Daily Broadside | Speak Up and Call Evil What It Is

Yesterday I wrote that there seems to be a gathering consensus that now is the time to speak up about the cultural revolution that we’re experiencing in the U.S., and that by “speaking up,” I mean getting educated and not being shy to educate others or to take a stand contrary to the woke orthodoxy that currently reigns as virtue in our country.

One of the authors and speakers I follow is Doug Wilson, pastor of Christ Church in Moscow, Idaho. I’m going to mash together what he wrote yesterday with a sprinkle of thoughts from Tucker Carlson and Naomi Wolf. First, here’s some of what Wilson said in his blog post:

All societies are grounded in the will of their God or gods, no exceptions. And when a society (like ours) pretends to be exempt from this iron law, the thing that results is massive amounts of confusion. In our case, the time of that confusion was lengthened and drawn out because we had an enormous amount of that moral capital. The prodigal son was truly disobedient, but he also had a really big inheritance to squander. It took him a while.

But our confusion about who is the god of the system does not mean that the god of the system is confused about it. We might think that we are all being decent bipedal carbon units in our Judeo/Christian faith tradition, when we are actually in the process of being enslaved to the service of Mammon. But our confusion is not shared by Mammon. Mammon knows all about it. Mammon knows the game.

So with that being the case, why am I being upbeat about our hot mess of a culture? The thing that has happened is this. Our situation has grown dire enough that when I now say it is Christ or chaos, an ordinary Christian can look at that and know exactly what I am talking about. Twenty-five years ago, this stark and very binary choice would have been very hard to explain to rank-and-file Christians—but now many of them are out looking for an explanation, and when someone gives it to them, they grasp it in under a minute.

This is an encouraging observation. He’s saying that people — and, in particular, Christian people — are beginning to notice that something is very wrong. And not only are they noticing that something is wrong, they are noticing that it is so wrong, so dire, that there’s really only two ways to go from here: continue into the chaos, or reverse course by throwing up roadblocks and barriers to any further progress down that road by intentionally standing on, and for, Christ.

In other words, Wilson says, we’re starting to pay attention.

But you know who else is paying attention and wondering what in the world is going on? Opinion leaders and influencers outside of the Christian faith. Neither Tucker Carlson nor Naomi Wolf would necessarily be expected to describe what is happening in distinctly Christian terms, but that is what has happened.

Carlson, by his own admission, is Episcopalian, “the shallowest faith tradition that’s ever been invented.” Yet, listen to what he says during his speech at the Heritage Foundation, the Friday night before his show was cancelled by Fox News.

Well, what’s the point of child sacrifice [abortion]? Well, there’s no policy goal entwined with that. No, that’s a theological phenomenon.

And that’s kind of the point I’m making. None of this makes sense in conventional political terms. When people, or crowds of people, or the largest crowd of people at all, which is the federal government, the largest human organization in human history decide that the goal is to destroy things, destruction for its own sake, “Hey, let’s tear it down,” what you’re watching is not a political movement. It’s evil.

That seems like a courageous act to me. In a culture where “tolerance” and “diversity” and “inclusion” are the highest values, making a moral judgement about someone else’s behavior is tantamount to a declaration of war. It’s deeply offensive to a society that is steeped in moral relativism. Carlson’s observation comes out of a conservative political viewpoint with at least the trappings of a Judeo-Christian worldview.

Naomi Wolf, on the other hand, has been, for most of her political life, a hard-left feminist of Jewish extraction, who considered her faith unimportant and, anyway, deeply personal. But during the Chinese Lung Pox hysteria, she did her research and began to discover that there was something much bigger and darker going on. Here’s what she wrote more than a year ago:

I told the group that I was now willing to speak about God publicly, because I had looked at what had descended on us from every angle, using my normal critical training and faculties; and that it was so elaborate in its construction, so comprehensive, and so cruel, with an almost superhuman, flamboyant, baroque imagination made out of the essence of cruelty itself — that I could not see that it had been accomplished by mere humans working on the bumbling human level in the dumb political space.

I felt around us, in the majestic nature of the awfulness of the evil around us, the presence of “principalities and powers” — almost awe-inspiring levels of darkness and of inhuman, anti-human forces. In the policies unfolding around us I saw again and again anti-human outcomes being generated: policies aimed at killing children’s joy; at literally suffocating children, restricting their breath, speech and laughter; at killing school; at killing ties between families and extended families; at killing churches and synagogues and mosques; and, from the highest levels, from the President’s own bully pulpit, demands for people to collude in excluding, rejecting, dismissing, shunning, hating their neighbors and loved ones and friends.

I have seen bad politics all of my life and this drama unfolding around us goes beyond bad politics, which is silly and manageable and not that scary. This — this is scary, metaphysically scary. In contrast to hapless human mismanagement, this darkness has the tinge of the pure, elemental evil that underlay and gave such hideous beauty to the theatrics of Nazism; it is the same nasty glamour that surrounds Leni Riefenstahl films.

In short, I don’t think humans are smart or powerful enough to have come up with this horror all alone.

So I told the group in the woods, that the very impressiveness of evil all around us in all of its new majesty, was leading me to believe in a newly literal and immediate way in the presence, the possibility, the necessity of a countervailing force — that of a God. It was almost a negative proof: an evil this large must mean that there is a God at which it is aiming its malevolence.

