Posted in Politics on Jan 4th, 2008 No Comments »
Al Mohler:
The rhetoric of the race — and the rhetoric of many evangelicals — is disturbing. This race is important and necessarily so. We are talking about the next President of the United States, after all. But evangelicals have invested far too much hope in the political process. No government can make people good, transform humanity, or eliminate sin. The political sphere is important, but never ultimate. Jesus Christ is Lord — and He will be Lord regardless of who sits in the Oval Office.
Tags: Al Mohler
Melinda Penner described Al Mohler’s talk at GodBlogCon:
Al Mohler spoke about his intellectual loneliness as a child asking the big questions that don’t seem to come up often in church, even though they’re well within the intellectual heritage of Christianity. He was rather odd. And I think a lot of us in our congregations who think about some of these questions we talk about at STR have felt lonely at times because it doesn’t seem like too many other people around us are thinking along the same lines. They have different interests. That’s why the Body is so important and that’s the beauty of the internet and blogs because it allows to connect beyond our physical boundaries.
This reminded me of the following quote from Harry Blamires’ The Christian Mind, which is featured on Keith Plummer’s blog banner:
If Christians cannot communicate as thinking beings, they are reduced to encountering one another only at the shallow level of gossip and small talk. Hence the perhaps peculiarly modern problem—the loneliness of the thinking Christian.
I’ve written before about the web rotting the mind. This reminds me that for all its downside, the Internet can be a means of grace too.
Tags: Al Mohler, GodBlogCon, Harry Blamires, Keith Plummer, Melinda Penner
Posted in Books on Sep 28th, 2007 No Comments »
Al Mohler offers some suggestions on reading books:
- Maintain regular reading projects.
- Work through major sections of Scripture.
- Read all the titles written by some authors.
- Get some big sets and read through them.
- Allow yourself some fun reading, and learn how to enjoy reading by reading enjoyable books.
- Write in your books; mark them up and make them yours.
Tags: Al Mohler