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Obeying God and Obeying God’s Servants: Five Truths from 1 Peter 2:13–17 (pt. 2)
In obedience to God, we gather and sing and testify to the risen Lord. Yesterday, I began a two-part series on 1 Peter 2:13–17. I am trying to answer the question, What does submitting to governing authorities looks like? Especially, what does submitting to governing authorities look like when they are ruling in ways that … Continue reading Obeying God and Obeying God’s Servants: Five Truths from 1 Peter 2:13–17 (pt. 2)

Obeying God and Obeying God’s Servants: Five Truths from 1 Peter 2:13–17 (pt. 1)
Photo Credit: Greg Southam / Postmedia in The Edmonton Journal Ever since writing on the harm of endless masking, teaching on the limits of Romans 13 (see here, here, and here), and considering how Levitical instructions about quarantine laws might help us think wisely about social distancing and sheltering at home, I’ve received numerous emails … Continue reading Obeying God and Obeying God’s Servants: Five Truths from 1 Peter 2:13–17 (pt. 1)

Getting Redemption Right and Understanding the Logic of Christ’s Cross
Recently, I have been watching, reading, and discussing the ways that the cross of Christ has being wrongly preached, taught, and explained in churches today. In particular the penal substitutionary nature of the cross, where Christ pays the penalty for sinners who have broken God’s law and deserve his righteous and eternal condemnation, has been … Continue reading Getting Redemption Right and Understanding the Logic of Christ’s Cross

Live Not By Feelings: Three Ways to Love and Live the Moral Life (1 Peter 1:13–19)
To feel good or to be good. That is the question. And in Sunday’s sermon, I considered the difference between the moral life that God commands (and grants by the power of his grace) and the therapeutic life that our world gives us (with no lasting grace). As countless cultural commentators have observed, there has … Continue reading Live Not By Feelings: Three Ways to Love and Live the Moral Life (1 Peter 1:13–19)

The Whole Truth: Why One-Sided Truths Are the Most Effective Way to Introduce Error
Since its inception, the church has been a community created by truth (Eph. 1:13; Col. 1:5) and engaged with confronting error. Both proactively and reactively, the church and its heralds of Scripture have been called to preach the truth of God’s Word and reject falsehood (see e.g., Titus 1:9). Yet, in every generation this calling … Continue reading The Whole Truth: Why One-Sided Truths Are the Most Effective Way to Introduce Error

On Reading Leviticus: Four Reading Strategies for This Glorious Book
With a new month (March) comes a new book in the Via Emmaus Reading Plan. This year I am reading Track 1 and listening to Track 3. And for those who are reading along this plan, or for those who are interested in reading Leviticus—“The Most Exciting Book You’ve (N)Ever Read”—I offer this reading strategy … Continue reading On Reading Leviticus: Four Reading Strategies for This Glorious Book

Let My People Gather: What We Can Learn from an Ancient Church-State Debate
1 Afterward Moses and Aaron went and said to Pharaoh, “Thus says the Lord, the Risen King, ‘Let my people gather, that they may hear my Word, sing my praise, and remember my sacrifice.’ ” 2 But Pharaoh said, “Who is this Lord, that I should obey his voice and let you gather? I do not … Continue reading Let My People Gather: What We Can Learn from an Ancient Church-State Debate

The Story of God’s Glory: A Wide Angle View of Salvation from 1 Peter 1:10–12
Concerning this salvation, the prophets who prophesied about the grace that was to be yours searched and inquired carefully, 11 inquiring what person or time the Spirit of Christ in them was indicating when he predicted the sufferings of Christ and the subsequent glories. 12 It was revealed to them that they were serving not … Continue reading The Story of God’s Glory: A Wide Angle View of Salvation from 1 Peter 1:10–12

The Beginning of the Priesthood: Revisiting Levi in Genesis 34
If anyone has spent anytime reading this blog, they know that I have written a fair bit about the priesthood. In January of next year, Lord willing, I will even have a book coming out on the topic. One note that I didn’t put in that manuscript, however, begins with the choice of Levi and … Continue reading The Beginning of the Priesthood: Revisiting Levi in Genesis 34

Seeing Leviticus with New Eyes: Understanding the Pollution of Sin and the Need for Sacrifice
On Tuesday’s nights I teach a class on Leviticus, which I have affectionately entitled, “Leviticus: The Most Exciting Book You’ve (N)ever Read). If you are interested in learning a thing or two about this vitally important book and how it teaches us about Christ, the gospel, and the logic of God’s atonement, you can find … Continue reading Seeing Leviticus with New Eyes: Understanding the Pollution of Sin and the Need for Sacrifice
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