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. 

                     

Entries by rebecca (4108)

Tuesday
Apr262011

Called According to Paul: Summary

This is another repost of an old post in the Called According to Paul series. I’ve been reposting them, one per week (sort of), so I can link to them in the sidebar under Favorite Posts. This post is the final post in the series and a summary of all the post series. What I’ve done is make a list of the ways Paul uses the word call or called in regards to God’s call and the things he most often associates with it. An explanation of this series can be found here, and the already reposted pieces are here.


Places where Paul uses called as a word of divine power—as something that brings sure results. I’ve also included all the times that the word called is used as a metonymy for saved, since the reasoning behind this use of the word seems to be that the call, in these cases, always brings salvation. Given how many times Paul clearly uses the word called as a word of divine power, it’d be reasonable to conclude that he always (or usually) uses the word like this, and so this meaning ought to be understood in all the other instances as well. On this list, however, I’ve only included those times where the power in the call is unmistakeable from the language of the context.


Places where Paul uses called as a summons or appointment. I consider these to be a subset of the divine power category, since there is forcefulness in the idea of summons or appointment.


As a summons to apostleship:

As a summons to holiness, Christlikeness, sainthood, etc.


 Places where Paul has the call originating in God’s choice/purpose/will.


Places where Paul has the call originating in God’s love/grace/mercy:


Places where Paul stresses the insignificance or “nothingness” of who/what is called:


Places where Paul stresses the personal/individual nature of the call. Included with this list should also be the instances found above where the call is to apostleship:


Tuesday
Apr262011

A Catechism for Girls and Boys

Part I: Questions about God, Man, and Sin

31. Q. What is meant by transgression?
      A. Doing what God forbids.
(Click through to read scriptural proofs.)

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Apr262011

Round the Sphere Again: Questions of Resurrection

Was Jesus’ Burial Cloth Folded or Rolled?
I didn’t even know this was an issue, but it is (Mondays with Mounce at Koinonia).

This illustrates the difficulty of translating Greek words that occur rarely. Either way, the point is the same: “[R]obbers had not stolen the body, as they would have given little care for the neatness of the grave clothes.”

Where Is Jesus Resurrection Body?
Jared Wilson answers this question:

After Jesus’s resurrection and ascension into heaven, where did his physical body go? I realize that when I ask that question I’m actually asking two questions: 1. the nature of Jesus’s body and how it works in another state 2. did Jesus go to Heaven, and if so, what is Heaven? If it is just a spiritual place how could Jesus’s physical body exist there? If he is simply with the Father, who is spirit, where is his physical body?

(The Gospel-Driven Church).