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Love and the Comforter

In 2 Corinthians 6:6 the apostle mentions the motives of his zeal for the cause of Christ: "By goodness, by the Holy Ghost, by love unfeigned." Goodness indicates general benevolence and readiness to sacrifice; of these we find among worldly people many examples that make us ashamed. Then come the stimulating and animating influences of the Holy Spirit; lastly, Love unfeigned which is the true, real, and divine Love.In his hymn of eternal Love the apostle gives us an exquisite…
Abraham Kuyper
August 1, 2004
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Transition and Tradition

With this issue Roy Anker rotates off Perspectives' team of co-editors, and the bearer of the above by-line rotates on. Nothing personal: it's Board policy, and a good one. Leanne Van Dyk and David Timmer, the rest of the current troika, will follow in due time, to be replaced by players to be named later. Perspectives is a journalistic trade built entirely on draft choices, with seven-figure contracts filled in only to the right of the decimal point and with…
August 1, 2004
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Risking Beauty at the AAR

Those who are familiar with "the AAR" (shorthand for the 9,000-person annual joint meeting of the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature) know that it offers a fascinating pastiche of tones and colors. Eastern Orthodox sisters in habit walk side by side with French postmodern theorists of religion arrayed all in black; wearers of British tweed stand across from colorful Southern Baptist teachers and preachers. One's tried and true sense of theological fashion gets stretched by…
David L. Stubbs
August 1, 2004
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The Alchemy of Grace

"At the right time, Christ died for the ungodly." "While we were enemies, we were reconciled to God." This is the gospel--the good news--of justification in Christ. We have spent many hours thinking hard together about the subtleties of what justification in Christ entails. It is time to ask: Have we begun to understand this gospel? Do we believe it?"While we were enemies, we were reconciled to God." If we are not amazed by these words then we are fooling…
Caroline J. Simon
August 1, 2004
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A Measure of Devotion

In November of 1950, Uncle Sam pointed his long bony finger at my father and ordered this able-bodied U.S. citizen to do his military duty. And so Robert Jack Hoolsema packed his bags and set off to do his part in the confusing mess that was the Korean War. He marched into a maze of uncertainties. Even the question of what would constitute victory was unclear: would restoring the 38th parallel as the North-South border prove satisfactory for both sides?…
Daniel J. Hoolsema
August 1, 2004
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Christian Zionism and Ecumenical Relations

America owes part of its national identity to powerful myths that arose out of its early history. Some of these myths are attached to founding "fathers," others to the experience of nation building.Perhaps the most powerful myth is the one that developed out of the frontier experience of an emerging nation. Manifest destiny is how historians label it, a belief that the settlement and taming of this vast, largely uninhabited land by European colonialists was divinely ordained. Here's how the…
John Hubers
August 1, 2004
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I Told You So

On December 21, 1992, I wrote a letter to Bobby Knight, then coach of the Indiana University basketball team.  I sent a similar letter on the same day to Dick Vitale, a basketball commentator for ESPN.  My letters were responses to the duo's public stance on the decision by Michigan player Chris Webber to leave college after his sophomore year to play for the National Basketball Association.Knight and Vitale had publicly approved of Webber's decision, saying that since college is…
Thomas B. Phulery
June 1, 2004
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Prostrate Cancer

At what point do you correct a parishioner about his insistence that he has prostrate cancer?  How do you break the good news to him that he does not have cancer only when he is lying down, but he has cancer in a place, not in a position?  Am I wrong to think that these matters are important?   In the Reformed tradition, we pride ourselves on getting things right.  Understandably, we aim for precision in naming things.  We are good…
Thom Fiet
June 1, 2004
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These Fragile, Gaudy Flowers

One of the best things about living in a Northern climate is rounding the curve that takes us from winter to spring, from cold to warm, from brown to green, from no flowers to a land lush with flowers. As we move from May to June, the whole land seems to be in bloom. Few flowers are more typical of the Midwest and of rural life in general than the peony. (Most of the farm gardens I have seen--my mother-in-law's…
Dave Schelhaas
June 1, 2004
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Educating for Shalom

Ten years ago, Richard Hughes of Pepperdine University and Theron Schlabach of Goshen College organized a small working conference with an awkward title: "Peace Thinking Among Churches other than the Historic Peace Churches."  Despite the awkwardness one can see the good point that Hughes and Schlabach were making: you don't necessarily have to be a Mennonite or a Quaker to take part in peace discourse. The conference issued in a good book in which I was glad to be a…
Ronald A. Wells
June 1, 2004