with Ravi Zacharias…
Posts Tagged ‘Worldview’
Freedom to Disbelieve?
Posted in Apologetics, Christian Witness, Christianity, Freedom, Islam, Pluralism, Tolerance, Western Civilization, Worldview, tagged Apologetics, Christianity, Freedom, Islam, Pluralism, Ravi Zacharias, Tolerance, Worldview on May 4, 2013 | Leave a Comment »
The Secular Boom
Posted in Secularism, Western Civilization, Worldview, tagged James Emery White, Secular, Secularism, Worldview on April 27, 2013 | Leave a Comment »
from James Emery White at Church & Culture blog…
You remember the 90’s, right?It was a patchwork quilt of events and ideas, movements and personalities, if there ever was one. Our headlines changed and moved with the fast-pace nature of a video camera.In August of 1990 Saddam Hussein and his Iraqi troops invaded Kuwait. The United States and its allies issued an ultimatum for his withdrawal, setting a deadline of January 15, 1991 for Iraq to pull out.Iraq didn’t.So our armed forces gathered themselves together and turned an operation called “Desert Storm” loose.Then came Wednesday morning, April 19, 1995.
What Do Americans Think of Islam?
Posted in Islam, Worldview, tagged Americans, Islam, Perspective, Worldview on April 27, 2013 | Leave a Comment »
from Barna…
In the aftermath of the Boston marathon bombings, the attention of the media and the American public quickly turned toward the faith and political background of Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev. Reporters honed in on Tamerlan’s apparently deep Muslim faith, especially analyzing if that faith had become radicalized in the last few years. Fair or not, pundits, experts, and the American public wondered—did the faith of the two alleged bombers have anything to do with the atrocity that occurred? If so, what did that mean?
It was yet another instance of American ideals and radical Islam clashing with one another. Since September 11, 2001, American attitudes toward the religion of Islam have been under increased investigation. Controversies surrounding al Qaeda action around the world (such as the recent attempt in Canada), the Ground Zero Mosque, the protests over the film The Innocence of Muslims, Pastor Terry Jones threatening to burn a Quran, or any number of proposed laws (like the one in Oklahoma) to ban Sharia Law in the United States, have all entered into the collective American consciousness. So what does America think about Islam?
Click here to read the whole report.
Consequences of Relativism
Posted in Relativism, Truth, Worldview, tagged Brian Godawa, Film, Relativism, Truth, Worldview on April 25, 2013 | Leave a Comment »
An important short film by Brian Godawa.
Neo-Darwinism’s Death??
Posted in Evolution, Worldview, tagged darwin, evolution, neodarwinism, ToTheSource, Worldview on April 25, 2013 | Leave a Comment »
from ToTheSource
Fact one: Thomas Nagel is an atheist. As he’s made clear on many occasions, he wants to be an atheist. As he said, famously, in The Last Word, “I want atheism to be true and am made uneasy by the fact that some of the most intelligent and well-informed people I know are religious believers. It isn’t just that I don’t believe in God and, naturally, hope that I’m right in my belief. It’s that I hope there is no God! I don’t want there to be a God; I don’t want the universe to be like that.”
Click here to read the whole article.
Our Post-Christian Culture
Posted in America, Culture, Dale Tedder, Uncategorized, Worldview, tagged Christianity, Culture, James Emery White, Post Christian, Worldview on November 12, 2012 | Leave a Comment »
My bookshelves are loaded with countless titles that take a look at post-Christian this and post-Christian that. For years I had a sneaking suspicion that these books were a little over the top. A bit of hyperbole goes a long way. However, over the last decade or so, it’s finally dawned on me how apt the phrase, “post-Christian” is to define our own culture here in the good ol’ USA.
All the books from George Barna and his various associates that warned the church repeatedly that you can’t continue to lose generation after generation of professing Christian youth have proven most observant and/or prophetic. Of course, the church abdicating her various other responsibilities to the wider culture, not to mention the loss of any sort of distinctive Christian home, have certainly helped us achieve our present situation.
(I can remember countless comments I’ve heard over the years from folks of older generations who would often tell me something along the lines of, “In my day, we didn’t go around talking about our faith like folks do today.” Two thoughts: First, if that premise is true, then it explains, in part, much of the loss of our culture to the secular world. My other thought is that I only wish that there were more folks today taking a stand for their faith… in every sphere of their lives.)
At any rate, I’ve read several great articles recently that focus on what “post-Christian”really means. Two fantastic articles that are well worth reading are both by James Emery White. (You can find the links below)
The Old Testament tells us that the Tribe of Issachar consisted of men who knew the times in which they lived and were able to advise Israel regarding what it should do. The Church today is in need of godly men and women who have not checked out but who, like foreign missionaries, know the culture in which they live, and can help steer the church as it seeks to faithfully represent our Lord and to share his Gospel with a dark and decaying world.
By the way, one of the ways to be a faithful member of the Tribe of Issachar is to subscribe and read (cover to cover) WORLD Magazine.
Grace and Truth,
Dale
The 2012 Tipping Point by James Emery White
Here’s an excerpt…
America as a nation is now, without doubt, decisively post-Christian. This does not mean is it non-Christian, or anti-Christian, simply post-Christian. To be post-Christian means that the very memory of the gospel is fading. This declaration has nothing to do with who won the election. It’s not even about the overall statement the nation made through the election on social issues. It’s about reminding those who may be in shock over the various votes and decisions that this was simply a reflection of who we have become. Religious “nones” now make up one of every five in our nation. To use a biblical metaphor, we have gone from an Acts 2 culture to an Acts 17 culture; we no longer live among the God-fearing Jews of Jerusalem, but reside firmly among the populace of Mars Hill.
Click here to read the whole article.
You will also want to read, Future Shock, also by James Emery White.
