Letters to Brighten Your Morning

Sharing Options
Show Outline with Links

More on Pella

I want to thank you for your post, As the Fighting Moderates Mount the Lone Bulwark.
Your fair, honest, and always erudite observations refresh me and my family in the midst of our current challenges here in Pella. Please accept my thanks to you and to God for your willingness and ability to confront, admonish, and encourage Christ’s body.
Because of Jesus,

djl

djl, thank you.
Respectfully, could you prayerfully consider your response to the Pella situation in”As the Fighting Moderates Mount the Lone Bulwark”? Even if their behavior was supremely unsavory, Blake Callens is an accuser of the brethren. He called Dusty Deevers intentionally evil, publicly opposes William Wolfe in the SBC every chance he gets, and wouldn’t hesitate to dox me or any other man with a family if we publicly expressed views slightly to the right of John McCain.

You gave him air time, and let a pastor and congregation in your own denomination get publicly flogged. Young men asking questions and circling the rabbit hole just have one more reason now to discard voices like yours that could have had a moderating and positive influence. Those men would never have boosted feminists and liberals attacking you over Stitler or Ride Sally Ride but you turned around and did exactly that to them.

Please consider deleting brother. Our issues right now are the ravenous wolves on the left. We can deal with the unsightly parts of the right in God’s timing, once the existential threat to the West is dealt with.

An anon Texan

AnonTex, I agree that Callens is a messed up dude. We have been the recipients of his slanders as well. But we didn’t give him air time—he already had that, and what he published needed to be placed in context.

Too Common a Problem

Marriage counseling question: How would you counsel a husband whose wife consistently cuts him and his children down verbally when she gets angry. It does not happen often, but when it does, she gets ugly and personal. The husband does not tolerate it, and intercedes when it happens, but it only stops temporarily. She is never genuinely sorry for the pain she causes, but is willing to stop when he gets angry. They are both Christians, and refuse to ever get divorced, but they now have effectively become emotionally divorced as a result of her personal verbal assaults.

How can this be redeemed?

Anon

Anon, this is a hard and terrible place to be. You can pray for me as I am starting to think about a possible book project. As Though She Were an Adversary—a book on how to deal with intractable situations in marriage that do not rise to the level of divorce.

Alistair Alternatives

Responding to the latest on Alistair: I suggest an alternate take I haven’t heard elsewhere. Alistair’s position is the conceit of the professional class. Where what the pastor does is somehow disconnected and completely different from other believers. In other words, the priesthood of all believers is more one of opportunity rather than current reality.

I once had a drawn out argument with a full-time, credentialed, installed and ordained pastor friend of mine. (me being but a former pastor, part-time speaker, etc). He insisted that while he could never officiate at a same-sex wedding it was perfectly fine for a photographer, a baker, or a musician to play at that wedding. As if somehow something I do unto to the Lord is left at the door of a same-sex gig. And if a musician adds to a wedding in a similar vein as a pastor then the same should apply to an attendee who sits in the pew or chair. Weddings are not private affairs—they are done in the presence of community as a testimony. Therefore the “mere” attendees, the bakers, the musicians, the photographers, and the pastor all perform a role—not one is of lesser importance than the other.
And this is the conceit that Alistair is conducting. The conceit of a professional, pastoral class of priests who have different rules from the plebs they pontificate to every Sunday.

Please note, my intent is not to denigrate the role and office of a pastor. Far from it—but neither should we denigrate and diminish the role of other believers.
I want to give Alistair the benefit of the doubt . . . but the stink of his conceit rises to the heavens on this one.

