Living In Faith
Living In Faith

Living In Faith

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Aunt’s Life-Saving Gift Gives 2-Year-Old a Second Chance After Cancer Battle
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Aunt’s Life-Saving Gift Gives 2-Year-Old a Second Chance After Cancer Battle

After a difficult battle with cancer, a 2-year-old received a precious second chance through an aunt’s life-saving gift. Her selfless act brought hope, healing, and a new beginning for the young child and family.

Teens Keep Their Childhood Promise They Made At Age 7 and Are Heading to Prom Together
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Teens Keep Their Childhood Promise They Made At Age 7 and Are Heading to Prom Together

Years after making a sweet promise at just 7 years old, two teens are finally making it come true. Their childhood pact to attend prom together has turned into a heartwarming full-circle moment.

What Does the Bible Say about Finances?
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What Does the Bible Say about Finances?

What Does the Bible Say about Finances?

Raise Kids to Be Reality Respecters
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Raise Kids to Be Reality Respecters

Years ago, my coworker and I were sitting at our desks with the office door open. One of our colleagues walked by with his young daughter, and we overheard him say to her, “You can be anything you want to be.” Instinctively, my office mate and I turned toward each other with our eyebrows raised. Although the fatherly intention behind the inspirational pep talk was good, it just wasn’t true. We can’t be anything we want to be. For decades, mainstream culture has told kids that if you’re true to yourself (that is, if you follow your feelings where they lead), your dreams will come true. To this message—also known as expressive individualism—the Scripture says, “There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way to death” (Prov. 14:12). Acknowledging the folly of expressive individualism doesn’t make you a cynic or a pessimist. It makes you what James Wood has called a reality respecter. A reality respecter is a person who refuses to tell the emperor that his new clothes are magnificent when he isn’t wearing any. They refuse to swallow the lie that a man can give birth or that all religions seek peace. If we believe God made the world and our children, we’ll teach them that the only way to be in touch with reality is to look at the world the way God looks at it. As a believing parent, I have a duty to teach my children to question whether their feelings fit the way things are. Reality Respecters Live in a Redemptive Story Parenting as a reality respecter doesn’t mean you always give your kids the hard truth. (When my 5-year-old finished basketball camp feeling great about his skills, I didn’t point out that he still couldn’t dribble a ball!) It means you help your kids understand their lives in the context of the biblical story of creation, fall, redemption, and restoration. When God created this world, he pronounced it good. But when the man and woman made in his image ate the fruit he’d forbidden, our good world became a place infested with sickness, death, and sin. This means that if you jump into a pool before you learn to swim, you could drown. It means some people are born with disabilities they’ll never overcome in this life. It means children need loving and corrective discipline (Proverbs 13:24). But that isn’t the end of the story. Through Jesus’s sacrifice, believers have been redeemed and are now God’s children. We look forward to the day he’ll return and make right all that’s wrong with our world. When that happens, we won’t have to fear drowning or contend with disabilities or dispense discipline any longer. As reality respecters living within the story of redemption, we don’t have to ignore the evil around us in order to believe in a happy ending. And we recognize that when someone recommends living a lie as the quickest way to a happy ending, we should run in the opposite direction. Raising your children to see themselves within God’s redemptive story is no guarantee they will. But it does mean you’ll have a framework already constructed for hard conversations. For example, when a teenager going through puberty feels uncomfortable in his or her body, you can talk about the way the fall has affected our bodies. You can also encourage your teen that those who believe can look forward to one day having resurrected bodies that won’t be at the mercy of adolescent hormones. Reality Respecters Encourage Resilience Parenting as a reality respecter doesn’t mean we set low expectations for our kids. Instead, we should encourage kids to grow and do hard things, even if they might not succeed right away. Christian counselor Sissy Goff tells the story of sitting with a 15-year-old girl who’d been stuck for weeks on the same issue. Eventually, Goff gently asked her, “What would it look like for you to grow in this area?” The girl quickly replied, “I don’t wanna grow. I just wanna be understood.” Goff sees this attitude as endemic to the culture most kids are growing up in. She says, “Boys and girls of all ages, they don’t wanna grow. They want relief. They want comfort. They want someone to fix it.” That attitude makes sense if you believe that being true to yourself is the way to make your dreams come true. When you fail, you look for someone else to blame. The alternative attitude—known as resilience—seeks to adapt and grow from difficulty or failure. It accepts responsibility, faces facts, and employs perseverance. As a mother, I long to keep my children from experiencing pain, but the reality respecter knows that pain is a part of life. Instead of protecting children from pain at all costs, we should teach them how to learn and grow from it. The Gospel Makes Sense of Reality Journalist Louise Perry became a Christian after she realized Christian teaching about the sexes lined up with the sociological realities she observed. Activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali professed faith in Christ after learning through experience that neither Islam nor atheism was equipped to “manage the challenges of existence.” High-profile atheist A. N. Wilson turned to Christianity because “asserting that God made humanity in His image, and continually restores humanity in His image, is simply true. As a working blueprint for life, as a template against which to measure experience, it fits.” Wood dubbed conversions like these the product of a “reality-respecter to Christian pipeline.” If we raise our kids to believe that they can be anything they want to be and that their feelings are the measure of truth, they’ll one day discover we’ve lied to them. If instead we teach them the Christian story, including the radical fallenness of this world and our need for redemption, we’ll offer them a story that fits reality.

