All Things 'The Week'

—of September 28, 2008

There will be no round-up this week boys. Mr McGregor has been busy chasing Peter Rabbit out of his garden this week, among other things. Instead, here are three links to follow.

  1. As I read around I have found that this young man has more on the ball than most men who have been in the ministry half their lives. If Southern cranks out just ten percent of their graduates that are half as astute as this guy, then there may be hope for the future of the SBC, after all.
  2. This guy is smarter than a tree full of owls. Every time I read him it makes me want to be a Presbyterian; or what ever he is.
  3. This brother is the real deal; just a faithful pastor is a small-ish metro SBC church, ministering faithfully to his congregation. You should read his weekly addresses. They may not win a Pulitzer, but like I said, It’s the real deal. Besides all that, he’s my pastor, and I manage the site, and I want to show off the make-over that I am working on.

Have a great weekend and Lord’s day.

—of September 21, 2008

I’m a little late posting last weeks roundup, but I had some family matters needing attention. Better late than never. Here’s the five best posts by Christian bloggers that I read this past week. Go check them out:

1. From a Pastor’s Heart:
“…there is a huge difference between “feeding” the people from the Word and “scolding” the people from the Word. I used to think that it was my job as the preacher to let everyone know what they were doing wrong. Rather than scold them, I now try to encourage them, comfort them, challenge them, and love them.
Les Puryear at Joining God in His Work:How Not to Preach“.

2. On Female Pastors and Beth Moore:
“When do we get the exercise in pretzel logic that explains there’s no inconsistency in having a female Bible teacher with an audience larger than any pastor in a denomination that opposes women pastors?”
Michael Spenser at The Internet Monk:Send in the Clowns.”
I saw a news piece on ABC that exploited this very thing, interviewing three Southern students, and then Dr. Mohler, and then switching over to the LifeWay issue. We are our own worst enemies.

3. A New Theological Journal:
“But if you look carefully, you will see that they have nothing from folks from TEC (the Episcopal Confusion). Why ask for theological nuance and substance from people who are still struggling with the concept of boys and girls?”
Douglas Wilson at Blog and Mablog: “Three Cheers for Anglicans, the Kind Who Believe the Bible

Hey, all you SBC Fundamentalists, check out this journal. Links for free samples and articles are available at the post. Be careful, though; you might learn something about the bigger world outside the compound walls. Worse yet, you might even be persuaded to sprinkle your babies.

4. On Pacing Yourself:
While I have been a sprinter
most of my life, I am [now (sp.)] trying to learn how to be the long distance
runner. The long distance runner paces himself and endures the entire
length of the race. The long distance runner of whom Paul writes in
Hebrews 12:1-3.

Les Puryear at sbc IMPACT!: “Goodbye Sprinter: Hello Long Distance Runner

Good advice, and five good points follow on how to achieve the transition from burn-out mode to finishing-the-course mode.

5. BAPTIST: A Great Acronymn:
“My goal was … to answer the question in my own mind, “How can we revitalize our denomination?”  I approached the task from the point of view of what I would preach to the convention if asked (by the way, like most small church pastors, I have not been and I don’t expect that I ever will be asked).”

From A Contract with Southern Baptists - Part 7.

Check these seven posts out and find what the Letters B.A.P.T.I.S.T. really stand for.

— of September 14, 2008

The best and not so good of this week’s ‘religious’ talk:

SBC resolutions and gluttony:

“If such a resolution makes it to the floor of the convention, I wonder if it will be amended to limit participation in denominational life to those who are not gluttons?” Tom Ascol at The Founders Ministries Blog.

Not gonna happen, but we’ll see. See you ’round like a donut—in Louisville.

The IMB and Believers Baptism:

“This means that the IMB was correct in placing the guidelines on baptism in place because the overwhelming majority of SBC pastors believe a person baptized in a church that does not believe in eternal security has not experienced a scriptural baptism.” At SBC Today.

Logic 101: If the overwhelming majority happens to be wrong, is that still what this means?

On Church Signs:

“IMHO, the proper use of church signs is to display God’s Word. Those who write a clever saying and then attach “God” to it, come very close to blasphemy to me. I would be very careful in attributing to God the words of men. I prefer the words of God.” Les Puryear at sbc IMPACT!

A sound principle in which I can find no fault.

Rant of the Week:

“My denomination is more interested in evangelism than any other denomination in existence or Christian history. Its entire apparatus of denominational machinery is devoted to the promotion of evangelism. Its denominational publications and web sites are basically all evangelism, all the time.” Michael Spencer at internetmonk.com

I never cease to be amazed at the insight of this guy that most in our denomination view as “fringe.” Just as a couple of bonus questions, does any body in the SBC know the meaning of personal holiness, and what the chief end of man is? Keep rantin’, brother iMonk.

On Multi-site Churches:

“Multi-site church is a logical and efficient solution to a problem brought on by bad missiology.” At Missions Misunderstood.

Nothing funny, ironic, or sad here. It’s just a good post. Read it.

Jonathan Edwards Resources:

October 5, 2008 is the birthday of Jonathan Edwards (happy 305th!). And on this date the Jonathan Edwards Center at Yale will launch WJE Online 2.0, a new 73-volume(!) digital works of Edwards, which will include the full electronic versions of the printed Yale Works (25 volumes) and another 47 volumes of unpublished, digitized sermons and other material.” At The Shepherd’s Scrapbook.

Edwards still looks good for his age. Check out the site.

Politics:

“Christ is the integration point, not some grand idea, and our duties are always right in front of us, simple and plain. There are certain intellectual convolutions that could make particularity and “individualism” abstract in an idolatrous way, but that is actually hard to do. Because of the Incarnation, the bias of particularity in politics favors the anti-ideological, which is to say, it is a bias against idolatry. And that describes historic conservatism very well. At the same time, I grant that it does not describe George W. Bush’s spending habits very well — there the resemblance would be more like a pack of simians that got into an Congo merchant’s storehouse of trade gin.” Douglas Wilson at Blog and Mablog.

No one makes better use of the English language than Doug Wilson. He is the master of metaphor, the sultan of simile. We Baptists may not agree with everything he says, but Pastor Wilson always says it well.