Kindle deals for Christian readers
The theme of this week’s Crossway deals is pretty transparent (but very welcome):
- What Is a Healthy Church Member? by Thabiti Anyabwile—99
- Nine Marks of a Healthy Church by Mark Dever—$1.99
- The Deliberate Church by Mark Dever—$1.99
- Total Church by Tim Chester—99¢
- Church Elders by Jeramie Rinne—99¢
Also on sale:
- Pastoral Leadership is… by Dave Earley—99¢
- Risky Gospel by Owen Strachan—$1.99
- Preaching to a Post-Everything World by Zack Eswine—$1.99
- Keep Your Greek by Constantine Campbell—$2.99
What We Can Learn From Gamergate
Richard Clark:
It all started with a scandal. One woman slept with other men, and one man took umbrage, posting personal chat-logs with her as “proof” of videogame nepotism and corruption. The result was “Gamergate,” a videogame-related witch-hunt the likes of which none of us have ever seen before.
Gamergate is an online controversy centered around both the treatment of women in videogames and ethics in videogame journalism. The active campaign operates primarily out of the concern that there is a general “groupthink” in videogame journalism centered around feminist and generally progressive concerns.
Of Michael Landon and Brittany Maynard
This is so good.
Bible Ignorance
Mark Jones:
People who have an excellent understanding of the Scriptures really impress me. If there’s one thing I detest, besides Manchester United, it’s Bible studies or theological discussions where the Scriptures function like the crumbs in a bag of chips: you get to them only if you’re desperate.
As someone who has had the pleasure and displeasure of examining candidates for the ministry, I can tell you that many candidates suffer from a lack of basic bible knowledge. They (kind of) know their five points of Calvinism – I wish they knew the other twenty – but they have no idea what the five Levitical offerings are. They know two Latin words (duplex gratia), which they say ad infinitum, ad nauseam, but they don’t even know whether the cupbearer, the baker or the candlestick-maker forgot Joseph in prison.
The Church and Women at Risk
Lindsey Holcomb:
Violence against women is a global epidemic that affects women and girls of all socioeconomic backgrounds, ages, religions, cultures, and ethnicities. Some women and girls, however, are particularly vulnerable to abuse. The phrase “women at risk” or “at-risk women” is used to describe women most susceptible to exploitation and violence, such as women and girls living in poverty and girls younger than 18.
Because life can be tragic for women, it is crucial to have a biblical understanding of how the church can protect and care for women at risk.
Abraham, Cultural Distance, and Offering Up Our Moral Conscience
Derek Rishmawy:
All too often in these discussions of troubling texts, we collapse the cultural distance between us and the biblical characters. Human nature is, in many ways, constant. Conscience is one of those basic human features. Across cultures, everybody has a clear sense of right and wrong, norms against which we must not cross, and an internal compass about these sorts of things. That said, any student of culture knows there are some significant variations across cultures as well. “Self-evident truths” held by post-Enlightenment Americans are not all that apparent to equally intelligent Middle Easterners or citizens of the Majority world. The conscience of a 1st Century citizen might be very sensitive about an issue you and I wouldn’t blink twice about, and vice versa. Our cultural presuppositions and plausibility structures do a significant amount of work here.
Where does this come in with Abraham? Well, I think it becomes a factor in two ways: cultural distance and revelational distance. These two are bound up with each other.