May 7, 2008 Matthew Cochrane, When in Rome: Ambrose and Augustine on Church Unity and Authority

Recently, while reading through Peter Brown’s Augustine of Hippo, I came across a particularly stimulating passage from one of Augustine’s letters. When Augustine was a new believer, he was under the teaching of Ambrose in Milan. This was the late fourth century when all Christians were Catholic but still had differing beliefs in different regions around the world. At this time, Augustine’s mother traveled from her native Africa to join her son in Milan. 

Augustine’s mother, Monica, was an extremely devout Christian and had faithfully prayed for her son’s conversion for years before Augustine became a Christian. Upon her arrival in Milan she discovered that they did not fast there on Saturdays, as they did in much of the other Christian world, including Rome and Africa. This caused her much distress, as she was not sure what to do: eat with the other believers in Milan on Saturdays or abstain from food as she had done her entire adult life on Saturdays. Augustine picks up the narrative:
 
When my mother followed me to Milan she found the church there not fasting on Saturdays. She began to be troubled, and to hesitate as to what she should do: upon which I, though not taking a personal interest in such things, applied on her behalf to Ambrose for his advice. He answered me that “he could only teach me to do what he himself did, for, if he knew of any better rule, he would have observed it.” I had thought that he was intending just to tell us to give up fasting on Saturdays merely by an appeal to authority, without giving any reason [and, evidently, Augustine had turned away, feeling snubbed]..But he followed after me, and said “When I go to Rome, I also fast on Saturday: when here, I do not. If you go to any church observe the local custom…” As for me, on frequently thinking back on this statement I have always treated it as if it were an oracle from heaven.
 
 
I’ve given a lot of thought to this nugget of wisdom from Ambrose and wonder if evangelical churches could stand to learn from this today. There are countless divisions within theologically-conservative evangelical churches. There are even numerous denominations within Reformed circles. Last year, in what proved to be one of my most widely-read series of posts ever (Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3), readers of this site and I discussed whether paedobaptists and credobaptists could find common ground within the same denomination or if they were destined to always be separated by the issue of infant baptism. I wonder if a lot of rifts existing between different evangelical churches be healed simply by following this maxim from Ambrose. In other words, could denominations of similar beliefs unite and simply leave the secondary issues up to each local church or is a concrete set of beliefs essential to each denomination?
 
There are obviously some rifts that are over matters of doctrine to significant to overcome. I am not speaking of reconciliation between Catholicism and Protestantism, but something more along the lines of a union between denominations that are similar in doctrine and creed (think of pairings like the PCA and OPC or Southern Baptists and Reformed Baptists, etc.). Also, I understand that denominations already have different churches with differing set of beliefs on secondary issues, but I wonder if some denominations have drawn lines of division that just do not need to be there. 
 
With so many divisions in the church over secondary theological issues and petty matters, I wonder if we’ve forgotten another thing Augustine said, “In essentials, unity. In non-essentials, liberty. In all things, love.”

Excerpt from:

227573: Augustine of Hippo: A Biography, New Edition Augustine of Hippo: A Biography, New Edition
By Peter Brown / University Of California



May 4, 2008 Matthew Cochrane, Sunday Matinee, 5/4/08: The Good, the Bad and the Funny V

The Good

Mark Driscoll explains why he hates religion. A little longer than most videos I post, but powerful. Money quote: “Religion never leads to joy…or humility.”
 
 
The Bad
 
The gullibility of nominal Christians is amazing. For years, Oprah Winfrey has subtly pushed a New Age ideology. Unfortunately, she has now established an online “church” that pushes this spiritual gobbly-gook on her trusting fans. This clip explains the New Age junk she’s peddling now. (Quick aside: The last minute of the video goes into Oprah’s endorsement of Barack Obama which I really don’t care about. Obviously, I don’t share her opinion on the best choice for president but that’s not why I posted this video. The “bad” I am referring to is the New Age agenda she has adopted as her belief system.)
 
 
The Funny
 
UCCF, a Christian student union in the UK, produced this short video promoting ten Christian books in different skits. Creative and funny!
 
 
Finally, ONN reports on a fast food customer that got more than he bargained for.
 
