head butts and headache inducing two year old flow add a certain zesty and testy flavor to the Monaghan home team.

Furthermore, we are just a few weeks in from gathering together as a small house church called Jacob's Well.  It has been a great privilege to chart the course for our community under the good hand of God.  We have been meeting new people, believers and not, and trying to make sense of new lives, new schedules, new culture and new flow in a new community.  We have also been going to Athletes in Action meetings again...it is great to be back around  the AIA community again. To be honest - I love what we are doing these days. 

The other night I hung out with a new guy at our church watching Monday Night Football and throwing down nachos with a Yuenlings.  A fun night as I enjoyed the depth of a new friend who thinks and cares deeply about life.  We also watched DeSean Jackson showboat into the end zone for the Eagles dropping the ball a weeeee little early on the one yard line.  Fantasy football people know this play - it determined some outcomes!  Shout out from Reid and Shaun to my boys Schaeffer and Jay.  Additionally, the other day I met a guy at a networking gig who had great questions about God, family etc. A guy who naturally shared with me that he doesn't believe but his interest seemed to be piqued as we talked.  I like learning from people like him and helping in any way I can in someone's road towards God.  Yes life can be full these days.

Yet I am back here on the POCBlog again - writing away.  I have thought over the last couple of weeks about my longing to return to some blogging.  I have had zero thoughts that the blog coaches give: "You better post regularly to keep readers coming back"  "You better post new and original content or people get bored" - Yeah, I know.  To be honest I don't write on the blog here for any sort of reason like that.  Quite simply, I want and feel a need to write...I just like it, it is something I enjoy and the interactions with you guys in the comments is enjoyable as well.  Plus once in a while something useful comes out (this post...not gonna be one of those).

Anyway, I am on a plane heading to Seattle for some Pastor Training meetings (the amount of reading and writing for this gig has kept the last few days a bit busy as well) and some time with some friends who are about the Kings business.  I am pretty stoked as the time in planes and in airports today has afforded some thought and reading.  I am pretty jazzed about a book I am racing through here on the plane...There is not (A) God by Anthony Flew and Roy Abraham Varghese.  It is by and about one of the more prominent atheistic philosophers who four years came to believe in a intelligent God.  Look for a review (likely to be glowing) here soon...

So I return again to these pages called Power of Change - to scribble and think, laugh and wink and enjoy the company of friends.  So the technotheolosophical random blogging goes on...

Oh yeah, one last thing.  You know that snotty little "I'm a Mac" guy that looks down on the whole world because of the type of computer he is?  Well, he has finally been answered in a little ad by Mikeysoft.  My name is Reid and "I'm a PC" so don't stereotype me. Grace and Peace to you on International Talk Like a Pirate Day.

Arrrrgh!

 

Pray for India

 


I know it is not getting much media play, but there is some terrible violence being directed at Christians by Hindu factions in Orissa, India.  Churches are being burned, people hacked to death...please pray for the people there.  We have received reports from some friends with some details about the situation and it is truly perilous and sickening. 

It seems some US leaders in Congress are at least paying attention. We hope the issues can be resolved on the ground and order be established by those responsible.  Please pray for Indian Christians under severe persecution.

POC Bundle 9.09.2008

General News

Technology


Sometimes I am left without words...

These guys are awesome - I hoped this was a parody - but the sad thing is that this is likely actual footage.  Please mourn with me...for all the mockers out there...Jesus can be your friend too...but you don't have to roll like this.

Here are my favorite lines

  • He taught me how to turn the cheeck when people laugh at me...uh, good thing
  • He taught me how to praise my God and still play rock and roll...uh, is this rock and roll?
  • He is like a Mounty he always gets his man...then I think he then said "zap" or something...scary.
(HT - Tim Dees - who is my friend)

The Interconnected Relationship of Family and Church

Throughout Scripture we see a beautiful metaphor emerging for that of God’s people; we are called a family.  As God’s created design has each of us born from the union of a mother and father we uniquely can understand what it means to be the family of God.  Yet in our day of gender confusion, family fissures and forgotten fatherhood it is something which can easily be lost upon contemporary believers.  What must be regained is a simultaneous resurgence of the family at home and the family of church.  These two are interconnected in Scripture and need to be reconnected in our day.  It may no longer be assumed that people see a loving family on their way through childhood so that church can offer a family to the familyless.  Additionally, the church can mentor young men and women to establish new families in our day which might again unite the church as a family in ever deeper ways.  In the short essay we will do three things.  First, we will outline what Scripture teaches about the family of home and the family of church.  Second, we will look at the nexus of family/church relationships and leadership.  Third, we will explain how we see this interconnection being lived out in the complexities of our lives together in the 21st century in face paced central New Jersey.

An Outline of Biblical Teaching

  • We all come from an original family consisting of one man and one woman. He builds families through Fathers and Mothers (Genesis 1-2, 1 Corinthians 11:11,12)
  • This family’s sin corrupted us all and results in painful family relationships which expand into the false gospels of culture (Genesis 3-11)
  • God reveals himself to us as Father (Jesus’ most used term for God)
  • He calls parents, within covenant community with others, to be the primary shaping influence on children (Deuteronomy 6)
  • Children are set apart as holy, part of the covenant community, by virtue of their believing parents (1 Corinthians 7)
  • Fathers and Mothers have unique and irreplaceable roles (Deuteronomy 6, Proverbs 31,1 Thes 2, Ephesians 5-6, Colossians 3)
  • The church is a family of brothers, sisters, fathers and mothers (1 Timothy 5)
  • The church community serves parents in their role and bear burdens along with them (Ephesians 4-6, Galatians 6)
  • Parents serve others in the church by modeling Christ in the family (Ephesians 5) and training the next generation of mothers and fathers (Titus 2)
  • The government of church is based upon the government of home - Husband is head who is to honor and serve his wife in sacrificial, life giving kindness (1 Corinthians 11, Ephesians 5, Colossians 3:19, 1 Peter 3:7) and woman is helper (Gen 2:18-24). Her response to his servant leadership is submission (Ephesians 5, Colossians 3:18 1 Peter 3:1-6) and his response to her helpful leadership is praise (Proverbs 31)
  • The Husband is a servant of his wife loving and leading sacrificially like Jesus. He is to give his life for her and bring his children up in the fear and instruction of God (Ephesians 5-6, Colossians 3:20,21)

The Family/Church Nexus

The interconnectedness of church and family is visible both in our relationships and the leadership/authority God gives to his people.  The following two diagrams demonstrate our relationships to Christ, Church and Family as well as the gracious gift of leadership given by God to his people.  Each one will be treated in turn.

