Calling for a Return to the Doctrinal Ideals and Kingdom Ethics of the First Reformation
09 July 2016
Evidence and the Rule of Law
As the years march on post-2001 we're still only beginning to
grasp the full implications of the Patriot Act and the fundamental changes that
have swept through our society.
04 July 2016
Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy
There is an oft-repeated but utterly fallacious argument that
Democracy and Capitalism go hand in hand. Capitalism is about 'voting' for what
goods and services you want and is thus an extension of the democratic system.
02 July 2016
The Day of Lies
This Sunday will effectively be
the July 4th Sunday, the day in which the National holiday is
commemorated. In the Patriotic liturgy that has overtaken American
Evangelicalism we might call this a high holy day.
But in truth it is a day of darkness, a day of evil, a day of lies.
But in truth it is a day of darkness, a day of evil, a day of lies.
28 May 2016
Memorial Day: A Lamentation
Memorial Day was born out of the US Civil War. All wars deal
heavily in propaganda but a civil war can be the most vicious in this regard
and perhaps the most emotional and subject to future sentimentality. The US
Civil War and its many myths is no exception. It was only a lesson in what was
to come.
Obama the Sociopath, Human Rights and Nuclear Weapons
The Right-wing media assails Obama for his 'apology tours' in
places like Cuba, Vietnam and Japan.
The reality couldn't be more different. He's not apologizing.
His tours are exercises in smug triumphalism and obfuscation of the historical
record.
Labels:
American Empire,
Asia,
Geopolitics,
History,
Propaganda,
WWII
26 May 2016
Evangelicalism and Homosexuality, Compromise and Conflict
http://www.npr.org/2016/05/10/476651373/as-u-s-attitudes-change-some-evangelicals-dig-in-others-adapt
These stories ran in conjunction on NPR. While no great surprise,
the trend is disturbing and it needs to be watched. The spirit of compromise is
in the air and the level of defection and capitulation on this point is
disturbing.
11 May 2016
Zuckerberg
The world is a crazy place. Black is white and white is
black, evil is good and good evil.
Mark Zuckerberg is esteemed, a tech-sage, an icon to be
emulated and listened to. Zuckerberg is the man who made social media part of
the warp and woof of daily life. Zuckerberg, the man who helped society
flourish through connectivity.
07 May 2016
Inbox: Finance Capital and Why I Don't Have a 401K or an IRA
This is not meant to condemn those that do or those who
invest in the market. You must form your own convictions but I will briefly
explain why I do not own investments or a retirement account.
Labels:
Economics,
Ethics,
Hermeneutics,
Inbox,
Sociology,
Theology,
Worldliness
01 May 2016
Solomon's Basilica: Church Buildings and Confusion
This is not a comprehensive piece on Church buildings. I
could easily put together a book-length piece on this but for now I'll only
raise a few points spurred on by something I saw recently.
We could debate over when Church buildings appeared. There's
some evidence to suggest they began to appear during the interlude in
persecution that occurred in the 3rd century between Decius and
Diocletian.
23 April 2016
Materialism, Nihilism and the Subjective
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCVRrybYWNE
This 4 minute video while both humorous and repugnant reveals more
than it intends. Like it or not this is the social trajectory and it is a path
of self destruction. Both dominant secular models that of the Scientific
Materialist relying on sceptical inductive empiricism and that of the
Subjective Individualist resting in existentialism have led the culture to
epistemological chaos and can offer no remedy.
20 April 2016
Inbox: Why are you taking so much time to write about Turkey, Syria, ISIS, spies, guerilla groups and other strategic issues? Isn't this just a waste of time?
This is a composite of several emailed questions.
I get these emails from time to time and even though I've
addressed these issues before it warrants the occasional review.
14 April 2016
Pakistan: Imperial Blowback and the Shapur Effect
In 1757 the British defeated a joint Mughal-French army at
the Battle of Plassey. This set them on a course to dominate the whole of the
Indian Subcontinent forever changing its history.
Labels:
19th Century,
American Empire,
Asia,
Britain,
Cold War,
Empire,
Geopolitics,
History,
Persecution,
Race,
Russia,
Terrorism
09 April 2016
Arlington Cemetery: Tribalism and Idealism, Propaganda and Reflection
It always impresses me when you cross the Arlington Bridge
over the Potomac. After whipping around the Lincoln Memorial and skipping the
right turn to Foggy Bottom and Watergate you cross the bridge and if you look
up there's Robert E. Lee's house looming over you and overlooking Arlington
Cemetery.
