Sovereign Grace Parenting Tips.
August 29, 2008 at 4:13 am | Posted in Biblical Parenting, Youth Ministry | Leave a CommentTags: Biblical Parenthood, CJ Mahaney, Youth Ministry
Tony from Sovereign Grace Ministries puts up some great, brief, audio clips on biblical parenthood. These are short and worth your time! You can listen to the entire two part interview by going to THIS POST.

Other clips in the series:
1. Gospel-Centered Parenting + Young Children (9:27)
2. The Gospel + Parental Sin (2:39)
3. The Gospel + Discipline (5:37)
4. Teaching Children to Love the Church (10:59)
Church Gets Lotto Winnings.
August 28, 2008 at 10:55 am | Posted in YouTube | Leave a CommentTags: Church Lottery, YouTube
New Matthew Perryman Jones CD.
August 28, 2008 at 4:39 am | Posted in Music | Leave a CommentTags: New Music, Matthew Perryman Jones, Indie
If you have not heard this guy you need to. He is releasing a new CD entitled Swallow the Sea. You can pre-order the CD by clicking HERE.
Luther on Raising Children.
August 27, 2008 at 9:52 am | Posted in Martin Luther, Sermons | 1 CommentTags: Biblical Parenthood, Martin Luther, Raising Children, Sermons
“But this at least all married people should know. They can do no better work and do nothing more valuable either for God, for Christendom, for all the world, for themselves, and for their children than to bring up their children well.”
“For bringing up their children properly is their shortest road to heaven. In fact, heaven itself could not be made nearer or achieved more easily than by doing this work.”
“By the same token, hell is no more easily earned than with respect to one’s own children. You could do no more disastrous work than to spoil the children, let them curse and swear, let them learn profane words and vulgar songs, and just let them do as they please.”
“There is no greater tragedy in Christendom than spoiling children.”
“Therefore, it is of the greatest importance for every married man to pay closer, more thorough, and continuous attention to the health of his child’s soul than to the body which he has begotten, and to regard his child as nothing else but an eternal treasure God has commanded
him to protect, and so prevent the world, the flesh, and the devil from stealing the child away and bringing him to destruction.”
Martin Luther – A Sermon on the Estate of Marriage (1519)
The best thing to hit the web since google – Mozilla Ubiquity
August 27, 2008 at 3:10 am | Posted in Web | Leave a CommentTags: Mozilla Ubiquity, New Applications, Technology, Web
BlackBerry Tips Tuesday – JuiceCaster and BlackBerry Bold.
August 26, 2008 at 9:08 am | Posted in BlackBerry | Leave a CommentTags: BlackBerry Bold, JuiceCaster
For BlackBerry Tips Tuesday this week we have two announcements:
1. Is a new app called JuiceCaster:

JuiceCaster just launched the beta of their video and sharing app for BlackBerry 8310 and BlackBerry 8330 users in the U.S., allowing them to post to Facebook, Flickr, Twitter, Photobucket, Blogger, LiveJournal, Typepad and plenty of other social networking sites. It’s too bad that it’s only on the BlackBerry Curve, but they promise that compatibility with the Pearl will be coming soon. Aside from broadcasting, JuiceCaster also lets you view other videos on the network so you meet all sorts of other mobile video microbloggin’ types. Head to JuiceCaster to get in on the limited beta.
2. Is the release of the Bold for Rogers in Canada…. Hopefully it will soon hit the US so I can drop my iPhone. 
2008 Baptist Hymnal.
August 26, 2008 at 4:18 am | Posted in Music | 1 CommentTags: 2008 Baptist Hymnal
Isaiah Six does a review of the new hymnal that is to be released soon he writes:
The Southern Baptist Convention typically publishes a new hymnal every fifteen or sixteen years. The last Baptist Hymnal was published in 1991 and the one before it was published in 1975. So we’ve been expecting a new version for some time. This summer, LifeWay Worship released the latest edition and here’s my conclusion: Stop what you’re doing, call whoever you need to call at your church and start raising funds to purchase this hymnal. Seriously. Mike Harland and his team have provided the church with an incredible resource that combines the rich tradition of historical hymnody with modern worship songs.