And that is a huge leap for me to take, as a classical Liberal writer in a postwar world, — to say these things out loud.

Grounded postmodern intellectuals are not supposed to talk about or believe in spiritual matters — at least not in public. We are supposed to be shy about referencing God Himself, and are certainly are not supposed to talk about evil or the forces of darkness.

Here are two secular personalities who have both come to the conclusion that our society is so broken, so twisted, so upside-down, that they’re forced to conclude that there is a force at work that transcends what we can see, and they label it “evil,” a theological term associated with, at minimum, the Jewish and Christian faiths. What I find so remarkable is that they’re so awestruck by the sinister nature of what we’re experiencing that they’re forced to use a theological term that many in the Christian faith themselves aren’t willing to utter for fear of being labeled a nutter.

And that brings me back to Wilson’s commentary. It’s great that believers are waking up to the ugly reality of our situation, but we need to be willing to say so. We also need to not only recognize that what we’re seeing is evil; we need to articulate that it is so. Christians, of all people, have the theological language, history and book to back up our claims.

The other thing that both Wolf and Carlson admit to is that the power of evil is so overwhelming that they both suggest that prayer is essential. From the same linked sources:

Carlson: “[M]aybe we should all take just 10 minutes a day to say a prayer about it. I’m serious. Why not? And I’m saying that to you not as some kind of evangelist, I’m literally saying that to you as an Episcopalian, the Samaritans of our time. I’m coming to you from the most humble and lowly theological position you can. I’m literally an Episcopalian. And even I have concluded it might be worth taking just 10 minutes out of your busy schedule to say a prayer for the future, and I hope you will.

Wolf: “I confessed at that gathering in the woods with the health freedom community, that I had started to pray again. This was after many years of thinking that my spiritual life was not that important, and certainly very personal, almost embarrassingly so, and thus it was not something I should mention in public.”

If secular types like Wolf and Carlson are willing to call evil, evil, and to call on God for help in resisting it, shouldn’t we be willing and ready to do the same?

Daily Broadside | New Discovery Boosts Christian Confidence in the Bible

As a believer it is helpful to my faith when archeological discoveries reinforce or directly prove the historicity of the Bible. In three scriptures, we read of the Pool of Siloam.

2 Kings 20:20 —

As for the other events of Hezekiah’s reign, all his achievements and how he made the pool and the tunnel by which he brought water into the city, are they not written in the book of the annals of the kings of Judah?

Nehemiah 3:15 —

He also repaired the wall of the Pool of Siloam, by the King’s Garden, as far as the steps going down from the City of David.

John 9:7 —

“Go,” [Jesus] told him, “wash in the Pool of Siloam” (this word means “Sent”). So the man went and washed, and came home seeing.

And now, if you want to go see the pool, you can.

The Israel Antiquities Authority, the Israel National Parks Authority and the City of David Foundation announced days before the new year that the Pool of Siloam, a biblical site cherished by Christians and Jews, will be open to the public for the first time in 2,000 years in the near future.

“The Pool of Siloam’s excavation is highly significant to Christians around the world,” American Pastor John Hagee, the founder and chairman of Christians United for Israel, told Fox News Digital. “It was at this site that Jesus healed the blind man (John:9), and it is at this site that, 2,000 years ago, Jewish pilgrims cleansed themselves prior to entering the Second Temple. 

“The Pool of Siloam and the Pilgrimage Road, both located within the City of David, are among the most inspiring archeological affirmations of the Bible…

The pool was first built roughly 2,700 years ago as part of Jerusalem’s water system in the eighth century B.C. The construction unfolded during the reign of King Hezekia as cited in the Bible in the Book of Kings II, 20:20, according to the two Israeli agencies and the City of David Foundation. 

According to estimates, the Pool of Siloam passed through many stages of construction and reached the size of 1¼ acres.

Atheists, secular humanists and mainline scoffers often characterize the Bible as being mythological or fictional. Yet there has never been an archeological find that has disproved any biblical record; in fact, any archeological discovery relating to a biblical text has only validated the Bible’s historicity.

For instance (and appropriately, as we exit the Christmas season), it was long thought that the Bible was in error when Luke wrote (2:1) that, “In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world. (This was the first census that took place while Quirinius was governor of Syria.)” Critics charged that Quirinius was governor at a later date than what the Bible claims, but Sir William Ramsey (1851-1939), historian and archaeologist, demonstrated that Quirinius was twice governor of Syria, the first being at the time of Jesus’ birth.

So, when another bit of archeology verifies the scripture’s record, it serves as a reminder that my faith is based, at least in part, on solid evidence of its historical accuracy. The reinforcement comes in handy when facing a culture that is not just increasingly hostile, but increasingly militant and violent towards Christians in ways that would have been unthinkable just 30 years ago.

The Pool of Siloam is one of those significant historical discoveries that can encourage us.

Ze’ev Orenstein, director of international affairs for the City of David Foundation in Jerusalem, told Fox News Digital, “One of most significant sites affirming Jerusalem’s biblical heritage — not simply as a matter of faith, but as a matter of fact — with significance to billions around the world, will be made fully accessible for the first time in 2,000 years.”

