We the Church must develop more self-confidence, not assuming ourselves merely one soul among many hoping to be infused into the Frankensteinian body of the State. We already have a body, a flesh in which we are living. We are the public Body of Christ, and as such we must continue to proclaim to the […]
Claim The Emerging Church has always been called a conversation, and it is generally always misunderstood by those trying to define it? Why a conversation? And why such misunderstanding? (See the recent call not to have a statement of faith, the reminder of EC as conversation, and a friendly diagnosis of potential pitfalls [see especially […]
the ‘theonomous self’, II
What’s it matter? Why is this important? Who cares about the theonomous self? Because it ought to effect how we think about and execute our liturgies, prayer, songs, and discipleship. The theonomous self could be seen to align more with heteronomous self, the self which is imposed, legislated, or given by anOther, as a Law. […]
the "theonomous self", I
I recently came across a concept that perfectly describes what I’ve been after concerning a sacramental subjectivity: the theonomous self. The question for me is how, beyond modern autonomous subjects, and the postmodern proliferation of subjectivities (or subject positions), can we conceive of the Christian ‘subject’ in relation to Christ, through the Spirit, to the […]
christians and the political
here is something that I ran across earlier this week and thought I should comment on. The article is from NYT : Christ Among the Partisans here are my thoughts on it. This debate within the EC and among evangelicals, and even those for/against the Hauerwasian mafia (or so called sectarians) is still raging, but […]
out until march
on human rights
A response to a comments from the previous post (and me trying on some ideas) Gordon (and everyone else) , I definitely understand you point, which is first and foremost a theological point about the nature of human beings. And while i would agree with the drift of you response, I would have to say […]
Free of Charge: by Miroslav Volf
Chapters 1: God the Giver (For those wanting my commentary and not the summary, skip to the bottom) “There is God. And there are images of God. And some people don’t see any difference between the two.” In Free of Charge: Giving and Forgiving in a Culture Stripped of Grace, Miroslav Volf attempts to separate […]