A Serrated Edge: A Brief Defense of Biblical Satire and Trinitarian Skylarking

Front Cover
Canon Press & Book Service, 2003 - Humor - 128 pages
Satire is a kind of preaching. Satire pervades Scripture. Satire treats the foibles of sinners with a less than perfect tenderness. But, if a Christian employs satire today, he is almost immediately called to account for his "unbiblical" behavior. Yet Scripture shows that the central point of some religious controversies is to give offense. When Christ was confronted with ecclesiastical obstinacy and other forms of arrogance, he showed us a godly pattern for giving offense. In every controversy, godliness and wisdom (or the lack of them) are to be determined by careful appeal to the Scriptures and not to the fact of someone having taken offense. Perhaps they ought to have taken offense, and perhaps someone ought to have endeavored to give it.

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Contents

Preface
7
Satiric Bite
11
The Meaning of Arrogance
19
The Satire of Jesus
29
Old Testament Satire and Jabs
47
The Language of Paul
59
Dearlybelovedism
67
ModEvism
73
Spurgeon the Magnificent
81
Objections
89
The Goal of Giving Offense
97
Apathetic Sanctity
107
Tender Mercies
111
Seductive Disrespect by Douglas Jones
117
Copyright

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