Pages

Monday, May 4, 2026

Review of Great Dialogues of Plato

Great Dialogues of Plato gathers several of the most influential philosophical conversations written by Plato, presenting them in dramatic form rather than as abstract treatises. These dialogues remain foundational texts for Western philosophy, ethics, political theory, and theology, and they continue to shape how we think about truth, virtue, justice, and the good life.

Main Characters

At the heart of nearly every dialogue stands Socrates, Plato’s teacher and philosophical model. Socrates is not portrayed as a lecturer but as a relentless questioner—patient, ironic, and deeply committed to uncovering truth through dialogue. Around him appear a wide range of interlocutors:

  • Glaucon and Adeimantus – earnest seekers of justice and moral clarity
  • Thrasymachus – a sharp, cynical voice arguing that power defines justice
  • Phaedrus – interested in rhetoric, love, and the soul
  • Alcibiades – brilliant, ambitious, and morally conflicted
  • Meno – puzzled by virtue and the nature of learning

These figures are not merely characters; they represent enduring human attitudes—idealism, skepticism, ambition, confusion, and moral longing.

Major Dialogues and Themes

While editions vary, collections typically include dialogues such as:

  • The Republic – justice, political order, the philosopher-king, and the Form of the Good
  • Symposium – love (eros), beauty, and ascent of the soul
  • Apology – moral courage, truth, and obedience to conscience
  • Meno – virtue, knowledge, and recollection
  • Phaedo – the immortality of the soul and death as philosophical fulfillment

Across these works, several unifying themes emerge:

  • The pursuit of truth through reasoned dialogue
  • The nature of virtue and moral excellence
  • The soul’s orientation toward the Good
  • The tension between appearance and reality
  • Education as moral formation, not mere information

Primary Message of the Work

The central message of Great Dialogues of Plato is that the unexamined life is not worthy of human dignity. Plato insists that truth is not imposed by authority or tradition but discovered through humble, disciplined questioning. Wisdom begins with recognizing one’s ignorance and grows through dialogue aimed at the good of the soul.

Equally important is Plato’s conviction that justice and virtue are objective realities, not social conventions. A just society, like a well-ordered soul, requires harmony, moral leadership, and a vision of the good that transcends self-interest.

Conclusion

Great Dialogues of Plato concludes not with tidy answers, but with a transformed reader. Plato does not hand us doctrines so much as he trains us in a way of thinking—and living. His dialogues invite patience, moral seriousness, and intellectual humility.

For readers shaped by ethical reflection, legal reasoning, or theological inquiry, Plato’s work feels strikingly familiar: a reminder that truth is relational, moral reasoning is formative, and wisdom ultimately serves the flourishing of the soul. The dialogues endure because they do not merely inform the mind—they call the whole person toward truth, goodness, and justice.

Review of The Republic by Plato

 

The Republic stands as one of the most influential works in Western philosophy. Written as a dialogue, it explores the nature of justice, the structure of a good society, and the formation of a virtuous soul. Rather than presenting abstract theory alone, Plato invites the reader into a lively conversation that unfolds with moral, political, and spiritual depth.

Main Characters

  • Socrates – The central figure and primary voice of inquiry. Socrates guides the discussion through probing questions rather than dogmatic assertions, embodying the philosophical method itself.
  • Glaucon – A passionate and idealistic interlocutor who challenges Socrates to defend justice not merely for its rewards, but for its intrinsic goodness.
  • Adeimantus – More cautious than Glaucon, he presses Socrates on the moral education of citizens and the dangers of corruption in culture and upbringing.
  • Thrasymachus – An aggressive skeptic who argues that justice is simply the advantage of the stronger, forcing Socrates to confront a cynical and power-centered view of human life.

Major Themes

Justice

The central question of the book is deceptively simple: What is justice? Plato ultimately defines justice as harmony—both within the soul and within society—where each part fulfills its proper role.

The Just Soul and the Just State

Plato famously parallels the structure of the individual soul with that of an ideal city. Reason rules, spirit supports, and appetite obeys. A just society mirrors a well-ordered inner life.

