Wittenberg Gate
About Me
- Name: Dory
- Location: Mid-Atlantic Region, United States
I'm a frumpy middle-aged homeschooling mom who hasn't stopped learning and is convinced that God has equipped ordinary people to do extraordinary things and think extraordinary thoughts.
Friday, November 19, 2004
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
Tackling Aristotle
We have these great leather love seats in the family room. They're as comfortable as all get out. I was stretched out across one this afternoon and my son, 13, was stretched out across the other. He stretches out further than I do now, and while that is hardly a great accomplishment, it is a landmark nonetheless--a landmark he enjoys more than I do.
We were reading Aristotle's Poetics aloud to each other. (His humanities course this year is George Grant's Gileskirk program, Antiquities, and I like to tie in his literature to his history.) Why read it aloud? Well, one reason is that my goals for his education exceed what mine was, and I haven't read it before. So why not read it together and help each other out?
Besides, he might need my help with the vocabulary.
Mom: "Now his use of the word trajectory here is not in the sense of..."
Son: "I know, Mom, he means the movement of history."
Mom: "Right. Very good, now where was I..."
Later he pointed out that the definition of tragic plots vs. comic plots that I had explained before reading Aristotle on tragedy and comedy were really quite different than what Aristotle had in mind. I was thinking about a plots turning up or down and Aristotle was only concerned about whether the characters were admirable or laughable.
Brat.
It struck me suddenly that here I was reading Aristotle with my thirteen year-old and HE GETS IT. Now every parent likes to think that his kid is the next Albert Einstein, but I know better. My boy is bright kid, but not out of the ordinary. And as far as motivation goes, well, sometimes it's like pulling teeth to get him to get his work done. I don't want to paint one of those rosy pictures that so many homeschoolers paint so their readers sigh and think, "Oh, I could never do that!"
But why do we avoid things like Aristotle's Poetics and other classic works? Is it because our lack of familiarity with it makes us afraid to try? Somehow I think the worst thing we could teach our kids is that there are whole categories of things out there that they aren't qualified to even try to learn. I can't hope to give my son a complete education in the next four years. I hope he will be learning for a lifetime. I hope that twenty years from now when he's looking for something to read he will see Aristotle's Politics on the shelf and, rather than be intimidated, he will say to himself, "I think I'll tackle this. After all, if I've been reading Aristotle since I was thirteen."
We were reading Aristotle's Poetics aloud to each other. (His humanities course this year is George Grant's Gileskirk program, Antiquities, and I like to tie in his literature to his history.) Why read it aloud? Well, one reason is that my goals for his education exceed what mine was, and I haven't read it before. So why not read it together and help each other out?
Besides, he might need my help with the vocabulary.
Mom: "Now his use of the word trajectory here is not in the sense of..."
Son: "I know, Mom, he means the movement of history."
Mom: "Right. Very good, now where was I..."
Later he pointed out that the definition of tragic plots vs. comic plots that I had explained before reading Aristotle on tragedy and comedy were really quite different than what Aristotle had in mind. I was thinking about a plots turning up or down and Aristotle was only concerned about whether the characters were admirable or laughable.
Brat.
It struck me suddenly that here I was reading Aristotle with my thirteen year-old and HE GETS IT. Now every parent likes to think that his kid is the next Albert Einstein, but I know better. My boy is bright kid, but not out of the ordinary. And as far as motivation goes, well, sometimes it's like pulling teeth to get him to get his work done. I don't want to paint one of those rosy pictures that so many homeschoolers paint so their readers sigh and think, "Oh, I could never do that!"
But why do we avoid things like Aristotle's Poetics and other classic works? Is it because our lack of familiarity with it makes us afraid to try? Somehow I think the worst thing we could teach our kids is that there are whole categories of things out there that they aren't qualified to even try to learn. I can't hope to give my son a complete education in the next four years. I hope he will be learning for a lifetime. I hope that twenty years from now when he's looking for something to read he will see Aristotle's Politics on the shelf and, rather than be intimidated, he will say to himself, "I think I'll tackle this. After all, if I've been reading Aristotle since I was thirteen."
Tuesday, November 16, 2004
Finding Good Blogs to Read
Perhaps you've had the experience I've had of browsing for blog sites and being confronted with material I'd just rather not see. If you're looking for some good reading, try these blog groups:
League of Reformed Bloggers
Pro Life Blogs
Evangelical Aggregator
League of Reformed Bloggers
Pro Life Blogs
Evangelical Aggregator
Shifting Standards at the FDA?
Today the FDA announced that due to three deaths and numerous damaging and life-threatening events attributed to the abortion-inducing pill RU-486, it will be changing the warning on the labels required with sales of the drug. To put this into perspective, let us remember that this drug is given to a population that is NOT sick with any condition that is cured by the drug, and each successful use causes at least one death.
The FDA recently turned down licensing of Exanta®, an AstraZeneca blood-thinning drug, because in clinical trials three deaths occurred in which the drug was a suspected (though not proven) contributing cause. In contrast to the RU-486 population, this drug is given to a population already at huge risk of dying from stroke, blood clots, or cardiac events. The only other blood thinner already on the market (warfarin – first developed as a rat poison) cannot be used by many patients, because of adverse drug interactions and other problems. Exanta®, which is already licensed in Europe, is not without its side-effects, but the risks seem to be lower than with the existing drug, and vastly lower than leaving these conditions untreated. Doctors are frustrated by the unavailability of this drug, and feel there would be thousands fewer deaths each year if the drug was available.
So one must ask the question. Are the safety standards for licensing RU-486 different than for other drugs, even life-saving drugs, such as Exanta®? Why do three deaths and many dangerous infections and ruptures among a well population warrant a warning label, while three deaths among a patient population that is, in many cases desperately ill, result in a denial of licensing for the drug?
