It’s OK to Think

Posted on: Friday, February 20th, 2009
Comments: 1

One of the things I’ve learned over the years is that it’s okay to think.  God wants us to do that.  In fact, it’s okay to think and be a Christ-follower.  I think, for example, about CS Lewis.  He was a devout Christian and a great author.  I think of Abraham Lincoln, who increasingly read the Bible as he governed and then, just before he died, was baptized.  I think of Francis Shaffer who was a great thinker . . . and a truly Christian thinker.  I think of JS Bach and his deep piety which found expression in music.

What’s the point?  There’s such a thing as thinking Christianity.

Does “Jesus Only” Bug You?

Does “Jesus Only” Bug You?

Jesus only. Yeah, I know. It seems narrow. And it’s certainly uncomfortable, even for many Christ-followers. But . . . should we always expect truth to be comfortable?

Evil and suffering proves . . . not what you think.

Evil and suffering proves . . . not what you think.

Some folks think the existence of evil and suffering proves that God doesn’t exist. Actually, if anything, it more likely proves He does.

If God is loving, surely he won’t hold us accountable for right belief.  Right?

If God is loving, surely he won’t hold us accountable for right belief. Right?

If God is as Christians claim, loving and caring, then surely He won’t hold us accountable for believing correctly. Right?

How can there be just “one true religion”?

How can there be just “one true religion”?

Have you ever thought about the “counter claims” between “just one true religion” and “all religions have part of the truth but not all of it”?

Stem cells, human life, and ethics

Stem cells, human life, and ethics

President Obama’s recent decision to allow for stem cell research to expand to the human embryo is a big deal.  So what are the issues at stake . . . or is it just tissue we’re talking about?

Stem cells and the nature of life

Stem cells and the nature of life

The question regarding human embryonic stem cells is not whether it’s human life.  The secular scientists tell us that the human embryo is both living and distinctly human.  The question then becomes, what is the nature and value of human life.