Jul 20, 2019 | Epistemology - Trust
Depending on your age the events of one or all of these dates are seared into your memory. You can see in your mind exactly where you were, what you were doing, and how you responded when you heard or saw what happened. I’m old enough to remember two of the three dates. Even not quite nine, I remember distinctly walking into a neighbor’s house just as the lunar module was going to be landing on the moon. I can see the people in the house sitting on sofa and chairs watching the grainy black and white footage of the lunar surface on a small TV. As an adult, the events of 9/11 are obviously more distinct in my memory. The emotions I felt, still palpable. For those old enough to remember the Kennedy assassination on November 22, 1963, the traumatic events of that day would scar a generation.
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Jul 16, 2019 | Culture, Theology
God saves sinners. That thought keep ringing in my brain as we recently watched a new documentary about the Brian Welch, the lead guitarist of a heavy metal band called Korn. Loud Krazy Love, is not for the faint of heart (or children), or those sensitive to F-bombs. It portrays the world of heavy metal, after all, so it’s expected. Here’s a description from one review:
Billboard described “Loud Krazy Love” as “part rock doc, part faith testimonial, part family drama.” It’s a fearless coming-of-age story that grapples with faith, teen depression, the quest for identity and the hope of a father willing to do anything for the one he loves. The film explores the relationship between the Welches and how Jennea saved Brian’s life, as he walked away from a $23 million record deal and overcame a crippling addiction to drugs to focus on becoming a good father.
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Jul 13, 2019 | Parents and Family, Theology
At my other blog I’m writing my way through the Bible, one of the best things I’ve ever done, and something I highly recomend for anyone who loves Scripture and likes to write. The last couple mornings I’ve been focused on this passage in Acts, and I make the case that all Jewish Christians, which would have been all the first Christians, would have baptized their children. I think I make a pretty good case. If you’re open or curious, here it is:
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Jul 10, 2019 | Apologetics, Explanatory Power
Too many Christians allow low-simmering doubt into their minds because the dominant Western secular cultural narrative assumes materialism at every point, that is that the material, matter, is all that exists. And, if materialism is true, Christianity is not. In the secular West, we are programmed to be materialists. From our earliest memories media, entertainment, and education are indoctrinating us into a materialist view of reality, as if it were the true nature of reality. It is not, and scientific knowledge is making it more untenable every day. Unfortunately the average Christian in the pew every Sunday doesn’t know this, and doubt easily creeps in: maybe, they think, this Christianity thing is a bunch of hooey. It also is not.
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Jul 8, 2019 | Epistemology - Trust
So much of life comes down to epistemology, what can we know, how we know, if we can know. It’s unfortunate that so few Christians realize this, or have ever come across the word. This is important because the credibility of Christian truth claims in the postmodern, post-Christian secular West rest on questions of knowing. The default epistemological stance of our age is skepticism; the hole is the thing, not the doughnut. And whether Christians are aware of it or not, this skepticism affects us too. My passion is to teach Christians to know that we can know! Beyond a reasonable doubt.
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