The FDA recently turned down licensing of Exanta®, an AstraZeneca blood-thinning drug, because in clinical trials three deaths occurred in which the drug was a suspected (though not proven) contributing cause. In contrast to the RU-486 population, this drug is given to a population already at huge risk of dying from stroke, blood clots, or cardiac events. The only other blood thinner already on the market (warfarin – first developed as a rat poison) cannot be used by many patients, because of adverse drug interactions and other problems. Exanta®, which is already licensed in Europe, is not without its side-effects, but the risks seem to be lower than with the existing drug, and vastly lower than leaving these conditions untreated. Doctors are frustrated by the unavailability of this drug, and feel there would be thousands fewer deaths each year if the drug was available.
So one must ask the question. Are the safety standards for licensing RU-486 different than for other drugs, even life-saving drugs, such as Exanta®? Why do three deaths and many dangerous infections and ruptures among a well population warrant a warning label, while three deaths among a patient population that is, in many cases desperately ill, result in a denial of licensing for the drug?
Monday, November 15, 2004
Hate Crimes in a Biblical Light
Reading David Limbaugh’s blog musing about why it is hate crime laws do not apply to the vandalism of Republican campaign headquarters—hate of some groups of people seems acceptable, or at least legal—got me to thinking again about hate crime legislation from a Biblical standpoint. To do that we have to think again about the four distinct governments in Scripture: self-government, family government, ecclesiastical (church) government, and civil government, and consider what responsibilities and tools of discipline are granted to each. I’ve made a little chart (above) that summarizes these as I see it from Scripture. (We could discuss that more later; but that’s not my point today.)
We get ourselves all mixed up when we forget the purposes and tools of the various governments and apply them to the others. For example, when we forget that repentance and restoration are the goals of the first three governments, but not the last, we end up with the civil government trying to “reform” prisoners, or we take apparent remorse into consideration when sentencing criminals. If we forget that the purpose of family discipline is to bring about repentance and restoration, rather than punishment, then the rod can become a weapon of angry abuse.
I define tyranny as what happens when one sphere of government attempts to exert authority in an area in which God has not given that authority. For example, the first three governments have been given the task of instruction. When the civil government takes on that responsibility, and claims authority over or compels taxes for education, they have become tyrannical in that area.
So what about offenses of the mind, of which unjust hatred is only one? Others include covetousness, lust, insincere worship, ingratitude, and pride. Yet how are these offenses handled in Scripture? What is the proscribed punishment or remedy for these things? We are often told to examine ourselves and to keep ourselves from such sins, and to pray for the help of the Spirit in doing so, but there is no imposition of penalty for these offenses by the family, ecclesiastical or civil governments.
For two reasons, then, I believe that any attempt by the civil government to legislate the governance of the thoughts or affections is tyrannical and ought not be supported: 1) These offenses are sins, but not crimes, and 2) They are sins that God has placed under no human government other than the self.
That is not to say that things such as racial hatred are not wrong. They certainly are. But they are sins of the heart that must be dealt with by the self and the Spirit of God.
We get ourselves all mixed up when we forget the purposes and tools of the various governments and apply them to the others. For example, when we forget that repentance and restoration are the goals of the first three governments, but not the last, we end up with the civil government trying to “reform” prisoners, or we take apparent remorse into consideration when sentencing criminals. If we forget that the purpose of family discipline is to bring about repentance and restoration, rather than punishment, then the rod can become a weapon of angry abuse.
I define tyranny as what happens when one sphere of government attempts to exert authority in an area in which God has not given that authority. For example, the first three governments have been given the task of instruction. When the civil government takes on that responsibility, and claims authority over or compels taxes for education, they have become tyrannical in that area.
So what about offenses of the mind, of which unjust hatred is only one? Others include covetousness, lust, insincere worship, ingratitude, and pride. Yet how are these offenses handled in Scripture? What is the proscribed punishment or remedy for these things? We are often told to examine ourselves and to keep ourselves from such sins, and to pray for the help of the Spirit in doing so, but there is no imposition of penalty for these offenses by the family, ecclesiastical or civil governments.
For two reasons, then, I believe that any attempt by the civil government to legislate the governance of the thoughts or affections is tyrannical and ought not be supported: 1) These offenses are sins, but not crimes, and 2) They are sins that God has placed under no human government other than the self.
That is not to say that things such as racial hatred are not wrong. They certainly are. But they are sins of the heart that must be dealt with by the self and the Spirit of God.
Sunday, November 14, 2004
Established Agnosticism?
See La Shawn Barber's discussion on the moral divide here, and be sure to read the comments for a fascinating look at both sides of this issue. My comments (below) are as much a comment on the comments as it is on the original article.
God exists.
God does not exist.
We cannot know whether or not God exists.
All of these statements are about God. None of them can be proved or disproved by science. All of these statements are religious. Everyone who subscribes to one of these statements or any other statement about any deity or absence thereof is making a religious claim.
The same can be said of statements about whether or not God is relevant to law, politics, or education. Can science (or history or law or language) be rightly understood without reference to the God of Nature (or of Providence, or the Supreme Lawgiver, or the Word Incarnate)? Whether you answer yes or no, you make a religious claim.
Secularists (I use the term broadly to apply to those who believe law, education, etc. can be carried on without reference to God.) claim that their views are not religious and then on the basis of that claim, expect others to join them and construct a culture that can be fairly characterized as officially agnostic. As all sides believe that what they believe is correct (otherwise they wouldn’t believe it), I would submit that we cannot solve the problem of how to live together in a pluralistic society where everyone is free to exercise his or her religion unless we first come to terms (as Mortimer J. Adler would say) and agree that all of these views are religious.
Our founders (some of whom were secularists) solved the problem by basing our law on the only reasonable unchanging standard that was available—the Bible, and then carefully protecting each person’s right to freely exercise their conscience (a Biblical concept which was greatly studied in the Reformation) in worship and belief. Further, they protected the Scriptural distinction between Church authorities and civil authorities when they included the Establishment Clause that prevented one Christian sect being established above others as the State Religion, and kept the government out of the business of appointing church leaders and vice versa.
If now we want to change this basis of our government and establish ourselves as an officially agnostic country, secularists need to admit that that is what they are proposing and then make the argument to persuade the majority of us to make the change.
