‘I love your law’

Psalm 119 is a lengthy paean to God’s law, which the author goes so far as to claim to love, as strange as that may sound to contemporary ears. Indeed the notion of loving a law is very far from most people’s thoughts. Why do we ourselves not love this law? William G. Witt, Professor of . . . . Continue Reading »

Thirty Three Things (v. 19)

1. A Promiscuously Permissive, User-Friendly Jesus It is odd that we have made even Jesus into such a quivering mass of affirmation and oozing graciousness, considering how frequently, unguardedly, and gleefully Jesus told us that we were sinners. Anyone who thinks that Jesus was into . . . . Continue Reading »

The Importance of Spiritual Discipline

In the history of the church, one of the most famous conflicts was between St. Bernard (d.1153), the charismatic abbot of Clairvaux, and Peter Abelard (d.1143), the brilliant medieval logician and theologian. St. Bernard thought that Abelard’s new approach to theology, an approach that . . . . Continue Reading »

Afternoon Links — 10.15.10

E. Christian Brugger reports on the dark side of the infertility industry . The woman whose body is over-stimulated to produce eggs “might suffer excruciating abdominal pain, blood clots, infections, kidney failure, loss of her ovaries, shock, and, in rare cases, death.” And “if . . . . Continue Reading »

Diversity and Toleration

President Obama has been tireless in speaking about and promoting religious tolerance.  Our religious diversity, he contends, is a source of our strength, so long as we act in accordance with our heritage of religious toleration.  Here’s how he put it in his Inaugural Address : . . . . Continue Reading »

The Wilberforce Scandal

A couple of months ago I asked whether William Wilberforce, the eighteenth century abolitionist and hero to modern evanglecals, was complicit in the practice of slavery in Africa. Today, Ted Olsen at Christianity Today follows up on the story and provides more details: Every successful . . . . Continue Reading »