The Pool of Siloam doesn’t prove that Jesus was who he said he was but taken with hundreds of other pieces of archeological evidence, we can trust that the biblical authors were accurate in what they wrote about the times and places in which they lived. And if they were accurate in those details, then a person could reasonably conclude that they were accurate in other details — like Jesus being the Son of God.

I thought Rev. Johnnie Moore, president of the Congress of Christian Leaders, nicely summarized what the discovery of the Pool of Siloam means for us.

“In the Pool of Siloam, we find evidence of history preserved for us, revealed at just the right time. This is a truly historic event. Theologically, it affirms Scripture, geographically it affirms history and politically it affirms Israel’s unquestionable and unrivaled link to Jerusalem. Some discoveries are theoretical. This one is an undeniable. It is proof of the story of the Bible and of its people, Israel.”

Daily Broadside | New Survey Shows Gaps in “Evangelical’s” Theology

Daily Verse | John 10:10
“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life and have it to the full.”

Monday’s Reading: John 11-12

Happy Halloween!

I came across a recent survey conducted by Ligonier Ministries and LifeWay Research called “The State of Theology.” Conducted every two years since 2014, the survey takes “the theological temperature of the United States to help Christians better understand today’s culture and to equip the church with better insights for discipleship.”

In the 2022 survey of 3,011 U.S. adults, they found that “Americans increasingly reject the divine origin and complete accuracy of the Bible. With no enduring plumb line of absolute truth to conform to, U.S. adults are also increasingly holding to unbiblical worldviews related to human sexuality.”

What was more concerning, however, was that “evangelicals” in the U.S. were also adopting views that increasingly looked like the culture around them, “evangelical” being defined according to four statements:

  • The Bible is the highest authority for what I believe.
  • It is very important for me personally to encourage non-Christians to trust Jesus Christ as their Savior.
  • Jesus Christ’s death on the cross is the only sacrifice that could remove the penalty of my sin.
  • Only those who trust in Jesus Christ alone as their Savior receive God’s free gift of eternal salvation.

While more than 90 percent of evangelicals agree that God is perfect, exists in three persons, that Jesus’ bodily resurrection is real, and that people are made righteous not through works but through faith in him, it was also clear that “the overwhelming majority of U.S. evangelicals have accepted a view of human identity that aligns more with American society than the teaching of the Bible.

In 2022, 71 percent of polled U.S. adults agreed with the statement that “Everyone is born innocent in the eyes of God.” While this is unsurprising, given the influence of humanistic philosophies and worldviews in America that teach self-determinism and a view of humankind as basically good, the survey also showed that 65 percent of polled evangelical Christians agreed with this same statement.

The fact that nearly two-thirds of U.S. evangelicals believe that humans are born in a state of innocence reveals that the biblical teaching of original sin is not embraced by most evangelicals. The Bible, however, makes clear that all humans are “by nature children of wrath” (Eph. 2:3). In other words, we are not sinners because we sin; rather, we sin because we are sinners. This truth is foundational for an accurate understanding of the gospel and of our absolute need for the grace of God in salvation.

As Christianity Today sums up in an article about the results, the five of most common mistaken beliefs held by evangelicals are:

  1. Jesus isn’t the only way to God;
  2. Jesus was created by God;
  3. Jesus is not God;
  4. The Holy Spirit is not a personal being; and
  5. Humans aren’t sinful by nature.

What strikes me as odd is that in creating a filter of four statements that define an “evangelical,” you’d expect that an evangelical would believe that “Only those who trust in Jesus Christ alone as their Savior receive God’s free gift of eternal salvation.” Yet here we have a result that tells us “more than half—56 percent—of evangelical respondents affirmed that ‘God accepts the worship of all religions, including Christianity, Judaism and Islam.'”

So are they “evangelical” or not? If 56 percent of “evangelicals” don’t agree with one of the defining characteristics of an evangelical, are they really an evangelical?

It’s a bit tricky to know what to make of the survey results because true “evangelicals” wouldn’t believe the heresies that are attributed to them.

Another interesting finding was in response to statement 23: “Christians should be silent on issues of politics.

Twice as many Americans adults (30%) “agree” or “somewhat agree” that Christians should be silent on issues of politics, while only 15% of evangelicals agree with that statement. On the other end of the spectrum, 80% of evangelicals “disagree” (64%) or “somewhat disagree” (16%) with the statement — in other words, 80 percent of evangelicals agree that we should speak out on political issues. And 61 percent of American adults agree with them.

Evangelicals can take comfort in the fact that a clear majority of Americans support their right to speak out about political issues, along with four-fifths of evangelicals. That doesn’t mean that all so-called evangelicals will agree on a particular political position.

Keep that in mind as you make your opinions known on November 8. And in between elections, too.

Daily Broadside | Restored! The Tomb of Nahum the Prophet

Daily Verse | Nahum 3:1
Woe to the city of blood,
    full of lies,
full of plunder,
    never without victims!

Monday’s Reading: Habakkuk 1-3

Monday and it’s the last week of September.

Today’s “Daily Verse” is from the book of Nahum, one of the twelve “minor” prophets. The “city of blood” referred to in 3:1 is ancient Nineveh, which is located just outside of modern-day Mosul, Iraq.

