Categories
Apologetics Evangelism Martin Luther King Jr.

Christianity has some appeal

 

https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1273746041662328833

He says he is a humanist but is not sure that is enough.

Bo Winegard
 
@EPoe187
·
I’m very open to the argument that Christianity is the best available totalizing narrative and that its putative replacements have been a string of pseudo-secular religions with deleterious consequences.
 
 
 
 
He is right. Those who think they have surpassed what they consider primitive moralities may be "profoundly self-deceived.” Alasdair MacIntyre, Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry: Encyclopedia, Geneaology, and Tradition ( University of Notre Dame Press, 1990), 27-28.
 
 
"There is no tale ever told that men would rather find was true, and none which so many sceptical men have accepted as true on its own merits." J. R. R. Tolkien, "On Fairy-Stories," in Tree and Leaf (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1965), 71-72.
 
 
 
 
I really like both Klein and Coates. In this conversation, they reflect on the reaction to George Floyd's death. Neither are Christians but the whole conversation is about how MLK was right and a longing for a realistic vision of a world of non-violence, compassion, and justice.
 
 
 
This is excellent. Here is a sincere policy wonk reasoning his way toward recognizing the genius of Martin Luther King Jr. and the world's desperate need for a different understanding of government. (Whispers: This is also what Jesus taught all about in terms of "kingdom").
 
Categories
Evangelism

Using people

 

 
Joy Clarkson
 
@joynessthebrave

 
the ironic thing about having children solely for the purpose of propagating your own ideological army is that there is a high likelihood your kids will sense the utilitarian nature of your relationship to them and rebel against the purpose you've set out for them (rightly).
Categories
Church Growth Church Planting Evangelism Missiology Missional Practical Theology

What should local missional outreach look like?

A key question churches struggle with is what missional outreach looks like in their local area. Many Christians feel their church is not doing "evangelism" OR "social justice" well. I think that there needs to be local analysis. Is violence, water, food, housing, medical, employment, education a major need in the local community because government is failing? Or is the locale wealthy and therefore struggling with meaninglessness, depression, loneliness, and broken relationships? These local realities and needs will shape the nature of local church outreach. In other words, biblical and theological convictions will not be the sole factor in what a local church's local outreach looks like. The context will also factor in. Paul's Gentile churches reached out to wealthy Roman citizens differently than James's Jerusalem church's care for the poor. Paul also collected offerings from the Gentle churches for the Jerusalem church. This is an example of churches reaching beyond their locale.

This is a Twitter thread by Andy Rowell

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