 
 
For more in The Good, the Bad and the Funny series see:
 
 
 
 


May 2, 2008 Matthew Cochrane, Friday Political Roundup XI: Eleven Random Thoughts on the Current State of American Politics

In honor of the eleventh edition of our Friday Political Roundup, I thought I would share eleven opinions, rants and notes I have concerning the current state of the presidential elections and politics in general. So, in no particular order, here are some of my thoughts:

1)      The biggest story no one is talking about? The uncounted delegates of Florida and Michigan. I am continually amazed at how this has not been picked up more by the political pundits. There are so many different ways these badly-managed Democratic contests have affected the current status of the left’s two major candidates, not the least of which is that Obama now stands to win the nomination, not Clinton. Even if we discount the logic that allowing these contests to count would have allowed Hillary to carry both states and allowed her to gain unstoppable momentum and cruise to sweeping victories on Super Tuesday, we’re still left facing the fact that millions of voters in two large states were left without a voice in the nomination of their party’s presidential candidate. Armed rebellions have started over far less.
 
Hillary Clinton’s campaign team is currently lobbying the superdelegates by making the claim she is leading in the popular vote when the two punished states’ contests are counted. As mLive, a Michigan news agency, recently reported:
 
After Hillary Clinton's dual victories this week in Pennsylvania and at Michigan's district conventions, Gov. Jennifer Granholm said the Mitten State would be a key factor in her candidate winning the nomination…
 
Granholm was on message. The Clinton campaign has been pushing the idea to the media, with some success, that after her 9-point win in Pennsylvania, she now leads in the popular vote. That includes Clinton's votes in Michigan and Florida, which she won, but the Democratic National Committee (DNC) stripped them of their delegates for holding early primaries.
 
The official tally is Barack Obama has 14,417,619 votes to Clinton's 13,917,393. With Florida and Michigan, it's 14,993,833 for Obama and 15,116,688 for Clinton.
 
I still believe this year is the Democrats’ to lose but, if they continue to alienate voters from these two crucial swing states, they just might snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. 
 
Think I’m wrong? A liberal friend of mine from Florida recently confided he was thinking of voting for McCain if his vote didn’t end up counting at the Democratic convention this summer. While McCain’s moderate positions make that an easier pill for him to swallow than if a more conservative GOP candidate was running in the general election, I know the disenfranchisement he feels is powerful for him to even consider such an action. He’s not alone, either. The DNC recently had to return money when Florida donors demanded refunds because their votes were not counted in their state’s primary. 
 
If the Democratic Party doesn’t find a way to satisfy their constituents in these states they might be in for a long election day in November. Beyond that scenario, though, if Barack Obama goes on to win the nomination and the general election in the fall, a huge assist should be credited to the DNC – which might be what they had in mind all along.
 
2)      The GOP’s premature celebration. The other day while going through my inbox I noticed an email sent from a close family member with a brief and simple message. It read, “I think we can beat him now.” The “we” referred to Republicans and the “him” referred to Barack Obama. Far from being alone, I get the sense that many conservatives think they can smell blood. McCain, sans competition, has been able to spend the past few months visiting troops in Iraq, touring the country, raising funds and, most importantly, resting up for the grueling home stretch this fall. Meanwhile, scandal after scandal is breaking out on the left. Obama has been tarnished by racist remarks made by his former pastor of twenty years, previous dealings with domestic terrorists and his own infamous “bitter” remarks (more on that later). 
 
While I don’t deny this respite has benefited McCain more than his competitors, it is far too early to chalk up November’s contest to the Republicans.
 
There are three reasons to believe McCain’s days of smooth sailing are coming to an abrupt end: 1) He’s still trailing in the polls. Despite his two major opponents acting pettier than teenage girls in a catfight, McCain still has been unable to grab a convincing lead. In the latest round of polls following Pennsylvania’s primary, Hillary holds a commanding nine percentage point margin over McCain while Barack still clings to a much narrower two-percentage point lead. If McCain can’t grab a lead now, during the mud-slinging contest taking place on the left, Republicans are probably in for a long fall; 2) The eventual Democratic winner, absent a blood bath on the convention floor, will undoubtedly experience a bump in the polls after his/her win in the wake of a tsunami of positive media reports. Expect it; and 3) Scandals breaking on opponents one month before election? Good. Scandals breaking six to eight months before an election? Bad. There’s still far too much time for the American public to process, forgive and, yes, even forget Hillary’s sniper fire yarns and Barack Obama’s racist pastor and “bitter” remarks. So, yes, it's good for Republicans that the Democrats are airing their dirty laundry for all the world to see but don't get cocky. 
 
