Letters to Help You Not Think Too Much About What Presents You Might Get

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A Perennial Question

Why should or shouldn’t churches incorporate? And where do you land?

Joshua

Joshua, laws vary from state to state, so this should not be taken as legal advice. But in Idaho, it is not necessary to incorporate, and I advise not incorporating wherever possible. Christ Church is an association, which means we can do all the things a corporation can do, and the central benefit is that an association is not a creature of the state, formed by the state, and existing within the state’s defined parameters. The head of the church is the Lord Jesus, and should not be your state’s secretary of state.

Cosplay Satan

In response to “Toppling the Cosplay Satan” I had to chuckle when I read a news article reporting on the monument of Satan in the state capitol of Iowa. The reason is, I sort of thought that the group who placed it there were more than likely not Satanists. As you have revealed, not only were they not Satanists, they do not even believe Satan exists. My thinking was, this group was attempting to make a point, but I do not think the point they were attempting to get across to us as Christians was, “This is the price we need to pay in exchange for our religious liberty . . . liberty for all of us.” No! Actually, I think this group was standing up for the Constitution, which prohibits the government from promoting any religion at all. In other words, Christians want to insist that it is perfectly fine for the government to promote their preferred religion by having things like a monument of the Ten Commandments in the courthouse but would be greatly offended if the government promoted any other religion. This group understood this, and ergo, they went for it all by using Satan.

I believe the point this group was making was, the government is not to promote any religion at all. However, if you Christians want to play this game, then it is not like the government is to only support your preferred religion. In other words, it is probably best to stick to the Constitution keeping the government out of the religion business, and in that way, we would never have to worry about such statues again. It is really not like “This is the price we need to pay in exchange for our religious liberty . . . liberty for all of us,” but more like, “what’s good for the goose.”

If we as Christians would stop attempting to force what it is we believe upon all others, we might find the others would have no problem with us as Christians, and we might just discover we would have a lot more influence in the culture. Or we can continue the insanity of doubling down on the culture wars as we have over the past 5 decades, as the culture continues to become ever more immoral, while our Churches continue to empty out.

Another thing I would have a chuckle about if it were not so sad, is the fact we have a group who erects a monument to Satan who is standing up for the Constitution, and freedom for all, while we have Christians who want to see the Constitution overturned.

Jack

Jack, I am afraid you have not thought this through. Do you want a separation of morality and state? Do you want the state behaving as though no such thing as morality exists? If you say yes, then there is no problem with us demanding preferential treatment for our religion, on the basis of force, because even-handedness is morality. If you say no, then the question of which morality immediately arises. And because you appear to be the kind of person who would not want a separation of morality and state, I would ask you, “which morality?” And why?

Re: the fake Satanists, surprised you didn’t mention Shift and the Calormenes accidentally summoning the real Tash. “Yes,” said the Dwarf. “And this fool of an Ape, who didn’t believe in Tash, will get more than he bargained for! He called for Tash: Tash has come.”

James

James, you are right. I absolutely should have thought of that. Cartoon Satans don’t stay that way.

Re:Toppling the Cosplay Satan

I know I am not pointing out a novelty here, but the mixed response to the Iowa Idol Smash has once again illustrated a demoralization problem among conservatives.

I don’t mean “conservatives are too demoralized” (although that’s true). I mean the left understands how to do the demoralizing. When they take scandalous action, they circle the wagons and dare us to do something about it. They need not unanimously, actively support the action. But, almost to a man, they deny all wrongdoing until the shock wears off and the dust settles, at which point the ratchet of new normal has mysteriously moved another notch left. Scattered reports circulate Fox News had their hands on the ratchet, but who really can say?

By contrast, when a Michael Cassidy takes scandalous action, many who would otherwise claim to be on his side join the left’s wagon circle instead. They express regret and distaste until it is turned into mourning for all the people. It may not result in a full ratchet notch gain for the left, but it very often negates the opposite motion from the right. Thus, the demoralization forces tend to mobilize on behalf of the progressive cause no matter who wins the initial skirmish.

I’m not here to argue that Cassidy’s actions were the way I’d have ideally liked things to play out, but we need to take a lesson from Joash, who probably never would have torn down Baal’s altar himself, but knew enough to stand against the mob once it had been done. How much more when we all ostensibly agree Baal is false in the first place?

Wesley

Wesley, thanks, and yes.

More Trinity Issues

Sir, one thing puzzles me about the recent “Eternal Subordination” controversy: Namely, J. I. Packer taught this economic “subordinationism” rather unapologetically in his very popular “Knowing God,” and I don’t recall a peep of controversy about his position. His take on eternal subordination was quite explicit, after all:

“It is the nature of the second person of the Trinity to acknowledge the authority and submit to the good pleasure of the first . . . the obedience of the God-man to the Father while he was on earth was not a new relationship occasioned by the Incarnation, but the continuation in time of the eternal relationship between the Son and Father in heaven.”

If there was any controversy whatsoever about his explicit “subordinationism,” I completely missed it . . . I don’t recall Packer ever being called to account for this position by his evangelical peers (even while he was at times sharply critiqued for other positions he supported).

I personally suspect that this topic only became controversial in recent years due to the growing feminist influence in the church, considering how supporters of Biblical gender roles often defended authority/submission between husband & wife as ontological equals by making analogy with the persons of the Triune God. It almost seems as though the mere acknowledgment that “Yes, two persons can be completely ontologically ‘equal’ but yet exist in a God-ordained relationship of authority/submission” is simply intolerable in our current climate; and any theological point that might lend credence to such ideas must de facto therefore be anathema. What else explains why the teaching of Packer, Lewis, Hodge, and so many others was so completely uncontroversial until just these recent decades?

Would certainly appreciate your thoughts.

Very respectfully submitted,

Daniel

Daniel, I certainly think the current feminist climate has something to do with the voltage of the disputes. One of our local feminist opponents, whose orthodoxy is, um, shall we shall, not all that robust, is all over this subordinationist thing.

This is a trinity related question, regarding the “filioque” controversy. A couple years ago, I went through John of Damascus’s work “An Exact Exposition on the Orthodox Faith.” I thought it was a mixed bag. His defense of icon veneration was lame and his arguments for the perpetual virginity of Mary was a dubious allegorical argument from Ezekiel 44:2. However, I found his portion on the Trinity to be really good and helpful. He takes the pre-1014 Nicene position. His interpretation of John 20:22 is that we have access to the Spirit only through the Son because the Spirit eternally proceeds from the Father and rests on the Son. The Son then shares with us all that is his, including the Spirit resting on Him from the Father. It seems to me like there could be a valid concern that the church in the West is confusing the revealed nature of the Triune God by adding that the Spirit also “proceeds from the Son.” For instance, I would not say that the Son and the Spirit are eternally begotten by the Father. That begetting is a distinct relationship which is only revealed between the Father and the Son in the Godhead. It seems like most of the proof texts I have seen for the post-1014 formulation actually describe the church’s relationship to the Spirit through the Son and not the eternal relationship that exists within the Godhead apart from the church. In some sense we receive the Spirit from God the Father and the Son (because all that the Father shares with the Son is ours through the son) but strictly speaking the Spirit only proceeds from the Father to the Son and God has not revealed to us that the Spirit proceeds from the Son to the Father. Am I missing something in the way I am thinking through this? There is certainly a lot more I could read on the issue. Thank you for your clear thinking and teaching on a number of issues. You continue to be a blessing to God’s people. May God continue to bless you and your family.

