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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s Crossroads – Your Daily Prayer – September 24
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A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s Crossroads – Your Daily Prayer – September 24

A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s CrossroadsBy Ashley Moore  Bible ReadingThe LORD says, "I will guide you along the best pathway for your life. I will advise you and watch over you. – Psalm 32:8, NLT Listen or Read Below: I love growing Zinnias in our yard every summer. The flowers boast vibrant colors, texture variation, stem strength, and they can be cut repeatedly only to return with more brilliant blooms than before. Just this morning, I had to cut back several branching stems that had grown so dense the entire plant toppled to the ground. Cutting away perfectly useful and glorious flowers simply due to overcrowding reminded me of what it feels like to be faced with important decisions and an abundance of options.  Can you relate to the frustration of having too many choices but struggling to know which direction to take? Perhaps you juggle the roles of mother, manager, and most-involved parent in the PTO. Yet, you feel the weight of one more responsibility may make you collapse under the pressure. You wonder if it's time to let something go or ask for help. Or you could wrestle with something much more complex, like whether you have outgrown an important relationship with someone. This person’s behaviors harm your growth, and you consider whether the time has arrived to snip your ties to them. Leaving the relationship scares you as you think of the pain this may cause each of you.  Whether your crossroad decision pertains to something simple, like the day's agenda, or something weightier, like how best to educate your children, we need help sorting through all the options to find the best path for our lives. I love the reminder from our key verse about how God responds to us as we stand at our crossroads, wondering what to do. God, the perfect gardener, carefully tends and attunes to the details of our lives. He watches over His tender fledgling plants, adding nutrients and water to produce in us, strong roots and firm branches. God holds His pruning shears in hand where necessary, guiding and advising us on what needs to go so that we can flourish and bloom. He places supportive structures around us and puts us near other plants that complement our strengths and gird up our weaknesses. He guides us along the best pathways that promote the purposes He decided for us long before we ever emerged from the soil’s surface.  I know how attentive and careful I am with the flowers in my garden. I find myself weeding despite the heat and my fatigue, buying and installing netting to protect my precious plant babies from the deer and other garden predators, and watering multiple times if it hasn't rained often enough. I weigh every decision through the question: Does this serve the ultimate good of my garden? Yet, I am only a human with a fondness for flowers. How much more does our Heavenly Father care about helping us make decisions for the ultimate good of our lives? Thank God He guides, advises, and watches over us because He loves watching His garden flourish, too!  Let's Pray: Dear Lord, Thank you for the reminders from creation and your Word about how you care for us. As much as I love my garden, this pales compared to how you feel towards us. Thank you for caring about the big and small decisions that weigh us down and threaten to destroy our future. Thank you for cutting away the parts of us that do not serve your purposes for our lives, despite how painful it may feel in the moment. Please continue to pour out your wisdom on the best ways to spend our time and which pathways prove best for our particular situations. Thank you for guiding us to environments where we gain additional strength from structures like a local church or the wise counsel of a therapist, support group, or dear companion. When we feel panicky about what to do, Lord, remind us of how you watch over us and advise without end. Thank you that we can come to you and get the much-needed direction we seek for the many crossroads of our lives.We pray all these things in your name, Jesus, amen. Photo credit: ©Getty Images/Bulat Silvia Ashley Moore is a writer and host of be the twopodcast. She is known for her relatability and for passionately writing and speaking about mental, emotional, and relational health from a biblical worldview. She has written for Kingdom Edge Magazine, Guideposts, Crosswalk, The Secret Place, enLIVEn, The Bubbling Brook and more. If Ashley isn’t writing, you can find her with her husband, three children, and two floppy-eared Goldens on their south Georgia farmland. The best way to connect with Ashley is to grab a free devotional or Bible study and join her newsletter at free.ashleynicolemoore.com. Related Resource: Remember God’s Enduring Love for You in this Guided Meditation on Psalm 100! This guided Christian meditation from Psalm 100 will help you experience and praise God for his unending love for you. Become aware of God's presence with you, and praise God for his loyal and enduring love from the beginning of time and into the future. Listen to every episode of the So Much More Podcast on LifeAudio.com, or subscribe on Apple or Spotify so you never miss an episode! Now that you’ve prayed, are you in need of someone to pray for YOU? Click the button below! The post A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s Crossroads – Your Daily Prayer – September 24 appeared first on GodUpdates.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning … –  Encouragement for Today – September 24, 2024
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Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning … –  Encouragement for Today – September 24, 2024