Jeff

Jeff, thanks.
What are the limits on Roman’s 14? I heard it applied to Alistair Begg’s comment on “wedding” attendance. It seems like the passage does apply to more than weaker brother dietary restrictions and sabbath observance but what would be the limit before you admonish the weaker bother?
Thanks,

Steve

Steve, I would say that you admonish the weaker brother, first, when he demands compliance with his scruples from everybody all the time, and not just out of deference to him, and secondly, when his scruples extend beyond the kinds of things that Scripture defines as adiaphora—as, for example, if he says that he is conscience bound to take multiple wives.
I have been greatly blessed by your ministry and the ministry of your family/the other Moscow ministries over the last 10 years or so. I grew up at Parkside church w Alistair Begg as my pastor; I am married w children in another part of the state but my mother is still a member. I thought your analysis of what Pastor Begg thinks he’s doing versus what he’s actually doing was spot on. What distresses me about the response of others online, is that they are shocked by his comments rather than seeing how consistent they are with his “bridge building, winsome, Christianity is not political” beliefs. He has held these the entire time I have known him. I love him dearly, I am thankful for his being a father in the faith to me. But I see the effects this has on real people that I know with regard to the COVID response, patriarchy vs complementarianism, and a host of other issues. My mother for example, is depressed because she doesn’t know what her job is as an unmarried woman with no children in the house—there’s a deficit in the preaching. And yet, Parkside rightly placed my father under church discipline for adultery and helped provide for her while she got on her feet. Parkside has not changed, the culture has. The deficiency is more noticeable. I feel divided on the response of some to “cancel him” for these comments. There is still so much faithfulness at Parkside. Don’t worry, I’m submissive to my husband and our local elders on these matters, but am reaching out to you since you are able to articulate these distinctions in a helpful way.
Thank you,

Meredith

Meredith, thanks for the additional perspective.
Alister Begg Question: Two things regarding the Begg question. 1) I think the Grandmother should not have passed the buck to another (in this case Alister Begg and stood on her own convictions. 2) I wonder if the trans-couple would have had enough love of their own to understand how the grandmother felt, and out of that love, excused her from coming to the wedding while remaining in a close relationship. This is all about “normalizing” the illicit relationship for the trans-couple. Sorry, I don’t buy Alister’s take on the whole idea of somehow showing compassion justifies attending. We can show compassion in other ways.

Rob

Rob, right. We cannot let the sexual revolution dictate to us what compassion should look like. That is defined by Scripture.
I agree with the position that Christians should not attend homosexual or trans “weddings” and I agree with all of the reasons why. My question is in regards to pastoral actions when they have congregants that disagree. If the pastor or pastors of a church think it’s a thing that Christians ought not do, but some members disagree and align more with Begg’s position and they decide to attend their son’s or nephew’s or friend’s illegitimate wedding ceremony, what then? Beyond a conversation with that member to convince them otherwise, what recourse should pastors take beyond that, if any, and how far should it go?

Rope

Rope, I would address that kind of situation via direct action, and here is what I mean. I would have the elders charge the pastor with the responsibility of preaching a sermon series on it. Secondly, if any of the people attending such ceremonies are church officers, elders or deacons, I would remove them. And I believe that this would be discouragement enough for the compromised in the congregation. They would either submit to the leadership of the church, or leave.
I would argue that attending the wedding is even worse than the alt-right bbq you mentioned. What Alistair came to in his reasoning is contradictory to his position.
What we must remember is what a wedding actually is. It’s a ceremony; a ritual. It’s more than the bride and groom. There is a reason why the officiant traditionally says “We are gathered here today to bear witness the joining of . . .” Those in attendance have their own role to play. The purpose of the wedding is to gain public affirmation of the union, and that is gained by the celebration.

And while I can’t claim to know why Begg chooses to be blind to this, it goes against his own comments. We can neither revile, nor can we affirm—but by attending, we do affirm. And in this case, it’s a mockery of God’s intended purpose of a man cleaving to his own wife, so how can we be part of that in any way? We cannot be partakers of another man’s sin, but his own advice, if followed, does that very thing.

Ronald

Ronald, yes, exactly.
Re: Alistair Beggs the Question “It is not just the doing of vile deeds that are a concern here. It is also the approval of them. And the devil, master of deception, is prepared to be pretty devious in how he gets Christians to believe that capitulation to the spirit of the age is somehow an exercise in risk-taking. He gets them to approve of such things in a way that provides them with some level of deniability, even to themselves. Especially to themselves.”

Doug,

Spot on. And hasn’t some of Satan’s best work been to get the American church to fashion evangelism into an idol?

It seems that this is a big reason why Christians can approve of so many vile things while maintaining some level of deniability.