Josh

Josh, thanks. When Christ Church recites the Nicene Creed, we do so as Westerners. In other words, we include the filioque clause. I have some sympathy with the claim that the process of including the clause was irregular, but I still think the inclusion important. The Spirit is described in Scripture both as being the Spirit of God, and also the Spirit of Christ. Following Augustine, I would argue that the Father loves the Son with an infinite love, and the Son loves the Father with an infinite love. And what would the mutual infinite love of two infinite persons be but an infinite person Himself? And last, every New Testament epistle begins with “Grace and peace from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.” The Spirit is not mentioned by name. Following Jonathan Edwards, I would say that this is because the Spirit is the grace and peace, and that He comes from the Father and the Son.

Deception and Lying

In “David and Deception,” you wrote that “all false witness is deception but not all deception is bearing false witness. The rule of thumb, as we see in Scripture, is whether or not it is occurring in time of war, or in what is tantamount to war.”

In light of this statement, could you interact with Colossians 3:9-10? It commands believers to not lie to one another because they have a new-creation-identity. Is lying only okay if it’s directed towards unbelievers? Or is all lying now outlawed under the new covenant?

It seems to me that all lying would be considered sin because God is truth and sin is that which in inconsistent with God’s character. Can you please help me work this in my mind? Thanks!

Caleb

Caleb, lying is corrosive to every form of comity, including the forms of comity we are supposed to cultivate with unbelievers. It is especially excluded within the body of Christ, but it is also excluded in the civil realm. Colossians tells believers not to lie to one another. But the ninth commandment says not to bear false witness against your neighbor, which might well be an unbeliever. But if that comity has deteriorated to the point of civil war, then at that point it is certainly appropriate to hide Jews in your basement, and to lie your head off about it.

Book Recommends for Boys

I’m wondering if you have any good recommendations for books that a father could give to his preschool age son. The boy learned to read very young, and loves to do so. With that in mind, we are trying to be very intentional about the books we keep around the house. We already own Sir Bad-a-Lot and others, but I’m specifically looking for age-appropriate books that deal with father-son relationships in a Biblical way. (As opposed to the nonsensical fluffy way) Thanks a million!

L

L, if you are looking for picture books like Sir Bad-a-Lot, I don’t really have a lot to offer. Except for, ahem, The Adventures of Fun Dad, offered below. But if you son learned to read early, and is really precocious, I wouldn’t hesitate to read books from Narnia and The Hobbit.

Federal Vision, From the Archives

I just finished reading your article, ‘Federal Vision No Mas’ written several year ago.

I greatly appreciated it. I also identified with it via my subjective understanding. I may be wrong, but I associate with something I discern in this article. Wordsmiths love to use words, even as painters love to use colors. However, too much color and too many words within the canvas of creativity and particularity, even witticism can confuse clarity. Not everyone has colorful minds, and struggle with that which is not laid out in black and white. Yet per Christian doctrine and love in deference to Christ and His kin, there are times it is very wise to carefully brush with black and white.

Lou

Lou, thanks. I take your point, and my challenge is that I think in color. I am sure there are times I require an interpreter.

Resentment, Bitterness, and the Holidays

Two questions: 1) What is the relationship between resentment and bitterness and how are they resisted?

2) Do you have any advice when considering whether to attend a Christmas family gathering when there are unresolved sin and fellowship issues?

EJ

EJ, I generally treat resentment and bitterness as almost-synonyms, with resentment being a tad milder. I would not avoid a family gathering just because others have unresolved issues that they should resolve. But if those unresolved issues are out in the open, and the whole pot is seething the whole time, and nobody will address it, then I would stay away.

Stay or Go?

Really appreciate your work. My family has been attending a large non-denominational church in North Idaho since I was young. In the past 3 years I’ve become more aware and convinced of a CREC/ Reformed position. The emphasis on an optimistic eschatology, family, biblical masculinity, Reformed theology, etc are convictions that I now see as essential to my walk with God. These however are not stressed and most often disagreed with at my current church. Is it wrong of me to leave this church to join the local CREC congregation or should I try to reform the church I’m in? Thank you

JJ

JJ, if the church is large, it is probably set in its ways. If you are not in the leadership, you have no standing responsibility to try to “fix it,” and if you tried, it would probably be a mess. I would figure out a way to leave peaceably.

I hope you’re doing well. First of all, I would like to thank you for your blogs, books, and messages. They have all been a true blessing to me and my family. May the Lord continue to bless your labors.

I need your advice/input. I live in the small country town I was raised in. By God’s providence here, a couple of SBC churches have recently hired some Calvinistic pastors. At the same time, my family is currently looking for a new church to go to and I’m quite hard pressed with the options that I have. Which is the better option?

1) A church led by a pastor who is Calvinistic Baptist with a weird bag of Dispy/Covenant Theology. Yet, he’s an unapologetic expository preacher. If the text says it, he will take it at face value and preach with authority. He may preach rapture every once in awhile, yet he’s hard on sin (and not just “outside” sin, he will highlight sins in the backyard) and passionate about doctrine. The liturgy is a bit light but that’s expected in a small Southern town.

or 2) A church led by a pastor who is nothing short of brilliant. He’s a Reformed Baptist that also honors Church History. The Liturgy is more traditional, and he’s got a solid plan to teach people. Yet, he’s a good bit careful in the way he preaches. Definitely isn’t expository.

As the head of my home, I want what’s best for my wife and son. What advice would you give me in choosing one of these two churches?

Seth

Seth, from what you describe, I would lean toward #1.

Just a Matter of Time

You’ve been in the trenches a while. Are you aware of this group/movement claiming to be a part of evangelicalism? 

Rope

Rope, yeah, I think I had heard of them. And if the degradation continues apace, our churches need to get policies in place to get ready for them.

Criticism From Afar

I’m truly appalled by the men (whom appear very zealous for the Word of God) that seem incapable of the smallest consideration of personally connecting with you (isn’t that a Matt 18 thing?) before dunking on your name and your church body. You’d think they want to make sure their powder was dry before firing on you in such a public manner. It’s shameful and they diminish their own credibility. Worse yet, they stir up strife among brothers which last I checked is something our Lord is not terribly fond of among brothers, much less pastors. I on the other hand look forward to coming to get a dose of that Moscow mood this summer and will be coming all the way from Dutch Harbor, Alaska to see for myself what’s going on, unlike the cowards that prefer potshots from afar. Cheers!

