Archive for the 'Theology' category

Win Ben Stein’s attention…

May 2, 2008 4:14 pm
Teacher
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Ben Stein Show
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Expelled Poster
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  • He was in that one movie as a dull teacher who kept repeating “Bueler”…
  • He was the casual genius on that one kooky game show in the 90s…
  • He’s the right wings answer to Michael Moore!

Just watched Ben’s movie “Expelled, No Intelligence Allowed” last night. It was a lot more fun than I was anticipating… which means it has been a while since I appreciated just what a fun guy Mr. Ben Stein is. I really enjoyed the movie, in much the same way I have enjoyed Michael Moore’s movies… just without the downer hangover afterwards. Ben is just really cool. He opens up a lot of cans in this little movie… I will think through some of it and return…

You only have to read a little bit of Ben’s wit to appreciate him…

The Cedarville Situation…

April 2, 2008 2:24 pm

What an interesting turn of events. My fundie baptist college of yesturyear is certainly having some issues…

First Things First…

January 21, 2008 5:15 pm
First Things Issue

My favorite magazine doesn’t have any pictures, I must be grown up now.

…to advance a religiously informed public philosophy for the ordering of society.

Mars Hill Audio…

5:13 pm
Mars Hill Audio

Imagine being able to sit in on candid one on one conversations between respected thoughtful Christians as they share their search for transcendent meaning and practical cultural relevance.

MARS HILL AUDIO is committed to assisting Christians who desire to move from thoughtless consumption of contemporary culture to a vantage point of thoughtful engagement. We believe that fulfilling the commands to love God and neighbor requires that we pay careful attention to the neighborhood: that is, every sphere of human life where God is either glorified or despised, where neighbors are either edified or undermined.

The Golden Compass…

December 11, 2007 4:43 pm
The Compass
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The church is an evil brought upon this world by the collective avarice of mankind.

It is a concoction of people in authority designed to keep everyone else in a subordinate role.

The purpose of the church is power, control, and wealth.

There is a secret that the church guards.

The secret is this.



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Lent, the return…

February 20, 2007 4:00 pm
Water Glass 4
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Water  Glass 1
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Water Glass 4
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Last year I gave up pop (soda) for 40 days. This year I am choosing to drink water exclusively, thereby denying all other liquids; pop, soda, juice, beer, wine, or whatever else flows.

Last year was a challenge, two days in and I was having fairly severe withdrawal headaches around the time of my usual sweet beverage fix. I was amazed how the experience altered my desires in just 40 days. I still drink pop now, but with less than half the fierceness that I had. The question is, can abstaining also build a good habit?

I am also going to use the 40 day opportunity as a sort of training boot camp for the supertrip. For 40 days I will…

  • Have my passport on me whenever I leave my house
  • Sleep with only the provisions I will have while traveling
  • Wear the same pair of underwear, I am serious

Calvinism Salvation Chart

February 9, 2007 4:39 pm
Perkins Chart
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Good luck…
reformed.org

Jesus Christ SuperStar

July 7, 2006 4:19 pm

Jesus Christ SuperStar
It’s interesting how each representation of Jesus gives us a slightly different perspective of who he was, and a sliver of truth to take from it. I couldn’t help thinking about all of the movies that Phillip Yancey mentioned in “The Jesus I never knew. I can’t remember if this was one that was on his list or not; but I remember him describing how each film portrayal of the life of Christ gave him a new appreciation for a specific quality of Christ.


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The Judas Gospel…

April 27, 2006 9:44 am

http://www9.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/gospel/

Are they from Judas?
Does he lie in them?
If they are true, what problems / inconsistencies does it pose for the rest of the gospels / bible?
How is / should the church responding?
Does it matter?
What else is there to ask?



