Tuesday 29 December 2009

Priorities

I knew playing warcraft was cool, thanks Dave:

Far from thinking that sin has narrowed God’s purpose, Reformed Christians assert that
his purpose – which was always an expansive and dynamic one – stands. While some
Christians tell the story rather like this:

Once upon a time God made a beautiful though immature estate and gave it to humankind, instructing Adam and Eve to fill it up and make it even more beautiful. He told them what he wanted where - a lake there and a golf course there, some water-colours in this room, a mural in this one and some portraits in oils here. But then Adam foolishly opened the gate and the wild beasts of sin took over spoiling everything and seeking to kill the people of the estate. So God said (with a certain franticness in his voice), “Hurry, hurry, get inside the panic room and call for help and I’ll let you out when the beasts have been killed and then we can start again elsewhere.” And when some people asked, “but what about the golf course and the lake?” God said, “Never mind the golf course, there’s no time for that now – and the beasts would tear it up anyway. I’m not interested in golf courses, I’m just interested in getting people into the panic room. We’ll have to leave the estate-glorification project until much later.”

the Reformed are more likely to think like this:

Although we are in the thick of a long and bloody war and although victory in that war is the single top priority for us, yet military engagement is not all that we are to do. Never mind the falling bombs, at four each afternoon we shall take tea in the drawing room, drinking from bone china cups and doing the crossword together. Poems, plays, and novels shall be written, symphonies composed, roses trimmed, and the sick visited. To abandon all activity other than direct military action against the enemy would itself be to surrender to that enemy because it would be to adopt his worldview, his sense of what matters and what works, and thereby to lose the very civilization which he is attempting to destroy.

Thursday 26 November 2009

Heroes


Friday 6 November 2009

The Drums

I promise I didn't hear this on a photoshoot with Kristen Stewart :P

Tuesday 3 November 2009

Honesty

This is why online exams suck:


You have NO IDEA how much I wanted to select this option, but I'm pretty sure it's a trap :P And 120apm and great bnet stats demonstrate FAR better dexterity/motor skills than wait for it... DRIVING A CAR/COOKING

Tuesday 27 October 2009

Top 2009 albums

7. Animal Collective - Fall be Kind EP The second half of Graze!!! I Think I Can; What Would I want? Sky deliver too
6. Bear in Heaven - Beast Rest Forth Mouth Lovesick teenagers never die :)
5. Wild Beasts - Wild Beasts Watch me! Watch me! The belle of the ball!
4. Neon Indian - Psychic Chasms Cut Copy/m83 hybrid - wonderful surreal summer sounds
3. Atlas Sound - Logos AMAZING
2. Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest This was so close to being number 1: achingly beautiful - heady summer; youth, vitality
1. Animal Collective - Merriwether Post Pavillion THIS ALBUM IS BASICALLY PERFECT


Stuff I listened to that didn't come out this year:

Bonnie Prince Billy - I See a Darkness Trent Reznor take note: what nihilism should sound like
Built to Spill - Keep it Like a Secret Woah: Not all 90s rock is shit! :o
Interpol - Our Love to Admire Coming to terms with the fact that I ignored this for 2 years on the basis of Pitchfork's lukewarm rating (yea, I'm that lame). Not as good as their first 2 albums, but still good

Saturday 24 October 2009

Lightbulbs are the devil

Apparently, we've only got 3 more days to buy standard light bulbs before EU legislation banning them comes into effect.

THANKS BRUSSELS!

Tuesday 20 October 2009

It's not the government's fault you're a fat loser

The myth of the political messiah is probably as bad today as in the Roman Empire: it's not the government's job to make you a better person!


More delightful madness from everybody's favourite lolbertarian, Ron Paul, here.

Sunday 18 October 2009

Gotta get big!

You've gotta feel bad for Rybakou, weightlifting's best runner up. Silver in Beijing and Athens:

DO NOT SMOKE ROMEO AND JULIETS



Seriously, nearly killed me

Tuesday 13 October 2009

Logos

Patrick Cox is basically my gangly super hero; how a guy that looks like Napoleon Dynamite can produce such wonderful music is beyond me, but the new Atlas Sound delivers!



Just check the praise it's been getting:

"Listening to the new Atlas Sound...fucking amazing album." - stylish internet dude

"consistently out of this park" - stylish asian internet dude

Monday 12 October 2009

Barry's To-Do List Uncovered

So I happened to be at a basketball game and stumbled across The One's diary :O




Obama Peace Prize

"The only way this could be more ridiculous would be if it was the Nobel prize in Economics." - Agnacious

Glad to see affirmative blacktion working well on the judging panel.

