Cornhole Extravaganza

Two years ago, my Fuller Seminary D.Min. cohort made mincemeat of a motley collection of bums from the Claremont School of Theology, taking the Seminary Cornhole Championship. Now Tripp Fuller and his team from CST has challenged us to a rematch, which will commence on a gorgeous rooftop in Malibu, California on Tuesday night. Being that cornhole is the ultimate spectator sport, and that you’ll get to see me throw bags with Barry Taylor, you should think about attending. $15 gets you entrance and beer, and to be in the audience for a taping of Homebrewed Christianity. There are only 50 tickets available. Hope to see you there.

BUY TICKETS HERE

Tilting at (Real) Theological Windmills

Tripp "Sancho Panza" Fuller and Philip "Don Quixote" Clayton, by Dave Huth

If there’s a Don Quixote of theology, it may be Philip Clayton, in that he attacks orthodoxies with an evangelical zeal rarely found in liberal and progressive ecclesial circles.  Tripp Fuller, Clayton’s erstwhile doctoral student and cornhole zealot, shares the wry, earthy wit of Quixote’s sidekick, Sancho Panza.  I first made this allusion in the preface to Transforming Christian Theology: For Church and Society, the book penned by Clayton and Fuller, and they proved true to these characterizations last week at Theology after Google.

My thanks to them for bringing together this event.  In many ways, it felt like an early emergent event, in that the quality and curiosity of all participants — those in front, and those in the audience — was uncommonly high.  And also, because of that quality, the participants walked away somewhat disappointed.  That’s because this was a demanding group, and because events, by their nature are bound to disappoint.  Someone’s constituency is always underrepresented; someone else’s ego not sufficiently stroked; and someone else is convinced they could have given a superior presentation (which surely they could have).

For these reasons, it’s a difficult task to produce an event — more difficult, I’ll say, than producing something more static, like an article or a book (or a blog post!).  So, I write to publicly express my gratitude to Don and Sancho for sharpening their lances and throwing a great party last week.  Bravo!  (And thanks to Dave Huth for taking me up on the challenge of the above illustration!)

Theology After Google

Starting tonight, I’ll be participating in (and co-hosting) Theology After Google, part of the Transforming Theology Project at Claremont School of Theology.  You can watch much of it live on UStream.  You can also follow our Twitter stream:

#tag10

Theology After Google

I’m going to be part of a very cool gathering, Theology After Google, March 10-12, 2010, in Claremont, California with such luminaries as Philip Clayton, Spencer Burke, John Franke, Helene Slessarev-Jamir, Adam Walker Cleveland, Bob Cornwall, Dwight Friesen, Jon Irvine, Glen Stassen, Tripp Fuller, and Ryan Parker.  Philip recently interviewed me via Skype and has posted it at the Transforming Theology site:

Books I've Worked On Recently – Part Two

Philip Clayton

Philip Clayton

I’ve had the great opportunity in the last couple years to get to know Philip Clayton and his work.  Philip, professor of theology at Claremont School of Theology, has been on quite a theological journey himself.  He grew up and was educated at Westmont College as an evangelical’s evangelical.  He went on to get graduate work in religion, philosophy, and science, and studied under one of the theological giants of the 20th century, Wolfhart Pannenberg.

More recently, I think that Philip’s evangelical tendencies have been getting the better of him — and by that I mean the passion to evangelize, not the conservative theology.  He’s on a quest for progressive theology (once again) to become a major force in the public face of Christianity.  To that end, he’s won grants, organized conferences, and written a first book on this subject. These all fall under the umbrella of the Transforming Theology Project.  (If you want a primer on his academic work, read Adventures in the Spirit: God, World, Divine Action or Mind and Emergence: From Quantum to Consciousness).

The most recent book he wrote along with homebrewer Tripp Fuller, and it’s their

Transforming Christian Theology for Church and Society

Transforming Christian Theology for Church and Society

manifesto for progressive theologians to come out of the closet and publicly proclaim their faith and their beliefs. It’s called, Transforming Christian Theology: For Church and Society. They asked me to write the foreword, which I’ve posted after the jump.

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