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Many today have an unhealthy love affair with everything John Piper writes. I am humbly learning how not to, as Scot McKnight would say, see things only through the lens of my “maestros.” But the following is just solid, pastoral thinking on the issue of exposure to edgier cultural forms…

And that Piper has said it doesn’t mean that if you are not a conservative, reformed, “glory of God” type of Jesus-follower, this doesn’t apply to you. Listen to me, it does. I believe this is one of the most important issues for many of the “younger evangelicals” who have swung towards a version of cultural syncretism with very little discernment or worse, blurred the lines of holiness for the sake of “understanding culture.”

Don’t misunderstand me. Some are called to things that most Christians couldn’t and frankly, probably shouldn’t, i.e., xxxChurch. This is a unique and specific calling that takes tons of accountability, boundaries, and discernment. I believe if Jesus were around today, he wouldn’t hesitate to be seen with someone from the adult film industry.

The truth is, I LOVE mainstream cultural art forms – probably too much. I have consumed my fair share of it to truly say, as Solomon did, “there is nothing new under the sun.” And in my pursuit of it, I have found, as Piper says in the following post, a “deadening” of my “capacities for joy in Jesus.”

Please read a portion of his recent post, “Why I Don’t Have a Television and Rarely Go to Movies” and ask God to show you how you can love Him more so you can relate to culture:

I think relevance in preaching hangs very little on watching movies, and I think that much exposure to sensuality, banality, and God-absent entertainment does more to deaden our capacities for joy in Jesus than it does to make us spiritually powerful in the lives of the living dead. Sources of spiritual power—which are what we desperately need—are not in the cinema. You will not want your biographer to write: Prick him and he bleeds movies.

If you want to be relevant, say, for prostitutes, don’t watch a movie with a lot of tumbles in a brothel. Immerse yourself in the gospel, which is tailor-made for prostitutes; then watch Jesus deal with them in the Bible; then go find a prostitute and talk to her. Listen to her, not the movie. Being entertained by sin does not increase compassion for sinners.

There are, perhaps, a few extraordinary men who can watch action-packed, suspenseful, sexually explicit films and come away more godly. But there are not many. And I am certainly not one of them.

I have a high tolerance for violence, high tolerance for bad language, and zero tolerance for nudity. There is a reason for these differences. The violence is make-believe. They don’t really mean those bad words. But that lady is really naked, and I am really watching. And somewhere she has a brokenhearted father.

I’ll put it bluntly. The only nude female body a guy should ever lay his eyes on is his wife’s. The few exceptions include doctors, morticians, and fathers changing diapers. “I have made a covenant with my eyes; how then could I gaze at a virgin?” (Job 31:1). What the eyes see really matters. “Everyone who looks at a woman to desire her has already committed adultery with her in his heart” (Matthew 5:28). Better to gouge your eye than go to hell (verse 29).

Brothers, that is serious. Really serious. Jesus is violent about this. What we do with our eyes can damn us. One reason is that it is virtually impossible to transition from being entertained by nudity to an act of “beholding the glory of the Lord.” But this means the entire Christian life is threatened by the deadening effects of sexual titillation.

All Christ-exalting transformation comes from “beholding the glory of Christ.” “Beholding the glory of the Lord, [we] are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another” (2 Corinthians 3:18). Whatever dulls the eyes of our mind from seeing Christ powerfully and purely is destroying us. There is not one man in a thousand whose spiritual eyes are more readily moved by the beauty of Christ because he has just seen a bare breast with his buddies.


untangling lost…

Genius…


the slow numb

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Jonathan Leeman of 9Marks is reviewing chapter-by-chapter, the new Crossway book, Worldliness, edited by C.J. Mahaney. Today, he reviewed chapter 2 entitled, “God, My Heart, and the Media,” written by Craig Cabaniss. He has some great reflections on the chapter:

…media makes up the continual background of many of our lives, and he [Cabaniss] provokes one to ask whether or not we’re aware of all the assumptions that are slowly filtering into our hearts and minds as we imbibe thoughtlessly imbibe the media.