Because it is not November, I’m happy to point out that evangelism is obviously good, right, necessary, and requires Christian obedience.

However, in the idolization of evangelizing the lost, it seems Evangelicals are convinced that it is better for the lost not to be offended by Christ rather than obey him.

Tyler

Tyler, yes, and thanks.

I have a question that I would love to get your response to if you find the time. I recently saw your video post responding to Pastor Begg on the issue of attending a gay or trans wedding. I found myself totally in agreement with you even before I watched your video on it. I serve alongside another pastor here in Illinois and we have been discussing this issue over the last few days. We see eye-to-eye on this issue and we also agree that this may be a problem on the horizon for our members to face. We want to lead them well through it. We are planning on counseling them away from Pastor Begg’s position on the matter. We see the ceremony / reception as something that Christians should avoid in the name of love and compassion. However, how would you handle the situation where one of your members agrees more with Begg and truly sees their attendance as something that can keep a door of influence open?

Ben, the other pastor here with me, came across this sentiment on Twitter. While we disagree with it, we can see how people may also come to this sentiment.

“If I’ve got to go down on the side of one or the other, I’ll go down on this side. I’ll go down on the side of compassion, with people accusing me of weakness… rather than go down on the side of condemnation, which closes any doors of opportunity for future engagement.”

We find this statement easy to disagree with and argue against. However, what would you do in the case of one of your members being convinced of this argument line and attending a gay or trans wedding? Would you call them to repent of going or even move towards discipline if they refuse?

We want to hold the line on this important issue, but we also don’t want to try to perform surgery with a chainsaw.

Any thoughts you may have would be appreciated!

Pastor Alex

Alex, first, see my reply above to Rope. And secondly, I would add this. “Coming down on the side of compassion” is a really problematic answer. You don’t show compassion to deluded people by catering to their delusion. Compassion reaches out, but doesn’t reach out with a lie. And next, this answer buries the question, “compassionate to whom?” By trying to encourage compassion to the deluded couple, Alistair was not showing compassion to the grandmother, who needed support in doing what she knew she needed to do. And she didn’t get it.

Bitterness

I am planning to get the book on bitterness that is highlighted on your web site. I am struggling with anger and bitterness for a long, long time now. I used to live a life of sin, and even though God brought me out of that long ago, the consequences of that is that even my family, formerly close friends, etc. want nothing to do with me and consider me a pariah. As I said, I have repented of that life long ago, and I have sought to be restored to those who were close in my life, but to no avail. You know initially, during the first several years after my conversion, I was happy and joyful, but as I began to see the ramifications of my previous life, I also saw how those close to me dealt with that. No amount of pleading has changed their mind about me. As a result, I have no happiness, in fact, major depression.

Anyway, I guess my question is this: I cannot figure out how to navigate things given my experience that even though there is forgiveness with God, but there appears to be none with mankind. I know that God’s forgiveness is ultimately what matters, but I struggle with the joy of my salvation being overwhelmed by mankind’s lack of forgiveness, and I just can’t seem to figure out things in light of that.

I think there’s a question in there somewhere but I don’t know how else to say it.

FG

FG, first, yes, get the booklet. It has been a tremendous help to thousands in your position. Secondly, step into the shoes of those who are “not forgiving” you, and lay out some of the options for how they might explain themselves to a third party. What are the possibilities? One would be “I want to hurt him the way he hurt us.” That would just be plain old sin, and you aren’t in a position to do anything about it. But another one could be, “The way he pleads for forgiveness is just the way he used to manipulate us all. He is not repentant.” That is something you could do something about.

Book Recommendation

Book recommendation: I wouldn’t recommend this to any but mature Christians because the author is a freak and very wrong about many things but it’s fascinating and he touches on several things that interest you, the evil of empathy for one. His main point is that we’re being deliberately programmed toward a dystopian nightmare. I expect he’s right about that. He draws heavily on Orwell and Huxly but should have read That Hideous Strength.

Blessings!

Rob

Rob, thank you.

Application

The Great Gospel-Centered Crack-Up

Hello. If you could, can you give me a list of scriptures to best prove this truth on application.

