I gotta have my orange juice.

Jesu, Juva

Water and wine

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Courage is almost a contradiction in terms. It means a strong desire to live taking the form of a readiness to die. “He that will lose his life, the same shall save it,” is not a piece of mysticism for saints and heroes. It is a piece of everyday advice for sailors or mountaineers. It might be printed in an Alpine guide or a drill book. This paradox is the whole principle of courage; even of quite earthly or quite brutal courage. A man cut off by the sea may save his life if he will risk it on the precipice.

He can only get away from death by continually stepping within an inch of it. A soldier surrounded by enemies, if he is to cut his way out, needs to combine a strong desire for living with a strange carelessness about dying. He must not merely cling to life, for then he will be a coward, and will not escape. He must not merely wait for death, for then he will be a suicide, and will not escape. He must seek his life in a spirit of furious indifference to it; he must desire life like water and yet drink death like wine. No philosopher, I fancy, has ever expressed this romantic riddle with adequate lucidity, and I certainly have not done so. But Christianity has done more: it has marked the limits of it in the awful graves of the suicide and the hero, showing the distance between him who dies for the sake of living and him who dies for the sake of dying. And it has held up ever since above the European lances the banner of the mystery of chivalry: the Christian courage, which is a disdain of death; not the Chinese courage, which is a disdain of life.

Chesterton, Orthodoxy

Written by Scott Moonen

March 20, 2024 at 1:27 pm

Posted in Quotations

Kept alive

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Seeing the parental relation is what the Scripture describes it, and seeing Satan has perverted it since the fall for the diffusion and multiplication of depravity and eternal death, the education of children for God is the most important business done on earth. It is the one business for which the earth exists. To it all politics, all war, all literature, all money-making, ought to be subordinated; and every parent especially ought to feel, every hour of the day, that, next to making his own calling and election sure, this is the end for which he is kept alive by God—this is his task on earth.

Dabney, Parental Responsibilities

Written by Scott Moonen

March 20, 2024 at 7:09 am

Posted in Parenting, Quotations

Tongues and Prophecy

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In this essay I explore what Paul means by prophecy and tongues in his first letter to the Corinthians. I suggest that:

  • By “prophecy” Paul generally means the church’s corporate prayer and especially singing, especially in the vernacular; and
  • By “tongues” Paul means worship in Hebrew rather than in the vernacular.

Prophecy

I take it for granted that 1 Corinthians 11 is addressing corporate worship, including Paul’s dealings with head coverings. This poses a problem: why does Paul countenance women’s praying and prophesying in corporate worship, when in chapter 14 he requires them to be silent?

We know that there is a sense in which prophecy can essentially mean spiritual song, as it does in the case of Saul and the company of prophets in 1 Samuel chapters 10 and 19. I suggest that this is the sense in which Paul is speaking of prayer and prophecy in chapter 11. Setting aside the question of whatever is meant by head covering, the prayer and prophecy that he is referring to must be the corporate prayer and song of the assembled church; this is within the extent of the words, and it is only at this point in the service that women are not silent.

Let’s consider whether this pattern holds in the more difficult passage of chapter 14.

Tongues

Chapter 14 is difficult to parse. Few interpretations make sense of the apparent contradictions in this passage. Paul does not wish to pray without understanding—and yet he speaks in tongues more than the Corinthians. Tongues are a sign to unbelievers (I assume this is unbelieving Jews)—and yet the Corinthians are not to speak in uninterpreted tongues lest the unbelievers fail to be convicted.

The charismatic interpretation that glossa = glossolalia seems to align with the general idea of unintelligibility that Paul is expressing, but it does not address Paul’s apparent contradictions. Worse, it is inconsistent with other occurrences of tongues in the NT, which generally seem to refer to known human languages. Moving from charismatic to cessationist interpretations, I’m intrigued by James Jordan’s observation that the church likely worshipped next to the Jewish synagogue (see Acts 18:7). The fact that the church’s worship would have been in Greek underscores the prophecy from Isaiah 28 that Paul cites. However, if we take glossa simply to refer to the church’s worshipping in Greek, this makes no sense of Paul’s argument, since it suggests that Greek may be unintelligible, and implies that he is forbidding worship in uninterpreted Greek.

