鈥淔lee immorality. Every other sin that a man commits is outside the body, but the immoral man sins against his own body鈥 (1 Cor 6:18 NASB). Why is sexual sin singled out as uniquely damaging to the body in a way that other physical actions are not? Substance abuse, gluttony, cutting鈥攖hese are all harmful acts to the body, but they do not do what sexual misconduct does, according to Paul. Typical responses from students to explain this exception are that sex involves the whole person, or maybe because it involves someone else. The same could be said for illegal drug use, so there must be something more.
El gran educador Antonio del Corro (Sevilla, 1527-Londres, 1591) es quiz谩 una de las figuras m谩s importantes y a la vez menos conocidas de la reforma espa帽ola. Es tambi茅n un ejemplo a imitar para todos los que seguimos a Cristo y sobre todo para los que nos dedicamos a servirle a trav茅s de la ense帽anza. El historiador Emilio Monjo se refiere a Antonio de Corro como 鈥渦n personaje que refleja el talante de la Reforma espa帽ola en cuanto a su libertad de pensamiento y palabra: una iglesia que hab铆a nacido libre por la acci贸n de la Escritura, y que se mantuvo libre con la Escritura tambi茅n en su exilio europeo".
I am so very grateful for the life and legacy of Pastor Chuck Smith, Senior Pastor of Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa and founder of the Calvary Chapel Movement. He entered the presence of the Lord early this morning after a bout with lung cancer.
Three years ago, Trudi and I adopted two precious girls out of the Los Angeles County foster system. They are now 14 and 12 years old. We are deeply grateful for these precious young ladies God has brought into our family. But we encountered a few things that we wish someone had told us about foster-adoptions before we started the process. Here is a short list of issues that might be helpful for you to know if you鈥檙e considering embarking on such an adventure.
2013 is the inaugural year of an innovative biblical commentary series edited by John Walton and Mark Straus (published by Baker Books). It鈥檚 called Teach the Text because that is what it is about: helping people to teach the biblical text effectively. It combines literary, background and exegetical analysis with theological, pedagogical and homiletical discussion. But it does this in a surprisingly concise and accessible manner.
A Bible reader might justifiably ask, 鈥淲hy would I need a commentary?鈥 Some prefer to read the Bible for themselves so that they won鈥檛 be influenced by the opinions of others. They want to learn solely through what the Holy Spirit teaches them, and perhaps they even think to support their desire through Scriptures such as John 16:13 or Jeremiah 31:33鈥34. Besides the fact that the context won鈥檛 support such an interpretation from those passages, there are some good reasons why a commentary can be not only helpful for understanding the Bible but even highly beneficial.
Yesterday I spent about 45 minutes talking and praying with one of my current students. Four months ago he was invited to step into the role of youth pastor in his church, and now finds himself responsible for preparing and teaching a message every Friday and Sunday. Two messages a week! And this for someone who has only done a bit of preaching in the past鈥 He shared with me (and I share this entire post with his permission) that the single hardest thing he has faced in his new role as youth pastor is the agonizing decision of what to preach each week.
Remember 7th grade, when your English teacher taught you how to diagram sentences? You know, 鈥渕ain clause,鈥 鈥渟ubordinate clause,鈥 and all that other stuff you have likely forgotten long ago? I still diagram sentences. And I teach my students how to diagram sentences, too鈥擥reek sentences!
Dave Brunn recently gave a gift to the English-speaking church in his book One Bible, Many Versions: Are All Translations Created Equal? (IVP, 2013). Dave Brunn is a professional translator and trainer of translator-wannabes within New Tribes Mission. To the best of my knowledge, he has never worked on an English-language translation project. His translational claim to fame is a translation of the Bible (done alongside dedicated national co-translators) into Lamogai, one of the multitude of languages in Papua New Guinea. Consequently, Dave Brunn brings an outsider鈥檚 perspective to our recent English translation battles. (You know what I鈥檓 talking about, the 鈥渕ine is the best translation and all others are suspect鈥 battles.) And his outsider鈥檚 perspective is clarifying and challenging. Here is a summary of the book, in the author鈥檚 own words (from pages 189-190), focusing on what translations share, rather than how they differ.
By Thomas Finley and Kenneth Way From October 2 to December 8 of this year the Cyrus Cylinder will make a visit to The Getty Villa (in Malibu, CA) as part of a tour of the United States. This will be an amazing opportunity to see in person this artifact that gives significant background information for the Bible.
鈥淎 mind is a terrible thing to waste.鈥 This slogan, first broadcast by the United Negro College Fund in 1972, has become something of a John 3:16 for educators seeking to evangelistically rouse students out of intellectual slumber. If I could tailor this slogan for our Biola community as we embark on a new semester, it would become: 鈥淭he mind of Christ is far too precious to not cultivate.鈥 While lacking the elegant phrasing and bumper sticker quote-ability of the original, it does express something I hope we can pause to ponder as we enter our classrooms.
This week was a week of tears in the Berding household. We cried as we sent our oldest daughter, Lydia, overseas into a needy and difficult region of the world as an ambassador for Jesus Christ. She will be gone for at least one year, and is open to and actively praying about making a long-term commitment after that year. We cried before we sent her. And we cried afterwards. But we will not hinder her from going out. Quite to the contrary, Trudi and I are entirely supportive of the mission Lydia is on; she is going out with our full blessing. But many young people don鈥檛 enjoy the support of their parents as they depart for overseas service, and many never actually make it鈥攊n large part because their parents have opposed them. Their Christian parents鈥! Family opposition may be the number one reason young people with a call to overseas missions don鈥檛 ever arrive there. And this is a grave sin on the part of the parents.