3)      McCain on War, Terrorism and the Middle East
 
 
Here he defines success in Iraq and Afghanistan:
 
 
4)      Where are they now? Mike Huckabee recently launched Huck PAC, an organization designed to help Republican candidates “who are passionate advocates for tax reform, a strong national defense, real border security, life, the family, less government and individual liberty.”Basically, it hopes to raise money and support from conservative activists across the country and then donate that money to local Republican candidates running for office. A good idea; I hope it’s effective.
 
Mitt Romney has kept busy the past month stumping for McCain.  Also, at the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association dinner, he finally let reporters in on the real reasons why he dropped out of the presidential race. In reverse order (drum roll, please):
 
No. 10: There weren't as many Osmonds as he thought.

No. 9: Got tired of the corkscrew landings of his campaign plane while under fire

No. 8: As a lifelong hunter, I didn't want to miss the start of varmint season.

No. 7: There wasn't room for two Christian leaders in the presidential race

No. 6: I was upset that no one bothered to search my passport files.

No. 5: I'd rather get fat, grow a beard and try for the Nobel prize.

No. 4: Got tired of wearing a dark suit and tie, and I wanted to kick back in a light colored suit and tie.

No. 3: When my wife realized I couldn't win the GOP nomination, my fundraising dried up.

No. 2: I took a bad fall at a campaign rally and broke my hair.

And the No. 1 reason Romney dropped out: His campaign relied on a flawed campaign strategy that as Utah goes, so goes the nation.
 
 Surprisingly funny, no?
 
5)      Hillary Clinton on The O’Reilly Factor:
 
Part 1
 
 
Part 2
 
 
6)      Obama’s Fall to Earth: While he was once considered the “transcendent” candidate, the one who could do no wrong, many of his former supporters in the media have taken harsher looks at him in recent days.  His fall from grace stems from what many think are his elitist attitudes.
 
 
Some of us love Hyde Park for its diversity and quirkiness, as there are those who love Cambridge and Berkeley. But it is among the more academic and liberal places around. When Obama goes to a church infused with James Cone-style liberation theology, when he makes ill-informed comments about working-class voters, when he bowls a 37 for crying out loud, voters are going to wonder if he’s one of them. Obama has to address those doubts, and he has done so poorly up to now.
 
It was inevitable that the period of “Yes We Can!” deification would come to an end. It was not inevitable that Obama would now look so vulnerable. He’ll win the nomination, but in a matchup against John McCain, he is behind in Florida, Missouri and Ohio, and merely tied in must-win states like Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. A generic Democrat now beats a generic Republican by 13 points, but Obama is trailing his own party. One in five Democrats say they would vote for McCain over Obama.
 
 
Behind closed doors in San Francisco, elitism’s epicenter, Barack Obama showed his elitism, attributing the emotional, spiritual and cultural values of working-class, “lunch pail” Pennsylvanians to economic woes…
 
At match points, when Hillary fights like a cornered raccoon, Obama retreats into law professor mode. The elitism that Americans dislike is not about family money or connections — J.F.K. and W. never would have been elected without them. In the screwball movie genre that started during the last Depression, there was a great tradition of the millionaire who was cool enough to relate to the common man — like Cary Grant’s C.K. Dexter Haven in “The Philadelphia Story.”
 
What turns off voters is the detached egghead quality that they tend to equate with a wimpiness, wordiness and a lack of action — the same quality that got the professorial and superior Adlai Stevenson mocked by critics as Adelaide. The new attack line for Obama rivals is that he’s gone from J.F.K. to Dukakis. (Just as Dukakis chatted about Belgian endive, Obama chatted about Whole Foods arugula in Iowa.)
 
Obama did not grow up in cosseted circumstances. “Now when is the last time you’ve seen a president of the United States who just paid off his loan debt?” Michelle Obama asked Tuesday at Haverford College, referring to Barack’s student loans while speaking in the shadow of the mansions depicted in “The Philadelphia Story.”
 