Thursday 8 October 2009

A World Without Lies

...is a world without fiction?

That's what Ricky Gervais said in response to whether he thought lying was acceptable during an interview for his new film The Invention of Lying. But using the creative faculties to produce works of fiction only becomes lying when the creator claims his work is true/real (hi Dan Brown).

Wednesday 7 October 2009

MARC JACOBS

MARC JACOBS!

Tuesday 6 October 2009

Thanks Marcus

Oooh boy, someone's got the entirety of the Cowboy Bebop franchise to watch :)

Sunday 4 October 2009

Sighpants

Man's gotta control his internet addiction:



I must say it's quite concerning that half of these sites revolve around replays of a computer game released 7 years ago :P

If you're looking for an internet filter, I can't recommend K9 Web Protection enough: it's cloud-based, lightweight and free.

Where would I be if I'd taken self control seriously 8 years ago? :o

Thursday 1 October 2009

Age/Sex/Evangelical?



love you really :)

You Must Create

What a cool name for a clothing company. I can't wait to read Art and Soul once I've got enough time (the irony of saying this as I write a blog doesn't escape me). Also fun: Obedient Sons.

BAD

Paradigm-shifting, martyr-inspiring, wallet-retiring audio from John Piper - God is the Gospel!!!

What's in Your Bag?

In the spirit of the flikr page:


My bag was fairly heavy today, which is surprising, considering that I left both my balaclava and trusty rohypnol on the bedside table this morning. On further pondering this image, it's clear that I've been pushing too many pencils recently - roll on healed shoulder!

And note the tie: coz people just don't trust haggard doctors these days...

Sunday 27 September 2009

Book Review: The Sartorialist

Just finished looking over Scott Schuman's first book, The Sarorialist. Essentially a 500 page collection of favourites from his blog, it's a great primer not only on style, but also as a manual of portrait photography done right.


Schuman's got a great eye for the person beneath the clothes, and the book's by no means completely comprised of nubile nineteen year old models: subjects range from the juvenile to the geriatric.


The aesthetics are just as broad - there's everything from hypebeast streetwear to Italian bespoke, not to mention all the bizzaro-American Apparel/Viceland Do's and Dont's hipster staples inbetween.


In keeping with his blog, the commentary is sparse: the photos are generally left to speak for themselves. Having said that, Schuman does provide a glimpse into his motives and method, which will be of interest to fans.

Saturday 26 September 2009

Look at what they make you give

The signs of service start before you even get the job: check out the depilatory action below


Before (excuse the Herbal Essences moment):



After: The shame of employment :(





Tuesday 22 September 2009

Our Love to Admire

Really enjoying Interpol's latest atm; don't listen to the reviews (lol irony): if you're a fan, you won't be disappointed. Sure, it lacks the brooding darkness of Bright Lights and the instant pop-catchiness of Antics, but you'll soon find it growing on you.

Everything from the album art (no more red/black/white tricolour) to the number of instruments used is far more expansive than their previous efforts, but fear not - tracks such as The Scale are unmistakably Interpol.

I got my copy from Amazon's mp3 store for less than 4 quid!

Anne is not older than Peter's dog's impressionist rendition of the third battle of El Alamein last Saturday...

So my brain is exploding thanks to a friend dropping off her old medical books :o


Because who doesn't love standardised entrance exams?

Thursday 17 September 2009

Music

Currently listening to:

The White Stripes - White Blood Cells
The xx - The xx
Wild Beasts - Two Dancers
Yacht - See Mystery Lights - it's a shame this album is so God-rejecting, because it sounds great (same case with NIN at their best)



PS. NOTHING wrong with Pitchfork more or less defining your musical taste...



Saturday 5 September 2009

Imba!

Great article over at wcreplays on alleged blademaster imbalance.

Monday 27 July 2009

Lightweight

A couple of samples from yesterday's tournament. Full album can be found here.












Sunday 26 July 2009

God knew I would write this

Talking to a philosopher friend of mine during an Oak Hall bible week a few days ago, he balked at the idea of hard determinism, thereby implicitly refuting the absolute sovereignty of God (as Spurgeon puts it, if determinism says “what happens, must happen;” God’s sovereignty says, “what God wills, must happen”) .

Having read a lot of John Piper recently, I feel the need to defend the doctrine of God’s sovereignty!

First of all, we need to understand that God (at least the God of the Bible) and chance are mutually exclusive: if chance exists, then God does not; likewise, if God exists, then chance does not.

