Christianity

Tim Tebow Fired For Being A Christian?

May 18th, 2013 | By
Tim Tebow Fired For Being A Christian?

Like most sports controversies, the Tebow story is already yesterday’s news. Google his name and you will see how few stories there are out there over the last month. He was hot for a while: Denver had a nice little run with him back in the dark ages of two seasons ago, and then the New York Jets fans and team kicked him to the curb and said good riddance. Since the New York Jets released Tim Tebow, various voices have either relegated his name to that junkyard reserved for superior college athletes that could
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The Princess and the Wicked Queen

May 12th, 2013 | By
The Princess and the Wicked Queen

The princess trope represented passivity, entitlement, materialism, and submissiveness, and no daughter of mine would wear a onesie that celebrated such loathsome values. —Andy Hines, The Atlantic (2013) What’s Wrong with Princesses? In January of 2000, Disney executive Andy Mooney made a brilliant if obvious business decision.  He consolidated the most popular Disney princesses into a single franchise and from it spun out through licensees some 25,000 varieties of princess merchandise.  Princess lip balm, princess alarm clocks, princess bedspreads, princess nighties.  According to Mooney, Disney merely discovered (finally!) an already existing demand and licensed all
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Should We Love A Wicked Nation?

May 5th, 2013 | By
Should We Love A Wicked Nation?

The early councils had as their primary purpose the defense and establishment of truth, not unity. —Rousas J. Rushdoony, Foundations of Social Order (1978) Loving Those Who Hate God? “Should you help the ungodly, and love those who hate God?”  This was the rhetorical question the prophet Jehu put to Jehoshaphat, king of Judah (2 Chron. 19:2).  Jehoshaphat had gone to Israel, the northern kingdom, on a good will visit.  The two Hebrew kingdoms had been at odds for a long time, and Jehoshaphat was trying to fix things up.  He hoped to reunite the
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No Other River – No Other Stream

Apr 28th, 2013 | By
No Other River – No Other Stream

“There is no other stream,” said the Lion. -C. S. Lewis, The Silver Chair (2009) Wash, and Be Clean Naaman and his entourage pulled up before the prophet’s hovel of a home.  Naaman was ready to be impressed and amazed.  His master, the king of Syria, had his own court magicians, and they put on a pretty good show.  But the prophet of God must be in a class all his own.  After all, he could cure leprosy.  Naaman’s little servant girl had said so, and now the king of Israel had confirmed it.  Elisha
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The Antidote For Relativism And Racism

Apr 21st, 2013 | By
The Antidote For Relativism And Racism

…and then there were other people on the island.  We called them the Others, and they started attacking us.     —Hurley, Lost (2009) The primary role of anthropology thus was a process of ‘inventing the human other’ in order to develop a theory of humankind. —Sundar Sarukkai, “The ‘Other’ in Anthropology and Philosophy” (1997) The Children’s Story The war is over, and they have won.  This is the background for James Clavell’s short classic, The Children’s Story (1981).  Clavell shows us a class of second graders in some generic school after the fall of the United
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The Meaning of History, Part Five

Apr 7th, 2013 | By
The Meaning of History, Part Five

“Such are the facts of history.  The reader will make his own comments upon them.” —Bishop John Wordsworth “An Act of God.” —The official cause of a fire in an abortion clinic. The Judgment of God? Arius, the arch-heretic condemned at Nicea, stood before the Emperor and swore that his beliefs were now orthodox.  Constantine accepted his oath, though with a warning, and ordered the bishop of Constantinople, one Alexander, to receive Arius into communion.  But Alexander didn’t believe Arius’s confession, and so, prostrate on the church floor, he cried out to God: If Arius
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Rise, the Woman’s Conquering Seed: An Easter Meditation

Mar 31st, 2013 | By
Rise, the Woman’s Conquering Seed: An Easter Meditation

Bruise in us the serpent’s head. —Charles Wesley, Hark! the Herald Angels Sing (1739) If He did not rise, but is still dead, how is it that He routs and persecutes and overthrows the false god, whom unbelievers think to be alive, and the evil spirits whom they worship? —Athanasius, On the Incarnation of the Word (c. 320) At the Beginning At the beginning of human history, God promised to establish warfare between the serpent and the woman, and between his seed and hers: And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and
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The Suffering Servant of Yahweh: A Good Friday Meditation

Mar 29th, 2013 | By
The Suffering Servant of Yahweh: A Good Friday Meditation

The Scripture clearly teach that there is one human sacrifice that is allowable and proper:  the one found in Isaiah 53. —Mitch Glaser, The Gospel According to Isaiah 53 (2012) And they didn’t recognize Him?! -a high school student on first hearing Isaiah 53 Behold, My Servant The prophet Isaiah draws a detailed and moving portrait of the Servant of Yahweh:  “He is despised and rejected of men, a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.” The Servant is wounded and bruised for the sins of God’s people; Yahweh makes His soul a sin offering.
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The Meaning of History, Part 4

Mar 24th, 2013 | By
The Meaning of History, Part 4

Occultism surfaces as a cultural phenomenon at the end of civilizations. —Gary North, Unholy Spirits (1986) …But speak the Name of Christ, and he shall see how through Him demons are routed, oracles cease, and all magic and witchcraft is confounded. —Athanasius, On the Incarnation of the Word (c. 320) Who’s Calling the Shots? “And now, please, attend very carefully,” the professor said.  “You have probably not heard of macrobes.” Mishearing the word, Mark Studdock looked up from the floor of his cell and began to object.  Of course he had heard of microbes, microscopic
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The Meaning of History, Part 3

Mar 17th, 2013 | By
The Meaning of History, Part 3

For the goddess brings forth the great sun and the bright moon. —Zoroaster, The Chaldean Oracles (c. 250 BC) True spirituality is not achieved in our own energy… It is the power of the crucified, risen, and glorified Christ, through the agency of the Holy Spirit, by faith. —Francis Schaeffer, True Spirituality (1971) “The Goddess Is Alive” The late twentieth century saw the rebirth of goddess worship in the West.  This religion is essentially pantheistic.  It assumes the existence of a feminine spirit or principle immanent in the Earth or in the cosmos itself.  It
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