There are a number of cases in the New Testament where God enacts an ironic reversal of old covenant realities. For example, Matthew 2:15 cites Hosea, identifying Jesus’s flight from Israel with Israel’s flight from Egypt; Israel herself has become the new Egypt, and Herod the new Pharaoh. In Galatians 4, Paul categorizes Israel as children of Hagar rather than Sarah. Paul, in Romans 3, quotes Psalm 14, identifying Israel not with “my people” and “the righteous” in that Psalm, but instead with the foolish and corrupt workers of iniquity. Paul understands that there has been a great and ironic reversal of loyalty and fortune for Israel.

Consider another likely reversal: by this time the Jewish diaspora has largely lost their familiarity with Hebrew. Hebrew itself has become an “other tongue” for God’s people. When Hebrew is spoken in the synagogue, God’s people do not hear him. Even before the reign of Jesus is preached in Corinth, Isaiah’s prophecy has already begun to be fulfilled. This is a good thing in itself; God’s word is going to many lands and languages (witness the Septuagint), just as he intended. It is not even a bad thing that Aramaic becomes the vernacular in the land of Israel. What transforms all this into a judgment is that Israel refuses to listen to and obey this word. The capstone of this judgment is that it will be pronounced in a foreign tongue.

This lends a double meaning to Isaiah’s prophecy. It is already a shame to Israel that her disapora cannot hear God in Hebrew. On top of this, it is a further shame that the proclamation of Messiah’s reign is being made week to week in Greek but they do not respond. What Paul refers to as “tongues” appears in this light to be, ironically, some kind of fascination with Hebrew, or perhaps even some kind of Judaizing conviction that the Corinthian church has toward Hebrew (perhaps especially when it comes to singing the Psalms); whereas “prophecy” is the church’s ordinary corporate worship in the vernacular Greek.

Paul is not writing this way to be clever or to confuse us; rather, he is making a devastating point about how Israel has become wholly deaf to God in every language whatsoever. Israel is no longer able to hear in Hebrew, and apparently unwilling to hear him in Greek. It is essential that God’s proclamation through his church be heard and understood by all. If the church were to worship in Hebrew, it must be interpreted or else none will understand. Although it is a shame to Israel regardless of whether worship take place in Hebrew or in Greek, unbelieving Jews will be convicted and provoked to jealousy only if they hear in Greek. God is giving Israel one final test to see whether they are deaf to him. For the sake of the church and for the sake of Israel, the church must worship in the vernacular—or at least must explain all Hebrew speech in the vernacular.

What a reformation this represents! At last God’s people hear him (c.f., Acts 2). At last God’s people can participate in genuine worship.

All those who have studied Hebrew, or remember a little from grammar school, or have memorized a little, must not be puffed up; they must not be little Judaizers. Paul, who speaks Hebrew more than all the Corinthians, gladly sets it aside. To the Greek speakers, he becomes as a Greek speaker. “How shall we sing Yahweh’s song in a foreign land?” We shall sing it in the vernacular.

Let’s walk through chapter 14 and see how this reading holds together:

1 Pursue love, and desire the spiritual, but especially that you worship in the vernacular.

Worship in spirit and truth is worship united together with God’s people on the foundation of the Spirit-breathed word.

2 For he who speaks in Hebrew does not speak to men but to God, for no one understands; however, in the spirit-breath he speaks mysteries.
3 But he who worships in the vernacular speaks edification and exhortation and comfort to men.
4 He who speaks in Hebrew edifies himself, but he who worships in the vernacular edifies the church.

It is difficult to understand how glossolalia could edify; Hebrew makes far more sense here in the case of those who understand it or who may have memorized some Hebrew and also its meaning.

5 I wish you all spoke in Hebrew, but even more that you worship in the vernacular; for he who worships in the vernacular is greater than he who speaks in Hebrew, unless indeed he explains, that the church may receive edification.