But his exclusive Hawaiian prep school and years in the Ivy League made him a charter member of the elite, along with the academic experts he loves to have in the room.
                       
But just how damaging was Obama’s “bitter” remark? Real Clear Politics columnist David Paul Kuhn believes they destroyed any chance Obama had of winning in November. He explains:
 
It's difficult to underestimate the enduring impact of Barack Obama's "bitter" remark. The day after John Kerry blurted that he "actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it" Vice President Dick Cheney ripped into the Democratic nominee and GOP strategists were already envisioning a new ad featuring the gaffe, intent on undercutting Kerry's character as a flip-flopper.
 
That week, four years ago, there were no banner headlines in major American newspapers declaring a turning point in the presidential race. Soon after the remark Kerry took a break from the campaign and skied at a resort in Idaho, a trip that added the air of elitism to Kerry's already sundered grit.
 
The Bush campaign had effectively won the campaign. It was only mid March.
 
7)      Barack Obama’s nightmare – that won’t go away. The controversy over Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama’s pastor for over twenty years, refuses to go away. Rev. Wright recently appeared at the National Press Club and confirmed his insane rants and ravings  were the same in and out of context. He confirmed his beliefs that the U.S. government invented the AIDS virus as a way to kill members of the black community and that drugs were intentionally distributed to black neighborhoods so young black men could be imprisoned. His lunacy knows no bounds. 
 
Wright’s press club appearance, and a similar one in Michigan, brought up the controversy all over again. What is now being analyzed by pundits, and the public, is Obama’s constantly changing response to Wright and his mad ravings. 
 
 
In an NBC interview Barack and his wife, Michelle, said it was time to move forward:
 
 
I loved Michelle’s response, “This conversation doesn’t help my kids. You know, it doesn’t help kids out there who are looking for us to make decisions and choices about how we’re going to better fund education.” Uh, you’re right Michelle, it has nothing to do with education; how perceptive of you. It has to do with evaluating your husband’s judgment, character and value system. If Barack survives the Democratic nomination, his advisers will need to hide all microphones and cameras from his wife. Next to his former pastor, she may well prove to be his biggest liability.
 
8)      Money, money, money. In the twenty-four hours after Hillary Clinton’s win in Pennsylvania she hauled in ten million dollars from online fundraising efforts, shattering the previous record for a single day’s haul or, so we’ve been told. After Pennsylvania’s win, reporters immediately began to question whether she would be able to compete with Obama in Indiana and North Carolina. Politico gives us the rest of the story:
 
The account of how the Clinton camp squelched that potential storyline is a lesson in successful campaign spin, a case of shaping favorable media coverage by crafting a narrative too compelling to overlook yet also impossible to independently verify.
 
 
It made no difference that the details didn’t always add up — wide variations in the numbers of new donors; a conflicting timeline of when the money was actually raised. It was the eye-popping $10 million figure — the most ever claimed in a 24-hour period — that dominated the news cycle. 
 
                       
 
In Lubbock, Texas – Lubbock Comma Texas, the heart of Texas conservatism – they dislike President Bush. He has lost them. I was there and saw it. Confusion has been followed by frustration has turned into resentment, and this is huge. Everyone knows the president's poll numbers are at historic lows, but if he is over in Lubbock, there is no place in this country that likes him. I made a speech and moved around and I was tough on him and no one – not one – defended or disagreed. I did the same in North Carolina recently, and again no defenders. I did the same in Fresno, Calif., and no defenders, not one.
 
He has left on-the-ground conservatives – the local right-winger, the town intellectual reading Burke and Kirk, the old Reagan committeewoman – feeling undefended, unrepresented and alone.
 
This will have impact down the road.
 
I finally understand the party nostalgia for Reagan. Everyone speaks of him now, but it wasn't that way in 2000, or 1992, or 1996, or even '04.
 
I think it is a manifestation of dislike for and disappointment in Mr. Bush. It is a turning away that is a turning back. It is a looking back to conservatism when conservatism was clear, knew what it was, was grounded in the facts of the world.
 
The reasons for the quiet break with Mr. Bush: spending, they say first, growth in the power and size of government, Iraq. I imagine some of this: a fine and bitter conservative sense that he has never had to stand in his stockinged feet at the airport holding the bin, being harassed. He has never had to live in the world he helped make, the one where grandma's hip replacement is setting off the beeper here and the child is crying there. And of course as a former president, with the entourage and the private jets, he never will. I bet conservatives don't like it.
 
