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By In Culture

David Baloche: “Labyrinth” – Music Review

Now for something different: an album that might not be for everyone, as it is mainly “ambient music.” But if background music with great content is your cup of tea, then I hope you love this music as much as I do. David Baloche’s 2017 album “Labyrinth” is all scripture, and it is aimed at troubled minds and souls who need the reminder of God’s word to comfort them. Videos are posted below for quick experience of the music, but I urge you to listen long enough to hear the words, usually a minute into each song.

I don’t know a ton about David Baloche – as he doesn’t have a very large musical corpus online, and he is not overtly connected to other musicians I follow. I do know he is the son of famous worship leader singer/songwriter Paul Baloche. Also, I know that the album cover is cool. I mean, look at it! I also know that if you need music in the background that fills your mind with the grace of God’s word – this is a good place to start. I have enjoyed this album for a couple of years and come back to it regularly.

I am posting here the links to YouTube videos for each song, and the text of the songs. I am benefiting from the annotation work done and presented in the following videos:

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By In Culture

My Baptist Obstacles: What It Took to Change My Mind About Infant Baptism

All throughout college I worked to convince various people that baptizing babies was wrong. But my hometown Sunday-school friends had gone off to different universities, and they were swimming in uncharted waters. That is, they were all now connected to Reformed University Fellowship, a Presbyterian college ministry. The only girl from my Sunday-school (the one girl in my tight-knit group of friends) was now eyeing engagement to a Presbyterian young man she had gotten to know. The back-home boys were alarmed. We started working overtime to keep her from the shipwreck of believing in infant baptism. We couldn’t let her drown in their depths, confused about something so obvious.

Then the unthinkable happened.

My best guy friend got sucked into the whirlpool. Casey had become a paedobaptist while trying to defeat paedobaptism questions from Karen. I was devastated and went into a panic mode. I shunned entertainment. I locked myself into my dorm room for two weeks and did nothing but read about baptism any time I wasn’t required elsewhere. I got on the phone about it. I emailed strangers about it, seeking information. I called in pastoral counsel about it. I was determined to know why Casey had deserted me. I read baptist books, and I read paedobaptist books. And finally, after two weeks, I unlocked the door and re-emerged… settled. Resigned. Convinced. I had changed my mind. I now believed in infant baptism.

But the story didn’t end there:

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By In Culture

Jamie Soles // Fun and Prophets

“Prophesize” is not a word. No matter how many tv shows and movies illiterately declare that some religious leader “prophesized to the faithful,” real Bible readers have never seen or heard that word. But just because we can spell prophesy does not mean we understand the prophets. Very few have a real handle on the biblical role of a prophet. Jamie Soles’ super-fun 2007 album, “Fun and Prophets” gives us some superior insight.

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By In Culture, Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom

The Salvation of Works

In all toil there is profit….

Proverbs 14.23

“Help Wanted” signs are up all over the country. Businesses are struggling, not only to find competent workers, but warm bodies who will show up. Jobs are available, but many people don’t want to work. On his November 2, 2021 show, Matt Walsh reported that three out of four unemployed able-bodied men of working age simply don’t want to work. Some of the biggest industries hit are the leisure and hospitality sectors. Vox, drawing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, reports that there are 1.7 million job openings in the industries, ten percent of the entire industry, with another one million quitting. Theories concerning the loss of drive to work, especially among able-bodied men, are many. Some attribute it to low pay (although some places are paying higher wages than they ever have). Others attribute it to the government’s quantitative easing through printing money, extending and expanding unemployment benefits, and sending out stimulus checks, disincentivizing workers who make more staying home than they would at work. Walsh attributes the problem to despair and purposelessness.

A perfect storm is brewing that has been created between the factors mentioned and many more that has already and will leave devastation in its wake. But all of this gives us the opportunity to ask ourselves, “Why do we work?” If work is only about getting a paycheck and the government provides that, why shouldn’t I get on the dole like everyone else and ride this gravy train until the last stop? The sheer mechanics of God’s world tell us that this is unstainable. You have to engage in some level of work to continue to survive. Remove producers from society and soon we will be covered with a fruitless, unkempt world that will be our death.

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By In Church, Culture

Altar Calls, Revivals, and Toxic Religion

There is a celebratory parade going on in certain camps exalting the virtues of grace over the Bible Belt religion. The strategy is to find ways to ridicule the training of many of us who grew up under mom and dad’s religious education in the South. They argue that we have been strangled by the legalism of local independent baptist/evangelical churches and therefore we have suffered much for it. Of course, the political point is that such a generation created the evangelical Trumpers, and for many, that was and will always be a bad, bad, boy moment. But among these tribes growing up in the Scofield Bible generation, some made the great escape and they can now tell the story of how grace transformed them from those religious meanies.

