One man band
This is an amazing performance – one guy sounding like a whole band – on quite the machine!
“Scottie Scheffler’s take on success in golf: ‘What’s the point?'”
ESPN covers sports, not philosophy, so their article on how the best player in golf doesn’t find fulfillment in winning stuck out from their usual fare. But as a secular media organization, they didn’t dare ask the question the article raised: if winning golf isn’t your reasons for getting up in the morning, what is?
I don’t know golf, and hadn’t heard of Scottie Scheffler before, but I do know how to read between the lines. Scheffler was speaking to how what he spends most of his effort on didn’t bringing him but the briefest moments of joy, and that’s the sort of thing a depressed guy sitting at a bar might confess to you, or what someone who has found joy elsewhere is happy to admit. Scheffler didn’t look like a sad barfly, so I did a bit of digging and discovered he is a professing Christian, and though ESPN’s article doesn’t share anything about Scheffler’s true source of joy, he has been happy to share.
They’ve found a mass dinosaur grave in Alberta…
… and it is seeming very Flood-related.
Chip and Joanna feature gay couple on their show
After Not the Bee reported on Chip and Joanna Gaines (of Fixer Upper fame) featuring a gay couple on one of their shows, Chip doubled and tripled down on social media, pulling out the most popular verse in the Bible “Do not judge” while ignoring all the rest of what the Bible has to say, including about same-sex relations. Chip called the questions coming his way “hate or vitriol” but as Franklin Graham noted, Chip wasn’t acting loving himself.
“While we are to love people, we should love them enough to tell them the truth of God’s Word…. His Word is absolute truth. God loves us, and His design for marriage is between one man and one woman. Promoting something that God defines as sin is in itself sin.”
Whatever happened to villains?
With Disney recasting its biggest baddies as simply misunderstood, it’s following a trend where there is no real wrong or bad. It’s another sort of relativism, it’d seem.
Do we want to force our religion on others?
When you get hit with an accusation, a knee-jerk temptation can be to deny it. But when it comes to the charge of Christians wanting to force our religion on others, we need to plead guilty…. in part.
God has no interest in hypocritical worship, so we should never want to force people to go to Church (see Amos 5:21-24, Is. 1:11–15, etc.). But stopping the murder of unborn babies and the infirm elderly is both biblical, and it is a restriction that should be universally applied. So yes, we do want to “force our religion” on others in the laws we want to make.
However, while the you-just-want-to-force-your-religion accusation sticks, it actually applies much more so in the opposite direction, and the secular world has little reason not to violate consciences. That’s why they’ll try to destroy a Christian baker for not wanting to bake a cake to celebrate a same-sex commitment ceremony or gender “transitions.” It doesn’t matter if there is another bakery in town that could fill the order, this Christian must be punished. Or maybe you know euthanasia is murder, and want no part of it as a doctor or other health professional. You better refer them to another contract killer who will do the hit, or you could face reprisals. The secular ethos must be imposed.
The fact is tolerance – within limits – is only a Christian virtue. The Western world has only the remnants of their Christian heritage to restrain them from “or else” demands and as those remnants fade, their religious demands will increase.