Our Relational Reality

Scripture teaches that all believers are “in union with Christ” (Col 3).  Furthermore the church universal and invisible is called his very body and the temple where Christ dwells by his Spirit.  So relationally speaking, church, home and believer all exist in the realm of unity with Jesus…in the figure below Christ is in all and encompasses all.  Furthermore, all Christians exist in the covenant community called the church - the one’s called out together for God’s purposes, worship and mission in the world.  Finally, all families, the arrangement of home, are in relational community with others (single, married, widowed, divorced) who are in covenant with Jesus.  So the Christian is in family, which is in covenant community which all exists by Jesus and for Jesus…see figure 1 below.

Figure 1 - Relational reality in Christ, in Covenant, in Family

Under Servant Leadership

The Scripture uses wonderful terminology for describing the leadership God has graciously given his people.  Jesus is called the bridegroom and husband of the church, he is called the head of the body (the church) and he is called our good and chief shepherd.  So all authority in heaven and on earth has been given by the Father to the Jesus (Matthew 28:18-20) and we live under his leadership each day.  Jesus fulfills all the types of anointed covenant leadership expressed in the Old Testament offices of Israel.  He is our true prophet, the incarnate Word, bring the Word of God to his people.  He is our great high priest ever interceding for his people before his father as our one covenant mediator. He is our great King who leads his people through spiritual battle as we sojourn on mission with him in this word.  Furthermore his leadership is one of a servant, who willingly washes his followers’ feet and shows his great love for his family by laying his life down for them.  There is no greater love than that of Jesus and he is both the model and the means to all servant leadership in God’s family. 

Jesus has called then calls some of his men to be elders/overseers/pastors to follow him as willing under shepherds giving their lives in service to God and his flock (1 Peter 5:1-5).  These pastors are to be examples to others, model godly leadership in their own homes, love their wives and kids with Jesus as their God and leader.  They are to proclaim the Word of God as Jesus ministers his word to his people.  They are to lead people to Jesus in baptism and the Lord’s Supper the appointed signs which point to Jesus’ priestly role in bringing us to the Father.  They are to exercise godly leadership and discipline in the church to help God’s people grow and follow Jesus who is King.  Under the care of the pastors of the church are the families of God, small communities organized under Jesus as well.

The fathers in the home serve as extensions of Jesus leadership to their families. Men are to serve as prophets, bringing Jesus’ word to their homes.  They are priests to lead the family in worship to God.  They are kings who are to manage their households well.  There is no believer who is not under God’s gracious authority. The family and the church are all under Jesus as Lord.

One note must be made from Jesus himself; we cannot take this more seriously.  This is the account of John Mark in chapter 10 of his account of the life and teaching of Jesus:

42 And Jesus called them to him and said to them, “You know that those who are considered rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over them. 43 But it shall not be so among you. But whoever would be great among you must be your servant, 44 and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all. 45 For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”

In our day where pastors can pimp the church for profit, power and posterity it is important for God’s men to wrap the towel around the waist and wash the feet of the household of God.  We need more men who serve and honor their wives empowering them to their God given callings.  We need more men who will teach, mentor, instruct and discipline the kids that they love deeply.  We need more pastors who are more like Jesus and less like the power brokers of politics and the corporate ladders. 

In summary, Jesus is senior pastor and good shepherd; his realm of authority is all things heaven and earth.  His pastors shepherd the church under his guidance in covenant communities where families are lovingly served by husband-fathers who extend gracious leadership in the home.  The following demonstrates the overlapping realms of Jesus’ authority.


Figure 2 - Leadership - Responsible Christ, Responsible Pastors, Responsible Fathers

All theology must not remain conceptual but needs to find a grip on everyday life in all contexts to which Jesus has called his church.  Jacob’s Well is called to live out the realm of home and church in a fast paced, success oriented, power hungry culture of central New Jersey.  As part of the New York City metro area, with institutions of education, medicine and business all around, families must swim against the tide of culture to have families together for the gospel of Jesus Christ.  To this task we now turn.

Living in 21st Century Central New Jersey

As we look at life and culture in the northeastern United States we find a people that are on the treadmill of 21st century life and business.  Many people do not live in the same town in which they work with some commuting anywhere from 30 min to 2 hours each way.  Time and finances are stretched for many and both parents working is many times the rule for those with children.  In this cultural fabric we must work to, no fight, to maintain a different rhythm of life.  We must carve out a rhythm where families can still walk together in spiritual formation and real community as the people of God.  The following are but a few lines in the battle.

Fight for Meal Time (with Family)

In order for families to grow in grace men and women need to fight to share a common meal together.  This will be a matter of schedule and priority for moms and dads to shape each day to make this a reality. Some families may find an early morning breakfast table easier to achieve while others may seek the solace of a dinner table appointment.  Either way, a time to eat, share Scripture, pray for one another and worship must be found.  A meal is a great thing to fight for.  Suggestions for content and structure for such devotions is being provided in our Jacob’s Well Family Worship piece currently under development.

Fight for Face Time (with Kids)

To respond to the biblical commands for parents, specifically fathers, to instruct children in the faith several things are needed.  First, it requires a committed relationship where kids trust can grow in the voice, teaching and character of their parents.  Kids need to see and be with their parents to learn to trust them.  Furthermore parents need to engage kids in active, real life learning in the course of everyday living. In other words, teaching needs to happen when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. This will require significant face time in the course of everyday life.  Men and women will need to schedule well, carve out time, and exercise discipline in order to configure schedules to be able to walk along side their kids.

Fight for Date Time (with your Spouse)

Many times parents can be so focused on their kids that they forget that their first relationship before God is their own marriage covenant.  Part of raising kids in a context of the gospel is allowing them to see God displayed in marriage (Ephesians 5), to see forgiveness granted for sin in real relationships, to observe healthy conflict and reconciliation and to grasp the meaning of the gospel lived out in their home. Kids will learn about masculinity and femininity as parents live out the marriage relationship with them.  Additionally, God has given marriage to bless his people and the joy and refuge which a husband and wife can be to one another is a treasure that the busyness of life often robs from us.  So we want to encourage creative ways for husbands and wives to be together.  We encourage couples to keep a regular date night as a practical measure of carving out time.  This can be something as simple as slow time together on the couch, a leisurely stroll, going shopping (yes men, you can do it) or something fun that requires a bit of cash.  The point is to have the flow of life directed so that you can get time together.