You may remember Mosul was captured by the Islamic State in 2014, taking control of Iraq’s second-largest city. The Islamists then gave Christians an ultimatum: leave the city, pay the jizya (a fee of protection) or die by the sword. They all fled, leaving no Christians in Mosul for the first time in the history of Iraq.

But Mosul was known for its murderous streets even before then. In April, 2010, while U.S. troops were still stationed in Iraq, I traveled to Erbil in Kurdistan-controlled northeastern Iraq as a member of a small Christian humanitarian relief organization. Erbil is about 50 miles east of Mosul.

Ancient Nineveh is mostly known because of the biblical prophet, Jonah, who was told by God to go and call the Assyrian capital city to repentance during the reign of king Ashurdan III (772–754 BC). He refused, and scripture tells us he spent three days in the belly of a great fish to help correct his attitude.

Turns out that the prophet Nahum also prophesied against Nineveh.

The fascinating thing that you may not know is that Nahum’s tomb is in the city of Alqosh, Iraq, about 30 miles north of Mosul. And that’s the small city we visited one day while I was in Iraq.

Nahum’s tomb was on the northern side of the city and was in severe disrepair. This is what it looked like when we stepped out of our car.

Photo: Dave Olsson, ©2010

In the background are the domes of a local Catholic church where the bones of the prophet were reportedly moved out of fear that the Jews who left the country in the 1950s would take his remains with them. Whether the bones were moved or not is still the subject of debate because no one dares violate the burial site.

But inside the crumbling edifice in the northern reaches of a Muslim majority country was something magnificent and, to me as an outsider from the West, shocking—ancient Hebrew text inscribed on the walls of the tomb.

Photo: Dave Olsson, ©2010
Photo: Dave Olsson, ©2010

And here is the actual burial site within the tomb, fenced off and covered by a green tarp. We never saw what the tarp covered.

Photo: Dave Olsson, ©2010

While I was there a gaggle of very young Arab boys were playing in the courtyard. One of them came up to me wearing headphones plugged into some kind of device. He smiled large and motioned for me to listen to what he was listening to, so I took his headset and placed it in my ears.

I’ll never forget how shocked I was—again—when I heard explicit American gangsta’ rap music. I was immediately embarrassed, thinking, “This is what we’re exporting?” The boy thought I’d be pleased to hear what he was listening to, but I just shook my head, disappointing the kid’s expectations that I’d find it awesome. How could I affirm that garbage?

We left not knowing what would happen to the tomb, grateful to have visited but assuming we’d never see it again and that it would be completely lost before long.

Remarkably, as I was researching this post, I came across an article from September 2021 in The Times of Israel called, “Saving Iraq’s Tomb of Nahum, a secret mission resurrects Kurdistan’s Jewish past.”

For decades, the people of Alqosh, members of the Chaldean Catholic Church, guarded a shrine once revered by local Jews as the final resting place of Nahum of Elkosh. But on that day, the structure that lay before them was crumbling around a caved-in roof.

“The walls and pillars were cracked and crumbling. It looked like the rest of the building would collapse at any minute,” recalled Adam Tiffen, an American entrepreneur and project manager who had visited the site a year earlier and was there that day with the Israelis.

[…]

But according to Tiffen, the tomb was special. It had for generations resisted being turned into a church or mosque, and more recently had also been spared by Islamic State, which had not been so kind to the nearby Nabi Younus Tomb, believed to be where the prophet Jonah is buried, or a shrine in Mosul that some revere as the final resting place of the biblical Daniel.

“The synagogue was a beautiful and tangible reminder of the connection of the Jewish people to the land and their coexistence in the region with the Christian, Yazidi and Muslim communities for over a millennium,” Tiffen said.

“Given the recent sectarian violence and attacks by ISIS on religious minorities like the Christians and Yezidis, we also saw the restoration as a symbol of hope and a reminder of the common history and belief that we all share,” he went on. “Jews, Christians and Muslims coexisted in the region for hundreds or thousands of years. Perhaps not perfectly, but with a level of tolerance and acceptance that should not be forgotten.”

The whole article is worth the read if for no other reason than to appreciate the preservation efforts of a site connected to a biblical figure. And the photos included are spectacular, including close ups of the work.

Here’s a comparison between my first photo above and one taken from almost the same spot following the restoration 11 years after I was there:

In a region beset by so much violence, destruction and bloodshed—true to the ancient reputation of Ninevah as recorded by Nahum—it’s refreshing to see what has become of this historic Jewish and Christian site.

Daily Broadside | All Lies Create Alternate Realities for the Victims

Daily Verse | 2 Kings 12:15
They did not require an accounting from those to whom they gave the money to pay the workers, because they acted with complete honesty.

Monday’s Reading: 2 Kings 15-17

It’s Monday, the day after the holiest day of the Christian calendar: Easter Sunday. It’s the most important day to Christians because, as Paul says, if Christ has not been raised, we’re still in our sins and our faith is futile.

Futile. Worthless. Useless. Pointless. That candid admission is one reason I believe scripture. I am unaware of any other faith that allows that if their central claim is untrue, the entire belief system collapses.

