Gray Havens: See You Again (3 min)
This Gray Havens’ song is an attempted answer to a question that many a married couple has wondered: how can there be no marriage in heaven (Matt. 22:30)? In my head I understand that as a part of the Church we will all be the very bride of Christ, and what we had here with our spouse was only a pale shadow of this perfected bond we will have with our Saviour.
But if you were in a good marriage how can you help but wonder, what about the wonderful special relationship you’ve had with your spouse for so many years? How can that just be done? The answer, I think, is that it won’t be. We won’t be married, but that doesn’t mean we’ll be strangers. As the song puts it:
Gonna see you again
On the gold streets
Standing next to me, I know
I’m gonna see you again
Darling, won’t be long
Till every trace of trouble is gone
We’ll be together
And I’m not sure what that means
But I know it’ll be better than we ever dreamed
When I see you again
I’m not sure what that will mean either, but I can trust my good and gracious God that it will indeed be better that any of us dreamed.
25 ways to provoke your children to anger
“How much of the anger in my home is caused by me? That’s a painful question. As parents, fathers in particular, we must heed God’s Word from Eph. 6:4 [“Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger…”] Of course, this is not to say that all of our children’s anger is caused by us. Each of our children is personally responsible for his or her own sin. However, this warning from God is here for a reason. One of the ways our sinful flesh manifests itself is by provoking others to anger. And the easiest place to do that is in our own home.”
DeYoung: homework on Sunday?
In his book The 10 Commandments, Kevin DeYoung shares how he has never regretted deciding to make Sunday a homework-free day.
Green hydrogen: a multibillion-dollar energy boondoggle (10-min read)
When ethanol-from-corn-production first started it probably took more energy to produce a unit of ethanol than that unit could then produce. So why did governments push it? Because it looked good, even if it didn’t do good. Increased farm efficiencies since then may have changed that net negative into a positive but the return is, at best, still modest, with estimates of 1.5 units of energy created for every unit of energy used in corn-ethanol production. By way of comparison, in the US, one unit of energy used in gas production returns 15-30 units of gas energy.
Now the US is ramping up production of hydrogen, but a unit of hydrogen takes more energy to produce than that unit of hydrogen then contains. And according to this article, that’s a matter of physics, and no manner of technological advances will change that net negative result. We should not be surprised that a world that has rejected God isn’t concerned with doing actual good, even as it still wants to look good. Thus this showmanship instead of stewardship.
Preparing our children to suffer well (10-min read)
There are things we can do to better prepare our children for the challenges and pains they will inevitably experience.
Pulling the reverse card on a woke feminist (1 min)
When a feminist is offended by a guy wearing a “feminist for Trump” shirt, he reverses it on her, questioning why she presumed his gender. Think of it as an addendum to the Golden Rule (Matt 7:12) – we aren’t supposed to do to others as they do to us, but what about when a little tit for tat would be highly educational? Then that could be the best thing for them… which is what we should want others to do to us, right? But turnabout is all this fellow’s got.
Meanwhile Christians can do one better by finishing the argument. As Paul writes in 2 Cor. 10:5, we should want to “demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God,” but note what comes next: “we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.” Ben Shapiro, Jordan Peterson, Pierre Poilievre and others can tear down the other sides’ arguments. But if that’s all they do, then they’re leaving the world in the same state as the man in Luke 11:24-26, who after being freed from an evil spirit, replaced it with nothing, only to have that spirit return with seven others “and the final condition of that man” was even worse than before. Merely dismantling a lie leaves a person vulnerable to the infinite number of others lies out there. So we should learn how to tear down false idols, like we see many conservative commentators doing. But we need to offer the alternative too, doing what only God’s people can do – pointing people away from the lie and towards God, and the truth that He made us male and female (Gen. 1:26-27).