Nebuchadnezzar and the Prodigal: An Israel-Christ Perspective

It occurs to me that there is a Nebuchadnezzar "feel" to the story of the "Prodigal Son" in Luke 15, and in both cases the story of Israel, and therefore of the Christ and his Church, is being told. Try it out. Both Nebuchadnezzar and the prodigal begin in a place of privilege and relative

On Being Mark G., And Not

Last week I received a brief but warm e-mail thanking me for something written that day in the comments section of the Reformed Forum blog. The comment in view was theological and in critical response to someone else’s remarks, with which my correspondent disagreed. One would expect, fairly, that I would be delighted to receive

Nagel, Atheism, and the Problem of Consciousness

The problem of mind and consciousness is captured well in a recent article on the hostile reception to atheist Thomas Nagel's book which questions the long-prevailing, materialist assumptions behind evolutionary naturalism. Regrettably, Nagel does not yet seem to have taken the step of reconsidering his own atheistic assumptions in light of naturalism's problems with consciousness. The

A Matter of Spiritual Perception: Rethinking Opportunity

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What do we mean by an “opportunity” to do or to be something? Our use of the word suggests something partaking of both the providential and ethical. How are these facets related?  Reviewing the Bible’s use of opportunity language, it seems a sound grasp of the notion enriches our understanding of what belongs to spiritual

This Magic Moment: Knowing and Being Known

Michael Jordan turns fifty years old this week. For many people, including myself, that's a scary reminder of how quickly time flies. But it means more than that for me. Any mention of Jordan reminds me of one of the most peculiar moments of my youth, a moment that has only become more meaningful for

Work, Economics, and Ethics in Daily Life

Isn't it best - even "good stewardship" - to give work to others if it would take away from your "own" time? In a culture obsessed with enlarging "me-time" by minimizing the to-do list, here is one of the best Christian rejections of the "time is money" confusion of the modern world. "But I do

The Comic Intrusion

Peter Berger, in Redeeming Laughter: The Comic Dimension of Human Experience (New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1997): "Conceivably, the experience of the comic is rooted in the human propensity to play. It may even be describable as a form of playfulness, but if so, it is a very distinctive form. Perhaps this distinctiveness is disclosed by

Truth, Time, and God’s Patience

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“Truth is the daughter of time, not of authority,” said Francis Bacon. This line is behind the title of what many consider to be the best detective novel of all time, The Daughter of Time, by Josephine Tey (1951). The plot develops Bacon’s maxim from the location of a hospital bed. Alan Grant, an injured

Upcoming Course Announcement

Announcement! July 1-5 ST 740L (WTS London): The Theological Virtues: Faith, Hope, and Love (Dr. Garcia) Purpose: To acquaint students with the exegetical, historical, and theological dimensions of the three theological virtues in Scripture and tradition; To instruct students in the integration of biblical and systematic theological labors with questions in ethics and apologetics; To

Whose Time Are We Saving Anyway?

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On this side of the empty tomb and looking for the Day to come, we are caught up in the mode of waiting, that state of existence in which lived (rather than mathematical) time retards and screeches and grows prongs and barbs. Waiting is hard. As we tumble homeward in faith, hope, and love, we