Piper makes an excellent case for God’s total sovereignty in his book Desiring God (HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!). One point he makes is this: God’s sovereignty is the foundation for God’s happiness; or, in the words of Psalm 115:

... Our God is in the heavens; He does whatever He pleases.

Just imagine if God didn’t have complete, sovereign control over His creation: He’d be frustrated, unsatisfied and anything but happy!

And since my friend is reading Church history, it seems appropriate to direct him to chapter seven of Piper’s Life as a Vapor (again, highly recommended), which discusses Augustine’s famous plea,

“Lord, command what you will, and give what you command!”

And ends with the beautiful prayer:

Lord, I pray that you would fill us with
hope and joy and expectation
that You have the power to put Your hand on us,
and grant us the will to do what You command.
You have made it plain:
We are responsible to do what You tell us to do.
But we know that in ourselves we
do not have the will to do it.
And so we cry with Augustine,
“Lord, command what You will,
and give what You command.”
Leave us not to ourselves. Have mercy.
In Jesus’ name,
Amen.

My prayer is that my brother too may come to rejoice in the absolute sovereignty of our Lord and Saviour: our God is in the heavens; He does whatever He pleases!

Monday 6 July 2009

Dan John on Supplements

Free PDF on the O lifts yields some nuggets:

If it works immediately, it is illegal.
If it works quickly, it is banned.
If it sounds too good to be true, it is.


Gotta get that creatine, brah

Thursday 2 July 2009

Two Perspectives on Thought

A great session on Wednesday going through Church history with Peter Mead gave rise to this discussion on Phil

Thus philosophy was necessary to the Greeks for righteousness, until the coming of the Lord. And now it assists towards true religion as a kind of prepatory training for those who arrive at faith by way of demonstration. For "Thy foot shall not stumble" if thou attribute to Providence all good, whether it belongs to the Greeks or to us. For God is the source of all good things; of some primarily, as of the old and new Testaments; of others by consequence, as of philosophy. But it may be, indeed, that philosophy was given to the Greeks immediately and primarily, until the Lord should call the Greeks. For philosophy was a "schoolmaster" to bring the Greek mind to Christ, as the Law brought the Hebrews. Thus philosophy was a preparation, paving the way towards perfection in Christ. - Clement of Alexandria (ca.200), Stromateis, I., v28


Sounds great; affirming the good that's in philosophy; recognising that all good is from God, and all good points to Christ. So what does Tertullian have to say on the matter?

It is this philosophy which is the subject-matter of this world's wisdom, that rash interpreter of the divine nature and order. In fact, heresies are themselves prompted by philosophy. It is the source of "aeons," and I know not what infinite "forms" and the "trinity of man" in the system of Valentinus. he was a Platonist. it is the source of Marcion's "better God," "better," because of his tranquility. Marcion came from the Stoics. Again, when it is said that the soul perishes, that flesh is taken over from the universal teaching of the philosophers; the equation of matter with God is the doctrine of Zeno; and when any assertion is made about a God of fire, then Heraclitus comes in. Heretics and philosophers handle the same subject-matter; both treat the same topics - Whence came evil? And why? Whence came man? And how? And a question lately posed by Valentinus - whence came God? Answer: "From enthymesis and ectroma"! Wretched Aristotle! Who taught them dialectic, that art of building up and demolishing, so protean in statement, so far-fetched in conjecture, so unyielding in controversy, so productive of disputes; self-stultifying, since it is ever handling questions but never settling anything... What is there in common between Athens and Jerusalem? What between the Academy and the Church? What between heretics and Christians? ... Away with all projects for a "Stoic," a "Platonic" or a "dialectic" Christianity! After Jesus Christ we desire no subtle theories, no acute enquiries after the gospel..." Tertullian (ca.160-240), De praescriptione haereticorum (ca.200), vii.


Woah! Talk about didactic opposites; still, you can see where the T-bone is coming from. Anyone else reminded of Paul's verdict on man's wisdom in first Corinthians 1?

...Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel—not with words of human wisdom, lest the cross of Christ be emptied of its power. For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. For it is written:

“I will destroy the wisdom of the wise; the intelligence of the intelligent I will frustrate.”

Where is the wise man? Where is the scholar? Where is the philosopher of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not know him, God was pleased through the foolishness of what was preached to save those who believe. Jews demand miraculous signs and Greeks look for wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified: a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles, but to those whom God has called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. For the foolishness of God is wiser than man’s wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than man’s strength.