God exists.
God does not exist.
We cannot know whether or not God exists.
All of these statements are about God. None of them can be proved or disproved by science. All of these statements are religious. Everyone who subscribes to one of these statements or any other statement about any deity or absence thereof is making a religious claim.
The same can be said of statements about whether or not God is relevant to law, politics, or education. Can science (or history or law or language) be rightly understood without reference to the God of Nature (or of Providence, or the Supreme Lawgiver, or the Word Incarnate)? Whether you answer yes or no, you make a religious claim.
Secularists (I use the term broadly to apply to those who believe law, education, etc. can be carried on without reference to God.) claim that their views are not religious and then on the basis of that claim, expect others to join them and construct a culture that can be fairly characterized as officially agnostic. As all sides believe that what they believe is correct (otherwise they wouldn’t believe it), I would submit that we cannot solve the problem of how to live together in a pluralistic society where everyone is free to exercise his or her religion unless we first come to terms (as Mortimer J. Adler would say) and agree that all of these views are religious.
Our founders (some of whom were secularists) solved the problem by basing our law on the only reasonable unchanging standard that was available—the Bible, and then carefully protecting each person’s right to freely exercise their conscience (a Biblical concept which was greatly studied in the Reformation) in worship and belief. Further, they protected the Scriptural distinction between Church authorities and civil authorities when they included the Establishment Clause that prevented one Christian sect being established above others as the State Religion, and kept the government out of the business of appointing church leaders and vice versa.
If now we want to change this basis of our government and establish ourselves as an officially agnostic country, secularists need to admit that that is what they are proposing and then make the argument to persuade the majority of us to make the change.
Saturday, November 13, 2004
Wherever 2 or 3 Are Gathered...There's Enough for a Church Split
A must read for my contentious brothers and sisters in the Presbyterian/Reformed churches(and I must sometimes include myself in that lot), is John Frame's Machen's Warrior Children.
If you don't have time to read the whole article, skim the bulk of it, but read carefully the author's concluding observations. And be prepared to blush. Here is a sample:
"Reformed people need to do much more thinking about what constitutes a test of orthodoxy. Is it really plausible to say that, for example, Gordon Clark's view of incomprehensibility was unorthodox, when neither Clark's nor Van Til's positions are clearly set forth in the Reformed confessions? But again and again, through the history described above, writers have read one another out of the Reformed movement (and even out of Christianity) on such dubious bases. The assumption seems to be that any difference of opinion amounts to a test of fellowship, that any truth I possess gives me the right to disrupt the peace of the church until everybody comes to agree with me. But surely there are some disagreements that are not tests of orthodoxy, some differences that should be tolerated within the church. Examples include the disagreements over days and the eating of meat, described by Paul in Romans 14, and the disagreements about idol food, which he discusses in 1 Corinthians 8-10. In those passages there is no suggestion that people holding the wrong view should be put out of the church. Rather, Paul condemns the party spirit and calls the disagreeing parties to live together as Christian brothers and sisters. In my judgement [sic], the Machen movement thought little about the difference between tolerable and intolerable disagreements in the church."
This is not an article that dismisses the importance of doctrinal issues, but it makes a strong case that such differences need to be handled in the Spirit of love and fellowship rather than the in the flesh. Those of us who love the Word and love to argue, persuade, and express our worldviews would do well to heed John Frame's wisdom.
If you don't have time to read the whole article, skim the bulk of it, but read carefully the author's concluding observations. And be prepared to blush. Here is a sample:
"Reformed people need to do much more thinking about what constitutes a test of orthodoxy. Is it really plausible to say that, for example, Gordon Clark's view of incomprehensibility was unorthodox, when neither Clark's nor Van Til's positions are clearly set forth in the Reformed confessions? But again and again, through the history described above, writers have read one another out of the Reformed movement (and even out of Christianity) on such dubious bases. The assumption seems to be that any difference of opinion amounts to a test of fellowship, that any truth I possess gives me the right to disrupt the peace of the church until everybody comes to agree with me. But surely there are some disagreements that are not tests of orthodoxy, some differences that should be tolerated within the church. Examples include the disagreements over days and the eating of meat, described by Paul in Romans 14, and the disagreements about idol food, which he discusses in 1 Corinthians 8-10. In those passages there is no suggestion that people holding the wrong view should be put out of the church. Rather, Paul condemns the party spirit and calls the disagreeing parties to live together as Christian brothers and sisters. In my judgement [sic], the Machen movement thought little about the difference between tolerable and intolerable disagreements in the church."
This is not an article that dismisses the importance of doctrinal issues, but it makes a strong case that such differences need to be handled in the Spirit of love and fellowship rather than the in the flesh. Those of us who love the Word and love to argue, persuade, and express our worldviews would do well to heed John Frame's wisdom.
Unequally Yoked
So if one parent kills his unborn child, he is guilty of capital murder. Yet if the other parent hires a professional to kill her unborn child, she is guilty of...nothing?
Curious.
Curious.
Relative Values
For more thoughts on the topic of relative values, (See my post on the Palestinian George Washington), read La Shawn Barber's post here.
May I see your receipt?
“May I see your receipt, Ma’am?”
“No, thank you.”
“I need to see your receipt, so I can know you paid for that.”
“Do you have any reason to believe I have stolen this? Didn’t I just walk away from your counter?”
“I didn’t see where you came from, but I need to be able to see that you paid for it.”
“So you have not seen me do anything wrong, yet you insist that I must submit to a search to prove I have done nothing wrong?”
“It’s not a search. I just need to see your receipt.”
“Of course it’s a search. This is my property, and you are insisting that you can stop me and examine it. That’s a search.”
“Well, I don’t know about that, but I have a right to see your receipt.”
“A right??? From where do you derive this right? Is this one of those rights that our Constitution protects?”
Sputters. “Well, I don’t know about that, all I know is I’m supposed to make sure people don’t walk out of here without paying for things.”
“There are ways to prevent shoplifting that don’t require you violate the Constitutional rights of your customers.”
