Weekend A La Carte (June 1)


My gratitude goes to Redeemer University for sponsoring the blog this week to let you know about a program that equips students to manage kingdom causes with sound business principles. Sponsors help keep this site going and I’m grateful for every one.

There are a few new Kindle deals today. I’ll collect the new batch of monthly deals over the weekend and have it ready to go on Monday.

(Yesterday on the blog: New and Notable Christian Books for May 2024)

This is quite an interesting look back at the desegregation of Dallas Theological Seminary. It’s amazing to think how recently this happened but a joy to know that it eventually did happen.

There is much that happened theologically on the cross or because of the cross. This article explains 12 different things that were accomplished there.

Alex Chediak: “Only Christ can give us the significance that many seek from their work. But is this how we should think of our jobs, as meaningless? Or might the Scriptures give us a richer, more optimistic view of the activities whereby we spend half of our waking lives? What does it mean to work as a Christian?”

The editors at Desiring God begin this article in this way: “Randy Newman, our longtime friend, wrote this article just weeks ago to be published May 30 at Desiring God. Last week Randy died unexpectedly of heart complications. We publish this article with the blessing of his wife and family, and in gratitude to God for Randy’s faithful ministry and contagious joy in Jesus.”

“Does a wolf in sheep’s clothing know what he’s doing? Of course. That’s what makes it so terrifying when you catch the glint of teeth inside the fleecy face. He came to eat sheep. But he knows if he comes leaping and snarling, his targets will scatter. He has to look nonthreatening. He has to look like one of them. He has to earn their trust. That’s sin.”

While I think we are all apprehensive about the precipitous rise of AI, John Avery explains how governments are using the “crisis” to curtail free speech. These are concerning matters!

We may easily spot such inconsistencies in the lives and vocations of others, but it can be difficult to spot them in our own. Sin, after all, is deceptive.

Do not have your concert first, and tune your instruments afterward. Begin the day with God.

—Hudson Taylor


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