I hope those of you who follow Christ marked the occasion with joy and celebration, and I hope those of you who are still undecided remain curious about the claim that Jesus defeated death. If that claim is true, it means everything to you now and for eternity. You can always write me at info@daveolsson.com and I’ll happily answer your questions or point you to resources that can.

While in seminary, studying for my MDiv., I took a course from one of the more popular professors on campus who was also very pastoral. By “pastoral” I mean that he cared about people, he seemed wise, and he had a good-natured, grandfatherly affect about him.

During one class, he said something about the nature of truth and to this day, try as I might, I cannot remember his exact words. I even asked him to repeat what he said so that I could write it down, but even he couldn’t remember exactly what he had just said. In the moment the words were profound, and I’ve often tried to recall them, but they just aren’t there—so what I’m about to write is (most likely) a poor approximation of what he actually said.

The gist of it was this: When someone lies, they alter the reality of the person to whom they lied. In other words, when someone receives a lie as the truth, they are living with a distorted understanding of what is, in fact, real, courtesy of the liar. They live as though the lie is the truth.

Lying is so abhorrent to me that it was one of two non-negotiable rules that we held for our kids: you may not defy us, and you may not deceive us. We wanted them to respect authority and the truth.

Now we know that our children did not always tell us the truth (and they did not always obey our direction)—but then, neither did I always tell the truth and neither did I always respect authority. It’s part of the nature of unredeemed mankind and even after repenting, it’s a process of learning to live the truth no matter what.

The reasons for lying are numerous, but often they have to do with gaining an advantage over someone or avoiding responsibility for something, both being motivated by pride. Lying can get us more power or more money or more attention; it can also help us avoid humiliation or the consequences of our actions.

One of our maxims was, “Little people, little problems. Big people, big problems.” When children lie, the consequences are (almost) always small.

Parent: Did you make mommy a pretty drawing on the wall with markers?

3-year-old: No.

Parent: Why is there marker on your hands?

3-year-old: I don’t know.

But the bigger they get, the bigger the consequences of a lie can be.

The Lie: “Cigarette smoking is no more ‘addictive’ than coffee, tea, or Twinkies.”

The Truth: “Nicotine is a highly addictive chemical compound present in a tobacco plant.”

The Consequences: “Cigarette smoking is responsible for more than 480,000 deaths per year in the United States, including more than 41,000 deaths resulting from secondhand smoke exposure. This is about one in five deaths annually, or 1,300 deaths every day.”

The Lie: There is an epidemic of white police officers killing unarmed black suspects.

The Truth: “In 2019 police officers fatally shot 1,004 people, most of whom were armed or otherwise dangerous. African-Americans were about a quarter of those killed by cops last year (235), a ratio that has remained stable since 2015 … In 2018, the latest year for which such data have been published, African-Americans made up 53% of known homicide offenders in the U.S. and commit about 60% of robberies, though they are 13% of the population.

That’s why there’s a disproportionate number of encounters with police. In addition, “white officers appear to be no more likely to use lethal force against minorities than non-white officers.”

The Consequences: “Mostly peaceful riots” over George Floyd’s death caused more than $2 billion dollars in damages, killed at least 15 people, and injured more than 700 officers.

The Lie: Gas prices are so high because of Putin’s war in Ukraine.

The Truth: “[Biden] canceled pipelines, restricted drilling on government lands and waters, and tightened regulations on oil and gas producers.” Also, “Gasoline prices climbed 48.3% between Biden’s inauguration and Putin’s invasion.”

The Consequences: “As of April 14, average prices for regular gasoline range from a low of $3.64 in Missouri to a whopping high of $5.72 in California, according to the national motor club AAA. The national average was $4.07, a 42% increase from last year.” Brandon pretends that the high cost of gas is out of his hands. It’s a lie and we’re literally paying the price for his deception.

There’s so many more lies that I could cite: Hunter’s laptop; Hillary’s illegal server; that men can be women; that January 6 was an insurrection; that 1619 is the true founding of America; that white supremacy is the biggest threat we face … and on and on and on.

We’ve come to accept that lying is part and parcel of politics. Why? Why shouldn’t we demand that our leaders are honest? At least we could make informed decisions. As it is, those lies distort reality and the results are what we’re living with today.

Maybe someday we’ll get lucky, and all of our political leaders will be forced to tell the truth, like Fletcher Reede (Jim Carrey) in Liar Liar, who is under a truth curse and cannot lie.

While I doubt we’d get that, I’d settle for workers who “acted with complete honesty.”

See you tomorrow.

Daily Broadside | A Brief Reflection on the Amazing Name of Joshua

Daily Verse | Joshua 2:9
“I know that the Lord has given this land to you and that a great fear of you has fallen on us, so that all who live in this country are melting in fear because of you.”

Friday’s Reading: Joshua 6-8
Saturday’s Reading: Joshua 9-12

Happy Friday and welcome to the weekend. If you’re following the Bible reading plan, we’re now in the book of Joshua—which is an amazing name.

Why? Glad you asked.

Joshua was the successor of Moses, the man brought up in Pharaoh’s household and the leader who brought the people of Israel out of slavery in Egypt. Joshua is described as Moses’ “young aide” (Exodus 33:11) and one “who had been Moses’ aide since youth” (Numbers 11:28).