Paul genuinely wishes that we all studied the original languages, but this is not his priority. Note that the word for interpret here has a range that includes explanation and expounding.

6 But now, brethren, if I come to you speaking in Hebrew, what shall I profit you unless I speak to you either by revelation, by knowledge, by proclaiming in the vernacular, or by teaching?

Here it makes sense that we would understand the use of prophesying as referring specifically to the preaching portion of worship.

7 Even things without life, whether flute or harp, when they make a sound, unless they make a distinction in the sounds, how will it be known what is piped or played?
8 For if the trumpet makes an uncertain sound, who will prepare for battle?
9 So likewise you, unless you utter by the tongue words easy to understand, how will it be known what is spoken? For you will be speaking into the air.

Here Paul is speaking of the human tongue.

10 There are, it may be, so many kinds of voices in the world, and none of them without significance.
11 Therefore, if I do not know the meaning of the voice, I shall be a foreigner to him who speaks, and he who speaks, a foreigner to me.
12 Even so you, since you are zealous for the spiritual,let it be for the edification of the church that you seek to excel.
13 Therefore let him who speaks in Hebrew pray that he may explain.

Here again interpret means explanation rather than translation.

14 For if one prays in Hebrew, his spirit-breath prays, but his understanding is unfruitful.

Paul here is using personification, as he often does. I’ve written this as “one” to clarify. He is not referring to himself but to Corinthians who may have memorized some Hebrew—hocus pocus—without understanding. Such a man does not even edify himself, let alone others.

15 What then? We will pray with the spirit-breath, and we will also pray with the understanding. We will sing with the spirit-breath, and we will also sing with the understanding.

I have adjusted Paul’s personification to “we.”

16 Otherwise, if you bless with the spirit-breath, how will he who occupies the place of the uninformed say “Amen” at your giving of thanks, since he does not understand what you say?

Paul switches to “you,” confirming his earlier personification.

17 For you indeed give thanks well, but the other is not edified.
18 I thank my God I speak in Hebrew more than you all;
19 yet in the church I would rather speak five words with my understanding, that I may teach others also, than ten thousand words in Hebrew.
20 Brethren, do not be children in understanding; however, in malice be babes, but in understanding be mature.
21 In the law it is written:
“With men of other tongues and other lips
I will speak to this people;
And yet, for all that, they will not hear Me,”
says the Lord.
22 Therefore Hebrew is for a sign, not to those who believe but to unbelieving [Jews]; but worshipping in Greek is not for unbelieving [Jews] but for those who believe.
23 Therefore if the whole church comes together in one place, and all speak in Hebrew, and there come in those who are uninformed or unbelieving [Jews who do not know Hebrew], will they not say that you are out of your mind?
24 But if all worship in Greek, and an unbelieving [Jew] or an uninformed person comes in, he is convinced by all, he is convicted by all.
25 And thus the secrets of his heart are revealed; and so, falling down on his face, he will worship God and report that God is truly among you.
26 How is it then, brethren? Whenever you come together, each of you has a psalm, has a teaching, has a word in Hebrew, has a revelation, has an explanation. Let all things be done for edification.

I don’t think it is necessary to view this as a free-for-all worship service. In the verses that follow, I take Paul to be addressing the elders, those who prophesy (i.e., preach and proclaim) in the service. Often this is the case when he writes to “brothers,” and it is self-evident that he is writing here to those who speak in the service. Corinth is disorderly and it is little surprise this disorder extends to and likely originates with the men who rule and teach. But even if you believe Corinthian worship to have been very nearly Quaker in form, it seems evident that Paul is referring to Hebrew and Greek in these verses.

In these verses, I take the sense of prophecy to be narrowed from corporate worship specifically to preaching and proclamation.

