Wednesday, April 19, 2023
All that is not God
The Stoic paradox
Come, Holy Spirit, our hearts inspire
The Spirit’s enlightening influences.
COME, Holy Ghost, our hearts inspire;
Let us thine influence prove ;-
Source of the old prophetic fire;
Fountain of life and love.
2 Come, Holy Ghost, for moved by thee
The prophets wrote and spoke:
Unlock the truth, thyself the key;
Unseal the sacred book.
3 Expand thy wings, Celestial Dove;
Brood o’er our nature’s night;
On our disorder’d spirits move,
And let there now be light.
4 God, through himself,
We then shall know, If thou within us shine;
And sound, with all thy saints below,
The depths of love divine.
Charles Wesley
Methodist Episcopal hymnal (1870 edition)
Tuesday, April 18, 2023
On the merry-go-round
<idle musing>
Right. No wonder the early Christians found a fertile field! Once you are on the merry-go-round of self-improvement, it's only too easy to get discouraged—which is why in our social media age we curate our appearance. What you see isn't who you are is the watchword. Of course, Stoicism is more honest than that! They were actually working on changing and becoming. We, on the other hand, simply chase a virtual reality and try our best to ignore the real one.
How's that working for you?
Yeah. That's what I thought. Come home to Jesus and let him heal the broken self. As it says in Isa 55:
All of you who are thirsty,</idle musing>
come to the water!
Whoever has no money,
come, buy food and eat!
Without money, at no cost,
buy wine and milk!
2 Why spend money for what isn’t food,
and your earnings
for what doesn’t satisfy?
Listen carefully to me
and eat what is good;
enjoy the richest of feasts. (Isa 55:1–2 CEB)
Give it time
<idle musing>
Sorry. Doesn't work for me. I'm glad the Holy Spirit gives light to the blind; no need to go stumbling around and trying to fix yourself so you can fix yourself. The Holy Spirit does the fixing—and the teaching.
</idle musing>
Tozer for Tuesday
<idle musing>
And if that was true in the 1950s, just think how much truer it is today, 70 years later.
</idle musing>
Monday, April 17, 2023
A variation on a theme of discipleship
<idle musing>
There's a lot to be said for examples. But as Christians, we are told to imitate Jesus, which is a far higher ideal than a Seneca or a Cato or an Epictetus or a Marcus Aurelius. And, we are given the Holy Spirit to empower and guide us in that path.
Yep. I'll take the Christian way over the Stoic way, even while acknowledging that they have much of value. But, it is more a stream of light in a darkened corner than the flood of light in the revelation of God in Jesus.
</idle musing>
Not a lot of hope in that…
Sunday, April 16, 2023
Who wins?
<idle musing>
And we'll leave the book on that note. As I said, a delightful little read. I heartily encourage you to find the time to read it. At less than 200 pages, it's even a manageable read : )
</idle musing>
Saturday, April 15, 2023
The righteous one
<idle musing>
Add in the power of the Holy Spirit, and I'll endorse that view 100 percent!
</idle musing>
Sustaining grace
Sustaining grace prayed for.
TAUGHT by our Lord, we will not pray
Out of the world to be removed;
But keep us, in our evil day,
Till patient faith is fully proved.
2 From sin, the world, and Satan’s snare,
The members of thy Son defend,
Till all thy character we bear,
And grace matured in glory end.
Charles Wesley
Methodist Episcopal hymnal (1870 edition)
Friday, April 14, 2023
He accompanies us
And even then…
<idle musing>
And that should make us humble. And cause us to lower our expectations on what we can discover about the past. Part of it will always be unretrievable. No matter how much we dig up or how much we read, the past is still the past and much of it is beyond our grasp.
</idle musing>
It's untranslatable
<idle musing>
This makes loads of sense. There are many times when I'm trying to explain something from the ANE/OT/HB and the words and concepts just aren't there in our modern language. No matter how much you try, it just doesn't satisfy. It's untranslatable.
</idle musing>
Labor on in vain
No success without God’s blessing.
EXCEPT the Lord our labours bless,
In vain shall we desire success;
Except his guardian power restrain,
The watchman waketh but in vain.
2 'Tis useless toil our stores to keep,—
Early to rise and late to sleep,—
Unless the Lord, who reigns on high,
His providential care supply.
3 Grant, Lord, that we may ever flee
For guidance and for help to thee ;
Thy blessing ask, whate’er we do,
And in thy strength our work pursue.
William Hiley Bathurst
Methodist Episcopal hymnal (1870 edition)
Thursday, April 13, 2023
Original sin?
<idle musing>
I picked up this book at our local used bookstore. It was on the discount cart for $1.00. I more than got my money's worth. I'm only going to cherry pick a few choice paragraphs from it, but if you ever see a copy, it would be worth your trouble to pick it up. It's not very common in libraries, but I think you can find one at the Internet Archive. Not sure if they still allow you to check it out, what with the court ruling (we won't get into that travesty of justice right now!).
OI, that aside, I find this view of Adam very interesting and have been leaning that way more and more. Once you remove the strongly Augustinian and Reformer-heavy views of the Bible, it seems to be the plain reading of the text. Having said that, there is a lot to be said for the idea of original sin—just remove all the sexual transmission stuff from it.
</idle musing>
A second "first language"
<idle musing>
Boy, ain't that the truth! That's why interlinears are worthless. And why trying to learn a language as an exercise in "decoding" is a waste. Languages represent a culture; they express a way of life. I like this idea of learning a culture as a "second first language." Naming it as such makes sense of some of the things I've been noticing in my approach to the ANE and biblical texts.
They are alive in a different way than they used to be. Could it be that finally after almost 45 years I'm starting to internalize some of this stuff? (Well, in fairness, it's been happening for longer than recently, but I just noticed it moreso recently.)
</idle musing>
It's the narrative
Fixed on God
Self-dedication to the Lord.
O LORD, thy heavenly grace impart,
And fix my frail, inconstant heart;
Henceforth my chief desire shall be
To dedicate myself to thee.
2 Whate’er pursuits my time employ,
One thought shall fill my soul with joy:
That silent, secret thought shall be,
That all my thoughts are fix’d on thee.
3 Thy glorious eye pervadeth space;
Thy presence, Lord, fills every place;
And wheresoe’er my lot may be,
Still shall my spirit rest with thee.
4 Renouncing every worldly thing,
And safe beneath thy spreading wing,
My sweetest thought henceforth shall be.
That all I want I find in thee.
Jean Frederic Oberlin, trans. Lucy Sarah Atkins Wilson
Methodist Episcopal hymnal (1870 edition)
<idle musing>
I was able to track down some info on the author; you can find it here. Especially interesting is his desire to educate the local populace. And that Oberlin, OH is named after him, which means that Oberlin College is heir to his methods. Fascinating stuff one learns in reading about the authors of hymns, isn't it?
</idle musing>
