Apr
16
2009
The Mission
or World Without End?

With all the fuss between hyperpreterism and preterism, is it possible both positions are basically right?
Hyperpreterists realise that the apostles were expecting an immiment resurrection, and the partials have to treat verses inconsistently – applying some to AD70 and some to the end of history. But then the hypers have to squish the millennium into AD70 like a fairground mirror. They believe all prophecy has been fulfilled. Not good.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: AD70, Against Hyperpreterism, Hermeneutics, Judgment, Moses | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
16
2009

The Rest of the Dead
I saw the souls of those who had been beheaded for their witness to Jesus and for the word of God, who had not worshiped the beast or his image, and had not received [his] mark on their foreheads or on their hands. And they lived and reigned with Christ for a thousand years. But the rest of the dead did not live again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection. Revelation 20:4-5
James Jordan writes:
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Abel, AD70, Cain, James Jordan, Millennium, Resurrection, Revelation, Temple | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus
Apr
16
2009
Always a Good Investment
Our nation is in the midst of significant financial upheaval, along with many other nations, and because of this we have to remember certain things as we approach God with our worship. Lord willing, we will address this in greater detail in next week’s message, but it is important to say a few things about it now.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Doug Wilson, Faith | posted in Christian Life, Ethics, Quotes
Apr
16
2009

[Jesus] was a master of ready speech and witty repartee, but most of the sayings that have come down to us bear every sign of careful preparation. They have the qualities of poetry, and with the aid of paradox, exaggerations, or play on words, were cast in such a shape as would enable them to find their way into the dullest mind and stay there.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Sermon on the Mount | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Apr
16
2009
Rieu’s theory of Jesus as a ‘man of letters’ is borne out by the structure of the Sermon on the Mount. As with many of the prophets, His “book” begins with a preamble that follows the themes of Israel’s 7 feasts in Leviticus 23.
Jesus begins with the Sabbath rest of those who have a humble spirit, works through those who mourn for their sins at Passover, and ends with the Atonementcovering of the blood of those who would be persecuted yet to be shed on the Land. And at Tabernacles, their reward is in heaven.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Feasts, Leviticus, Literary Structure | posted in Biblical Theology
Apr
16
2009
Available at http://www.goodseed.com/products/tab-eng-set
It even includes the Ten Words, pot of Manna and Aaron’s rod, so you can teach Word, Sacrament and Government.
Comments Off | tags: Old Testament, Tabernacle, Teaching | posted in Christian Life
Apr
16
2009
Garden
Christ reclaimed Adam’s garden and disarmed Satan by dying.
Land
The “son of man” (Christ’s body, the church) reclaimed Abel’s land and disarmed his Canaanite older brother in the Land by dying.
World
With the razing of Cain’s city, Jerusalem, the Christ’s Dominion expanded from Land to World, from brothers to children, from Abel to Seth. As the sons of God, we disarm the “daughters of men” culture around us by dying. We die to our predatory desires, and if necessary, we die physically as a witness. Kingdom expansion is always bought with blood. As with Job, our innocent suffering shames and disarms predatory powers and thus renews the world.
(See also Postmillennial Suffering)
Comments Off | tags: Abel, AD70, Adam, Cain, Canaanites, Crucifixion, Ecclesiology, Martyrdom, Satan, Seth, Totus Christus, Witness | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
16
2009
“Because of Christ we are thought of as fools, but Christ has made you wise. We are weak and hated, but you are powerful and respected. Even today we go hungry and thirsty and don’t have anything to wear except rags. We are mistreated and don’t have a place to live. We work hard with our own hands, and when people abuse us, we wish them well. When we suffer, we are patient. When someone curses us, we answer with kind words. Until now we are thought of as nothing more than the trash and garbage of this world.” 1 Corinthians 4:10-13
So, are God’s people to wear rags? Or should they be dressed well like Solomon or the woman in Proverbs 31? Or is that even the right question?
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Adam, Corinthians, Daniel, Ecclesiology, Ezekiel, Ezra, Joseph, Maturity, Mordecai, Nehemiah, Noah, Paul, Proverbs, Robes, Solomon | posted in Biblical Theology, Totus Christus
Apr
15
2009
My comment on iMonk’s article, Why Do They Hate Us? is here. Below is another comment that I thought interesting:
As a former rabid atheist, I disliked Christians because I saw them as ignorant, intolerant and absurdly convinced that they had the Truth. The only evidence for this was TV and the people I came in contact with. Also, many of my College Professors found them easy targets and I enjoyed laughing at these poor deluded souls. But I was empty if the truth be told. However, I was won over to the other side, in the San Francisco Bay area because I personally witnessed the love amongst Christians and I had had enough of the self righteousness of New Agers and fellow Freethinkers to know they were a bunch of lost souls. Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Atheism, Hypocrisy, Pharisees | posted in Apologetics, Christian Life, Ethics
Apr
15
2009
(A post from my friend Matthew’s blog. I haven’t read this book.)

I recently read The Lost History of Christianity – The Thousand-Year Golden Age of the Church in the Middle East, Africa and Asia- and How It Died by Philip Jenkins (2008). It is a magisterial introduction to a rich but largely forgotten history. The lands Jenkins has in mind were well and truly the centre of the Christian world for well over a thousand years, even after the Muslim invasion of these lands from the seventh century.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: China, Church Growth, Church History | posted in Quotes