Lorene

Lorene, you are most welcome, and I trust you will get a warm reception.

A Move to Idaho

This wouldn’t be just another move to Idaho, which is why I finally decided to write to you directly.

I’m a Teaching Elder in the PCA and I have arrived at this: seriously considering (along with my wife) a move to Idaho. Some of my favorite readings of late have been “21 Maxims for discouraged pastors” and Spurgeon’s lecture “The Minister’s Fainting Fits.” I have a long story . . . To shorten, the bullet points: I’m 41 and was ordained in 2018, but transferred from EPC to PCA in 2021; my wife and I have 6 children, one on the way; because I had a career before ordination, there are possible jobs for me in Moscow.

It seems as though I no longer fit in the PCA. But my conscience is focused on this: I would be leaving this congregation behind, perhaps in dire straits.

I feel isolated and, for the first time ever, thinking I need the wisdom of strangers, for a variety of reasons. Therefore, this message.

By grace, you are a seasoned pastor, and I’d like some wisdom. What are valid reasons for me to “retreat” from this work? The type of congregation I’d like to raise my family in does not exist in the PCA, nor do I think I’m currently able to lead this congregation into such transformation.

At the moment, all I want is to be a member of a congregation where neither I nor family are such “novelty.” I find myself desiring to disciple my family, and simply be a member in the church.

If I were not a pastor, I would already have made this move. However, I am a pastor—and do enjoy what I was ordained to do! I’d appreciate any counsel you would be willing to offer me. I have never retreated from any work before. This would be the first time ever…

I.F.

I.F., from what you describe, it seems to me like you should pull up stakes. The key phrase was “nor do I think I’m currently able to lead this congregation into such transformation.” If you thought you could, then that is what I would try to do. If you thought you might be able to, then I would lay it before your elders. “If I were to stay, this is my plan for what I would like to do . . .” But if you believe that the unlikelihood of that ever happening is high, then I would contact U-Haul.

Young Women

I must say, as a husband of over 20 years and a father of two teenage daughters, leading my family is very challenging in our modern environment. To my great shame, in my early bachelor years, until I committed to Christ at age 26, I was promiscuous. But there are two things that were striking about this time. First, it was always the women who first initiated, not I (does not alleviate my culpability in the slightest). Second, and what is most striking, is how many former partners I saw at church when I was searching for a church, and most were churchgoers at the time of our indiscretions. What’s important about that is I think many pastors have no clue how many women in the church have non-Christian sex partners outside the church, and many of these women smile and nod when the pastors condemn the men in the church (who are not their partners). I also think the frequent berating of the single men in the Church has the unintended consequence of not only diminishing the Christian men, but making the non-Christian men look better by comparison . . . after all, women spend Monday-Saturday in workplaces, colleges, and social gatherings where their non-Christian options are treated with more respect than the Christian men in their church. No need for response, just thought my experience may be useful. In my 50’s I look back on my 20’s with great regret, and try to share the earned wisdom with the women in my family so my daughters may be the rare virtuous women that the Bible so highly regards. Appreciate your efforts to give pastoral care to women, our society and even the church makes that very painful.

John

John, yes. There is a common assumption in Christian churches that women are the standard, and that they don’t sin—and especially that they don’t sin sexually. Consequently, they are not warned or cautioned, which is another way of saying that they don’t receive good pastoral care.

Thanks

A suggestion for a future Ask Doug?

I watched a clip of Dave Rubin interviewing Bret Weinstein. It is a good example of an Atheist wanting to have theism without having God. And having to acknowledge that atheism destructive. I thought it might make a good clip to comment on.

Sam

Sam, thanks for the suggestion.

Worth Thinking About

The Spoken Written Word

Pastor Wilson—I have appreciated your substantive engagements with the recent criticisms by Owen Strachan and Kevin DeYoung (and in earlier similar such posts like IndigniLadies on 2/6/23). It is helpful to hear a distillation of your communicative philosophy and writing strategies for those who have not worked through the fuller treatment of your approach in the book “The Serrated Edge.”

As I recall, though, you and your son Nate have made emphasis on the importance of medium in encountering and/or using vulgarity/obscenity/cursing/swearing. Hence, you would choose to use VidAngel when watching certain films, and Nate admits it would be most difficult to translate Lewis’ brilliant Perelandra into a cinematic medium.

Over the course of the last year or so, I have noticed the increasing proliferation of audio option for your blog posts and wondered if this increasingly utilized medium by the Canon content team changes the way you blog (or plan to write your blog). Where you might have chosen to use a stronger word when it was only written, do you now choose different language since you know your posts will be read and potentially videoed as well? Similarly, as you read current material and/or as you work your way back to some of your acknowledged controversial posts, do you find yourself censoring or substituting words?

Not looking to set a trap or make an indictment—just mostly curious about your process and your intentions with the blog’s increasingly multimedia formats.

A Wannabee Wordsmith

AWW, this is something I have thought about. Not a great deal yet, but it is a factor. When wiring something up that way, an electrician has to be concerned about voltage. And if the written word and the spoken word were wire, their conductivity is different. That should be taken into account.

Yet Another Example

You mentioned several examples of names originally used to taunt groups (Puritan, Methodist, Quaker, Jesuit etc). In support of your point how about “Chicano”? It was originally a derogatory term used to describe lower class Mexican-Americans (usually by upper class Mexican-Americans). But in the 1960’s and 70’s it was embraced as an affirmative label expressing camaraderie and commonality of experience.

Jerry

Jerry, thanks.

From the Cheap Seats

On Rob Reiner’s movie:

When I was a kid, and that was a long while ago, Rob Reiner was a Meathead. Based on this trailer and its underlying motive, I suppose it remains true.

Andrew

Andrew, that should be retained as a possibility.

Living Faith

Responding to Living Faith Has No Side Hustles—

My name is Kyle, from Northern VA. I’m a big fan of your work and believer in the Moscow Mood, but I feel that I you are in error in slandering all theologians arrayed against your position as “doing politics.” Their concerns and detractions of the Federal Vision (which you refuse to reject) are real, not political, and I think I can help elucidate that. The NAPARC denominations do not deliberately refuse to understand you/accept your claims. Their jobs are to investigate theological positions that array themselves against standard Orthodoxy (as FV does), not accept simple statement of orthodoxy as proof of orthodoxy. And their investigations (as well as my own) consistently uncover errors. The disagreement is because you are using words differently than they are.

