Jonathan Edwards
“Indeed the saints in themselves have no excellence as they are in and of themselves…. They are in themselves filthy, vile creatures and see themselves to be so. they have an excellence and a glory in them because they have Christ dwelling in them…. Tis some. thing of God. This holy heavenly spark is put into the soul in con version, and God maintains it there. All the power of hell cannot put it out…. Though it be small … ’tis a powerful thing. It has influence on the heart to govern that, and brings forth holy fruits in the life, and won’t cease to prevail ’til it has consumed all the corruption that is left in the heart and ’til it has turned the whole soul, as it were, into a pure, holy and heavenly flame.”
christmas perspective of the Puritans
“For preventing disorders arising…by reason of some still observing
such festivalls as were superstitiously kept in other countrys, to the
great dishonor of God, and offence of others, it is therefore
ordered…that whoever shall be found observing any such days as
Christmas or the like, either by forbearing of labour, feasting, or
any other way…shall pay five shillings as a fine.”-Massachusetts
General Court in 1659
Evangelical… what does that mean?
It seems that word is thrown around so loosely sometimes, and with the recently finished election, as with the one before it, the word evangelical has taken on more of a political meaning than a theological one. Is it time to take the word back?
The word evangel comes from the Greek word ‘evangelion’, found in the New Testament, that means ‘good news’, or ‘gospel’. The common use of the word Evangelical starting at the time of the Protestant Reformation. As the movement gained force and momentum, there needed to be a distiction between the Roman Catholics and the non-Romanists (as the term ‘Protestant Reformation’ was a later attribution), thus the term ‘Evangelical’ was used to differentiate between those who held to Scripture and Church tradition (though not necessarily in that order, the Romanists) and those who held strictly to a high view of Scripture as the sole authority (the Protesters). This was the majority meaning of the term Evangelical for centuries.
Within the first half of the 20th Century, the meaning of the term shifted. The term began to include a broader swath of those called ‘Christians’– even those not necessarily holding to a high view of Scripture. It appears to have included many who, seeing that culture has left a centrality of Biblical influence to one that is influenced by a man-centered priority, have been eager to change the message of the Gospel to fit a wider audience. However, within the last decade or three perhaps, a shift back to Bible-centeredness has been the impetus for the ‘Evangelical’ label, and this has roused the ire of those who simply, for lack of a better word, hate the fact that people live among them that place something else besides man/self/humanity at the center of Reality.
Essentially, then, the term has been bandied about lately as more of a pejorative. When a term is used that creates an emotive response to a certain segment of the population, then either a) people are not thinking clearly enough about the words they use, b) people are easily roused up to an emotional and visceral reaction now more than in the past, or c) a mixture of both. Or, is it like Paul said, that the Good News is folly to those who are perishing? (1 Cor. 1:17,18)
How do images affect our thinking?
In The Genius of Temptation, Michelle McKinney Hammond writes, “These things of the world go in through our eyes and ears, lodge in our hearts, and come back out of our mouths. Once repeated, they’re filed in our minds, where they settle comfortably into our subconscious. And each of these things waits for the right moment to rise up and superimpose itself over a thought that has left a convenient space to accommodate it. The next step we take is to put that thought into action.” We mustn’t allow ourselves to be led on by the googoo-eyed thrill of flirting with improper thinking that leads to disaster. That’s a trap that Satan loves to set.
Chapter One of a useful reference…
A fresh perspective at a time of need, Luther gave us these thoughts.
http://www.lgmarshall.org/Bible/luther_galatians.html#chapter1
-
Archives
- February 2009 (2)
- January 2009 (5)
- December 2008 (5)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS