By Gary Shogren, Seminario ESEPA, San José, Costa Rica I have at last spotted a creature that until now I’d only read about. It is the reappearance of a style of preaching which does an end-run around the rational mind and appeals to the non-rational. I’m probably the last one of my social set to... Continue Reading →
The Parable of the Lost Coin, Luke 15:8-10
8 “Or what woman, having ten silver coins, if she loses one coin, does not light a lamp, sweep the house, and search carefully until she finds it? 9 And when she has found it, she calls her friends and neighbors together, saying, ‘Rejoice with me, for I have found the piece which I lost!’... Continue Reading →
What books have I used to write a commentary on 1-2 Thessalonians? [Studies in 1 Thessalonians]
Note: In November 2012 I published a commentary of 1-2 Thessalonians for Zondervan (click HERE). The advice given below is applicable to all preaching and writing projects. I used to do business at a local office building. On the wall was an engraved map of the New World from the 1600s. It was a real... Continue Reading →
We should challenge all who need correction…young or old (1 Tim 5:1)
By Gary Shogren, Seminario ESEPA, San José, Costa Rica The Bible does not tell us to refrain from correcting our elders; this is a misunderstanding that arises from 1 Tim 5:1 KJV, “rebuke not an elder”. We should understand that there is more harshness implicit in “rebuke”; the NIV for example says “Do not... Continue Reading →
How to Teach your Church to Pray: Don’t tell them, show them!
The Twelve learned to pray by asking, “Lord, teach us to pray, just as John taught his disciples” (Luke 11:1 NIV). For that they received the Lord’s Prayer, which functions as Jesus intended, whether used as a model or prayed verbatim. In general the North American church fails to teach its people to pray. For... Continue Reading →
Isn’t a pastor mainly a teacher?
By Gary Shogren, Seminario ESEPA, San José, Costa Rica Much of my formative ministry experience took place at a summer Bible Conference in New Hampshire. What I would see was a famous preacher speaking to a crowd of 500 people every morning and night, wowing them with his expositions. In fact, it was sitting in one session... Continue Reading →
Preach about hell…but think it through first!
By Gary Shogren, Seminario ESEPA, San José, Costa Rica I have no sympathy with those who eliminate the hard teachings of the Bible. A Christian has made a prior commitment to follow Jesus and to speak and act as Jesus would. I have little sympathy with those who affirm right and left that they stand true... Continue Reading →
Bring Him the Sacrifice of…Paint??
It’s Friday afternoon (in early January 2010). I just got done showering off some layers of paint. What I thought would be a straight roller job turned out to take several days, but it was specifically to God’s glory! You see, in November, the Lord very definitely answered my prayer and allowed us to bring... Continue Reading →
Which Bible version is the most “literal”? (updated)
“Literal” is really not a technically precise term, because some people take it to mean “more faithful”, and this is simply not the case. The KJV is fairly literal, the NASB more so. The NIV, NJB, and others are more in the “dynamic equivalent” camp. Some people who opt for “literal” translations disdain these Bibles... Continue Reading →
Logos and Thayer’s Greek-English Lexicon (updated)
How strange it is, that I, a student and professor of the Greek New Testament, would object to the electronic publication of a classic Greek-English dictionary! Yet object I must. Baur and LSJ are top-of-the-line lexicons. They draw from discoveries that have been made of hitherto lost books from antiquity, and especially of the papyri and inscriptions. Besides which, digital databases such as Thesaurus Linguae Graecae (or TLG; ancient books) and the Packard Humanities Index (PHI; papyri and inscriptions) now put within the reach of all interested students the ability to search through almost all known ancient material within minutes. We might reason – if two lexicons are good, then wouldn't three be better? The answer is a firm no. For example, Thayer states that the word agapē was invented by the inspired translators of the Septuagint in the 3rd. cent. BC, and that pagan Greeks had not previously known of the word. Using advanced software I was able within an hour to disprove Thayer in great detail, demonstrating that agapē was known and used in pagan Greek – although not frequently – long before the translation of the Septuagint and after its publication, yet in works that show now Jewish or Christian influence. Was Thayer mistaken? No he was not...given the data that were available when he wrote. But new data have come to light since then, invalidating their statements. Some people have the idea that Thayer, being a classic, will provide a fresh and perhaps more spiritual perspective. This is not the case. The person who reads Thayer cannot simply weigh his opinion against Baur’s and decide which he or she prefers. LSJ and Baur, whose conclusions are not fallible and are sometimes debated, will always have a decisive edge over an older lexicon simply by having publication dates of 1997 and 2000 respectively. We must use the very best tools that are available, and we must be prepared to pay the appropriate cost in order to make use of recent research, even the $150 for Baur. Or, we must commit ourselves to seek out the best tools where we can find them – in a library, or using Liddell, Scott and Jones gratis from the Perseus website! (www.perseus.tufts.edu). I’m sorry to conclude that, by publishing Thayer, Logos – of which I am a devoted fan – is part of the problem. See also my post: “What books have I used to write a commentary on 1-2 Thessalonians?”