Now, to the elucidation: When the orthodox Reformed say “Active/Living Faith” they mean a mental/spiritual/soulful (assensus, notitia, fiducia) action that WILL result in works, which include Resting-and-Receiving-Obedience (R&RO). When you say “Active Faith” or “Justifying Faith” you mean a faith that does not include “Active Works” like helping old ladies across the street, but does include works of R&RO. This is a big distinction, because you, in your efforts to closer-knit faith and works of obedience (or faithfulness, as you prefer to call good works done through faith) have combined Faith and Works together in your Definition of Justifying Faith. You many a time sound the phrase “Justifying faith is alive”, or “It is not a dead inert faith which comes to salvation, it is alive from the get-go.” This is both true and undisputed among the Reformed world: and I do believe it is disingenuous of you to hold that as a fallback position and give the implication your opponents believe that they do not. Again, the classic Reformed position is that a Justifying Faith will always result in works, but those works play NO part in our justification, whether R&RO or Active works. Classic Reformed Ordo Salutis: Faith (assent, knowledge, belief)–> Justified –> works

Your outline: Faith+Works-of-R&RO –> Justified–> Active Works

While you make a distinction here between R&RO works and Active Works, the distinction between various types of works is not one held by the Reformed Confession. The Catholics to this day refer to their works not as “works” as the Reformed do, but in the same way you refer to R&RO, as gifts. This debate between you and the orthodox Reformed takes the same form as the Reformation debate over justification, but you are on the wrong side of the Tiber.

I say this in love, because I believe we need more men like you. But I also believe you are in theological error, possibly unknowingly. You accuse the orthodox Reformed of not doing theology in their critiques of you. There is a very easy way to ensure this will be manifest—reject Federal Vision, clarify your acceptance of the classical Reformed Ordo Salutis, deny that works of any sort (whether or receiving or active) contribute to your justification, to your being justified. And then repeat these positions loud enough to make even R Scott Clark cry “Mea Culpa, Mea Culpa, Mea Maxima Culpa!”

Kyle

Kyle, if I am understanding you correctly (which I might not be, I grant), you are saying that a man is justified independently of him resting and receiving? Is that right? That can’t be right.

Regarding last Monday’s “Faith Has No Side Hustles:”

I was introduced to heresy hunters in the early 1990’s after reading John MacAuthor’s “The Gospel According To Jesus.” I remember being flummoxed about the controversy surrounding it. I thought, “Wait, why are these biblical Christians not understanding this? Have they had a personal discussion with him to try to understand before the attacks?” Last week’s post (and many before it) reminded me of that. It’s like guys going out hunting pheasant, and after a few hours of nothing, start shooting at crows and magpies—“Gotta bring something home!”

Also thanks for the lol quote of the week—“If Kevin DeYoung didn’t already think I cuss too much, I would hurl a few imprecations at it.”

John

John, thanks.

Child Discipline

“it becomes exasperation for them when the one wielding the rod is also exasperated.”

But is it not also a lesson to teach children that one of the consequences of disobedience is anger, disappointment, etc. by the one they disobeyed? Not in a way that is out of control where parental anger is the driving factor, but a kind of “controlled wrath” that is measured according to the severity of the infraction and intentionally shown to the child in order to drive home the point?

GH

GH, there is something in what you say. But I believe that many parents have deceived themselves regarding how they come across to their kids in moments of discipline.

Sabbath Liturgy

Can you direct me to a description of what exactly you do in Moscow during a Sabbath Dinner? It it just a meal in someone’s home, or do you have certain things you do at the meal? Singing together, topics of discussion? etc…? I hear about it all the time in various posts coming from Moscow but I cannot figure out what exactly happens, and would like to get things like that started in my neck of the woods as well.

Tyler

Tyler, the meal itself is simply a large, family-style meal. The thing that sets it apart is a liturgy that is more extensive than the ordinary saying of grace. What usually happens is this (although big adjustments have been made over the years with the number of kids and so on). Everybody gets a glass and fills it, and finds their seat. I address any company we have with “B and S welcome to our table.” I will then toast, “This is the day that the Lord has made,” and everyone responds with “we will rejoice and be glad in it.” I then offer up a prayer, thanking God for the arrival of the Lord’s Day and for the food. Then I ask the little kids, “What Is the blessing for my wife?” They reply, “May her house always have seven pillars and may she always mix her wine with wisdom (Prov. 9:1).” I then ask, “What is the blessing for the children?” They reply, “Happy are the people whose God is the Lord. May our sons flourish like saplings, grown up in their youth, and may our daughters be as columns, sculpted in the palace style (Ps. 144:12).”

I then ask catechism questions that the little kids all respond to: Do you love God? Yes! Are you baptized? Yes! Is Jesus in your heart? Yes! Will you take the Lord’s Supper tomorrow? Yes!

Then I ask individual questions: G, who made you? God M, who made the sun, moon and stars? God P, who is the Son of God? Jesus S, who reveals God to us? Jesus L, what day is it? The Lord’s Day B, why is it the Lord’s Day? Because Jesus rose C, what kind of day is it? A sweet day N, what did Jesus kill on this day? The dragon Everyone, what else did Jesus kill? The dragon in our hearts

Everyone, what’s the point of the whole Bible? Kill the dragon, get the girl!

And then we sing Psalm 134. Behold bless the Lord . . .

Servant Leadership

I just listened to the interview you did with Aaron Renn, where, among other things, you talked about ‘the lies of servant leadership.’ Being a new evangelical Christian (I’m 21 and converted three years ago), this was a take I had never heard and had trouble comprehending. You briefly mentioned that people would argue by quoting Mk 10:42-44 but you didn’t really answer it? I guess my question would be: Can you define in your words what is servant leadership, why you believe it’s wrong and what should we do instead.

A follow up interrogation I had is that at one point you say: ‘Who is a woman at church more likely to want to marry? The janitor or the worship leader?’ You also said (and I’m going to paraphrase here): ‘You should pursue leadership roles because women like that’

My question would be: What about the motivations of our hearts? Wouldn’t it be sinful to want to grow in leadership and manliness to appeal to women and not in order to be pleasing to God? I understand God wants us to be manly but in my experience I can be really motivated to want to grow in these things only because I want girls to like me. And doing it for God becomes an afterthought. So how can we reconcile these two things?

In conclusion I want to clarify that I love your ministry, it is a blessing for me and many friends here in Quebec. I am not asking these questions to argue, judge or declare my disagreement. But in humility I simply want to understand your point better because I believe you posses great wisdom that is valuable for my life.

Also I am French, if some of the things I said weren’t clear, just let me know. And even if you don’t make a video about this could you please still answer? I’d really love to understand more.

Nathaniel

Nathaniel, I believe that there really is a good thing called servant leadership. But most people today assume that it means that you lead by serving. I believe that it means that serve by leading. If a husband takes servant leadership as meaning that he just needs to find out what his wife wants and then do that, then he is abdicating. And on your second point, of course we should do everything Godward first. But there are secondary goals, and for a young single man, finding out what women need (which is not the same thing as what they say they want) should be one of those goals.

Tangled Up in Ministry

Thanks so much for your ministry, I have profited much from your work. One place that I have not looked into much of what you have to say is Pastoral Ministry.

Here’s my question; what kind of healthy emotional distance should a pastor keep with his congregation? Our church is currently losing many members to death, and so this question came to mind. Of course, you don’t want to be cold and distant. But I’ve also seen pastors deal with death in their congregation with an unhealthy attachment.