His main outlined points discuss the following:
Theological Importance
More Songs
Additional Resources
Online Tools
To read his entire review CLICK HERE.
Religulous.
August 25, 2008 at 6:53 am | Posted in YouTube | Leave a CommentTags: Documentary, Relgulous
A new documentary. I’m going to take a wild guess and say he didn’t talk to any of educated people in reformed circles….
Why I am crying right now.
August 22, 2008 at 6:56 am | Posted in Music | 1 CommentTags: backing up files, lost music, sad day
Yesterday was a happy day because I got a new 17″ MacBook Pro. Today was a sad day because I thought I backed up my music library to an external drive yesterday, successfully, turns out I didn’t. I lost my entire music library. As a person who plays music and loves music I am extremely bummed over this.
There is some light at the end of the tunnel and that is that I have about 15 gigs of music on my iPhone which means I only lost 45 gigs of music… only
Moral of the story, if there is one, back up your junk WEEKLY.
Sitting in my tears,
Bryan
First Day of School.
August 20, 2008 at 4:28 pm | Posted in Family | 1 CommentTags: Matthew, School, Selah
Voddie Baucham on what a husband should be.
August 20, 2008 at 6:53 am | Posted in Family | Leave a CommentTags: Biblical Fatherhood, Biblical Parenthood, Men leading househoulds
Pure Church does a breakdown of Baucham’s sermon on the topic of how a husband should lead and be, his primary points are as follows:
1. Must lead in love.
2. Must lead in the word.
3. Must lead in righteousness.
4. Must lead in selflessness.
5. Must lead in intimacy
Great Stuff! Read the entire post HERE.
HT: Pure Church
John Frame Interview
August 20, 2008 at 6:44 am | Posted in Interviews | Leave a CommentTags: Intervews, John Frame
Thanks to Andy for this one! Andy has the following conversation with Dr. Frame:
1. It may be misleading to speak of the problem of evil. Would you agree that there are at least these two (and would you add any others)?
- The logical-intellectual-philosophical problem of evil is the logical tension in the following three statements: (1) God is all-powerful, (2) God is all-good, and (3) evil exists.
- The emotional-religious-existential problem of evil is the emotional and religious tension people experience when they or those close to them suffer.
Yes, these are the standard ways of formulating the problem. One might add “God is all-wise” to the three propositions in the logical-intellectual problem. With only (1) and (2) someone might argue that though God is all-powerful and all-good, he might not be wise enough to find a way to prevent or avoid evil. But of course the Bible teaches that God is so wise (and implicitly so knowledgeable) that he can always find a way to accomplish his purposes. So the logical-intellectual problem posits that evil conflicts, not only with God’s power and goodness, but also with his wisdom.
I think these exhaust the forms of the problem of evil. Others reduce to one of these.2. You assert, “The problem of evil is probably the most difficult problem in all of theology, and for many atheists it is the Achilles’ heel of the theistic worldview” (2008, p. 141). Why is it such a difficult problem for theists?
I think it is a hard problem because of the sheer quantity of evil in the world and the terrible suffering that it brings. Events like genocide, terrible floods, and infant-suffering are very hard to reconcile with the idea that God has a good purpose for everything. I don’t think that evil logically justifies unbelief, but I can well understand how personal tragedies have led people to abandon faith in God.
3. People often think that the logical problem of evil is a problem primarily for theists. Would you say that it is at least equally problematic for atheists? Why?In order to formulate the problem, atheists have to use the concepts “good” and “evil,” which make no sense in their system. If good and evil are just names for our feelings of approval or descriptions of the pleasure that comes from various events, then there is no reason to assume that God would produce only good and avoid all evil. So, as some have said, if believers have a problem with evil, unbelievers have a problem with both good and evil. For on the unbelieving view, there is neither good nor evil in an objective sense. Still, it is legitimate, I think, for atheists to question whether the Christian faith is consistent within itself. Whatever the unbeliever may think about good and evil, he has a right to ask how the Christian concept of good and evil is consistent with the Christian view of God.