Russell Moore goes so far as to refer to this kind of religious upbringing as “toxic” and that those who remain Christians are examples of “survivors.” Now, a few footnotes:

First, many of us can sit down and share some stories that are cringe-worthy of our upbringing in independent churches and many of us probably have a share of stories that ruined our appetite for certain things. That is true.

Second, since I am in the Reformed persuasion side of things, I have plenty of humorous stories about eschatology charts and walking down the aisle for the 4th time in a week-long revival extravaganza and of being terrified–ahem 1999!–that the rapture was coming.

Finally, I can also share how many of my friends were driven away from the church later in life as a reaction to what they perceived as rigorous and often graceless training. Much of their assessment is true.

Much could be added to this list and I have shared them on numerous occasions on various platforms. I join the frustration with what is considered and defended as “Fundamentalism” in my part of the world. In fact, my own father was a graduate of Bob Jones University and even had a subscription to “The Sword of the Lord.” In fact, when I was in college, I eagerly ran to my box to find the latest edition to read the latest sermon. I hope this proves that I was a teenage-mutant-dispy.

Now, here is where “Amazing Grace” meets “I Come to the Garden Alone:” the critique of Southern religion or Bible-Belt Religion fails because it assumes ideas of grace are somehow immune to abuses. It assumes that some alternative to fundamentalist religion was pure and provided the gravitas to carry us through our lives. It assumes that the only kind of training that is fruitful is the one that limits the boundaries of duties and increases the garden of grace.

While it would have been lovely to grow up in a richer theological environment, with festive sounds of Psalm-singing all around, I would not trade my history. My Bible-Belt upbringing made me cherish this phase of life and in many ways prepared me to embrace life with firmer conviction. You see, one of the things that folks like Moore fail to grasp is that the myriads of Bible verses we memorized were being used to form a backbone and a hunger for more; that Bible-Belt training prepared us to embrace healthier habits only because we knew our Bibles well. At one time I had over 400 verses memorized and that sits within me like a balm for my soul, though I can’t remember all the commas and thous any longer.

While so much of the formation of the fundamentalist world is flawed, it shaped many of us to see the Bible as the authoritative revelation of God’s world, good ol’ hymn-singin’ as good medicine for the soul, and responsibility and duty as vital to formation. And of course, we could add more, but you didn’t come from that world without grasping those three elements.

To speak of it as “toxic religion” is a simple way of dismissing it and treating it with utter contempt while showing how grace is better than all of that stuff. But “grace” has been used during this COVIDsteria season as a baseball bat to religious liberties and as a way of conveying “Love Thy Neighbor” in the most egregiously legalistic way possible. Moore and his tribe have joined the “grace” forces to ensure that such regulations and jabbery were instrumental in the re-shaping of society.I am all about grace for breakfast, lunch, and supper, but when it is divorced from clear mandates and when it does not come shaped by a bold Christendom, I want none of it. And while some may claim they survived “that toxic religion” and now found this “grace-free religion,” I can guarantee you that the latter comes with a cost. What you claim as “survival” probably will produce a generation of teenagers who won’t survive leftism, but will feel the bern and certainly won’t be cheering for Brandon.

Ultimately, what we have here, is an example of ingratitude. Gratitude looks at the past and despite all the flaws can still see how God was shaping our humanity and providentially caring for our souls through Fanny Crosbie and AWANA. It’s really how we should look at our Bible-Belt past–with gratitude for that ol’ time religion.

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By In Culture

My God From My Mother’s Womb

Dads, do you sing to your babies before they are born? Do you talk to them? Current experts tell us to speak to our babies before they are born, and we are told that they recognize our voices when they are born, because they have been hearing it the whole time. What can your babies know about you yet? They know immediately to latch on to Mom. They recline in her arms. They rest and receive. And they know your voice, too. Like sheep who know the voice of their master (John 10.4). Those sheep don’t know how to do logic, but they can find their shepherd. Are children less than sheep? Certainly not!

Last week, I made a big claim that Christians should fully treat their children as Christians. I want to show you that the Bible says such things. In ways both explicit and implicit, scripture says that there is a faithful relationship between Christian-infants and God. We are called on to confess this before God, and we are called to teach it to our children. And we can relax theologically in the rest of knowing that recumbency (lying back in the arms) is the picture God gives to portray faith in the womb.

I want to take time in this post to read through some of that actual Bible material so that it can sound more plausible, and harder to dismiss.

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By In Culture

A Novel Conversion

I recently read Charlotte Mary Yonge’s 1853 novel, The Heir of Redclyffe, which tells the story of the relationship between two principal characters, the youthful heir to the Redclyffe estate, Sir Guy Morville, and his rather impulsive and slightly older cousin, Captain Philip Morville, who stands to inherit the estate in the event of Guy’s death. It is not great literature. Yonge’s work has not stood the test of time and has been overshadowed by the likes of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, and Charles Dickens. Yet in her day, Yonge’s books were tremendously popular, bearing the marks of early Victorian romanticism and sentimental piety.