This would also apply to things like church discipline, seeing children go apostate, etc.

How do you toe that line?

Thanks in advance!

Chaz

Chaz, I believe that a pastor should be all tied up with his people. I would look at the apostle Paul’s relationship to the Corinthians, and to the Galatians, and so forth. The problems you have witnessed may not be the result of attachment, but rather the result of a wrong like of attachment, based on emotional neediness.

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Andrew Lohr
Andrew Lohr
11 months ago

Subordinationism? Revise the creed to “proceedeth from the Father and is sent by the Son.” This is Biblical, to make Protestants happy, and avoids the Western extreme of flat sameness and the Eastern extreme of ontological subordinationism. Eh?

Luke Pride
Luke Pride
11 months ago
Reply to  Andrew Lohr

People hate revising creeds, which is unfortunate. All modern translation got rid of “begotten” but the creed keeps it. I’m not for abandoning the creeds but the anyone saying the wording and grammar can’t be refined us treating them as sacred documents. Either they are part of scripture or they’re not.

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago

Re Cosplay Satan, the thing is, though, that even-handedness is not a matter of morality, at least not necessarily. It’s a recognition that your faction will be out of power eventually, and when that happens you’re going to be awfully appreciative of whatever evenhandedness is available to you. We’ve avoided a lot of the religious violence other countries have experienced explicitly because up until this point we’ve had an agreement that no religion gets to run the government. Do you really want whoever has the greatest capacity for violence to be the ones whose values are enforced by the state?… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

“ We’ve avoided a lot of the religious violence other countries have experienced explicitly because up until this point we’ve had an agreement that no religion gets to run the government. “ Begging the question. The argument is that a religion always *does* run the government regardless of whether or not we say it out loud. The argument is that all values are inherently religious, and so since all laws are predicated in values, laws too are inherently religious. There is thusly no such thing as a religiously neutral government. You’re free to disagree and argue against the notion, but the case… Read more »

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

I suppose that depends on how broadly one defines “religion” and how broadly one defines “values”. What is the argument that child pornography is a “good” thing? Because if someone were to show up and say, “I have absolutely no idea whether it’s good, bad or neutral,” my response is going to be “Fine, you’re a complete idiot, have a nice day.” And just as we swat mosquitoes on no greater principle than that they cause us harm, so we swat child pornographers by sending them to prison, making them register as sex offenders, and doing everything in our collective… Read more »

Luke Pride
Luke Pride
11 months ago

I’m tempted to say anyone who thinks blaspheming God or worshiping an evil monster like Jim Jones or Muhammad is an idiot. People defending it makes it no less dumb. And claiming people have the right to defend themselves when they intrinsically have no value just sounds silly. You claim it’s common sense, but why do you get yo enforce your “common sense” on anyone who thinks some lives have values and others don’t? The retreat to claiming it’s self-evident is just admitting there’s no reason behind it but your emotions. The greatest good for the greatest number… who decided… Read more »

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Luke Pride

You haven’t demonstrated that religion is required for people to have intrinsic value, but for sake of argument, let’s assume you are right. For the sake of argument, assume humans are just flotsam and jetsam that appears for a brief moment in time and then disappears forever. (I don’t believe any of that to be true, by the way.) Now, assuming all of that to be true, here’s what’s wrong with your argument: Even if I am only here for a brief moment before disappearing forever, and of no value whatever to anyone else, the claim that whether that moment… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

You haven’t demonstrated that religion is required for people to have intrinsic value”

The argument isn’t that you need religion to have intrinsic value. The argument is that religion *is* intrinsic value. The terms are indistinguishable.

If you codify the method by which you evaluate intrinsic value, you have a holy book.

From Merriam-Webster.

3: a cause, principle, or system of beliefs held to with ardor and faith

If you have principles and you hold to them with ardor, you have a religion. A government definitionally holds to its laws with ardor. So….. are they based in principles?

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

That’s a pretty expansive definition of religion you’ve got there. There is intrinsic value in diet and exercise but I wouldn’t call that a religion, even if someone is thoroughly devoted to them. And you’re ignoring the second half of “ardor and faith.” If the system of beliefs is based on reason, science, observation, or something else other than faith, doesn’t matter the amount of ardor, it ain’t religion. And part of my objection to your claims is that it appears to me that you’re attempting to prove your case by giving religion a wide definition that no one else… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

“And you’re ignoring the second half of “ardor and faith.” If the system of beliefs is based on reason, science, observation, or something else other than faith, doesn’t matter the amount of ardor, it ain’t religion.” All beliefs are held with faith. It is not possible to hold any position without faith. In order to come to a scientific conclusion, one must have faith in a wide variety of presupposed faith based positions about the validity of not only your own observational skills, but everyone else in the chain of custody of evidence. “And part of my objection to your… Read more »

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

No, all beliefs are not held by faith. I believe that if I jump in front of an oncoming train I’m going to get killed, and there isn’t an ounce of faith in that belief. If you think it’s an open question, feel free to jump in front of a train and let us know how it works out for you. I will grant that there is some dispute on some issues as to what is and is not harmful. The tobacco companies told us for years that smoking wasn’t harmful. But at least in theory that should usually be… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

You’re agreeing to the premise. You are in fact enforcing your values on other people. You simply think that the values you elect to enforce are reasonable values. Well, so does everyone else. The problem of course isn’t that you can’t show that child pornography is bad. The problem is that your initial argument was not about any proposed law, because in fact there is no proposed law in question. The problem is that your initial argument was *purely* about the idea of enforcing one group’s values over another. The exact second you say “Well if you don’t see why… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

This is quite comical! So, the reason we have not had religious strife in this country is because Christians made up the majority. This seems to mean, those who were not Christian, who were in the minority were fine with this being the case, and did not attempt to cause religious strife. However, now that Christians are in the minority we can be assured, (according to you) that “Religion strife is coming one way or the other”. I mean, why do you believe this to be a fact? Why is it that when we as Christians were the majority, there… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

“ So, the reason we have not had religious strife in this country is because Christians made up the majority.” No. The reason we have not had religious strife is there was a supermajority of any kind. If Taoists were the ultra supermajority, there would likewise be no strife because there would not be anyone to have strife with. “, but now that we as Christians are the minority, you can almost guarantee us that there will be religious strife? If this is the case, then it does not speak well of us as Christians.” You’re attributing special meaning to the… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

Justin, I can assure you that we have had folks in this country who adhered to other religions from the beginning, who were in the minority, and according to you we did not have any religious strife, which sort of demonstrates those in the minority did not want to cause any religious strife. However, now that it is we as Christians who are in the minority you can almost guarantee us that there will now be religious strife. Why do you suppose this is the case? Why can’t we as Christians be the minority without any sort of religious strife?… Read more »

