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12.26.2020

This is a Worldview

01 Holy Bible, AV1611

02 Iliad & Odyssey - Homer

03 Parzival - Wolfram von Eschenbach

04 Russian Novel - Tolstoy/Dostoevsky

05 Institutes of the Christian Religion - Calvin

06 Spirit of Laws - Montesquieu

07 On War - Carl von Clausewitz

08 Wealth of Nations - Adam Smith

09 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire - Gibbon

10 Lives - Plutarch

11 History of the Peloponnesian War - Thucydides

12 Democracy in America - Alexis de Tocqueville

12.12.2020

What Christmas really symbolizes?

Christmas Eve and Christmas day are not about the birth of Christ. The enduring power of the holiday is due to it being a pageant of the Second Coming of Christ.

Santa on his sleigh, seemingly arriving everywhere at once, is Jesus. The presents under the now approachable Tree of Life symbolize the new Heavens and Earth. 

The focus on expectation is familiar to us. "Wait! Wait! It's almost here!" That tension.

12.08.2020

Central motif of the Bible

[From an email...]

Awhile back I sent a kind of sloppy list of central motifs of the Bible. One way lists work is an initial list may not be definitive, but it enables you to get perspective and perhaps see what is missing. Also you can get a sense of hierarchy.

Now I see that the motif of the 'serpent and the serpent slayer' can be seen as the foundational archetypal motif of the Bible.

I've always seen the story of the knight who slays the dragon and rescues something of value the dragon was keeping in his cave as a big - BIG - universal, archetypal story that underlies so much reality and carries so much meaning.

And there it is throughout the Bible as central motif from Genesis to Revelation. 

Another big, central motif I missed is the City of God motif. From Eden to the New Jerusalem. It kind of overrides the more elemental serpent and serpent slayer motif.

Two books:

The Serpent and the Serpent Slayer by Andrew Naselli

The City of God and the Goal of Creation by T. Desmond Alexander

Both are part of a series titled Short Studies in Biblical Theology.

12.06.2020

The true frame of reality

Do this as an exercise. Next time you're far away from where you usually read the Bible and study doctrine, somewhere like a common store, or when in a social scene or gathering, intentionally bring up into your mind a basic truth of salvation and the plan of God. Like, I'm a born sinner and an active sinner, but by having faith in the work and death of Christ I am able to enter the Kingdom of God, and to in effect leave the darkness and enter the light. This thought is the true frame of reality. Where you truly are. Not a store. Not a common gathering. All that is incidental to the true frame of reality that the Bible and biblical doctrine portray.

12.01.2020

Three angles of study of the Bible

To study the Bible theologically, historically, and as literature use these sources:

Theology: any good source of Reformed Theology like Louis Berkhof's Systematic Theology; i.e. five solas, doctrines of grace, covenant - federal - theology

History: the Baker Illustrated Bible Background Commentary by Duvall and Hays

Literary: the four main books by Leland Ryken: Dictionary of Biblical Imagery; Literary Introductions to the Books of the Bible; the Complete Handbook of Literary Forms in the Bible; How to Read the Bible as Literature

Three sources to understand Christianity

To understand Christianity use these three sources:

The Bible and on-the-mark biblical doctrine (Reformed Theology)

Worldview analysis like Universe Next Door by James Sire

Ancient psychology such as the language of the Work contained in P. D. Ouspensky's Fourth Way

These three sources correlate to the three-front battle against the Devil, the world, and the flesh (or, our fallen nature)