Apr
23
2011

Doug Wilson writes:
“When it comes to child-rearing, between the Old and New Testaments there is total and complete continuity on the subject of godly parenting. There is no discontinuity. It needs to be emphasized again that there is continuity in the promises of God with regard to parenting. Not surprisingly, this has ramifications for the subject of infant baptism” (To a Thousand Generations, p. 10).
I am currently reading this book. Lots of good stuff in there, even for a Baptist. BUT…
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2 comments | tags: Baptism, Circumcision, Covenant Theology, Doug Wilson, Parenting, Resurrection | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Apr
19
2011

[Part 1 is here.] Here’s the next matrix cycle in Matthew 28:
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Comments Off | tags: Atonement, Covenant Theology, Feasts, Literary Structure, Matthew, Tabernacle | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology
Apr
15
2011

or Baptizing the World
After Pentecost, the firstfruits church met in the Temple. Over the next few decades, the Jewish leaders barred these worshippers from their premises. What they didn’t realise was that the glory was departing as it did in the time of Ezekiel, only this time it was inside people who were living Temples as Jesus was.
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10 comments | tags: Baptism, China, Dispensationalism, Persecution, Postmillennialism | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Creation, Ethics, Totus Christus
Apr
8
2011
“Reports of Christianity’s demise have been greatly exaggerated.”
“If your eschatology sees something other than the progressive growth and universal influence of the Kingdom of God in time and history, the success and triumph of the Great Commission, then you’d better stop drinking the Kool-Aid.” George Shubin
That was my friend George’s comment after reading this article by George Weigel from First Things.
For 27 years, the International Bulletin of Missionary Research has published an annual “Status of Global Mission” report, which attempts to quantify the world Christian reality, comparing Christianity’s circumstances to those of other faiths, and assaying how Christianity’s various expressions are faring when measured against the recent (and not-so-recent) past. The report is unfailingly interesting, sometimes jarring, and occasionally provocative.
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Comments Off | tags: Atheism, Christopher Hitchens, Islam, Postmillennialism, Richard Dawkins, Roman Catholicism | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Apr
6
2011

“…how we feast and celebrate is a reflection of our beliefs concerning the salvation of the world.”
Sermon Notes on Deuteronomy 14:22-29 – Part 3
Guest post by Michael Shover
Gathering Clouds
There is another aspect to the Feast of Booths that we need to take into consideration. The sacrifices. During the Feast of Booths, 70 bulls were sacrificed. 13 on the first day, 12 on the second, 11 on the third, 10 on the fourth, 9 on the fifth, 8 on the sixth, 7 on the seventh which equals 70. Then 1 on the last day. Why 70? What is the significance of the number 70? The 70 bulls represented the 70 nations of the world as outlined in Gen. 10. The 1 bull that was sacrificed on the eighth day represented Israel. The 70 bull sacrifices represented the ingathering and atonement for the 70 nations of the world. Salvation was accomplished by Israel for all the nations.
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2 comments | tags: Deuteronomy, Genesis, Tabernacles | posted in Biblical Theology
Apr
4
2011

“…how we feast and celebrate is a reflection of our beliefs concerning the salvation of the world.”
Sermon Notes on Deuteronomy 14:22-29 – Part 2
Guest post by Michael Shover
The Garden City
According to Leviticus 23 the Feast of Booths, or The Feast as it was later called, was an eight day celebration.
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1 comment | tags: Deuteronomy, Exodus, New Jerusalem, Revelation, Tabernacles | posted in Biblical Theology
Apr
2
2011

“The priest shall take some of the blood of the trespass offering, and the priest shall put it on the tip of the right ear of him who is to be cleansed, on the thumb of his right hand, and on the big toe of his right foot.” Leviticus 14:14
This is one of those weird things we Christians don’t like to talk about. But James Jordan loves to talk about the weird things. He says somewhere that these three bloody points on the body plus circumcision make a cross. Well, there are certainly four points, but does it look like a cross to you?
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Comments Off | tags: Genesis, Holy Spirit, James Jordan, Lampstand, Leviticus, Tabernacle | posted in Biblical Theology
Apr
1
2011

“…how we feast and celebrate is a reflection of our beliefs concerning the salvation of the world.”
Sermon Notes on Deuteronomy 14:22-29 – Part 1
Guest post by Michael Shover
Feasting, the Heart of Evangelism
It has been one of the most unfortunate developments in the history of the Church that we have gotten away from and have forgotten the Biblical mandate to feast before the Lord. We so often lead lives that are shallow in piety and so consuming in busyness that we become forgetful, nay even neglectful of the fact that our God commands such things as, “And you shall spend that money for whatever your heart desires: for oxen or sheep, for wine or strong drink, for whatever your heart desires; you shall eat there before the LORD your God, and you shall rejoice, you and your household.”
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Comments Off | tags: Church History, Deuteronomy, Ecclesiology, Evangelism, Feasts, Tabernacles | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life