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Cultivating Christlike Virtue in the Between Time

N. T. Wright's excellent book focuses on sanctification during "all that time in between" the "now" of conversion and the "not yet" of the fully realized eschaton. A follow-up to the work Wright began in Simply Christian and Surprised by Hope, this book would be ideal for college and seminary classrooms as well as small group study. Wright starts with the tension between those who think of Christian discipleship as principled rule-following and those who think of worship and practice…
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Still Practicing

It's not very often that you want an instant faith do-over. If I think back through my life carefully, there might be only two or three times I could have used a re-do, but this is the only time I recognized I needed one right away. I recognize I need to refer to myself as a "practicing" Christian because the teachings of Jesus haven't fully taken root in my life. This was a faith pop quiz and I think I…
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Shades of Glee

After reading a Time magazine essay in which a youth minister described the television show Glee as "anti-Christian," I tuned in and watched. I was absolutely dumbfounded by what I saw, but not because it was any more "anti-Christian" than anything else on television. Indeed, I was far from offended and found Glee to be great fun. What took me by surprise was seeing that Glee is set in a place called William McKinley High School. My mind reeled as…
Jeff Munroe
May 1, 2011
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The Absence of Christ

Question 46: What do you mean by saying, "He ascended to heaven"? Answer: That Christ was taken up from the earth into heaven before the very eyes of his disciples and remains there on our behalf until he comes again to judge the living and the dead. Question 47: But isn't Christ with us until the end of the world as he promised? Answer: Christ is truly human and truly God. In his human nature Christ is not now on…
Eugene Heideman
May 1, 2011
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Understanding Muslim Spirituality

Over long centuries Western Christians have saved some of their most vile polemics for the Prophet Muhammad. In the Middle Ages Dante threw him into the pit of hell, and within the last decade the head of the American Southern Baptist Convention called him a terrorist and a pedophile. But what have Muslims thought of Muhammad? In Memories of Muhammad Omid Safi introduces us to the Muhammad of faith. More than a biography, this book is a useful introduction to…
Douglas Howard
May 1, 2011
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Reformed Christians and American Grace

Maybe we take our Reformedness too seriously. You know that bumper sticker capsule, "Reformed and always reforming." Perhaps it makes us too critical of ourselves, our churches, our pastors, our denominational institutions and the like. Yes, it is true: Our two-services-on-Sunday habit is in tatters. The young people don't learn the Compendium answers like they once did. Our council rooms include married people who have been divorced. There is hardly anyone home in Home Missions. Christian school enrollments are down.…
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Catenary: The Curve of a Hanging Chain

I learned it from Meredith Kline (The Structure of Biblical Authority), who got it from George Mendenhall. We've had it wrong on the "two tables" of the law. It's not that the law is divided in two; it's that each stone tablet had a full copy of the law. One copy was for God, and one copy was for Israel, like ancient suzerainty treaties and modern contracts. There is no division in the actual text of the Ten Commandments, either…
Daniel Meeter
May 1, 2011
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Writing (and) Theology

There's no dearth of publishing in Christian theology. To the contrary, an expanding universe of theological publishers seems to churn out more and more books, now supplemented by the ofthailed (and over-hailed, I'd say) blogosphere. So at this moment there are countless theologians writing--sketching outlines and plans, whiling away at manuscripts, passionate about their ideas, all with the aim of reaching an audience via the still-exhilirating technology bequeathed to us by Gutenberg. But for all that publishing, there surely is…
May 1, 2011
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Fall on Your Face

I've recently begun living alone in an off-the-grid cabin in Colorado's San Isabel National Forest. No electricity or running water. No f lush toilet. No easy-access concrete driveway or garage. No cell coverage and no landline. I'm the caretaker of the cabin and the land it sits on--twelve mountain acres of lodgepole pines and a pond. Bears live here, too, but there's still snow on the ground, so I don't worry about them just yet. I fret obsessively about other…