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Tag Archives: theology

Did God Create Me This Way?

23 Wednesday Mar 2011

Posted by David L. Gill in Personal, Theology

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Heidelberg Catechism, homosexuality, original sin, rebellion, sexuality, theology

6. Q: Did God create people so wicked and perverse?

A: No. God created them good and in His own image, that is, in true righteousness and holiness, so that they might truly know God their creator, love Him with all their heart and live with Him in eternal happiness for His praise and glory.

7. Q: Then where does this corrupt human nature come from?

A: From the fall and disobedience of our first parents, Adam and Eve, in Paradise. This fall has so poisoned our nature that we are born sinners–corrupt from conception on.

8. Q: But are we so corrupt that we are totally unable to do any good and inclined toward all evil?

A: Yes, unless we are born again, by the Spirit of God.

from the Heidelberg Catechism, Lord’s Day 3.

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Holiness

25 Friday Feb 2011

Posted by David L. Gill in Personal, Theology

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

holiness, Reformed Theology, sanctification, Scripture, theology

…the term “holiness” is not exhausted by that of “moral purity.” Granted, the latter is not excluded, but neither is it the only meaning, not even the primary one. … Holy is that which in all things conforms to the special laws God has ordained for it. Holiness is perfection, not only in a moral sense, but in the comprehensive sense in which the unique legislation of Israel conceives it: a religious, ethical, ceremonial, internal, and external sense.

–Herman Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics vol. 2: God and Man, Baker, 2004: pg. 219.

Strive for peace with everyone, and for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord.

–Hebrews 12:14, ESV.

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Response to Randy Alcorn and Abortion

21 Friday Jan 2011

Posted by David L. Gill in Theology

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Gospel, politics, preaching, relationships, Scripture, theology

A friend of mine here at the seminary sent me this link to Justin Taylor’s blog regarding some comments made by Randy Alcorn about Sanctity of Human Life Sunday.  Last night, a few of us from the seminary discussed at some length the merits and demerits of having services which commemorate extra-biblical events, holidays, etc.  This friend, who was involved in the conversation, was interested to know what I’d say to Alcorn’s assertion.  Here’s the email I sent to my friend.

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Canon Closed

14 Friday Jan 2011

Posted by David L. Gill in Theology

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

C. H. Spurgeon, false teaching, Scripture, theology

“I have heard many fanatical persons say the Holy Spirit revealed this and that to them.  Now that is very generally revealed nonsense.  The Holy Ghost does not reveal anything fresh now.  He brings old things to our remembrance.  ‘He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have told you,’ [John 14:26].  The canon of revelation is closed; there is no more to be added.  God does not give a fresh revelation, but he rivets the old one.  When it has been forgotten, and laid in the dusty chamber of our memory, he fetches it out and cleans the picture, but does not paint a new one.  There are no new doctrines, but the old ones are often revived.  It is not, I say, by any new revelation that the Spirit comforts.  He does so by telling us old things over again; he brings a fresh lamp to manifest the treasures hidden in Scripture; he unlocks the strong chests in which the truth had long lain, and he points to secret chambers filled with untold riches; but he coins no more, for enough is done.
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Good Advice? or Good News?

10 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by David L. Gill in Theology

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Gospel, marriage, preaching, relationships, repentance, theology

A friend recently sent me some notes he took during a sermon at his church.  Here’s what he sent me:

  • It’s easy to pick someone [as a spouse] to have fun with, but it’s more important to chose someone you want to go thru hardship with.
  • My responsibility in marriage is to guard our oneness.
  • The biggest enemy of marriage is selfishness.
  • We get into trouble when WE decide what parts of scripture are relevant.
  • Learning to pursue God indicates the ability to pursue our spouses.

The trouble, in short, is that none of these takeaways require a crucified and risen Savior.

Let me put it another way:  can an atheist create a list like this (with, of course, the exception of the final point)?  Can the final point be made by a Jewish person just as easily as a Christian person?  I still maintain that if the sermon’s punchline is not repentance and the forgiveness of sins in Christ, it is not a distinctly Christian sermon.