I am in conversation with a man who is considered for leadership who has some aversions to specific applications.

R

R, I would point to the second half of Ephesians, to James 1:22, and John 14:15. And countless other passages.

Sure Thing

Regarding weddings of cohabiting unbelievers, what are your thoughts on children participating in the wedding party?

Jay

Jay, it appears my take on this differs from that of others, but marriage is a good thing, and getting out of sin is a good thing. It seems to be something you can explain to the kids in five minutes. “Kids, you know that mom and dad think that your uncle shouldn’t have been living with his girlfriend, and even though they don’t know the Lord yet, this is a good step they are taking.” You are not celebrating sin, but rather celebrating the end of that particular sin.

Check It Out

[Regarding a book, Mercy in Motion] . . . Anyways, my question: For someone like me, who doesn’t have a following and for all intents and purposes is a “nobody” in the world of the who’s who. How long do I keep pushing it, when there is little to no traction on it? It’s been a year and while I got a good review from a podcaster within the circles I run in, there just doesn’t seem to be anyone willing to read it. And it could be that it’s just not that good. Which I’m willing to accept and walk away from. Anyway, that’s my question. How long should I keep pushing it? I’m open to any counsel you have on the matter. I have thick skin, I can take it.

Freddy

Freddy, I would push it a little bit more. I think a good rule of thumb on such things is to give it three good tries, and after that needing guidance to keep on.

Commentaries

I hope this finds you well. I wanted your advice on solid exegetical commentaries to read on the book of Joshua. I managed to get a hold of John Calvin’s commentary and the NICOT (New International Commentary on the Old Testament) Commentary. I’m from South Africa and recently I’ve been having to deal with Hebrew Roots movement advocates and I’ve got my work cut out for me. I’m planning on starting my Bachelor’s of Divinity later this year, so hopefully that will also help, but I’m trying to get going as best I can so long. Any advice would be really appreciated.

All the best to you and yours

Johann

Johann, Calvin would be good, as well as the standard evangelical commentaries. But I am afraid I have not preached through Joshua, and my knowledge of good commentaries would be on the thin side. We can crowd source this though. Anyone?
Thank you so much for what you do. Your work has been a great help to me. Can you recommend a Bible commentary or more than one that has the postmillennial worldview?

Is there a Scofield slayer out there!? Ha ha ha.

Gustavo

Gustavo, I am afraid I do not know of one. Anyone?

Adoption

Concerning SR’s question about domestic adoption. I’ve been down that road and would encourage you to walk it if you have $60k to spend ($10-$20k of it at risk!) on an adoption. There are Christian agencies out there like Mustard Seed Consultants that I’d encourage you to check out. I’m in the midst of the process myself . . . and wouldn’t recommend it to anyone. Out of the 15 or so cases that have come across my email I have only qualified to throw my hat in the ring for about 4 (and the cost of entry to even see cases cost me about $7k). That is due to the fact that the majority of the cases we’ve seen only want black or bi-racial parents, or only parents who don’t have any children already. It’s a tough racket, and you have to be okay with the adoption agencies making the majority of the money you spend without justifying where it’s actually going . . .”marketing- $5000, consulting fee-$2000 etc.” What I would recommend instead is for you to get involved in foster care in your area. I’ve adopted two children that way and given a temporary home to about 6-7 more. These are truly children in need whom the Father cares much about. There are also a couple hundred thousand foster children awaiting adoption, and you can go here and literally just pick out a few kids and get paid to adopt them. A lot of states will actually subsidize you adopting kids from foster care.

Spread the word! Foster care participation is something Christians must do, salt and light and all that. Will be praying for you, SR. Before you get started ask yourself this question: “If I was in foster care would I want a loving Christian family to let me live with them?”

Pick up your cross and follow Christ!

Tim

Tim, thank you.

When the Clowns Go Reeeee

Regarding your statement, “I don’t react even a little whenever the clowns go reeeeeee. After a while you don’t hear it anymore. It is like living by the train station.” Color me impressed! I have lived among the clowns (life in Portland). I have lived by busy train crossings. I daresay i found the latter only took weeks to become accustomed to whereas the former continues to grate. Is there some trick I am missing here?