September 24, 2024 Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning ...LYSA TERKEURST Lee en español "So they impaled Haman on the pole he had set up for Mordecai." Esther 7:10a (NIV) In Esther 7, we read an account of the downfall of Haman, a man who was planning to kill the Jewish people. This included the godly Queen Esther and her beloved relative and guardian, Mordecai. But Haman's pride backfired, and his evil intentions led to his humiliation. Ultimately Haman, the one who had been scheming to kill others, became the one begging for his own life. The very device he built to kill Mordecai became the place of Haman's death: "So they impaled Haman on the pole he had set up for Mordecai" (Esther 7:10a). He ate the fruit of his wicked schemes. No human could have possibly arranged for all this to happen ... but God could. Even though God's name is not specifically mentioned in the book of Esther, sometimes God does incredible moves without calling any attention to Himself at all. Esther certainly did her part to help her people (Esther 7:1-6), as did many others. But they didn't do wrong things to try and bring about right things. Doing things God's way and in God's timing is the right way and the right timing. And the book of Esther isn't the only time in Scripture where an evil plan looked like it was going to succeed. Jesus' enemies all believed they had created a foolproof plan to get rid of the Messiah and overthrow His reign. The ultimate enemy was Satan. But the irony is that the very plan of Satan led to the redemptive story of Jesus' resurrection. Evil forces set Jesus on the journey to the cross, but with every step Jesus took, evil was closer to defeat. In both Jesus' story and Esther's story: There was an evil plan. There was an enemy. Innocent people were going to be destroyed if someone didn't step in to save them. A hero came from humble beginnings and looked nothing like what the people expected. The heroes remained humble and honored God in their approach to handling the dire situation. The heroes were uniquely positioned by God to fulfill the plan of God. The heroes set aside what was best for them for a greater purpose. In the case of Haman, the guilty died in place of the innocent. In the case of Jesus, the innocent died in place of the guilty. Oh, friend, I pray we cling to this truth today: Darkness, sin and hopelessness have been overcome. Jesus did it for me and for you. Jesus loves you and sees you. The battle you're facing, no matter how dark it feels, isn't hopeless. We may not be able to see victory right now, but because of Jesus, evil is in the process of being ultimately defeated. The world as we know it, plagued with sin and pain, is not our home. The new heaven and new earth are closer than we think (Revelation 21:3-8). For now, our assignment is to follow and trust God. That's not easy, especially when so much of what we are facing feels incredibly unfair. But we don't serve a do-nothing God. Even in the silence, the unknown, and the places where it looks like evil is winning, He is working. We will experience evil in this world, but even still, God reigns. There is a Savior of the world who will right all the wrongs. Even if it takes a long time - even if we don't see it in our lifetime - victorious Jesus will have victory over the wrongs done to us and the evil committed against us. This doesn't mean we give up. It means we're giving God what was never ours to carry. In the meantime, we make room for what we don't understand ... for the mystery of God. Romans 11:33-36 reminds us of this: "Oh, the depth of the riches and the wisdom and the knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments and untraceable his ways! For who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor? And who has ever given to God, that he should be repaid? For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be the glory forever. Amen" (CSB). Heavenly Father, purify my heart today. I trust You to handle all outcomes I feel unsure of or overwhelmed by. I lay down situations that are worrying me. Help me to be obedient to You. I want to walk in step with You, Your ways and Your timing. In Jesus' Name, Amen. OUR FAVORITE THINGS Have you ever thought, How can I trust God when I don't understand what He's allowing to happen right now? Lysa TerKeurst has been there. In her new book, I Want to Trust You, but I Don't, Lysa will help you release the heavy mental and emotional weight of what you don't understand - by learning how God's justice will always prevail. Preorder the Proverbs 31 Ministries Exclusive Edition, and start reading today! ENGAGE Find real-life encouragement when you connect with Lysa TerKeurst here on Instagram. FOR DEEPER STUDY Isaiah 43:2, "When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze" (NIV). How does it help you to know God is with you as you walk through difficult circumstances? How is your trust growing in Him even in this hard season? We'd love to hear from you! Share your thoughts in the comments. © 2024 by Lysa TerKeurst. All rights reserved. Proverbs 31 MinistriesP.O. Box 3189 Matthews, NC 28106 www.Proverbs31.org The post Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning … –  Encouragement for Today – September 24, 2024 appeared first on GodUpdates.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s Crossroads – Your Daily Prayer – September 24
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A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s Crossroads – Your Daily Prayer – September 24