From a literary standpoint, we can see that Yonge writes as an all-knowing narrator, inhabiting the thoughts of the principal characters in quick succession, constantly shifting vantage points–sometimes within a single paragraph–thereby making the story difficult at times to follow. The book is overly long, although I can’t say how many pages it has. The copy I purchased from Amazon was obviously downloaded and printed from an online source without title page or page numbers! It starts slowly and takes too long to build to its denouement, although at that point it nearly becomes a page turner, only to be followed by the final chapters once more taking their time to wrap things up.

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By In Culture

Psallos // Philippians

Last winter, a good friend from church begged me several times to listen to some band called, “Psallos,” eventually prevailing. I regret that I didn’t listen to him sooner. My heart overflows when I hear them. My teenagers now beg me to listen to Psallos.

I started out testing them with their album “Hebrews” and later heard “Jude.” Both albums were exceedingly good musically, but most refreshingly, they were music written by people who adore the word of God.

But it would be really unfair to characterize a Psallos album as a music set that related to the Bible. A Psallos album is more like a movie than a record. It’s a movie for your ears. But not a spoken drama… But not NOT a drama… Each album is a fully-orbed story project with dramatic elements, and frequent switches in styles of music. The feeling of some songs is more serious, others more playful, but there is always respect toward the text of scripture. A Psallos album is a creative project so unusual that you really just have to… well… let me put it this way:

I beg you to listen to Psallos. Pick an album.

Lucky for you, a new album was released last Thursday (October 21, 2021). Their latest offering: “Philippians.”

Let me try my best to convey what happens during the album Philippians –

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By In Culture

Tell your children, “You’re a Christian!”

I used to dread Sundays. When I was six years old, I used to spend the hours before church with a hole in my gut, knowing that there would be an altar call at the end of the service, and that once again I would be guilty of not responding.

Don’t mistake me; I wanted to respond. I wanted so badly to do whatever it would take to get to call myself a Christian. But I knew first that I should obey my parents, and I was scrupulous. So since my parents had not instructed me specifically to respond to the altar call that Sunday, I was afraid I shouldn’t do it. But I was afraid to ask for permission to do something so obvious… obvious because they knew that I had always believed them, so I was embarrassed about being late to comply. I felt like I was in trouble either way I looked at it, because I was so compliant, but was also confused by thinking like a child without guidance.

My wonderful parents had explained the gospel many times. I always believed it; I assumed it was true. My parents who loved me were the ones telling me, after all. They wouldn’t lie. Their gospel was true. But my childhood OCD was fierce. I wanted to obey Jesus, but the devil’s trick was that I felt like I was disobeying if I were to respond without permission. And I wanted to obey my parents in order to honor God. My heart was faithful, but my mind needed help.

We used to sing songs in children’s Sunday school about being a ‘C-H-R-I-S-T-I-A-N’, but obediently, I shut my mouth in that song, because it was a sin to lie, and I knew better: I hadn’t yet made the long walk down the short aisle to pray with the pastor. My heart was faithful, but my theology told me that salvation didn’t begin until you had made a public profession.

My experience was one of total faith since before I can remember. I could rely on my parents, and I could rely on our family’s God. He was true. My heart was faithful, but I needed better teaching.

Eventually, I believe, God helped me out by directing me to more consistent theology.

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By In Culture

Jamie Soles // The Way My Story Goes

Fourteen years ago next week, my second daughter received an intriguing birthday present from her godfather. Inside, I found a music cd with a cartoon cover. I had never heard the musician before. I could assume that it was some kind of kid-level Christian music, but I had no expectations for it. Little did I know, as at that moment I could only see it as Bible music for a one-year-old, that this music was destined to be one of the most valuable and life altering gifts we have ever received into our house. The album was “The Way My Story Goes” by Jamie Soles.

The kids liked it. But somehow, mysteriously, the album began to find its way into my car whenever I was facing a long drive. I admit it – I was stealing a kid’s cd from a one year old. It was aimed at children, but it wasn’t kiddie music. It was deep, soul-clasping music that needed attention. It could fill me with joy, and with laughter, and with weeping in a single listen.

In the coming years, Jamie Soles’ music would deeply alter my own theology, educate me in ways my seminary training hadn’t, and push me to deal with critical problems in my understanding of God and the Bible. I like to tell people that Jamie Soles once saved my life. And maybe he did. But that is a story for another review. I have decided that I don’t want to get through the Jamie Soles reviews too fast, so I am going to spread them out over time and hit many of his albums along the way.

Let me give you some reasons you should introduce yourself to “The Way My Story Goes”:

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