Nathan

Nathan, okay. Maybe it is more like tinnitus.

Geocentricity

So, I see that you decided to lump geocentrists in with the rest of your puppies and kittens in your most recent article. I guess that also includes Calvin and Luther, who vehemently opposed Copernicus? I guess they just didn’t know any better. Maybe they needed more of “the science.” What so many non-physicists have no clue about is that all of our physics that we have ever discovered/developed work out exactly the same whether you have a Copernican view of the universe or a Tychonian one. Truly the only deciding factor is (on the part of the unbeliever) a prior philosophical commitment to how important the earth is in the grand scheme of things. And some Christians would add to that philosophical consideration a few scriptural considerations (such as the way Joshua says that God stopped the sun—not the earth—and the way David talks about the sun running its course with joy, etc.).

Why is it that Ernst Mach and Albert Einstein can understand that there is no difference to physics whether the earth is the unmoving center of the universe or it is just some loser cosmic speck of dirt, but pastors will laugh at anyone who suggests such a thing on biblical grounds? I bet many of them were laughing about those who opposed the vaccine and mask mandates too. “Such puppies and kittens coming out to play! Can you believe these morons? Pretty much in the same category as antisemites, amirite?”

So maybe—just maybe—don’t assume for a moment that you know everything about cosmology or physics and allow yourself to learn something new that may really charge you up to see even more of the glory of God in creation. Try to find a copy of Gerardus Buow’s “Geocentricity: Christianity in the Woodshed”, or Russell T. Arndts’ “Geocentricity, Relativity and the Big Bang”. I guarantee that you will think differently about the subject once you have read one of those. In fact, I’d place a bet on it! If you don’t change your mind on the whole idea to a much more friendly view, then I will take you out to eat at Chili’s the next time you are in Georgia, and you can order anything—not just the Three for Me deal.
Now are you going to pass up an offer like that?

Corey

Corey, without getting into all the fine shades of distinction between various kinds of geocentrists, I will only pause to assure you that when it comes to cosmology and relativity, I am already guilty of various heresies.

Christian Prince?

You answered my question related to this a few weeks back but I could still use some help. You said in Christendom and Christdumber:

“The Christian approach argues that man is so far corrupted that we cannot entrust too much power to any human entity or person, which means that we have to spread the political power as thinly as possible. That is the Christian view, and it rests on our doctrine of sin.”

I’m having a hard time squaring this with theonomy/CN/MC-not-dumber. I know we don’t want a theocracy per se, but aside from a dumb majority-rule setup like we pretty much have now but one where the majority is Christian, how does it work without one uncomfortably powerful man?

Austin

Austin, the more Christian influence on government, the less power that government will seek to gather to itself. In other words, checks and balances, federalism, and limited government is the framework for Mere Christendom.
How should Christians make application of the shrewd servant parable in Luke 16. The conclusion seems to be “make friends for yourselves from the wealth of unrighteousness, so that when it fails, they will take you into the eternal dwellings” (v 9 LSB). But what does that mean? And how should we apply it today?

Best,

Peter

Peter, I think it means that we should use our resources for things like hospitality and other forms of generosity as a means of growing and expanding the kingdom. That meal you shared with someone was a step toward their conversion, and so they welcome you to eternal habitations. One of the lesser instruments in their conversion was the price you paid for that roast at Safeway.

A Delicate Matter

Not a troll post, but what if a Christian man has a micro-penis? (yes this is a real condition where the penis only grows 1 to 3 Inches when erect) Does he tell his potential wife or not and brace for the inevitable disappointment on the wedding day? Obviously this shouldn’t be first date subject material, but when things start to get serious this feels like the kind of thing you should tell a woman you want to marry. Any advice you have towards handling sensitive matters like this when dating would be appreciated.

J

J, not taken as a troll post. It is truly a misfortune for those afflicted. In such a circumstance, I believe the man should make sure the woman is apprised somehow (maybe through her dad) before she becomes emotionally invested. If the condition is of such a nature as to make intercourse impossible, then he should not be pursuing anyone anyhow. But if sexual intercourse would be possible, but sure to be a wedding night disappointment, she should be brought up to speed before he begins pursuing her seriously.

