Manna: Trusting God and Others in a Season of Scarcity

Manna: Trusting God and Others in a Season of Scarcity

If there’s one thing we learn from how manna, that strange stuff or bread or substance (what is it?), worked throughout Israel’s time of traipsing through the desert, then it’s that trust is a major issue, trusting each other in our communities, trusting our local and national leaders and trusting the faithful triune God who is committed to us and present with us in Christ by the Spirit.

Real Presence and Social Distancing

Real Presence and Social Distancing

We can see each other, but we can’t be with each other. There is a big difference, and we feel it every time we log on. I’ve also noticed that many pastors are preaching shorter sermons and sending out short updates. This is because we recognize that a lecture on a screen is, quite frankly, not the best medium for teaching and preaching complex theology or calling people to deep reflection on the gospel.

How Do We Know If Our Experiences of God Are Real? Lessons from Jonathan Edwards

How Do We Know If Our Experiences of God Are Real? Lessons from Jonathan Edwards

What sort of signs might we look for to know whether or not what is happening is from God? And if we were to pray for renewal, how would we know God was answering that prayer? Would it look like renewed interest in our liturgies? Or perhaps a new love for the Prayer Book? Would it look like many running to new monastic communities? Would it look like a passion for theology, for politics, or community impact? Would it mean more contemporary worship music? Maybe more traditional music? Would it be lots of new churches? Would it mean larger or smaller churches?

Trump, Christianity Today, and the Question of History (Part 2)

Trump, Christianity Today, and the Question of History (Part 2)

Believing that Christ’s resurrection triumph is to be translated into the structures of the world, the church has become a triumphalist institution working to impose “Christian values” (either left values or right values) on the world around us, but in so doing has become captive to the world. This mistaken understanding of presence has led us to the place we find ourselves today, mired in division along political-ideological lines, screaming at one another from entrenched positions provided to us by the options of a human political ideology, liberal democracy. We won’t be able to break out of these entrenched positions that are causing such deep division in the church until we free ourselves from the false view of the church’s relationship to history, and so to the powers of this age.

Trump, Christianity Today, and the Question of History (Part 1)

Trump, Christianity Today, and the Question of History (Part 1)

Evangelicalism, due to its particular way of living out the assumption of the church’s relationship to history, has become accustomed to analyzing political candidates based on how “Christian-ly” they will wield the powers of this world. In the past, the criterion for voting for a candidate was rooted in the character of the candidate; we can call this the “character criterion.” Assuming alignment on social issues, evangelicals would vote for the candidate with the best character to lead the government in a manner consistent with Christian “values.” (This was why George W. Bush was such a favorite: His conversion story gave comfort to evangelicals that this was a true follower of Christ, a man of character who would lead the country in a manner worthy of Christ.)

When the Bible Becomes Your Roommate: On Pastors and Original Languages

When the Bible Becomes Your Roommate: On Pastors and Original Languages

We should be spending a little bit of time working at Greek and Hebrew on most days—maybe 10 minutes. For some of us that will mean taking a couple months to learn (or relearn) the alphabet. Eventually we might be translating a few words at a time, until we are eventually able to work through a whole paragraph or even chapter per day. After exhorting Timothy to “devote” (!) himself to reading and teaching Scripture, Paul tells him to “practice these things, immerse yourself in them, so that all may see your progress” (1 Timothy 4:15 ESV). We must practice so that we can make genuine progress. And, just as with marriage, we must not let our lack of progress in the past became an excuse for a paralyzed apathy in the present