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

But isn’t the point of representative government that citizens elect legislators whose values they believe align with their own? Which is why legislators who are supported by a majority in Alabama would get nowhere in California and vice versa? This is limited, of course, by court decisions that thwart the will of a state’s electorate but perhaps the answer lies in returning more power to the individual states. It could certainly be argued that the Roe court imposed its views about the morality of abortion on the entire country, legalizing abortion in states with legislatures and a majority of voters… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

I agree with you completely Jill. California has autonomy to be California. I’m not suggesting that tomorrow afternoon we pass constitutional amendments that subvert the just independent authorities of the states. I’m suggesting that the long term aim of Christians ought to be the accomplishment of explicitly Christian law. This will naturally come by convincing voters, and engaging in the process legally. I’m talking idealized goals, not the 2024 election cycle. I’m talking about what we ought to do if we get an 80% supermajority in every state, and can actually restructure the government as we wish. In that event,… Read more »

Dave
Dave
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

“This will naturally come by convincing voters, and engaging in the process legally.” “Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 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.” Matthew 28:18-20 What happens if the Great Commission is preached along with teaching about how the Bible is to be applied in America with our existing constitution? God is the one who changes hearts and softens necks and… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave I don’t see how your point in any way interferes with mine. You seem to be more or less restating me. I’m afraid I don’t see your aim.

Dave
Dave
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

“I’m talking about what we ought to do if we get an 80% supermajority in every state, and can actually restructure the government as we wish.” Justin, how do you get that supermajority? I have watched politics for more than 55 years and convincing voters of one thing doesn’t work. I ask again, what would happen if the Great Commission were really acted on by Christians here in America? Our constitution was made for a moral and religious people and if our God were put at the top of every American’s thinking, the constitution would work well. There would be… Read more »

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

But Roe didn’t impose anything on anyone. It told the states with anti-abortion laws that they could not impose that value on individual women. There is a huge difference between telling someone “You must do X” versus telling someone “You may not prevent your neighbor from doing X” Those are very different propositions. Get back to me when someone is forced to have an abortion. As a matter of constitutional law, I think Roe was a very badly reasoned decision, even though I agree with its bottom line that a flat ban is unconstitutional (though for reasons other than the… Read more »

Kristina
Kristina
11 months ago

Plenty of women in Scientology’s “Sea Org” have been forced to have abortions.

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Kristina

Those women voluntarily joined a cult, which is not quite the same thing as being forced by the government to have an abortion.

Kristina
Kristina
11 months ago

Does anyone “voluntarily” join a cult?

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Kristina

I don’t believe in free will so I don’t think anyone “voluntarily” does much of anything; your choices are mostly made by your personality, character, nature, temperament and emotional needs. Pharaoh had no real choice about being Pharaoh; Paul tells us as much in Romans 9.

But the fact that despite being diabetic I lack the will power to walk away from a double chocolate truffle cake is not a reason to ban double chocolate truffle cake for everyone.

John Middleton
John Middleton
11 months ago

In that case there is no reason we do anything, it is what it is, and it’s just a matter of who has the power to impose their lizard brain impulses on who. Makes should/should not conversations like this rather moot.

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  John Middleton

John, as a practical matter, biological determinism is Calvinism for atheists and Calvinism is biological determinism for theists. Both agree that most of your major decisions have been made for you and you’re basically along for the ride, and the only real dispute is whether it’s God or the laws of physics that are pulling the strings. Since you and I are both Christians we agree that any strings that are being pulled are being pulled by God. That said, why, then, did God keep sending Moses to tell Pharaoh to let his people go, even as he was simultaneously… Read more »

John Middleton
John Middleton
11 months ago

I’m neither a Calvinist nor an atheist, so I am not bound by the presuppositions of either. Scripture also tells us that Pharaoh hardened his heart himself, as well as God hardening Pharaoh’s heart. God’s judgement sometimes consists in giving us over to our choices – see Romans 1. In any case, God determining human actions in a given instance, pursuant to the working out of His redemptive purpose, is nothing like biological determinism driven by our own instincts, impulses, and appetites. If, not free will actions by moral agents, with reference to some perceived transcendent good, but rather personality,… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  John Middleton

John, Exactly who is imposing their beliefs upon you? Who is it who has the power right now, who is imposing their morality upon us all? What rights of yours is being violated by those who are in power? If you do not have an answer to this, then this sort of demonstrates that we can live in a society where we are not all attempting to impose what we believe upon others. On the other hand, I can demonstrate to you where there are Christians who are championing the idea that we as Christians should indeed impose what we… Read more »

John Middleton
John Middleton
11 months ago

Who indeed? There are laws, and I’m glad for it. Either someone will impose their beliefs, or someone will impose their impulses; I prefer the former. Anyway, I don’t think your argument here is really with me.

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  John Middleton

John, Not really. No one is forced to impose their beliefs, and no one is forced to impose their impulses. Rather, we can all have our beliefs, and we can all have our impulses, and we can live our lives upon these beliefs, and or impulses, allowing all others to do the same. Or we can buy into the argument Doug Wilson, and those such as R.J. Rushdoony would have us believe, in that we will have to impose what it is we believe as Christians, or those opposed will attempt to impose what it is they believe upon us.… Read more »

John Middleton
John Middleton
11 months ago

Whether anyone is forced to impose their beliefs or their impulses is irrelevant, it’s what happens. Thieves, murderers, and rapists will impose their impulses upon you, or they will be imposed upon by men who believe theft, murder, and rape are bad things.

Cherrera
Cherrera
11 months ago

“Exactly who is imposing their beliefs upon you? Who is it who has the power right now, who is imposing their morality upon us all? What rights of yours is being violated by those who are in power?” Seriously? My tax dollars go to support child murder and transgenderism. That’s imposing a God-hating morality in the worst possible way. https://pjmedia.com/matt-margolis/2023/12/19/planned-parenthood-finds-a-new-disturbing-cash-cow-n4924855 Many of us have been forced to sit through and “sign off” on classes on pronouns and LGBTQ+ garbage, CRT and other things we vehemently disagree with in military, government and corporate settings. Churches and businesses were forced to shut… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Cherrera

If you are so opposed to your tax dollars going to pay for abortion, then why don’t you refuse to pay your taxes? I will assume you will not do this because it is really not that important to you. The fact is, since the overturning of Roe vs Wade, many states have banned abortion, and so this means less of your tax money will go to providing such coverage. The thing is, no one is forcing you nor any of yours to have an abortion. Moreover, you are free in this country to oppose abortion, and work to enact… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

unless what it is you believe is infringing upon the rights of others.”

Rights of others as determined by…….. you know all those beliefs that aren’t in the constitution.

