You are currently browsing the monthly archive for February 2007.
“…most of them are old enough to know by experience that a gun is no more likely than a toothpaste or a cosmetic to do the things its makers say it will do. It is the same with all their machines. Their labour-saving devices multiply drudgery; their aphrodisiacs make them impotent: their amusements bore them: their rapid production of food leaves half of them starving, and their devices for saving time have banished leisure from the their country. There will be no radical change. And as for permanence—consider how quickly all machines are broken and obliterated.”
C.S. Lewis, The Pilgrim’s Regress
“Is the Christianity of our day of the lofty kind of which apostolic men have left us so bright an example? Is it not feeble, indolent, self-indulgent, second-rate? Is there in it anything of the presentation of ‘living sacrifices’ to God, which is our acceptable and reasonable service? Are we not seeking our own, not the things which are Jesus Christ’s? Are we not feasting when the world is starving? Are we not at ease in Zion? Are we not sitting still and in luxurious comfort, when many noble and self-sacrificing ones amongst us are rushing into the toil or the war, and, for want of being supported by their fellow Christians, are sinking under the burden and heat of the day?
“O easy, luxurious, comfortable Christian! While you are lolling on your couch the sinner is going down to woe! While you are soothing your conscience with the opiates of religious routine; or pampering the flesh; or killing time in mirth and music, at the concert, or oratorio, or social party; or idling days in sport; or talking politics; or drinking in the applause of public opinion; or sunning yourself in the blaze of the ballroom; or absorbed in the latest novel; or engrossed with the unmeaningness of the card table;—men are dying, the present scene is passing, the eternal world is hastening on, and the Judge is at the door!
“Rouse thyself from thy indulgence, and work! Do it with thy might. Spend and be spent. Give thy money to the Master; give thy strength and thy life to Him. For He is at hand. He may be nearer than thou thinkest. And how shouldst thou like to be caught by Him lounging on thy soft couch, or feasting at thy well-spread table, when thou shouldst have been working for Him, or fighting His battles,—visiting His brethren, soothing His sorrowing children, ministering to His poor disciples, grudging no weariness or hardship for a Master like Him?”
-Taken from Light & Truth: Bible Thoughts and Themes, Vol. IV, The Lesser Epistles, by Horatius Bonar, 1870.
I stole all of this from horatiusbonar.com, which you should really check out. It offers a CD full of almost all Bonar’s works, including one of my favorite books: God’s Way of Peace–a book which I know has, by God’s grace, done many souls eternal good.

Below are some words in ancient Greek. Please leave a comment in the following format: “[OS] [Browser] [Can you see the letters?] [Can you see the accents (including the one below the line)?]” Also, if you note anything that you think doesn’t belong, please describe it (eg. boxes).
An example comment would be: “Windows, Internet Explorer, Yes, Yes” or “OSX, Safari, Yes, No”
Thanks a lot, this is greatly appreciated.
So here’s the Greek:
Καλῶς γένοιτο Ῥωμαίοις καὶ τῷ ἔθνει Ὶουδαίων
Here’s an awesome little video to whet your appetite for more of what can be found in the book I just reviewed below. It really is worth the 10 minutes it will take you to watch. (click either of the play buttons to watch it here, or click the picture to watch it at Youtube.com)(Also, if it’s a little choppy at first, just press pause and wait for the red line to get ahead of you.)
“Strobel’s tough, point-blank questions make this remarkable book read like a captivating, fast-paced novel. But it’s not fiction. It’s a riveting quest for the truth about history’s most compelling figure.
What will your verdict be in The Case for Christ?”
So states the back cover of Lee Strobel’s book, The Case for Christ: A Journalist’s Personal Investigation of the Evidence for Jesus. Captivating, fast-paced and riveting as it may be, the question remains: is it worth reading?
In a word, yes.
The book is basically a compilation of Srobel’s interviews with various scholars regarding the historicity of Jesus Christ. It is divided into three parts: the first deals with the reliability of the biblical narrative of Jesus’ life; the second with Jesus’ identity; the third with the resurrection.
The basic premise of the book is that if Jesus really existed and if Jesus was/is who the gospels say he was/is and if his resurrection from the dead really happened in time and space, then Jesus of Nazareth has a unique claim on all of our lives. Strobel himself began a personal journey to find if these things were so after the salvation of his wife turned him from hardened sceptic to intrigued investigator. In his book, Strobel attempts to recreate his journey from sceptic to believer by asking scholars the same hard questions he himself asked of the evidence.
Satan has often assaulted the church of Christ by trying to undermine its key doctrines (the word, the identity of Jesus, the resurrection) and this book is a great introduction to some of the extra-biblical evidence that supports what believers already know to be true. In that sense it can definitely be used by God to strengthen the believer’s faith and is a recommended read.
There is, however, a major weakness which undercuts what seems to be Strobel’s primary purpose with this volume: evangelism. In this capacity I think its usefulness will be limited. The problem is that the book is structured in such a way so as to leave us with the impression that we should believe the Bible is true because five guys with their PhDs say it is. We should believe Jesus is who he says he is because three guys with their PhDs say he is. And we should believe the resurrection really happened because four guys with their PhDs say it did. You see the problem. For every one of these PhDs, there are a hundred other PhDs who would answer Strobel’s questions very, very differently. This is not to say that the PhDs don’t provide encouraging corroborative evidence or that what they say doesn’t matter. It is to say, however, that in the end we must believe the Bible because we are convinced by the Holy Spirit of God that it is his word to man. Nothing less will change our lives.
There are other little quirks about this book as well. Strobel doesn’t play the role of the hardened sceptic too convincingly and the real hardened sceptic will complain that he concedes his points too easily. In addition, his writing style can be wearisome at times.
In the end though, this book is worth the read for a Christian. Just don’t expect it to convince everyone on your street that Jesus is Lord. Stick to God’s own word for that. By the way, when was the last time you used God’s word to try and convince everyone on your street that Jesus is Lord?

It’s true: total nonsense completely devoid of any instructional, devotional, spiritual, anything-al trumps anything instructional, devotional, spiritual or almost anything-al. The graph which you see to the right is a graphic demonstration of this phenomenon. Note the day (circled in red) on which I posted the ridiculous post below. Next, note the meteoric rise in hits this blog has received since then. Next, sit down and ponder this remarkable (though not unexpected) demonstration of… (of what? you tell me.)

geegeegee geegee efefef efef beeflatbeeflat cee dee deedee
geegeegee geegee efefef efef beeflatbeeflat cee dee deedee
geegeegee geegee efefef efef beeflatbeeflat cee dee deedee
whoohoo!

Here’s a sample from one of Ehrman’s lectures: “You shouldn’t think something just because you believe it. You need reasons. That applies to religion. That applies to politics . . . just because your parents believe something isn’t good enough.” The statement is true enough, but coming at the end of lecture designed to tear away all credibility from the canonical gospels, it leaves a bitter taste. What Ehrman’s eyes are blind to is the fact that Christians do have reasons to believe. Lots of them.
The saddest part of this whole tale is not the eternal peril Bart himself is in (though that alone would be sad enough). Rather, it is the fact that he seems determined to lead others down the same road of destruction. By all accounts, he’s doing a good job of it. His book, Misquoting Jesus, was a New York Times bestseller, and he has written many similar books besides.
Bart Ehrman is the devil’s dream come true. ‘Born again’ in his teens, Ehrman went on to study at Moody Bible Institute and Wheaton College before earning his PhD in Biblical Studies at Princeton Theological Seminary. The more he studied the documents on which his Christianity was based, however, the more he realized that everything he ever believed was a lie.