Joshua was commissioned by God Himself to lead the Israelites just before the LORD took them into the land of Canaan (Deut. 31:23):

The Lord gave this command to Joshua son of Nun: “Be strong and courageous, for you will bring the Israelites into the land I promised them on oath, and I myself will be with you.”

Here are some facts about the name “Joshua” that give us a more robust (and inspiring!) understanding of how the Old Testament (the Jewish Tanakh) points to Jesus.

In Hebrew, Joshua is spelled יְהוֹשֻׁעַ (Yehoshu’a) (and always reading right to left in Hebrew). It means, “Yahweh is salvation,” from the roots יְהוֹ (yeho) referring to the Hebrew God and יָשַׁע (yasha’) meaning “to save.”

Included in the name Joshua is a shortened form of the Tetragrammaton, i.e. the name of the Lord: YHWH (יהו). YHWH is unpronounceable,

“… and wherever the text called for YHWH, a reader would pronounce the Hebrew word for lord, namely Adonai. In the Middle Ages, the Masoretes began to fear that the traditional pronunciation of the written text might become lost and inserted symbols to help preserve it. That caused the pronunciation of the word Adonai to be linked to the spelling of YHWH, which in turn resulted in the impossible hybrid “name” Jehovah.

Other Jewish traditions handled the vocalization of YHWH by inserting the word Hashem, which is the word for “name” … plus the definite article: The Name.

The name Joshua, then, is associated with God and with salvation.

Second, Joshua is the original Hebrew form of the Greek name Jesus, which comes from a Greek translation of the Aramaic short form יֵשׁוּעַ (Yeshu’a). As The New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology (ed. Colin Brown) puts it,

Iēsous is the Gk. form of the OT Jewish name Yēšua‘, arrived at by transcribing the Heb. and adding an -s to the nom. to facilitate declension. šua‘ (Joshua) seems to have come into general use about the time of the Babylonian exile in place of the older Yᵉhôšûa‘. The LXX rendered both the ancient and more recent forms of the name uniformly as Iēsous … It is the oldest name containing the divine name Yahweh, and means “Yahweh is help” or “Yahweh is salvation” (cf. the vb. yiisa’, help, save).

The name Joshua, then, is also associated with Jesus.

Finally, the name Joshua is the exact reverse of the name Isaiah (ישעיה).

The name Isaiah(u) consists of two parts: The final part is יה or יהו, both abbreviated forms of יהוה; YHWH or Yahweh. The first part of the name Isaiah comes from the verb ישע (yasha’), meaning to be saved or delivered … The verb ישע (yasha’) means to be unrestricted and thus to be free and thus to be saved (from restriction, from oppression and thus from ultimate demise). A doer of this verb is a savior.

Where have we heard that before?

The name Joshua, then, is also associated with Isaiah and thereby reinforced in its meaning of “Yahweh is salvation.”

One more interesting and related fact. The name Moses is the Latin version of the Greek name Μωσης (Moses), which in turn is a transliteration of the Hebrew name משה (Moshe). If you spell the name of Moses backward in Hebrew (השם), it spells the word Hashem, which is Jewish for The Name.

Remember that from above?

Mind, blown.

Let’s put it all together. Moses, whose name is associated with “The Name” leads the Israelites out of Egyptian bondage into the Promised Land with the help of his young aide, Joshua, whose name means “Yahweh is salvation” and is associated with Jesus.

What you’re reading in the account of the exodus from Egypt and the conquest of the land “flowing with milk and honey” (Exodus 3:8) is a type which, in scripture, is a person or thing in the Old Testament that foreshadows a person or thing in the New Testament.

An Old Testament type’s details don’t all necessarily have a one-to-one correlation in the New Testament, but the broad parallels in the account of Moses, Joshua and the Israelites with Jesus Christ and his work are pretty hard to miss.

Exciting!

Have a good weekend.

Daily Broadside | Big Government Wants You to Die From a Drug Overdose, Not From an Infection

Daily Verse | Leviticus 17:11
For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you to make atonement for yourselves on the altar; it is the blood that makes atonement for one’s life.

Tuesday’s Reading: Leviticus 18-20

It’s Tuesday and I am not making up what I’m about to share with you. One of the news sources I frequent had a story yesterday about the newest initiative of Brandon’s efforts to address “racial equity.”

The Washington Free Beacon reports that,

The Biden administration is set to fund the distribution of crack pipes to drug addicts as part of its plan to advance “racial equity.”

Just pause there for a second to admire the total incoherence of that statement of fact.

You’re going to give crack pipes to drug addicts to advance “racial equity”? What, are blacks competing with whites in the world of addiction?

In what sane society does enabling drug addicts to satisfy their addiction “advance racial equity”?

In Brandon’s world, this is apparently the compassionate thing to do.

The $30 million grant program, which closed applications Monday and will begin in May, will provide funds to nonprofits and local governments to help make drug use safer for addicts. Included in the grant, which is overseen by the Department of Health and Human Services, are funds for “smoking kits/supplies.” A spokesman for the agency told the Washington Free Beacon that these kits will provide pipes for users to smoke crack cocaine, crystal methamphetamine, and “any illicit substance.”