“Ma’am, I don’t know whether or not you stole that, and I need to see your receipt.”
“May I see a receipt for those shoes you’re wearing?”
“No.”
“But how do I know you paid for them?”
“Ma’am, I must insist on seeing your receipt!”
“Do you think a police officer could stand outside your store and search the packages and receipts of your customers as they leave the store?”
“No.”
“You’d expect him to get prosecuted for unlawful arrests and illegal searches, wouldn’t you?”
“Yes, but I am not a police officer.”
“Yet you claim the authority to search my property even beyond what a commissioned police officer has been granted? Who has granted you this authority?”
“Look lady, if you don’t show me your receipt, I will have to ban you from this store and you may never shop here again.”
“Somehow, I think I'll find a way to bear the loss.”
The above is an amalgamation of conversations I have had at several local stores at an alarmingly growing rate of frequency. (Soon the only place I will be able to shop is online!)
The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States says, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
Webster’s Dictionary defines probable cause as, “reasonable grounds for presuming guilt in someone charged with a crime.” (Webster’s New World Dictionary and Thesaurus, Accents Software International, Macmillan Publishers, Version 2.0, 1998) So, as far as obtaining a search warrant goes, an officer must show reasonable grounds that a crime has been committed, and the described search is likely to produce evidence of that crime. Seeing a person walk out of a store with merchandise does not meet this standard of probable cause, since honest, paying customers do this all the time.
In those cases in which there is no time to get a warrant, (lest the suspect get away or the evidence be lost), an officer may make an arrest and conduct a search, but he will later have to answer (under oath) to a judge or court commissioner as to why he had probable cause to act as he did and to show that his actions were lawful. Most jurisdictions allow a noncommissioned merchant to make a lawful arrest in a shoplifting case; however the same standards of probable cause still apply.
“A long standing exception permits warrantless searches incident to a lawful arrest. Circumstances may not permit an arresting officer to obtain a warrant. But only the person under arrest and the immediately surrounding area are subject to search (Chimel vs. California, 1969)…” (The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States, Kermit L. Hall, ed., Oxford University Press, New York 1992, pg. 762, emphasis mine.)
I am not a lawyer and this post is not intended as legal advice. But I believe that Americans need to inform themselves about their rights and resist attempts to trample them. Unless a merchant has seen you behaving in a way that would make a reasonable person believe you have stolen something, he has no more right to search your person or property than you have to search his.
I also believe that we should take the next step of writing or telephoning the managers and/or the corporate headquarters of these businesses and let our objections be known. If they hear from enough of us, they may back off from these policies. And if they don’t, I think the issue needs to be tested in the courts.
“No, thank you.”
“I need to see your receipt, so I can know you paid for that.”
“Do you have any reason to believe I have stolen this? Didn’t I just walk away from your counter?”
“I didn’t see where you came from, but I need to be able to see that you paid for it.”
“So you have not seen me do anything wrong, yet you insist that I must submit to a search to prove I have done nothing wrong?”
“It’s not a search. I just need to see your receipt.”
“Of course it’s a search. This is my property, and you are insisting that you can stop me and examine it. That’s a search.”
“Well, I don’t know about that, but I have a right to see your receipt.”
“A right??? From where do you derive this right? Is this one of those rights that our Constitution protects?”
Sputters. “Well, I don’t know about that, all I know is I’m supposed to make sure people don’t walk out of here without paying for things.”
“There are ways to prevent shoplifting that don’t require you violate the Constitutional rights of your customers.”
“Ma’am, I don’t know whether or not you stole that, and I need to see your receipt.”
“May I see a receipt for those shoes you’re wearing?”
“No.”
“But how do I know you paid for them?”
“Ma’am, I must insist on seeing your receipt!”
“Do you think a police officer could stand outside your store and search the packages and receipts of your customers as they leave the store?”
“No.”
“You’d expect him to get prosecuted for unlawful arrests and illegal searches, wouldn’t you?”
“Yes, but I am not a police officer.”
“Yet you claim the authority to search my property even beyond what a commissioned police officer has been granted? Who has granted you this authority?”
“Look lady, if you don’t show me your receipt, I will have to ban you from this store and you may never shop here again.”
“Somehow, I think I'll find a way to bear the loss.”
The above is an amalgamation of conversations I have had at several local stores at an alarmingly growing rate of frequency. (Soon the only place I will be able to shop is online!)
The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States says, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
Webster’s Dictionary defines probable cause as, “reasonable grounds for presuming guilt in someone charged with a crime.” (Webster’s New World Dictionary and Thesaurus, Accents Software International, Macmillan Publishers, Version 2.0, 1998) So, as far as obtaining a search warrant goes, an officer must show reasonable grounds that a crime has been committed, and the described search is likely to produce evidence of that crime. Seeing a person walk out of a store with merchandise does not meet this standard of probable cause, since honest, paying customers do this all the time.
In those cases in which there is no time to get a warrant, (lest the suspect get away or the evidence be lost), an officer may make an arrest and conduct a search, but he will later have to answer (under oath) to a judge or court commissioner as to why he had probable cause to act as he did and to show that his actions were lawful. Most jurisdictions allow a noncommissioned merchant to make a lawful arrest in a shoplifting case; however the same standards of probable cause still apply.
“A long standing exception permits warrantless searches incident to a lawful arrest. Circumstances may not permit an arresting officer to obtain a warrant. But only the person under arrest and the immediately surrounding area are subject to search (Chimel vs. California, 1969)…” (The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States, Kermit L. Hall, ed., Oxford University Press, New York 1992, pg. 762, emphasis mine.)
I am not a lawyer and this post is not intended as legal advice. But I believe that Americans need to inform themselves about their rights and resist attempts to trample them. Unless a merchant has seen you behaving in a way that would make a reasonable person believe you have stolen something, he has no more right to search your person or property than you have to search his.
I also believe that we should take the next step of writing or telephoning the managers and/or the corporate headquarters of these businesses and let our objections be known. If they hear from enough of us, they may back off from these policies. And if they don’t, I think the issue needs to be tested in the courts.
