imagining how the church can reorient around mission

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beth moore – don’t go home

“By judging others we blind ourselves to our own evil and to the grace which others are just as entitled to as we are.”

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

I have been a Christian for a long time now. I became an ardent follower of Jesus at 21, 40 years ago. During those days there was fresh fire and unquenchable faith. There was also not just a little bit of arrogance and desire for certainty. Also, during those days I listened to several Bible teachers on the radio (that’s what you did then). One of those was John McArthur. He was sure and brave…and “biblical.” Everything I was looking for. But, even in the cocky, more youthful version of me, I quickly began to sense his hard, and non-humble take on things. He was the only one “right” in the world. I also quickly discovered that he had a very unyielding theological grid in which he read the Bible through. This came off as very ungenerous and very ungracious toward others. It became most evident to me in a book he published called, “The Charismatics.” A book in which his deductive approach (I’ve pre-settled the issue, now I will interpret the Bible to prove my opinion) was clearly exposed. It was incredibly stilted in its hermeneutic. After combing through it several times, I reasoned that it was nonsense. He built a fence of fear around the full-life of the Spirit for scores of good-hearted Christians who hung on his words as gospel. Even as a young pastor, I intuitively felt like there was something more going on. Almost a vendetta. I turned the radio off. I stopped listening. read more

I Like Women – Part 2

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In a post from last December (CLICK HERE), I apologized to the women in my world. It was more a philosophical apology, because even before my shift in positions (complementarianism v. egalitarianism) I worked hard to insure respect for everyone I have been privileged to journey with, difference in gender included. I may have failed at some points, but my intention was to honor all. If there is a continuum where a complementarian view was on one side and an egalitarian view were on the other, internally, I attempted to live as close to the center-line as possible.

As a result of the previous post, I was asked by an atheist friend this question: “Not trying to be a douche, I honestly want to know what you and other more "progressive" pastors do with all the verses talking about a woman’s role in the church.” The following is, at least for me, a short summary of how I approach said passages. read more