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Posts Tagged ‘paradox’

Reflecting on my first year of blogging

August 22, 2009 Barry Wallace 8 comments

One year ago today, August 22, 2008, I tentatively published my first blog post.  Blogging has proven to be a good (although time-consuming) discipline for me, helping me to think through some important issues.  I’ve also made some good friends along the way, and enjoyed a number of thought-provoking discussions.

Discussion seems to me to lie right at the heart of blogging.  It’s a format tailor made for a type of interaction that has tremendous potential to benefit those who participate.  “Iron sharpens iron, and one man sharpens another” (Proverbs 27:17).  Many times your comments have contributed more to a subject than my original post.

With that in mind, I decided to compile a list of the posts here that generated the most discussion in the past year.  I arbitrarily decided to draw a line at posts with 15 or more comments.  (I made one exception, excluding a post with 16 comments.)

Blogging is a strange thing.  I don’t consider very many of these my best or most well-written posts; yet, for one reason or another, they generated the most discussion.  Go figure.

Here’s the list, in chronological order from the oldest to the most recent, along with a brief note about each post.   The total number of comments and trackbacks on the post is in parentheses beside the link.

I hope you can take the time to read the comments left by others.  They really are what makes re-reading these posts worthwhile.  Feel free to add your own comments while you’re there, no matter how old the original post.

  • Made for another world (15) I had only been blogging for a few days when this post attracted the attention of a very gracious, intelligent, and articulate atheist.  An interesting dialogue ensued.
  • Ray Boltz announces he’s gay (16) I typed up this post within minutes of reading about Ray Boltz’s announcement.  Looking back at the post, I see that I interacted very little with commenters.  I regret that.
  • Memorizing Scripture is hard on an old man (16) Ever since his expository series on the book of Isaiah, our pastor has urged the members of our church to memorize a specific passage of Scripture from each book he preaches on.  My memorization skills have eroded with time.
  • Forgiveness and Corrie Ten Boom (31) To this day, this post is the most visited and most commented post on my blog.  It was part of a series on the subject of forgiveness.  See this page for the other posts.
  • Is it necessary to believe in the resurrection of Jesus to be saved? (24) As a result of interacting with a friend of mine on his blog, I attempted in this post to elaborate on the answer I gave to a question he had raised.  Unlike most of the other posts on this list, I consider this to be one of the better ones, and one that prompted some important discussion.
  • Bertrand Russell’s darkness (19) This short post posed a simple question.  Three different atheists commented on this one, provoking quite a bit of discussion.
  • Recovering from a 5200 mile road trip (15) We took a rather spur-of-the-moment 5200 mile road trip this summer.  I hope to follow up on this post (eventually) with some pictures and details of the trip.

To those of you who have befriended me and encouraged me to continue blogging, my heartfelt thanks.  Your friendship and your comments are always deeply appreciated.  To the rest of you, thanks for visiting.  I hope you too become a regular!

Zero-Sum Games, Parenting, and Theology

July 22, 2009 theoparadox 2 comments

Paradoxes can be a great tool for parenting.

MonopolyManLast weekend, I had a lot of yard projects to get done, so I told my kids (ages five and eight) that we would be spending the day together working. They looked excited, and started holding out their hands at me. Somehow, without trying to, I’ve given them the impression that this type of work should always be compensated. Or maybe they’ve given themselves that impression, I’m not sure.

Either way, I found myself staring down at two very expectant youngsters. I didn’t want to pay them, so I proposed decreed the following:

1. Everyone who works will get paid (including Daddy).

2. The payment scheme will be as follows: I will pay my daughter $1.00 for her work. She will pay her little brother $1.00 for his work. He will pay me $1.00 for my work.