Cherrera
Cherrera
11 months ago

“If you are so opposed to your tax dollars going to pay for abortion, then why don’t you refuse to pay your taxes?” We could stop here, because that statement is beyond asinine. While it may be possible to lawfully stop paying taxes, that discussion is way beyond the scope of this discussion. If most people stop paying, they risk spending years in prison. That’s the definition of being forced to do something against your beliefs at gunpoint. Moreoever, the entire idea of funding Planned Parenthood via Federal taxes is MUCH more unconstitutional than your silly idea “muh, freedom of… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Cherrera

When I say you should not pay your taxes, I am making a point. I think we can agree there are certain things worth going to jail over, you know, like when the apostle Paul was under arrest, and he thought it was well worth it. I mean, you give me a link in which some women were arrested for attempting to stop abortion. You seem to believe it important to put a stop to taxpayer abortion, but I guess it is not important enough to you to risk jail time. The thing is, I happen to agree with you 100… Read more »

Cherrera
Cherrera
11 months ago

My last comment on this thread. “as a Christian, you are far better off in the U.S. then many other Christians around the world” – that’s not the point, though. Who’s in charge of the U.S.? Look to the first three words of the Constitution: “we the people.” Not the president, not SCOTUS, not Congress, and surely not unconstitutional 3-letter agencies, NGOs, international groups like the WHO, UN, WEF, etc. which have a tremendous amount of influence over our affairs but should have none. Saying I should be happy because it least we’re not the in middle of Mao’s Cultural… Read more »

Last edited 11 months ago by C Herrera
Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Cherrera

You say, “My last comment on this thread.”  That is certainly a good move, because it is clear your arguments are not holding up. Is it really “we the people” who are to be in charge? Is it really all the other agencies, and nations you mention who is in charge? Because, I am thinking it is Jesus Christ who is The King of kings, and Lord over all, and I am thinking it is Christ who is in control, and I can assure you Christ is not at all biting His fingernails hoping against hope we elect the right… Read more »

Kristina
Kristina
11 months ago

If you had the cake, you’d be harming yourself. If you had a surgical abortion, it wouldn’t be YOUR body being dismembered now would it?

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
11 months ago
Reply to  Kristina

Scientology has (deservedly) had terrible press for years. It is difficult to understand how anyone these days might not have read about it. The ones I feel very sorry for are the children who grow up in the cult, attend Scientology schools, and are barred from contact with non-members. That includes grandparents, other relatives, and even parents who managed to get out. The kids are pressured to sign billion-year contracts when they reach their mid-teens and then they’re sent away to Sea.org centers in other cities and countries.

Laurel
Laurel
11 months ago

“But Roe didn’t impose anything on anyone.”

It imposed the death penalty on a few babies….

Dave
Dave
11 months ago

Kathleen, the Roe v Wade was only applicable to Jane Doe and the State of Texas. This is what I mentioned before. The other states were not obliged to follow the Supreme Court decision but did because the Christians in those states didn’t stand up for unborn children. Our current judges have ignored the constitution, our federal or state laws and just make decisions based on what their political leaning is toward. For example: Executive Orders apply to the executive branch only. They do not apply to the judicial or legislative branches or to citizens. When Trump was in office,… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

“But Roe didn’t impose anything on anyone.” Well it stripped states of their constitutional right to determine at what age children qualify as citizens deserving of the state’s protection. “There is a huge difference between telling someone “You must do X” versus telling someone “You may not prevent your neighbor from doing X” That’s true…… what’s your point? I never discussed Roe. We *can* discuss Roe if you’d like? But you seem to be responding to something I never said. ” Get back to me when someone is forced to have an abortion.” Why? Its not remotely relevant to anything I… Read more »

Dave
Dave
11 months ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Jill, the states already have the all the authority that is needed. “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.” X Amendment The problem is that Americans and American Christians in particular do not have a clue about our constitution or how to apply the Bible to our constitution. Ignorance is part of the tar baby, but the lack of will power in the state elected officials and residents of each state is the major problem. As a note, Supreme… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

My friend, what the United States government has said “out loud” is, the government is prohibited from promoting any religion at all. Ergo, there should be no religious symbols at all on government property, or we will have to allow any, and all. This should demonstrate to you that it would be best for the government to stay out of the religion business. The United States was not founded upon religion, but rather founded upon freedom of religion, allowing the freedom of each individual to decide such matters. What this means is, the government is not in the religion business.… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
11 months ago

This argument is incoherent from beginning to end. “what the United States government has said “out loud” is, the government is prohibited from promoting any religion at all.” Well no, what its said is the Government is prohibited from establishing a state religion. But this is completely irrelevant to the topic at hand, as I am not suggesting we do this under the American government as it presently exists. ” This should demonstrate to you that it would be best for the government to stay out of the religion business.” The state having decided anything at all does not demonstrate any… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

You continue to claim my arguments are incoherent, but this would mean that you could not understand the argument, which would go on to mean that you would not be able to engage the argument which is not coherent. The fact that you are engaging the argument defeats the idea that you do not understand the argument. This seems to sort of demonstrate you are simply being dramatic, and this is actually taking away your credibility. You say, “Well no, what its said is the Government is prohibited from establishing a state religion.” My friend, this is exactly what I… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago

Extremely well said!!

Jonathan
Jonathan
11 months ago

The simple answer is that the Triune God is the true God and that Jesus Christ rose from the dead and ascended to the throne of dominion.

We don’t ask for equal treatment. We command everyone to trust in Christ alone and submit to His authority in all things.

So yes, our God is the right one. That’s the answer to “by what standard:” Scripture told us so, and it is God’s Word.

Kathleen Zielinski
Kathleen Zielinski
11 months ago
Reply to  Jonathan

But that simply pushes it back a level. A Muslim would say the same thing about Allah and the Koran. In both your case and his case I’m being asked to take your word for it. And since the government has no means by which to test the truth of either, I’m just as happy having it stay out of it.

And if and when Christianity is no longer the dominant religion in this country, which seems to be the direction in which things are headed, you’ll discovery for yourself the wisdom of separation of church and state.

Dave
Dave
11 months ago

Kathleen, there is no separation of church and state. We are currently ruled by those who worship at the alter of Bael, the false god. We are ruled by the religion of whatever feels good, do it. Never mind the laws, never mind the Bible, just do it. Look around and see the destruction caused by those religions.

Islam is not a religion but a political system that demands submission. If you noticed, America used to prohibit Muslims from political office until just recently because the framers knew the problems that would arise.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
11 months ago

The Satanic Temple favors a ban on religious displays and religious activities on public property and in publicly funded institutions such as schools, courthouses, and government buildings. Its statement of ethical principles is very similar to those held by Secular Humanism which SCOTUS recognized as a non-theistic religion in 1961. In 2019 the IRS recognized the Satanic Temple as an organized religion that can apply for faith-based grants. And, as we all know, courts have generally ruled that publicly funded entities can’t permit a nativity scene but ban a menorah. But if the ST’s only goal was equal representation, why… Read more »

Zeph
11 months ago

What are people’s thoughts about lying to maintain confidences? I am thinking about situations that answering a question with any other answer could be to betray something that shouldn’t be betrayed. Say a spouse of a cop or lawyer etc.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
11 months ago
Reply to  Zeph

It’s really tricky. I assume you mean the kind of situation where a refusal to answer a question would be interpreted as confirmation that the thing being questioned is true. “Is the woman next door having an affair?” “I’m not going to answer that.” Everyone would know you meant yes, she is. Catholic moral teaching is that you do not owe the truth to someone who has no right to it. You ordinarily have a duty not to injure someones reputation without extreme necessity. You also have a duty to keep confidences. But you’re not supposed to tell a direct… Read more »

Dave
Dave
11 months ago
Reply to  Zeph

Zeph, if you lie to maintain a confidence, you are just lying.

