Blog


Dane Ortlund Dane Ortlund

The Central Core of My Life

Jack Miller: 
Personally I do not see anyone as a special case with special problems. . . . As Christians we all believe in the forgiveness of sins. Whenever we confess them to God through Christ, we know that they are released from having power over us and the guilt is removed through His atoning sacrifice. But often this does not really control where we live on a practical level. What we are saying is just words, good words, yes, but words nonetheless which have no reference to where we really live and believe.
But it does not have to be this way. I can begin to build my life on the platform of God's forgiving grace. I can make the central core of my life the knowledge that Christ died for me and thus removed my guilt and with that accepted me permanently as His son. 
--The Heart of a Servant-Leader: Letters from Jack Miller (P&R, 2004), 253
Read More
Dane Ortlund Dane Ortlund

Home at Last


Jewel the unicorn in The Last Battle at the end of all things in Narnia:
 “I have come home at last! This is my real country! I belong here.
This is the land I have been looking for all my life, though I never knew it till now.”
Read More
Dane Ortlund Dane Ortlund

Two Beautifully Done Crossway Bibles

I recently went from the Thinline, which I used since 2002 and loved, to the Single-Column Legacy. Both great Bibles. Here's an overview of each.


Thinline Bible Overview from Crossway on Vimeo.




Single Column Legacy Bible Overview from Crossway on Vimeo.

Read More
Dane Ortlund Dane Ortlund

A Purpose-Driven Cosmos: Why Jesus Doesn't Promise Us an 'Afterlife'

Outstanding article from a few months ago by Russell Moore at CT. Right on, at so many levels. Thanks for this, Russell.

A quote that perhaps represents the heart of the article:
We tend either to ignore the future, because we are so consumed in the drama of the here and now, or to see it as simply a continuation of our present lives, with our loved ones there and sickness and death gone. But in Jesus we see a future that has continuity and discontinuity. In his resurrected life, Jesus has gone before us as a pioneer of the new creation.

Perhaps we dread death less from fear than from boredom, thinking the life to come will be an endless postlude to where the action really happens. This is betrayed in how we speak about the "afterlife": it happens after we've lived our lives. The kingdom, then, is like a high-school reunion in which middle-aged people stand around and remember the "good old days." But Jesus doesn't promise an "afterlife." He promises us life—and that everlasting. Your eternity is no more about looking back to this span of time than your life now is about reflecting on kindergarten. The moment you burst through the mud above your grave, you will begin an exciting new mission—one you couldn't comprehend if someone told you. And those things that seem so important now—whether you're attractive or wealthy or famous or cancer-free—will be utterly irrelevant.
HT: Dave McHale
Read More
Dane Ortlund Dane Ortlund

Finished

Read More