Showing posts with label Seth Haines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seth Haines. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Unicorns With Body Image Issues and The Best Things You'll Read All Week

by Ben Howard

Reads of the Week

1) The Blue Period: An Origin Story by Ta-Nehisi Coats

"I don't think a human gets to see all of this before dying. But I want to see as much of it as I can. And here is the key thing--it thrills me to see it. I love seeing it. I love knowing. The knowing is its own reward. The ability to frame the question is it's own gift--even if you can't quite name the answer."

2) Where I Stand by Jen Hatmaker

"We don’t get to abandon the theology of love toward people; the end does not justify the means. That is not Christ-like and it is certainly not biblical. As a faith community, it is time we relearn what “speaking the truth in love” means. Something that actually feels like love is a start. If the beginning and end of love is simply pointing out sin, then we are doomed."

3) Humanity - Spirit of the Poor Link Up by Aaron Smith

"I am more than someone with bipolar, more than my stance on gender equality, even more than my faith and devotion to Jesus. I am fully human, and my humanity is complex. I am more than what shows in crisis, in passion, and in devotion. I am all of these things, and more. I am what is revealed in the normal moments, in the moments just before I fall asleep, in the mornings before coffee. This humanity of mine shows it’s self at work, at church, in the kitchen, when I am giving my son a bath, at the doctor’s office, riding public transit. Everywhere I am, there is my humanity."

4) On Broken Pastors and Golden Calves by Seth Haines

"We’re all looking for a lock-tight faith, one that allows escape from the clutches of the strangling sins common to men. We want to believe in the ideal, that we’ve been crucified with Christ, therefore we no longer live, but the sinless, perfect Christ lives in us. But fumble though we may, grope as we must, white-knuckle as we can, we still struggle with living an actualized, in-dwelt life."

5) The Psalms as Liberation Theology by Richard Beck

"The thing that strikes you about the psalms when you read them straight through is how oppressed and beleaguered is the psalmist. Enemies, hecklers, back-stabbers, two-faced friends, violent oppressors and economic exploiters abound. This goes to the source of lament in the psalms. Rarely is the lament about, say, the death of a loved one. The lament is generally about oppression, about the victory of the oppressor."

Honorable Mention

You Are Allowed Your Process by Jamie Wright


Disunity in Reading the Same Bible by Nate Pyle


The Splenda Level of Friendship by Megan Gahan

Tweets of the Week

"Fun first date idea: Force a connection because you're afraid to be alone." - @mdob11


"If I die unexpectedly can everyone just do the right thing and pretend I was a way better person than I am?" - @AnnaKendrick47


"'Religious liberty has never been more under attack,' said Ted Cruz while zero lions ate him." - @indecision


On Pop Theology Week in Review

On Pop Theology Podcast: Episode 55 - Villainous Villainy


"This week on the show Ben, Sebastian and Jesse tackle the topic of villains."


Ten Thoughts About the Noah Movie from Someone Who Has Been Resolutely Not Paying Attention by Lyndsey Graves



"I have not been paying attention to anything about the new Noah movie. Here are my thoughts about it."

A Theology of Filthy Rags by Charity Erickson


"The other day my mother brought a green suitcase to my house, full of random crap from my old bedroom."


Time is a Trap by Ben Howard


"Time is, in a very real sense, a trap."


Song of the Week

"The Book of Live" by Peter Gabriel

 
Peace,
Ben

You can follow On Pop Theology on Twitter @OnPopTheology or like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/OnPopTheology. If you'd like to help us pay the bills, you can donate via the button on the right of the screen.

Contact us at onpoptheology [at] gmail.com.  


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Saturday, December 7, 2013

The War on Christmas Crosswords and the Best Things You'll Read All Week

christmas, crossword, war on christmas, santa, satan, hail, consume, flesh, funny
by Ben Howard

Reads of the Week

1) The "War On Christmas": On Ethnocentrism and Blasphemy by Richard Beck

"What is being 'lost' in our nation isn't Christianity but white hegemony. The white majority of America is declining. America is becoming more diverse and pluralistic. And retailers, well attuned to the demographic shifts in their customer base--it is their lifeblood after all--shift to reflect the times."

2) What Teachers Do: On Dave Ramsey, Prosperity Theology, and Christ-Character by Seth Haines

"The prosperity gospel is a thin ruse that associates the accumulation of wealth with Godly character, and if it were relegated to the silver-tongued televangelists, perhaps it’d be tragically laughable. The unfortunate truth is, though, the philosophy is seeping into mainline Christianity at an alarming pace."

3) Singled Out: How Churches Can Embrace Unmarried Adults by Christena Cleveland

"Since married people are the ones calling the shots, they remain central to the life of the church.  Meanwhile, single people are relegated to the margins. Whether this is intentional or not, this “married people monopoly” results in a Christian world in which single people are often misunderstood, ignored, overlooked for leadership positions, caricatured, equated with immaturity, and little more than a punchline or an afterthought."

4) Advent: A Prison Story by Richard Beck

"The logic of retribution holds. The righteous are blessed. Sinners are punished. That's how God has set up the world. Bad things happen to bad people. And then we get to the book of Job. And an entire theological trajectory--starting in Deuteronomy and traced through 2 Kings--gets knocked off course. Good people are always blessed? Not so fast, says the book of Job."

5) The Time I Fell In Love With Rockstar Jesus by Deanna Ogle

"About a year ago I was really angry at him. I asked why he had to ditch the worship leader hair and why he stopped giving sermons. I understood him when I only saw him at church. He was my pastor then and it made sense. I understood the rules back then. So why did he give that up?"

Honorable Mention

Who Will Carry On by Lyndsey Graves

In Which Advent is For The Ones Who Know Longing by Sarah Bessey

ShePonders: Another Arrival by Kelley Nikondeha

Tweets of the Week

"'I don't like you either.' -A Brazil Nut" - Jonathan Coulton (@jonathancoulton)


"Motion to rename the 'Christian Fiction' section at Barnes and Noble to 'Pseudo-Erotic Amish Novellas'" - Emily Joy (@softlysoaring)

"WITH THIS WIN AND THAT OTHER TEAM'S LOSS MY TEAM HAS A GREATER CLAIM TO ONTOLOGICAL PRIMACY THAN YOURS" - Tony Woodlief (@tonywoodlief)


On Pop Theology Week in Review

On Advent Dawning by Sebastian Faust

"My favorite song this time of year sounds nothing like Christmas on the ears, but it sings with unspeakable beauty to the heart."

On Demonizing the Devil by Sebastian Faust

"I was searching through some old texts about Saint Martin of Tours, the 4th century bishop and monastic who’s probably best known for his impressive skill at slicing cloaks with a sword, and his very shoddy skill at hiding amid geese."

A Power Ranking of Various Kinds of Powers by Ben Howard

"Sports writers have to fill a lot of column inches every week and there's only so many original ideas that you can come up with before you just start making lists of things."

Song of the Week

"Freaks" by The Hawk in Paris



Peace,
Ben

You can follow On Pop Theology on Twitter @OnPopTheology or like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/OnPopTheology. If you'd like to help us pay the bills, you can donate via the button on the right of the screen.

Contact us at onpoptheology [at] gmail.com.  


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