1000

This is my 1000th post.  I haven’t noted previous milestones, but 1000 is just such a resonant round number, I couldn’t let it pass unremarked.  Considering that from October 2003 through December 2006 I only posted 30 times, no one would have been likely to predict I’d hit this one (not that anyone would have cared enough to consider the question); 2007 was a busier year, but even then I only put up 65 posts.  In January of last year, though, I was inspired to take blogging seriously as a discipline, and that changed things; in the 16 months from my first post that year until now, I’ve put up 905 pieces, or about 56 per month.  Of course, a lot of those have been minor—video posts, song lyrics, quotes—but there’s been a fair bit of serious material, too; this blog is still small potatoes as these things go (actually, fingerlings would be more to the point), but there are folks who read on some kind of regular basis, too, and I appreciate all of you.

I was ruminating a bit the other day over some of the hits and misses I’ve had, and my mind got stuck a little on my 2006 post on Barack Obama, in which I praised his speech on religion in the public square.  That was the point at which he really stuck in my mind as a likely presidential candidate, though I didn’t think he’d be ready for the office in 2008 (and 100 days into his administration, I still don’t).  In retrospect, I think I gave him more credit for that speech than he had coming, but if I heard more what I wanted to hear than what he was actually committed to, I don’t blame myself too much for that, since he has a gift for eliciting that sort of response.  Given how many pro-life evangelicals managed to convince themselves that he deserved their support, I think I did a pretty decent job of staying objective; I suspect the biggest fallout for the pro-life cause from the Obama presidency will be the number of evangelicals who, when they really face the cognitive dissonance between their convictions and their vote, sacrifice the former to justify the latter to themselves and others, and end up coming out in support of abortion.  I hope there won’t be too many, but I don’t think they’ll be isolated cases, either.

Anyway, I’m enjoying the ride, and whether it does anyone else any good or not, I think this blog is helping me grow as a thinker and writer, and I even think it’s helped my preaching; and I do hope it provides some benefit to those of you who are regular visitors, and to the various folks who drop by for one thing and another.  Onward and upward.

On this blog in history: January 26-31, 2008

Whose table?
A brief reflection on the Lord’s Supper.

The Jesus heresy?
You can’t be properly Christ-centered without being Trinitarian; worshiping Jesus without the Father and the Spirit isn’t really worshiping Jesus at all.

Church as consumer option?
I’m looking forward to following up on this one by reading Skye Jethani’s The Divine Commodity:  Discovering a Faith Beyond Consumer Christianity.

Justice and mercy
On the need to affirm the justice of God, and why even his mercy is, in a way, an act of his justice.  I want to go back to this one at some point and develop it at greater length.

Reader’s guide: posts on faith

Keeping faith in mind
Is it a choice between brains and belief? No.

A matter of trust
Do we really believe God knows and wants what’s best for us?

Thoughts on the nature of Christian faith
Flannery O’Connor was right: it’s harder to believe than not to.

For a 90° turn: meditation on faith and reason
Learning from St. Augustine.

Thought on belief
We’re wired to believe.

Statement of faith
Just because I believe in God doesn’t mean it came—or comes—easily.

The stubborn faithfulness of God
In the end, this is what really matters.

On this blog in history: January 1-20, 2008

Spiritual discipline?
Considering whether blogging can be a spiritual discipline, and if so, how—a question I revisited last month.The fantasy of the Real
On Chesterton, Tolkien, and the value of fantasy and science fiction.Gospel witness
A comment on what it means to bear witness to Christ.God’s own fool, part II
On the preposterous idea of a crucified Messiah.God’s own fools
On being fools for Christ.

On this blog in history: November 1-20, 2007

Continuing the retrospective posts . . .. . . and it’s not even fake Carson
An occasion for dispute between John Stackhouse and D. A. Carson provided an occasion to consider an unfortunate trend in disputes among Christian academics.Midway between luck and skill
On the Battle of Midway and the providence of God.The spirit of the soul
Lynn Redgrave, thumos, and how we face death.Ministry as trinitarian work
After I finished Andrew Purves’ book The Crucifixion of Ministry: Surrendering Our Ambitions to the Service of Christ, I went on to Stephen Seamands’ book Ministry in the Image of God: The Trinitarian Shape of Christian Service, which had been on my to-read list for a while; the two books complement each other wonderfully, I think, as Dr. Seamands’ work sets the message of Dr. Purves’ book in a trinitarian context.

Reader’s guide: posts on grace

A few weeks ago, I wrote that “The developing center of this blog, I think, is a core of reflections on the interrelationship between Christian theology and praxis and American politics.” That said, there are other major themes running through these posts as well; of those, surely the most important thing I think and write about is the grace of God, and why it’s so hard for us to live by.

Umm, what was that about grace?
One of the biggest mistakes we can make is to forget the difference between grace and justice, and start to imagine that we have earned God’s favor.

1 Timothy and the misdirected conscience of the West
The word “gospel” means “good news,” and the gospel of grace truly is good news . . . but we often don’t receive it as good news, because it isn’t what we want to hear

.The Christian discipline of forgiveness
Forgiveness, repentance, and the Gordian knot
We not only need to receive grace, we need to give it—for our own sake as well as for others’.

Justice and mercy
A thought on the relationship between the two.

The lust of the world, the grace of God, and the heart of the church
Why do we keep sliding into legalism? Because legalistic religion lets us take the credit.

The crucial challenge of living by grace
The key to living by grace is gratitude to God.

The cost of grace
On grace as God’s free gift, and why it isn’t cheap.

No matter how far you run, the Father’s heart goes farther
We’re all prodigals in need of grace—and we’re all offered it, whether we want it or not.

On this blog in history: October 2007

Continuing this series of retrospective posts, there’s rather a gap after May 2007; the one post worth noting from June, 1 Timothy and the misdirected conscience of the West, is one I actually reposted in full not that long ago, and after that one the summer got very busy (both in town, and in my search for a new call). It was October before I got posting again.Madeleine L’Engle, RIP
A belated tip of the hat to an author from whom I learned much.Meme tag
In retrospect, I don’t think this meme was really all that helpful; but I do think my positive section here, drawing on James 1, is worth remembering.Good news—no boundaries
A post about the mission organization Words of HOPE, which I served as a board member for three years; this is basically a brief introduction to one of the best ministries I’ve ever come across.Meme Reversi
My wife’s response to the meme above was to toss it back the other way, with a challenge that I could wish had gone all the way back down the chain: if you’ve identified problems and how things ought to be, what are you going to do about it? This is my answer to that challenge.