27 If anyone speaks in Hebrew, let there be two or at the most three, each in turn, and let one explain.
28 But if there is no one to explain, let him keep silent in church, and let him speak to himself and to God.
29 Let two or three preach in the vernacular, and let the others judge.
30 But if anything is revealed to another who sits by, let the first keep silent.
31 For you can all preach in the vernacular one by one, that all may learn and all may be encouraged.
32 And the spirit-breath of the preachers are subject to the preachers.
33 For God is not the author of confusion but of peace, as in all the churches of the saints.
34 Let your women keep silent in the churches, for they are not permitted to speak; but they are to be submissive, as the law also says.
35 And if they want to learn something, let them ask their own husbands at home; for it is shameful for women to speak in church.
36 Or did the word of God come from you? Or was it you only that it reached?
37 If anyone thinks himself to be a preacher or spiritual, let him acknowledge that the things which I write to you are the commandments of the Lord.
38 But if anyone is ignorant, let him be ignorant.
39 Therefore, brethren, desire earnestly to worship and preach in the vernacular, and do not forbid to speak in Hebrew.

Preachers everywhere are greatly relieved.

40 Let all things be done decently and in order.

Amen.

Summary

This interpretation seems to make better sense of this passage, resolving the apparent contradictions. Paul touches on tongues and prophecy in chapters 12–13 as well. In chapter 12 it seems possible that Paul is referring not just to knowledge of Hebrew but to skill with languages in general. Chapter 13 underscores some of the fleshly reasons that people may have been speaking in Hebrew.

Written by Scott Moonen

February 11, 2024 at 3:53 pm

AD 30

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Andreas Köstenberger argues that AD 33 is the date of the crucifixion. James Jordan argues instead for AD 30 based on Herod’s death in AD 44 (Acts 12) and Paul’s fourteen years (Gal 2; Acts 11–12). It seems difficult to adjust Jordan; is there potential to adjust Köstenberger?

Köstenberger connects the fifteenth year of Tiberius’s reign (Luke 3) with the three Passovers Jesus attends (John 2, 6, 11). He holds that the first Passover could have been no earlier than AD 29, making the crucifixion no earlier than AD 31. But I think Köstenberger is wrong to say that the fifteenth year requires that Luke 3 must be no earlier than August of AD 28. We see a counterexample in the resurrection itself: Jesus rises the third day at dawn: Friday afternoon, Saturday, Sunday morning.

Thus, if we allow for this possibility, Tiberius’s fifteenth year begins as early as the winter of AD 28 rather than August. That makes it possible for the first passover to be in AD 28, and this is consistent with Jordan’s chronology. Köstenberger actually allows for this kind of flexibility in language in how he reckons the possible end of the fifteenth year; but not for its beginning:

The earliest possible date at which Tiberius’s “fifteenth year” began is August 19, a.d. 28, and the latest possible date at which his “fifteenth year” ended is December 31, a.d. 29.

Taken together, Jordan shows that the crucifixion could have been no later than AD 30, while this adjustment to Köstenberger’s argument shows that it could have been no earlier than AD 30.

Written by Scott Moonen

February 11, 2024 at 3:32 pm

Posted in Bible

Beowulf

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Tolkien’s translation is okay:

Then that warrior turned his horse, and thereupon spake these words: ‘Time it is for me to go. May the Almighty Father in his grace keep you safe upon your quests! To the sea will I go, against unfriendly hosts my watch to keep.’ (22)

Heaney is better:

. . . then the noble warrior
wheeled on his horse and spoke these words:
“It is time for me to go. May the Almighty
Father keep you and in His kindness
watch over your exploits. I’m away to the sea,
back on alert against enemy raiders.” (23)

But Wilson’s rendition is the best (it must be read aloud):

Then he wheeled and he went, wished them Godspeed,
“May the great Father favor you and find you in kindness,
Bestowing His blessings and backing your exploits.
For myself I must go and make my way back
To the coast where I can keep my watch up for raiders.” (17)

Written by Scott Moonen

August 30, 2023 at 11:06 am

Posted in Books, Poetry, Quotations

Cross country coaching notes

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Endurance training descending priorities

