A La Carte (September 17)

A La Carte (September 17)

Good morning from Austria! I very much enjoyed last weekend’s events in Schladming and am now taking a couple of rest days before heading to Romania for the final conference of this journey.

Among today’s many Kindle deals are some new titles I have read, enjoyed, and recommended like T. David Gordon’s Choose Better and Marvin Olasky’s Pivot Points. There’s also a book on theological method, a biographical graphic novel, and much more.

(Yesterday on the blog: Did the Angels Laugh?)

Andy Hood has a fascinating article about Romans 1 and worldview. “The task of Christian discipleship is not to adopt a Christian worldview by putting on a particular pair of glasses but to take off our glasses and see the world as it truly is. Christianity is not a particular way of looking at the world but the truth about reality, a truth that is knowable by all.”

T. M. Suffield takes issue with the popular idea that you can only be what you can see—that kind of intersectional thinking that says you can really only learn from people who are like you.

“I’m talking about the kind of hurt that a pastor inflicts when he acts in ways that fail to build up the body of Christ. In fact, I believe this is how most hurt happens: not when a pastor deliberately plots to make his people suffer, but when he occupies his heart with concerns and interests other than his personal relationship with Christ and the central task of caring for Christ’s flock.”

Stephanie O’Donnell explains how a holy life is the seed of so much evangelism. She also tells how this proved true in her life.

Casey McCall writes about those moments we sometimes experience when it seems like heaven breaks through to earth. “Do you ever experience those glimpses? It doesn’t have to be the changing seasons that do it for you. I get similar feelings sometimes at concerts. Sometimes it comes over me during mundane family dinners with my wife and children when an unforeseen cheeriness pervades the room. Most often, I experience it at church—as the diverse voices of Christ’s redeemed people sing in unison about the glory of Christ or when a testimony leads me to taste grace more deeply. I can’t manufacture these experiences.”

“In a world flooded with persuasive voices, we must learn to think biblically in every corner of our lives.” Doug explains how and why.

The heaven tourism books, written by men and women still stained by sin, couldn’t show us the glory of that sinless world.

The more clearly we see sin’s horror, the more we shall treasure the cross.

—D.A. Carson

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