I often see folks’ photos of their bookcases or their offices or their podcast studios. I like to see where it all happens. Maybe you would like to see how I manage here, living tiny, and what my office looks like. Let’s be casual for a moment here on The End Time before I return to weightier topics next week, as the holidays end and we all get back to ‘reality’.
I have always liked living in smaller spaces. In the 1980s when the motto was “Greed is good” and the American dream was to have a large house, I bought a three story raised ranch with a yard. And filled it with furniture and stuff. After a while it got to be too much of an albatross around my neck, and I sought a better way of living. I’m glad I saved for, purchased, and owned a house. It taught me that I don’t want to own a house. Continue reading “Take a Tour of my Office with Me!”→
I love to read. But as much as I love it, my fleshly sinful nature will rear up to divert me from any wholesome activity, even one I love. My eyes tire more quickly too as I’ve gotten older so I struggle against the pull to just watch TV. I motivate myself to maintain this important habit in a number of ways. One of them is doing Tim Challies’ Christian Reading Challenge for 2020. He sets out a four-tiered list of themes to match with books you choose. You also choose the pace at which you want to read them. I chose Avid Level, reading 1 book every two weeks. His list is below. You can see the themes. Continue reading “2020 Christian Reading Challenge: My Big, Fat Book List!”→
False Teachers (as are politicians) are selling something. Will you buy?
It was a startling moment when at the October 2019 Truth Matters Conference, in reply to interviewer Todd Friel’s query to answer in one or two words to the name Beth Moore, John MacArthur forthrightly said “go home”. Even more startling is when he likened her and her ilk to hucksters selling jewelry on TV. (video here). It was true and thus it was a relief to hear.
False teachers are selling something. They have to. The holy Spirit isn’t in or behind their words propelling them into hearts and minds, so in order to get their message across, false teachers have to resort to sales language. Sales language appeals to the flesh. Continue reading “What to listen for in a (false) teacher”→
Aging isn’t easy. I’m entering my 60th year of age. My teeth are crumbling, my joints are aching, arthritis is thriving, my hair is graying, and my eyes are weakening. Yet my faith given by Jesus is growing, the Light is nearer, and the life He sustains is sweeter every day. I’ve had an immensely great year. I choose to overlook the inconveniences and difficulties, and instead praise the providential care of my God, given through my church, my colleagues at work, my friends, and likely His ministering angels. Continue reading “When Every Minute is Golden Hour”→
Since it’s year-end and I’m concluding the Challies Christian Reading Challenge, the next couple of days will be about books and bookish things. I already wrote about a Bible Reading Plan.
I like a challenge. I like to have goals. I need them in order to stay on track and be productive. I like Reagan Rose’s Redeeming Productivity blog and podcasts, “A Christian Approach to Getting Stuff Done”. Otherwise I’d melt into a puddle of TV-watching couch potato with a melting brain to match! I recommend Rose’s blog and podcast, they’re great.
The thread of Christianity from generation to generation depends on a mutual understanding of our important words. Hence the Word of the Week. Past Words of the Week have included Justification, Transcendence, Immanence, Propitiation, Sanctification, Glorification, Orthodoxy, Heresy, Omniscience, Aseity, Immutability, and more. I then went to a series examining each of the 9 characteristics of the Fruit of the Spirit: Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness, and Self-Control. Continue reading “Word of the Week: Angel”→
This 3-part series looks at Jen Wilkin’s “Redefining Rahab” lessons from 2014 and 2018. We have abackground & intro part 1, a look at her gender emphasis in the Rahab lesson part 2, and finally this essay, part 3, a look at her academic ethics & her situational ethics from that Rahab lesson.
I wrote a 3-part series on Mrs Wilkin, looking at her overall ministry here,here, here. It got long, so I promised to follow up with some specifics from her Rahab teaching lesson. This is that series.
Mrs Wilkin teaches expositionally through books. This is good. She has taught through Joshua recently and also in 2014. In the section concerning Rahab, Wilkin preached a gender message. I am sad to report this. I was fairly shocked with Wilkin’s attitude through this lesson, which was angry, unethical, and improper for a woman of her maturity and standing. Let’s take a closer look.
Full lesson from 2014 sorry this full episode has been deleted and I can’t find it anywhere on the internet
A pertinent part of the 2018 talk is transcribed for you here. Wilkin said much the same things in her 2014 podbay lesson and the June 2018 Lifeway talk. One difference is that in the 2014 talk Wilkin said the names of the commenters with whom she disagreed.
But in both talks Wilkin twisted the exposition to meet her own agenda, which was to elevate and redefine Rahab’s reputation away from the biblical characterization, downplay her prostitution as a sin, add a mythical backstory, and tarnish the men who dared to speak of her in a way Wilkin didn’t like.
Jen opens her lesson this way-
Quote: Rahab has been handed down to us thru the centuries characterized with 2 words- she is liar and a whore. That is the way she has come to us through the centuries. Even to today I was hard pressed to find commentaries that did not view her in that light. Listen to some of the things I read as I prepared to teach. (from 2014 podbay lesson).
