Archives For February 2012

Bless You!

February 27, 2012 — Leave a comment

A true story, happened yesterday: I was preaching from Romans 11 in the small evangelistic ministry I lead; I teach the adult class. During this Romans series I have frequently reminded my listeners of God’s promises to Abraham.

At one point, I asked them, “What did God promise Abraham?”

I answered my own question: “He said, ‘I will make you into a great nation,’ and ‘I will…’ what?”

“Bless you!” said one lady, a visitor.

“That’s exactly right!” I said. God told Abraham, “I will bless you, and make your name great!”

But then I realized people were snickering a little. She hadn’t actually known the answer; she only said it right then because another lady in the audience sneezed.

Kevin Bauder on my Alma Mater

February 17, 2012 — 1 Comment

Kevin Bauder, former president of Central Baptist Theological Seminary, is one of the most public voices defending historic fundamentalist ideals of careful and appropriate separatism. His recent contribution to the Zondervan Counterpoints series (The Spectrum of Evangelicalism) highlighted the reason for that: only by being willing to withdraw ourselves from false gospels can we have unity in the true gospel.

I personally also appreciated Dr. Bauder’s call at a Bible Faculty Leadership Summit for a church-serving Christian scholarship that “advances the discipline,” and I blogged about other helpful addresses of his here and here.

I’m reprinting his very recent (as in a few minutes ago!) In the Nick of Time article because, as other bloggers have found, it’s impossible to permanently link to Dr. Bauder’s articles.

This one praises my alma mater, and I want to give a hearty “Amen” to that praise by reposting it.

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An Open Letter to Dr. Stephen Jones
Kevin T. Bauder

Dear Stephen,

Because we occupy rather distinct corners of the Lord’s vineyard, it has been some time since I have given much thought to you or to the university that you lead. My attention was riveted a few weeks ago, however, by a public clamor that was being raised against Bob Jones University. It is not necessary to rehearse the details of that commotion here, except to say that it brought certain matters to my attention.

First, it made me aware that your ministry (by which I mean both yours personally and the university’s institutionally) is facing sustained and sometimes very harsh public censure. Second, it alerted me to the fact that, while your critics are of different kinds, the most vocal detractors will be satisfied with nothing short of the complete collapse of Bob Jones University. Third, it made me aware that some of the most vitriolic criticisms are being leveled through venues in which careful analysis and personal accountability are notably absent—namely, venues such as Internet weblogs and social media services.

While I am not close enough to Bob Jones University to judge much of what takes place in the institution, many of the criticisms themselves simply lacked credibility. Both the vehemence and the virtual incoherence of the critics left me thinking of a lynch mob. The degree of their speculation about what you must have known or done behind closed doors was—well, it was hardly the mark of fair-mindedness or even-handedness.

On the contrary, as I have thought about what has taken place at Bob Jones University over the past fifteen years, I find many reasons to rejoice. Beginning under your father’s presidency, the ministry seems to have followed a trajectory of moderation and increasing responsibility. It is a trajectory of which I sincerely approve.

Prior to the last decade, my exposure to the work of Bob Jones University was limited. What there was of it was mostly second hand. Just over ten years ago, however, I began to meet some of your professors at academic meetings. I was frankly impressed at the high level of academic and spiritual competence that they brought to their task. The opportunity to trade ideas with these men has become a true pleasure. I look forward to the occasions when our paths will cross. Because I know them, I can infer that the level of classroom instruction at Bob Jones University is always good and often superior. I cannot think of a single discipline in which a student would receive inferior instruction.

We’ve had a few of your graduates in our seminary. They have been sharp men. They know how to think. They speak and write clearly and charitably. They are gentlemen who know how to treat people kindly. They are a million miles away from the caricature that some of your critics attempt to draw.

Furthermore, I know that you’ve taken steps to ensure improvement in the academic and spiritual atmosphere of Bob Jones University. I know some of the people whom you have brought to your faculty—people who had no previous connection to the Bob Jones orbit. I know them to be bright, talented, and committed Christians who will challenge their students at many levels. Their influence, and the influence of people like them, will certainly strengthen the university.