Fight for Faith Time (with our Church)

Many churches excessively burden families with such a dizzying flurry of programs that the average Christian has little to no free time for other things.  Churches should slow it down to a very minimum amount of activities so that families can spend time together and on mission in their respective communities.  Simplicity should be valued and practiced when putting together a church calendar.  With that said, we are still to come together for Word and Sacrament and a corporate expression of worship before God.  This requires a commitment to unite as a family for the worship of God.  The church’s ministry to children should supplement and undergird the teaching and discipleship ministry of the parents.  Older men and women and more mature Christians should teach and model parenting to new families and provide curriculum and resources to help the family towards certain devotional realities in the home. 

Fight for Mission Time (with friends, families, co-workers and comrades)

Finally, Jesus is on mission in the world among the lost and the hurting.  He calls his church and sends us on mission with him in our world.  If Christians only have time for their family, their work and their church stuff there is usually no time left for mission. Let me revisit for a moment parents spending time with their kids.  If we see all of life as mission and our nature and identity as his sent people families will be engaged in more activities that watching “safe” TV and playing Jenga on the weekends. Our families need to be on mission with Jesus in all things.  Be it with other families at the soccer field, getting to know neighbors on an evening walk/bike ride, serving those in need, visiting the sick, celebrating at weddings, etc. etc. Those who live the mission of Jesus with their kids in all of life will find they might just see Jesus as more than “their parent’s religion.”

All of these require margin…work to change the rhythm of the day so that life can happen…God give grace as we work together towards a lifestyle where family, work, mission are found daily under the rule and reign of Jesus.

 

Suffering - A Transcendent Clue

 

 

I have been pondering this question quite a bit...using Aristotelian/Thomistic categories. Is evil/suffering/pain/death etc. essential/substantial or accidental to this world and human experience?

I find the answer from a framework of naturalism must say "this is essential...fundamental to the way things are." Death, survival, reproduction...genes moving on through the cosmos perhaps hindered by our memes along the way.

Yet this seems to be strange because we seem to create a "problem of evil" - as if evil is a problem. and not a simple fact of the world.  In a theistic worldview, evil is accidental, not essential and hence a "problem" - but this only makes sense if there is a good world...somehow gone bad with an alien invasion of suffering which is constant and objectionable by the creature.

So...essential or accidental? The answer to this question seems to set one's trajectory in life. Ask yourself a question - does your own suffering seem "right and normal" or really something "wrong."

Worth your time to think about...

Chrome is Cool

OK, I should be getting some sleep but I have been wired all day and thinking too much about well...too many things.  Anyway, I wanted to let you guys know that Google's new web browser, Chrome...is pretty cool.

It is still beta software (meaning it is a work in progress...but you know Google calls everything beta just so you won't think it sucks if something doesn't work right) so there are some kinks. I have had a few tiny hiccups running Facebook and its inline spell checker won't work in my Movable Type Blog entry interface (a HUGE deal for me). Anyway, if you have not checked it out hop on over to this link http://www.google.com/chrome. There are some cool short vids and even a comic book (yes, really) explaining the features of the new platform.  

Just so you know - this is Google's OS play - they want to control the space that applications run in on your browser. It is an end around both OS X and Windows (or Ubuntu if you like) so developers can write software for the browser and not a certain OS API.  Kind of cool...but to be honest I like things that have a client and cloud computing combination...perhaps if Google can actually get Gears to work well it will be an interesting platform.  Yet for now I like it that I can get all my stuff to interoperate - I connectc to Exchange with Outlook, sync automatically to Google Calendar where I can see my stuff and our family's stuff overlaid with each other...and can access it all from my Palm Centro. 

In the evolving computer world this is an interesting play...whether they will take browser share from Internet Explorer or canibalize the market share gains garnered by FireFox is yet to be seen.  I will say that most people who are tech saavy have moved to the Fox...so it seems to me it isn't grandma who will switch or consider switching to Chrome - but FireFox users like me...if they can get spell check to work in ALL web forms. Those special nerds who use WebKit will enjoy Chrome - it is based on that rendering engine.  

Enjoy... 

 

 

 

Our New Fam - An Exciting Mustard Seed

 

Tonight we had our first core gathering of a small mustard seed called Jacob's Well.  It was great to eat, fellowship and dream together with my new family.  We are beginning a journey together to live for the glory of God, the good of our cities and extend hope through the gospel of Jesus Christ in central New Jersey.  I am so thankful for each person involved.  Two guys are not pictured as one of them had a pretty bad allergic reaction this afternoon and had to be driven home. 

It is a joy and privilege to lead this community forward serving them and building our team.  Pray I would lead them willingly with a passionate servants heart...with wisdom and skill with faith and dependence on God.  

Please keep this crew in mind - that God would expand the family, add to our number as we work together to see a community planted - a gospel centered, thoughtfully engaged, family who seeks mercy and justice while finding joy through generosity and mission. 

The Office

No this is not going to be some pithy off the wall theo-commentary about the popularly funny sitcom "The Office" - Not that I am above doing that, but this office is my new home office.  Some generous servants from NC (thank you Terry, Tom and Charles) built and delivered me some incredibly sexy bookshelves which now house my small army of little friends.  Kasey and I cannot thank these men enough for all they did to help our home and family. 

And yes, I speak endearingly of my books.  Anyway, here is a picture of my shelves, my desktop, my office and my new printer which has brought both joys and pain.

The Shelves - this action shot features a twelve foot wall of wood with room to grow from the guys birthed out of brown Amazon.com boxes. It also features some framed Inversion gear from years past.  Some would ask why I don't have more books...some would think I have bookidolatry...my secret is keeping almost a thousand volumes (mainly classic works, references, lexicons and commentaries) on my hard drive courtesy of Logos Liboronix...awwww yeah. Click images for larger views.

 

The Office - here I sit with my Windows Vista equipped Dell Laptop, conceled USB hub for connected devices.  I have a minimal desk as most work is computerized...I have a small resource center behind me for printed materials, supplies and workspace for hole punching and paper cutting. Having your office in what is supposed to be "the living room" gives you a nice selection of windows. 

 

The Desktop - Currently I have some printouts on my desk in preparation for our first core get together for Jacob's Well on Sunday night.  Fall Schedules, Jacob's Well DNA files and some cool visual teaching thingys (can't show you pics of that - top secret) are there.  Also of note is a picture of me with my smoking hot wife, some new biz cards with my NJ 411 and slightly to the left is one of my daughters panda bears from the Littlest Pet Shop...yeah, I roll that way.

 

The Printer - this lovely guy is the subject of my previous blog post - well, sort of.  This was an unbelievable gift from a friend.  Color, full duplex, wireless and cost me nothing.  Did I say this was an unbelievable gift! 

