Reigning with Christ

How to cancel cancel culture

How to cancel cancel culture

I don’t think there’s ever been a year where the power of the media became such a subject of public focus. Somehow, we have always assumed — naively, perhaps — that for the most part what we saw and read was a reasonable representation of reality.

No longer.

The power of hope

The power of hope

If any group of people can mine gold out of the sludge of 2020, it’s us. Why? The answer is simple: Christians are in the hope business.

I find it interesting that there’s all sorts of teaching about faith, but very little about hope.

I think it’s because faith deals in tangible things: faith in God, faith in Christ, faith that the Bible is true, faith that God will protect us or help us in a given situation, faith for specific things we feel God has promised us.

Pressure is my friend

Pressure is my friend

“The pressure is getting to me!”

That’s a statement all of us, except those in extreme denial, can relate to. And 2020 certainly has turned the heat up even more than usual.

Even Paul admitted being in a similar situation. The trouble that came upon him at one point was so severe he was utterly burdened beyond his own strength. He even felt a sentence of death had been passed on him. Later he talked about being afflicted but not crushed. The latter word refers to being stuck in a mountain pass so narrow you had to squeeze through it. He had squeezed his way in, but didn’t know if he was going to get out. For someone slightly claustrophobic like me, that’s a nightmare scenario.

But it got me thinking. What is it that we add to the mix? What is missing when we’re not there?

Bringers of life

Bringers of life

There’s a little girl called Selah in the church we attend who just brings life. She scurries around, gives people big smiles and always has the pastor’s three-year old son running after her (perhaps a sign of things to come). She was sick this week and it just wasn’t quite the same.

But it got me thinking. What is it that we add to the mix? What is missing when we’re not there?

Think on these things

Think on these things

Few things cause us more grief in interpreting the Bible than ignoring the context.

It’s true that some statements are pretty clear no matter what the context is. One of those is found in Philippians chapter 4: whatever is true, honourable, just, pure, lovely, commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think on these things. Paul is not talking about moral ideals. The Greek philosophers believed that the good, the true and the excellent all existed independently of God. The role of their god or gods was to try to implement these in the world. But for the Bible, all these phrases are simply a character description of God himself, and hence of Jesus.