One factor for which I am very grateful is the increased sensitivity of the university and its administration to counsel from outside. This sensitivity was evident in your father’s administration, for example, when he changed the policy on interracial dating. Within your world, that act took tremendous courage, but your father rose to the occasion, and he did it as gracefully as anyone could under the circumstances.

Under your administration, the university has continued to respond, for example, by issuing a formal apology for wrongs that were done under the old policy. The apology itself was a good thing. Better still was the sensitivity it displayed for godly counsel.

Of course, there is a difference between the counsel of friends and the fulminations of a mob. I do not believe that you are obligated to respond to every Facebook group or Internet petition. In fact, the more extreme your critics become, the more difficulty you must find it to hear whatever truth may be in their words. For my part, I would be disappointed if you were to change a policy every time somebody wears red for a day.

Nevertheless, I am glad of the improvements that the university is making. The decision to go after regional accreditation is a big one. Of course it took courage to acknowledge that some past commitments were overstated—but the process can only help and improve Bob Jones University in the future. This is a good move that will help your graduates in tangible ways.

As for the moves to allow ROTC and intercollegiate sports, I confess that these are of less interest to me personally. Still, I think that they are good decisions. ROTC in particular will prepare some students for leadership in the military—and our nation can only benefit from the presence of strong, ethical Christians in positions of command.

In short, I want you to know that I am deeply grateful for the trajectory that Bob Jones University has pursued over the past fifteen years. You can thank your critics for getting me to reflect upon the good things that have happened (and are still happening) at BJU. Personally, I would actually feel more comfortable recommending the university to prospective students today than ever before.

I want to do more than that. While I haven’t the means to become a huge supporter, I am sending a financial gift for the ministry of the university. If my word of encouragement carries any weight, then I would urge others to do the same. Be assured of my prayers for the ongoing prosperity and integrity of the ministry. Thank you for your careful, thoughtful leadership over Bob Jones University.

Sincerely,

Kevin T. Bauder

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Some computer nerd across the pond made a cool site that will show you your whole Logos library in visual format. Here’s mine.

Setting it up is a little involved, but it’s neato. You can even click on a cover and it will open up that book in your Logos library!

A separate page shows you more info about your library: which books you’ve hidden, which books are most popular, which are most highly rated.

Few people bother rating their Logos books, however, so ratings tend to appear artificially low, I think.

Do you ever feel a pang of regret when a certain memory flits across your mind? I won’t begin to share all my examples—I typically take them to the Lord alone. But here’s one. And don’t laugh.

Once upon a time, I was a counselor at the Wilds Christian Camp and Conference Center. And the humble servants there asked us teenage counselors at the end of the summer to feel free to write anonymous comments on a legal pad about anything we’d like to see change the next time around. I can’t remember what others wrote or whether I was supposed to look.

What I remember is that I chose that opportunity to remonstrate with one of the best speakers there about his word choice. I actually did have theological questions I could have taken the time to express, but I was more concerned to enforce the standards of English pedantry. I wrote the following,

“Fervency” is not a word, Rand!

The next summer I came back and he used it again, just like he had the previous summer. And then, unmistakably, he corrected himself and said “fervor.”

One 19-year-old in the room sat back satisfied. I had done my duty on behalf of all my fellow word mavens. One more person had, for his own good, submitted to our principles. Some day perhaps we would rid the English-speaking world of all incorrect speech and writing. The pigs flying overhead would salute us, and the Millennium would commence.

So I was once exactly the person I now so gently complain about: someone who simply didn’t get it. I had been told by someone I trusted (who sometimes reads this blog…) that “fervor” was a word and “fervency” was not. The bright light of reason, however, never dawned upon my mind. I never thought to ask, “How does he know?”

How can anyone know that what a clearly very competent English speaker says is, somehow, not English? I understood him perfectly. So did every maven in the room. Why can’t he say it? Why isn’t it a word?

Let me mark it down for the record: fervency is a word. An English word. A fine one anyone is allowed to use whenever they (!) want. As best I can tell, it was more than once in its history considered preferable to fervor. That it is not now (as best I can tell) may be due to overzealous teenagers who think they know The Truth About Words and aren’t afraid to try to cow their betters into complying.