HHS said the kits aim to reduce the risk of infection when smoking substances with glass pipes, which can lead to infections through cuts and sores. Applicants for the grants are prioritized if they treat a majority of “underserved communities,” including African Americans and “LGBTQ+ persons,” as established under President Joe Biden’s executive order on “advancing racial equity.”

I’m sorry, did I say the government is providing the kits? What I meant to say is that you are providing the kits. Since the government doesn’t actually produce anything of value that anyone wants to buy, they’re using the money they take from you and me to send drug reinforcement kits to drug addicts who otherwise would have to use—horrors!—glass crack pipes that lead to infections.

You see, the problem isn’t the addiction; the problem is the infections users get as a result of their self-destructive habit. We can’t have white people getting clean drug delivery products while black people get used drug delivery products! That ain’t fair!

Other equipment that qualifies for funding include syringes, vaccinations, disease screenings, condoms, and fentanyl strips.

Terrific. Instead of fighting addiction, the government has thrown in the towel and said, “if they’re going to do drugs, let’s make them comfortable.” This is entirely in keeping with the therapeutic embrace of anyone or anything that is “oppressed” by the traditional culture.

You’re a drug addict? Poor thing! What you need is compassion and understanding that your habit isn’t a bad thing. No! If drugs are your reality, well, then, the least we can do is protect you from the discomfort the results of drug use can produce. Here’s a clean crack pipe! That should put you on an equal footing with whitey.

This is the same as when the government provides clean needles to heroin addicts. “At least they aren’t getting infected by dirty needles.” It’s like filling potholes as people shuffle their way along the highway to hell. The problem isn’t the potholes; the problem is that the road goes to hell.

This is the insanity of the Left. The father of a drug addict (Joe) is enabling his son (Hunter) and other addicts to remain addicts—by keeping the unflattering results of their addiction suppressed and allowing the addiction itself to eventually kill them.

That’s the true “equity” in this program.

Daily Broadside | No, God Isn’t Safe, But He Is Good

Daily Verse | Exodus 40:35
Moses could not enter the Tent of Meeting because the cloud had settled upon it, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle.

Wednesday’s Reading: Leviticus 1-3

The following is adapted from a Facebook post I wrote on January 29, 2017

It’s Wednesday, and if you’re reading through the Bible with me this year, we recently read Exodus 20:18-21. The Israelites are standing at the foot of Mount Sinai and are trembling with fear because of the trumpet blast, the shaking and smoking mountain, the thunder and the lightning—all manifestations of God’s presence—and they are terrified.

It reminds me of the disciples in the presence of Jesus when he calmed the storm on the lake: “They were terrified and asked each other, ‘Who is this? Even the wind and the waves obey him!'” (Mark 4:41). It must be overwhelming to be confronted with a manifestation of transcendent, supra-human power.

What struck me most is Moses’ response: “Do not be afraid. God has come to test you, so that the fear of God will be with you to keep you from sinning.”

Don’t be afraid, yet fear God? What’s going on?

Believers debate what it means to fear the Lord. Some suggest that fear means reverential awe and deferential respect. Others say that doesn’t go far enough, that it literally means to be scared of God, to be frightened of Him. I think, perhaps, the truth is closer to a combination of both.

We must accept that God is the Supreme Being, the One who spoke everything into existence, the great I AM, with no beginning and no end. Nothing—neither man, beast, nor nature—can successfully oppose his authority or will. God has the power to raise up and to put down, to reward and condemn, to create and destroy.

Remember God’s challenge to Job: “Will the one who contends with the Almighty correct him? Let him who accuses God answer him!” (40:2). Or Isaiah 29:16, “Shall what is formed say to the one who formed it, ‘You did not make me’? Can the pot say to the potter, ‘You know nothing’?”

We don’t have words to describe the perfect power, wrath and justice of God. The writer of Hebrews says, “It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God” (10:31) and Paul said, “God cannot be mocked” (Ephesians 6:7). This is why we must have “the fear of God” in us. 

But we don’t need to be afraid. Why?

Because God is love (1 John 4:8). We don’t have the words to describe the immense love and benevolence that God has toward us. “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16). God “is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9).

So we find these two properties held in tension: God’s unimpeachable and invincible authority on one side and his “great love for us” (Ephesians 2:4) on the other.

That is why Moses can say to the Israelites, “Don’t be afraid.” Don’t faint under the demonstration of God’s power; he doesn’t intend to destroy you. You will not die as you fear. But it’s also why he can follow that with “the fear of God will be with you” for the express purpose of keeping the Israelites from sin.

Perhaps the best explanation of this tension is found in C.S. Lewis’s novel, The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe. In one scene, Susan and Lucy ask Mr. and Mrs. Beaver if Aslan is a man. Mr. Beaver tells them that, no, Aslan is not a man, but a lion, “the great Lion.” Here is the rest of the conversation:

“’Ooh!’ said Susan. ‘I’d thought he was a man. Is he quite safe? I shall feel rather nervous about meeting a lion.’

“’That you will, dearie, and make no mistake,’ said Mrs. Beaver, ‘if there’s anyone who can appear before Aslan without their knees knocking, they’re either braver than most or else just silly.’