Friday, November 12, 2004
Palestinian George Washington?
As Fox News was covering Arafat's burial this morning, a guest commentator began to compare the Palestinian view of Arafat to how Americans view George Washington. Many British called him a terrorist, he said. Then he began to bring in the name of Ronald Reagan. That's when E. D. Hill pounced, and firmly and passionately rejected any such comparisons.
As I reflected on this incident--and we have heard many other similar attempts to compare terrorists to Patriots--I have to wonder, does the Islamic worldview actually permit someone to, with sincerity, compare the life of George Washington to that of Yassar Arafat? In Islamic ethics do uniformed soldiers engaging in warfare exist on the same moral plane with those who order the strapping of explosives onto brainwashed teenagers and exploding them into a crowd of old men, women, children, and babies?
I don't think so. I think there may be another explanation. I think our enemies are attempting to exploit our own moral weakness, namely, our rejection of an absolute standard of truth and justice, and our willingness to see truth, including ethical truth, as a relative thing. Each woman is able to choose if killing her unborn baby is "right for her." Unmarried, unrelated people living together are called "roommates" if that is what they prefer, or a "family" if that is what they call themselves.
So why not call people who blow up busloads of school children, "Freedom fighters" and American soldiers, "Terrorists?" On what grounds can a moral relativist object?
As I reflected on this incident--and we have heard many other similar attempts to compare terrorists to Patriots--I have to wonder, does the Islamic worldview actually permit someone to, with sincerity, compare the life of George Washington to that of Yassar Arafat? In Islamic ethics do uniformed soldiers engaging in warfare exist on the same moral plane with those who order the strapping of explosives onto brainwashed teenagers and exploding them into a crowd of old men, women, children, and babies?
I don't think so. I think there may be another explanation. I think our enemies are attempting to exploit our own moral weakness, namely, our rejection of an absolute standard of truth and justice, and our willingness to see truth, including ethical truth, as a relative thing. Each woman is able to choose if killing her unborn baby is "right for her." Unmarried, unrelated people living together are called "roommates" if that is what they prefer, or a "family" if that is what they call themselves.
So why not call people who blow up busloads of school children, "Freedom fighters" and American soldiers, "Terrorists?" On what grounds can a moral relativist object?
Thursday, November 11, 2004
Marriage Part II: A Help and Not a Hindrance
Proverbs 12:4 “An excellent wife is the crown of her husband, But she who causes shame is like rottenness in his bones.”
This Proverbial couplet warns a wife that she can be either a help or a hindrance to her husband, but we must look elsewhere in Scripture for practical instruction on what being a help or being a hindrance looks like.
In Proverbs 31 we have a picture of a virtuous wife. From her we can glean the following advice:
· Be competent with our work so that when our husbands can leave home for the day they trust that we are handling things well, enabling him to serve in the community.
· Be industriously productive and creative for the sake of the family’s provisions and to produce extra income for the family.
· Manage the family resources and live within our means well enough that there is excess to offer to the poor
· Manage our tongues so that we give wise advice and speak in an edifying and kind way.
· Extend charity to the poor on behalf of the family.
From descriptions of the qualifications of church officers (see I Timothy 3 and Titus 1), we can glean the following instructions for not only officer’s wives, but for all of us:
· We must control our tongues (Hmmm… that one comes up rather often). Note that a man cannot be a deacon if his wife is a gossip.
· We must show respect for our husbands and their leadership and teach our children to do the same. (Otherwise he will not be considered a competent leader.)
· We must practice hospitality. Actually the text says that the elder must be hospitable, but how can a man be hospitable if his wife is not?
Here’s a Proverb that makes me smile and shudder at the same time: Prov. 19:13 “The contentions of a wife are a continual dripping…” I just picture that leaky faucet in the old two-room apartment we lived in when we were first married. It’s the sort of thing that can be unbearably annoying on a sleepless night. Drip…drip….drip. So are we contentious? Is this house too old, the food budget too small, the gutters long overdue for a cleaning, so on and so on. Drip…drip…drip. It’s enough to make a guy feel like he can’t do anything right—and lose his motivation to try.
1 Corinthians 15:33 affirms that, “Evil company corrupts good habits.” It is a sad truth that often the weaknesses and shortcomings of one spouse can corrupt the other spouse, especially if they share weaknesses. Imagine a household in which both the husband and the wife tend to listening to and sharing gossip. Each will be emboldened by the other and soon the household will be a bitter one. At some point this bitterness will be evident not only in the home, but also in their public lives. The same could be said of other sins: gluttony, indulging lusts, laziness, lying, complaining. We are much more comfortable sinning when there are others around us doing the same thing, and no one is keeping us accountable. So we need to keep careful watch over our weaknesses, especially those we share with our husbands, and pray especially for deliverance from those sins which can bring us both down.
The positive side of the issue of shared weaknesses is to look for skills or habits that are lacking in the family and work to contribute those ourselves. Do neither of us know how to balance a checkbook? A helpful wife could set out to learn the what she needs to know to take over that task.
I'm sure the Scriptures hold many more treasures on how we can be a help rather than a hindrance to our husbands, but that's plenty for me to be working on for now!
This Proverbial couplet warns a wife that she can be either a help or a hindrance to her husband, but we must look elsewhere in Scripture for practical instruction on what being a help or being a hindrance looks like.
In Proverbs 31 we have a picture of a virtuous wife. From her we can glean the following advice:
· Be competent with our work so that when our husbands can leave home for the day they trust that we are handling things well, enabling him to serve in the community.
· Be industriously productive and creative for the sake of the family’s provisions and to produce extra income for the family.
· Manage the family resources and live within our means well enough that there is excess to offer to the poor
· Manage our tongues so that we give wise advice and speak in an edifying and kind way.
· Extend charity to the poor on behalf of the family.
From descriptions of the qualifications of church officers (see I Timothy 3 and Titus 1), we can glean the following instructions for not only officer’s wives, but for all of us:
· We must control our tongues (Hmmm… that one comes up rather often). Note that a man cannot be a deacon if his wife is a gossip.