 
10)  GOP VP Speculation.  Here’s my official list, in order, of who I think stands be chosen as John McCain’s running mate:
 
1.      Mark Sanford – former governor of South Carolina, popular, very conservative
2.      Tim Pawlenty – Minnesota governor, relatively young, strong social conservative, popular in swing states like Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin
3.      Condoleeza Rice – strengthens foreign policy credentials of ticket, female minority, popular with conservatives
4.      Mitt Romney – former Massachusetts governor and GOP presidential candidate, popular with conservative media, would not deliver any particular state to McCain, strong dislike within McCain’s camp of Romney’s former campaign staff
5.      Marsha Blackburn– popular and conservaitve congresswoman from Tennessee, young, female
6.      Charlie Crist – popular Florida governor, moderate conservative, would definitely give McCain Florida
7.      Joe Lieberman – senator from Connecticut, would solidly deliver almost all independents in McCain’s camp but would probably alienate too many conservatives, close friend of McCain
 
Anybody you like or dislike on the list? Have any suggestions for the Arizona senator? 
 
 
 
11) Supreme Court Smackdown. Finally, Supreme Court Justice Scalia was recently given a raw deal on one of my favorite liberal blogs and, to shed light on some of his more brilliant opinions, I thought I would include his recent take on a death penalty case before the Supreme Court. After Justice Stephens issued his opinion, Scalia gave us the pleasure of a good, old-fashioned smackdown – judicial branch-style:
 
But actually none of this really matters. As JUSTICE STEVENS explains, “ ‘objective evidence, though of great importance, [does] not wholly determine the controversy, for the Constitution contemplates that in the end our own judgment will be brought to bear on the question of the acceptability of the death penalty under the Eighth Amendment.’ ” Ante, at 14 (quoting Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U. S. 304, 312 (2002); emphasis added; some internal quotation marks omitted). “I have relied on my own experience in reaching the conclusion that the imposition of the death penalty” is unconstitutional. Ante, at 17 (emphasis added).
 
Purer expression cannot be found of the principle of rule by judicial fiat. In the face of JUSTICE STEVENS’ experience, the experience of all others is, it appears, of little consequence. The experience of the state legislatures and the Congress—who retain the death penalty as a form of punishment—is dismissed as “the product of habit and inattention rather than an acceptable deliberative process.” Ante, at 8. The experience of social scientists whose studies indicate that the death penalty deters crime is relegated to a footnote. Ante, at 10, n. 13. The experience of fellow citizens who support the death penalty is described, with only the most thinly veiled condemnation, as stemming from a “thirst for vengeance.” Ante, at 11. It is JUSTICE STEVENS’ experience that reigns over all.
 
I take no position on the desirability of the death penalty, except to say that its value is eminently debatable and the subject of deeply, indeed passionately, held views—which means, to me, that it is preeminently not a matter to be resolved here. And especially not when it is explicitly permitted by the Constitution.


April 29, 2008 Matthew Cochrane, Second Blogging Anniversary: Not Conformed Thoughts Turns Two!

My creative consultant believes I should start reviewing more classics like Go, Dog. Go! and Green Eggs and Ham.Today marks two years since I started writing on this web site. A close friend was gracious and kind enough to set everything up on the technical side so all I have had to do is write. Two years have gone by and I’m still writing, so either I have a lot to say or I like hearing myself talk. You decide. Anyhow, here are some of the things I’ve learned along the way:

 
1)      Writing is a discipline and, like anything else in life, the more you practice the better you get. 
 
2)      People like commenting on the things you say, but they like it even more when they can use fake names or speak anonymously (i.e. Steamboat Willie, Top Hat, Sam the Eagle, Amusing Burrito, D.J. Revival, CDL, Dale from Ohio, SBC Guy, Jameson, D.A. and Mean Gene).
 
3)      When I write blog posts and want to generate comments and feedback I’ve found worship music  and Mike Huckabee to be quite effective.
 
4)      If I don’t want to generate comments or feedback, I’ll just spend hours reading, analyzing, and studying a book and then write a review on the book.  Ann Coulter’s books are an exception.
 