A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s CrossroadsBy Ashley Moore  Bible ReadingThe LORD says, "I will guide you along the best pathway for your life. I will advise you and watch over you. – Psalm 32:8, NLT Listen or Read Below: I love growing Zinnias in our yard every summer. The flowers boast vibrant colors, texture variation, stem strength, and they can be cut repeatedly only to return with more brilliant blooms than before. Just this morning, I had to cut back several branching stems that had grown so dense the entire plant toppled to the ground. Cutting away perfectly useful and glorious flowers simply due to overcrowding reminded me of what it feels like to be faced with important decisions and an abundance of options.  Can you relate to the frustration of having too many choices but struggling to know which direction to take? Perhaps you juggle the roles of mother, manager, and most-involved parent in the PTO. Yet, you feel the weight of one more responsibility may make you collapse under the pressure. You wonder if it's time to let something go or ask for help. Or you could wrestle with something much more complex, like whether you have outgrown an important relationship with someone. This person’s behaviors harm your growth, and you consider whether the time has arrived to snip your ties to them. Leaving the relationship scares you as you think of the pain this may cause each of you.  Whether your crossroad decision pertains to something simple, like the day's agenda, or something weightier, like how best to educate your children, we need help sorting through all the options to find the best path for our lives. I love the reminder from our key verse about how God responds to us as we stand at our crossroads, wondering what to do. God, the perfect gardener, carefully tends and attunes to the details of our lives. He watches over His tender fledgling plants, adding nutrients and water to produce in us, strong roots and firm branches. God holds His pruning shears in hand where necessary, guiding and advising us on what needs to go so that we can flourish and bloom. He places supportive structures around us and puts us near other plants that complement our strengths and gird up our weaknesses. He guides us along the best pathways that promote the purposes He decided for us long before we ever emerged from the soil’s surface.  I know how attentive and careful I am with the flowers in my garden. I find myself weeding despite the heat and my fatigue, buying and installing netting to protect my precious plant babies from the deer and other garden predators, and watering multiple times if it hasn't rained often enough. I weigh every decision through the question: Does this serve the ultimate good of my garden? Yet, I am only a human with a fondness for flowers. How much more does our Heavenly Father care about helping us make decisions for the ultimate good of our lives? Thank God He guides, advises, and watches over us because He loves watching His garden flourish, too!  Let's Pray: Dear Lord, Thank you for the reminders from creation and your Word about how you care for us. As much as I love my garden, this pales compared to how you feel towards us. Thank you for caring about the big and small decisions that weigh us down and threaten to destroy our future. Thank you for cutting away the parts of us that do not serve your purposes for our lives, despite how painful it may feel in the moment. Please continue to pour out your wisdom on the best ways to spend our time and which pathways prove best for our particular situations. Thank you for guiding us to environments where we gain additional strength from structures like a local church or the wise counsel of a therapist, support group, or dear companion. When we feel panicky about what to do, Lord, remind us of how you watch over us and advise without end. Thank you that we can come to you and get the much-needed direction we seek for the many crossroads of our lives.We pray all these things in your name, Jesus, amen. Photo credit: ©Getty Images/Bulat Silvia Ashley Moore is a writer and host of be the twopodcast. She is known for her relatability and for passionately writing and speaking about mental, emotional, and relational health from a biblical worldview. She has written for Kingdom Edge Magazine, Guideposts, Crosswalk, The Secret Place, enLIVEn, The Bubbling Brook and more. If Ashley isn’t writing, you can find her with her husband, three children, and two floppy-eared Goldens on their south Georgia farmland. The best way to connect with Ashley is to grab a free devotional or Bible study and join her newsletter at free.ashleynicolemoore.com. Related Resource: Remember God’s Enduring Love for You in this Guided Meditation on Psalm 100! This guided Christian meditation from Psalm 100 will help you experience and praise God for his unending love for you. Become aware of God's presence with you, and praise God for his loyal and enduring love from the beginning of time and into the future. Listen to every episode of the So Much More Podcast on LifeAudio.com, or subscribe on Apple or Spotify so you never miss an episode! Now that you’ve prayed, are you in need of someone to pray for YOU? Click the button below! The post A Prayer When Seeking Direction at Life’s Crossroads – Your Daily Prayer – September 24 appeared first on GodUpdates.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning … –  Encouragement for Today – September 24, 2024
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Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning … –  Encouragement for Today – September 24, 2024