  1. Training volume: get in a lot of hours and miles each week
    Beginning runners should devote at least three days to running, and experienced runners should devote five or six days to running.
  2. Incorporate high intensity training
    A portion of your training should involve high intensity work, which should take you into a high heart rate zone and leave you out of breath. You should incorporate both short, explosive intervals as well as longer intervals (e.g., 4 minutes, 1 mile) into your work.
    • 8min/zone4 intervals seems like a sweet spot but all HIIT is beneficial
    • In a 5k you are still ~12% anaerobic; be sure to incorporate very short intervals and plyometric exercises as well, while allowing for longer recovery for intense anaerobic work
    • Training at each zone boundary gives your body practice with different forms of energy production and helps to raise each boundary
  3. Recovery far outweighs HIIT; 80/20 seems like a sweet spot, but there is benefit even in a 60/20/20 model.
    Surprisingly, your body’s greatest adaptation to training takes place during its “recovery” phase. You must spend 60–80% of your running time at lower intensity. If you over–train at high intensity you are stealing from rather than building up the running capacity you want to develop by the end of the season.
  4. Seek a balance of variety
    This includes many things such as exercises and cross training; stretching, flexibility, and coordination; running races vs. practices; varying your running workouts and terrains; varying your training plan over the course of the season; tapering before races; etc. Although these are less important than the earlier items on the list, they are still helpful and can also add to your running enjoyment.
    • This includes different kinds of long and short scale periodization; exercises and cross training; stretching, flexibility, and coordination; terrain; climate; elevation; running races; etc.
    • Over the course of a season there should be a graduated movement of focus from acceleration to speed and then to speed-endurance
    • Targeted stretches will vary widely from person to person. Focus broadly on dynamic stretching and emphasize this primarily as part of pre-workout warmup. Stabilization work (balance and range of motion) can be helpful for many younger runners.
    • Tapering; toward end of season drop volume and increase intensity

Running form

  • High cadence (160+) is more efficient for your body but also solves many common problems with running form
    • Shorter, lighter impulses are more efficient
    • Arm and corresponding leg drive opposite one another
  • Do not overstride; land foot underneath or just in front of you. Overstriding increases braking, makes each stride more intense, and divides your effort between push and pull.
  • Foot strike relatively flat; do not worry about difference between heel vs. toe strike
  • Draw knee relatively high on return; this reduces effort of angular motion
  • Upright torso, even on hills
  • Run relaxed; monitor tension especially in your face and shoulders as this is a sign you are running tight
  • Belly breathing vs. chest breathing; side aches can indicate poor breathing

Nutrition, etc.

It’s possible to get very meticulous here, but most runners are best helped by simply being well rounded. Food journaling may be worthwhile for ambitious students.

  • Are you getting a reasonable balance of carbs, fats, proteins? Carbs should be significant.
  • Are you getting a reasonable balance of these not only each day but each meal as much as possible?
  • Are you getting much of your carbs from fruits and vegetables and not just grains?
  • Adequate sleep is important; 8-10h
  • Hydration is important, especially in hot weather. Hydration the day before the race is especially important and is commonly neglected.

Kids may be tempted to mainly to undervalue fruits and vegetables. Adults today are likely to undervalue carbs.

Race day

  • Your meal should be at least 3-4 hours prior
    • Eat things easy for you to digest: primarily carbohydrates, some proteins, few fats
    • Spaghetti, rice, yogurt, chicken all good options
  • Adequate warm-up
    • 10min for youngest ranging to 30min for older students
    • “Go full speed before you go full speed” to recruit your muscles
  • Are shoes double knotted? If your shoe cannot hold a double knot, the “Ian Knot” or the “Two Loop Knot” (same knot, different technique) hold much more strongly.
  • If there is an early turn in the course, start on the opposite side so that you aren’t boxed in
  • Don’t always follow the crowd: follow the course. Run the shortest distance possible.
  • Be cool and stay relaxed, while keeping your eyes wide and alert.
  • Don’t lead unless you know you are going to win. You become a target.
  • Run your race, not someone else’s.
  • Your arms are your engine. Keep them active but under control.
  • Remember your hill routine: eyes up, shoulders down, use your arms
  • Pace hills; don’t kill them. Run up a hill on your toes and downhill on your heels.
  • When you start to feel depleted, think of a recent workout that you conquered and how good it felt when you finished it
  • Run race in a pack, but don’t get stuck in middle of pack. Move up, then move between packs decisively.
  • Take setbacks in stride. Get up after a fall.
  • Instill attitude “no one on the team gets passed over the final 100 meters”
  • Rehearse courses beforehand if possible
  • Watch the finish line and not other runners
  • No need to overdo pre–race speech
  • Adequate cool-down (10-15min)
  • Post–race talk important; be encouraging, give praise. Involve team captains in this.

