Theology & Sport

I love sports and love talking about sports.  I follow several of them quite closely and have found that it’s an area of human experience ripe for theological reflection. It’s particularly enlightening to relate justification by faith to sport.  This has to do with the character of sport as both serious and unserious. It’s intuitive […]

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The Gospel According to Barth

“[The Gospel] speaks of the Creator who shall be our Redeemer and of the Redeemer who is our Creator.  It is pregnant with our complete conversion; for it announces the transformation of our creatureliness into freedom.  It proclaims the forgiveness of our sins, the victory of life over death, in fact, the restoration of everything […]

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The Gospel’s Devastation and Renewal

Barth is doing something quite unique in his Romans commentary.  He draws upon Romans as Scripture to do in his own day what Paul’s text did in its original situation.  He’s not merely trotting out the exegetical details so that Paul’s text lies safely “back there” in the first century.  The exegesis is indeed essential, […]

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Athlete, Know Thyself!

I’m always fascinated by athletes’ self-perception.  It’s a rare person who has a sober and accurate self-conception, but the challenge of self-knowledge for athletes is greatly multiplied. Most professional athletes grow up with excessive adulation.  Their handlers make a living by stroking their client’s ego.  But the most deceptive factor is the relationship of age-related […]

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Being Confused with Barth

Despite attempts to fix it, the Amazon.com page for my Paul book continues to revert to a description of Barth’s Dogmatics.  I’m sure this is due to Amazon’s inability to distinguish between the power of Barth and my interpretation of Paul.  Delusions aside, I just hope he’d be kinder to me than he is in […]

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Karl Barth’s Romans Commentary

I begin teaching Romans on Monday.  Looking back through Barth’s commentary reminds me of its devasting and renewing power.  He powerfully employs dialectic and paradox to speak of God, Jesus, the gospel, the cross, and faith. A paradox of the cruciform God: “God gives life only through death” (p. 105). A paradox of the cross: “The cross is […]

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Sarah’s Birthday

Sarah and I went to Seattle last week for her birthday and had an absolutely lovely time.  Just a few highlights: We drank our morning coffee at Le Panier and watched the stalls open up at Pike Place Market.  We ate lunch at Matt’s in the Market, where I had the best burger of my […]

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First Audience(s) of the New Testament

The documents of the NT, with a few exceptions, are addressed to communities and not to individuals.  Many of us know this and it may not be too shocking, but the significances of this reality must continue to transform how we envision Christian identity. Nobody in the first century had a Bible.  Most people in […]

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On Coaching Little League Baseball

I grew up playing and enjoying hockey, football, basketball, and baseball, but I was fascinated by and absorbed with baseball.  I studied how to throw different pitches, read all I could on the history of the game and its many colorful characters, poured over strategies and the rules of the game, and spent countless hours […]

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Hijacking the American Revolution

Jill Lepore’s brilliant book, The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle over American History (Princeton University Press, 2010), sparked some fascinating dinner table conversations over the last few months on the current political landscape in America, manipulative public rhetoric, naked grabs for power, the perils of unbound ambition, and how […]

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