It’s a Site!

It’s a Site!

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The parents of TacticalChristianity.org are happy to announce the arrival of TC.O’s sister site LivingWithFaith.org!  The new site weighed in at a healthy five pages and is already receiving  lots of visitors – we hope you will visit, too.

As the site’s title suggests, LivingWithFaith.org is dedicated to the biblical concept of faith, and its aim is to provide focused information on what faith is, how we obtain it, and how we continue to develop it.  It’s about faith, but it’s about the life of faith, too.  Articles, blog posts and in-depth book reviews aim to help you learn and grow in this vital area. In short, our new site’s goal is to help you better understand the process of living with faith.

We hope to see you there!


Leaders with Only Half of What They Need

A Barna Group survey, conducted last year, found a number of interesting things about the leadership concepts, identities and lifestyles of  the self-identified Christians who were surveyed.  The full study can be found at their site, and I recommend it highly if the topic is of interest to you.

For the purposes of this blog I would just like to consider one of the survey’s findings.  In the words of the survey report:

“More than half of Christians in this country identify themselves as leaders (58%). Yet, less than one-sixth (15%) say their primary leadership trait is integrity, the quality Christians were most likely to name as an important leadership trait.”

This finding is unsettling to say the least.  The survey report does not list in exactly what ways the respondents  identified themselves as leaders – whether at work, in church, other activities or in their homes, yet the outcome is the same – that the majority of Christians who felt they were in leadership roles did not think integrity was a primary trait for them.   Either most Christians have an overly developed sense of humility when considering their own integrity, or integrity just isn’t their primary trait. The survey indicated the latter.

Now the honesty here is a good thing, so I’m not faulting that.  Notice David’s words when he realized he had failed his leadership position in a matter of integrity: “… I have sinned; I, the shepherd, have done wrong…”  (2 Samuel 24:17); but this was an instance of failed integrity, not an accepted lack of integrity as a leadership trait.

Interestingly, the Barna survey  agrees with similar population-at-large studies done  in the business and political arenas.  Integrity is often not an issue that those who are in leadership positions would claim as being of primary importance. If we watch the news, we probably know that.  It is doubtless a symptom of the society and the age in which we live, yet it is one which we certainly should not find acceptable. 

I can’t help thinking about the parallel with David in this situation.  Although he readily admitted those occasions when his own integrity did fail, it is clear that as a leadership lifestyle he was committed to integrity:  “And David shepherded them with integrity of heart; with skillful hands he led them” (Psalms 78:72).  Today, all too often we only expect skill in leadership – the “skillful hands” David mentions – as the requirement for leading.   But David’s example makes it clear that integrity is just as important – in fact, of course, he listed that trait first.
The Threads of Context

The Threads of Context

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The English word “context” is derived from two Latin words meaning  “to weave threads” (contextus, from con ‘together’ + texere ‘to weave’) and so our word signifies that which is connected or woven together. 




Successful  understanding  of almost everything the Bible says cannot be accomplished without proper context, but context means so much more than just looking at the surrounding verses of a text. 

The Importance of Context in Bible Study,” this week’s new article on the Strategic Understanding page, discusses four types of context which are necessary for understanding any biblical verse and gives examples for each type from both the Old and New Testaments. 

The article not only shows principles you can use immediately, but also explains several verses which readers often find difficult to understand or which they misunderstand  due to lack of context.   Check out the article and see how profitable following the threads of context can be in your own study.

“The Importance of Context in Bible Study” is the third in a series of articles planned on successful study of the word of God.  The first articles in the series, “Why We Study the Word of God” and  “Choosing a Bible Translation” are also available on the Strategic Understanding page.

Job’s Friends

They’re the Biblical characters we “love to hate” – the friends who said more unfriendly things than they should have done, the friends God reproved for what they said. Yet were they all bad?  This week, on the Tactical Living page, we reproduce a short article by Lenny Caccio on exactly this topic.  Lenny makes an excellent case that we should look at Job’s friends again and that they were taught a lesson from which we can all learn.   Lenny’s article also will form a great introduction for another one we have planned for the near future. The two articles should dovetail perfectly, so don’t miss Lenny’s take on “Job’s Friends” and be on the lookout for a sequel on this same topic.
Battle Plans

Battle Plans

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In Deuteronomy 20 we find the special instructions God gave to ancient Israel as it was about to enter the Promised Land.  These instructions were the “tactical briefs” given to Israel’s fighting forces.  At first sight they may seem simple, but they are deceptively so – and  they represented vital information Israel needed for successful conquest.

Today, those same tactical instructions can be applied in our own lives and offer us simple but timeless guidelines for the spiritual battles we must fight – as we can see in each instruction and the lesson it carries. Newly uploaded to the Tactical Living page this week, “Sound and Simple Battle Plans” looks at the tactical instructions given to ancient Israel – instructions from which we can all profit.