Relevant Generation

A Theological Community

July 26, 2007

Challies Dot Com Reviews “Letter to a Christian Nation”

Tim Challies offers a concise review of Sam Harris’ new book, “Letter to a Christian Nation.”

July 19, 2007

Jesus is ‘Like an Energy’

In an article with christianitytoday.com, Sinead O’Conner speak of her “Christianity” and how that has influenced her new “Christian album.” Still famous for ripping a picture of the Pope on Saturday Night Live, she speaks in the interview of what appears to be generic theism. When asked if Jesus is the one way, truth, and life, she responds, “I believe that God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit and that whole kind of thing is one particular energy. If you want a put a picture of a body on it, then fine. But I call it an energy. Some people paint a picture of Jesus. But to me, he’s an energy. That energy is the same no matter where you are in the world or whose side you’re on. If you call it Allah or you call it God or you call it Buddha, it’s all the same. I thing God saves everybody whether they want to be saved or not. So when we die, we’re all going home.”

July 03, 2007

Is God Wild at Heart?

This is a review written on thresurgence.com by Randy Stinson.

Whenever a book written for men (notoriously known for their lack of interest in reading) sells 500,000 copies, you can be sure that it has made a clear connection. There is a lot that is right with John Eldredge’s Wild at Heart, and with his compelling style of writing it is no surprise that thousands of men all over the country have been drawn to it. Eldredge has called attention to some problems with which most men seem to intuitively resonate:

  1. Our culture (and even our churches) has adopted a strategy that facilitates the feminization of men.
  2. Masculinity, with its predilection to adventure, rowdiness, and risk has become a condition to be cured.
  3. Consequently, boys are in big trouble. School systems and churches have not taken the unique features of masculinity into consideration when designing curriculum or programs.
  4. Our culture, intent on emasculating its boys, has produced a huge sense of withdrawal and boredom from its men.
  5. As disconcerting as it may be to mothers everywhere, masculinity can only be imparted by masculinity. In other words, a young boy is never really sure he has become a man until another man, or group of men, tells him so.
  6. Sadly, many, if not most, men have abdicated this responsibility.
  7. Every man needs a battle for which he can live and die.

Eldredge clearly knows how to write to men and by the testimonies of many, he has achieved one of his objectives, which is to give men permission to be men. With all of the good insights Eldredge offers in this book, it is actually a little painful to mention two of what should be considered very significant problems which undermine the entire book.

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