September 24, 2024 Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning ...LYSA TERKEURST Lee en español "So they impaled Haman on the pole he had set up for Mordecai." Esther 7:10a (NIV) In Esther 7, we read an account of the downfall of Haman, a man who was planning to kill the Jewish people. This included the godly Queen Esther and her beloved relative and guardian, Mordecai. But Haman's pride backfired, and his evil intentions led to his humiliation. Ultimately Haman, the one who had been scheming to kill others, became the one begging for his own life. The very device he built to kill Mordecai became the place of Haman's death: "So they impaled Haman on the pole he had set up for Mordecai" (Esther 7:10a). He ate the fruit of his wicked schemes. No human could have possibly arranged for all this to happen ... but God could. Even though God's name is not specifically mentioned in the book of Esther, sometimes God does incredible moves without calling any attention to Himself at all. Esther certainly did her part to help her people (Esther 7:1-6), as did many others. But they didn't do wrong things to try and bring about right things. Doing things God's way and in God's timing is the right way and the right timing. And the book of Esther isn't the only time in Scripture where an evil plan looked like it was going to succeed. Jesus' enemies all believed they had created a foolproof plan to get rid of the Messiah and overthrow His reign. The ultimate enemy was Satan. But the irony is that the very plan of Satan led to the redemptive story of Jesus' resurrection. Evil forces set Jesus on the journey to the cross, but with every step Jesus took, evil was closer to defeat. In both Jesus' story and Esther's story: There was an evil plan. There was an enemy. Innocent people were going to be destroyed if someone didn't step in to save them. A hero came from humble beginnings and looked nothing like what the people expected. The heroes remained humble and honored God in their approach to handling the dire situation. The heroes were uniquely positioned by God to fulfill the plan of God. The heroes set aside what was best for them for a greater purpose. In the case of Haman, the guilty died in place of the innocent. In the case of Jesus, the innocent died in place of the guilty. Oh, friend, I pray we cling to this truth today: Darkness, sin and hopelessness have been overcome. Jesus did it for me and for you. Jesus loves you and sees you. The battle you're facing, no matter how dark it feels, isn't hopeless. We may not be able to see victory right now, but because of Jesus, evil is in the process of being ultimately defeated. The world as we know it, plagued with sin and pain, is not our home. The new heaven and new earth are closer than we think (Revelation 21:3-8). For now, our assignment is to follow and trust God. That's not easy, especially when so much of what we are facing feels incredibly unfair. But we don't serve a do-nothing God. Even in the silence, the unknown, and the places where it looks like evil is winning, He is working. We will experience evil in this world, but even still, God reigns. There is a Savior of the world who will right all the wrongs. Even if it takes a long time - even if we don't see it in our lifetime - victorious Jesus will have victory over the wrongs done to us and the evil committed against us. This doesn't mean we give up. It means we're giving God what was never ours to carry. In the meantime, we make room for what we don't understand ... for the mystery of God. Romans 11:33-36 reminds us of this: "Oh, the depth of the riches and the wisdom and the knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments and untraceable his ways! For who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor? And who has ever given to God, that he should be repaid? For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be the glory forever. Amen" (CSB). Heavenly Father, purify my heart today. I trust You to handle all outcomes I feel unsure of or overwhelmed by. I lay down situations that are worrying me. Help me to be obedient to You. I want to walk in step with You, Your ways and Your timing. In Jesus' Name, Amen. OUR FAVORITE THINGS Have you ever thought, How can I trust God when I don't understand what He's allowing to happen right now? Lysa TerKeurst has been there. In her new book, I Want to Trust You, but I Don't, Lysa will help you release the heavy mental and emotional weight of what you don't understand - by learning how God's justice will always prevail. Preorder the Proverbs 31 Ministries Exclusive Edition, and start reading today! ENGAGE Find real-life encouragement when you connect with Lysa TerKeurst here on Instagram. FOR DEEPER STUDY Isaiah 43:2, "When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze" (NIV). How does it help you to know God is with you as you walk through difficult circumstances? How is your trust growing in Him even in this hard season? We'd love to hear from you! Share your thoughts in the comments. © 2024 by Lysa TerKeurst. All rights reserved. Proverbs 31 MinistriesP.O. Box 3189 Matthews, NC 28106 www.Proverbs31.org The post Just When It Looks Like Evil Is Winning … –  Encouragement for Today – September 24, 2024 appeared first on GodUpdates.
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BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
51 w

