Who’s Really the Blind One Here?

Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light (Matthew 11.28-30). His name is not as important as his story. For four hours last week God demanded our attention on […]

Communal Hermeneutics

Hardly a Patristic studies devotee, I am recently intrigued by Christopher Hall’s Reading the Scripture with the Church Fathers. One early quote has caught my attention: “The Scriptures have been given to the church, are read, preached, heard and comprehended within the community of the church, and are safely interpreted only by those whose character is continually being formed by prayer, worship, meditation, self-examination, confession and other means by which […]

Desparate Housewives and the Christian Husband

Older women. . . are to be reverent in their behavior, not malicious gossips nor enslaved to much wine, teaching what is good, so that they may encourage the young women to love their husbands, to love their children, to be sensible, pure, workers at home, kind, being subject to their own husbands, so that the word of God will not be dishonored.(Titus 2.3-5, NASB) Older women are to be […]

It’s Good to Breathe Again

After dusting off Monday’s filth Augustine greeted me warmly again. He always seems to know under what rock I was hiding. “Grant my prayer, O Lord, and do not allow my soul to wilt under the discipline which you prescribe. Let me not tire of thanking you for your mercy in rescuing me from all my wicked ways, so that you may be sweeter to me than all the joys […]

Another Manic Monday

Is it just me or do all pastors feel on Monday like: 1. I didn’t know my Bible well enough yesterday. There were too many questions left on the table.2. I was not prepared enough in prayer and meditation. Rather, I just rushed to the pulpit after a dizzying morning of “Hellos,” “I’m sorries,” and “Good to see yous.” The time I complained about not having should have been spent […]

The Price for Grace

Behold, God is my salvation, I will trust and not be afraid; For the LORD GOD is my strength and song, and He has become my salvation (Isaiah 12.2). I recently listened to a recent sermon on Psalm 90 by Sinclair Ferguson (for you other Ferguson fans you can now hear his weekly sermons from First Pres’, Columbia, SC). In it was a statement that still rings with Scottish brogue […]

Not Jealous Enough

Apart from such external [unmentioned] things, there is the daily pressure on me of concern for all the churches (2 Cor 11.28). There are few, if any, who will experience what Paul endured in Christian ministry. In Corinthians 11.12-27, he takes inventory of his life as an apostle—prisons, floggings, death beds, stonings, shipwrecks, homelessness, muggings, deprivation, and danger from all sides. Paul hints in v28 there is even still more […]

Judge Alito on Hermeneutics

In an article this morning a New York Times journalist defined Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito’s approach to Constitutional interpretation as “originalism.” This Constitutional hermeneutic is further defined by Alito himself, who was quoted as saying, “In interpreting the Constitution I think we should look to the text of the Constitution, and we should look to the meaning that someone would have taken from the text of the Constitution at […]

A Great Example of Baptist Association

Unless you are an evangelical hermit you know of Bethlehem Baptist Church’s (BBC) latest proposal on baptism. The elders sought a constitutional change that would have relaxed the church’s grip on believer’s baptism as a requirement for church membership. This proposal has since been rescinded for now undoubtedly for several reasons. In the meantime, the elders of Clifton Baptist Church (CBC), Louisville, Kentucky, submitted their own proposal, offering responses and […]

Eugene Peterson

“. . . the pastor must not be ‘busy.’ Busyness is an illness of spirit, a rush from one thing to another because there is no ballast of vocational integrity and no confidence in the primacy of grace. In order there to be conversation and prayer that do the pastoral work of meeting the intimacy needs among people, there must be a wide margin of quiet leisure that defies the […]