Friday
May072010

My Place 1

Airing the sleeping bags, May 3, 2010.

I know there are people who come here each week only to see the desktop photo, but I’ve decided to change things up anyway. Last week’s was number 100 and that’s enough for me. For a few months I’m going to post weekly photos from my place, and by that I mean something more than just my home and less than all the universe. Each week’s photo will be taken during the week it’s featured—a photo that show something unique (or maybe not) about my corner of the world.

This is the view from my porch on Monday morning. Airing on the clothesline are the son’s sleeping bags from the weekend’s spring camping trip. Yes, it was spring when they were camping, but Monday brought us a brief bit-o’-winter.

Thursday
May062010

Thankful Thursday

I’m thankful that I can see the light at the end of the tunnel on the basement organizing job. Sometimes I get discouraged because the home maintainance projects are all my responsibility now. Keeping up a house the size and and age that mine is can be a never-ending job and I frequently feel intimidated by the responsibility. I often pray for strength, focus, and wisdom to be the sole home upkeeper. So far, everything has worked out alright, and for that I am thankful. While I’m at it, I’m thanking God that I have the physical health and strength to tackle big jobs, and that the struggle I have with this responsibility is mostly mental and motivational, not physical.

I’m thankful, too, that I have a home.

I’m thankful for morning sunshine and a full day ahead.

On Thursdays throughout this year, I plan to post a few thoughts of thanksgiving along with Kim at the Upward Call and others. Why don’t you participate by posting your thanksgiving each week, too? It’ll be and encouragement to you and to others, I promise.

Wednesday
May052010

Self-Attesting Authority

In yesterday’s status report I mentioned that I was afraid that the Greg Bahnsen book I was reading was one of those weird things that I enjoy but no one else would. That remark peaked more interest in Always Ready: Directions for Defending the Faith than if I’d actually reviewed and recommended it.

So here’s a selection from this book for you. This list, which is a summary of the first six chapters, is found in Chapter 12.

CHRIST’S EPISTEMIC LORDSHIP

  1. God’s knowledge is original, comprehensive, and creative. There are no higher principles or standards of truth to which He looks and and attempts to bring His thoughts into conformity. There is no mystery surrounding His understanding, for it is infinite. God’s mind gives both diversity and order to all things thus guarantying the reality of particulars (multiplicity) and yet assuring that they are intelligible (unity).
  2. All knowledge and wisdom have been deposited in Christ, the source, standard, and embodiment of truth.
  3. God’s word thus has supreme, absolute, and unquestionable authority in the realm of knowledge as well as morality.
  4. This also means that God’s word must be the final standard of truth for man, in which case it cannot be challenged by some more ultimate criterion.
  5. Consequently, the teaching of Christ in Scripture has self-attesting authority; Christ clearly speaks with the authority of God, is the repository of knowledge, and is subject to no authority or standard more basic than Himself as “the way, the truth, and the life.” He alone is adequate to witness to Himself and His word.

See what I mean? So far—I’m on chapter 12 out of 34 and an appendix—there are no stories, no illustrations, just text that is very repetitive, some might even say tedious (but in a clarifying sort of way, of course), and that reads more like a collection of classroom lecture notes or something. Not your typical book.

I’m finding it fascinating and very easy to understand, at least compared to other presuppositional apologetic stuff I’ve read. You might like it, too. Just don’t expect a conversational book like Tim Keller’s The Reason for God.