· We must show respect for our husbands and their leadership and teach our children to do the same. (Otherwise he will not be considered a competent leader.)
· We must practice hospitality. Actually the text says that the elder must be hospitable, but how can a man be hospitable if his wife is not?
Here’s a Proverb that makes me smile and shudder at the same time: Prov. 19:13 “The contentions of a wife are a continual dripping…” I just picture that leaky faucet in the old two-room apartment we lived in when we were first married. It’s the sort of thing that can be unbearably annoying on a sleepless night. Drip…drip….drip. So are we contentious? Is this house too old, the food budget too small, the gutters long overdue for a cleaning, so on and so on. Drip…drip…drip. It’s enough to make a guy feel like he can’t do anything right—and lose his motivation to try.
1 Corinthians 15:33 affirms that, “Evil company corrupts good habits.” It is a sad truth that often the weaknesses and shortcomings of one spouse can corrupt the other spouse, especially if they share weaknesses. Imagine a household in which both the husband and the wife tend to listening to and sharing gossip. Each will be emboldened by the other and soon the household will be a bitter one. At some point this bitterness will be evident not only in the home, but also in their public lives. The same could be said of other sins: gluttony, indulging lusts, laziness, lying, complaining. We are much more comfortable sinning when there are others around us doing the same thing, and no one is keeping us accountable. So we need to keep careful watch over our weaknesses, especially those we share with our husbands, and pray especially for deliverance from those sins which can bring us both down.
The positive side of the issue of shared weaknesses is to look for skills or habits that are lacking in the family and work to contribute those ourselves. Do neither of us know how to balance a checkbook? A helpful wife could set out to learn the what she needs to know to take over that task.
I'm sure the Scriptures hold many more treasures on how we can be a help rather than a hindrance to our husbands, but that's plenty for me to be working on for now!
Wednesday, November 10, 2004
Marriage Part I: God-Centered Marriage
This is taken from a talk on marriage I recently gave to a group of women .
Genesis 1 26Then God said, "Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, over all[1] the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth." 27So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them. 28Then God blessed them, and God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over every living thing that moves on the earth."
Genesis 2 18And the LORD God said, "It is not good that man should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him." 19Out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. And whatever Adam called each living creature, that was its name. 20So Adam gave names to all cattle, to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field. But for Adam there was not found a helper comparable to him. 21And the LORD God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. 22Then the rib which the LORD God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man. 23And Adam said: "This is now bone of my bones, And flesh of my flesh; She shall be called Woman, Because she was taken out of Man." 24Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.
The perennial weakness of the human soul is to regard oneself as the center of all things. One of the most sanctifying and humbling benefits of a Biblical worldview is to develop a theocentric understanding of the Universe and our true place within the Creation. Man asks, “What is the purpose of life?” The Westminster Shorter Catechism gives us a God-centered answer: “Man’s chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever.” This answer doesn’t leave out our enjoyment of life, but it ties that enjoyment inexorably to living a life that glorifies God. Our enjoyment is not necessarily an enjoyment of the world, but it is necessarily an enjoyment of God. In other words, the purpose of our lives is to glorify God and find our joy in Him.
We might likewise ask, “What is the purpose of marriage?” As marriage is an aspect of human life, we can, by extension, say that the purpose of marriage is also to glorify God and enjoy Him forever. Just as the Scriptures teach us how we can live our lives to glorify God, they also instruct us in how marriage leads to that end.
Before we look at that more closely, as an aside, let us consider claims that are now made that homosexual couples or polygamous groups have a “right” to marriage. Of course, this claim severely twists the definition of, “right,” and the definition of, “marriage,” but I will leave that for now. The reasoning usually goes something like this, “We love one another, we are happy together, we want to take care of each other, so why can’t we marry?” The unspoken premise of this argument is that the chief end of marriage is the happiness, convenience or comfort of the people involved. If we do not challenge that premise, Christians are halfway to losing that debate before we even begin.
The verses from Genesis quoted above record the creation of mankind, define our place in the Creation, define our life’s work, and establish marriage and its role in that work. Man is made to have dominion over the earth. He is to subdue the earth and fill it with people. Marriage establishes a holy partnership in that work, and the man and woman are to labor together as one with the husband at the head of the partnership. (More on that later.)
This good and God-glorifying work was given before the Fall, but after the Fall, sin’s curse made the work less fruitful. Christ, through His works of Redemption, reverses that curse and sets us on our way once again to glorify God through subduing the earth and filling it. Now we must not only, in Christ, subdue the physical earth, but also renew the spiritual light that the darkness of sin took from us. Jesus commissioned us all when He said, “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” We are quick to pick up on the evangelistic aspect of this commandment, but we must not miss the discipling aspect of it either. We are to teach the nations to obey all that He has commanded us, including His original mandate to fill the earth and subdue it. Only when freed from sin by the work of Christ can we expect our work to be fruitful. In Romans 12:2 Paul writes, “And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.” In other words, we are to shape the world, not let it shape us, and that all begins with our minds.
Some are called to labor alone in life, but that is not the norm. Marriage is established as a partnership in which two labor together as one to accomplish the work God has given us. There are many aspects to that work, and many roles our lives can take as members of the body of Christ. Our labors include our paid vocations, our unpaid vocations, and the many other duties and labors of a Christian, including hospitality, worship of God, education, evangelism, assisting the saints, helping the poor, and comforting the sick. It includes renewing our own minds by the Word of God. But all of these things relate back to that original command to fill the earth and subdue it, and Christ’s command to baptize and disciple the nations.
So, ladies, as we consider our own marriages (or contemplate a future marriage), we must ask ourselves if we have calibrated our purposes to God’s. Do we take seriously His call to fill the earth and subdue it through our marriages? Do we see our husbands not only as our lovers, friends and providers, but also as co-laborers in the Kingdom of God? Do we view the work that each of us does, not as “his work” and “her work,” but as “our work?” When we set goals for our families, do we chart a course that keeps us well within the will of God and enables us to serve Him, or do we let our own desires hinder the work He has called us to do? Do we establish and manage our homes in such a way that they are conducive to accomplishing God's purposes, or a hinderance?
