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Another good one From Kim Fabricus

posted:  04:04:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Church, Kingdom of God, Social Justice, theology

Ten propositions on political theology

1. The doctrine of the ascension is the basis of all political theology – and why there can be no such thing as apolitical theology. The church cannot be a cultus privatus because Jesus of Nazareth, “crucified under Pontius Pilate,” reigns and his edict is public truth. Remove Christ from the forum and it does not remain empty: nature abhors a vacuum; idols love one and soon fill it.

2. God is political. Cut the political bits out of the Bible – as Jim Wallis and some friends once did – and you’re left with “a Bible full of holes.” God is political – and God takes sides. In the Old Testament, Yahweh’s exodus and covenant “bias / preferential option for the poor” is now a well-worn phrase – but an undeniable fact. And the New Testament – Luke in particular – doesn’t drop the ball: the Magnificat and the Jubilee Manifesto suggest the game plan.

3. In my view it is legitimate to speak of an “epistemological privilege” of the excluded and oppressed. Bonhoeffer, writing in prison, was avant la lettre of liberation theology: “We have for once learnt to see the great events of world history from below, from the perspective of the outcast, the suspects, the maltreated, the powerless, the oppressed, the reviled – in short, from the perspective of those who suffer.” Here is the “more rewarding principle for exploring the world in thought and action than personal good fortune.”

4. With a shrug of their shoulders, conservatives love to quote the text, “You always have the poor with you” (Mark 14:7), as if poverty were an order of creation (cf. “the rich man in his castle, / the poor man at his gate”), and there is nothing we can – or should – do about it. But Jesus was not being cynical, or even realistic, about the inevitability of an excluded underclass, rather he was reminding his disciples where they will be found if they are faithful – among the poor and oppressed.

5. The point is not that the poor and oppressed have a monopoly on virtue, let alone that they are an elect group, rather it is simply that they are the ones who get screwed – and God doesn’t like people getting screwed. So God sends his servant Moses, his spokesmen the prophets, and finally his Son Jesus, their Big Brother, to take care of the bullies, though he fights with his mouth not his fists. Not, of course, that God loves the oppressor any less than he loves the oppressed; indeed his rescue mission is to liberate them both, the latter from their humiliation and suffering, and the former from their pride and violence.

Read the other 5 propositions….

Woo Hoo….more N.T. Wright

posted:  28:03:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Church, theology, N. T. Wright, Eschatology

Here are some more links for the talks by N. T. Wright

St. John’s

Church Of The Holy Spirit

Have fun!

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Dispensationalists and Premillennialists and Preterists, OH MY!

posted:  23:03:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Church, theology, Eschatology

So, Through a series of discussions here, here, and via email, the question seems to be “what are Jamie’s eschatological beliefs?” Well, well, wouldn’t we ALL like to know the answers to this question.

I have taken to reading blogs that are written by well trained theologians. A theologian I am not. Theology has only recently grabbed my interest and boy, I’m hooked. I am fascinated. Why have I not been taught this before? Why is that the average Jane (or Joe) in the pew isn’t encouraged to explore the width and breadth and beauty of the different interpretations of Scripture? Why have I always been taught that people who hold different interpretations of Scripture are just wrong, (and probably going straight to hell) instead of being taught the scriptural basis for WHY they believe the way they believe.

Thanks to Virgil, I am exploring preterism. (And Virgil, I think I’m leaning towards a partial preteristic view….but that remains to be seen). Thanks to TA for enlightening me to the beauty of reformed theology (even when I pushed back hard). Thanks to Scot McKnight for putting brilliant, sensitive and thoughtful words to my current frustrations with the evangelical church. Thanks to Rob Bell to helping me understand the Gospel in a more holistic sense. Thanks to NT Wright for helping me understand that “Heaven’s nice, but it’s not the end of the world.” Thanks to people like Phil, John and Molly for showing me what it looks like to come out of one set of theological beliefs, into another. Perhaps not unscathed, but stronger and loving Jesus more. To Brian McLaren for showing me what a generous orthodoxy might look like.

There is so much to learn about why people believe these different views. The Church Universal is exciting and intriguing. All this to say, that I’m still not sure what my eschatological beliefs are, BUT I’m questioning people, I’m searching the Scriptures, and I’m seeking God for the answers. While I’ve been frustrated and hurt by the local church, I’m discovering that the Church (both visible and invisible) is beautiful.

Quick thoughtful read on “The Rapture”

posted:  21:03:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Blogosphere, theology, Eschatology

Bop over to my friend, TA’s blog to read a thoughtful post entitled “Why I cannot support the rapture theory.”

Bell In January, Wright In March….

posted:  13:03:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  theology

Even when things are not ideal, there sure are little places of grace. I was fortunate enough to travel to Grand Rapids in January to hear Rob Bell speak at the Isn’t She Beautiful conference. It was absolutely magnificent. This week, N. T. Wright is coming to my little town and speaking this weekend. Here is the line-up….

THURSDAY, MARCH 15

6 PM, “Apocalypse and the Beauty of God”

8 PM, “The Gospel and Our Culture”

FRIDAY, MARCH 16TH

7 PM “Did Jesus Really Rise From the Dead?”

SATURDAY, MARCH 17TH

9 AM “Resurrection and the Future of the World”

11 AM “Resurrection and the Task of the Church”

There will be time for questions after each lecture.

SUNDAY, MARCH 18TH

11 AM “Resurrection and the Calling of the Christian”

Oh, joy joy. I’m so excited. I’ll be taking copious notes to blog by…..

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Saying I’m Sorry

posted:  02:02:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Church, Prayer, Poverty, Missional, Social Justice, Persecuted Church, Scripture, theology, Isn't She Beautiful

John Smulo says:

“I could develop a list of things to say sorry about that could go on until tomorrow. But over the last few weeks I’ve been thinking through a few different ways for the Christian community as a whole to say “we’re sorry”.”

If you’ve ever regreted the way you’ve acted, or things you’ve said “in the name of God”, take a look at John’s website and join the chorus of apologies.

Nonviolence

posted:  29:12:06,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  theology

Rob Bell quoted Mark Kurlanski’s book, Nonviolence: Twenty-Five Lessons from the History of a Dangerous Idea,
in a recent sermon.

“If someone were to come along who would not compromise, a rebel, who insisted on taking the only moral path, rejecting violence in all it’s forms. Such a person, would seem too menacing, that he would be killed, and after his death, he would be canonized or deified because a saint is less dangerous than a rebel.”

This book is a secular, historical overview of nonviolence. Wow. Is a saint less dangerous than a rebel? Mark Kurlanski was not referring to any one person, he was simply making a general observation. I just simply can not get past the truth of this statement. Have we lost the “rebel” nature of Jesus? Have we deified and sanitized Jesus until He is simply a really nice guy(God)? Or have we taken His rebel nature and twisted it so that we can justify our own violent natures? Or both?

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Salvation from what?

posted:  29:11:06,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  God, Christianity, Church, Faith, theology

In His Big Grip » Blog Archive » Salvation From What?

John Turner has started an interesting discussion on his blog about salvation. Should be interesting to see the discussion.

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