- Make sure your faith is something you only live out in public.
- Pray only in public or when it is expected.
- Focus on their morals but allow yourself a double standard.
- Give financially as long as it doesn’t inhibit your own desires.
- Make church a priority… as long as there is nothing else you want to do.
Theological Pedigree Does Not Determine Orthodoxy nor Faithfulness
- Theodore Beza (1519 – 1605) was handpicked by Calvin to continue the Academy at Geneva.
- While teaching there, Beza instructed a new student Jacob Arminius (1560 – 1609).
- Arminius became an instructor at the University of Leiden, where he taught Gisbertus Voetius (1589 – 1676).
- Voetius spent seven years at Leiden. Among his teachers were both Gomarus and Arminius.
Few theologians are known for a higher Calvinism than Beza or Voetius. And yet Arminius fits squarely within their pedagogical history. What conclusions can we draw from this?
- We must not become either too mechanical – as if good teachers automatically produce good students – or too indifferent (e.g., “it doesn’t matter who my professors are; I’ll turn out just fine”). Yes, Arminius studied under Beza, but he also learned from Johann Kolmann. True, Voetius learned from Arminius, but he also sat at Gomarus’ feet. Teachers do exert an effect on their students, but it is not automatic or without nuance.
- I thank God for the professors I had at Westminster West, but a theologically sound faculty is no guarantee for theological soundness. Students blessed to have excellent teachers should be cautious to proceed in their fathers’ footsteps, and never depart.
- Poor theological education is no final impediment to your theological growth. If you lament your professors or education, Voetius is an example of rising above your education and proving to be a master at his craft despite some inadequate examples.
The Old Filth of the Heart
The lumen naturæ (or “light of nature;” Westminster Confession I.1) does a lot of heavy lifting, especially when we notice how little consideration it often receives. The light of nature, also known by its alias “natural revelation,” is that which we know “by nature” – or just being human in creation – and it turns out that this is quite a lot.
But one of the most important things natural revelation does for us, and this is where The Marrow lays the emphasis this week, is that it reminds us that humans are covenantal servants, and that we are “hardwired for law.” The works covenant that God made with Adam at creation included the law that disobedience would be recompensed with death, and that obedience would be rewarded with life and blessing. As Adam’s federal progeny, our DNA comes built-in with the principle that we must work before we may have our wages, and that the harder we work, the better the wage. However, living in a post-Genesis 3 world means that even our grandest efforts have only earned us death (Romans 6:23) and our brightest righteous efforts are filthy rags (Isaiah 64:6). Continue Reading at TheMarrow.Org…
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Aidan on Guitars and Girls
Gallery
This gallery contains 6 photos.
Well, to be more precise: girl, singular. Aidan loves his mommy, and when Dad strums the 6 string. He’s almost 9 months here!
Important Update
Unfortunately, due to some of the changes of the blog, we’re going to have to close the doors and shut down.
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Maintenance
Please bear with us while the site is down for some updates. Thank you for your patience.
Hearts Harden Fast
Aside
Hearts can harden fast. The writer of Hebrews drives this point home: “But exhort one another every day, as long as it is called ‘today,’ that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin” (3:13).
GTD on Pocket PC
Repost from an old article at What the Thunder Said… circa 2006. A lot has changed since then – for example, I now use an HTC Touch Pro 2 rather than the (HTC built!) HP iPAQ 5555 – but the reliance on mobile tech for GTD, productivity, and so much more remains the same. Some day I’ll update what I use now in mobile technology, but this was an important benchmark.
Reading: The following article… Googlenews… praying for Katrina victims
Enjoying: State Fair “Sweet Martha Cookies” chocolate chip cookies and milk
Listening: Nothing. Its too early…
According to this article, more and more people – from professionals to teens – are taking advantage of PDA devices to run their lives more smoothly. Where teenagers may be simply chatting and messaging each other with wireless devices, professionals are getting their email wirelessly, working with mini applications like Pocket Word and Excel, and getting directions from voice activated and self-speaking GPS locators on their unit.
Of course, this is nothing new to blund. As a “seminary student,” I’ve been relying on my Hp iPAQ 5550 for a long time now to keep me going. Besides maintaining three email accounts, surfing the net, managing all the paperwork for my part time job, creating papers, spreadsheets, and powerpoint presentations (with wireless printing, nonetheless), listening to my mp3 collection, and running my blund blogs, there are few things my little pocket pc cannot do. I get all my news, weather, sports scores, movies, music videos, and daily paper on the little gadget. Perhaps even more amazing than all of this, is that I haven’t spent a dime on software, and other than the purchase for the initial machine (which should run anywhere from $300 – $500), I have spent only $130 on memory cards, an extra battery, a foldable keyboard, and a Bluetooth mouse (I’d like to get Bluetooth or nice corded earphones). A Pocket PC’s flexibility and useability are tremendous. Continue reading
Singing Through Tears
When the wounds and scars of this world come, we have several options in front of us. Numb the hurt by denying reality (drugs, drunkenness, other-worldly asceticism)? Wallow in the pain and let it consume us? Lash out in rage at that which causes pain?
Or, we can join the Psalmist and cry out to God, singing through the tears and waiting for the Lord to arise and banish our foes and fears. If you’re suffering, consider the two songs below as good examples of ultimately looking to the Lord through the pain. Your Good Shepherd does not promise to keep you from the valley of the shadow of death, but He does promise to bring you through to the green pastures and still waters on the other side.
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