Thank James for Me

Here’s what James White said about you in his sermon series on baptism: “I’ve said this on my program, and I’ll say it here. I’ve now gotten to spend enough hours over the last two trips I’ve made to Moscow with Doug. Here’s the most important thing I can say about him. He is what he is wherever he is. The man that I sat there eating crisp meat burritos with is the same man you hear on Blog & Mablog, the same man you hear preaching at Christ Church. He just is who he is, and that means he’s consistent. That is the best thing you can say about anybody.”

How do I be like you (“is what he is wherever he is”)? What specifically do I need to know (book recommendations) and do?

Best,

Jake

Jake, thanks. The best thing I can suggest is that you make it a point of personal discipline to address inconsistencies openly. For example, when you notice you said one thing to one person, and a different thing to somebody else, go and put it right. Openly dealing with inconsistency will be a great aid in developing consistency.

Applying in the Cracks and Corners

In Toppling the Cosplay Satan, you said that Christian leaders will need a black belt in casuistry. As a pastor, this is evident. Reading a few books may help us pass the white belt exam, but what is available for the black belt level of training? Any thoughts? Perhaps New Saint Andrews could offer a graduate degree in what William Perkins calls case divinity.

Jesse

Jesse, yes. Or something like Baxter’s Directory.

Age of the Earth Litmus Test

A reader wrote: “a litmus test in my mind for how much I can trust a Christian pastor/apologist/blogger/etc. based on their view of the age of the earth, 6 literal days of creation, evolution, and global flood. If they fall on the side of taking the old earth/day-age/theistic evolution/local flood points of view, OR saying that they are possible and running cover for those views (punching right happily all the while), then I consider that someone who is to not be heavily trusted as a source of wisdom”

To which you responded:

“it is not wrong to be wary. It is not wrong to be willing to learn from such men where you can, but in this area, wariness is a virtue.”

As someone who consistently points out that defining days in terms of hours, minutes, and seconds—which are mathematical terms of rotation and arc, meaning they require a rotating earth to have been created to actually make sense—and therefore make the definition of day entirely arbitrary or nonsensical if taken literally the first few days . . . I want to ask if you how strict the litmus test is for any other sort of theological difference? It seems, when it gets down to it, that there are probably as many different theologies as there are Christians, and the rules should always be the same:

First: judge the fruit of the tree to determine if they really are Christian (anything labeled progressive Christianity usually falls away pretty quickly here, for example)

Second: take every theological tenet with a grain of salt, but also one’s own theology with a grain of salt, realizing that only Christ has perfect faith and theology, and try and reason as best as one can about the topic, with Scripture as the primary source and natural revelation as reinforcement, and generally considering the different theological traditions and history as some pretty good guidelines of what one’s thoughts should debate.

It seems like under these rules, any and all theological differences can be appropriately weighed. I consider you a great source of wisdom and a theological waypoint, even though I am continuationist, amillennial, and old-world creationist—but I know where you stand and that you have strong and well-reasoned faith, and I know where the others I look up to stand and their strength and well-reasoned faith, and therefore I know that on any given issue I can look in these differing directions as reliable resources and counterpoints as I try to find where my own faith ends up.

Ian

Ian, I think your rules are good. And wariness, as I would define it, would be described as the disposition to apply those rules.

Classical Electives

Is a computer programming course of some type for high schoolers appropriate for a classical christian education K-12 school? Or does it not really fit into the classical education model?

Would love any guidance / advice you can give on this.

Humble Computer Programmer

HCP, it is absolutely appropriate as an elective. I don’t think there should be too many electives offered, but that kind of thing would be great.

Plodcast Question

I love your Plodcast book reviews. I don’t see the books listed in your episode info. There is a list by year and month of reviews but it doesn’t have a link back to the source. Are the months listed only of the Plodcast or is the blog or other source referred to as well? Have you considered clipping out the book reviews and re-releasing them as a separate podcast? The list is not up-to-date yet. I was trying to find the author’s name for Rabbit in your recent review and it is harder to find without it listed in the episode info at least

Any update on Ride, Sally, Ride movie?

