Rebecca Stark is the author of The Good Portion: Godthe second title in The Good Portion series.

The Good Portion: God explores what Scripture teaches about God in hopes that readers will see his perfection, worth, magnificence, and beauty as they study his triune nature, infinite attributes, and wondrous works. 

                     

Saturday
May282011

Round the Sphere Again: Extra-light Edition

Who Owned It?
Another mental_floss quiz: Given a country and a year, name the country that controlled it, whether through colonization or military occupation. I’d have done better if I’d paid more attention to the year. (If the answer seems too easy, you might be wrong.) How’d you do?

Who Will Make Me One of These?
You bring the pie and I’ll put on a pot of coffee (Mennonite Girls Can Cook). 

Sounds fair to me.

Friday
May272011

Round the Sphere Again: The Gospel 

What It’s Not
Russell Moore:  

What We Need
Yep, more books on the gospel (Dane Ortland at Crossway Blog).

And the priority of this gospel, the functional need of the gospel, the contesting of the gospel, the retaining of the gospel, the constant sidelining of the gospel, and the unified biblical testimony to the gospel all unite to say—yes, we need more books on this gospel.

Power to Perform
Don Carson, commenting on 1 John 5:

The truth is that Jesus’ commands “are not burdensome” (1 John 5:3), for in the new birth God has given us the power to perform what Jesus commands, the ability to overcome “the world” (1 John 5:4–5; cf. 2:15–17). Who, then, has this power to overcome the world? Those who are born again, those who have genuine faith, of course—and genuine faith is defined in terms of faith’s object, namely the truth that Jesus truly is the Son of God. 

Read more to see how confession of the truth and transformed living go together (For the Love of God).

And Alzheimer’s
Karyn Heath at Radical Womanhood:

I believe that we fail to see the fullest scope of God’s plan when we do not actively encourage one another to think rightly about God’s sovereignty over the last days of our lives.  Perhaps, I exaggerate, but it seems that we envision that each godly Christian is entitled the perfect death scenario. We want be in our right minds, surrounded by loving family and friends in graceful dignity or otherwise slip away to heaven gently in our sleep. An extended illness we might face with fortitude, but certainly not one that might steal away our memories or personalities on its way.  Yet in the very loss of self that terrifies us when facing Alzheimer’s or similar diseases is there not an unparalleled opportunity for seeing the transforming power of the Gospel?

Read the whole piece.

Thursday
May262011

This Week in Housekeeping

Recently updated Theological Term of the Week post:

sufficiency of scripture