Moving In and Moving On
Cohabiting couples have become more likely than in the past to break up or not transition into marriage.
First, taken with the growing body of research in this area, I think we are seeing cohabitation headed toward becoming more ambiguous than ever regarding commitment. Actually, that’s not quite right. Cohabitation seems to be moving toward being, unambiguously, a form of dating with no implications about the odds of marrying. Second, these societal changes... Continue Reading
Circular Reasoning and KJV Only-ism
When it comes to Bible translations, we are being illogical if we start with the presupposition that a certain translation is the only perfect one.
In each case the KJV Only advocate is using circular argumentation. How? The assumed standard is the KJV. Why is the KJV the standard? Why not the Geneva Bible, or the Bishop’s Bible, or the Great Bible? Could we not choose any one of these earlier English translations and then make up page after page... Continue Reading
Marriage And Millennials
There’s something about this “death ’til we part” business that’s worth hanging in for
“This marriage thing is hard.We know everything about each other, can anticipate each other’s next sentence, and not only know exactly where the dirty socks will be thrown but when. We repeat the same fights, stick to the same guns, rebut with the same rebuttals, face the same bedheads in the morning. If monogamy equals monotonous... Continue Reading
Christian Eschatology and The Planet of the Apes
Movies can represent the intersection of eschatology with contemporary fears.
As I went around the room with my students, I asked what their home churches had taught about the ultimate things: heaven, hell, kingdom, and so on. Most of them said their churches were reluctant to say much at all, beyond generalities. Many of their churches, it seems, were fearful to talk much about eschatology... Continue Reading
Radical(ly Normal)
“You don’t have to live crazy to follow Jesus.”
All in all, this book, Radically Normal, is a helpful evangelical counterpoint to the “radical” American evangelical emphases and movements (emphases and movements which have been around for more than 30 years). It’s well written, not too difficult to read, and provides a good remedy for those Christians who feel guilty for not being radical. Thankfully, you... Continue Reading
The Picture of a Godly Man
Why have church-going Christian Men become a rare commodity?
It is this process of sanctification in the life of male Christians that I find to be the missing element in American evangelicalism. Men receive no discipleship, no instruction as to how to grow in grace, no teaching on how to become more like Christ, and so they find themselves making little or no progress,... Continue Reading
On (Not) Listening to Recorded Sermons
Just because technology makes something easier and more convenient doesn’t mean it is right, proper, and good.
“When we listen to an MP3 recording of a sermon, we are not listening to preaching, but to an echo of preaching that happened in the past. Listening on my own to a recording can never be more than a poor second-best to actually being there with the people of God in a local church. ... Continue Reading
Review: ‘Unbroken’
Louis Zamperini was called home to glory on July 2, 2014
Zamperini’s story of survival and resilience will grab most readers’ attention. But it’s his testimony of redemption that makes Unbroken perhaps the most exciting and encouraging book published in 2010. You won’t feel even a tinge of worry when sharing the book with unbelievers. It should provoke fascinating conversations. Unbroken memorably illustrates both the depths of human depravity and... Continue Reading
Childish Tendencies
A window into the self-absorbed hipster, ‘Obvious Child’ is painful to watch
Despite Obvious Child’s attempt to be a gritty, independent film, the realism is limited to Donna’s millennial attitude. Here Juno distinguishes itself again. Juno, which won an Oscar for best original screenplay, allowed its story to remain first. The writer, Diablo Cody, wasn’t a pro-life lobbyist with a checklist. But in Obvious Child, the story is reduced to... Continue Reading
Liberalism Reinvented
A review of Theo Hobson's Reinventing Liberal Christianity
The other matter which Hobson does not really address and yet which is so germane to the current situation is the role of the law courts. With so many competing visions of what individual freedom actually looks like (as opposed to what it is in theory), the liberal state has arguably ceded significant power to... Continue Reading
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