becoming

the trail of a family becoming

Do nothing

Yes, let’s make it looks like we are doing something about ACNA, by making sure nothing actually happens.

Jackie and her E Minor

Don’t know why, but I thought of her today. She would have been 65 years old on January 26 of this year.

Jacqueline du Pre, and her Elgar’s E Minor… who can forget?

Read any interesting stuff lately?

My next book-purchase is coming. Any recommendation from you this time? Read anything interesting lately?

Let me know.

Fear of Theosis

Read an interesting post today about Theosis, and our fear of the concept and hesitation of using that word):

Why are so many Protestants afraid of theosis? This is the term, used primarily in the Eastern Christian tradition but now enjoying a revival more widely, for becoming “partakers of the divine nature” (2 Peter): becoming like God, a process that begins now and culminates in eschatological glory. Other terms for theosis are deification, divinization, and christification. We come to share in God’s life especially God’s holiness, and immortality. Some of us even argue that there is a spirituality of theosis in Paul…

Michael Gorman then listed 5 common objections with his response in each case. Read them here.

[link | HT: New Testament Perspectives]

iDoubt

It’s been a couple weeks since my last entry. Was in AMiA 10th anniversary Winter Conference last week which is awesome and quite refreshing.

Catching up with the happenings around blogsphere, my first question is this:

Is it just me, or is the iPad a bigger version of the iPhone (minus the phone part)?

Am I the only one that is completely NOT sold as to why we need an iPad at all?

Anyone?

Blomberg on Robertson re: Haiti

Craig Blomberg on Pat Robertson’s recent comment on Haiti:

… One of the most discouraging things about high-profile individuals whose misguided views on disasters are widely cited is the scorn that skeptics and critics subsequently unleash with renewed vigor against Christians more generally. If one’s goal really is for the lost to repent, this kind of pontification after a disaster proves dramatically counterproductive.

What Robertson needs to do, according to Jesus—what we all need to do—is take personal stock of our own lives, not those of anyone else, and ask what we need to repent of. Are we taking for granted that we have tomorrow to make amends, when we really know we can’t know that for sure?

[link: Denver Seminary]

See also Donald Miller’s remarks.

The Golden Canon Leadership Book Awards

The Golden Canon Leadership Book Awards

Two things in short supply for nearly every church leader—time and money. Unfortunately both are necessary if we hope to buy and read the numerous books intended to help us in our work. That is why Leadership created the Golden Canon, the ten books of 2009 most valuable for church leaders. The winners were selected by a diverse group of more than 100 pastors and leaders, including our contributing editors, who selected the best books in two categories: The Leader’s Outer Life, and The Leader’s Inner Life. We hope this list contributes to your development as a leader, and assists you in determining where to invest your finite hours and dollars.

The Leader’s Inner life
BEST OF THE BEST
Knowing Christ Today
Why we can trust spiritual knowledge
by Dallas Willard (HarperOne)

“Every leader from elder boards on down ought to be revolutionized by this book. Its correctives are timely, needed, and redemptive.” —Sarah Sumner

The Leader’s Outer life
BEST OF THE BEST
Deep Church
A third way beyond emerging and traditional
by Jim Belcher (IVP)

“Neither traditionalism nor emerging Christianity comes out unscathed. But Belcher’s analysis is fair and even. I hope all our future conversations about what divides us is done in the spirit of Deep Church, which reminds us at every turn what unites us: the gospel of Jesus Christ.” —Brandon O’Brien

Read the whole list here.

[link: leadershipjournal.net]

Hauerwas on Death

“In the Middle Ages, what people feared, is what we want. They feared the sudden death. And they feared the sudden death because they wanted to have time to be reconciled with God, their enemies (who are usually their families), and the church. They wanted to have a lingering death, because what they feared was God. We just feared death. We just want to put it off.”

More good stuff @ the Work of the People.