Most of us are familiar with Jesus鈥 words at the Last Supper鈥攐r at least with some of those words. When we celebrate communion together, we regularly hear 鈥渢his is my body given for you; do this in remembrance of me鈥 and 鈥渢his cup is the new covenant in my blood, which is poured out for you.鈥 Recently, however, I read through Luke 22, which includes the Last Supper and the events surrounding it. In addition to these familiar words from the Last Supper, I was struck by some of the other words spoken by Jesus on this momentous occasion.
Reza Aslan鈥檚 new book, Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth (Random House, 2013), is in most ways a typical attempt to paint a new picture of Jesus. Because so many hundreds of books of this type have been published, Aslan鈥檚 book would most likely not have received significant attention at all, except for two factors. First, a botched interview of the author on Fox News caused a huge surge of interest, making his book an overnight best seller. And second, Aslan is a very good writer. His primary teaching role, after all, is as a professor of creative writing at UC Riverside. Aslan is able to take a lot of important historical background and present it in a riveting manner, accessible to most readers.
The Baker Illustrated Bible Dictionary, edited by Tremper Longman III (with Peter Enns and Mark Strauss), is now available for purchase as an E-Book or in hardcover. This one-volume dictionary offers 1767 full-color pages and more than 5,000 articles by 124 Bible scholars. You might ask, 鈥淲hy should I care about this Bible dictionary?鈥 You should care because many of the contributors are Talbot faculty.
Hace ya varios a帽os escuch茅 una frase que me ha hecho pensar constantemente y que refleja uno de los mayores peligros que enfrentan los l铆deres cristianos. La frase dice as铆: 鈥渆s importante no estar tan ocupado en la obra de Dios que nos olvidemos del Dios de la obra鈥. El problema no es el servicio a Dios sino el enfoque y, en muchos casos, la motivaci贸n que nos mueve al servicio. Estoy convencido que uno de los pecados principales de muchos l铆deres es el 茅nfasis obsesivo por el trabajo y, por lo tanto, el descuido de lo esencial y verdaderamente importante como Dios, la familia y el cuidado personal.
Love is a sloppy concept, and love is a complex reality. I love ice cream. I love my children. I love my wife. I love books. I love God. I love my students. Each of these 鈥渓oves鈥 has a different content. It could be a problem if I love books in the same way that I love my children, or if I love God in the way I love my wife. Love is not the same in every relationship that we live in. This is a brief analysis of love as we experience and live it in various relationships.
Many women, and men, too, avoid studying Proverbs 31:10-31 because they think it presents an unrealistic and unattainable standard for women. I can鈥檛 tell you how many articles I have read that describe this lady as 鈥榮uperwoman鈥 and, therefore, not applicable for the average female. But would God really put a job description in His Word if it were unattainable? Surely our knowledge of Him says the description of the woman of noble character was placed in the Scriptures to encourage us, male and female. It鈥檚 for our edification; there is much we can learn from it about becoming wise women.
The most recent issue of the Journal of Spiritual Formation & Soul Care carried an article I wrote on the relationship between spiritual formation and mission. Here's an outline...
In response to the ongoing revelations of widespread cheating in professional sports, my earlier blog explored the idea of cheating as compared to New Testament ethics. So much for why athletes should not cheat, and what they should pursue instead. The doping problems in sport raise another question: what is someone responsible to do when she becomes aware of others' cheating? This question extends beyond sport to daily life evils that are preventable if someone in our lives would just speak up once in a while.
Slowly, more top professional cyclists that were rivals of Lance Armstrong are mumbling confessions of the same carefully-worded sort that Lance released last January. Some have been coerced by teams or government inquiries (as with the handful of Americans who testified to their own doping as part of implicating Lance Armstrong). The latest is Jan Ullrich, the German cyclist who placed second to Lance three times in the Tour de France. Like many others, Ullrich used the same worn out excuse that 鈥渆verybody was doing it,鈥 and that his joining the 鈥渕edical program鈥 was just a way to play on a level field. What are we to think of these things?
A recent check on Amazon.com discovered that over 25,000 books are listed under the category of Church Growth. This is an amazing number of books given the fact that the North American Church Growth Movement is only forty-one years old. With such a large number of books written on the topic of church growth, it is only natural to ask if there is any consensus on what factors are found in growing churches in North America. What are those factors? I thought you鈥檇 never ask!
A couple years ago I was asked to lead a discussion for the Talbot School of Theology faculty on 鈥淭he New Perspective on Paul.鈥 Now, you should know up-front that (for the most part) I am not very positive about the overall approach that New Perspectivists take when they interpret the letters of Paul (esp. Galatians and Romans) and when they try to set those letters in a reconstructed first century Jewish theological context. But I also do not believe that it is right or wise for people to be dogmatic about topics that they don鈥檛 know very much about. So, to help you interact responsibly with the New Perspective, I want to revisit the lecture I did for the Talbot faculty try to help you understand the New Perspective on Paul so that you can critically weigh for yourself its merits and demerits.