2011-08-18T19:27:33-05:00

This is an addendum to my recent post “The Kingdom of God as critical principle.”  Some have asked me to elaborate on the millennial kingdom. There is no single premillennial view of the details of the thousand year reign of Christ on earth.  For the most recent discussion of historic premillennialism that compares and contrasts it with dispensational premillennialism see The Case for Historic Premillennialism: An Alternative to “Left Behind” Eschatology edited by Craig L. Blomberg and Sung Wook Chung... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:33-05:00

Underlying everything I wrote about the distinction between “justifiable” and “just” in my previous post is my belief that the coming Kingdom of God on earth is the Christian’s and the churches’ critical principle for discerning whether something (such as a violent act) can be celebrated. I have adopted Isaac Watts’ 1793 hymn as my anthem for the coming messianic Kingdom on earth: Jesus shall reign where’er the sun Does his successive journeys run; His kingdom stretch from shore to... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:33-05:00

Several people have asked me to clarify what I mean when I say that an act may be “justifiable” but not “just.”  The background is my post about the killing of bin Laden which I suggested might be justifiable but not just.  Someone said that it is okay to celebrate bin Laden’s death (something I denied) so long as one is celebrating the justice in it and not the killing per se.  I cannot bring myself to celebrate something that... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:33-05:00

I realize I’m treading on dangerous ground here.  And everyone who knows my Anabaptist tendencies will not be surprised.  Nor will those who know my Niebuhrian tendencies.  That’s right–I’m a person caught in a paradoxical mindset torn between John Howard Yoder and Reinhold Niebuhr!  I tend to think every reflective Christian ends up there. One thing Yoder (Anabaptist) and Niebuhr (Christian realist) would agree on is that Christians should never celebrate killing–however justified it may be.  Anabaptists like Yoder probably... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:34-05:00

I’ve been reading a new book by my LDS acquaintance Robert (Bob) Millet who teaches religion at Brigham Young University.  Because I know he prefers to be called a Latter Day Saint (LDS) that’s what I’ll call him here.  The book is Modern Mormonism: Myths and Realities (Greg Kofford Books).  Now, you’ll have to know a little of my own background and Bob’s to understand why I have to be open to his argument that LDSers are Christians. Bob begins... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:34-05:00

Some have questioned whether anything like the satisfaction or penal substitution theories of the atonement can be found before Anselm.  I have asserted they can be. Hear Athanasius in De Incarnatione (On the Incarnation of the Word) (and these are only two selected quotations out of many possible ones): “And so it was that two marvels came to pass at once, that the death of all was accomplished in the Lord’s body, and that death and corruption were wholly done... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:34-05:00

Some comments here are so good that I want to make them posts.  I hope “Robert” won’t mind if I do that with his recent comment about God abiding by rules in his interactions with the world.  This is simply another way of saying God is sovereign over his sovereignty.  He can choose how his sovereignty will be exercised.  Only such an explanation (as given by Robert below) explains why God is not arbitrary.  Here is Robert’s comment in response... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:34-05:00

According to news reports, David Wilkerson, author of The Cross and the Switchblade, died in a car accident in Texas on Wednesday, April 27.  May he find peace and bliss in paradise with his Lord. When I was a Pentecostal preacher’s kid and a student in a very secularized high school (where I was the object of much ridicule for being openly a believer) David Wilkerson’s book and the movie based on it gave me great comfort and some ammunition. ... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:34-05:00

Some students (current and former) and I have been reading and discussing a new book entitled Church in the Present Tense: A Candid Look at What’s Emerging by Scot McKnight, Peter Rollins, Kevin Corcoran (editor) and Jason Clark (Brazos Press).  It’s an enlightening and stimulating volume of essays related to the concept of “emerging church.” My favorite essay so far is by Jason Clark who is coordinator of the Emergent UK online resource network, pastor of Vineyard Church Sutton (UK) and... Read more

2011-08-18T19:27:34-05:00

It was my intention to move on from the controversy about capital punishment that resulted from my post “Capital punishment is sin.”  However, I just viewed Saturday evening’s episode of the TV show “48 Hours” (April 23).  (I wasn’t able to watch it when it aired because we attended a wonderful Easter concert that included many songs about the cross and the atonement as well as the resurrection.  We tried not to be distracted by the fact that we were... Read more




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