
Happily Ever Affirmed (Guest Post by Lakin Saucedo)
“I want adventure in the great, wide somewhere I want it more than I can tell And for once it … Continue reading Happily Ever Affirmed (Guest Post by Lakin Saucedo)
“I want adventure in the great, wide somewhere I want it more than I can tell And for once it … Continue reading Happily Ever Affirmed (Guest Post by Lakin Saucedo)
Anyone who follows me on Twitter or Facebook is by now familiar with my saying: Everyone is polite and rational … Continue reading Confessions: Anti-LGBT Rhetoric and the Dynamics of Abuse in Evangelical Christianity
On April 21, 2016, the provost and executive vice president of Westminster Theological Seminary, Jeffrey K. Jue, wrote of his … Continue reading 5 Reasons Not to Support New Calvinism
Dr. Ruth Tucker has written a new book, Black and White Bible, Black and Blue Wife. I have already written … Continue reading A Q&A with Dr. Ruth Tucker
Mark Driscoll is about to establish a new church in Phoenix, he is engaging in regular public speaking gigs, but the question is, “Is there any fruit of repentance evident in his life?” Continue reading Fruit? (A Mark Driscoll Post)
When considering the words and actions of Larycia Hawkins, what ought to be out paradigm for critique? Continue reading to see my proposition. Continue reading Larycia Hawkins and the Christ of God
Often, Christian leaders will address difficult topics by telling us there is one absolute and unquestionable answer. Here I dare to ask, “Is anything is truly unquestionable?” Continue reading Rhetorical Questions: Al Mohler
When read both in the context of ancient Israelite history and through the intertextual lens of the NT, 20th-21st century concerns of modern evangelicals for preserving their own moral privilege by arguing for an inerrant text which condemns Homosexuality, falls apart. Such arguments are exposed as attempts to establish “self” as normative ensuring there is a denigrated “other” to compare with. They feed into the artificial categories of gender binary and traditional marriage, the attempt to preserve the power of a male elite by carefully maintaining the boundaries of christian patriarchy. Flying under banners such as complementarity and “biblical manhood/womanhood”, inerrancy allows those in power to insist their teachings cannot be rejected without rejecting the Gospel of Christ as well. Continue reading Sodomy (or How I learned to Love my Neighbor)
For me, the story of the Flood found in Genesis 6-9 is one of the most challenging and perplexing in all of Scripture. It challenges our preconceptions, defies our often simplistic hermeneutics, and undermines attempts to formulate propositional, systematized theological statements. While this story is often relegated to Sunday School, I suggest we put aside our pictures of fuzzy, smiling animals on a houseboat and take up the task of engaging God through the story he inspired. Continue reading Flood
A Complementarianism reading of Scripture decentralizes Yahweh/Jesus in the biblical narrative and insists everything must be read through the lens of a universal gender binary. I would define this as idolatry, anthropotheism at its most sinister. Continue reading Of Order and Complements