Education and Moral Formation

Education is not merely the transmission of information but the shaping of character. Music, poetry, physical training, and philosophy all serve to orient the soul toward truth and goodness.

The Allegory of the Cave

Perhaps the most enduring image in the book, the cave depicts humanity’s captivity to illusion and the painful journey toward enlightenment. Knowledge, once gained, carries moral responsibility.

Philosopher-Kings

Plato controversially argues that societies will know peace only when philosophers rule—or rulers become philosophers—because only those who love wisdom are fit to govern justly.

Primary Message

At its heart, The Republic teaches that justice is not merely a social contract or a tool for stability, but a condition of the soul aligned with truth and goodness. A life ordered by wisdom is happier and more fulfilled than one driven by power, pleasure, or reputation. Plato insists that moral integrity and genuine happiness are inseparable.

Conclusion

The dialogue concludes by reaffirming that justice is worth pursuing for its own sake. In the final myth of Er, Plato underscores the eternal significance of moral choice, suggesting that the shape of one’s soul has consequences beyond this life. The message is ultimately hopeful: human beings are capable of growth, illumination, and transformation when they turn toward truth.

The Republic remains compelling not because it offers easy answers, but because it invites readers—across centuries—to examine their lives, their societies, and the ultimate ends they serve.

 

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Is There Biblical Evidence that Jesus Encouraged Any Person to Attend Either Temple or Church?

 

The Bible does not explicitly mandate that Jesus encouraged attendance at a temple or church as we understand it today. Instead, Jesus emphasized the importance of community and relationships among believers, suggesting that the essence of "church" is about gathering as a community rather than attending a specific building.

Monday, April 27, 2026

Original Sin

 A thoughtful way into this question is to distinguish what redemption heals decisively from what it begins to heal progressively. The apparent tension dissolves once we stop treating “the removal of original sin” as equivalent to the immediate completion of moral transformation.

Original sin as condition, not merely behavior

In classical Christian thought, original sin is not simply a catalogue of bad inclinations but a condition of alienation—a rupture in right relationship with God that distorts perception, desire, and trust. At redemption, that condition is genuinely addressed. The believer is reconciled, adopted, and reoriented toward God. Guilt is removed; condemnation is lifted; the status of estrangement is ended.

Yet removal of original sin in this sense does not imply the erasure of every internal consequence that developed under its reign. A forgiven disease is not the same as a healed nervous system.

The persistence of disordered patterns

Sin after redemption does not arise from a remaining “taint” in the juridical sense, but from habituated distortions—patterns of thought, affect, and action that were learned and reinforced prior to, and even after, conversion. Scripture regularly names this reality as “the flesh,” not as a substance but as a mode of life shaped by fear, scarcity, and self-protection.

Redemption reorients the self at its center, but it does not instantly dismantle the neurological, psychological, and relational grooves carved over years. These patterns can continue to operate even when the heart’s fundamental allegiance has changed. One might say the root has been healed, but the soil still bears weeds.

Divided consciousness rather than divided loyalty

The Christian who sins is not best understood as choosing rebellion over obedience, but as acting from partial integration. The mind knows one thing, the embodied self reflexively does another. Paul’s language in Romans 7 is not a denial of redemption but a phenomenology of it: the self awakened to God now perceives, often painfully, the mismatch between intention and enactment.

This is not hypocrisy; it is exposure.

Salvation as inaugurated, not exhausted

The New Testament consistently frames salvation as both accomplished and unfolding. Justification is decisive; sanctification is participatory. Redemption restores communion with God, but the restoration of the person into full coherence—emotionally, relationally, somatically—takes time and cooperation with grace.

If sin were impossible after redemption, growth would be unnecessary, repentance obsolete, and perseverance meaningless. The Christian life would collapse into a single moment rather than a lived transformation.

Grace does not bypass embodiment

Finally, grace does not annihilate the human condition; it heals it from within. Christians continue to live in bodies marked by stress responses, memory, trauma, and social formation. Sin can emerge not from defiance but from exhaustion, fear, or misperception. Redemption does not remove vulnerability; it gives it a new horizon.

