Here are some of the good reads found this week:
To the Older Woman in the Church: You Are NOT Obsolete. "Older women in the Body of Christ are not obsolete, and 'so we do not lose heart.' Though our outer self may be forgetful, less agile, and plumper than we'd like, our inner self is on duty, continuing in service to our God."
Potential Dangers of "Applying Scripture to My Life," HT to Knowable Word. "Imagine asking a friend how her day was and two minutes into her summary interjecting, 'Wait, tell me how this applies to me?' We'd never do this. And yet we do it to God. We exchange the feast of relational intimacy and holistic formation for the porridge of minor behavioral change and practical nuggets for our optimized life."
What We Regard as Little, HT to Challies. "The lack of obedience in small things would always eventually lead Israel to idolatry, to drifting from the God who rescued them and made them His own people. We like the dramatic stories of walls falling and dry river crossings but deemphasize the daily obedience to God's Word because that's not as gripping or faith-growing."
Obituary for a Quiet Life, HT to Susan. "When the notable figures of our day pass away, they wind up on our screens, short clips documenting their achievements, talking heads discussing their influence. The quiet lives, though, pass on soundlessly in the background. And yet those are the lives in our skin, guiding us from breakfast to bed. They're the lives that have made us, that keep the world turning."
At the Center of All Things. "Christians are prone to take a relatively minor point of doctrine, one we might identify as second- or third-order, and set it like the earth at the pivot point of Ptolemy's universe. Their love of this doctrine and their conviction that it is key to a right understanding and practice of the Christian faith means that soon everything begins to orbit around it. It becomes the center of their beliefs in such a way that any other point of doctrine is understood only in relation to it." Tim shares a better way.
The Danger of Playing God. I caught part of this from Stephen Davey's Wisdom for the Heart program on the radio then skimmed through the transcript online.The part that grabbed my attention was the difference between critical thinking and judgmentalism. "The Christian is actually told, and I quote, to judge all things (1 Corinthians 2:15) – the same root word for judge that James uses here when he obviously tells us not to judge. So is the Bible confused? Not if you understand the context of this prohibition. What James is forbidding here is judgmentalism – a critical spirit that judges everyone and everything and runs everyone down. / Hughes, p. 196. There is a difference between making a discerning judgment and having a judgmental spirit. There is a difference between judging and judgmentalism. There is a difference between thinking critically and being critical."
The Assignment I Wasn't Expecting, HT to Challies. "I once was an eager college student flush with conviction, laying my life out for Jesus. His love had captured and transformed me, and I was driven by the wonder of it. I would go anywhere, do anything, I vowed. And I did. It was difficult and painful and exhilarating and beautiful, while it lasted. But somehow I didn't expect it all to come down to this."
Why We Should Read Poetry, although the piece talks about literature, not just poetry. HT to the Story Warren. "Reading literature offers us profound solidarity with an author and admits us to a broader human community but it also holds up a mirror that allows us to see aspects of ourselves more clearly than we could have before."
Why Build a Personal Library? HT to Linda."Writing in the Guardian, Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett recently took aim at 'everything that is smug and middle class about the cult of book ownership.' She clarified, 'I don't mean reading. . . . No, I specifically mean having a lot of books and boasting about it, treating having a lot of books as a stand-in for your personality, or believing that simply owning a lot of books makes one 'know things.' But, seriously: Who does that?" Joel J. Miller shares some good reasons *for* a personal library.
I enjoyed looking through several illustrations by Liz Fosslien, many about time management, HT to Redeeming Productivity. I especially liked this one about having a bad day and breaking the cycle.
It's a good time for my occasional reminder that links do not mean 100% endorsement of everything on these sites.
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