Friday, June 21, 2024
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- Опубліковано 4 лип 2024
- This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
New Terms, Old Terms and Changing Terms (00:00)
Language Across Time and Nation
- First Came ‘Spam.’ Now, With A.I., We’ve Got ‘Slop’ by New York Times
- If You Know What ‘Brainrot’ Means, You Might Already Have It by New York Times
- Does it Pencil by New York Times
Should I Pursue Marriage While Not Yet Able to Provide For a Family? (10:44)
- Dr Mohler Responds to listeners of the Briefing
Should Christians Celebrate Jewish Festivals? (15:47)
- Dr. Mohler Responds to Listeners of The Briefing
If Social Media Has So Many Dangers, Why Do You Use it? (19:40)
- Dr. Mohler Responds to Listeners of The Briefing
Do Dogs Sin? (23:03)
- Dr. Mohler Responds to Listeners of The Briefing
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God Bless you Dr. Mohler.
Yaaaa Great Show.
I happen to like Spam. Fried, smoked, grilled...
A Christian seder is an interesting educational exercise - particularly when you have a good facilitator pointing out the symbolism that points to Christ. But those who seek to incorporate the various feasts as a matter of conscience I think probably stems from an incomplete reading of Scripture (as when a new believer reads the Pentetuch but hasn't made it to Acts or Galatians). A good pastor/teacher can steer them right. But I've encountered many nominal Christians who obsess over OT ceremonial issues (diet, etc.) that have very little understanding of the implications of Christ and the NT.
I also suspect that Dispensational thinking kind of lends itself to this thinking.
This question of Jewish festivals was answered more from a SBC theology, antinomian, dispensationalism perspective rather than historical, Biblical interpretation and good hermeneutics. These influences have been devastating to the church and it shows. It seems to me, it would do the church good to take a look at scripture and reexamine what the Bible actually teaches (and what Paul actually said) on a whole host of issues including Jewish festivals with proper hermeneutics. And, let's start with the Fourth Commandment...and then repent.
Would God be pleased if His children kept His sabbath and festivals? In answering the question Mr Molher did not use any scripture.
If Jesus is the center of all the Jewish festivals, why is the question framed as if is a" moral Wrong" ?
If there is value in tradition, why not remember the Christian truth within the old Jewish festivals?
Good question. I would add that Genesis to Malachi point to Christ. So do festivals. We had Jews for Jesus at our church and had the theme, “Jesus in the Passover.” It was really good
Exactly
Albert: There is no such quantity as 1000 percent! You know that!
Evil spirit possessions leading the faithul away from God's path to the worldly ways, ignoring to help the faithful to live in faith and hope following Jesus Christ, not on workdy things 😮
Inconsistent for sure.
Onomatopoeia, you don't get to use that word very much lol