And so there's a tension - on the one hand, most philosophy contains some reality (most lies contain some dilute measure of truth in order to make them palatable), and yet, man's wisdom cannot get him to God.

I must say that I'm far more inclined to align with Clement, and use philosophy as a signpost pointing to the Truth.

Friday 12 June 2009

For David

Bite off more than you can chew THEN CHEW IT
An obstacle is only something you haven't torn through yet
Nothing's gonna stand in your way NOT TONIGHT
The world is dark when you're depressed Your thoughts have the power to shape your world
you were born a winner you were the fastest sperm
Depression breeds depression Effort breeds success
If you never give up You never lose
Don't believe in yourself Believe in me, who believes in you
The doctor said it was cancer I call it a challenge
You are awesome Go and prove it
Even if you fall on your face You're still moving forward
You have no limits
You feel alone but someone is thinking of you
Better to die on your feet than live on your knees
If life asks for your all give it even more


Tuesday 9 June 2009

Couldn't it all just be random?

I completely bailed out when a friend asked me this earlier. He saw me carrying Does God Believe in Atheists, and when he asked, I told him how it proposed that a Christian worldview makes best sense of the world.

"What, you mean creationsim and stuff?" (He's a physisist) - it's amazing how many people focus not on Jesus, but on the relatively impersonal, abstract Genesis of the universe. Whether the world was created in six days or 6 billion years continues to be debated, but I don't think the argument tends to bring people to Jesus.

We got on to talking about purpose vs entropy, at which point he asked why the universe couldn't just be random...

Sunday 7 June 2009

Objective Christian Beauty

Chatting with David Field over the weekend on an Oakhall event, it seems that Christian aesthetics is a sorely underdeveloped field of study.

He is convinced, and I expect he's right, that there is such a thing as objective beauty - that it is possible to correctly judge album X as more praiseworthy than CD Y.

David reckons that a checklist of however-many points is necessary (but not sufficient) in judging the worth of a piece of art/music/drama, the first two points of reference being:

1. Does it honour God?
2. Does it promote an unframed lie?

The first point is self-explanatory - meaning that the majority of death metal and anything associated with Trent Reznor cannot be beautiful.

The second denounces anything that presents a lie as truth, unless it is in the context of exposing/showing up the lie for what it really is.

Thanksgiving

A very blessed time saying goodbye to some Korean friends from church today. I praise the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who sovereignly ordained that MJ, Mee Young and So Ye would be brought into my life this year.

For the servantheartedness, encouragement, fun and fellowship we share with friends - we must treasure more the good gifts He gives!

Tuesday 2 June 2009

Bring Back Hideoblog!

I remember the first blog I ever read was that of Hideo Kojima. He's been called a lot of things; the first postmodern game designer will always have a special place in my heart for creating such beautiful games.

Metal Gear Solid changed everything back in 1999, and MGS2 and particularly 3 were no small feats either.

Come back Hideo!

Saturday 16 May 2009

Ethics over Education

A friend said that we should be more concerned with illiteracy than illegetimacy - in other words, education is more valuable than ethics. But of what use is the sum of all human understanding without the knowledge of your Creator!

Sunday 10 May 2009

The True Humanism

Great review by David Field exposing the farce of secular humanism. The conclusions:

  • that any claim to do 'good' or oppose 'evil' is meaningless when coming from an evolutionary, random-universe worldview.
  • that a life of God-denying philanthropy is nothing to boast of - it is making an idol of human welfare
  • that the modern Humanist movement is in large measure a negative thing - a reaction to Christianity. So many humanists are self-consciously fighting against God even while on the run from him. And it will be clear to some of them at least that the harder they resist, the more they sense that there is something to resist.
  • that Christianity is itself the 'True Humanism'. (There is a 1980 book by J.I. Packer and T. Howard called Christianity: the true humanism which expounds this thesis quite superbly.) Only in relation to his Maker, only when reconciled to him, subject to his laws, promoting his glory, and relying on his strength, can man be all he is meant to be. It is the high calling of all Christian people to demonstrate this - living lives of humble, loving service to God and men, displaying the righteousness, power and joy of Christ and so inviting others to 'the life that is truly life'.

Facebook

Apt quote from the article on Midlife Crisis:

“All sorts of half-forgotten acquaintances and abandoned friendships reappear in this spreadsheet of potential reasons to feel terrible about yourself. If you’re as petty as I am, you spend a lot of Facebook time gauging your own feelings of inadequacy in direct relation to other people’s success. All these people you couldn’t give a shit about a couple of years ago are now these omnipresent benchmarks and counterpoints to measure against whatever you have or haven’t got going on in your life.”