More later...
Genesis 1 26Then God said, "Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, over all[1] the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth." 27So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them. 28Then God blessed them, and God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over every living thing that moves on the earth."
Genesis 2 18And the LORD God said, "It is not good that man should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him." 19Out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. And whatever Adam called each living creature, that was its name. 20So Adam gave names to all cattle, to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field. But for Adam there was not found a helper comparable to him. 21And the LORD God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. 22Then the rib which the LORD God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man. 23And Adam said: "This is now bone of my bones, And flesh of my flesh; She shall be called Woman, Because she was taken out of Man." 24Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.
The perennial weakness of the human soul is to regard oneself as the center of all things. One of the most sanctifying and humbling benefits of a Biblical worldview is to develop a theocentric understanding of the Universe and our true place within the Creation. Man asks, “What is the purpose of life?” The Westminster Shorter Catechism gives us a God-centered answer: “Man’s chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever.” This answer doesn’t leave out our enjoyment of life, but it ties that enjoyment inexorably to living a life that glorifies God. Our enjoyment is not necessarily an enjoyment of the world, but it is necessarily an enjoyment of God. In other words, the purpose of our lives is to glorify God and find our joy in Him.
We might likewise ask, “What is the purpose of marriage?” As marriage is an aspect of human life, we can, by extension, say that the purpose of marriage is also to glorify God and enjoy Him forever. Just as the Scriptures teach us how we can live our lives to glorify God, they also instruct us in how marriage leads to that end.
Before we look at that more closely, as an aside, let us consider claims that are now made that homosexual couples or polygamous groups have a “right” to marriage. Of course, this claim severely twists the definition of, “right,” and the definition of, “marriage,” but I will leave that for now. The reasoning usually goes something like this, “We love one another, we are happy together, we want to take care of each other, so why can’t we marry?” The unspoken premise of this argument is that the chief end of marriage is the happiness, convenience or comfort of the people involved. If we do not challenge that premise, Christians are halfway to losing that debate before we even begin.
The verses from Genesis quoted above record the creation of mankind, define our place in the Creation, define our life’s work, and establish marriage and its role in that work. Man is made to have dominion over the earth. He is to subdue the earth and fill it with people. Marriage establishes a holy partnership in that work, and the man and woman are to labor together as one with the husband at the head of the partnership. (More on that later.)
This good and God-glorifying work was given before the Fall, but after the Fall, sin’s curse made the work less fruitful. Christ, through His works of Redemption, reverses that curse and sets us on our way once again to glorify God through subduing the earth and filling it. Now we must not only, in Christ, subdue the physical earth, but also renew the spiritual light that the darkness of sin took from us. Jesus commissioned us all when He said, “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” We are quick to pick up on the evangelistic aspect of this commandment, but we must not miss the discipling aspect of it either. We are to teach the nations to obey all that He has commanded us, including His original mandate to fill the earth and subdue it. Only when freed from sin by the work of Christ can we expect our work to be fruitful. In Romans 12:2 Paul writes, “And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.” In other words, we are to shape the world, not let it shape us, and that all begins with our minds.
Some are called to labor alone in life, but that is not the norm. Marriage is established as a partnership in which two labor together as one to accomplish the work God has given us. There are many aspects to that work, and many roles our lives can take as members of the body of Christ. Our labors include our paid vocations, our unpaid vocations, and the many other duties and labors of a Christian, including hospitality, worship of God, education, evangelism, assisting the saints, helping the poor, and comforting the sick. It includes renewing our own minds by the Word of God. But all of these things relate back to that original command to fill the earth and subdue it, and Christ’s command to baptize and disciple the nations.
So, ladies, as we consider our own marriages (or contemplate a future marriage), we must ask ourselves if we have calibrated our purposes to God’s. Do we take seriously His call to fill the earth and subdue it through our marriages? Do we see our husbands not only as our lovers, friends and providers, but also as co-laborers in the Kingdom of God? Do we view the work that each of us does, not as “his work” and “her work,” but as “our work?” When we set goals for our families, do we chart a course that keeps us well within the will of God and enables us to serve Him, or do we let our own desires hinder the work He has called us to do? Do we establish and manage our homes in such a way that they are conducive to accomplishing God's purposes, or a hinderance?
More later...
Tuesday, November 09, 2004
Check the Box that Best Describes....
Our presidential election was expected to be a close one; perhaps so close that the outcome would be decided by the courts or the House of Representatives. As it turned out, President Bush was reelected rather handily and it really wasn't all that close (as elections go) after all.
Now the speculators are pouring over the poll data and trying to figure out why the Democrats lost the election for the presidency as well as for several Senate and House seats. The thing that is jumping out at the analysts is when asked what motivated their vote, and given a list of broad choices, such as, "Iraq," "Terrorism," or "Health Care," Bush supporters chose "Moral Issues" in overwhelming numbers. Many have concluded that issues regarding homosexual marriage (so-called) motivated a bigoted right-wing response from the heartland of America. Although recent court decisions that have attempted to force "gay marriage" on an unwilling populace has certainly been a factor, I think the pundits are failing to see another factor at work in our culture.
Many within the church have taken on the task of addressing worldview issues. In recent decades, the church has absorbed a lot of the prevailing cultural philosophies so that humanism, existentialism and moral relativity have crept into the average Christian's thinking. Folks such as Gary DeMar, James Boice, R.C. Sproul, our friend Kenneth Gentry, and many others have been hard at work, ministering to the Church by instructing us on how to conform our thoughts to the Scriptures and "take every thought captive," to Christ.
It has been the case that many Christians would say things such as, "Well I think abortion is wrong, but I can't force my morality on others." But now we are recovering our clarity and beginning to differentiate between those moral issues that do, in fact, fall under the authority of the civil government (such as murder and other crimes, as God defines them, and regulating commerce), and those which fall under other governments, that is, the church (doctrine, the sacraments, congregational charity, Christian education), the family (education, child-raising, family charity), and an individual's self-government (governance of our thoughts, religions duties, passions and devotions). We are recovering our understanding of the "wall of separation between Church and State," of which Thomas Jefferson wrote.
