2010-01-25T10:29:00-05:00

JohnDave Medina has been reading my first book, John’s Apologetic Christology and shares some thoughts and quotes. . Read more

2010-01-25T10:25:00-05:00

It is rather dismaying to find one of my local representatives, Rep. Vanessa Summers, being harrassed and maligned by other Christians because she wants to ensure that even religiously-affiliated child care centers are held to the same basic standards of best practices as all other such institutions. The proposed legislation is available online, and I for one can’t figure out why anyone would oppose it, unless they would put the inconvenience of having to meet these minimal standards above the welfare of children... Read more

2010-01-24T19:49:00-05:00

Today the story of Elisha and the she-bears (2 Kings 2:23-25) came up in Sunday school class. Some people there hadn’t encountered the story before. It led to an interesting discussion about the fact that some use the rhetoric of “believing the whole Bible” even when they aren’t sure what it would mean to “believe in” such stories, or what to do with them. Later I found myself wondering why a God with the power to send bears to maul mockers... Read more

2010-01-22T20:17:00-05:00

A commenter on my recent post about the Documentary Hypothesis suggested a possible analogy to the activity of the redactor of the Pentateuch, namely Tatian’s Diatessaron, the first attempt to create a single life of Jesus from the four Gospels. I wonder whether the scenario of creating a single narrative from multiple sources, however unusual some aspects of it may seem in the context of typical ancient composition, is nevertheless a persistent recurrent phenomenon distinctive of the Biblical tradition, which perhaps more... Read more

2010-01-22T19:02:00-05:00

I heard Joshua Bell perform this piece as an encore on Live From Lincoln Center on PBS last night, and was reminded of hearing the amazing virtuoso Rachel Barton Pine perform the piece live. A quick search on YouTube turned up this recording of her performing the same piece, Henri Vieuxtemps’ Souvenir d’Amérique, op.17. If you don’t know it, you’ll recognize the sterotypically American tune it is based on, but I won’t spoil the surprise/fun for you. Enjoy! Read more

2010-01-22T13:14:00-05:00

Deirdre Good shared a link to an article about memory research, and mentions its relevance to (among other things) the ending of Mark’s Gospel. Despite my avid interest in that subject, the first thing that came to my mind was the subject of a class I taught today: the Documentary Hypothesis. On the one hand, everything we know about the production of ancient texts makes me resist the Documentary Hypothesis – the idea of an author copying a few lines from here... Read more

2010-01-22T10:28:00-05:00

I think I just had an “a-ha” moment regarding LOST – and I’m wondering whether I’ve had a flash of insight, a flash of misunderstanding, or am just noticing what is obvious to everyone. We’ve been so focused on the “resurrection” of John Locke this past season, that most fans have failed to connect this with the earlier “resurrection” of Christian Shephard. That the two are parallel or related has been indicated clearly: indeed, taking Locke back wearing Christian’s shoes... Read more

2010-01-21T16:17:00-05:00

None other than Damon Lindelof shared this on Twitter with the simple comment “Wow”: In other LOST tweeting, I came across a speculative timeline trying to connect the flashes (and accompanying shifts in time) from this past season with other things that happened on the show. Read more

2010-01-21T15:28:00-05:00

Two more blog entries related to religion and sci-fi came to my attention today. First, prophetsandpopstars reviewed The Gospel According to Lost. Second, The Onion applied the movie Enemy Mine to the Israel-Palestine conflict.. Read more

2010-01-21T14:34:00-05:00

I am grateful to Kris Komarnitsky for sending me a copy of his book Doubting Jesus’ Resurrection: What Happened in the Black Box?  For some, the title may seem appealing, while to others it may be disturbing, but when it comes to historical study, the simple fact is that there is no way for a historian not to doubt the resurrection – or to put it more precisely, a historian cannot but raise questions about the historical factuality of the... Read more

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