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Thoughts on Sex

01 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by David L. Gill in Personal, Theology

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

child rearing, Scripture, sexuality, theology

According to Covenant Eyes, more than 40% of adolescents have intercourse before talking to their parents about sex.  I’m not sure who the sample included, but I have some thoughts about why this is.

Parents of children, especially those in the church, do not believe in original sin.  We talk often, especially pro-life oriented churches, of the “innocence of children” and “the innocents” as a group (usually infants or toddlers).  This is a misnomer and a gross misrepresentation of the biblical teaching on original sin.

One reason 40% of adolescents have sex prior to their parents having “the talk” is that parents simply wait to long to have it.  My own childhood did not have honest talks about sex at all.  Toddlers, it has been long known, engage in self-exploration long before they equate such action with being sexually aroused.  Rather than using this opportunity to discuss the body, I was chastised, “Don’t play with yourself! It’s dirty!”

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Look at the Rose

31 Friday Dec 2010

Posted by David L. Gill in Theology

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Tags

Christmas, Gospel, hymns, theology, worship

Isaiah 11:1 says, “A shoot will come up from the stump of Jesse; from his roots a Branch will bear fruit.”  This German hymn, dating from 1560, was translated by Theodore Baker (vv1-2), Harriett Spaeth (vv3-4) and John Mattes (v5).  Taken from The Trinity Hymnal, Revised Edition, 1990.  Hymn #221.

Lo, how a rose e’er blooming
From the tender stem hath sprung
Of Jesse’s lineage coming
As men of old have sung
It came, a floweret bright
Amid the cold of winter
When half-spent was the night.

Isaiah ’twas foretold it,
The rose I have in mind
With Mary we behold it
The virgin mother kind
To show God’s love aright
She bore to men a Savior
When half-spent was the night.

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Break Forth!

30 Thursday Dec 2010

Posted by David L. Gill in Theology

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Tags

Christmas, hymns, repentance, theology, worship

“O God, You make this most holy night to shine with the brightness of the true Light.  Grant that as we have known the mysteries of that Light on earth we may also come to the fullness of His joys in heaven; through the same Jesus Christ, Your Son, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy  Spirit, one God, now and forever” (Collect for Christmas Midnight, from The Lutheran Service Book).

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Jesus, Our Example

30 Thursday Dec 2010

Posted by David L. Gill in Theology

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

atonement, Christus Exemplar, Pelagius, Reformed Theology, Socinius, theology

Recently, I attended a mainline church here in St. Louis and heard the children’s sermon in which the children were instructed that the cross showed us how much God loved us, and that Jesus shows us the right way to live.  Nothing else was said: nothing about the atonement, nothing about what Jesus was doing there (except a possible inference that He was somehow setting an example of self-sacrifice) and certainly nothing about how we actually go about being like Jesus apart from emulating a certain niceness which is desired of all Christian boys and girls.

Louis Berkhof has something to say about this in his Systematic Theology (pg.387-388).  He speaks directly to the Example Theory of the Atonement.

This theory was advocated by the Socinians in the sixteenth century, in opposition to the doctrine of the Reformers, that Christ vicariously atoned for the sin of mankind.  Its fundamental principle is, that there is no retributive justice in God which requires absolutely and inexorably that sin be punished.  His justice does not prevent him from pardoning whom He will without demanding any satisfaction.  The death of Christ did not atone for sin, neither did it move God to pardon sin.  Christ saves men by revealing to them the way of faith and obedience as the way of eternal life, by giving them an example of true obedience both in His life and in His death, and by inspiring them to lead a similar life.  This view really establishes no direct connection between the death of Christ and the salvation of siners.  Yet it holds that the death of Christ may be said to expiate the sins of man in view of the fact that Christ, as a reward for His obedience unto death, received power to bestow eternal life on believers.  This theory is objectionable for various reasons.

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Silence!

28 Tuesday Dec 2010

Posted by David L. Gill in Theology

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Christmas, confession, Gospel, hymns, music, prayer, theology, worship

Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence. from the Liturgy of St. James, trans. by Gerard Moultrie, 1864.  As published in Cantus Christi 2004 revised edition, pg. 241.  (For those keeping track, this particular hymnal was produced by Douglas Wilson’s church.)

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