02 April 2016
Psyops and State Idolatry
My wife and I are always struck by the security in places
like Philadelphia and Washington DC. We remember these places in the 1990s and
in many ways these cities have from our standpoint been all but ruined.
Security now dominates every museum and historical monument. Streets are
closed, buildings blocked and its all for naught.
25 March 2016
Imperial Narratives, Urban Planning and Architecture
The movie Downfall (Der Untergang) contains many fascinating
scenes but there's one in particular that recently came to mind. In the movie
Hitler is pondering a magnificent scale model of the Berlin he imagined, the Berlin
that he dreamed up with his architect Albert Speer. This Berlin was not just
the Berlin of Bismarck and the Hohenzollerns but a new Ultra-Imperial Berlin, the
"Welthauptstadt Germania" the city of not just a European power but a world empire. It
was a city that would exhibit art and culture from around the world.
19 March 2016
Dispensationalism, the Restrainer and the NKJV
As much as I appreciate the New King James Version for both
its textual basis and philosophy of translation I was disappointed to find a
theological insertion. At this particular point they deviated from principled
translation protocols and made a judgment call. The judgment favours a certain
type of theology but is without substantial textual basis. It is therefore
misleading and ought to be corrected.
14 March 2016
Paul, the Cretans and Addressing Social Sins
Cretans are always liars, evil
beasts, lazy gluttons (Titus 1.12)
This quotation taken from Epimenides and utilised by the
Apostle Paul is used by some to argue that Paul was 'taking on' the evil forces
at work in the culture. He was challenging the culture of Crete and therefore
those Christians who argue for Two Kingdom theology, those Christians who reject
Dominionism are necessarily in error.
10 March 2016
Imperialist Wars, Conscription and Democracy
If you're listening to the second season of the Serial
podcast then you're learning about Bowe Bergdahl and the circumstances of his
capture and the swirl of events that surrounded it.
I'm mildly interested in the story but if you're listening
there's a lot more that you can glean. There's something to be learned about
these modern wars, how they're fought and it leads one to reflect.
07 March 2016
Inbox: Lutheranism, Kuyper and the Two Kingdoms
In terms of the differences between the confessional Lutheran
position and my own maybe I can shed a little light, but I will be brief and
paint with a broad brush. I'm also throwing a variant of Reformed Theology into
the mix because I think it's pertinent and may shed a little light for some
readers on a seemingly obscure point of dispute in contemporary Reformed
circles.
04 March 2016
Addendum to the Fifth Republic
This is a follow-up discussion to the previous essay:
In that article I posited the following scenario:
26 February 2016
The US Fifth Republic
This is a subjective exercise to be sure but it is certainly
in keeping with the frameworks imposed by many others on the American narrative
and its historical development.
Many countries occasionally will replace their constitutions,
re-write their laws and effectively re-create themselves. This can be
occasioned by a huge political shift, a coup, a war or something along those
lines.
21 February 2016
The False Narratives of Meese, Scalia and Originalism
Recently former Attorney General Ed Meese was interviewed on
LPR's Issues Etc. and asked to comment on the death of Supreme Court Justice
Antonin Scalia and the coming battle over a replacement for him.
Meese consistently expressed concern for the Constitution,
praised Scalia for his stances, values and defense of the document. In addition
Meese also identified himself as a devoted Lutheran.
The entire interview was a fraud.
14 February 2016
The Razor's Edge: Covenant Faithfulness and Apostasy Part III
When you break with a group like the Brethren you have taken
a wholly different path and it's no surprise that some who have done this end
up working out the implications.
For many years I've often thought about someone like Garrison
Keillor, host of the radio show 'A Prairie Home Companion'. He's retiring this
year and has recently been making the news. Many people mistake him for being a
Lutheran as his show based on a fictional town in Minnesota often pokes fun at Upper-Midwestern
Christian and thus Lutheran culture. But Keillor was raised Plymouth Brethren
and he's mentioned it many times in the show and done pieces about how his
family didn't celebrate Christmas etc...
The Razor's Edge: Covenant Faithfulness and Apostasy Part II
The antithesis requires that our children will grow up
knowing that it means something to be a Christian and this affects the whole of
life and the decisions and plans that we make.
But it also means that they will realise it's not the
'both-and' of mainstream Christianity but the definitive 'either-or'.