Elon Musk Agrees: Abbott Accuses Biden Administration of ‘Treason’ In Handling Migrant Crisis
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Elon Musk Agrees: Abbott Accuses Biden Administration of ‘Treason’ In Handling Migrant Crisis

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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

3 Ways to Disciple Your Kids in an Election Year
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3 Ways to Disciple Your Kids in an Election Year

Last weekend, my 11-year-old daughter asked my wife and me, “Why are you talking more about politics this year than you have before?” There are multiple answers to her question. First, my daughter is more aware of our conversations than she was four years ago. But this is also a historic election season, so my wife and I are talking more about what’s happening. I was glad my daughter asked. Her curiosity allowed us to share how we approach politics as Christians. And our conversation helped me see how important it is to guide my children to take part in politics for God’s glory. There are several issues of biblical clarity every Christian parent ought to embrace and pass along to their children this election season. We must model a distinctly Christian and countercultural approach to political engagement in at least three ways. 1. Show respect to those in authority. In today’s political culture, people are more apt to use negative and vulgar expressions against political leaders than they did when I was growing up. I can’t imagine looking out the window of my parents’ Ford Aerostar minivan in 1996 and seeing a flag that proudly displayed an obscenity against the sitting U.S. president. Today you may see one in your neighbor’s yard. It’s common for individuals across the political spectrum to mock and disparage whomever they oppose. When I was a child, such behavior would have been deemed “unpatriotic.” But while what is and isn’t “patriotic” may change with culture, what God wants for his people is unchanging. In a culture that expresses vitriol toward government officials, we must teach our children to respect the rulers who have authority over our country, states, and cities. I can’t chant “Not my president!” and lead my children to “be subject to the governing authorities” (Rom. 13:1). While what is and isn’t ‘patriotic’ may change with culture, what God wants for his people is unchanging. If my children hear me gleefully mocking our president, will they have reason to believe my prayers are genuine when we obey God and pray for that same individual (1 Tim. 2:1–4)? 2. Be clear that God’s Word shapes our political convictions. When we teach our children to respect authority, we shouldn’t give them the false impression that whatever elected leaders do is worthy of praise and approval. Instead, we must be clear that rulers serve under God’s authority. We’re raising children in a culture dominated by political tribalism. Social media posts, cable news, and the candidates seeking office seek to peddle the idea that the “good guys” owe them their allegiance. Politicians make great efforts to pull Christians into their tribe. Both Democrats and Republicans claim their platform is the appropriate one for voters who wish to see “Christian principles” made the policy of the nation. I don’t expect politicians to be honest about how they connect Scripture to their policies. But my children should expect more from their father. If I’m to disciple my children to see Scripture as the standard for their political involvement, I must help them see how it shapes my political convictions. My children need to hear me connect the small role I play in the public square to the standards God gives us in Romans 13:1–7. I need to advocate for a government that’s a terror to bad conduct and carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer. As we have opportunities, my wife and I need to help them see that when the government functions as God designed, we can celebrate his good provision of human authority. It’s also not enough to tell my kids I’m pro-life. I need to read to them from Genesis 1 and point out that God is pleased with the fruitful multiplication of image-bearers. They need their mother and me to guide them through passages like Psalm 139:13–16 and Jeremiah 1:4–5 so they see the biblical perspective on the value of life inside and outside the womb. I need to help my children understand that God, not politicians’ opinions, is the source of justice. They need to have compassion on the poor and afflicted because God “has pity on the weak and the needy, and saves the lives of the needy” (Ps. 72:13). They should desire for the government to guard the innocent and punish their oppressors because such government function is God’s good gift (Rom. 13:3–4). When earthly justice fails, I must teach them not to throw up their hands in hopelessness but to raise their voices in prayer, knowing the Judge of all the earth will bring about justice in his good time. 3. Root your identity in Christ’s kingdom. If I could pick one principle about political involvement to model for my children, it’d be this: Don’t put hope in earthly politics. I’ve never voted for someone—especially for national office—without profound reservations about some of his or her opinions, policies, and character traits. I want my kids to know my concerns. I want them to see, and see clearly, that while I vote for individuals to serve our country, my hope isn’t in those individuals. Nor is my hope in the United States, though I’m thankful for many good things about this country. Participating in the democratic process is a way for me to be a good citizen. As a Christian, I rejoice in the ability to be an ambassador for my King and advocate for what he has revealed as good. But I’m only a sojourner in a democratic system. My destiny isn’t to elect a leader; it’s to bow to a monarch. By grace, I’m a subject of King Jesus. My destiny isn’t to elect a leader; it’s to bow to a monarch. By grace, I’m a subject of King Jesus. To model this reality to my children, they need to see our family conduct ourselves in a way that anchors hope in Christ, not in American politics. When we gather for corporate worship, they need to hear proclaimed the truths of Scripture, not the platitudes of a political party. When I speak with people of differing political views, they need to see and hear my concern for the salvation of others, not political animosity. As we lead our children in this way, I pray our family will cling to the political credo found in these words the Holy Spirit spoke through Paul: “Our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ” (Phil. 3:20).
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Rethink the Relationship Between Empires and Religions
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Rethink the Relationship Between Empires and Religions