 

So I am really thankful for my office, my bookshelves and gifted gear.  Yet I am not thankful for these in themselves...but rather their purpose in my life.  To be used in service of the giver of all good things.  St. Augustine once commented that to love a gift more than the giver of all things would be utterly absurd...I'll leave you with a classic quote from him on this.

“Suppose brethren, a man should make a ring for his betrothed, and she should love the ring more wholeheartedly than the betrothed who made it for her….Certainly, let here love his gift: but, if she should say, “The ring is enough.  I do not want to see his face again” what would we say of her?...The pledge is given her by the betrothed just that, in his pledge, he himself may be loved.  God, then, has given you all these things.  Love him who made them.” 

Selah...

Struggling with Life and Printers

This past week I have been working on setting up my home office.  My undergrad degree was in Applied Computer Science and a minor in Physics so I still take to the tech world a little bit.  So I was installing a wireless network, my work laptop and the family computer.  As Balki Bartokomous used to say, it was easy as cake and a piece of pie. Successfully installing some technology is very rewarding and yet there is a dark side of this same force as well.  Introduce the new printer...

A gracious and generous friend from Fellowship Nashville bought Jacob's Well a sweet color laser printer which also scans, faxes and gives back massages.  Well, maybe I am embellishing a bit...but it is a sweet printer.  I unpacked the box, installed a hardware duplexer (both sides of the paper please!) and we were off and running.  I plugged in my USB cable to my laptop and viola! Printing in less than 5 minutes...pride cometh before a fall.  The printer is also networkable and I wanted to be able to print from our family computer...and from my wireless network anywhere in the house.  Part II of my printer installation experience took 5 hours.

So I followed instructions installing a wireless network card into the printer - pretty simple.  Then ran the install stuff and unplugged...nothing. Then I spent a good few hours reading a fat manual and trying different methods of installation. Finally, I did the unthinkable - I called Dell Tech Support.  For about an hour I did exactly what the guy said, which was stuff I already had tried - which did nothing but make me feel less stupid.  Then we gave the printer a permanent IP address (something I think the Dell install manual should tell you to do, but I digress) and thought we had made it.  Nope.  Anyway, the install routine was not giving it a TCP/IP port in Windows - we went in and added a port and finally...printing again. The Dell guy was cool and very helpful - but it took time and a bit of perseverance.

In going through this joyous process I realized how my life centers around getting stuff to "work right."  I want my marriage to work right, my kids to work right, my body to work right, my work to work right and of course, my newfangled techno-gadgets to work right.  Yet I keep running into this problem - things can and do go "wrong." So for me, my entangled battle with a printer is an echo of the running battle that all people face living outside of Eden. 

  • We want the world to be rational and moral...and it is, well, sometimes
  • We want things to go well...and they don't, and do...sometimes
  • We want to control things...and we can...sometimes, but then realize it is an illusion...well, sometimes
  • We want life to be easier, but it is hard
  • We want joy to flow from all our possessions and trappings - and it doesn't
  • We want life to be full and sometimes it is boring and mundane
  • We think sex, food and new experiences will fix it all - and we are perplexed when they don't

So it seems to me that there are two ways you can look at this world, both based on the reality of our mingled existence...that there is a real experience of joy, goodness, truth, love and beauty and an equal amount of despondency, evil, deception, guile and ugliness. When we run into this reality all the time.  It is why we get drunk.

So my question is this: What more defines your world? Brokenness or Beauty, Harmony or Havoc?

  1. You can see the world as a random place of chaos where death and survival are the only laws of the jungle.  In this view love is accidental (not essential) and pain would seem essential.   
  2. You can see this as a world of purpose and order where truth, purpose and goodness govern the universe.  In this view chaos/evil are accidental (not essential, even alien) and love/goodness is essential. 

It is my contention that we all long for goodness and love and think the world ought to be a more hospitable place. In other words, we think existence is a good thing but there is stuff going awfully wrong - like my printer. We hope, love, dream, desire and ache for another place.  As CS Lewis once rightly wrote in his classic Mere Christianity: "If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world."

So my printer now prints...and is filled with awesomeness...but it doesn't yet scan on the network...and the control panel seems to have an admin password that I neither asked for or assigned.  So it seems like technology bliss and banality both remain ahead. Likewise, my life will likely continue to travel roads that are mingled as well.  I know I will need to choose to follow God tomorrow and love my neighbor as myself.  I know that I must resist the dark paths that emerge from my own soul and choose to stay close to Jesus.  I need to find his grace in my failures and new hope tomorrow.  I need him to teach me that God is good and governing the chaos and some day the alien darkness will lift from his world. To think otherwise is to give way to a view of life that is less human...and certainly not from God. 

 

Son of Hamas...

FOXNews.com has a fascinating article about Mosab Hassan Yousef son of someone in the leadership of Hamas. The article is mostly interview form and centers on Yousef's conversion to Christianity from the religion of peace. In commenting on what other Muslim's think of his conversion he provides one of my favorite quotes from the piece:

Yeah, they think that Christians took advantage of me, and this is completely wrong. I've been a Christian for a long time before they knew, or anyone knew. I love Jesus, I followed him for many years now. It wasn't a secret for most of the time, and this time I just did it to glorify the name of God and praise him. They're not dealing with a regular Muslim. They know that I'm educated, they know that I studied, they know that I studied Islam and Christianity. When I made my decision, I didn't make it because someone did magic on me or convinced me. It was completely my decision.

There is also a video report which I have embedded here as well:

Death by Love

ReLit/Crossway will be publishing a second book from Mark Driscoll and Gerry Breshears.  The book is titled Death by Love and is a treatment of the scope and breadth of Christ's work on the cross for us.  ReLit just launched a new web site to feature the book and it is extremely well done.  There is a fantastic video (see embed below, or larger video on their site) some sick graphic art to download, a sample chapter in a nice flash reader, as well as a page on Facebook

This book will be a work in theology and practical ministry as it focuses on various aspects of Jesus death on the cross applied practically to the stories of real people.  I look forward to having this one on our book table once we get launched out with Jacob's Well next year.

In

The ESV - Even Loved in China

Readers here know that I am an ESV fanboy - I said the other day that I loved Windows Vista - but even more that that I love the English Standard Version of the Bible.  It seems that the ESV is even beloved in the nation of China.

From the Crossway Press Release - ESV and the Olympics.  I feel happy:

Wheaton, IL—China will provide 10,000 free Chinese-English bilingual Bibles to be distributed in the Olympic Village where the Olympic athletes and media are housed, as reported by the China Daily newspaper. The bilingual Bible text will include the CUV (Chinese Union Version) and the ESV (English Standard Version), appearing in two side-by-side columns per page. The CUV Bible is the most widely distributed Chinese Bible in the world, and the ESV Bible has recently become the fastest-growing English language Bible in the world.

