I don't know what to make of this. A Trump supporter sues a paper that misrepresents him in an altercation with an opposing protestor. On one hand, it might be a useful tactic against media bias: defamation. On the other, since when did conservatives go to litigation and the bare-knuckled approach, instead of the high road and persuasion? Something's rotten in the state of conservatism. But that's old news, I suppose.
Two opinion pieces in the Wall Street Journal caught my eye today.
1. Alan Dershowitz, professor at Harvard Law, fights back against the MeToo movement, having been accused of sexual harassment when the objective evidence completely favors his innocence. No matter. If you are accused twice, even when the same lawyer is behind both accusations, people start calling his innocence "inconclusive." Dershowitz is right that accusers have a civil right to a presumption of innocence until proven guilty, but we are quickly losing that right in our society.
2. The Supreme Court is revisiting the case where an employee asks for a day off for religious reasons. The 1972 law is that the employer needs to give it unless it causes said employer undue hardship. A 1977 court verdict made that hardship a bare minimum, almost an inconvenience, which any reshuffling of employee schedules is. So the obligation was virtually gone. Let's hope the court restores some leeway for the conscience of employees for religious reasons with employers who couldn't care less about the Sabbath.
3.22.2019
3.20.2019
1 Corinthians 11-14
The Text:
Have loving regard for each other.
Order your clothing and your conduct in worship to honor God
(chapter 11). Maintain natural gender
identity in worship. Eat and drink at
Communion together, remembering the body of Christ on the cross, and
recognizing the body of Christ sitting around you and with you.
Work together like a body with different parts that need
each other (12). The same Spirit gifts
each one of us uniquely.
All the work and sacrifice in the world doesn’t mean anything
without love (13). Other gifts will fade
in importance over time (tongues, knowledge, etc.) but love is the reason why
we have regard for each other. Love is
your future destination.
Use your gifts to help others, not show off how great you
are (14). Don’t use the worship service
to show off in any way. The presenting
issue is tongues, but this would apply to a preacher showing off knowledge,
flashy clothing and more.
Christ in the text
Jesus laid down His physical body sacrificially to establish
and strengthen His spiritual body, the Church.
His Incarnation, ministry, atonement, resurrection, current reign, and
future return – each of these He does specifically for His people, in an
orderly fashion and not chaotically (ch 14), without showboating (ch 12, 14),
or disregarding us (ch 11).
Doctrinal application
Some of these gifts Paul discusses have passed away. They were signs of apostolic authority (2
Cor. 12:12), or of a new phase of revelation from God, as with Moses and
Elijah. God continues to heal people
miraculously, but does not ordinarily vest specific people with the gift to do
so. (I’m willing to consider anomalies
and exceptions to this.)
Personal application
But the principle remains: use the gifts the Lord has given
you to help others, not to advance your own ego or reputation. The Corinthians had a real problem with this,
and we do today, also.
Cultural application
We have institutionalized and celebrated it, with Madison
Avenue’s branding of the self. It’s a
fine line between getting people aware of you in the marketplace, and vaunting
pride. Confident announcement, or
shameless self-promotion? One way to
tell is to ask yourself, “Where’s the love?”
You can do what you do to show others how great you are out of self-love,
or you can do what you do to help others out of love for them. Knowing that much of our vocation is oriented
to providing for yourself and your family, it is still true that the most
successful people balance that with a genuine motivation to provide value to
others in their work, using their gifts.
Christian love is the only real desire fueling that motivation.
1 Corinthians 11:3-16 cuts against the grain of our culture's gender fluid push today. Cultures may express it differently, but there is a built-in-to-nature creational difference between men and women. More on this another time.
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