The world would be better off if organized religion didn’t exist. Christianity is a prime example of a religion invented to justify the imperial impulse. The expansion of the Christianized Roman Empire, the medieval crusades, and the modern missions movement are perfect examples of using religion to justify domination and oppression. Being spiritual is alright; being religious isn’t. That’s why it’s so wonderful to imagine a post-religious world. I’ve heard each of these arguments before in various forums. As it turns out, historical analysis shows nearly every statement on that list is wrong. In Kingdoms of This World: How Empires Have Made and Remade Religions, Philip Jenkins, distinguished professor of history at Baylor University, affirms historical connections between religions and empires. However, Jenkins argues that the formative pressure between them pushes in both directions. His argument brings nuance to perpetual debates about the relationship between politics and religion that will benefit both general readers and specialists. Jenkins explains the nature of empires, demonstrates how the empires shape religions, and disrupts contemporary cultural narratives about the historical hegemony of empires and religions. Redefine Empire The connection between empires and Christianity baffles some scholars, especially when the New Testament’s anti-imperial elements are considered. John’s Revelation, for example, contains thinly veiled critiques of the Roman empire. Some theologians, especially those from the Anabaptist tradition, see Constantine’s conversion or the formal adoption of Christianity by the Roman Empire as the point when Christianity fundamentally changed. There’s no question that empires influence religions. “Empires are an inescapable component in the making, remaking, and rethinking of the world’s faiths,” Jenkins writes. “To varying degrees, all those religions exist in what we might call a postimperial environment” (3). Yet this is true not just of Christianity but of all world religions. Even religions that have never dominated an empire have been formed by imperial realities because of the very nature of empires. According to Jenkins, the key elements of an empire include “one society extending its power over others, diversity of populations and territories, and geographical scope” (22). This definition certainly covers traditional military empires, but it also includes economic empires where trade and finance are primary tools of influence. More broadly, it encompasses contemporary empires, where modern, secular Westerners demand traditional cultures adopt LGBT-affirming policies or face sanctions. Historically, Jenkins argues, “imperial ideologies did matter” (36). Yet in most cases, empires were incapable of enforcing anything like total religious control. Even if rulers intended to proselytize through military might and political power, the result was often much different from what they expected. The confusing mishmash of religious influences Rudyard Kipling represents in his novel Kim is more typical of an empire than not. Imperial religions changed as they were contextualized to new cultures. In many cases, the peace and prosperity of an empire created space for undesired religions to flourish. Empires Shape Religions Christianity is a classic example of a religion that flourished despite imperial attempts to crush it. The Pax Romana enabled Paul’s journeys to take place along a network of roads built by the oppressor. Similarly, Jenkins writes that in the hostile Persian empire, “Christian communities flourished in