In addition to the 10,000 bilingual CUV-ESV Bibles, 30,000 New Testaments and 100,000 bilingual editions of the four Gospels will also be made available at the Olympic Games.

Because cultural and academic leaders in China are seeking to understand the influence of the Bible on the worldview and culture of the West, there is a growing interest in Chinese-English bilingual Bibles in mainland China. “We are especially grateful,” Crossway President Dr. Lane Dennis notes, “that the ESV was selected by Chinese Christian leaders for publication with Chinese CUV Bible, through our partnership with the British and Foreign Bible Society. Since both the CUV and the ESV are ‘essentially literal’ Bible translations, they are ideally suited for a side-by-side comparison of the two languages. What a wonderful thing it would be if thousands of people would learn English—and Chinese!—by reading the Bible in side-by-side bilingual editions.”

You can read the rest here

 

POC Bundle 8.07.2008

The Church 

Technology

  • I heart Windows Vista...now don't start mouthin off if you have not used it and watch Mac commercials. I have used it for 8 months and love it.  Also, Microsoft has a fun project they launched called the Mojave Experiment - check it out
  • Looking for affordable online back-up for your PC or MAC?  Check out Jungle Disk.  It is an interface for Amazon's S3 Storage solution.  Your data is stored online with Amazon's servers and the monthly fee is ridiculously small. 
  • Practice Surgery on the Wii - Why not? Surgeons Hone Skill with the Wii
  • Finally, John Mark Reynolds asks the question - Are We Distracting Ourselves to Death? and offers five practical tips for techno-sanity in our age.

Peripateo - My Walk

  • A touching story of a man who is wrestling away from a drug addiction.  ESPN Outside the Lines Feature - Getting Off the Mat.
  • John Crace from the Guardian (UK) does a sort of parody review of William Young's The Shack. Just a look at how someone from the outside views things...here is a sampling: "

    The snow lay thick and the shack was deserted when Mack arrived, but he blinked and suddenly it was spring and the forest was covered with verdant greens. "Hello, Mack," said a black woman.

    "I wasn't expecting God to be a black woman," Mack gasped.

    "That's because you've never read any quasi-liberal, religious crap like this before," God laughed. "But don't panic. I am American."

    "I'm Jesus," said Jesus. "I've got a wacky sense of humour."

    "And because I'm eastern, I've been given the job of being the Holy Spirit," Sarayu murmured, "so forgive me if I sound like a stoned hippie when I burble some meaningless mystical bollocks."

Gender Issues
  • Interesting Review of Wendy Shalit's book Girls Gone Mild - Young Women Reclaim Self-Respect and Find It's Not Bad to Be Good in the Weekly Standard. 

 

 

The Love of a Daddy

OK, I just watched this video with my wife.  She had seen it before but I had not.  Lets just say somebody was all teary eyed watching this...great love, great theology, great God.  I'm not saying who was the crier...I'll keep his identity under wraps.

Some of you have probably seen this already but in case you haven't click play below:

Mars Hill Church - Pastors Training Program (aka PTP)

Over the past few days I have been in Seattle with a group of men beginning Mars Hill Seattle's first class of its new Pastors Training Program. Mars Hill is investing in men from around the country to provide training for planting churches in the coming year. We will fly out every six weeks or so, with assignments in between to walk together towards launching churches in 2009. 

It has been a great four days and I have greatly enjoyed meeting the guys and being invested in by the staff at Mars Hill Church.  Many thanks to Scott, Gary, Tyler , and Dave of the church planting office of Mars Hill.  Many thanks to Mark for the few hours he invested with us on Friday.  Many thanks to deacon Adriel Ifland and her tireless work pulling all the details together. Adriel writes of her passion for this program over at the Reforming the Feminine Blog - Her passion to see godly men raised up who will treat women with honor is quite amazing.  You can read her post here - 16 men in my life - I highly recommend it.

And last, and most important, many thanks to the risen Jesus who leads us forward in gospel centered, culturally engaged church planting in our day.

The Devil's Delusion - A Refreshing and Witty Polemic


David Berlinski, The Devil's Delusion - Atheism and Its Scientific Pretentions (New York: Crown Forum, 2008)

Introduction

Every now and again I come across books which do two things.  They provide great food for thought and they make me laugh out loud.  It is a very rare convergence of events but nonetheless there are some authors out there which succeed at uniting the horns of thought and humor in my life. This summer I just finished reading one such book, one The Devils Delusion - Atheism and Its Scientific Pretensions by David Berlinski.  For those of you who are not familiar with him Berlinski is a sort of rogue academic who is involved with the work of the Discovery Institute (shhh...they are involved with intelligent design...shhh). Slate recently did an interesting piece on him if you want some background on the man described in that article as "a critic, a contrarian, and—by his own admission—a crank"

He holds a PhD in Philosophy from Princeton has taught at numerous institutions of higher learning and has published books on Mathematics and the history of science.  He is a bit of a rogue because he is a skeptical secular Jew who most recently has been writing against the overconfident reach of the the Darwinian establishment.  He also is an American academic who lives in Paris...which seems to point to "rogue."  I don't think he is too much of a troublemaker but he is a bit punchy and mischievous in his writings.

The book is another work which addresses the arguments of militant (perhaps obnoxious?) atheists such as Sam Harris, Daniel Dennet and the now infamous Richard Dawkins (aka Dick to the Dawk). This book, however, has a particular idea in its cross hairs; the idea that only atheism can lay claim to being "scientific" as well as some of the more ridiculous things atheistic thinkers claim in the "name of science." It seems that the likes of the new atheist posse have big love for him as well.  From Slate:

The atheists, meanwhile, can't stand him: According to Daniel Dennett, Berlinski exudes a "rich comic patina of smug miseducation"; Richard Dawkins implies that he may be wicked to the core; and blogger-ringleader P.Z. Myers has called him a "pompous pimple" and a "supercilious snot." 

How nice of these fellows! In reading this book I can see why they might find Berlinski a bit maddening.  For one, he is spooky smart, erudite, irreverent towards their cause and quite pithy in his deconstruction of their cherished religion of scientism. Quite frankly, I have found Berlinski to be quite adept at the lost art of polemics.  With a society that is either too squeamish to oppose any ideas or is so ridiculously uncivil in dealing with opponents, a nice intelligent polemicist is a treat to read. 

In this review I will summarize the book's argument using many of Berlinski's own words.  I will then share some of the things I enjoyed in Berlinski's book as well as few times where I felt him just a little bit unfair - well, ok, maybe only one time.  I also have a few questions for Dr. Berlinski which I will ask here in closing.