Saturday 9 May 2009

Life without Christ

This article expresses the listless lack of purpose that defines our generation of God-haters. What's the point to life without recognition of your maker?

A man for every season

How often do you hear someone say that they "want to get in shape for summer"? This makes no sense: why would you only want to be beautiful for one season in four? Who wants to be athletic a quarter of the time? Who only needs strength when the sun's shining?

Get off your cottage cheese ass and sort it out!

Tuesday 5 May 2009

The Unhelpful Divide

We cannot separate the spiritual from the material;

Often we create a really unhelpful divide in our lives between those things that appear to us to be ‘spiritual’ or of eternal consequence and those that are temporary or unimportant- but thinking theologically about everything opens-up to us a world where nothing is pointless, lost, or unspiritual. As Kuyper said, there is nothing we do, touch, see, experience, or know of which the Lord Jesus does not say ‘That is mine!’.

Full article here.

Jesus vs Kim Jong Il

When Kim Jong Il missed the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea last year, allegedly because of declining health issues, I was reminded of the permanence of Christ's kingdom against all earthly dynasties:

"He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever; his kingdom will never end." [Luke 1:32,33 NIV]

Psalm 127

I'm looking at Psalm 127 atm, in preparation for Monday's CU meeting.

Some good points from the New Bible Commentary:

  • "...In the Bible, the opposite of rest is not work, but restlessness,"
This is revolutionary! Society would have us divide our lives into discrete chunks: thus work becomes a separate unit to rest; and we're encouraged to think of relaxation as the absense of work and duty. But this is not the case! Adam had the responsibility of stewarding the garden before the fall; God himself holds all things together in his providence! I'm sure that there'll be work in heaven (minus the painful toil instituted in Genesis 3:17-19)
  • "All life must be lived to the full, all its joys enjoyed and its duties performed in unworried reliance on him who is the doer of all. Joyful activity, toilsome activity - but full of untroubled rest."
Often I'm tempted to feel guilty about how good life is; that it's somehow wrong to enjoy peace and wealth and health when so many are poor, at war and ill. But how much more wrong it is for us not to enjoy God's great goodness to us! God's providence means that we can trust him in everything - in work and in play; in abundance and in poverty; in duty and in freedom!

Thursday 30 April 2009

Farewell ToD!

Great article on ToD's retirement over at SK.

Life with Grubby

An excellent documentary has recently been released by ESL. Chronicalling the life of famed eSports player Grubby, everything is covered: from his motivation to his love life, a must-see for all fans of Warcraft 3!

Download link here.

Saturday 25 April 2009

Ought Implies Can?!

Correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems to me that at 1:32, Mark Driscoll spouts a load of Palagian nonsense!

Knowing

Just got back from watching Nic Cage's latest, Knowing. Despite changing genre every 15 minutes (spot the progression from thriller to horror to bizzarre sci-fi come disaster movie), it's got some interesting ideas going on.

Replete with Biblical themes - from the final judgement by fire (from which only the called will be saved; Calvinist theologians rejoice!) - through to the Edenic tree-of-life ending, there's plenty of material for discussion.

However, it must be said that any Christian ethos is portrayed in a completely immasculated form: humanoid aliens take God's place; the climactic theophany is revealed as advanced technology rather than the personal God.

Essentially, you're getting a demythologized apocalypse (aliens are apparently more palatable than God), and while it's admirable that the writer's didn't go down the Green route of death-by-pollution (the ozone layer was only mentioned once!), Knowing is ultimately an unsatisfying way to spend 90 minutes of your life.

Friday 24 April 2009

Grudem on Faith and Knowledge

Faith should increase as our knowledge increases. Contrary to the current secular understanding of "faith," true New Testament faith is not something that is made stronger by ignorance or by believing against the evidence. Rather, saving faith is consistent with knowledge and true understanding of the facts. Paul says, "Faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ" (Rom. 10:17 NASB).

When people have true information about Christ, they are better able to put their trust in him. Moreover, the more we know about him, and about the character of God that is completely revealed in him, the more fully we are able to put our trust in him. Thus faith is not weakened by knowledge but should increase with more true knowledge. [Grudem, Wayne Systematic Theology p712


How often do we, as Christians, allow ourselves to be deceived by society's idea that our faith is merely wishful thinking! A fabricated faith is no faith at all, and is certain to bring the God to whom it purpotedly centres no glory.