5)      Always put your family ahead of blogging unless your wife is mad at you or the baby is crying. 
 
6)      Quote, quote, quote. I’m not that smart so I take any chance I can to quote people wiser and smarter than myself, who happen to agree with the point I am trying to make.  
 
7)      Link, link, link.  Practically everything is on the World Wide Web somewhere, so if I’m referencing a study or a poll, I always try to provide a link to the original source of that information. I also like to share with my readers the things I’ve found to be particularly interesting and enjoyable online.
 
8)      Always proofread and, whenever possible, have somebody else proofread as well. Compare the first two posts I ever wrote (first post and second post). See any difference? The first article I posted as soon as I was done writing it. The second, my father helped edit and improve. Having somebody else’s help made a huge difference on the quality of the writing.
 
9)      Interviews  are fun, easy, interesting and give an aura of credibility.
 
10) Always thank those who help you out along the way.
 
With that in mind there are a few people I would like to thank: 
 
The Lizard Master, for completely handling the technical side of things. He did everything from designing the site to making it really easy to post new entries. Without him this site would not exist.
 
Dad, for proofreading and editing almost everything I’ve ever posted here. He checks for grammar, spelling mistakes, typos, and knows how to manipulate the English language to get it to say exactly what I want to express like few other people can. 
 
And, most importantly, Karen. When my dad can’t get to an article or post she does an admirable job of filling his place.   She watches James and fulfills other household chores I cannot get to while I write. In other words, she has sacrificed her free time so that I could pursue this hobby of mine. She has done this without ever uttering a word in complaint. 
 
This last year, I’ve absolutely enjoyed the opportunity to share what I’ve been learning and thinking about and I can’t wait to see what this next year has in store. 
 
Two year stats forthcoming...

Also see:

Blogging Anniversary



April 26, 2008 Matthew Cochrane, From the Depths of the Web 2, April 2008

It’s that time of the month again kids! Another round of interesting, weird, enlightening, and uplifting links to stories and opinion pieces from around the great world wide web:

Mark Driscoll, pastor of Mars Hill Church in Seattle, answers twenty questions on leadership he learned while going through the book of Nehemiah.
 
Author Devin Brown, one of the world’s foremost experts on Narnia and one of my wife’s all-time favorite professors from her college days, gives us his wish list for the soon-to-be-released Prince Caspian, the second film in the Chronicles of Narnia series from Disney. Wish number four:
 
Wish number four: Stay firm on the truths about the two ways of living. Lewis wants to inform young readers and remind older ones that a life lived exclusively for self is not exciting or fun, but is a small, ignoble life. It is definitely not cool, or even very interesting. Lewis clearly asserts through the Chronicles that the self-centered life leads only to sorrow, isolation, and ultimately destruction.
 
This truth was made very clear in the first Narnia film's depiction of the White Witch, living all alone in her castle of ice, as well as in its grim portrait of the early Edmund and his betrayal. If the Caspian trailer is any indication, the film's visual rendering of Miraz's unhappy existence will provide further support for this claim.
 
It is impossible to miss Lewis's corresponding message: that the virtuous life, the life lived for something beyond one's self, is a real adventure, one with hardship that must be taken seriously, but an adventure not to be missed because it is the only path that leads to genuine happiness, real fulfillment, and true community. This second point was also vividly captured in the first film. In times like ours when the word virtuous has gone out of fashion, this is a truth we need to be reminded of again and again.
 
Here's hoping that all of Dr. Brown's wishes come true this May.  Oh yeah, and the movie looks awesome:
 
 
Seven insane conspiracies that actually took place. Operation Ajax is enough to make me sick.
 
John Mark Reynolds in Scriptorium on the Christian ideal of love:
 
Somehow the traditional Christian sexual ethic of Dante and Donne has become confused with repression or being undersexed. Nothing could be further from the truth. If my email box is any indication, libertine sexual rules have not made us happier or better lovers. It has made things worse. It certainly did for me.
 
Chastity is a positive thing, not the lack of something. It is, I think, the active nourishment of love to prepare it for the appropriate beloved. It is a great gift. For some that other is God directly, for the rest of us (less fit perhaps for great things) this love is expressed through an intermediate beloved person.
 
Our culture has changed in what it thinks desirable or possible when it comes to love, but I have not changed. There is a vision of love in Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale that is so beautiful and redemptive that even the hope of it is worth a risk.
 