The reason Rahab ‘has come down to us’ as a liar and a whore is becuase the Bible says that is what she was.
Quote: How has [Rahab] come down to us through history? She’s a woman and a Canaanite and a prostitute. She would have been a social outcast even among her own people. Here’s the way she is often referred to in commentaries. I’m not going to name the names of the commentators. … You know why she was a prostitute? Because she wanted to be one.(from 2018 Lifeway lesson)
Wilkin refers to Rahab several time as a ‘whore’: History has judged Rahab as a liar and a whore. Is that how we should read her?
In the 30 or so Bible translations I looked at, the word prostitute or harlot was used almost equally. Not one used the word whore. Only Jen Wilkin called Rahab a whore. That was Wilkin’s choice, and of course, we know that it is a worse word, an inflammatory word.
The reason Rahab has ‘come down to us in history’ as a prostitute is because God in His wisdom inspired the writer to write it that way. It is a fact. She was a prostitute. That was her profession. Lydia was a dyer of purple, Moses was a shepherd. Rahab was a prostitute. It’s a plain fact, but Wilkin spends a good deal of time in her lesson on this topic, as we will see.
Quote: Here’s the way that she’s often referred to in commentaries. I’m not going to name the names of the commentators, but can I just be honest with you? Male commentators can be super hard on female Bible characters. Abraham can take his wife over to Pharaoh’s house and leave her there for several weeks twice basically. Abimelech and Pharaoh. And we’re like, “But you know what? It’s cool.” And then the women, it’s like, “Mmm. No. You know why she’s a prostitute? Because she wanted to be one.”
It is a massive generalization to claim that ‘male commentators’ are ‘super hard’ on female characters. Her gender bias is showing here. In addition, Wilkin is claiming that the male commentators are biased in how they write their commentaries, that they see male vs. female and write about the females in a less than honest way. It may or may not be so. If one finds bias in a commentary then a teacher should just move on and not disdain their work by publicly mocking it, which was the tone of Wilkin’s voice as she made the statements. So far she hasn’t taught the text yet.
Matthew Henry, we can give his name out cause he’s long dead. And this does not mean these men are terrible commentators, it’s just a sampling for you. I said I wasn’t gonna say their names, I lied. He’s describing her taking them up on the roof and hiding them under the stocks of flax and he says, “By these stocks of flax it appears that she had at least one of the good characters of the virtuous woman. However, in others of them, she might be deficient. That she sought wool and flax and wrought willingly with her hands. From this instance of her honest industry, one would hope that whatever she had been formally, she was not now a harlot.”
What on earth is the matter with that assessment? One would hope the woman was not still a harlot. And the flax on the roof is mentioned in Proverbs constantly as a worthy industry for a woman.
Another well-known commentator, I will not say his name, he says, “We may be appalled at the fact that Rahab was a prostitute or that she was a liar, but the fact is that she was not saved by her works, but by her faith.” Now, don’t miss that we’re supposed to be appalled by the fact that she was a prostitute and a “liar” (air quotes).
Of course we’re appalled at the thought of a woman selling her body for money. Who wouldn’t be! It’s a degrading and awful profession. It’s also a sin. Sexual sins are worse than other sins, according to 1 Corinthians 6:18.
And then this is from a book called All The Women of the Bible by a man whose name I very much want to tell you, because I’ve since read other things he said about other women of the Bible. He says this about Rahab: “Like many a young girl today, perhaps she found the restrictions of her respectable home too irksome. She wanted a freer life, a life of thrill and excitement away from the drab monotony of the home giving her birth and protection. So high-spirited and independent, she left her parents, set up her own apartment with dire consequences.” Yeah, right, Herbert. (audience laughs). … History has judged Rahab as a liar and a whore. (from 2018 Lifeway video).
Jen’s voice deepened when she read ‘dire consequences’. It is dire when a woman finds she must turn to selling her body to survive. Is Jen saying it isn’t dire? Here her mocking became hardened. That was sad, not only because one should simply teach the text, not attempt to educate the audience on gender politics suspected or imagined from other commenters, but because that is what the text says.
History hands Rahab the moniker liar and prostitute because that is what the eternal word has named her. Is Jen Wilkin disagreeing with the inspiration of scripture and the characterization of Rahab this way? She spends time mocking commenters who relate Rahab’s profession as it was stated in the Bible, as if the mean and misogynistic men had made it up. She chided the commenter for speculating on how Rahab might have became a prostitute, but Wilkin does the exact same thing in both her lessons, speculating on Rahab’s backstory.
I think we’ve grown in our understanding of things. If you were to google the name Rahab right now, do you know what would come up for you? A list of non-profit organizations. And what do you think that they’re involved in? Freeing women from human trafficking.