the empire’s booming cities, which they made the seats of church organizations” (71). Though the Persian empire fell, Christianity has continued to grow. At the same time, Jenkins argues, imperial peace allowed the rise of Manichaeanism, which plagued Christianity for centuries. Christianity is a classic example of a religion that flourished despite imperial attempts to crush it. More recently, “British rule [in the 19th century] certainly expanded the reach of Christianity, but it also promoted the worldwide dissemination of other faiths, including Judaism and Hinduism” (171). The prominence of the Bhagavad Gita as sacred Hindu scripture is due, in part, to its usefulness in countering the “pocket New Testaments distributed by Christian proselytizers” (191). Ironically, the British and Dutch dominance over pirates in the Mediterranean helped theological reforms in Islam take place in a broad geographic region. This made something like a transnational Islamic unity possible. The peace the Europeans imposed, Jenkins writes, “made it far easier for Muslims from remote territories to make the once near-impossible pilgrimage to Mecca and even to travel more widely through the Muslim Middle East” (175). According to Jenkins, ever alert for potential sociological and geopolitical drivers of theological shifts, the dominant religions of empires were changed through contextualization. Christianity, for example, “naturally borrowed its depictions of Christ and the saints” from Greek and Roman artistic ideals (183). More significantly, there are clear cases where the cult of Roman Catholic saints was adopted syncretistically as a way to preserve elements of native religions. Disrupt Cultural Narratives In our cultural moment, the word “empire” has a nearly universal negative connotation. For most Americans, the word conjures images of plastic-clad stormtroopers and Darth Vader. Yet Jenkins disrupts this caricature by reminding readers of the many benefits empires have brought throughout history, displayed with satirical potency by Monty Python in Life of Brian. “Empires spark social revolutions,” Jenkins observes (32). Jenkins also reminds critics of the Great Commission as a form of imperialism that “Christian missions build and extend empires; but they also help end them” (141). Jenkins is far from whitewashing the historical problems of religious violence and political oppression. Yet he offers an extensively researched account that disrupts the revisionist histories that either lionize or demonize religion and empires. This book, like Tom Holland’s Dominion, shows that reducing historical analysis to debates about power dynamics produces an inadequate explanation of our contemporary social realities. At the same time, though indirectly, Jenkins’s explanation of the influence of empires on the religions they sponsor should give proponents of a renewed Christendom pause. It’s unlikely to end the way they hope. Jenkins disrupts the revisionist histories that either lionize or demonize religion and empires. Kingdoms of This World is a reminder that history is complex. Monocausal explanations or unidirectional theories of influence are almost always incorrect. The book contributes substantially to the conversation because it’s the first attempt at a “systematic history of the relationship between religion and empire” (17). Historians, apologists, theologians, pastors, and those simply seeking to understand our world better will benefit from reading this well-written, thoroughly enjoyable volume.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
51 w