In old movies, making love was about intimacy and might culminate in marriage. Marriage was more, so much more, than the sex act, though it was not less than that. In modern terms, making love is merely a nice way to say the f-word.
 
Nothing like a little class to mark your passing away!
 
A new Harvard study on media bias: regular readers won’t be surprised.
 
Joe Carter writes on Evangelical Outpost that Christians can no longer ignore the epidemic of prison rape in our country:
 
In 2004 the corrections industry estimated that 12,000 rapes occurred per year—more than the annual number of reported rapes in Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York combined. In a 2007 survey by the U.S. Department of Justice, though, more than 60,000 inmates claimed to have been sexually victimized by other inmates during the previous 12 months.
 
First-time and non-violent offenders are often targeted by prison gangs for sexual servitude. Once an inmate is forced into sexually submissive role, becomes a ‘punk”, the gangs treat him as chattel. While prison guards turn a blind eye, the gangs use these men as sexual slaves.
 
Although the majority of these inmates are eventually returned back into the general public, their sentence could turn into a death penalty. HIV, tuberculosis, and hepatitis C are up to 10 times more prevalent in correctional institutions than in the outside population. The repeated abuse these inmates receive makes it almost inevitable that they will be exposed to one of these fatal diseases.
 
Here are fourteen Old Testament ways to get a wife. Few people know this, but I got Karen by doing #5.
 
The Art of Manliness blog tells us the proper way to break down a door.
 
 
At the heart of Zen-Calvinism is the belief that all human beings are morally flawed, unlike the worldviews projected by the celebrity-saturated commercial culture of the modern West. . . .Zen-Calvinists also accept that they are themselves no better than anyone else; and, understanding their own tendencies to treat everyone else in a less-than-perfect fashion, they will not be surprised when they are repaid in kind. Zen-Calvinists are at one with the depravity of the fallen universe; they expect to be treated as they know they have treated others.
 
 
Ours is an era of self-expression. Individuals express themselves through marriage, and then express themselves through divorce--as if all of life is nothing more than a succession of acts of self-expression.
 
A divorce culture explains away obligation and sacred promises as temporary statements of emotional disposition. I may feel married today--I may not feel married tomorrow.
 
Our culture is so sexually confused that the goods of sex are severed from the vows and obligations of marriage. Thanks to modern technologies, we can have sex without babies, babies without sex, and both without marriage. For many, marriage has become an irrelevancy.
 
For others it is worse. Some have lambasted marriage as a domestic prison, a patriarchal and oppressive institution foisted upon unsuspecting men and women in order to deny them freedom, autonomy, fulfillment, and liberation. And, for a post-Christian culture, there is that nagging problem of the essential character of marriage as sacred institution. A society that disbelieves in God will eventually disbelieve in marriage.
 
Christian couples who are committed to this high conception of marriage must see themselves as counter-revolutionaries. In a very real sense, they are. They are standing against the tide of public opinion, against the trend of modern morality, against the erosion of order and the deflationary market in faithfulness. Before God, they stand committed to each other--and only to each other. To live together for each other, no matter what may come.
 
Philosophy Today tackles joke morality.
 
 
“If I wanted to after the book came out I could have bought an island and retire and have people serve me little drinks with umbrellas the rest of my life,” Warren joked. “But when you write a book and the first sentence of the book is, ‘It’s not about you,’ then you kind of figure the money is not for you and the fame is not for you,” he said drawing laughter.
 
Rick Warren and his wife, Kay, after prayer decided to not change their lives “one bit” even though they now had millions of dollars at their disposal. He said he still drives an eight-year-old Ford truck, lives in the same house before he wrote the book, and wears a watch from Target.
 
In addition, he stopped receiving salary from Saddleback Church in 2002 – the year the book was released; repaid all the salary he ever received from the church; set up foundations; pays for all his own travel expenses; and practices reverse tithing – where he gives 90 percent of his income and lives on 10 percent.
 
“I don’t want anybody doubting why I do what I do,” Warren explained. “I know with this book God has put me under the spotlight and I didn’t want anyone doubting why I do what I do,” he said, noting his main goal in life is to simply save one more soul.
 
 



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©2008 Matthew Cochrane




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