Palmer St. Podcast: Death and Love (or Love and Death if you’re a fan of old Woody Allen movies)

It didn’t take long for the effects of sin on the human race to hit rock bottom.  Adam and Eve ate a fruit – a seemingly simple act.  Yet in the next generation they saw what that seemingly trivial deed actually meant when Cain killed Abel his brother.

1 John 3.11-24.pdf

Palmer St. Podcast: Our Uncertainty and the Will of God

Born in 1834, Charles Spurgeon was one of the most popular preachers in London by the age of 21. His sermons were also published inwritten form. One, entitled God’s Will About the Future, was based on James 4:13-17, our text today. It was scheduled for distribution on Sunday, February 7, 1892. One week before that, on January 31, Charles Haddon Spurgeon died, 57 years of age. Considering the subject matter of the text, the timing of that event was perfect.  Life is uncertain.  Make the desire to please God your life’s principle driving force.

James 4.13-17.mp3

James 4.13-17.pdf

James 4.13-17.pptx

An excerpt from Marilynne Robinson’s *The Death of Adam*

“History is a nightmare, generally speaking, and the effect of religion, where its authority has been claimed, has been horrific as well as benign.  Even in saying this, however, we are judging history in terms religion has supplied.  The proof of this is that, in the twentieth century, “scientific” policies of extermination, undertaken in the case of Stalin to purge society of parasitic or degenerate or recalcitrant elements, and in the case of Hitler to purge it of the weak or defective or, racially speaking, marginally human, have taken horror to new extremes.  Their scale and relentlessness have been owed to the disarming of moral response by theories authorized by the word “science,” which, quite inappropriately, has been used as if it meant “truth.”  Surely it is fair to say that science is to the “science,” that inspired exterminations as Christianity is to the “Christianity” that inspired Crusades.  In both cases the human genius for finding pretexts seized upon the most prestigious institution of the culture and appropriated a great part of its language and resources and legitimacy.  In the case of religion, the best and worst of it have been discredited together.  In the case of science, neither has been discredited.  The failure in both instances to distinguish best from worst means that both science and religion are effetively lost to us in terms of disciplining or enlarging our thinking.

“These are not the worst consequences, however.  The modern fable is that science has exposed religion as a delusion and more or less supplanted it.  But science cannot serve in the place of religion because it cannot generate an ethics or a morality.  It can give us no reason to prefer a child to a dog, or to choose honorable poverty over fraudulent wealth.  It can give us no grounds for preferring what is excellent to what is sensationalistic.  And this is more or less where we are now.”

– Marilynne Robinson, “Darwinism” in The Death of Adam:
Essays on Modern Thought
(New York, Picador, 1998, 2005), 70-71

Find the book here on Amazon:
amazon.com/Death-Adam-Essays-Modern-Thought

Palmer St. Podcast: Exactly the Savior We Need

In the midst of our deepest troubles, it’s understandable to think that God is distant.  Understandable, but wrong.  God is not far away.  He has done literally everything to bridge the gap between the human race and Himself.  There is no longer any need for distance between you and the God who loves you.  Jesus – God the Son – crossed over to our side to lead us back over to His side.  That’s just one reason the Lord Jesus Christ is exactly the Savior that we need.

Hebrews 02.mp3

Hebrews 02.pdf

Hebrews 02.pptx