CFR

by Apr 29, 2015Piety, Theology1 comment

Walsh and Middleton make a good pointwalsh middleton about the Creation-Fall-Redemption story of Scripture: Christians may tend to think of the Bible as all about sin (fall) and salvation (redemption). But without creation, neither of these concepts makes sense. What is sin but the violation of the way God created things to be? And what is salvation but the restoration of God’s creation to its (our) original purposes? (pp. 43-44)

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Review: Finding the Right Hills to Die On by Gavin Ortlund

Review: Finding the Right Hills to Die On by Gavin Ortlund

Finding the Right Hills to Die On: The Case for Theological Triage by Gavin Ortlund My rating: 4 of 5 stars Gracious, clear, accessible. Extremely well done. I nearly docked him a star for being ever-so-slightly in a different place than I am on creationism (though I...

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  1. Elijah

    People with a lot more experience than me talking with Chinese people about Christianity say one of the most common complaints is: “The Bible doesn’t make sense. I can’t understand it.” When that complaint is made, the solution, much to the average Westerner’s surprise, is not to go over the purpose behind genealogies or pontificate on systematic theological explanations of things like justification. Rather, the need is to spend a lot of time going over every phrase in Genesis 1:1. After that, the Bible suddenly makes sense.

    Western Christians (and even Western atheists who have never set foot in a church) are so familiar with Genesis 1:1 concepts that it doesn’t occur to us what it might be like not to know them.