Coaching

  • Engagement includes both parents and students
  • Cross country is a team sport and a team should use this to their advantage
  • Variety is helpful physiologically but also for runner engagement
  • Encourage goal-setting and work on incremental improvements
  • Teach resiliency in the face of setbacks; coach yourself, watch your self-talk. “I can do this.”
  • Watch out for overtraining, make adequate time for recovery
  • Some especially important kinds of training and skills include hill workouts, starting, passing
  • Beginners should train 3 days / week, older and more advanced runners 5 or more days including cross training
  • If you’ve come from a track background, we are going to do some longer interval and recovery work to develop your cross country chops
  • Your balance between slow and fast twitch is largely fixed at birth; you are born for endurance or sprinting. But you can improve your performance at both!
  • Hot and humid weather is dangerous

Sources

Written by Scott Moonen

February 16, 2023 at 10:21 pm

Posted in Miscellany

Metal men

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The metal of God’s tabernacle symbolizes his people. Perhaps the clearest implication of this is that Nebuchadnezzar first takes gold from the temple together with the leaders of the land (2 Kings 24), and later takes remaining gold, silver, and a multitude of bronze together with the remaining people of the land (2 Kings 25). There is an analogy between the implements of God’s physical house and the people who form and serve in God’s spiritual house.

I know that Tarshish is not necessarily Tarsus. But there is still a linguistic connection between the two, and I think we can glimpse another example of this precious metal analogy in the person of Paul. Solomon supplies his house and God’s house with gold and silver from Tarshish:

All King Solomon’s drinking vessels were gold, and all the vessels of the House of the Forest of Lebanon were pure gold. Not one was silver, for this was accounted as nothing in the days of Solomon. For the king’s ships went to Tarshish with the servants of Hiram. Once every three years the merchant ships came, bringing gold, silver, ivory, apes, and monkeys. (2 Chronicles 9:20-21)

God brings into his kingdom another gift-treasure from Tarshish/Tarsus:

So the Lord said to him, “Arise and go to the street called Straight, and inquire at the house of Judas for one called Saul of Tarsus, for behold, he is praying. And in a vision he has seen a man named Ananias coming in and putting his hand on him, so that he might receive his sight.” (Acts 9:11-12)

Saul/Paul is gold and silver brought into God’s house.

This reminds me of the great reversal between Psalm 68 and Ephesians 4. While Psalm 68 says that God receives gifts:

You have ascended on high,
​​You have led captivity captive;
You have received gifts among men,
Even from the rebellious,
That the LORD God might dwell there. (Psalm 68:18)

Paul reverses this in Ephesians:

Therefore He says:
​“When He ascended on high,
He led captivity captive,
And gave gifts to men.” (Ephesians 4:8)

This is not because Paul is simply perpetuating Septuagint corruptions. Instead, I maintain that Paul is here applying his understanding of the union between Jesus and his church. Paul understood this union from the very moment of his conversion, when Jesus identified himself with his church:

Then he fell to the ground, and heard a voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?” (Acts 9:4)

What is happening in Ephesians is that Jesus is receiving gifts from the nations—gifts such as Paul himself. In the very act of receiving these gifts he also sets them free and gives them to his own body, his church.

Written by Scott Moonen

February 15, 2023 at 8:30 am

Posted in Biblical Theology

Metábasis eis állo génos (4-1)

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Malapropism of the day: clock pot.

