Showing posts with label F. F. Bruce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label F. F. Bruce. Show all posts

Monday, July 7, 2025

Hymn for a School of Biblical Studies in a Secular University

 

 Hymn for a School of Biblical Studies in a Secular University 

Come, all ye sons of Science,
   That magic name of awe,
And Medicine, and Music,
  And Arts (poor thing), and Law;
 
Here shall we speak of gospels
  That to your peace belong,
And faith that hath moved mountains
  And filled men's mouths with song.
 
Fear not ye be converted:
  The University
For truth has strictly ordered
  No bias here shall be;
 
Here shall we hold the balance
  That weighs the creeds divine
In scales that may not falter
  Nor thus, nor thus, incline:
 
That so, with faith unfaithful,
  We tread the narrow way --
Of truth (but not too much truth) --
  That lies 'twixt Yea and Nay.
 
-- P. B. R. Forbes, The University of Edinburgh, 1947, reproduced in F. F. Bruce, In Retrospect: Remembrance of Things Past (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980), p. 141.

Thursday, May 2, 2024

Charitable me would say this is simply laughable ignorance, but I know better

Was Paul a Slave? The surprising argument that Saul of Tarsus was born into bondage. By , Christianity Today,

But Paul was neither a proponent of slavery nor an abolitionist, despite efforts to use his letter to Philemon to make him out as one or the other. In truth, neither option was available to him.

It’s difficult for modern readers to understand that in the Roman Empire of Paul’s time, abolitionist thought was virtually nonexistent. According to Jeffers, “No Greek or Roman author ever attacked slavery as an institution.”

It was a given that slavery would always exist. Alexis de Tocqueville wrote, “All available evidence suggests that even those ancients who were born slaves and later freed, several of whom have left us very beautiful texts, envisioned servitude in the same light.”

Instead, the first Christians had their minds almost exclusively fixed on the Second Coming, which they believed was imminent. There wasn’t time to reform entrenched Roman injustices.

 

The article is replete with tendentious statements, attempts to redefine words, and special pleading. It's lying by omission.

What will be next from Christianity Today? That Paul was a tranny?

I can't wait.

Meanwhile, free-born Roman citizen, self-described Pharisee from a wealthy family in Tarsus*, Paul the Apostle, not only endorsed freedom from slavery, Second Coming or no, but well understood the possibility of it under the Roman system:

Were you a slave when called? Never mind. But if you can gain your freedom, avail yourself of the opportunity. ... You were bought with a price; do not become slaves of men. 

-- I Corinthians 7:21, 23.

   

*A property qualification of 500 drachmae was fixed for admission to the roll of citizens, perhaps by Athenodorus sometime after 30 B.C. (Dio Chrysostom, Oration 34.23).

-- F. F. Bruce, The Book of the Acts (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988), p. 432.

Monday, May 23, 2016

Miracles have declined in proportion to the increase of our wealth

 
 
 An old chestnut related by the dear departed F.F. Bruce in his 1988 commentary on Acts 3.6:

According to Cornelius a Lapide, Thomas Aquinas once called on Pope Innocent II when the latter was counting out a large sum of money.

“You see, Thomas,” said the Pope, “the church can no longer say, ‘Silver and gold have I none.’”

“True, holy father,” was the reply; “neither can she now say, ‘Rise and walk.’”