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40 days…

March 26, 2006 5:23 pm

Coke Ban

Friday March 3rd at approximately 10 PM I began my first official observation of Lent.  Since I did not begin on ash Wednesday, March 1st, I may be technically disqualified.  I am participating on the principle of the occasion and not the exactness of its related laws.  I am not exactly sure how the Catholic church arrived at the specifics of observing lent or how the history of these laws have changed over the years to the version that is now in practice.  I did find this scripture reference as support for the practice of lent.
 "In the third year of Cyrus king of Persia . . . ‘I, Daniel, mourned for three weeks. I ate no choice food; no meat or wine touched my lips; and I used no lotions at all until the three weeks were over.’" (Daniel 10:1-3)
Although many people still observe lent by abstaining from meat and wine for 40 days, the object of ones abstention seems to be open to whatever a person feels compelled to substitute, usually something that they enjoy as a guilty pleasure of sorts.  Spiritually, this personal decision allows the experience to become a meaningful introspective offering.  My personal indulgence was obvious to me, once I took the possibility of participation seriously.  I would give up pop. No sweet, carbonated, caffeinated beverages.  I am almost famous for over indulging in coke refills at restaurants.  I still boast of one glorious evening at Chili’s in college when I drank 17 refills of coke in a single sitting.  The number gets a little higher each time I tell the story, but I think it was at least 13.  Anyways, I will not drink a coke or a mountain dew for the next 40 days, until Wednesday the 12th of April.  The official rules of Lent omit observance on Sundays, so here I am also breaching the contract since I am going 40 days straight.  This just seems better to me.  The observance is supposed to be patterned after Jesus’ 40 days in the wilderness, I don’t imagine he took off Sundays while in the desert, so I decided I wouldn’t either.



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Lewis, advertising, and the imagination

January 11, 2006 10:46 pm

C.S. Lewis, the incessantly quoted Christian author, has been quoted as saying that the one profession he could never go into with good conscience was that of advertising. He seemed to think that every other profession had surmountable conflicts of morality except that of advertising. What was the conflict that he found intolerable? Apparently the deceit of one’s imagination. I guess I have had the same sort of feelings when considering that particular line of work. Many times I have considered the moral implications of using media to convince people to buy things that they don’t need, or worse yet shouldn’t have. I create visual imagery for a living, mostly sewer systems. I do not need to be reminded of the lack of glamour, but at least I know that my efforts of the imagination are not being used to create an illusion… most of the time. Lewis viewed the imagination as having two separate paths, or modes of operation. One in which the chief goal is to create illusionary imagery. The other is the type that tries to capture and present the truth. His view is summed up by a recent biographer…

When the human imagination is functioning as it is supposed to. Then it should stimulate, inquiry, reflection and thought so that you can move deeper into an understanding of the good, the true, and the beautiful.

Alan Jacobs

At first glance this seems like a rather stifling view of the imagination and its uses. Illusionary fantasies are so beautiful though, aren’t they? Didn’t Lewis write an entire book series based in imaginary worlds? They are and he did. Illusionary fantasies only remain beautiful as long as they confirm what you find beautiful about reality. If they differ and you are forced to choose which one you will go with, you are in a world of trouble. I think I have been on both sides of this choice and if I had to pick I would indulge my imagination in the inspiration of the beauty of reality; the air is really thin in the fantasy world. This may be why all of his imaginary worlds end up being so allegorical and applicable to regular life experience; something that was not he may have consideredto be too dangerous of a temptation. Ever wish your life was a video game, sometimes I dream in halo vision, but I don’t think I would like to live there… a rather stifling view of the imagination and its uses. Illusionary fantasies are so beautiful though, aren’t they? Didn’t Lewis write an entire book series based in imaginary worlds? They are and he did. Illusionary fantasies only remain beautiful as long as they confirm what you find beautiful about reality. If they differ and you are forced to choose which one you will go with, you are in a world of trouble. I think I have been on both sides of this choice and if I had to pick I would indulge my imagination in the inspiration of the beauty of reality; the air is really thin in the fantasy world. This may be why all of his imaginary worlds end up being so allegorical and applicable to regular life experience; something that was not, he may have considered to be too dangerous of a temptation.

Ever wish your life was a video game, sometimes I dream in halo vision, but I don’t think I would like to live there…