I have begun a new project, one that is so far above me that it embarrasses be to mention it. I would not, except I have found that when I don’t confess my plan, I am likely to shrink back. When I don’t make my thoughts public, I am free to make them sloppy. So I am writing my own commentary on “The Gospel According to John”
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Write a Commentary for Lent
Filed under ALL, Bible, Christianity, Church, Gospel According to John, Theology
Interesting post on another blog:
Peter Lopez has a very interesting discussion going on his blog at Beauty of the Bible on the relationship between the exercise of Charismatic Gifts and the study of Theology.
Christian devotes of both camps have a tendency to distrust the other sphere, which I think is a shame. God is One. Those who have hold of His right hand may perhaps be understood for thinking that others (holding His left hand) have everything backwards, but they are not excused for thinking so. God is God, truth is truth however God reveals it to us.
We discard any of it to our loss, and at our peril.
Filed under ALL, Christianity, Theology
Is Creation Finished?
Mr. D. C. Toedt, who is a friend of mine from my church, writes a blog called The Questioning Christian
In a post entitled “The world isn’t broken, it’s just unfinished”
He suggests
1. Suppose hypothetically that God is still creating the world, using processes we’re only beginning to kinda-sorta understand — processes that entail generating lots of variations and keeping the ones that “work” as the starting point for later variations.
(These processes of the ongoing creation seem to include us as construction workers, incidentally: our powers of imagination let us generate new variations, while our powers of perception and memory let us see and remember — imperfectly — what does or doesn’t work.)
This hypothesis is not totally implausible, not if you take a long view of what we think we know of history. …
Now, D.C. (for whom I have a great deal of respect) and I disagree about much in the church, including what is the very nature of “church” and even what it means to be christian. I would argue that to be a christian means to accept Jesus as Lord, as being God incarnate who died in the flesh and rose again so that we might be released from the bondage of our sin. I will let D.C. speak for himself, which he does quite well, but he would more describe it as following the commandments of Jesus in that we are to love God and our neighbor, and teach others to do the same.
But in this post, I think he has it pretty much right. The main difference is that Continue reading
Filed under ALL, Christianity, Theology