“’Then he isn’t safe?’ said Lucy.

“’Safe?’ said Mr. Beaver. ‘Don’t you hear what Mrs. Beaver tells you? Who said anything about being safe? ‘Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good. He’s the King, I tell you.’”

There it is: “‘Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good.” God isn’t safe. Not by a long shot. But he’s good.

Just don’t take His goodness for granted.

Daily Broadside | Ring Found with Image of Good Shepherd from Third Century

Daily Verse | Genesis 14:13
One who had escaped came and reported this to Abram the Hebrew.

Friday’s Reading: Genesis 15-17
Saturday’s Reading: Genesis 18-20

It’s Friday and the end of the first week of January 2022, the 93rd week and third year of “two weeks to flatten the curve.” It’s also the 50th week since the disaster known as Brandon was foisted on these United States. I think just as the Democrats commemorated the January 6 riots with melodramatic speeches, a performance by the cast of Hamilton and a candlelight vigil organized by an antifa-linked group, the Republicans should hold a memorial on January 20 to mourn the death of America as founded, reciting all the failures of the current administration and the malfeasance of the Democrat Party that is now a rabid anti-American Marxist cabal.

But enough of that. Let’s close out the week with a stunning discovery reported just before Christmas.

Israeli researchers on Wednesday displayed a Roman-era golden ring with an early Christian symbol for Jesus inscribed in its gemstone, found in a shipwreck off the ancient port of Caesarea.

The thick octagonal gold ring with its green gemstone bore the figure of the “Good Shepherd” in the form of a young shepherd boy in a tunic with a ram or sheep across his shoulders.

In the Facebook post linked from the image, the Israel Antiquities Authority writes:

This image, of the ‘Good Shepherd’, is known in ancient Christian art as a symbol of salvation; it is a parable of Jesus as the merciful shepherd of mankind, or as the one who has shown the protection of man or the testimony of his believers. The investigators are sobbing, who carried the ring, was one of the first Christians; the ring was revealed in the vicinity of Caesarea, which has great significance in the Christian tradition, as in Caesarea was one of the oldest centers of Christianity.

The shipwreck from which the ring was taken was dated to about 1,700 years ago.

Sokolov said that while the image exists in early Christian symbolism, representing Jesus as a caring shepherd, tending to his flock and guiding those in need, finding it on a ring was rare.

The presence of such a symbol on a ring probably owned by a Roman operating in or around Caesarea made sense, given the ethnically and religiously heterogenous nature of the port in the third century, when it was one of Christianity’s earliest centers.

I’ve written before about discoveries like this, which are always exciting because they independently fortify our faith in Christ. If you’re a believer, you understand what I mean. If you’re not, perhaps it appeals to your curiosity about the veracity of the Bible.

Have a good weekend.

Daily Broadside | It’s The End of The Year But Not The End of The Lunacy

Daily Verse | Revelation 16:18-19
Then there came flashes of lightning, rumblings, peals of thunder and a severe earthquake. No earthquake like it has ever occurred since man has been on earth, so tremendous was the quake. The great city split into three parts, and the cities of the nations collapsed.

Friday’s Reading: Revelation 17-19
Saturday’s Reading: Revelation 20-22

It’s Friday and the last day of 2021. I don’t know what 2022 holds, but I expect more of the same as 2021. We still have an illegitimate junta occupying the White House, our country is in economic shambles, the Chinese Lung Pox continues to thrive, China, Russia and Iran are threatening our safety, and creeping Marxism continues to solidify its grasp on the once-great institutions that held our nation together.

It’s not looking good.

That’s why starting each year with a focus on God and his revealed Word is essential to maintaining my sanity and reminding me of what truly matters. When the world burns—and it will—the only thing that remains stable and sure is the eternal God and his Son, Jesus Christ, who “is the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8).

One of the things I started doing this year was adding a “Daily Verse” to the top of every post, and then I started adding the day’s full reading, too. I plan to keep up that practice in 2022, and I invite you to join me in reading through the Bible next year.

Below is the updated Bible reading plan, which runs six days a week, taking you cover-to-cover over the course of the year. If you’ve never done it, I strongly encourage you to do so. Even if you’re not a Christ-following believer, but are curious about the Bible, you’ve got nothing to lose and everything to gain by reading through it.

Part of what motivates me to read through the Bible (again and again) is that it is the source of what I say I believe. To say I believe what it tells me but not to know what it says is irrational. Plus, I don’t want to stand before the Lord someday and try to explain why I wasn’t regularly familiarizing myself with his written Word and letting it guide my thoughts and actions.

So, without further fanfare, here’s 2022’s One-Year Bible Reading Plan, developed by yours truly. It starts on Monday, January 3, and finishes on Saturday, December 31. Print it out (you don’t have to print the calendar on the second page to use the plan, but I included it since having a calendar handy is sometimes helpful) and have it ready to start on Monday.

As we pull the curtain on 2021, thank you for reading the blog this year. I sincerely appreciate the kind words, the questions and the comments you sometimes leave for me. My goal is to bring you the latest developments of any consequence in faith, culture and politics, and offer my (admittedly partisan) view on them.

I wish you all a very Happy New Year and look forward to continuing the conversation.

Blessings. Have a good weekend.