Tuesday’s Links To Go

Just how realistic is just war theory? The case for Christian realism

Ultimately, I think the lack of realism about realism by American just war advocates has everything to do with their being American. In particular, American advocates of just war seem to presume that democratic societies place an inherent limit on war that more authoritarian societies are unable to do. While such a view is quite understandable, I would argue that democratic society – at least, the American version – is unable to set limits on war because it is democratic.
Put even more strongly, for Americans war is a necessity to sustain our belief that we are worthy to be recipients of the sacrifices made on our behalf in past wars. Americans are a people born of and in war, and only war can sustain our belief that we are a people set apart.


Republicans’ Immigration Bind, as Explained by Aristotle

But let’s not forget Aristotle. When contested legislation passes, it isn’t because its enactment is in the interest of the Republican Party or the Democratic Party as such. It’s usually because it’s in the interest of the particular Republicans, and the particular Democrats, who end up for voting for it.


The Story: The Law of Moses (and Grace of God), Part 1

The Law of Moses is not about how to go to heaven when you die. That’s the mistake. It’s not that God didn’t save any of the faithful Israelites, but that they weren’t saved based on perfect obedience to the Law. That was about something else altogether.


Missions vs. Missional? Why We Really Need Both

Mission and missions need to live together. Missional churches—those focused on living on mission where we are—must remember that Jesus called us to reach people where the gospel is not. I want us to be missional, living as agents of God’s mission in context, but you can’t take John 20:21 in isolation without also remembering Matthew 28:18-20 and Acts 1:8.


The ugly flip side of Christian consumerism

If the church were indeed a business, then a pastor would be wise to view his occupation much as any businessperson sees their career. The goal would be to improve skills, land the role of greatest influence, gain the most responsibility, and be rewarded by the best compensation package, all while residing in the most livable city.
But if the local church is viewed biblically—less like a business and more like a family (Luke 8:19–21)—then moving up the “ladder” of pastoral leadership makes as much sense as switching out families every few years. In many ways, pastors leaving the leadership position of one church to go to the next more promising church could be as damaging as a family having a revolving father every couple years.


Seven Secrets to Listening When Time is Short

Quick listening isn’t the best, but it may be your only option.

  1. Explain time pressure. “I’m interested. I only have five minutes before my next meeting.”
  2. Relax the tone in your voice. Take a breath.
  3. Begin where most conversations end. Ask, “What’s important about this?”
  4. Say, “Tell me what you want to tell me.” Help them get to the point.
  5. Ask, “What can you do?” Avoid reverse delegation – that’s when their problem becomes your problem.
  6. Establish accountability. “Call me tomorrow and tell me what happened.”
  7. Stick with time limits. If you said, “Five minutes,” then stick to it.

Japanese professor pushes for Hide and Seek at the Olympics

The committee has set formal rules for competitive hide-and-seek, pitting two teams of seven players against each other in a 10-minute match. In the first five-minute half, one team is given two minutes to hide on a “pitch” that measures 65ft x 65ft . The opposing team then has to locate and touch the hiding players.


Outrage as toy company creates ‘crystal meth lab’ for children with Breaking Bad play sets

Children can now build their own drug dens with a shocking new play kit inspired by TV show Breaking Bad.
The sell-out £160 kit, branded ‘SuperLab’, lets any child or adult recreate Walter White’s notorious crystal meth lab.
Complete with protective masks, drug paraphernalia, figurines and a version of the car from the show, infants can even reenact scenes from the series.
The toy looks similar to a classic Lego set, although it is not connected to the Danish company in any way and was made by a separate firm.


Iowa grants permits for blind residents to carry guns in public

Private gun ownership — even hunting — by visually impaired Iowans is nothing new. But the practice of visually impaired residents legally carrying firearms in public became widely possible thanks to gun permit changes that took effect in Iowa in 2011.


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