Wright on Improvisation

Wesley Vander Lugt reviews N. T. Wright’s new book, Scripture and the Authority of God: How to Read the Bible Today at Jesus Creed.  Wes is doing his Ph.D. in theology at the University of St. Andrews and considers matters related to improvisation and Christian identity at Reflaction. Good stuff, Wes!

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Wes Anderson, Fear, and Fathers Day

I love Wes Anderson films.  I’m captivated by the fantastical worlds he creates, the quirky characters, and the incomparable soundtracks. I’ve always been slightly puzzled by this, however, since a troubled father-son relationship drives each of his narratives. In Rushmore, Max Fischer is ashamed of his father and so adopts Herman Blume as a sort […]

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The Cross & the New World

“…in the way of the Cross, in the offering of His life, and in His death, the radical nature of the redemption which He brings and the utter novelty of the world which He proclaims are first brought to light.” Barth, The Epistle to the Romans, pp. 105-106.

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The Follies of Idolatry

Paul says in Romans 1:21 that humanity “became futile in their speculations, and their foolish heart was darkened.  Professing to be wise, they became fools…” He then ties this folly directly to idolatry.  Paul’s vision of idolatry is complex and rich.  It involves at least two perversions. First, it perverts humanity’s role within creation in […]

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CEB on Faith

I’ve been dipping into the Common English Bible a bit and I really like the way it has translated hupakoēn pisteōs in Romans 1:5 and 16:26.  They render the phrase as “faithful obedience,” so that Paul’s apostleship “was to bring all Gentiles to faithful obedience for his name’s sake.” Further, they’ve got “faithfulness” throughout the […]

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Barth & Kierkegaard on the ‘Otherness’ of the Gospel

Barth’s Romans commentary is loaded with broadsides against the church’s domestication of the gospel, making it just another worldly commodity.  Barth quotes Kierkegaard: “Remove from the Christian Religion, as Christendom has done, its ability to shock, and Christianity . . . is altogether destroyed.  It then becomes a tiny superficial thing, capable neither of inflicting […]

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Celebrity & Cruciformity

While packing up my office I came across my copy of Daniel Boorstin’s classic The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America.  It’s an early account and critique of the rise of a new kind of advertising since the late 19th century.  Decades ahead of its time (it was first published in 1962) it winsomely […]

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Hijacking Spiritual Gifts

Paul says the following to the Roman church(es): “I long to see you so that I may impart some spiritual gift to you, that you may be established; that is, that I may be encouraged together with you, among you—each of us by the other’s faith, both yours and mine” (1:11-12). I found two things […]

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Radical Gospel Solidarity

I’m teaching a two-week course on Romans, so I’m dipping back into Barth’s commentary here and there. On Paul’s barrier-destroying gospel: “God can be known only when those of the highest rank regard suffering with the whole social order of their age and bearing its heavy burden as the noblest achievement of which they are […]

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Oliver “The Enforcer” Crisp to Fuller

Knowing how this might upset trans-Atlantic relations, Her Majesty’s Special Forces asked me to keep a lid on this for a while.  It’s apparently out, however, that Oliver Crisp is joining the faculty at Fuller Theological Seminary. Crisp’s unique brand of bare-knuckle theological brawling is well-known, especially his treatments of Jonathan Edwards and Christology.  Less […]

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