The only sane program of national defense begins with right worship:

​For the nation and kingdom which will not serve you shall perish,
​​And those nations shall be utterly ruined. (Isaiah 60:12)

The last enemy that will be destroyed is death. As a down payment against this sure promise, the first place to be inhabited by the first body to die no more was a tomb.

What does the Westminster catechism say is the chief end of man—“To glorify God and to be brokenhearted before him forever”? (Brad Hodges)

Then a man came from Baal Shalisha, and brought the man of God bread of the firstfruits, twenty loaves of barley bread, and newly ripened grain in his knapsack. And he said, “Give it to the people, that they may eat.”

But his servant said, “What? Shall I set this before one hundred men?”

He said again, “Give it to the people, that they may eat; for thus says the LORD: ‘They shall eat and have some left over.’ ” So he set it before them; and they ate and had some left over, according to the word of the LORD. (2 Kings 4:42-44)

Jesus, who fed such bread to thousands, and now feeds billions each week, is the head of the new school of prophets, which is his church. Like Elisha, his pastors have the firstborn’s double portion of his spirit with which to feed his people.

The inauguration of the Lord’s Supper was not the last Passover: that came 40 years later. Jesus, the latter Jehu (2 Kings 10), gathered the idolaters together for a great sacrifice, made doubly sure that his people were not among them, surrounded them, and destroyed them.

God scourges a people when he sets them under childless pagan women like Jezebel and Athaliah. But he also brings about restoration by means of his church, as with Elisha and Jehoiada.

Philip K. Dick wrote this provocative short story on abortion: The Pre-Persons.

Psalm 91 is worth reading in detail, but what makes it so important is that it is not a prayer for protection, it is an outright statement the believer will be guarded against all sorts of harm. No ifs or buts. This is what God shall do. (Philip Jenkins)

Written by Scott Moonen

January 28, 2023 at 9:27 am

The Beginnings

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By Robert Louis Stevenson. Hat tip: Steven Wolfe

It was not part of their blood,
    It came to them very late
With long arrears to make good,
    When the English began to hate.

They were not easily moved,
    They were icy willing to wait
Till every count should be proved,
    Ere the English began to hate.

Their voices were even and low,
    Their eyes were level and straight.
There was neither sign nor show,
    When the English began to hate.

It was not preached to the crowd,
    It was not taught by the State.
No man spoke it aloud,
    When the English began to hate.

It was not suddenly bred,
    It will not swiftly abate,
Through the chill years ahead,
    When Time shall count from the date
    That the English began to hate.

Written by Scott Moonen

October 15, 2022 at 6:42 am

Posted in Poetry

Metábasis eis állo génos (3-25)

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The future turns into the past. But also the past turns into the future.

The word ekklesia appears in the gospels. Fortunately Jesus spends a great deal of time defining this surprising new word for his puzzled disciples. This is how we learn that the church is a new kind of noncorporeal body (TM), whose primary nature is invisible rather than visible, and which excludes children from membership. The word covenant isn’t entirely new to the disciples, however. Jeremiah first introduces us to it: “This is the covenant that I will make with some of the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put my grace in some of their minds, and write it on some of their hearts; and I will be the God of some of them, and some of them shall be my people. . . Some of them shall know me, from the middlest of them to the greatest of them.”

Joseph understands Girard and Friedman. Families and churches must guard against quarrels even during the best of times:

So he sent his brothers away, and they departed; and he said to them, “See that you do not become troubled along the way.” (Genesis 45:24, NKJV)

Kuyper’s got it all: Christian individuals, Christian families, Christian businesses, Christian art and music, Christian localism, Christian nationalism, even Christian cosmos. So: baptize your babies, sing Psalms against tyrants, and raise a glass to the king of kings!

Everyone who is clean in your house may eat it. (Numbers 18, NKJV)

For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband; otherwise your children would be unclean, but now they are holy. (1 Corinthians 7:14, NKJV)

Thus, paedocommunion! Thanks to Michael Burdge for this connection.

Written by Scott Moonen

October 15, 2022 at 6:25 am