The Christian understanding of civil government is one that limits the powers of government to those powers which God has granted them. All authority has been given to Christ, and He has delegated that authority into the various spheres of human government, all of whom must answer to Christ their King. To the civil governments He has given the authority and the responsibility to protect the innocent and punish the wrong-doers on both the individual and the national scales. The rights God has given individuals must be protected by the civil government from the tyranny of sinful man. These protections fall under three main categories, according to our founding documents: life, liberty, and prosperity.
So when government works to protect the rights of the people (not grant them rights, as God has already done that) they are exercising good government. When they deny rights God has granted or define new "rights" that are in contradiction to God's proscriptive will, then they are exercising wicked government.
Now armed with a more Biblical understanding of government, the church turns to evaluate their government and the political whims of the day. Gay "rights" and abortion are certainly issues. But also, there are moves to increase or decrease taxes, with most of those taxes being spent on projects that do not lawfully fall under the authority of civil governments. There is a war on terrorism and a war in Iraq with ideological components to them, as well as national protection issues. There is a move to nationalize health care, to increase education spending, to fundamentally change the income tax (or abolish it) and Social Security. All of these issues can now be evaluated in light of a broad philosophy of government that is informed by the Scriptures.
I would argue that today's Christians are beginning to look first at the broader picture--at basic philosophies of law and government, at the meaning of life, the nature of charitable giving and service, the nature and character of leadership and leaders. Only secondarily are they applying this philosophy to the individual issues. They are not voting the issues. They are voting for leaders. They are beginning to be not issue-driven voters, but philosophy-driven voters.
Sometimes we are faced with a list of choices and none of them quite fit. Perhaps we are asked to check the box that best describes our occupations. We just check off the one that seems closest, even if it's not quite right. Perhaps this is the dilemma in which many Christian voters found themselves this year when faced with a pollster asking them what motivated their votes. Was it the war? The economy? Health Care? Moral Issues? If I was motivated most not by individual issues, but by my overall understanding of a Biblical philosophy of government, (as I was) and was presented with such a list of alternatives, (as I was not), I might choose "moral issues." Mightn't you?
Now the speculators are pouring over the poll data and trying to figure out why the Democrats lost the election for the presidency as well as for several Senate and House seats. The thing that is jumping out at the analysts is when asked what motivated their vote, and given a list of broad choices, such as, "Iraq," "Terrorism," or "Health Care," Bush supporters chose "Moral Issues" in overwhelming numbers. Many have concluded that issues regarding homosexual marriage (so-called) motivated a bigoted right-wing response from the heartland of America. Although recent court decisions that have attempted to force "gay marriage" on an unwilling populace has certainly been a factor, I think the pundits are failing to see another factor at work in our culture.
Many within the church have taken on the task of addressing worldview issues. In recent decades, the church has absorbed a lot of the prevailing cultural philosophies so that humanism, existentialism and moral relativity have crept into the average Christian's thinking. Folks such as Gary DeMar, James Boice, R.C. Sproul, our friend Kenneth Gentry, and many others have been hard at work, ministering to the Church by instructing us on how to conform our thoughts to the Scriptures and "take every thought captive," to Christ.
It has been the case that many Christians would say things such as, "Well I think abortion is wrong, but I can't force my morality on others." But now we are recovering our clarity and beginning to differentiate between those moral issues that do, in fact, fall under the authority of the civil government (such as murder and other crimes, as God defines them, and regulating commerce), and those which fall under other governments, that is, the church (doctrine, the sacraments, congregational charity, Christian education), the family (education, child-raising, family charity), and an individual's self-government (governance of our thoughts, religions duties, passions and devotions). We are recovering our understanding of the "wall of separation between Church and State," of which Thomas Jefferson wrote.
The Christian understanding of civil government is one that limits the powers of government to those powers which God has granted them. All authority has been given to Christ, and He has delegated that authority into the various spheres of human government, all of whom must answer to Christ their King. To the civil governments He has given the authority and the responsibility to protect the innocent and punish the wrong-doers on both the individual and the national scales. The rights God has given individuals must be protected by the civil government from the tyranny of sinful man. These protections fall under three main categories, according to our founding documents: life, liberty, and prosperity.
So when government works to protect the rights of the people (not grant them rights, as God has already done that) they are exercising good government. When they deny rights God has granted or define new "rights" that are in contradiction to God's proscriptive will, then they are exercising wicked government.
Now armed with a more Biblical understanding of government, the church turns to evaluate their government and the political whims of the day. Gay "rights" and abortion are certainly issues. But also, there are moves to increase or decrease taxes, with most of those taxes being spent on projects that do not lawfully fall under the authority of civil governments. There is a war on terrorism and a war in Iraq with ideological components to them, as well as national protection issues. There is a move to nationalize health care, to increase education spending, to fundamentally change the income tax (or abolish it) and Social Security. All of these issues can now be evaluated in light of a broad philosophy of government that is informed by the Scriptures.
I would argue that today's Christians are beginning to look first at the broader picture--at basic philosophies of law and government, at the meaning of life, the nature of charitable giving and service, the nature and character of leadership and leaders. Only secondarily are they applying this philosophy to the individual issues. They are not voting the issues. They are voting for leaders. They are beginning to be not issue-driven voters, but philosophy-driven voters.
Sometimes we are faced with a list of choices and none of them quite fit. Perhaps we are asked to check the box that best describes our occupations. We just check off the one that seems closest, even if it's not quite right. Perhaps this is the dilemma in which many Christian voters found themselves this year when faced with a pollster asking them what motivated their votes. Was it the war? The economy? Health Care? Moral Issues? If I was motivated most not by individual issues, but by my overall understanding of a Biblical philosophy of government, (as I was) and was presented with such a list of alternatives, (as I was not), I might choose "moral issues." Mightn't you?