3. If any of us doesn’t work, that person will still have to pay, but won’t get paid.

We were left with the perfect paradox: everyone gets paid, but no one gains anything. And no one loses anything, either. And we all have a motivation to work. Most importantly, Daddy doesn’t lose his shirt on the deal. Read more…

Don’t tell the Bible what it can’t say

June 14, 2009 Barry Wallace 21 comments

…a few more thoughts on embracing biblical paradox

Unless God has clearly told us what he will or will not do, it seems a little presumptuous (if not downright laughable) for flawed, finite beings like us to think we somehow intuitively know what the all-wise, all-powerful, transcendent God and Creator of the universe would or wouldn’t do.  In reality, our intuitions about God are marred by sin and limited by human nature, and therefore often unreliable.

A while back I came across a helpful comment by someone named India:

It seems to me that one of the surest ways to fall into theological error is to make an argument about what God would or would not do based on our own fallible conceptions of what a good God ought to do. After all, this is the same reasoning that leads atheists to reject God (because a good God wouldn’t permit evil) and universalists and annihilationists to reject the notion of hell (because a good God wouldn’t punish people eternally).

In a similar way, we should be cautious about making bold assertions that the Bible couldn’t possibly teach a certain doctrine, simply because we can’t imagine that it would.  John Piper said something that arrested me the first time I read my favorite book of his, The Pleasures of God:

My aim is to let Scripture stand–to let it teach what it will and not to tell it what it cannot say.

Wow.  How many times have I heard someone (in so many words) tell the Bible what it cannot say?  That sentence alone is worth the price of the book (and it’s nowhere near the best thing he says in it).  Piper continues:

For example, the statement, “God cannot choose individuals unconditionally and yet have compassion on all men,” is based on a certain kind of philosphical assumption, not on Scripture.  Scripture leads us precisely to this paradoxical position.  I am willing to let the paradox stand even if I can’t explain it.

Anyone, regardless of theological persuasion, can make this mistake.  Calvinists can make it.  Arminians can make it.  Those with Orthodox, Roman Catholic, or various Protestant backgrounds make it.  I can make it.  You can make it.

The bottom line is, we’re not as smart as we think we are.  Are we content to let the paradoxes of Scripture stand, even if we can’t explain them?

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Randy Alcorn on embracing biblical paradox

June 11, 2009 Barry Wallace 12 comments

Speaking of Charles Spurgeon

…he’s one of those guys who continues to speak long after his death.  Many Christian leaders (and laymen) readily acknowledge their indebtedness to Spurgeon.  Take Randy Alcorn, for instance.

If you don’t already know who Alcorn is, I’d like to introduce him to you.  In fact, when you finish with this post, you might want to check out C.J. Mahaney’s recent four-part interview with Alcorn:  Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4Before you run off, though, I’d like to ask you to spend a couple of minutes with me here looking at one particular aspect of Alcorn’s theology that has a distinct Spurgeon-esqe flavor. Read more…

“but if you do not forgive others…”

April 4, 2009 Barry Wallace 7 comments

The most pointed words in the Bible on the subject of forgiving others come directly from the lips of Jesus.  They’re so pointed, in fact, that we’re tempted, for various reasons, to dull their razor sharp barbs.

I want to look briefly at two examples from Jesus’ teaching on the subject of forgiveness.  These are genuinely hard sayings—not in the sense that they’re hard to understand (they’re actually easy to understand), but in the sense that they’re hard to accept at face value, and hard to reconcile with other truths we hold dear. Read more…

A Christmas meditation with Martin Luther

December 25, 2008 Barry Wallace 3 comments

My Sunday School lesson last week concluded with some questions about the Incarnation:

Consider the remarkable truth that God becomes a human being in Jesus Christ. How do you respond to that fact? Does it still have power to amaze you? Is it so familiar to you that it has little impact?

It is a sad fact of our human nature that our hearts often grow dull.  We don’t feel the force of truth as we should.  In order to combat that tendency we need to meditate deeply on the stunning realities of Scripture.  The incarnation is exactly that sort of reality.  The new The ESV Study Bible, commenting on John 1:14, says, Read more…