Carl Trueman’s Answer to the Modern Self
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Carl Trueman’s Answer to the Modern Self

Every generation has a defining theological challenge: a doctrine thrust into public view by events and cultural pressures. For example, 25 years ago, the September 11 terrorist attacks required reflection on the nature and character of the triune God of the Bible in juxtaposition to Allah. Our particular moment—riddled with moral issues like pornography, abortion, same-sex marriage, transgenderism, artificial reproduction, and physician-assisted suicide—demands articulation and defense of the image of God. Carl Trueman, professor of biblical and theological studies at Grove City College, has kept publishers and readers busy with his responses to cultural challenges related to theological anthropology. In 2020, Trueman’s Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self introduced many to expressive individualism, an anthropology developed through Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Charles Darwin. After reducing and reworking Rise and Triumph’s content in Strange New World, Trueman produced a treatment of critical theory and identity politics in To Change All Worlds. Trueman’s latest work, The Desecration of Man: How the Rejection of God Degrades our Humanity, introduces a wider audience to the importance of theism and theological anthropology for social ethics. This is an important volume for understanding our culture. Importance of Anthropology The book’s setup is a question Trueman was asked on the Triggernometry podcast: “Is it possible to build a moral society without a belief in God?” (2). In prior generations, this question by the atheistic hosts would have been a “gotcha” moment, but in Trueman’s telling it was a sincerely asked question, and The Desecration of Man is Trueman’s sincere answer. In short, he says no. Western morality is grounded in a conception of man as made in God’s image. As Trueman explains, Man is who and what he is because God has made him so. Any significance, any meaning, any value he has is rooted in the divine act of creation that assumes the reality of God as divine creator. . . . Anthropology is inseparable from theology. (6) He goes on to argue, [Morally,] human beings are created by God with a given set of dependencies and obligations, limits, and ends. We are rational, dependent, limited, and teleological beings. And the ways in which we formalize these traits are the moral codes that define what it means to be human. (12) Accepting this definition is particularly important in light of evolving technologies. The anthropological question isn’t a 21st-century problem; it has roots in early modernity. In Nietzsche’s parable of the madman, a prophetic character arrives in a modern city square populated by atheists and accuses them of killing God, with the result that man would need to become gods themselves. Western morality is grounded in a conception of man as made in God’s image. Nietzsche’s prophet is mocked for two reasons. First, though severed from theistic roots, the anthropological and moral flowers hadn’t yet begun to wither. Second, the lack of certain technologies meant there was neither the social imaginary nor the capability to throw off certain aspects of Christian anthropology and morality. Technology has since significantly expanded our capability to pursue “godlike aspirations” by changing the way we relate to time, nature, and our own physical bodies (36). Technology and Humanity Few readers will be surprised that Trueman makes the case that abortion, contraception, and pornography desecrated sex and, therefore, humanity. However, even some conservative evangelicals will likely be uncomfortable as he evaluates other technologies like those involved in assisted reproductive technologies and surrogacy. For example, Trueman argues, By detaching conception from sexual union, IVF reinforces the logic of the sexual revolution. . . . If contraception, legalized abortion, and antibiotics allowed us to think of sex as recreation rather than something that carried obligations and thus commitment, so with IVF the imaginative breach between sex and reproduction is further strengthened. Sexual union of a man and a woman is no longer essential. It becomes merely one option for the creation of children. (123) Trueman handles IVF and surrogacy with care, recognizing the natural human desire to be a parent and the suffering of infertility that often drive people toward those technologies. However, he’s also clear that right-wing tech bros who use IVF and offer surrogacy coverage in their employee benefits aren’t morally blameless. On the other hand, some faithful evangelical ethicists argue for a qualified embrace of reproductive technologies while also valuing theological anthropology. Though I agree with Trueman’s final position on IVF, aspects of the ethical analysis were simplified as he made his bigger cultural argument. IVF is one example of several that Trueman offers, but it’s significant because too often conservative theologians chastise feminists who shout their abortions yet don’t stop to consider the antihuman tendencies of those who hew closer to their own ideology. A robustly biblical worldview will critique trends to both the left and the right. Technology and Ideas Popular books on society and technology, like Jonathan Haidt’s The Anxious Generation and Christine Rosen’s The Extinction of Experience, are generally uninterested in the origins of particular technologies. Rather, they focus on technology’s detrimental effects and what institutional leaders and parents can do to respond. Yet it’s always helpful to ask where those technologies came from so we can get ahead of their effects. Trueman traces the history of the ideas that drive humanity’s desecration. He notes that in earlier stages of modernity, “the belief that there was such a thing as human nature” kept society “from devolving into pure subjectivism” (52). Technology changes our perception of human nature, but our perception of human nature also shapes the technologies we develop. We exist along a spiral, not a linear vector, of change. That means there’s hope for a recovery of more humane ideas. In The God Who Is There, Francis Schaeffer expresses concern that religious leaders were late in dealing with the movement of ideas through culture. Ideas usually begin in academic philosophy. Then ideas move into art and music, which in turn shape popular culture. Schaeffer observes that because Christian leaders weren’t paying attention to the upstream issues, ordinary Christians were encountering persuasive ideas before the church had a theological framework for them. A robustly biblical worldview will critique trends to both the left and the right. In large part, Trueman is doing what Schaeffer prescribes by wrestling with the ideas that shape our culture before they’re fully entrenched. Yet Trueman and Schaeffer have different approaches. Trueman’s “is not a book of Christian apologetics.” This volume, published by Sentinel rather than an evangelical publisher, points people toward the need to “embrace the Christian faith, with its dogmas, its cultic practices, and its ethics,” but it doesn’t provide a roadmap to get there (xix–xx). It’s a book that points toward the church from outside. In contrast, Schaeffer wrote primarily to the church, so the particulars of the gospel are much clearer. Hopefully, Trueman’s careful arguments will lead readers to further investigate the truths he points toward. Trueman’s title echoes that of C. S. Lewis’s The Abolition of Man. Both books address the ways subtle cultural trends undermine a biblical view of humanity. Like Lewis’s classic, The Desecration of Man will help church leaders understand the philosophical currents shaping our culture.