Sermon Video Introduction: Self-deception is truly an interesting psychological phenomenon. I mean, whenever it occurs in your life, that means that you are the one lied to, and you are the liar, ...
A Little Folding of the Hands to Rest
“Christians aren’t perfect, just asleep on the couch.”
The Cultural Mind, p. 26
Probably All of Them
This is My Shocked Face
“Sinners don’t do well on Easy Street.”
The Cultural Mind, p. 25
Inverse Sabbaths
“We rest for one day and are refreshed and enabled to work before Him for the other six. But the modern man wants to work for five in order to play for two, and if the union negotiations are successful, work for four in order to play for three.”
The Cultural Mind, p. 25
Content Cluster Muster [05-19-22]
Exactly So: Kinda Road Trippy: And more here. A Song I Really Like for Some Reason: Good Fun: Can’t Be Too Careful: Jokes I Like to Tell: Once there was an elderly couple who lived a few miles out in the country. They had a nice country home, with a few out buildings. It was …
Logos Teacher Training. Still at It After All These Years.
So it is hard to believe, but we have been hosting summer training for teachers in classical Christian schools for 27 years now. If you would like join us this summer (or join us again this summer), we would be most pleased. This is training for teachers, administrators, and board members. Whether you’re new to …
Drunk in the Gutter
“Although the memory is dim, we still refer today to ‘the Protestant work ethic.’ This is like an impoverished man in the gutter recalling how wealthy his great-grandfather was.”
The Cultural Mind, p. 23
On Avoiding Romantic Reverie
Dear Darla, In my last letter I talked about the surreptitious competition that women tend to engage in, as opposed to the “out in the open” competition that is preferred by men. Men tend to compete ...
Affection, Not Affectation
“Next to the Scriptures, nothing makes a sermon more to pierce, than when it comes out of the inward affection of the heart without any affectation.”
William Ames, as quoted in Kent Hughes, Power in Weakness