Saturday, August 16, 2008

Numbers: Word Cloud


created at TagCrowd.com


Text used: NIV

Deuteronomy: Word Cloud


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Text used: NIV.

Torah: Combined Word Cloud


aaron (303) abraham (146) abram (63) according (105) against (158) alien (54) along (91) altar (194) animal (135) anointing (52) answered (56) anyone (102) anything (66) ark (59) around (71) asked (59) assembly (69) atonement (94) away (91) balaam (56) became (82) become (93) belongs (57) blessed (124) blood (146) bread (71) bring (189) bronze (51) brother (132) brought (206) bull (104) burn (121) burnt (140) called (70) camp (100) canaan (61) careful (58) carry (62) children (121) city (102) clans (175) clean (70) clothes (55) cloud (52) comes (53) commanded (219) community (78) country (71) covenant (79) curtain (55) cut (61) daughter (94) days (148) death (93) descendants (118) desert (106) destroy (83) die (87) died (67) done (85) drink (93) earth (132) eat (199) egypt (279) egyptians (66) enemies (48) entrance (74) esau (83) evening (65) everything (96) eyes (90) face (72) fat (67) father (372) fellowship (53) field (91) filled (56) fine (86) fire (146) firstborn (74) five (76) flocks (56) food (80) front (58) gathered (57) gave (130) given (81) giving (70) goat (108) god (768) gold (145) grain (140) ground (88) hands (97) head (111) heard (69) heart (58) heaven (59) himself (80) holy (146) house (105) household (53) however (48) hundred (62) incense (56) inheritance (84) isaac (100) israel (211) israelites (309) jacob (219) jordan (56) joseph (182) judah (49) kill (50) king (94) laban (55) lambs (108) land (523) law (76) leader (72) leave (58) levites (94) life (67) linen (49) listen (67) lived (176) livestock (67) lord (1848) male (141) man (342) meeting (175) month (68) morning (74) moses (640) mother (62) mountain (79) named (57) nations (105) night (69) number (66) offering (582) oil (114) people (437) person (69) pharaoh (212) possession (98) presence (53) present (96) priest (245) ram (75) replied (51) rest (71) sacred (66) sacrifice (52) sanctuary (63) sea (74) send (56) sent (79) servant (62) serve (63) seven (148) seventh (58) sheep (52) shekels (100) silver (108) sin (189) skin (57) son (368) speak (74) spread (53) stand (66) stay (52) stone (52) surely (65) tabernacle (97) ten (49) tent (225) things (61) till (54) today (76) told (75) took (131) toward (68) towns (49) tree (56) tribe (118) twenty (56) unclean (157) until (93) wash (49) water (210) whole (99) wife (146) woman (101) wood (59) words (49) work (146) years (305) young (82) yourselves (55)
created at TagCrowd.com


Text used: NIV

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

The spiritual hazards of debate

I recently read a book by a pointedly atheist author. This was not just someone who happened to disagree with Christians, but one who even made a false statement or two (easily enough demonstrated), falsified his source material (again, easily enough demonstrated) and misrepresented its contents in order to put together a logical "case" against Christianity. His tone was frequently mocking, his portrayals of Christians so skewed that I found myself wondering if there is some objective standard to measure and demonstrate the extent of bias in a piece of writing. (No doubt there is somewhere, if I were inclined to track it down.)

I found myself, as I read, mentally gearing up to demolish these distortions. And as I did, I saw the author as the enemy. Now, in his own mind he probably is; it would be difficult to imagine someone setting out to write and publish a book like that without first deliberately and consciously taking position as an enemy of mainstream / orthodox / traditional Christianity. But I found myself reacting to someone who is, honestly, trying to provoke a reaction. I have watched myself -- and other Christians in debate -- forget what we're working towards. Yes, it's best if we counter the lies and malicious talk. But if I let myself forget why I'm doing it, I may gain a small win at the cost of a large loss.

I read several books recently by atheists who engage in Christian baiting for sport, and had planned a series of posts. Recently I checked some of my planned posts lists. I was planning a post on baptism in the gospels and in the epistles, not to learn more about baptism, but to show "those people" how wrong they are about Paul having no interest in Christ's teachings. Worse, I was planning a post on Christ's teachings on the primacy of love and how Paul, more than anyone else in the New Testament epistles, picked up that idea and ran with it -- not planning this post to learn more about love or to ingrain the primacy of love deeper into myself, but again just to show the bias and blatant distortion of facts coming from the anti-Christian crowd when they claim that Paul taught an entirely different thing than Jesus, or had no interest in Jesus' teachings.

I could multiply examples, but I'm hoping by now my point is made: hostility and factions and discord are typical price tags of "debates", and "debates" may not be the best way to answer someone. How often are polemics productive? (Productive of what?) Even within Christianity, we find ourselves polarized, and polarization often distorts both parties from their original position. At any rate a debate format makes sure the sides remain "parties" or partisans -- it prevents union, interferes with outreach.

I do not intend to abandon the original proposed posts. But I hope to handle them differently. If I approach this in a better way, proclaiming the answer to the constant stream of misguided accusations will show Jesus at his best, not me at my worst.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Making a difference in the world: the price tag

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. - Newton
One thing has become plainer to me in recent years: it is impossible to make a meaningful difference in someone else's life without making a meaningful difference in our own lives. It is impossible to make a meaningful difference in the world without being meaningfully different from the world. There is a reason quick fixes don't work -- you know, the kind of fixes that are easy and don't involve much change. And the reason is not that we haven't found the right "quick fix." The reason "quick fixes" don't work is precisely because they're quick fixes. When we weigh them on the scale of "for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction", we get what we pay for with a quick fix. It's like a dieter who needs to lose 100 pounds and so skips dessert for a week: Nice sentiment but no real commitment; it's not going to do the job. All the places in which I've made any real difference have been years-long, even lifelong efforts. All the people I've seen who made lasting differences in the world began by being lastingly different themselves.