Summary

In beginning his book, Berlinski provides a great preface that summarizes succinctly his aims in writing.  He quite frankly wants to call the scientific hegemony on its bluff - that it, and it alone can answer all of life's questions...if given enough time of course. In addition, he wants to dismantle the belief that religion is bankrupt as a system of understanding things which science seems hopelessly empty in addressing.  In his own words:

No scientific theory touches on the mysteries that the religious tradition addresses.  A man asking why his days are short is not disposed to turn to algebraic quantum field theory for the answer.  The answers that prominent scientific figures have offered are remarkable in their shallowness.  The hypothesis that we are nothing more than cosmic accidents has been widely accepted by the scientific community.  Figures as diverse as Bertrand Russell, Jacques Monod, Steven Weinberg, and Richard Dawkins have said it is so.  It is an article of their faith, one advanced with the confidence of men convinced that nature has equipped them to face realities the rest of us cannot bear to contemplate.  There is not the slightest reason to think this so.

While science has nothing of value to say on the great and aching questions of life, death, love, and meaning, what the religious traditions of mankind have said forms a coherant body of thought. The yearnings of the human soul are not in vain.  There is a system of belief adequate to the complexity of experience.  There is recompense for suffering.  A principle beyond selfishness is at work in the cosmos.  All will be well.

I do not know whether any of this is true.  I am certain that the scientific community does not know that it is false. (Berlinski, xiv)

So Berlinski's task is simple - show that science is full of itself and overstates its case against religion all the while making some pretty impressive leaps of faith of its own.  The book covers a diverse range of topics from philosophical arguments for God from Thomas Aquinas and others, to a rebuttal of Richard Dawkins' sophomoric argument against God's existence related to "complex entities", to some dense chapters on the standard model of quantum physics and the infinitely inventive purveyors of string theory.

I found Berlinski to be quite well read on the subjects he treats and seemed to skip around within them with both a feeling of delight and ironic skepticism.  Now on to a few things that I really found enjoyable in the book.

Enjoyable

I found many things enjoyable in The Devil's Delusion the first being his calling the almost infinite arrogance of certain thinkers to account. In recounting the words of chemist Peter Atkins, Berlinski exposes this posture: 

Peter Atkins is a professor of physical chemistry at Oxford, and he, too, is ardent in his atheism. In the course of an essay denouncing not only theology but poetry and philosophy as well, he observes favorably of himself that scientists "are the summit of knowledge, beacons of rationality, and intellectually honest." It goes without saying, Atkins adds, that "there is no reason to suppose that science cannot deal with every aspect of existence." Science is, after all, "the apotheosis of the intellect and the consummation of the Renaissance." (7)

So much for that old fashioned human virtue known as humility. Additionally, he exposes the way that some scientists (after all, Berlinski is quite the fan of science) present their views as the only admissible discussion in any human affairs.  What Berlinski has found in reading the literature of science is that some men have created a new religion and one that demands all people submit to its tenants of the faith.  Again and again he shows that many times science has attempted to flee from certain ideas (such as design, God, morality, human uniqueness in the universe, big bang cosmology, etc) by cooking up strange explanations to avoid the obvious.

The second enjoyable aspect of the book is that it is extremely funny.  Now, I will say that you might need a bit of a background in the sciences to understand just how funny some of his prose actually is...but nonetheless the humor is transparent enough in most places for even the uninitiated reader.  Let me just drop some of his lines in for your enjoyment as well...

On the fact that "religion is the source of all violence and carnage" Berlinski has this to say:

It is religion, Christopher Hitchens claims, that is dangerous, because it is "the cause of dangerous sexual repression." Short of gender insensitivity, what could be more dangerous than sexual repression? (18)

In the same chapter, he brings one of the more blunt uses of humor when speaking of the heinous atrocities invented by atheistic thinkers and certain creations of modern scientific understanding. This was in some commentary he made on the words of physicist Steven Weinberg:

"Religion," he affirmed, "is an insult to human dignity. With or without it you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things.  But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion (italics added by Berlinski) In speaking thus, Weinburg was warmly applauded, not one member of his audience asking the question one might have thought pertinent: Just who has imposed on the suffering of the human race poison gas, barbed wire, high explosives, experiments in eugenics, the forumula for Zyklon B, heavy artillary, pseudo-scientific justification for mass murder, cluster bombs, attack submarines, napalm, intercontinental ballistic missiles, military space platforms, and nuclear weapons? If memory serves, it was not the Vatican. (21)

Touche! If you are interested in a few more pithy quotes click the "continue reading" link at the end of this review. So let me move on to my final enjoyable aspect of the book; his exposing of the naive positions of the likes of one Sam Harris.

Harris has the habit of reducing things to simple rants and platitudes.  A quick reading of his "letter to a Christian nation" will suffice to show that he does not treat serious subjects with much rigor.  Perhaps he is just writing out of field and we need to show him charity.  Yet Berlinski is right to call him on much hot air.  One example is the atheistic treatment of human sin and behavior.  It is quite common for Harris and the like to present smart people as good people and that if we only could get rid of religion all people would live in perfect harmony.  Here is Berlinski calling them on this nonsense:

I am under most circumstances the last person on earth to think Richard Dawkins a Pollyanna, but in this case I defer to his description.  Why should people remain good when unobserved and unpoliced by God? Do people remain good when unpoliced by the police? If Dawkins believes that they do, he must explain the existence of the criminal law, and if he believes that they do not, then he must explain why moral enforcement is not needed at the place where law enforcement ends.

To the scientific atheists, the ancient idea that homo homini lupus--man is a wolf to man--leaves them shaking their heads in poodle-like perplexity.  Sam Harris has no anxieties whatsoever about presenting his own views on human morality with the enviable confidence of a man who feels that he has reached the epistemological bottom.  "Everything about human experienc," he writes, "suggests that love is more conductive to human happiness than hate is." It goes without saying, of course, that Harris believes that this is an objective claim about the human mind.  

If this is so, it is astonishing with what eagerness men have traditionally fled happiness. (34, emphasis in original)

Yes, human beings are more complicated than simply thinking we will all do right and good with one another once we have studied brain and biology. Some of the smugness and confidence of these men is amazing in light of the 20th century carnage brought about by atheistic regines (Stalin, Mao, Khamir Rouge).  It needs to be called out.

One finanl chapter is worthy of note. Chapter 8 - Our Inner Ape, a Darling and the Human Mind does a masterful job and explaining and demonstrating the actual difference between humans and the rest of the animal kingdom.  The chapter is worth the price of admission and is a needed argument in light of the atheistic mantra than human beings are nothing special in the universe.  I tell my own kids that you don't see alligators, or chimps for that matter, launching a mission to Mars.  The difference between man and ape is massive and Berlinski gives a great treatment of this subject.

Questions

Now, there are a few problems with the book and a puzzle I find in Berlinski himself.  First, there are a few places that he seems a bit unfair to his opponents.  Now, I know, Sam Harris is a big boy and can take it but it does seem he gets thrown into a bit of a guilt by association argument in aligning him with holocaust denying David Irving. Though Harris' views that the Jewish people's beliefs and actions could have brought on their suffering, making him an ally of source with Irving seemed a bit unfair (see Berlinski, 28). 

Finally I have one question for Dr. Berlinski.  Why don't you go ahead and leave the skeptical place in your views about God and come on over to the team.  He defends theism masterfully, seems to understand the biblical message and spent quite a bit of time in the book making a pretty good case for the theistic arguments.  There is a place for skepticism, in seeing through things.  But as CS Lewis once said, if you see through everything you lose your ability to see.  So I hope Dr. Berlinski would accept that which he seems to have some good knowledge thereof.  That there is a God, who created us in his image, who orders the moral universe and to whom we will give an account. 

Conclusion

Overall, I enjoyed this book quite a bit.  I particularly enjoyed the discussions of various scientific theories as I still remain a huge fan of the scientific enterprise.  This is no anti-science book, but rather a book which will not allow the smuggling of atheistic philosophy into the room by putting a lab coat on its back.  Science is the empirical study of repeatable causes, it is not the sum of all knowledge and human experience.  All of us have some sort of faith commitment from which they launch into daily life. Some trust in the creator, others trust that they themselves will solve every problem and explain away all spiritual reality and every mystery when science is given enough time.  I find such an existence absurd and quite boring.  Science from a theistic perspective is quite fascinating and I commend the young minds of the world to take up science and give glory to God.

 ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Appendix - A few More Berlinski Zingers.

In speaking of the confidence some have in certain quantum mechanical theories, Berlinski again is a bit of a meddler:

It has not, however, explained the connection between the quantum realm and the classical realm. "So long as the wave packet reduction is an essential component [of quantum mechanics]," the physicist John Bell observed, "and so long as we do not know when and how it takes over from the Schrodinger equation, we do not have an exact and unambiguous formulation of our most fundamental physical theory."

If this is so, why is our most fundamental theory fundamental? I'm just asking. (94)

In sticking with the "science functioning for some as a religion" Berlinski actually produces a "Catechism of Quantum Cosmology" which I found ridiculous and wonderful.  Just so you can catechize your own children (found on pp 104, 105)

Q: From what did our universe evolve?
A: Our universe evolved from a much smaller, much emptier, mini-universe. You may think of it as an egg

Q: What was the smaller, emptier universe like?
A: It was a four-dimensional sphere with nothing much inside it. You may think of that as weird

Q: How can a sphere have four dimensions?
A: Asphere may have four dimensions if it has one more dimension than a three-dimensional sphere.  You may think of that as obvious

Q: Does the smaller, emptier universe have a name?
A: The smaller, emptier universe is called a de Sitter universe. You may think of that as about time some one paid attention to de Sitter.

Q: Is there anything else I should know about the smaller, emptier universe?
A: Yes. It represents a solution to Einstein's field equations. You may think of that as a good thing.

Q: Where was the smaller, emptier universe or egg?
A: It was in the place where space as we know it did not exists. You may think of it as a sac.

Q: When was it there?
A: It was there at the time when time as we know it did not exist. You may think of it as a mystery

Q: Where di teh egg come from?
A: The egg did not actually come from anywhere. You may think of this as astonishing.

Q: If the egg did not come from anywhere, how did it get there?
A: The egg got there because the wave function of the universe said it was probable.  You may think of this as a done deal.

Q: How did our universe evolve from the egg?
A: It evolved by inflating itself up from its sac to become the universe in which we now find ourselves.  You may think of that as just one of those things.

Now you are ready to sing the hymns of the new world order and your kids can report for confirmation.  He is not trying to make light of the hard work of theoretical physicists, bu the is saying that they appear to be saying a bit of nothing disguised in mathematical flair that has no experimental connection to the observational world...and it is funny.  Let me close this section with his quote about the continued and multiplied musings of string theory.

In the end, string theorists argued that the extra dimensions of their theory were buried somewhere. At each point in space and time, they conjectured, there one would find a tiny geometrical object know as a Calabi-Yau manifold, and curled up within, there one would find the extra dimensions of string theory itself.  It was an idea that possessed every advantage except clarity, elegance, and a demonstrated connection to reality. (119, empahis in original)

Ok, I must have a weird sense of humor because once again I had a chuckle at those lines.

According to Plan - Gold from Graeme Goldsworthy

There are very few books that I recommend that everyone who is a follower of Christ read.  I am particularly careful in how I go about recommending books that have "Theology" written somewhere on the cover.  I found out after moving to Nashville that the word "Theology" can cause some church folk to twitch in fear that you are about to split hairs about some meaningless thick book you have read. I think many times theology is just not presented well to normal folks and I find this tragic.  So today I want to recommend According to Plan - The Unfolding Revelation of God in the Bible - An Introductory Biblical Theology by Graeme Goldsworthy.

I remember one of the challenges I faced as a young Christian was looking at the big book called the Bible and knowing how it all fits together...understanding what the whole book was about. I could read various books in the canon but I needed a big picture view of how the many parts made up the unified whole.  Goldsworthy's book does just that - it gives a unified thematic view of the Scriptures centered on the person and work of Jesus Christ. 

Biblical Theology

One the strong points of this book is that it succeeds greatly in its goal to introduce the reader to Biblical Theology. In differentiating this form of theology Goldsworthy does the reader a great service in chapter 2 by introducing the various forms of Christian theological inquiry.  I'll summarize some of this here (and add my own take) for the readers of the POCBlog

Systematic Theology

"Systematic Theology asks: What should Christians believe now about any aspect of Christianity.  Its results: Christian Doctrine" (Goldsworthy, 30).

Systematic theology takes up the task of seeing what every relevant passage of Scripture teaches on a various topic.  It looks at all the passages in order to form a clear and succinct statement of Christian teaching. Any time a church or a Christian person says anything about God it is an exercise in systematic theology.  Mistakes can often be made by not looking at ALL the texts relevant to a topic and thereby teaching a reductionist view of a subject.