Wilkin choked up and held back tears at this point. We’ve ‘grown’ in our understanding of things? What things? That we should no longer believe that prostitution is bad? That lying is OK? Here Wilkin goes off on a second tangent (the first was mocking commenters who identify Rahab as a prostitute) and here she spends time explaining about the backstory of Rahab as an unwillingly trafficked youth, which isn’t in the Bible, and tying it to today’s Googling of her name as the inspiration for social justice causes. Is that what you want from a credible Bible teacher?
How do you think a woman gets to be a prostitute in ancient Canaan? I mean, it could be that she chose the profession, but I’ve heard precious few stories in my entire life that would indicate that a woman chooses that, free of any power dynamic, free of anything societal that’s going on. And in fact, we even know from history that it was a common practice in Canaan and other ancient cultures, that when a family could not pay a debt they often had to sell a daughter. It seem far more likely to me that find Rahab in the state that we find her in, not because she wanted to be a prostitute, but because that is where life forced her to be.
In neither of her lessons, the 2014 or the 2018 that I listened to, I never quite understood Wilkin’s emphasis on softening Rahab’s profession with a mythical backstory and including societal pressures and human trafficking into the lesson as potential motivators for Rahab’s profession, and what that had to do with what she had said would be the point of her lesson: looking at why Joshua sent the spies in the first place.
Others who commented under the 2018 Youtube Lifeway video were similarly confused at Wilkin’s emphasis. You can see I’m not the only one who saw Wilkin’s obvious anger.
La Di commented: So why concentrate on commentators when we can read it for ourselves? I don’t understand the anger at flawed men with flawed opinions. It’s not really relevant to the story.
Shelie Martin commented: Jen Wilkins cannot redefine Rahab. She is not God and she should not be redefining anything in God’s Word.
In part 3 we will look at Jen Wilkin’s academic ethics and her situational ethics. It’s not dry, I promise. Stay tuned.
Falsity spreads its tentacles no matter how it comes, secretly, openly, or when it is known but not opposed. It upsets the faith of some, destroys whole families, and pollutes the church, drawing away its disciples into darkness.
Though it is a heavy responsibility and a constant challenge, incorrect or false teaching must be identified and rejected. It does get wearisome for people to constantly see this one or that one called out as drifting, false, or a heretic. It’s disappointing too. But we must persist. Keep Christ’s name spotless and His faith pure.
Incorrect or false teaching sometimes doesn’t start out as false. It sometimes starts off as good. But without course corrections, satan can take something good and twist it. (2 Peter 3:16). That may be happening with Jen Wilkin.
She admitted in an interview that her foremost motivation is not to teach the Bible to women, it is that she wants women to see a woman teaching the Bible. It’s gender, not Christ. She said, “One of the most important things that I do when I travel around the country and teach the Bible is actually not that I teach the Bible. It’s that I show up looking like a woman and teach the Bible. Because a lot of women see only men do that.” Underline mine. There is nothing more important than teaching the Bible, for a man or a woman. (2 Timothy 3:16-17)
This 3-part series looks at Jen Wilkin’s “Redefining Rahab” lessons from 2014 and 2018. Part 1 is background & intro, part 2 is a look at her emphasis in the Rahab lesson, and part 3 is a look at her academic ethics & her situational ethics.
Jen Wilkin bio
Jen Wilkin hit the public scene with her freshman 2014 book, Women of the Word. She is a member of Matt Chandler’s Village Church, and is an Executive Director of Bible Studies at The Village Church Institute, a discipling/teaching arm of the church. Jen writes Bible studies and teaches. She is a nationally known author, and is a sought-after speaker for conferences, podcasts, and other settings. Jen is a wife and mother of 4 adult children.
Jen has stated often that she is a complementarian, and wishes to teach women only, strengthening them in their theological understanding. She decries books “that look like their covers were painted with estrogen”, lol, and pushes for a strong foundation for women in their beliefs. To that end, Jen has made her career and ministry focus by writing books and touring the conference circuit with that message.
However in the past series I wrote, I demonstrated that Wilkin’s complementarianism is in word only. Functionally, she teaches the Bible to men, she trains male pastoral staff, male missionaries and male church planters, (frequently on gender issues), and she speaks before mixed audiences even on a Sunday pulpit.
As we see with ministries with a singular focus, such as end time ministries, ‘deliverance’ ministries, or discernment ministries, the more singular and narrow focus the ministry’s theme is, the more easily it can be twisted away from its center and into something that over time goes far afield from orthodoxy. With Wilkin’s ever more narrowing focus on women and gender, I believe that is what might be happening with Wilkin.
I wrote a 3-part series on Mrs Wilkin, looking at her overall ministry here, here, here. It got long, so I promised to follow up with some specifics from her Rahab teaching lesson. This is that series.
Christmas means baby Jesus. Everybody loves the baby. The swaddling clothes (so cute!) the manger (awww, really?), the Wise Man (distinguished solemnity). It is a tremendous story. It is THE story of all of history. God Himself came in flesh, incarnated solely to grow, live a perfect life, and die. Continue reading “Thirty Days of Jesus Repeat: Postlude 2, Like the Sun”→