Thursday, August 07, 2008

An ancient memory of the Exodus?

The Talmud records an interesting folk history about the Exodus from Egypt:
All those years that the Israelites were in the wilderness, those two chests, one of the dead and the other of the Shechinah, proceeded side by side, and passersby used to ask: ‘What is the nature of those two chests?’ They received the reply: ‘One is of the dead and the other of the Shechinah’. ‘But is it, then, the way of the dead to proceed with the Shechinah?’ They were told, ‘This one [Joseph] fulfilled all that was written in the other’. (Talmud - Mas. Sotah 13a-b)
I know there has been much question about the historicity of the exodus from Egypt, and I know that this is hardly conclusive, being a folk history from many centuries later. But it is an interesting piece of folk history in being so specific about those details of the journey.

Sunday, August 03, 2008

Scripture and the Liturgy (or: Why I am pro-liturgy)

From time to time I hear people from non-liturgical churches speaking of how unScriptural it is to have a liturgy. Nothing could be further from my experience. I am glad to belong to a liturgical church and would wish that as a blessing upon anyone I know. Why? To explain that to my non-liturgical (even anti-liturgical) acquaintances, I'd have to show them our order of service. I won't ask anyone here to read an entire order of service. But here I will briefly go through our most commonly-celebrated order of service in the liturgy and highlight a few things.

Blessing at the start of worship
M: The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you. (2 Cor 13:14)

Confession
[Based on passages such as 1 John 8:10, we confess our sins and proclaim God's forgiveness. We follow a fairly simple order of confession and absolution.]

Prayers at the start of service
For the steadfast assurance that nothing can separate us from your love (Romans 8:38-39) and for the courage to stand firm against the assaults of Satan and every evil (Ephesians 6:11-14)

Before the reading of the Gospel Lesson
(Each week we have a reading from the Old Testament other than Psalms, then a prayer from the book of Psalms, a reading from the Epistles, and a reading from the Gospels. Before the gospel is read, the congregation stands and says the following.)
C: There words are written that we may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God. (see John 20:30-31)

The Lord's Prayer
(Matt 6:9-13)

Prayers before the Sacrament
M: Praise to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In love he has blessed us with every spiritual blessing. (Ephesians 1:3)

(The next portion of the prayer varies by the season of the church year:)
Advent: Through his holy prophets, he promised a King to bring light to those living in darkness and in the shadow of death. (Isaiah 9, esp vv. 1-2)

Christmas: When the time had fully come, he sent his Son, born of a woman, born under law, to redeem those under law, that we might receive the full rights of sons. (Galatians 4:4)

Epiphany: In the past he spoke to us through the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, who is the radiance of his glory. (from Hebrews 1:1-3)

Lent: He made his Son to be the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours but also for the sins of the whole world. (1 John 2:2)

Resurrection/Ascension: He raised Christ from the dead and seated him at his right hand in the heavenly realms and placed all things under his feet for the benefit of the Church. (from Ephesians 1:20-22)

Sundays after Pentecost: He sends the Holy Spirit to testify that we are his children and to strengthen us when we are weak. (from Romans 8:16, 26)

(General close to the prayer)
Now have come the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God and the authority of his Christ. To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be praise and thanks and honor and glory for ever and ever. (Revelation 12:10, 5:13 and others in Revelation)

Holy, holy, holy
(Song preceding communion)
Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts, the whole earth is full of your glory. (Isaiah 6:3)
You are my God and I will exalt you, I will give you thanks, for you have become my salvation (Psalm 118:28)
Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts, the whole earth is full of your glory. (Isaiah 6:3)

Words of Institution
Our Lord Jesus Christ, on the night he was betrayed, too bread; and when he had given thanks, he broke it and gave it to his disciples, saying, "Take and eat; this is my body, which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.

Then he took the cup, gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, "Drink from it, all of you; this is my blood of the new covenant, which is poured out for you for the forgiveness of sins. Do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me." (I Cor 11:23-25)

O Christ, Lamb of God (Agnus Dei)
O Christ, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world; have mercy on us.
O Christ, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world; have mercy on us.
O Christ, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world; grant us peace.
(see John 1:29)

Blessing at the end of worship
The Lord bless you and keep you
The Lord make his face shine on you and be gracious to you
The Lord look on you with favor and give you peace. (Numbers 6:22-27).

Is liturgical worship Scriptural?
I suppose it depends on what we mean by "Scriptural". If we mean "commanded by Scripture", then Scripture does not command our worship to be either liturgical or non-liturgical. But if we mean "holding Scripture close and dear, consulting it often and being shaped by it at every turn," then liturgical worship is Scriptural. Just from the parts I have excerpted here, on the average you can expect to hear 12 passages of Scripture during the order of service. This is in addition to the four passages which vary weekly (3 readings and the prayer of a Psalm), and does not count hymns or other songs which vary by week, many of which are also from Scripture, nor the Creeds which also track Scripture closely. That is why I would wish the liturgy on all the churches as a blessing.

If you belong to a non-liturgical church, what do you think: Would you hear more or less Scripture in the average service if you followed the liturgy?