I, hereby, absolve myself of guilt. I’m sorry. I was wrong. I say this with both fervency and fervor, because I can’t tell you how many times this little story has embarrassed me without anyone else knowing what thirteen-year-old memories were causing that look on my face. Now maybe those memories will leave me alone. The “Linguistics” category on this blog should be more than sufficient for my penance.

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A friend of mine, an excellent preacher (his name rhymes with “come ‘n’ see us”), sent me this article on application in preaching by Michael Horton.

If you preach or teach the Bible at all, it’s worth a quick read. The issues he raises, it seems to this preacher, need to stay at or near the forefront of our minds every time we prepare a sermon, especially in our formative years.

Ulti-Awesome

February 14, 2012 — Leave a comment

Turn down your speakers, then check out some clips of people playing my favorite sport:

I use Boomerang for Gmail and like it.

Check out their really great infographic.

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How do you back up your precious BibleWorks user notes?

1. Install the excellent, free online back-up service Dropbox (click on this link and you and I both get free space!).

2. Open your notes tab.

3. Click the “Choose Notes Directory” button (see image below).

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4. Navigate to your Dropbox folder in the menu that pops up.

5. Click “Make New Folder,” and name it “BibleWorksNotes.”

6. Click “Okay” when BibleWorks asks you if it can shut down your existing note.

7. If you already have notes, move them all from where they were (probably in Program Files (x86)/BibleWorks 9/notes) into the new folder you created inside your Dropbox. (If you have no notes yet, you can skip this step.)

Another tip: Make sure that you know what kind of notes you’re making, chapter notes or verse notes. Check the Notes options in Tools > Options. Here’s what my options look like:

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Facebook Psychoses

February 13, 2012 — Leave a comment

Some great quotes from an insightful and humorous New York Times article on Facebook and other social media:

How is it that activities we wouldn’t in a million years be roped into doing in real life—paging through an acquaintance’s baby album, suffering through a relative’s slide show from Turkey—become strangely alluring online?

….

“If the F.B.I. came and ransacked my computer they’d be like, ‘What is your obsession with this person from sixth grade? Why have you looked at her picture a million times?’”

….

A study published last month in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking found that the more time people spent on Facebook, the happier they perceived their friends to be and the sadder they felt as a consequence.

….

Alas, what strikes us as witty, original and winning often comes across to the rest of the world as sloppily confessional, self-promotional or trite.

For the first time in many years, a radio station other than NPR has managed—sometimes—to win my listenership during my daily commute. It’s 92.9 FM, aka Christian Talk 660. I have to admit I usually can’t stand the brash talk programs (the one exception is local pastor Kevin Boling’s more humble and theologically minded program “Knowing the Truth”). I tend to listen for the preachers. The talk programs have too much politico-religious fulminating even for my fundamentalist ears.

Exhibit A: I flipped to 92.9 yesterday on my way home, and the first thing I heard was the fulmination of a young man who could not believe that Barack Obama, at the recent National Prayer Breakfast, actually claimed the sanction of Jesus on his efforts to help the poor. The talk host was doing his best “shocked, shocked.”

I was disgusted by his disrespectful tone, so I immediately hit the NPR preset. Their perspective is, of course, quite different. But NPR was equally shocked, shocked. They were just fulminating—in their own, much more restrained way—against something different. Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Komen, it seems, decided to stop sending money to  Planned Parenthood because they provide abortions. (Komen, of course, reversed their decision; shame on them for giving money to an organization that is interested in saving the lives of only some women and throwing away the lives of others.)

It just so happens that for the last two days I have been doing some extensive editing and re-writing of a new chapter in the BJU Press American Government textbook. The content was excellent; my job was to add some concrete illustrations. So at one point I turned to the President’s recent speech, the one 92.9 FM was fulminating against. Here’s what the President said that was relevant:

We can’t leave our values at the door. If we leave our values at the door, we abandon much of the moral glue that has held our nation together for centuries, and allowed us to become somewhat more perfect a union. Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, Jane Addams, Martin Luther King, Jr., Dorothy Day, Abraham Heschel—the majority of great reformers in American history did their work not just because it was sound policy, or they had done good analysis, or understood how to exercise good politics, but because their faith and their values dictated it, and called for bold action—sometimes in the face of indifference, sometimes in the face of resistance.