Naturally Affirmative

"It is always easier to believe than to deny. Our minds are naturally affirmative." - John Burroughs

I couldn't disagree with John more. Surely this is the Golden Age of skepticism: at no other time in history have people been so aware that the burden of proof lies with the believer.

Thursday 23 April 2009

Transporter 3 Sucks

Seriously, the entire plot revolved around seeing how buff Jason Statham is. The action sucked, the dialogue was somehow worse, and nothing interesting happened until the end credits. Those hoping for the (ridiculous) fun of Crank will be largely dissapointed.

Jason, when will you return to your former glory?!

Wednesday 22 April 2009

Year of the Orc

50% of the top 10 are Orcs at the moment :\

Still, good to see TH000 up there!

Monday 20 April 2009

Faith and Repentance

The interaction between the two is something that I need clarification on; one friend suggested that they cannot be separated: each proves the authenticity of the other:

"Faith without repentance is no faith, repentance without faith is no repentance, we need "penitent faith" and "believing repentance."


Sounds pretty Roman Catholic to me

To know Him is to love Him

Philippians 1:9 -
"And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight..."
How many times do we pray, "God, make me love You/my boss/myself more"? But this is not how the process works for Paul. Love is the byproduct of knowledge; truly, to know Jesus better is to love Him more. In this life, we make the effort to get to know those we love, and the same is true for God: if we want to love Him more, we need to know Him better!

Recently, I've found Spurgeon's Morning and Evening reflections helpful in knowing God better; you can read an entire year's worth of content free here. Just remember that nothing beats the word for getting to know the Word!

Zeitgeist

Facebook ad reveals the spirit of our age:

















Make Yourself Amazing :[

The Amen

From Spurgeon's Morning and Evening, April 19th:

The word AMEN solemnly confirms that which went before; and Jesus is the great Confirmer; immutable, for ever is "the Amen" in all his promises. Sinner, I would comfort thee with this reflection. Jesus Christ said, "Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." If you come to him, he will say "Amen" in your soul; his promise shall be true to you. He said in the days of his flesh, "The bruised reed I will not break." O thou poor, broken, bruised heart, if thou comest to him, he will say "Amen" to thee, and that shall be true in thy soul as in hundreds of cases in bygone years. Christian, is not this very comforting to thee also, that there is not a word which has gone out of the Saviour's lips which he has ever retracted? The words of Jesus shall stand when heaven and earth shall pass away. If thou gettest a hold of but half a promise, thou shalt find it true. Beware of him who is called "Clip-promise," who will destroy much of the comfort of God's word.

Jesus is Yea and Amen in all his offices. He was a Priest to pardon and cleanse once, he is Amen as Priest still. He was a King to rule and reign for his people, and to defend them with his mighty arm, he is an Amen King, the same still. He was a Prophet of old, to foretell good things to come, his lips are most sweet, and drop with honey still-he is an Amen Prophet. He is Amen as to the merit of his blood; he is Amen as to his righteousness. That sacred robe shall remain most fair and glorious when nature shall decay. He is Amen in every single title which he bears; your Husband, never seeking a divorce; your Friend, sticking closer than a brother; your Shepherd, with you in death's dark vale; your Help and your Deliverer; your Castle and your High Tower; the Horn of your strength, your confidence, your joy, your all in all, and your Yea and Amen in all.

Sunday 19 April 2009

Easter

David Field quotes Luther in his Easter post:

  • "The one who wants to bring his own merits and works to bear in this situation and employ them against sin, blasphemes Christ's vicarious death and intercession ..."

How much we need to be reminded of this! Praise God that our righteousness is in Christ; may we never believe that our morality earns His favour!

What a Friend we have in Jesus

Singing this hymn today got me all choked up:

What a Friend we have in Jesus, all our sins and griefs to bear!
What a privilege to carry everything to God in prayer!
O what peace we often forfeit, O what needless pain we bear,
All because we do not carry everything to God in prayer.

Have we trials and temptations? Is there trouble anywhere?
We should never be discouraged; take it to the Lord in prayer.
Can we find a friend so faithful who will all our sorrows share?
Jesus knows our every weakness; take it to the Lord in prayer.

Are we weak and heavy laden, cumbered with a load of care?
Precious Savior, still our refuge, take it to the Lord in prayer.
Do your friends despise, forsake you? Take it to the Lord in prayer!
In His arms He’ll take and shield you; you will find a solace there.

Blessed Savior, Thou hast promised Thou wilt all our burdens bear
May we ever, Lord, be bringing all to Thee in earnest prayer.
Soon in glory bright unclouded there will be no need for prayer
Rapture, praise and endless worship will be our sweet portion there.