There are plenty of issues and questions that can be
addressed and answered by the incorporation of 'both-and' thinking, and can
even be done so in a non-accommodationist way. We can widen the question, embrace
types of multi-perspectivalism and thus to a degree embrace and entertain a
reduction in certainty without giving in to absolute extremes.13 February 2016
The Razor's Edge: Covenant Faithfulness and Apostasy Part I
When the antithesis is heightened, so is the risk. The
Plymouth Brethren represent not only a more conscientiously separatist form of
Christianity but their antithesis in this case also extends to the Christian
narrative as a whole.
08 February 2016
The Reality of the Demonic
All Christians committed to the veracity of Scripture
acknowledge the reality of the demonic and yet there's a wide spectrum in how
this is understood and applied.
30 January 2016
Saudi Arabia and Iran: 1979 and the Islamic Narrative
In 1979 a group of Salafis overtook the Grand Mosque at
Mecca. This group deliberately associated themselves with the Ikwhan movement
from the days before the Saud family formally took over the reins of the new
kingdom. As ultra-conservatives they believed the Saud family had been morally
and theologically compromised. They had become too friendly with the West and
were no longer worthy of being the guardians of the holy sites of Mecca and Medina.
The house of Saud was illegitimate.
26 January 2016
Evangelical Compromise and Wheaton College
While not a fan of Wheaton, this is one of those moments
where the divide between Christians and the world becomes all too clear. The
world is not going to understand the stance of an organisation like Wheaton in
retaining 'statements of faith' as criteria for employment. Of course there are
tensions present in the Christian College which attempts to maintain epistemological
antithesis with the world and yet operate within it. Evangelical schools like
Wheaton also seek to synthesize Christian beliefs with the world system in a
way that Christians can be educated (as the world reckons the concept), but
also maintain a distinct Christian identity.
02 January 2016
Ghosts of Trieste
When poking around in the 19th century the name
Trieste often comes up. Today situated in the northeast corner of Italy it was
the Habsburg's chief port for many generations and the fourth city of their
empire.
Labels:
19th Century,
Economics,
Europe,
History,
Third Reich,
Waldensians,
WWII
01 January 2016
Biblicism, Transgenderism and Epistemological Chaos
While many conservative and Christian cultural commentators
will speak of the dominance of postmodernism I would argue that particular
category and the relativism that goes with it is really limited to sociological
questions, hermeneutics and ethics. When it comes to most interpretations of
reality, Scientific Realism and Modernism still reign. The postmodern thinker
will most certainly subjectivise the interpretation of that reality but the
scepticism rooted in postmodernism is largely shared with Scientific Realism
(Materialism) and its commitment to inductive epistemology.
31 December 2015
Inbox: Why don't I write a book?
I've been asked this several times. I would love to but I
don't have the time to do it and in the end the means of publication would be
such that circulation would be low and overpriced. I would sell very few copies
as the market for such a book would be very restricted. Conventional Christian
publishers will not be interested either in me or my topics.
26 December 2015
Inbox: Media Sources
I've received various emails both in the past and as of late
that request assistance with regard to what media sources I utilize. Where do I
go for news?
25 December 2015
Christmas: Dan and Bethel Revived
The embrace of Christmas is
a rejection of Scripture as the ultimate authority and arbiter of all matters
concerning the faith and Kingdom. Christmas is perhaps the perfect example of
syncretistic religion and worldliness wedded to the Church. There is no better
way to bear witness to our culture than to categorically reject Christmas. This
will say more to people you know than any attempt to 'keep Christ' in something
that He was never part of to begin with.
14 December 2015
Observing Two December Deaths and Putting Them into Context
Eliason 2015 and Bahnsen 1995
This is a somewhat sombre and unpleasant reflection. Read it, or not. Perhaps by the end the reader will understand the contrast, conflict and both senses of bitter gratitude and denunciation I wish to communicate.
This is a somewhat sombre and unpleasant reflection. Read it, or not. Perhaps by the end the reader will understand the contrast, conflict and both senses of bitter gratitude and denunciation I wish to communicate.
02 December 2015
A Most Wanted Man (The Myth of Principled Power Part II)
The movie industry is producing some of the most debased and
worthless films ever made and yet at the same time there are a very small
number of excellent and thoughtful films out there. Generally they're not big
hits at the box office but should we expect any different?
What I appreciated most about this John le Carre movie was
the lesson in the nature of power and what happens when someone tries to apply
it in a principled and ethical manner.
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