Years
ago I heard a preacher tell a story that most of you have probably encountered
in some form or another. It goes like
this:
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
a Fantastically Gross Martin Luther Quote.
I came across this one while working my way through Luther's "Table Talk."

For more fun with Luther check out the "Lutheran Insulter"

"I am fed up with the world, and it with me. I am like a ripe stool, and the world is like a gigantic anus, and so we’re about to let go of each other."I'm so proud to be a Lutheran!
For more fun with Luther check out the "Lutheran Insulter"
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Our Webs of Dysfunction
I’ve
been seeing my counselor a bit more lately.
The addition of a second child combined with the pressures of life has
really thrown me for a loop. One way
this imbalance rears its ugly head is in my anger. Not making excuses, but I come from a long
line of bad tempers on both sides of my family.
Because of this, anger is usually one of the first signs that my life is
off kilter. On a side note, when I say
anger I don’t mean the emotion per say, rather I’m speaking of the almost
unquenchable desire to hit inanimate objects (usually a wall). So needless to say a trip to the counselor
was needed.
One
of the surprising things that came from a session was that people who have anxiety
disorders (the reason I see a counselor in the first place) tend to have
trouble with anger as well. The two are
interrelated. I left that appointment
oddly encouraged by the fact that so many of my problems are interrelated. In opening up my web of dysfunction I at
least could understand myself a bit better.
Along with this I was given a personal understanding of Luther’s breakthrough
insight to the human condition: Simul Iustus et Peccator (Simultaneously just
and a sinner at the same time). In other
words, as a result of my extensive web of dysfunction, it’s only because of God’s
declaration of Christ’s righteousness upon me that I have any chance in
life.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
shawn-thoughts relaunch

Monday, November 22, 2010
Karl Barth: The Power of the Word of God
Commenting on Romans 1:16 & 1 Cor. 1:18 Barth writes:
"If a man knew nothing of this power that both sustains and stimulates, both protects and punishes, both pacifies and disturbs, if he merely heard about it without knowing it as a power, he would only give evidence that he knew nothing of the Word of God. We are acquainted with the Word of God to the degree that we are acquainted with this power. We speak of God's Word when we speak in recollection and expectation of this power, and when we do so in such a way that we realise that this power of the Word of God is not one power among others, not even among other divine powers, but the one unique divine power which comes home to us, to which we are referred, in face of which we stand in decision between the obedience we owe it and the unfathomable inconceivability of disobedience, and consequently in the decision between bliss and perdition." (I.1 150)


Monday, November 15, 2010
Saturday Night Live on the Folly of Positive Thinking
"It is certain that man must utterly despair of his own ability before he is prepared to receive the grace of Christ." -Martin Luther
"So our troubles, we think, are basically of our own making. They arise out of ourselves, and the alcoholic is an extreme example of the self-will run riot, though he usually doesn't think so. Above everything, we alcoholics must rid of this selfishness. We must, or it will kill us! God makes that possible. And there often seems no way of entirely getting rid of self without His aid. Many of us had moral and philosophical convictions galore, but we could not live up to them even though we would have liked to. Neither could we reduce our self-centeredness much by wishing or trying on our own power. We had to have God's help.
This is the how and why of it. First of all, we had to quit playing God. It didn't work. Next, we decided that hereafter in this drama of life, God was going to be our Director. He is the Principal; we are His agents. He is the Father, and we are his children. Most good ideas are simple, and this concept was the keystone of the new and triumphant arch through which we passed to freedom." -Alcoholics Anonymous the Big Book
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Karl Barth on the Importance of Theology.
I'm currently trudging my way through Karl Barth's massive Church Dogmatics. My goal is to get through the whole 14 vol. set over the next several years. Needless to say, I'll be sharing some of his gems as I come across them. Here's Barth on the importance of theological work:
"How disastrously the Church must misunderstand itself if it can imagine that theology is the business of a few theoreticians who are specially appointed for the purpose, to whom the rest, as hearty practical men, may sometimes listen with half an ear, though for their own part they boast of living 'quite untheologically' for the demands of the day ('love'). As though these practical men were not continually preaching and speaking and writing, and were not genuinely questioned as to the rightness of their activity in this regard! As though there were anything more practical than giving this question its head, which means doing the work of theology..."
"As though there could be any more urgent task for a Church under assault from without than that of consolidating itself within, which means doing theological work!"
"The whole Church must seriously want a serious theology if it is to have a serious theology."
"The freedom claimed when men think they can and should theologise 'quite untheologically' is the freedom to prattle heretically or in a way that makes for heresy. There is no room in the Church for this freedom."
Church Dogmatics I1 76-77
"How disastrously the Church must misunderstand itself if it can imagine that theology is the business of a few theoreticians who are specially appointed for the purpose, to whom the rest, as hearty practical men, may sometimes listen with half an ear, though for their own part they boast of living 'quite untheologically' for the demands of the day ('love'). As though these practical men were not continually preaching and speaking and writing, and were not genuinely questioned as to the rightness of their activity in this regard! As though there were anything more practical than giving this question its head, which means doing the work of theology..."
"As though there could be any more urgent task for a Church under assault from without than that of consolidating itself within, which means doing theological work!"
"The whole Church must seriously want a serious theology if it is to have a serious theology."
"The freedom claimed when men think they can and should theologise 'quite untheologically' is the freedom to prattle heretically or in a way that makes for heresy. There is no room in the Church for this freedom."
Church Dogmatics I1 76-77
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