Amen!!!

David Field on Esther

Just booked in on David Field's weekend teaching Esther at Oakhall this June. Should be great!

Saturday 18 April 2009

Reilly, Ace of Spies

I've enjoyed rewatching the series starring Sam Neill recently. Viewing it, you'll see why Neill was strongly considered for the role of Bond after Roger Moore got too leathery. While that mantle ultimately got passed on to Timothy Dalton (imo no bad thing), Neill would have in many respects delivered a suave, sophisticated and ultimately believable representation of 007. I can't help but wonder if Pierce Brosnan took note from Neill's portrayal of Reilly.

Excellent acting all round, beautiful theme music (Shostakovitch's Romance portion of the Gadfly suite), and a believably adapted story.

Highly recommended, you can purchase it here.

Monday 13 April 2009

Sincere Disbelief

Amy Orr-Ewing, in her article on Sex and Marriage, offers a select quote from Aldous Huxley:

"I had motives for not wanting the world to have a meaning; consequently I assumed that it had none and was able without any difficulty to find satisfying reasons for this assumption.... For myself as, no doubt, for most of my contemporaries, the philosophy of meaninglessness was essentially an instrument of liberation ... liberation from a certain system of morality. We objected to the morality because it interfered with our sexual freedom.... There was one admirably simple method in our political and erotic revolt: We could deny that the world had any meaning whatsoever."

We often hear that Christianity is merely wishful thinking; but, as it was for Huxley, is this more likely the underlying fabric of atheism? If you don't believe in the Personal God to whom you are accountable, search yourself to see if your skepticism is sincere!

God's Glory

Many thanks to a friend of mine for reminding me of these great truths spoken by John Piper in his book Don't Waste Your Life:

On God's love:

"For most people, love is to be made much of... we are taught that love is increasing someones self esteem. Love is making someone feel good about themselves. Love is giving someone a mirror and helping him like what he sees. This is not what the bible means of love. Love is doing what is best for someone. But making self the object of our highest affections is not what is best for us. It is, in fact a lethal distraction. We were made to see and savour God, and in savouring him, to be supremely satisfied and thus spread in all of the world the worth of his presence. Not to show someone the all satisfying God is not loving them."

On God's glory:

"No thing can satisfy the soul. The soul was made to stand in awe of a person- the only person worthy of awe. All heroes are shadows of Christ; we love to admire their excellence. How much more will we be satisfied by the one person who conceived all excellence and embodied all skill, all talent, all strength and all brilliance. God loves us by liberating us from the knowledge of self so that we can enjoy knowing and admiring him forever. The really wonderful moments of joy in this world are not moments of self satisfaction but moments of self forgetfulness. The universe is about the greatness of God, not the significance of man. God made man small and the universe big to say something about himself." (emphasis mine)

Secular humanists can put that world view in their pipes and smoke it!

You can download a free copy of the book here.

Friday 10 April 2009

Free?

Royal Holloway Christian Union has taken part in the nationwide Free Gospel Project. The idea is to give a biography of Jesus' life to every student on campus.

Check out the training video we cooked up.

Thursday 9 April 2009

Purpose

"All human beings should try to learn before they die what they are running from, and to, and why." - James Thurber

Does Religion Cause War?

Great article from BeThinking.

Those naively concluding that a world without religion would be less violent need only look back to the 20th Century ("the bloodiest century of all") - whose conflicts revolved not around theistic, but secular doctrines. Communism/Marxism; Fascism/Nationalism killed far more than any religious conflict ever has.

The article concludes with respect to Christianity:

"The crucial point here is: What is the central message of the ideology in question? Some of our atheists who respond... seem to miss the fact that ultimately we do not follow Christians, we follow Christ. It is what he said and did that matters, as it is on Him that our faith rests. And his message was one of unqualified love, the eschewment of violence, and the centrality of forgiveness. It is Christ who defines Christianity, not those who have committed atrocities in its name.

So, does religion cause war? Sadly, it does. But does Jesus Christ, and do those who submit themselves wholeheartedly to Him and His teaching? No. He was the Prince of Peace and he remains the only hope for real peace – even, perhaps especially, in the Middle East."

Road to WCG 2009

There's no avoiding facts: the recession has hit Warcraft 3 hard. Downsizing, if not complete closure, is the order of the day.

4Kings, MYM, fnatic... these stalwarts of yesteryear are all gone; and the new formats for WC3L and NGL likely mark the end of an era for team-focused competitive WC3.

