Archives For The Bible

Check out God or Godless on Amazon!

Check out God or Godless on Amazon!

Civil dialogue seems to be a thing of the past. More and more, we divide ourselves into camps, turn every issue into Us vs. Them. Pro-Life vs. Pro-Choice. Democrats and Republicans. Cubs vs. Cardinals. And increasingly in our culture, Christian vs. Atheist.

When we polarize our positions, we eliminate any real opportunity for dialog.

I understand why we end up polarized: the convictions we hold are strong and mean a lot to us. We deeply care about whatever position we’ve assumed. But in our passion, we often dehumanize the person who does not agree with us. An opponent becomes an enemy.

That’s why we need genuine, civil dialog. We need interactions that don’t forsake kindness and charity for truth. We must remember that engaging the Other violently, without respect to their personhood, experiences and positions is wrong no matter how right our positions may be.

We don’t have many examples of civil, truth-seeking dialog with the Other, especially in the realm of religion. Until now. Continue Reading…

42 Poster42 is the new biopic of Jackie Robinson, the first black man to play Major League Baseball. It’s a typical sports film in that it’s inspirational and feel-good. It’s also a typical race film in that it’s fairly heavy-handed. Even though 42 doesn’t look too hard to find a weakness in Robinson, neither does it shy away from portraying how brutally he suffered.

42 centers on the relationship between Brooklyn Dodgers owner Branch Rickey and Robinson. Rickey recruits Robinson as the key player in his plan to desegregate baseball. Rickey proves to be as shrewd a businessperson as he is a strong Christian.

Rickey’s faith drives how he conducts the business of baseball.

He’s Methodist. I’m Methodist. God‘s Methodist. There’s no problem.
– Rickey, talking about Robinson. Continue Reading…

This entry is part 10 of 10 in the series Venom

Download a PDF of the Prayer Vigil here.

“Prayer is not introspection.  It is not a scrupulous, inward-looking analysis of our own thoughts and feelings but is an attentiveness to the Presence of Love personified inviting us to an encounter.  Prayer is the presentation of our thoughts – reflective, as well as daydreams, and night dreams – to the One who receives them, sees them in the light of unconditional love, and responds to them with divine compassion.”  — Henri Nouwen, A Book of Hours

This is Holy Saturday, a time that lies between the shame and pain of Jesus’ death and the celebration and glory of Jesus’ resurrection. These prayers follow the traditional Holy Hours of the church, times when the faithful would take out of their days to pray and read Holy Scripture.

Use this to help guide you into prayer and meditation on God, who brought you to this point, who died that you might live, and who leads you into community and new life. Continue Reading…

Good Friday 2013

March 29, 2013 — Leave a comment
This entry is part 9 of 10 in the series Venom

Explore Other Messages:

Multiple Speakers - Mar 29, 2013

Good Friday 2013

More From "Venom"

Ash Wednesday 2013 Feb 13, 2013 Listen
The Runaround Feb 17, 2013 Listen
What's in a Name? Feb 24, 2013 Listen
God is Bigger Mar 3, 2013 Listen
Atonement Mar 10, 2013 Listen
Repentance Mar 17, 2013 Listen
Good Friday 2013 Mar 29, 2013 Listen

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Since the Garden, the Snake has stood for our worst impulses. In Christian art, the snake is our pride, our conviction we can get along without God. The Snake embodies our bent away from God, our conviction that our way is better.

The Snake features in a strange little story in Numbers. Israel is wandering in the wilderness because they didn’t trust God to take them into the Promised Land. And at this particular point, they’re asking to go back to Egypt, complaining about the food God is giving them to survive. So God sends venomous snakes among the people. The snakes bite them, they begin to die, so they ask their leader Moses to save them. They begin to repent of their Sin.

So God tells Moses to make a bronze snake, put it on a pole, and raise it up for everyone to see.

Once the people gaze on the image of the snake, the representation of the consequences of their Sin, their rebellion against God’s Way, they are saved. Continue Reading…

storymen_avatar3The StoryMen podcast I do with Matt Mikalatos and Clay Morgan put out our 10th episode today. Head over to the StoryMen page to check it out!

In this episode, we talk about Crowdsourcing, and how the Church should be taking note to recapture the spirit of the Body of Christ we see in the Scriptures. You’ll also learn:

  1. Our thoughts on History Channel’s The Bible 
  2. The stunning results of the first ever StoryMen live taste test
  3. One of the StoryMen’s unusual obsession with dust
  4. The shocking board game I don’t own

If you enjoy The StoryMen, you can help us out by liking us on Facebook, and by subscribing, rating or reviewing our podcast on iTunes.

Listen in and let us know what you think!

Click here to get "What We Talk About When We Talk About God" on Amazon!

Click here to get “What We Talk About When We Talk About God” on Amazon!

What We Talk About When We Talk About God (WWTAG) is the first book Rob Bell has written since Love Wins blew up the internet. Since then, Rob has stepped down from his position as Lead pastor at Mars Hill, the church he founded, and moved to the Los Angeles area.

Writing book reviews is always tricky. But when Rob Bell writes a book, that review is even harder because you almost have to write a review about Rob himself before you can talk about the book. Well, I’m not going to do that. I’m going to stick to the book itself. If you like Rob, you’ll probably like this book. If you don’t like Rob, I doubt you’ll like it. This review is for people who are more interested in God than Rob Bell.

WWTAG launches conversations about God into the twenty-first century. Continue Reading…

Click here to get this on Amazon!

