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Tim Limkeman

Alternative Paradigms of a Christian Response to Science Seven Patterns For Relating Sc... - 0 views

  • Postmodern culture involves the triumph of "perspectivalism" over "objective truth". 
  • Truth
  • Truth
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  • Truth
  • Andrew White, A History of the Warfare of  Science and Theology in Christendom (1896) (War metaphor presupposed an irreconcilable 'war')
  • John Draper's History of The Conflict Between Religion and Science (1874).
  • John Draper's History of The Conflict Between Religion and Science (1874).
  • Authentic Science
  • Colin Russell, Cross Currents; Interactions between Science and Faith (1985).
  • Is reconciliation between 'scientific method' and 'Christian faith' possible?
  • Science is a human endeavor to describe and understand the physical universe
  • Reijer Hooykass, Religion and The Rise of Science (1972).  Stanley Jaki, The Road of Science and Ways of God (1978). 
  • The history of scientific development exposes at least Seven Patterns for relating Science and Theology.
  • A fundamental question is: can those of us who have made a fundamental commitment to Jesus Christ live a consistent life in the context of a secularistic scientifically oriented world?
  • To say that science is a way of knowing is to deny that science is the way of knowing—True Truth
  • scientism
  • positivism
  • Reality
  • Truth is that which corresponds to reality
  • Science cannot provide answers to questions of ultimate meaning, purpose and primary causes and (2) there are insights into reality that cannot be obtained by scientific by scientific investigation.
  • Evidence acceptable as scientific must be accessible to public testing. 
  • Authentic Christianity
Tim Limkeman

"Science without Religion Is Lame, Religion without Science Is Blind" - Softpedia - 1 views

  • Albert Einstein wrote in his letter to philosopher Eric Gutkind
  • explains Einstein's personal beliefs regarding religion and the Jewish people
  • The letter states pretty clearly that Einstein was by no means a religious person - in fact, the great physicist saw religion as no more than a "childish superstition".
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  • "The word god is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honorable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish. No interpretation no matter how subtle can (for me) change this", Einstein wrote.
  • Although, neither Einstein nor his parents were religious people, he did in fact attend the Catholic primary school. But at the age of 12 he was already questioning the truth of the stories written in the Bible. "The consequence was a positively fanatic orgy of freethinking coupled with the impression that youth is being deceived by the state through lies; it was a crushing impression", Einstein wrote.
  • Einstein may have not believed in God, but he felt that faith was a must.
  • God does not throw dice",
  • This belief in faith is probably also why his position towards religion was often misinterpreted.
  • Like other great scientists he does not fit the boxes in which popular polemicists like to pigeonhole him.
  • John Brook from the Oxford University, leading expert on Albert Einstein.
  • Einstein was often associated with atheism because of his views on conventional religion, but he never liked being called an atheist.
Tim Limkeman

Clarification on Confession | Stand to Reason - 0 views

  • First. if this verse teaches that we are supposed to confess our sins on an ongoing basis as Christians, then it also teaches that it is necessary to confess in order to be forgiven. If we don't confess, then we aren't forgiven. Those are the words of the text.
  • Christians are clearly in view here because he used the endearment "little children"--the secure antidote for sin is the advocacy of Jesus acting as a defense counselor for us
  • We have clear teaching in a number of places in the New Testament that our forgiveness is a one time event, that it's done when we confess that Jesus is our Lord, when Jesus comes into our life we enter into eternal life, that our sins and transgressions God remembers no more,
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  • then how is that we can interpret 1 John 1:9 that we must confess in order to be forgiven if, in fact, we are forgiven already?
  • The word fellowship when applied between God and man in the New Testament is synonymous with salvation.
  • This first section is strongly evangelistic, it is addressing the non-Christian contingent
  • God is faithful to bring that sin to our awareness through conviction in our hearts by the Holy Spirit (John 16:8)
  •  
    Gregory Kukl
Tim Limkeman

4. Structure and Purpose of 1 John | Bible.org - 0 views

  • the structure of 1 John
  • reflect on just how different this “letter” is, especially in comparison with contemporary examples of letters and with 2 and 3 John (both of which exhibit almost all the characteristics of first century a.d. letters).
  • Most of the sentences in Greek have a very simple syntactical structure and the lack of connective conjunctions is often striking.
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  • an extremely convoluted internal structure which has plagued interpreters for centuries.
  • Attempts to trace a consecutive argument throughout 1 John have never succeeded. For the convenience of a commentator and his readers, it is possible to present such an analysis of the epistle as is given on pp. 31 f., but this does not imply that the author himself worked to an organized plan.
  • At best we can distinguish three main courses of thought: the first (1.5-2.27), which has two main themes, ethical (walking in light) and Christological (confessing Jesus as the Christ); the second (2.28-4.6), which repeats the ethical and Christological themes with variations; the third (4.7-5.12) where the same two essential themes are presented as love and faith and shown to be inseparable and indispensable products of life in Christ.41
  • the two main themes of walking in light and confessing Jesus as the Christ are repeated throughout all the sections.
Tim Limkeman

TROJAN HORSES ENTER OUR TRANSCENDENTLESS CULTURE - 0 views

  • ignostics.”  They simply do not know what we are talking about!
  • Our problem in reaching the lost West is compounded by the fact that the West has been effectively “inoculated” from being able to hear the real thing.  Most in the West have been exposed to a diluted and/or distorted version of Christianity.
  • Hunter defines secularization as “the withdrawal of whole areas of life, thought, and activity from the control or influence of the Church” (pp. 25-26). 
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  • Renaissance
  • It created the cultural soil out of which humanism would emerge as a vital competitor for Christian truth claims and ethics.
  • Reformation – Christendom continued to fragment with the advent of the Protestant Reformation
  • the “Church’s pathological pattern of responses to these events—responses that undermined the Church’s credibility and distanced the people from her witness. . . The Church’s behavior (i.e. in relationship to Science mentioned above? Made it appear to be the enemy of thought, rationality, and truth” (p. 29). 
  • This killed Christendom as a political unity.  War led ultimately to disillusionment with the Church’s God. 
  • Science challenged Christendom’s prescientific assumptions about the universe and human life.  The Church’s pigheaded refusal to acknowledge the legitimate truth claims of science (such as the position of the earth in the universe system) caused the Church to lose credibility with the thinking world.
  • Enlightenment escalated the secularization process.  It is such a big part of secularization that many writers treat it like the only cause.  The Enlightenment mood taught that people were intrinsically good and reasonable, but environment makes them less good and reasonable.  Is this the breeding ground for the current tidal wave of “victim mentality?”
  • Urbanization is the migration of people from the rural, farming community to the mass of people joined in the “secular city.”
  • Rise of Nationalism
  • Church’s failure to respond properly to those events. 
  • Martin Marty suggests that secularity as “the schism between the Church and western culture has taken at least three different forms.”
  • Controlled Secularity – This form is characteristically found in the United States where Christianity has been distorted into a folk religion which typically deifies traditional American values.  
  • Kierkegaard, who said, “When everybody is a Christian, nobody is a Christian.”  (p. 33)  
  • Christian movement’s first three centuries, four objectives had to be achieved in order for Christianity to be communicated:  (1)  People needed to be informed and educated as to the Church’s truth claims;  (2)  In the midst of a hostile populace, people had to be influenced;  (3)  In the midst of a diverse religious atmosphere, people had to be convinced that at the last Christianity was plausible and at the best true; (4)  Since people have to willingly choose to enter the Kingdom, people had to be invited to adopt the Christian faith as their own (p. 35).
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