With many pessimists suggesting that the golden years of Warcraft are long gone, I'm hoping that this year's WCG bludgeons some much-needed optimism into the scene. I'm particularly looking forward to a chance for Sky to claim a third title; consider the winners so far:

2003: Insomnia
2004: Grubby
2005: Sky
2006: Sky
2007: Creo (2-1 Sky in the finals; damn metamorphosis!)
2008: Grubby (Sky didn't pass the Chinese qualifiers!)
2009: Sky??

UK qualifiers, when announced, will appear here.

Practical Programming

Following on from Starting Strength, Rippetoe's second book will nicely develop your weightlifting knowledge. While some initial space is devoted to revision of the major lifts (their proper form, pre-eminent importance etc.), the material quickly progresses onto the quirks of programming.

Anyone who's spent any time in gym knows that seemingly everyone is on a different program; often with no real idea as to why they're following their particular choice. The result is aimless training: the program is modified - and even changed altogether - every other week.

This book effectively slices through this inefficient indecision. Several chapters are devoted to the theory, methodology and finally execution of training programs for athletes of all levels.

A must for anyone ready (read: has trained regularly for 3-9 months already) to advance from the basics presented in Starting Strength.

Order yours here.

Theology of Everything

If, as Christians believe, all things "...are from him, by him, and for him," then the remainder of Romans 11:36 follows: "Glory belongs to him forever!"

In that vein, I love the heading to Theology Network's Theology of Everything:

"Oh, no single piece of our mental world is to be hermetically sealed off from the rest, and there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: 'Mine!'"

Amen!

Jim Caviezel on The Passion

At the suggestion that the film would increase anti-Semitic sentiment:

"We're all culpable for in the death of Christ. My sins put him up there. Yours did. That is what this story is about."

On playing Jesus:

"I love him more than I never knew possible. I love him more than my wife, my family. I don't want people to see me. All I want them to see is Jesus Christ."

This is my prayer for myself and you this Easter: that we would see Jesus for who he is: the crucified, risen Son of God!

Find out more.

Wednesday 8 April 2009

C7!

Had a strong desire to fire up Counter Strike 1.6 for the first time in literally years today. Map of choice? cs_siege! Of all the imbalanced options (T's have a major advantage)...

Old, potent memories of day-long stints in Croydon internet cafes come flooding back: I can clearly remember my first time playing Half Life and CS on LAN back in 2001: eight years ago! The situation's pretty similar with Warcraft 3: barring brief sabbaticals during my episodic O.C.-like adolescence, it's been an ever-present distraction for the last 6 years or so.

All the kids nowadays are playing borefests like Halo and Call of Duty. I feel like an old man.

Lose 30 Pounds in 10 Seconds!

Scrap the last post; if you want to get buff, look no further than Nintendo's latest super-trendy; micro-useful accessory.

I'm sure you'll have 6-pack abs in 3 weeks.

Starting Strength

Rippetoe's codex comes highly recommended for anyone new to weight training. Don't waste your time doing a billion variations of bicep cirls in *shudder* the squat rack: keep to the 5 big basics.

This book contins everything you need to know about all the major lifts: Squat, Deadlift, Bench Press, Shoulder Press, and Barbell Rows. There's even a section on Power Cleans for Olympic and power athletes. Just make sure that you read him as a strength coach; not a (rather laughable) humanistic philosopher.

It can be purchased from Amazon here.

Layer Cake; The Boat That Rocked

Enjoyed watching Layer Cake again tonight; had it downloading during the day (7 hours' total!). It's hard not to envy Craig's lifestyle - the aesthetics, from his lean body, to stylized clothing and home decor - not to mention his glamorous and exciting job, are all pretty cool!

Still, it's hardly fulfilling from a Christian perspective. Why is it that these material and aesthetic elements have such high appeal? Why is it so hard to see the beauty and attractiveness of Christ?

I remember reading an interview with Daniel Craig regarding the fate of his character at the end of the film. A sequel was being discussed, and he stated that there was some ambiguity as to whether XXXX had been fatally wounded. There is no such confusion when watching, and retrospectively resurrecting characters for a sequel tends to cheapen the original (cf. Advent Children, Crank 2).

The best part of The Boat that Rocked was the music: I need to get a hold of some of that original, 60's rock and roll! Aside from the musical highlights which formed the soundtrack, the film was afflicted with pacing issues: the entire second half of vomited onwards, with weak character development (we get it; the protagonist's mother is a slut!), not to mention the feel that many of the actors are only superficially bolted on - see silent smoking guy and Rhys Darby's character

Oh, and Kenneth Branagh overacted as usual.