Overcoming Our Ahistoric Age
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Overcoming Our Ahistoric Age

It pains my history-loving heart to admit, but most people today simply ignore the past. Some will twist history for partisan gains. Few can sit underneath the wisdom of the past and learn to discern God’s work in this fallen world that’s still marked by his grace.  I’ve found Sarah Irving-Stonebraker to be a reliable, inspiring guide for receiving that wisdom. Her new book, Priests of History: Stewarding the Past in an Ahistoric Age (Zondervan Reflective), offers stories, examples, and arguments that will change you, whether you’re already convinced of Christianity or still wrestling with its claims. She converted from atheism to Christianity while an assistant professor at Florida State University. You know that’s a story we discussed! Historian conversions are kind of our thing on Gospelbound. Sarah warns that our societies have become confused about how to make sense of good and evil in the past, and lack hope for the future. Especially in the last decade, history has been captured by the culture wars, making it even harder for us to wrestle with historical and moral complexities. She joined me on Gospelbound to discuss the five major characteristics of this ahistoric age, the wrong side of history, and more.
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
51 w

Red Sox’s Jarren Duran Accomplishes Season With 47 Doubles And 14 Triples, Hasn’t Been Done Since 1946
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dailycaller.com

Red Sox’s Jarren Duran Accomplishes Season With 47 Doubles And 14 Triples, Hasn’t Been Done Since 1946

It's official: Jarren Duran is a bonified superstar
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Pet Life
Pet Life
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RECALL ALERT: ANSWERS Pet Food Voluntarily Recalls Certain Dog Foods Due To Potential Salmonella and Listeria
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RECALL ALERT: ANSWERS Pet Food Voluntarily Recalls Certain Dog Foods Due To Potential Salmonella and Listeria

ANSWERS Pet Food voluntarily withdraws certain lots of ANSWERS Detailed Beef Formula for Dogs, ANSWERS Straight Beef Formula for Dogs, and ANSWERS Straight Chicken Formula for Dogs on Sunday, September 22 due to possible contamination of Salmonella and Listeria monocytogenes. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) revealed that the samples they collected were reported to have tested positive for Salmonella and Listeria monocytogenes. According to the FDA, the products being withdrawn are sold in 4lb half gallon cartons with the following brand names, size, expiration date, and lot numbers: Furthermore, the FDA also provided the following photos of the affected products on their announcement: Photos from: FDA Photos from: FDA Photos from: FDA Photos from: FDA The affected products were reportedly distributed throughout the country in retail stores and direct online sales. “ANSWERS will continue investigating this FDA report pursuing its number one priority to bring healthy, safe, truly raw pet food products to market,” the FDA announcement read. Thankfully, no illnesses have been reportedly associated with these lots. However, the FDA is advising pet parents to stop feeding their pets the affected products and to throw out and destroy the food in a way that children and other animals cannot access it. “The FDA recommends that people do not touch potentially contaminated food with bare hands and therefore suggests wearing gloves or using paper towels when placing any contaminated product in a sealed bag to throw out or when handling such food,” the FDA also wrote. Salmonella and Listeria can affect both people and animals. Salmonella can cause illness and death in both humans and animals, especially those who are very young, very old, or have weak immune system. Listeria causes the same for people. And people can get infected if they handle contaminated products with bare hands, contact with pets that have eaten then contaminated products, or contact with surfaces where the product has touched or been exposed to. In pets, Salmonella can cause vomiting, diarrhea, fever, loss of appetite and/or decreased activity level.  The FDA is also advising consumers to clean and disinfect all pet supplies and surfaces that the food or pet had contact with. Furthermore, the FDA reveals that if consumers want a refund, they can submit a receipt and pictures of the product to info@answerspetfood.com along with the retailer’s information. For any other questions or concerns, you may email ANSWERS’ Pet Food at info@answerspetfood.com.
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