Posts

THE CARRYING – A Poem

A poem (using a cascading litany form), based on my recent post, “The Carrying”: He carries. Not merely sustains, as though the universe were a clock and He its distant keeper. Not merely upholds, as though existence balanced itself upon borrowed momentum. He carries. The atom and the archangel, the whale-road and the wandering star, the dust mote adrift in a shaft of morning light, the fire of a thousand suns. Every electron circling its hidden center. Every photon crossing impossible distances. Every breath drawn by every creature from Eden until now. He carries. The dice tumble across the table, striking wood, bouncing, turning, their final resting place already beneath His hand. The clouds gather over thirsty fields. Rain falls upon furrow and forest. The earth drinks because He visits it. What we call weather, Scripture calls God. He carries. Two sparrows flutter in a market cage, worth scarcely more than a laborer's hour. One falls. Not beyond His notice. Not outside His decr...

Why the Cross Needs More Than One Lens

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 There is a temptation, when you have found a theological home, to let it do all the work. Penal substitution explains the cross, the logic goes, so we are finished. And penal substitution does explain the cross, in ways that are central and indispensable, more thoroughly developed in the New Testament than anything else on offer. But the New Testament itself refuses to stop there. It reaches for law-court language, then temple language, then the slave market, then the battlefield, then the family. Five semantic fields, each distinct enough that no single model can hold all of them at once. That multiplicity is not a sign of theological confusion in the biblical authors. It is a sign that the event they are describing exceeds every individual framework brought to bear on it. This is something I work through in considerable detail in All Things in Christ , my larger works-in-progress systematic theology, and what follows is a compressed summary of the argument. The short version: th...

The Carrying

  The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful word… (Heb 1:3a, LSB) The Greek verb in Hebrews 1:3 is pherō . Translators usually render it "upholding” or “sustaining,” but the word means, plainly, "to carry." The Son carries all things by the word of His power. Not props them up. Not winds them like a clock and steps back. Carries. The image is closer to a parent bearing a sleeping child than an engineer monitoring a system. Every electron orbiting every nucleus, every photon striking every retina at this moment, is being personally borne along by the Lord Jesus. Withdraw His carrying for an instant and the universe does not coast. It dissolves. Consider what Scripture insists on. The lot is cast into the lap, and every decision is from the Lord (Prov 16:33). Throw dice, draw straws, decide on a whim. The result was already in His hand. The rain of Psalm 65 falls because He visits the earth and w...

Scripture Versus Tradition?

One of the more anachronistic mistakes people make when discussing the early church is imagining that the fathers operated with the same “Bible versus tradition” framework that dominates so many modern debates. They usually did not. In fact, the very men most frequently quoted by Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox Christians in defense of tradition were often equally emphatic about the supremacy and sufficiency of Scripture. The tension is not nearly as neat as internet polemics make it sound. What the fathers faced was not a world where heretics denied Scripture altogether. Quite the opposite. Nearly every major heretical movement arrived carrying a Bible under its arm. Arius quoted Proverbs and John. Sabellius appealed to Scripture. The Donatists did the same. So did Pelagius. Even the Gnostics, bizarre as some of their cosmologies became, often wrapped themselves in biblical language. That created a real interpretive crisis. If everyone claims the Bible, how do you distinguish ap...

NOT MERELY JABBERWOCKY:THE MEANINGFULNESS OF THEOLOGICAL LANGUAGE AND THE DOCTRINE OF ANALOGY

Abstract This essay examines the meaningfulness of theological language by tracing three classical positions on predication—equivocalism, univocalism, and analogical realism—and arguing that Thomas Aquinas's doctrine of analogy, understood within a Protestant framework shaped by Calvin's concept of divine accommodation, provides the most defensible account of how finite human language genuinely refers to God. The logical positivist challenge is taken as a clarifying provocation rather than a decisive refutation, and the essay demonstrates that contemporary theological concessions, particularly the claim that human speech about God carries an inherent degree of falsehood, reproduce the positivist error under the guise of creaturely humility. Drawing on the imago Dei grounding of language, patristic precedent, and the canonical presupposition that divine self-disclosure in human words is genuinely cognitive rather than merely evocative, the essay defends analogical realism as...

Giving the Sense: The Quiet Work That Makes the Word Land

There’s a line tucked into Nehemiah 8 that has always felt like a job description more than a narrative detail. The scribes read from the Law, “explaining so that they [the people] understood the reading” (Neh. 8:8). Or as it’s often phrased, they were “giving the sense.” No rhetorical fireworks, no clever turns of phrase for their own sake. Just clarity. Careful, patient, almost stubborn clarity. And yet that’s the moment the people begin to weep, then rejoice. Not when the text is merely read, but when it is understood . It’s worth lingering there. The crowd in Jerusalem wasn’t hostile. They were hungry. Men, women, even children old enough to listen stood from early morning until midday. That’s five, six hours on their feet, under the open sky. What they needed wasn’t novelty. They needed the bridge between ancient words and present understanding. Language had shifted. Context had faded. The Law was still true, still authoritative, but it had to be opened up, unfolded, pressed into...

Jesus, the Scarlet Thread

A thread of scarlet runs unseen, through orchard green and exile’s keen. It binds the dust of Adam’s fall to promise whispered through it all. In ark and altar, flame and flood, in patriarch, judge, and royal blood— it never snaps, though frayed and worn, it holds the hope of worlds reborn. Until at last, in flesh and breath, the Word steps in beneath our death. And every knot of sin and shame is gathered up in Jesus’ name. Now all of Scripture sings as one: the scarlet thread and God’s own Son.