Next week I will ride to the Atlanta airport, get on a plane about 2:00, stay on that plane for close to 12 hours, and land in Istanbul, Turkey. I will be with eight or nine others from the church I attend to visit the ancient city of Constantinople, Cappadocia, and the sites of the seven churches in Revelation. A major event in my life. My seventh trip to "Europe" (Turkey is technically not Europe, but in NATO). Do I have trepidation? A bit. I will stay close to my group and never stray. I do not plan to be adventurous in a place where I will stick out for my coloring, size, and clothing (despite keeping that last one as muted as possible). I will be a quiet, unopinionated, but friendly and open visitor to a place with a difficult history. Turkey, however, according to Wikipedia, is the fourth most visited country in the world (fifth or sixth on other lists), so they depend on us tourists. They are modern and their economy is fairly healthy. (Not to sure about o...
Over the past months I have been reading slowly through Romans. Slowly. When I got to 8, it was a stroll to smell every flower and look into every leaf. In 9-11, it was an uphill climb to fathom the perfect, unmistaken sovereignty of God and how Israel fits into it. I haven't reached the top on that one. Now, I come to 12:1-2, which in my generation was the go-to text for speakers to young audiences. Despite all those sermons, it still perplexes me: knowing and proving the perfect will of God? Well, he has just been writing about the will of God. Our sacrifice of our active bodies and inner selves (in contrast to the fatal sacrifice of physical animal bodies like those of centuries in the temple) to a service to God that is only rational in light of what he has just written, which ended with this: 11:33 Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and His ways past finding out! 34...