There are many ways to deflect such questions which are usually just attempts to gossip or to dig up dirt without actually speaking with the individuals involved to put out more gossip.

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago

In response to Doug’s response to my letter above, Doug it always seem so strange how it always seems to be those who are opposed to you who “have not thought this through”. I mean, it could not possibly be you who is in need of more thinking? The fact is, we are not talking about a “separation of morality and state”. Rather, we are talking about Christians being allowed to erect monuments, statues, religious symbols, etc. on government property, while at the same time these Christians want to forbid any other religion from doing the same, when the fact… Read more »

Dave
Dave
11 months ago

“The fact is, this country was founded upon allowing us all to determine our own standard, without the interference of the government.” Jack Jack, you are incorrect on the founding of our country. Below in the first Virginia Charter, the Great Commission is spelled out with clarity. America was founded on the Bible, not on our own standards without interference by our government.  “We greatly commending, and graciously accepting of, their desires for the furtherance of so noble a work, which may, by the providence of Almighty God, hereafter tend to the glory of his divine Majesty, in propagating of… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, You are not helping yourself by referring to what the first Virginia Charter had to say. We are talking about the Constitution of the United States, which prohibited the federal government from promoting any religion at all. Moreover, the Constitution does not mention Christianity, nor does it mention Christ, and I can assure you that a nation founded upon the Christian faith would mention Christ. This does not mean that the federal government could prevent the individual states from being tied to some sort of religion, it simply meant that the federal government would not be involved in religious… Read more »

Last edited 11 months ago by Jack O'neal Hanley
Dave
Dave
11 months ago

“The fact is, this country was founded upon allowing us all to determine our own standard, without the interference of the government.” No America was not founded so we could all just do what we want to do. It was built on the foundation of the Bible and the solid rock that is Jesus Christ. What was the first founding document of America before the Constitution? The Virginia Charter. That is an old historical fact that used to be taught in school to prevent false starts about our country. Perhaps you would like to zip back to Leif Erickson, the… Read more »

Cherrera
Cherrera
11 months ago
Reply to  Dave

In addition, if we could all determine our own standards and not have other standards force on us, there would be no transgender teachings or porn in public schools, no tax dollars going to Planned Parenthood/SPLC, no mandates to close Sunday worship based on a virus, no “blasphemy” laws for saying something homophobic or racist according to government officials, etc. This allegedly neutral, “you can’t legislate morality” secular democracy (read: Global American Empire) idea is such a joke. We’re as religious as ever. In fact, we have a lot more enforced “morality” than we did 40 years ago. It’s just… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Dave

You say, “No America was not founded so we could all just do what we want to do.” This is not what I said. What I am saying is, this nation was founded upon allowing each individual to worship God in any way they saw fit. It’s called, “freedom of religion” not “freedom of Christianity”. If this nation “was built on the foundation of the Bible and the solid rock that is Jesus Christ” then why does the founding documents not mention the Bible, nor name the Name of Christ? I can tell you why. It is because this document… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
11 months ago

Jack,

Where in Scripture do you get your virtue of pluralism? Can’t seem to find it in my translation anywhere. Pretty sure as Christians we are obligated to treat our religion as true and all others as false, not to treat them as equal.

Demanding your religion be treated as true over all others is consistency, not hypocrisy.

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, I have not said a thing in the world about “pluralism”. In fact, until now, I have not typed the word. I am standing up for the Constitution, which was given to us by a Christian society, whose standard was the Bible. This Christian society, whose standard was the Bible, prohibited the federal government from promoting any one religion over another. Now, you may believe the Constitution to be pluralistic and if so, the question I have is, are you ready to overthrow the Constitution in order to insist the federal government recognize Christianity as the one true religion,… Read more »

Dave
Dave
11 months ago

Jack, as a note, you are interpreting the Founding Fathers incorrectly as their papers clearly show that the desire was not to have an official United States religion such as the Church of England but to have a Christian nation.

The various states were actually founded by different denominations of Christians not by Hindus or Muslims or atheists or secularists, but by Christians and the thought of those false religions starting here was not envisioned.

The parallels between Old Testament Israel starting out holy, obeying God and then turning away because they didn’t follow God’s commands are obvious today.

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, You are simply incorrect! While it is true that there were states which were founded upon different Christian sects, this has nothing to do with the federal government. If the federal government would have intended this nation to be founded upon the Christian faith alone, they could have made this clear, by saying, freedom of Christianity, instead of, freedom of religion. The fact is, the founders do not mention Christianity in the Constitution, nor do they name the name of Christ. I will assure you that a nation which intends to be a Christian nation only, would name the… Read more »

Dave
Dave
11 months ago

Jack, when our country was being formed, the only religion among all the old, dead white guys who wrote things down on paper was Christianity. That is an uncomfortable fact for you and for those who want to say that America wasn’t founded as a Christian nation. The heathens were to be converted to Christianity, not the other way around. Christianity was the standard and that is in many of the old letters and documents if you want to search it out. It was not written into the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution as that would be the same… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, This is not at all an uncomfortable fact for me, because I have already stated that if you are claiming the United States used to be a Christian nation in the sense that most of those who were here at the time were Christian, then I would agree. However, this is not the same as saying the U.S. was founded upon the Christian religion, as your Judge Brewer clearly demonstrated above. Therefore, Christianity was the standard for most individuals of the U.S. but it was not the standard of the federal government since the Constitution prohibits the government from… Read more »

Cherrera
Cherrera
11 months ago

I appreciate the candor in your letter “However, if you Christians want to play this game…” It sounds like you don’t consider yourself a Christian. If so, I suggest you call the collection of gnostic and antinomian beliefs you can never support Biblically something else, maybe “Easy Believism Pseudo-Christian Thoughts with Jack O’neal Hanley” as a spin on the old SNL skit. As for your take on the Constitution and 1A, it’s rubbish. Most of the original colonies had established religions, and even New Jersey’s charter said “all persons, professing a belief in the faith of any Protestant sect, who… Read more »

Jack O'neal Hanley
Jack O'neal Hanley
11 months ago
Reply to  Cherrera

If you will notice, when I said, “However, if you Christians want to play this game” I was acting as though I was speaking for the group which set up the monument in the state capitol in Iowa. In other words, I was not speaking in the first person. You are correct in that, “most of the original colonies had established religions” but this has nothing whatsoever to do with the federal government. The federal government could not get involved in the religious affairs of the states exactly because the Constitution prohibited the federal government from getting involved in religious… Read more »