Greg

Greg, sorry. On the way the Plodcast is posted, I literally have no idea. The pen name of the author of Rabbit is Charles Higgins. And it was decided that to do Ride Sally right, we needed a lot more money than we were likely to get.
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
22 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
MidwestJohn
MidwestJohn
9 months ago

In response to a possible new book titled “As Though She Were an Adversary”: This sounds like a fantastic resource. I would encourage you to include chapters such as:

  • Working towards course correction when it’s been going on for 25 years
  • How to know if your sin started it, or if it’s an issue all his/her own
  • Knowing when it’s time to die to self, and when it’s time to have a discussion, and how to follow through on either
  • Tugging on the string without unraveling the sweater

Suggesting on behalf of a friend…

Blueboy
Blueboy
9 months ago
Reply to  MidwestJohn

The book would have to be volume 1. As I believe this is one of the most underrated ministries in need of attention. I was a lonely fool that burned with lust, so I found a woman and asked her her name. It has been pure hell. There has been no biblical reason to divorce her, however, there is more than just the sin of lust burning in me over all the years. I am no Gem of a husband either. The volumes may mitigate Pastor Doug’s responses to letters from “30,000 ft”. *How to recognize which of the five… Read more »

Chris
Chris
9 months ago
Reply to  Blueboy

There are professionals outside of the church that are much more suited for this.

The Gottman Method is a great place to start researching that is generally applied as a place to start and give shape and words to your dilemma.

Doug gives advice like, tell your girlfriend’s dad about your micro penis.

Blueboy
Blueboy
9 months ago
Reply to  Chris

Man I wish I could get a percentage of what Doug would owe if you charged him rent for the space he is occupying in that cute little head of yours. I’m very thankful and grateful for his ministry and looking forward to reading whatever books he writes and/or recommends. I pray that God would help benefit you all the same. Professionals outside the church?…that’s a good one!

Michelle
Michelle
9 months ago

Peter, This is a wonderful meditation on Luke 16 by Oliver O’Donovan. I found it very helpful. https://soundcloud.com/user-240690980/sets/2024-uk-convivium?utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing

Jane
Jane
9 months ago

I would take issue with Rob’s first point. Of course it is possible that that grandma is asking the pastor in order to avoid taking responsibility for the decision, but it’s both uncharitable and logically unwarranted to assume that asking a pastor’s advice is automatically an evasion of responsibility. It’s absolutely one of the things you should do when struggling with a moral dilemma.

Rob
Rob
9 months ago
Reply to  Jane

Jane, This is a dilemma, but not a moral one. This is a clear failure to take a tough stand and condoning a union that mocks the institution of marriage ordained only by God and shifting the decision to a pastor…. as if the pastor can make it all right. The grandmother did not want to pay the price. I’m not unsympathetic to her dilemma but I know these are the choices brought on us by a world gone wrong. That is why our Lord made the declaration that our love for His truth will cause a division between us… Read more »

Last edited 9 months ago by Rob
Jane
Jane
9 months ago
Reply to  Rob

It’s not a moral dilemma to you because you’ve figured out the answer. Same with me. I don’t find it a hard question, either. But not everyone is born understanding everything.

I just don’t think you need to assume bad faith when lack of understanding is always a possibility.

Gray
Gray
9 months ago
Reply to  Jane

A general observation regarding “ask the pastor”. While I understand the reflex to extend grace to granny, it really does underscore the depraved moral relativism extent in the culture, and in Christianity in particular. Why would any Christian (or any sane person) need to “ask the pastor”: “Well my grandson is marrying his pet dog and he has requested my attendance, thus extending my dignity to the event.” (And, people pretending that sodomy is something to be celebrated will eventually descend to bestiality being celebrated, because “love is love”.) Everyone involved in any of these perverted charades know what happens… Read more »

Jane
Jane
9 months ago
Reply to  Gray

Oh, I completely agree that her lack of understanding is not something to be dismissed lightly. But that is where we are, unfortunately. So it’s not really in keeping with understanding the times to assume that everybody really does “know better” and that a request for counsel on such a topic is necessarily a bad faith action. Even though we could say her ignorance is inexcusable barring her being quite a new convert, that is not the same thing as saying that it is so unlikely that she must be refusing to take responsibility for the situation. It’s not the… Read more »

Last edited 9 months ago by Jane
Ken B
Ken B
9 months ago
Reply to  Jane

I think grandma’s and Begg’s desire to maintain communication was a good one. The advice to attend was wrong in that this, as our host rightly maintains, is almost certainly going to taken as approval.