4. One of the most common evangelical “solutions” to the logical problem of evil is the free-will defense, which presupposes that humans have a will that is absolutely free, thus making God contingent. Why is this such an attractive view, and what are the main reasons that you reject it in favor of compatibilism?It is attractive because people like to think that they are in control of their own choices. People like the idea that they are utterly free, autonomous. But of course this idea is unbiblical. Scripture teaches that God controls human decisions (Gen. 45:5-8; Ps. 16:9; Acts 2:23-24), even when these decisions are sinful. We cannot become followers of Christ unless God draws us (John 6:44, 65; Acts 16:14-15). In fact, God controls all events; he makes everything happen as it does (Lam. 3:37-38; Rom. 8:28; 11:36; Eph. 1:11). So human freedom must be understood in a “compatibilistic” way, i.e., as compatible with God’s foreordination of our decisions.
5. Why do you argue that it is merely possible that this is the best of all possible worlds?People sometimes say that God must make the best possible world because he himself is perfect. So they think that although evil exists now, this is nevertheless the best world God could have made. That is one traditional attempt to solve the problem of evil.
I disagree, however. Genesis 1:31 says that God made everything good, but not perfect. “Perfect” would mean not only good, but also incapable of becoming evil. Clearly God did not choose to make that kind of world. In that sense, the new Heavens and the new Earth (Rev. 21:1) will be a better world than this one, for that world will be confirmed in goodness, incapable of becoming evil. So the world in which we presently live is not the best possible world. God is free to make a world that is imperfect in some respects.
Could God have made a better world than this one? Certainly. He could have made what we call the “new Heavens and new Earth” right back at the beginning. Why, then, did he choose not to do so? I don’t know. That is essentially the problem of evil. I think there are some biblical ways of addressing the problem, but I don’t think we will have a completely satisfying resolution of the problem during our present life.
6. It is not uncommon for people to assert, “God does not cause evil; he only permits it.” Why do you disagree with that? What verbs do you prefer to use to explain God’s relationship to evil? (You list “some initial possibilities” in your 2008 article: “authors, brings about, causes, controls, creates, decrees, foreordains, incites, includes within his plan, makes happen, ordains, permits, plans, predestines, predetermines, produces, stands behind, and wills.”)Yes, well, I discuss a number of these terms at some length in Doctrine of God. Certainly God “permits” evil, and I think it’s legitimate to use that language. People sometimes think that we should say God “permits” evil, but doesn’t bring it about. They think that would alleviate the problem of evil.
The question, though, is whether God merely permits evil, or whether in addition he actually brings evil about in some sense. I think the latter is true. Scripture often says that God brings about sinful decisions of human beings (see above under Question 4). This is a hard teaching, and on one level it makes the problem of evil more difficult. But in another sense, this teaching is reassuring. If evil comes from some source other than God, that would be pretty scary. It would imply that there are forces of evil that are capable of resisting, even overcoming God’s desires. But if evil comes from God, we know that he has a good purpose in bringing it about (Rom. 8:28).
I avoid saying that God “authors” evil, an unclear expression which seems to suggest that God (like the author of a book) not only brings evil about, but approves of it. “Creates” is awkward: evil is a quality, not a thing, and God creates things, not qualities. “Wills” is ambiguous, since it can mean that he approves it or simply that he brings it about. “Incites” suggests that God encourages people to do evil things; Scripture says he does not do this. “Stands behind” can also suggest this. The other terms listed above differ mainly in their connotations. I think any of them are legitimate, depending on the context. I have used all of them, but I tend to prefer plain-English phrases like “brings about” and “makes happen.”
