The Hypocrisy of Seneca

Cassius Dio on the hypocrisy of Seneca, the tutor of Nero:

[This was not] the only instance in which his conduct was seen to be diametrically opposed to the teachings of his philosophy. For while denouncing tyranny, he was making himself the teacher of a tyrant; while inveighing against the associates of the powerful, he did not hold aloof from the palace itself; and though he had nothing good to say of flatterers, he himself had constantly fawned upon Messalina and the freedmen of Claudius, to such an extent, in fact, as actually to send them from the island of his exile a book containing their praises — a book that he afterwards suppressed out of shame. Though finding fault with the rich, he himself acquired a fortune of 300,000,000 sesterces; and though he censured the extravagances of others, he had five hundred tables of citrus wood with legs of ivory, all identically alike, and he served banquets on them. In stating thus much I have also made clear what naturally went with it — the licentiousness in which he indulged at the very time that he contracted a most brilliant marriage, and the delight that he took in boys past their prime, a practice which he also taught Nero to follow. 

You Don’t Need to Become a Monk to be Holy

Holiness is not a separate compartment of your life that you can switch on and off at will. It is in full effect 24 hours a day, seven days a week and it happens in the context of your relationships, not just in the secrecy of your prayer closet.

You don’t cut yourself off from the rest of the world in order to live a life of holiness. The monks and the ancient mystics got it wrong. When God called you to be holy, he meant that you live it out in the middle of the usual busy-ness, boredom, and drama of life, not just in the middle of the sugary sweet smiles of people in a church service.

One Day on the Flip Side of Heaven

One day, when we wake up in resurrection morning, we will be fully holy and fully conformed to Jesus. We will no longer have the appetite for sin because it’s power will have been completely broken and thoroughly removed from us. All the lingering pain, hatred, lust, or bitterness that we know so well in this life will be rolled off our backs permanently. We will be free, perfect, and truly sanctified inside out. All our yearning for holiness will be filled.

Christian, look to that day. Trudge on.

Advice to Young Pastors

Sam Storms:

My counsel to young pastors is to make every effort and read every book that will facilitate and deepen their “delight in the Lord” (Ps. 37:4) and enable them to communicate this truth. The only way long-term to empower people to say “No” to the passing pleasures of sin is by cultivating satisfaction in the superior pleasures of knowing and delighting in Christ. Make “Christian hedonism” the focus of your study! Don’t relegate joy to the periphery of your Christian life or reduce it the “icing on the cake of Christian obedience.” Make your joy in Christ the central pursuit of all pastoral study and ministry. You and your people will conquer the lesser pleasures of the world, flesh, and the Devil only by immersing yourselves in the surpassing and altogether satisfying pleasure of savoring all that God is for you in Jesus.

Stop Hiding Behind Your StrengthsFinder Results

Holiness has a lot to do with our temperaments. Many Christians hide behind psychological terms (and StrengthsFinder results) in order to excuse their unsavory behaviors. They’d say they are sanguine, or choleric, or futuristic, or activators in order to explain away the fact that they are mean and uncaring. J.I. Packer, in his book Rediscovering Holiness, argues that we are not victims of our personalities. When we got saved, Jesus redeemed our personalities too. Holiness is supposed to temper our personalities so that we will gradually become Christlike. Holiness is in fact another term for Christlikeness.

10 Books Something

Without introductions, let’s dive!

1. Grace Awakening (Charles Swindoll). This is the first proper Christian book that I read from cover to cover and for that reason, I will always think of it as my number one favorite next to the Bible, even if my taste has changed and my understanding has grown ever since. Swindoll opened my eyes to the wonderful concept of grace.

2. Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien). This is the most difficult series I read so far and that’s mainly because of the kind of English Tolkien used. I read all four books before I switched to electronic reading so I literally had to carry a dictionary around to help me with my vocabulary. It was difficult and tedious but it felt like I entered into a magical world. Tolkien’s skill with words is unmatched. He could describe the falling of the morning dew in exquisite detail like it was the most glorious thing in the world. When he described the natural beauty of Lothlorien, it sounded like he was describing heaven.

Continue reading 10 Books Something