Historical Theology

"Historical Theology asks: What have Christians believed about their faith at any given time?  Its results: A record of the development of Christian doctrine." (31)

Historical Theology is looking at what various Christian people and traditions have taught at various times in Church history.  Historical Theology is helpful in that it assists us in our understanding of the faith as we look at what others who have gone before us.  It is not authoritative, but helps us see the truths and errors of the past.

Pastoral Theology

"Pastoral Theology asks: How Should Christians minister to one another so that they grow to maturity in Christian living? Its results: Care and growth in the local church." (31)

Pastoral theological is the application of biblical truth and the study of how the gospel shapes and changes people's lives.  It focuses on the importance of a theology of ministry and how we rightly relate to God in shaping one another's lives.

Exegetical Theology 

"Biblical Exegesis asks: What was the text intended to convey to those for whom it was originally written? Its results: Understanding the intended meaning of the text." (34)

Exegesis is the unpacking and explaining of particular passages of Scripture in their original historical, grammatical and literary contexts. 

Biblical Theology

"Biblical Theology asks: By What Process has God revealed himself to mankind? Its results: The relating of the whole Bible to our Christian life now" (32)

Biblical theology looks at large themes in various sections of Scripture.  It treats major themes in the Old Testament, the New Testament or the major sections of the biblical corpus.  I find the best way to understand the subjects treated by biblical theology is by example.  The following I hope you find helpful as well:

  • What is the focus of sacrifice in the Pentateuch?
  • What is Paul's theology of Grace?
  • What do the Gospels teach about the Kingdom of God?
  • What is the central theme of the entire Bible?

Whereas systematic theology is concerned with Christian Doctrine treating all passages relevant to a topic and teaching it for today, biblical theology brings to us the major themes of Scripture seeing its subject as a unified whole. Systematics break down the teaching of Scriptures into its parts to unify doctrine, whereas biblical theology steps out to see the big picture.  One makes sure you do not miss some of the trees that are actually in the forest (Systematics) the other makes sure we don't miss the forest from closely examining the trees (biblical theology). Both are extremely valuable and important to the church and the believer.

Goldsworthy does a fantastic job introducing the discipline of biblical theology but also convincingly laying out the central theme of the Christian Scriptures...namely, the person and work of Jesus who is called the Christ.

Central Theme of The Bible - Jesus Christ

Many times Christians have been so exposed to systematic theology that they can recite certain doctrines or somethign learned in Sunday school, but find it difficult to see how the whole Bible is relevant to the faith.  What does a man cutting off the foreskins of his son have to do with me?  Biblical theology explains just how integrated Scripture is and the unique unfolding of God's purposes throughout redemptive history.  Just what does circumcision mean? Why was this given?  How does it relate to God's ways of dealing with people?  How does this continue today? Or does it? 

Biblical Theology sees a beautiful line of continuity in God's revelation in Scripture which reaches its zenith in Jesus Christ and then sees our life as the church as his sent community continuing his mission until this age comes to a close.  If you ever wondered how the big Old Testament narratives reveal God's purposes in Jesus Christ I cannot recommend this volume enough.

Book Structure

Another strength of According to Plan is the way in which the material is structured and laid out.  After each major idea or paragraph the author porvides a succinct summary of the major point.  These are so well done that you could get the entire thrust of the book by just reading these summaries.  Now I did read the book and did not attempt said path, but I will say that after reading a section and then the summary I continually thought - what a great way to review this book.  Additionally each chapter has a summary, listing of main themes, keywords and a preview of what is ahead. Also each chapter includes a study guide at the end for further discussion.  Finally, the book also has several helpful illustrations and diagrams though you need to follow how the diagrams "build" up throughout the book.  Overall, the structure of the book makes it very helpful for learning and review; the author goes to great length to help a more popular audience find traction in biblical theology. 

Conclusion

In conclusion I want to commend this book to anyone who wants to investigate the theological teaching of the Scriptures as a whole.  Read it slowly, enjoy it greatly and see what the Bible is really about. His name is Jesus.  If you have ever been bogged down by what seems like the excessive minutia of Systematic Theology (let alone speculative theology) then take biblical theology a spin. Rather than a naive trust in Scripture, the discipline of biblical theology gives a robust and deep faith in the wonderful message of the Holy Bible. There were and are not accidental stories in redemptive history, they all have a purpose in the revelation of God in Jesus Christ and the Kingdom of God.  This book has helped me marvel at the unity and glory of the story of God...and it has helped me love him more deeply.  For this I thank God and give According to Plan a hearty POCBlog recommendation.

 

POC Bundle 7.18.2008

The Church

  • I guess Frank Beckwith has gone activist as he went to Rome.  Some of you know that Beckwith was the recent president of the Evangelical Theological Society that returned to the Roman Catholic Church - the church of his youth. He has a new book coming out from Baker entitled Return to Rome - Confessions of an Evangelical Catholic.  My guess is the title "Evangelical Catholic" may be one of interest to both Catholics who want to be more Protestants and Protestants who find Rome a bit alluring. Beckwith is a first rate philosopher and I commend his work in that arena...I do not find agreement with his recent theological reconciliations.

Technology

  • Apple says "I'm Sorry to all those Me's who are Mobile" - Apple's much hyped and oddly named cloud computing system MobileMe had a tough time getting off the ground.  Word is it is still a bit troubled.  Apple has graciously responded by giving 30 days free. But hey, no Mac person will say a word like "MobileMe is terrible" - such would be sacrilege. What we can say is this - "MobileMe is way better than .Mac!" - for we all know about the glories of .Mac. In all honesty - MobileMe (despite the name) looks pretty cool - should be free though.
  • Engadget dares to suggest that iPhone is less than the most perfect device ever created by human kind.  Does your iPhone suck? OK, don't answer that - of course not.  But are you having any of these cool issues?

History and Biography

Just for Fun

Feminists and Mothers and Work...Oh My!

(Illustration by Polly Becker)

The crowd who set off to see the wizard once echoed their fears of lions and tigers and bears...The Atlantic Monthly shows no fear as it touches upon the rather touchy subjects of feminism, motherhood and the nature work in a woman's life.  The article is probing, pithy and a bit punchy at times. It wrestles openly with the complex issues of the feminist movement and motherhood in modern times. 

The article, entitled I Choose My Choice - The fruits of the feminist revolution? Sisterhood, empowerment, and eight hours a day in a cubicle, is an interesting push back against some of the radical feminist rants offered by the likes of Linda Hirshman...who is featured prominently in the article.

I think that Sandra Tsing Loh has provided some probing thoughts about a woman's liberation in our day.  You might be surprised at from what she sensing her own liberation.  An article worth your time for both men and women.