From the perspective of hospitality, I may not agree with the taboos of Japanese culture, the rigors of animal rights vegans, or the Muslim fast, but I shall try to accommodate to each of these folks as I am able. So why wouldn't I likewise accommodate to Caitlyn Jenner and Miriam Knoppow?
I learned that psychopathy is a disorder which renders individuals utterly incapable of grasping moral principles of good and evil or right and wrong. Perhaps most disturbingly, the evidence suggested that psychopathy is untreatable.
Several different reactions were evoked upon hearing that John McCain reportedly does not want President Trump to attend his funeral. Some were appalled at the sheer bitterness of such a comment. Those who are devoted to God, however, felt deep sadness over apparent entrenched unforgiveness in the heart of someone who has not long to live.
Archbishop of Canterbury William Temple once observed, "when I pray coincidences happen, and when I do not pray coincidences do not happen." Many Christians can resonate with Temple's wry description of answered prayer. Skeptics ask, "What about all the time when you prayed and those 'coincidences' didn't happen?"
Over the last few decades, Christian apologetic defenses of the historicity of the New Testament have typically pursued a minimal facts approach according to which one seeks to establish a basic set of core claims about the life and death of Jesus which are most widely accepted by biblical scholars. The fact is that there are other apologetic strategies which offer a more robust historical defense of the New Testament documents.
Over the last couple months, I've heard the song "Reckless Love" played at two different churches. What should we make of the central claim that God's love is "reckless"?
Even if New Atheism no longer grabs the headlines, it has left behind a significant and very unfortunate legacy of incivility and anti-intellectualism. Incivility was always a New Atheist hallmark.
If segregating the congregation into special-interest services isn't the answer, how might we begin to change attitudes on the nature of church and worship?
Calvinists insist that perseverance of the saints is a scriptural doctrine. Calvinists have also often argued that perseverance has a clear pastoral advantage in that it grounds our assurance of salvation in the faithfulness of Christ rather than our own unreliable human wills.