The president said a lot of other interesting things about his own personal faith. Frankly, he sounded little different from George W. Bush. And he paid explicit and lengthy homage to the same evangelical patron saint Bush cites, Billy Graham. (C.S. Lewis, Joel Hunter, and T.D. Jakes were the other religious figures who got a shout-out. He even praised the Passion Conference, where Piper often speaks.)

The 92.9 FM host seems to think Obama is an out-an-out liar, pretending to obey Jesus’ commands about the poor when all he’s really doing is justifying socialistic wealth redistribution. But I think this is as disrespectful (think Romans 13:7 and 1 Peter 2:17) as it is wrong. I think the president fully believes what he’s saying, and that he’s no dummy. His comments weren’t just politically canny, a cynical attempt to undermine Republicans’ hitherto exclusive claim to the values vote. He knows and believes that religious conviction is usually the only force that can generate the deep moral feeling required to change deep-seated injustices. And he believes that he is a man of religious conviction.

Both President Bush and President Obama see things this way—interestingly, Obama says in his speech that he expanded faith-based initiatives, something for which Bush received a great deal of Democratic criticism, as I recall.

But both presidents, with all due respect, seem to me to be willfully blind to an inconvenient truth: value systems sometimes clash. The same president who (rightly) praised civil rights leaders for their moral courage in the face of injustice just clarified that his administration intends to force Catholic hospitals to provide insurance coverage for contraception. The hypocrisy of a Catholic church in which, I’m told, 98% of women use contraceptives despite Vatican opposition is not fully beside the point. But still, why is Martin Luther King Jr. good and the US Conference of Catholic Bishops bad? Both of them have taken bold action, sometimes in the face of resistance, to do what their faith and values dictate. Why do President Obama’s values win and St. Francis Hospital’s values lose?

The truth is that both President Obama and former President Bush need to have their apparently religious comments run through the CRF—the Civil Religion Filter. This filter, for only $19.95 (PayPal to mlward AT gmail), will reveal which of a politician’s comments represent the Christian religion and which represent its much-shriveled shadow puppet, American civil religion. I ran the President’s comments through, and very little fell out the bottom, I’m afraid.

All that came through was his appeal to a few somewhat more obscure verses, verses you’d have to be some sort of Christian to know, verses that I’ve never heard used by a politician before (Rom. 8:26; Prov. 31:8 in the NIV). And his personal experiences. I don’t want to get into denying that he does his devotions every day when he says he does. I’ll leave that kind of overt disrespect to the conservative talk-show hosts.

But note that civil religion is itself a value system that both clashes and overlaps with the Christian religion. Civility—“Can’t we all just get along?”—is the value which trumps other values. Let other people do what they want as long as it doesn’t directly affect you. Telling people they are depraved and condemned, that the only way they can be saved is repentance and faith in the blood of Christ—this is not civil.

American presidents have a vested interest, one that comes out in Obama’s speech, in keeping major value systems on the same plane. Several times the president referenced Jewish and Islamic teachings as equivalent to certain Christian ones. He wants religious toleration to keep us together as it seems to have in the past. He wants to believe that all people hold the same values:

Now, we can earnestly seek to see these values lived out in our politics and our policies, and we can earnestly disagree on the best way to achieve these values.

But there is no reference at all in the speech to people who hold clashing values. Instead, the way major American politicians classify those whose values clash with prevailing American ones is to imply that the clashers are not “people of goodwill.”

Our goal should not be to declare our policies as biblical. It is God who is infallible, not us. Michelle reminds me of this often. (Laughter.) So instead, it is our hope that people of goodwill can pursue their values and common ground and the common good as best they know how, with respect for each other. And I have to say that sometimes we talk about respect, but we don’t act with respect towards each other during the course of these debates.

In other words, if we all stay humble and nobody pushes too hard for their values, we can all just get along.

There are deep clashes between other value systems, but the Christian religion creates the one irreconcilable difference that American Civil Religion has never been able to acknowledge, the doctrine of original sin. There are, ultimately, no people of goodwill unless God changes us. We’ve all been bent by sin. And any efforts at consensus will, ultimately, take a society in the wrong direction unless God mercifully intervenes. Society is on the broad road, and Civil Religion has covered up the entrance to the narrow way.