‘Did a Typo Teach Us Wisdom?’ (My Newswithviews Column, Feb. 1)

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Any minute now…

Anyone can make a typo. It doesn’t mean you’re stupid. But sometimes a mere mistake, a typo, can teach us wisdom.

Did a Typo Teach Us Wisdom?

Y’know, the Battle of Goof vs. Evil is usually a civil war. Their own foolishness trips them up. How? Because they don’t even suspect it’s foolishness! They think this horse manure is wisdom!

It was our brain trust, our government elites, the smartest monkeys in America, who got us bogged down in Viet Nam. But that’s only one of hundreds of examples. How many can you think of in five minutes?

‘A Word to Christians: Endure’ (2013, 2019)

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Sometimes it feels like we’re trapped aboard a runaway train, with homicidal maniacs in the locomotive speeding toward the edge of the cliff. God understands. That’s why He gave us 1 Corinthians Chapter 1.

‘A Word to Christians: Endure’ (2013)

We are weak, but He is strong. Much stronger than those idiots who want to rule the world! And His delight is in using weak things to overthrow the strong. Weak things like us, in fact.

All great worldly empires are supposed to live forever. None of them do. Some of them go down in flames within a single lifetime.

But God’s word lasts forever.

Little Weak Things Vs. Big Mighty Things (1 Cor. 1)

Sometimes it looks like the ungodly and the wicked will swallow the whole world. Who’s stopping them? Aren’t they doing anything and everything they please? And crushing or canceling anyone who disagrees with them?

A Bible passage comes to mind:

Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.

For ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are called. But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty. 

And base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are…  1 Corinthians 1: 25-28

Enemies of God, enemies of truth, despisers of the human race, are riding high just now: this is their era, they’re convinced of it–one more push, and they’ve got their global government! They’ve got the money, they’ve got the power, they’ve got the schools and the media–what can possibly go wrong?

I don’t know. God will take them down by something they never expected, never even thought of–something they would laugh at, if they saw it.

We can continue to declare the truth of God’s word: the predators don’t like it, they’re blinded by rage when they hear it–in short, we are a diversion. While they’re busy chasing us, they won’t turn and see what’s chasing them. They’ll never sense it till it leaps upon their shoulders.

And that–rejoice!–will be the end of them.

‘No Weapon Formed Against Thee Shall Prosper’ (2019)

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Esther and the King of Persia

If we walk by sight and not by faith, it’s easy to lose hope: God knows this fallen world is falling farther by the day.

God respects our free will that He gave us; but He has not surrendered His sovereign lordship over all of His creation. If He did, how long do you suppose the human race would last?

“No Weapon Formed Against Thee Shall Prosper”

Remember I Corinthians, Chapter 1: God’s foolishness is wiser than men, God’s weakness is stronger than men; and He uses foolish things of this world to confound the wise, weak things to confound the strong, things that are despise–and things which don’t exist, to bring to nothing t

‘A Word to Christians: Endure’ (2013)

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1 Corinthians 1: 17-31 (“For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel…”) is one of those Bible passages I return to again and again: because I need it. Those verses are foundational to my whole series of Bell Mountain books.

(https://leeduigon.com/2013/03/29/a-word-to-christians-endure/)

We often feel that the whole world is a runaway train headed for a broken trestle over a bottomless pit, and there’s absolutely nothing we can do about it, the monsters have got the locomotive and we are only helpless passengers.

But here God reminds us that the strength that will be decisive is not our strength, but His. He doesn’t care if we are weak, He’ll use us anyway! Foolish things to confound the wise, weak things to confound the strong, not many noble, not many wise, things that are despised hath God chosen…and things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are.

God could send armies of invincible angels to work His will on earth. But instead He sent a baby in a manger. The Devil must’ve laughed himself silly over that.

Our weakness, in God’s hands, is stronger than this world.

We just have to learn to see it that way.

Christianity is Wild

Image result for images of jesus walking on water

The thing you have to remember about Aslan–who symbolizes Jesus Christ in C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia–is the oft-repeated warning, “He’s not a tame lion.”

And Christianity is not a tame religion.

Do you ever wonder why the Romans tried to hard, for so long, to wipe out Christianity? After all, they tolerated other religions. Could it be they were afraid of Christianity?

Well, if they weren’t, they should’ve been. Because we Christians, if we take our faith at all seriously and try to be conformed to God’s Word rather than to the ways of this world, are crazy. Really. We are out to lunch.

We believe in an almighty God, in fact the only God, who loved the world so much, He sent His only begotten Son down from Heaven to be born as a baby, live as a man, keep the holy Law without committing a single sin, to be brutally murdered on the cross as atonement for our sins–who then rose from the dead, as He said He would, ascended into Heaven, and will surely come again: because it is His divine right to rule over all Creation.

He also walked on water.

And He has absolute authority. He has it–not the state, not Science. He has it, and only He. Jesus Christ the King of Kings, who was and is and is to be.

Could anything be more counter-cultural? Really, is this tame or wild? And all that stuff about salvation and eternal life, forgiveness of sins, miracles–oh, come on! miracles?–by all the standards of our worldly wisdom, this, as St. Paul said, is foolishness. “For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness” (1 Corinthians 1:18).

O Lord our God, help us to embrace our wildness! In Jesus’ name, Amen.

By Request, ‘We Are an Offering’

Thank you, Erlene, for suggesting this–We Are an Offering, by Chris Christian.

In light of the constant seepage of bad news, let us remember Paul’s exhortation to Christians to “offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God” (Romans 12:1). God will use us: He will let us enter into His work. And bearing in mind that He uses weak things to overthrow the mighty, and foolish things to confound the wise, and things that are despised to undo the things that are honored by this fallen world (1 Corinthians 1)… it may be that He’s got the bad guys right where He wants them.