Click here to get this on Amazon!

For anyone who’s ever tried seriously to read the Bible, the gap between our 21st century American culture and the ancient world of the Scriptures has proven to be very challenging, if not outright impossible. Plenty of earnest Christians have tried to understand the Scriptures only to be thwarted by the Levirate Law or unspoken rules of Honor and Shame.

Bible teachers know: there’s no easy bridge across the cultural divide. But finally there’s an excellent, accessible book that at least gives us some climbing rope.

Okay, you know what? Forget the whole chasm metaphor and just go get a copy of Misreading Scripture With Western Eyes by E. Randolph Richards and Brandon J. O’Brien. As the authors state early in the book,

The most powerful cultural values are those that go without being said. It is very hard to know what goes without being said in another culture. But often we are not even aware of what goes without being said in our own culture. This is why misunderstanding and misinterpretation happen…

Our goal is to raise this question: if our cultural context and assumptions can cause us to overlook a famine, what else do we fail to notice? [emphasis original]

It’s hard to overstate how important this statement is. Some of the worst (and most influential) theological systems in the West right now are built on supposedly ‘objective’ readings of the Bible that uphold a ‘plain reading’ of Scriptures. Randy and Brandon deftly expose how foolish such statements are.

Again and again, they demonstrating how huge are the gaps between what went without being said then and what goes without being said now.

Our different cultural assumptions can make reading the Bible intimidating.

Our different cultural assumptions can make reading the Bible intimidating.

Drawing on both personal and professional experiences in other cultures and as students of the Scriptures, Rand and Brandon move through three layers of cultural assumptions:

  1. “Surface” Differences: obvious problematic differences such as mores, ethnicity and language barriers.
  2. “Just Below the Surface”: less obvious cultural assumptions like individualism vs. collectivism, honor/shame vs. right/wrong and how we conceive of time.
  3. “Deep” Differences: assumptions so deeply embedded in our culture we can hardly imagine anyone thinking differently: the priority of relationships over rules, what counts as a vice or virtue, and the idea that the scriptures are mainly about me.

Each section is clear, concise and loaded with examples both from lived experiences and from the Scriptures.

One of the best tips? Don't read alone. The Bible was never intended to be read alone!

One of the best tips? The Bible was never intended to be read alone!

The greatest strength of the book is that each chapter ends with practical ways to begin to overcome reading “with Western eyes*”.  Though the authors are quick to warn that there’re no shortcuts, they offer guidelines that can and should become part and parcel of any serious student’s reading strategy.

As a teacher, I’ve often found myself struggling to explain how differently non-Western cultures see the world, and how differently we ought to be reading the Scriptures accordingly. Misreading Scripture With Western Eyes has already become my go-to teaching tool, and I’ve given out several copies to friends.

I wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone who wants to be a better student of the Bible. You don’t have to be be a bible scholar to enjoy this book, or to apply what you’ll learn. Misreading Scripture With Western Eyes is an indispensable tool in the interpreter’s utility belt!

Bottom Line: Anyone serious about reading and understanding the Bible should get this book and read it immediately. Even better, read it with a friend or five.

YOUR TURN: What are your biggest struggles in reading the Bible? What cultural assumptions have you uncovered in your own life?

*I would be remiss to mention that the authors take great care to acknowledge how inherently problematic the term “Western Eyes” is. They deserve to be commended for unpacking it as well as they do.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free for review purposes from the publisher. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Undead by Clay Morgan

Click to check out Undead on Amazon!

Unless you are Amish, you are probably aware that zombies are way in right now. Which is at least slightly weird since zombies aren’t even a little bit sexy. I mean, there’s not much you can do to glamorize the zombie apocalypse.

But Walking Dead is the biggest show on TV. The number of zombie novels might be outpacing teen vampire romance novels. (Also, that those are a thing? Truly horrifying.) Zombies are even getting attention from scholars.

Which begs the question, Why are zombies so “in” right now? Continue Reading…

Click here to get this book on Amazon!

Click here to get this book on Amazon!

Something you may not know about me: when I was growing up, I was the Apologetics Kid. Apologetics, by the way, is the fancy word for a “systematic argumentative discourse” which is the fancy way to say “defending Christianity”. I was really into Apologetics. As in I argued with my science teachers and my atheist friends. Loudly and repeatedly.

But somewhere along the way – probably sometime in college, I sort of gave up on Apologetics.

I realized that you can’t argue someone into a relationship with Jesus, and it just got harder and harder for me to see the point of Apologetics. I still maintained my belief that Christianity is rational – that it basically makes sense and is coherent. And I could still hold my own in conversations with people who don’t see the world the way I do.

I wondered: is there really any point to Apologetics? And then I found this wonderful book. Continue Reading…

The Politics of Communion

November 6, 2012 — 6 Comments

I had an interesting phone conversation last week.

Today, America will choose who will be President for the next four years. Our church building is a polling center. And we are participating in the Election Day Communion event.

These facts all mean that last week, I had to call our county’s Board of Election to figure out exactly what sorts of signs we were allowed to put up. And since we’re offering communion throughout the day, for voters to partake in after they vote, I wanted to be sure we weren’t violating any poll laws.

The person with whom I spoke (who was helpful and kind) essentially told me any political signs had to be 100 feet away from the entrances, but when it came to communion, we could do whatever we wanted.

The County Board of Elections clearly doesn’t consider receiving Communion to be a political event. Continue Reading…