This is,however, the second case in the last couple of weeks where I have been shocked at the intemperate reaction of evangelicals. Almost a mirror image of the woke. Can’t cope with something they disagree with and cancel a man for one mistake. Trial by social media. The indifference to how this will come across to a watching world.

Jane
Jane
9 months ago
Reply to  Ken B

We still need to separate an intemperate response from a correct assessment that Begg mess up very badly here, though. It needs to be said clearly that he was wrong, and committed a very fundamental error. Not everything that people do as a consequence of that is justified, though.

Ken B
Ken B
9 months ago
Reply to  Jane

I think we are essentially in agreement. Begg, however, has not compromised on the sinful nature of LGBTQ, and his advice/suggestion to attend was where both parties understood grandma’s faith precluded her from approving the ‘marriage’. In practice grandma turning up would imo be a failure to ‘avoid the appearance of evil’, but this error does not justify the response of the evangelical establishment. At the very least it would be good if said establishment showed the same level of passion in dealing with the level of divorce in their own constituency. I am 100% with the no compromisers on… Read more »

Andrew Lohr
Andrew Lohr
9 months ago

Gustavo, I really like David Chilton’s book Paradise Restored–it was exactly what I needed when I was ready to move from uncertainty to (eventually) postmillenialism. Kenneth Gentry, more scholarly than Chilton but still readable, The Greatness of the Great Commission shorter, He Shall Have Dominion postmillennialism from the whole Bible in 600 pages. Amillennial but useful, Schofield-refuter The Momentous Event by W. J. Grier, and personal-practical, The Future of Everything book by Boekestein, both around 130 pages +-. (I take it Jesus started the millenium at His first coming; its length is not a specific 1000 years but indefinite, so… Read more »

Joe
Joe
9 months ago

Check out the Joshua commentaries by Richard Hess and Trent Butler.

DC
DC
9 months ago

Johann, A good, practical, expositional commentary on Joshua would be James Boice’s. It is not an academic commentary.

https://www.amazon.com/Joshua-Expositional-Commentary-James-Montgomery/dp/0801066468

Keith
Keith
9 months ago

As lay people, we enjoyed Dale Ralph Davis’, “Joshua, No Falling Words”, from Focus on the Bible commentary series.

Robert
Robert
9 months ago

Joshua commentary for Johann:

Every Promise of Your Word – The Gospel According to Joshua
by Rhett P. Dodson, Banner of Truth

Last edited 9 months ago by Robert
Nathan
Nathan
9 months ago

To the self-described, “old-world creationist” on “defining days in terms of hours, minutes, and seconds—which are mathematical terms of rotation and arc, meaning they require a rotating earth to have been created to actually make sense—and therefore make the definition of day entirely arbitrary or nonsensical if taken literally the first few days”. Do consider seriously two things. First, that outside the epistles, i the Bible was rarely, if ever written at the moment it was happening. So the authors regularly describe places and people with the current names and terms, being well aware of the time of their audience.… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
9 months ago

Not a complaint, but since I take Doug’s side so often in debates on the board it would seem appropriate to note that whenever I write a letter that contains a core of criticism, or something that can be interpreted as notable criticism, those are the letters that don’t make it into the weekly column.

I don’t mean to imply sinister motives, because I don’t think that’s the case, but I feel like since I get into so many arguments on here in defense of Doug that the record should reflect that I do write in to Doug with criticisms.

Terri
Terri
9 months ago

Did I understand Pastor Doug correctly regarding the man with the micro penis? That if indeed he has been afflicted by this he should not get married?? Thank you.

Terri
Terri
9 months ago

Posted wrong email. Sorry. Healthyenergy123@protonmail.com
Thanks!