In this light, post-redemption sin is not evidence that original sin remains, but that healing is relational and temporal, not mechanical. The miracle is not that Christians never sin, but that sin no longer defines who they are—or where they are going.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Hebrews 9:11-14 - Let's discuss

The description of the Ark of the Covenant is something that most people don’t have a clue about as to its significance, what was contained in the ark, and the ritual associated with the ark. This background is critical to understanding the new “lid of the ark” or “mercy seat” present in Jesus.


Background reading on the tent shrines of the wilderness years is found in Exodus 25:1-26:37. The first tent was the Holy Place which included the lamp stand, the table, and the bread of the Presence (Leviticus 24:5-9). With the destruction of the First Temple in 587 BCE the items of the second tent behind the Holy Place, the Holy of Holies, were lost. Here was the altar of incense and the Ark of the Covenant “overlaid on all sides with gold” (9:4). The lid is called the “mercy seat” or “place of atonement” upon which the high priest sprinkled blood once a year on the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) “for himself and for the sins committed unintentionally by the people” (9:7). Overshadowing the mercy seat were “the cherubim of glory” (9:5).

 

Paul makes the connection of the “lid of the ark/mercy seat” to Christ, “whom God put forward as a sacrifice of atonement (Greek: hilasterion) by his blood, effective through faith” (Romans 3:25). Paul continues to show that God’s righteousness/justification (Greek: dikaiosuna) in Jesus Christ proves “at the present time that he himself (God) is righteous/just and that he makes right/justifies the one who has faith in Jesus” (Romans 3:26).


The author of Hebrews continues to show in our text (9:11-14) that “Christ came as a high priest of the good things that have come.” The previous tents of the Holy Place and the Holy of Holies are now a “perfect tent” in Jesus Christ. This is a tent “not made with hands, that is, not of this creation” (9:11). The connection to the Ark of the Covenant and sacrifice of atonement is unique in the New Testament and draws us into the rich history of the “first covenant” now brought to perfection in Jesus Christ.


The perfection in Christ is now spelled out: “He entered once for all into the Holy Place, not with the blood of goats and calves, but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption” (Greek: lutrosis) (9:12). The goat was used for the people’s sacrifice, and the calf was used for the sacrifice for the high priest and his house (Leviticus 16:5-11). Once again we have a connection to Paul in the same section in Romans: “For there is no distinction, since all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God; they are now justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption (Greek: lutrosis) that is in Christ Jesus” (Romans 3:22-23). Christ’s act of atonement (Greek: hilasterion) on the cross secures an eternal redemption. Christ has entered into the perfect heavenly sanctuary after he provided an eternal redemption, thus securing our eternal redemption by his blood/death on the cross.


The analogy to the first covenant sacrificial system has provided a remarkable way in which the author of Hebrews has drawn us into the history and meaning of the way in which the first covenant attempted to bring the gift of redemption to the people. It was not a perfect system, but it foreshadows the perfect redemption of the blood of the cross in Jesus’ redeeming and atoning death.


The text now brings us to a resounding conclusion: “For if the blood of goats and bulls, with the sprinkling of the ashes of a heifer, sanctifies those who have been defiled so that their flesh is purified, how much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God, purify our conscience from dead works to worship the living God” (9:13-14). This is only one sentence!


What is present in these words stands through all eternity! The imperfection of previous sacrifices is past. There is no more meaning to all things previous. They have had their place in the history of God’s salvation for the people, but now all things are new. The blood of Christ is the complete sacrifice. In Christ Jesus redemption is accomplished.


Jesus’ final word from the cross in the gospel of John is the word of fulfillment: “It is completed” (John 19:30). The verb (Greek: tetelestai) is in the perfect passive tense. This Greek tense signifies that Christ’s redemption has been made for all times. It is completed/accomplished/finished in the past and it remains completed/accomplished/finished into the eons of eons.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Heb. 8:7-13

 Hebrews 8:7–13 is a carefully reasoned theological reflection on God’s redemptive purposes, written to help believers understand how the work of Christ fulfills—and surpasses—the Mosaic covenant. Let’s walk through the heart of the passage you’ve highlighted.

