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Showing posts from April, 2013

How do you know your a good citizen?

             It was August 24 410 CE. It was the day that the Army of the Goths sacked Rome. They burned and killed for 3 days and then left. For the first time in 1,000 years Rome was sacked. Impossible! How could this be? Augustine came along during this time and wrote a book called the City of God . Augustine said that the reason why Christians were freaking out was because they had associated the Kingdom of God with the Kingdom of Rome. Augustine says that there is no eternal human city. There is only one city that cannot be broken, beaten, injured, burned or bombed and it is the City of God. Augustine says that if you are freaking out over what is happening to Rome then you are greatly confused. You have confused the City of God with the City of Rome. If you stop there then you miss out. If you suggest that what really matters is some other city and not the city you live in then what you could conclude is that  ...

Surprising Sources of Violence

  Jonah 3:1-10- 4:1-5 This is probably one of the more surprising passages in all of scripture. It is surprising for many reasons. One of those reasons is the surprising sources of violence. The first source of violence is the pagan society of Assyrian. When I say pagan I mean a worldview. Paganism believes in many gods. When you look across history and the various societies/cultures that believed in paganism you discover that those societies/cultures were often violent cultures. For example the ancient Roman socieity was pagan and violent. Rome built the Colosseum. The Colosseum, by some estimates, could seat up to 50,000 people. These 50,0000 people would gather and cheer as they  witnessed  gladiators kill each other, lions eat people and others burned alive. And in those pagan cultures there was no concern for the poor or weak. In fact many of the gladiators that fought to the death in front of cheering crowds were slaves. Well why are pagan cultur...

What Storms and Fish Reveal (Jonah 2)

             In Jonah 1:3 we read that Jonah “paid the fare” to get on a boat that was headed to Tarshish.   Now the implication made here is that Jonah was not just paying for his own fare. That phrase “paid the fare” suggests he paid for the whole ship. We would say that Jonah chartered the ship. The implication is that Jonah is a dude who has to get somewhere fast. He walks up asks “How much is this ship?” Okay, well here is the cash. Some would suggest that the journey to Tarshish from Joppa would take about a year by ship. So Jonah is a person who can afford to travel for the next year. Jonah can “pay the fare” and charter the whole boat and can travel for a year to the farthest possible place. Jonah is an empowered man. Jonah is a man of wealth. Jonah is a man who can afford options. God says he wants me to go to Nineveh? I don’t think so when I can afford to go the other direction for a year. This is a m...