7. What advice would you give to Christians who are wrestling with the emotional problem of evil?Usually it is not helpful to get into the intellectual issues during a personal tragedy. It is best to find family, pastors, and Christian friends who can weep with you and bring the comfort of Jesus. The first priority is to recognize that Jesus has redeemed us from sin and death, and that he promises a world to come without any suffering at all. Similarly, when you are counseling someone else who has suffered great loss, don’t batter him with arguments at first. Show love and give good counsel. And admit (which is true) that we don’t have an ultimate answer. This is God’s mystery.
Now later on, after a time of weeks, months, or even years, genuine intellectual questions may come up, and we need to deal with them honestly. Although there is no fully satisfying answer to the problem of evil, there are considerations that will alleviate it if we are willing to recognize God’s Lordship over his world.
8. How should Christians apply the gospel to the intellectual and emotional problems of evil?The Bible is really all about the problem of evil. It shows how evil came into the world (Gen. 3), and it tells us how God sent his Son to deal with it, to “destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8). The death of Jesus atoned for the sins of his people, and sin is the root of all evil. So through him all the heavens and the earth will be renewed.
In dealing with the emotional problem of evil, therefore, Jesus is our greatest source of comfort (2 Cor. 1:3-4), our only ultimate source of comfort. Without him, evil reigns. But because he has risen from the dead, he has gained the victory over evil, and will come again in triumph. Paul says we should comfort one another with these words (1 Thess. 4:18).
As for the intellectual problem of evil, we must point out that the intellect itself is God’s creation, and it must operate according to God’s rules. That is, God himself has the right to govern our epistemology. So if we come up with an argument that questions or denies God’s existence, we subvert the intellect itself. God often asserts his authority when people charge him with evil: see Job 38-42; Matt. 20:13-15; Rom. 9:14-24.
So our intellect, too, is fallen and needs the redemption of Christ (2 Cor. 10:5). We need a new heart and a new mind, to see things as they really are. Remarkably, in the new Heavens and new Earth, nobody will raise the problem of evil. They will find it obvious that God is just and true, and they will praise him that his righteous acts have been revealed (Rev. 15:3-4). Why are people no longer troubled by the problem of evil? Perhaps God gives them more information. But he also gives them new hearts and minds. So the gospel provides the best answers to both forms of the problem of evil.
9. What are some of your forthcoming writing projects (short-term and long-term)?My Collected Works is being compiled in three CD/DVD sets, one on Theology, one on Apologetics, one on the Christian Life. The first volume is available now; the others will be available later this year or in 2009. We’re also putting together a “Festschrift” in which a number of authors will write essays, critically analyzing my ideas.
What is most important to me, however, is Doctrine of the Word of God, the last of the four Lordship books, a study of the word of God and Scripture. That will be a multi-year project. I’m praying that God will give me more time to work on this.
[Editorial note from Naselli: Check out about thirty endorsements of volume 1 of Frame's collected works (about half-way down this page). Authors of the endorsements include J. I. Packer, Wayne Grudem, D. A. Carson, R. Kent Hughes, Bruce Waltke, Ligon Duncan, Richard B. Gaffin Jr., Robert A. Peterson, Kelly M. Kapic, and Vern Poythress.]
10. Many thanks, Dr. Frame, for taking time to serve the readers of JT’s blog with such helpful comments!You’re welcome, Andy. I hope this interview will be helpful to your readers. May God lead us into his truth, in Christ.
BlackBerry Tips Tuesday – PhoneFace
August 20, 2008 at 6:40 am | Posted in BlackBerry | Leave a CommentTags: BlackBerry Applications, BlackBerry Tips Tuesday, PhoneFace
Sorry for the delayed post. Things have been a bit crazy with work as of late. Here is a new app that you BlackBerry and Facebook users will enjoy. It’s a little slow, but is a great concept.
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“But this at least all married people should know. They can do no better work and do nothing more valuable either for God, for Christendom, for all the world, for themselves, and for their children than to bring up their children well.”