1. “If that first covenant had been faultless…”

The author of Epistle to the Hebrews is not saying that God’s law was morally defective or mistaken. Scripture consistently affirms that the law was holy, righteous, and good. The “fault” lies not in God’s revelation, but in the covenant’s inability to bring about lasting inner transformation in a fallen people.

The first covenant:

  • Revealed God’s will clearly
  • Defined sin accurately
  • Provided a sacrificial system for dealing with guilt

Yet it could not change the human heart. It exposed sin but could not cure it. As a result, it could not secure the obedient, intimate relationship with God that it envisioned. That limitation made a “second” covenant necessary—not as a correction of God’s mistake, but as the fulfillment of God’s long-standing purpose.

2. “I will put my laws into their minds, and write them on their hearts”

Here the author quotes Book of Jeremiah 31:31–34. This promise marks a decisive shift from external regulation to internal renewal.

Under the new covenant:

  • God’s law is no longer primarily outside us (tablets, scrolls, rituals)
  • It is within us, shaping desire, conscience, and will

This is covenant language of regeneration, not mere instruction. Obedience flows not from fear or compulsion, but from a heart reoriented toward God. The law is no longer experienced chiefly as demand, but as delight.

3. “I will be their God, and they shall be my people”

This is the covenant formula that runs through all of Scripture, but here it reaches its fullest expression. The relationship is no longer mediated through a priesthood that stands at a distance, nor maintained by repeated sacrifices.

Instead:

  • God claims His people in a direct and enduring relationship
  • Belonging precedes behavior
  • Grace grounds obedience

The new covenant secures not only forgiveness, but communion.

4. “They shall all know me… from the least to the greatest”

This does not abolish teaching, preaching, or discipleship (Hebrews itself would contradict that). Rather, it means that knowledge of God is no longer restricted or mediated by status, lineage, or office.

To “know the Lord” here means:

  • Personal, covenantal knowledge
  • Shared access to God through Christ
  • A community formed by grace rather than hierarchy

Every member of the covenant people—from the most obscure to the most prominent—stands on equal footing before God.

5. The pastoral center of the passage

Hebrews 8 is ultimately about confidence:

  • Confidence that God has acted decisively in Christ
  • Confidence that forgiveness is real and lasting
  • Confidence that transformation is possible because God Himself writes the law on the heart

The first covenant could diagnose; the new covenant heals.
The first could command; the new empowers.
The first could point forward; the new has arrived.

Synopsis: Of the Last Judgment (WCF XXXIII)

God has sovereignly appointed a definite day on which the entire world will be judged in perfect righteousness through Jesus Christ, to whom the Father has entrusted all authority to judge. On that day, not only fallen angels but every human being who has ever lived will appear before Christ’s judgment seat. Each person will give a full account of their inner life and outward actions, and judgment will be rendered according to what was done in this life, whether good or evil.

The purpose of this final judgment is the public display of God’s glory—both His mercy and His justice. God’s mercy will be magnified in the eternal salvation of the elect, who will enter everlasting life and experience the fullness of joy found in the Lord’s presence. At the same time, God’s justice will be revealed in the condemnation of the wicked, who rejected God and disobeyed the gospel. They will be excluded from God’s gracious presence and endure eternal punishment.

Christ teaches with certainty that this day will come, serving two gracious ends: to restrain humanity from sin through sober accountability, and to comfort believers amid suffering with the assurance of ultimate vindication. Yet the precise timing of this judgment remains unknown. This intentional secrecy calls all people to vigilance, repentance, and spiritual readiness, freeing them from complacency and cultivating a watchful hope. Believers are thus encouraged to live in faithful expectancy, ready to welcome Christ’s return with joy and longing.

Review of Great Dialogues of Plato