…many Christians take care to avoid the more explicit moments in movies…Yet we often don’t give a second thought to the fact that entire storylines are premised upon, not just secular, but sinful worldviews…

And when we let storylines undergirded with these kinds of worldviews comprise our “entertainment,” our “down-time,” our “rest,” there’s an effect: “Filling our minds with these media deceptions dulls our sensitivity to God’s holy hatred for sin” (Cabaniss, 53).

Leeman notes that Cabaniss lists several pages of questions to ask of our hearts about one’s media viewing. Here are the ones Leeman reprinted (57-59):

“Why do I want to watch this program or film? What do I find entertaining about it?”
“Am I seeking to escape from something i should be facing by watching this? Am I seeking comfort or relief that can be found only in God?”
“What sinful temptations will this program or film present?”
“Do I secretly want to view something in it that’s sinful?”
“Am I watching because I’m bored or lazy? If so, what does that reveal about my heart?”


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my top 10 lost episodes…so far

  • Author: Brad
  • Filed under: television
  • Date: Jan 17,2009

It’s almost here. That crazy-good, uber-genius, best show ever in the history of prime time TV called Lost returns this week. In honor of the premiere of season 5, I give you my top 10 lost episodes up to this far. Enjoy:

#10: Maternity Leave – Season 2, Episode 15

maternity1

#9: Not in Portland – Season 3, Episode 7

portland1

#8: Orientation – Season 2, Episode 3

orientation

#7: Live Together, Die Alone – Season 2, Episode 23

live

#6: The Economist – Season 4, Episode 3

economist

#5: TIE – Flashes Before Your Eyes – Season 3, Episode 8/The Constant – Season 4, Episode 5

flashesconstant

#4: Man of Science, Man of Faith – Season 2, Episode 1

science

#3: The Man Behind the Curtain – Season 3, Episode 20

curtain

#2: Pilot, Part 1 – Season 1, Episode 1

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#1 – Through the Looking Glass – Season 3, Episode 22

glass


we’re going on vacation…

Ladies + gentleman, your first look at Lost – Season 5:

Oh, the places we will go…

And if you haven’t seen it, from Comic-Con 08:

To read the absolute best commentary on this vid, read here.


jeremy bentham is ?

And an added bonus, Kate’s phone call backtracked:


breaking news: massive three-hour finale for lost

  • Author: Brad
  • Filed under: television
  • Date: Apr 12,2008

Via Dark UFO:

It’s official: Sources confirm to me exclusively that Steve McPherson has signed off on Lost’s extra-special 14th hour this season, which means Lost is getting a three-hour finale! The first hour airs May 15, the second and third hours will air May 29. (In between, on Thursday, May 22, Ugly Betty has an hour finale and Grey’s Anatomy airs a two-hour season finale of its own.)

Word is that there are so many big reveals that the producers wanted to deliver this season, that they felt like anything less than a full three-hour finale would have cheated the fans. In fact, I’m hearing that writers’ draft of the second half of the finale was 80 pages long, which led all parties involved to realize these stories had to be told now. Anything else would be a ripoff.

So, ABC made it happen, with the help of Shonda Rhimes and Grey’s Anatomy, who agreed to a two-hour finale on May 22. And bless McPherson and friends for taking the risk of letting the Lost finale air on May 29—that’s after the end of the critical ratings sweeps period. If you’re a Lost fan, but don’t usually watch Grey’s you might consider doing Team Alphabet a solid and just tuning your TV to their channel for the GA finale that night!


the ‘lost’ lost theme song?

I guess they decided to go in a different direction. Children of the 80′s, enjoy:

HT: Zach Nielsen


lost ruminations…

  • Author: Brad
  • Filed under: television
  • Date: Mar 10,2008

Via Dark UFO recapper Erika:

annie.jpg

My theory on Annie – Ben’s childhood friend – remains that she did not die in The Purge, but rather in childbirth (with Ben’s child), and that’s why he’s so hell-bent on figuring out the pregnancy problem on the Island. Perhaps she was even the first woman in the original Dharma group who died while pregnant. Since we never saw Annie’s body in The Purge scene, I presume that we’ll get another Ben flashback one of these days that closes out what happened to her. On the DVD commentary for “The Man Behind the Curtain,” the producers declared Annie to be of “seismic” importance to the show… hmmm.


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