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Photography and Music

Switzerland

Going through some photos from the Summer.

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Biblical Studies Hermeneutics Photography and Music Theological Hermeneutics Theology

N.T. Wright on "Literal"

Another good video in the continuing conversation with N.T. Wright.

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Photography and Music

That's What I'm Talking About..

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Photography and Music

How Many of These…

does your team have?

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Photography and Music Travel

Switzerland

It doesn’t get any better than this!

DSC06971

DSC06987

DSC07039

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Photography and Music Travel

Top of the World

Connor and me on the Schilthorn.

Dad and Connor on the Schilthorn

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Photography and Music

Me Want

A Moog Guitar

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Epistemology Historical Theology Humor Law and Policy Photography and Music Spirituality

CLS v. Martinez: An Ugly Decision Arising from Ugly Circumstances

Today the Supreme Court released its opinion in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez.  If you have heard about this case from the press or from an advocacy group and are concerned about it, I’d encourage you to read the entire opinion as well as the concurrence and dissent.  The whole package is ugly, I think.  It seems that the principles of freedom of expression, association and religion have been mired in a Dickensian procedural swamp, which was either created by the majority or conveniently used by the majority to bypass the big issues presented by the case. I urge interested readers to peruse the entire 75 pages of all the opinions, so that you may experience for yourself how a question of important Constitutional moment can be drowned in the turgid waters of civil procedure.

The majority opinion, written by Justice Ginsberg, holds that U.C. Hastings’ “all comers” policy was content-neutral and reasonably related to the school’s policy of promoting a diverse forum for student activities.  The all comers policy stated that approved student organizations must admit any student to membership or eligibility for leadership, regardless of the student’s status or beliefs.  A pro-choice group, then, would have to admit pro-choice students, a Democrat club would have to admit Republicans, the Christian Legal Society would have to admit non-Christians or people who do not live according to the CLS’ views on sexual ethics, and so on.

Indeed, the all comers policy does seem content-neutral as Justice Ginsberg describes it.  On its face, the all comers policy itself seems silly and unworkable — it essentially would require that no student organization can stand for anything other than the principle that it is good to encourage diverse viewpoints — but not unconstitutional.

In contrast, the dissent, written by Justice Alito and joined by Justices Roberts, Scalia and Thomas, goes into great detail about the factual circumstances of Hastings’ adoption of the all comers policy.  In short, according to Justice Alito, the all comers policy was “adopted” as a litigation strategy late in the game.  The policy really at issue, Hastings’ “Nondiscrimination Policy,” only prohibited discrimination based on a select few protected categories — race, color, religion, national origin, ancestry, disability, age, sex or sexual orientation.  Enforcement of the Nondiscrimination Policy against groups, such as CLS, that discriminate in one of these categories on the basis of religious beliefs raises a very difficult Constitutional question:  do the freedoms of religion, speech and association mean that the government must accommodate religious groups that discriminate based on categories such as sexual orientation?

In a previous post, I summarized the issues in the case, and expressed my view that the whole thing was an unfortunate manifestation of ongoing confusion by Christians about the relationship between American government and Christian faith.  In his dissent, Justice Alito expresses disappointment with the majority and suggests that the majority’s opinion is “a serious setback for freedom of expression in this country.”  He might be right, but maybe not for the reasons he expresses.  In one sense, I’m glad the majority found a way to avoid deciding the more difficult issues presented by the Nondiscrimination Policy.  There is a hard tension between citizenship in the Church and citizenship in a liberal (meaning classically liberal) pluralistic democracy.  I don’t think it’s a tension that we in the Church should want to press up against so hard.  Sometimes, the wiser course for the life and mission of the ekklesia is to maintain a faithful witness without suing for full government recognition of all our rights.

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Photography and Music Spirituality

James Emery White on the Crisis in Evangelicalism

Scot McKnight reviews James Emery White’s new book on Jesus Creed. I read Scot’s review and scanned the book on Amazon preview.

Sigh. I’m sure this is unfair, but books like this make me want to convert to Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy. For all of Dr. White’s emphasis on Truth, pragmatism, orthodoxy and the Church, the problem with Evangelicalism has been that its fundamental tenet of foundationalist Biblicist inerrancy is obviously untrue and unworkable, its doctrinal emphasis has ignored the historic center of Trinitarian orthodoxy, and it has no functional ecclesiology through which to mediate theological understanding. It’s not working and it’s losing influence because it’s fundamentally broke. (Note: I am using the term “Biblicist inerrancy” to distinguish this from the sort of “functional infallibility” that I think is a more appropriate model for Biblical authority. See my comments on Billy Graham and Charles Templeton below).

White sounds the gong of the “correspondence” theory of Truth. There are enormous epistemological issues over the “correspondence” view of Truth, various ways of construing it, and so on. These are deep waters. Sorry, but it’s grossly inadequate for a non-philosopher theologian just to say the word “correspondence.” It becomes a distracting fight. Many serious theologian-philosophers (e.g. Nicholas Wolterstorff) have demonstrated why foundationalist-correspondence theories of Truth are inadequate from a Christian perspective.

White talks about orthodoxy and doctrine but at least from the preview I could see doesn’t really offer a basis for defining what is finally and absolutely orthodox, other than an apparently softer version of the Biblicism that is now dramatically failing Evangelicalism.

As an example, he tells the famous story of Billy Graham and Charles Templeton. Templeton takes Biblical criticism and scholarship seriously, and loses his faith. Billy pietistically says “God, this is your word, and I believe it,” and goes on to become Billy.

If evangelical faith is going to survive, it needs to bring Billy and Charles together. A correspondence theory of truth tied to Biblicistic inerrancy simply is a failure unless one has the capacity, like Billy, to put intellectual concerns on the shelf and focus on pragmatics. I’m not knocking Billy here at all — maybe many people are designed by God and called take Billy’s approach, and they don’t need to do the difficult work required for serious scholarship.

But we are living in a time when the average American is far better educated, far better connected, far more cynical, and far more savvy than in Billy’s heyday of the 1950’s. Evangelicalism will be dead within the next generation if the best it can muster is the same common-sense, naive, foundationalist Biblicism that caused it to lose its credibility in the first place.

I do appreciate White’s emphasis on the virtue of civility, however. That alone can go a long way.

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Photography and Music

Jams: Santana

This is just me having fun with my guitars and recording software.  It’s a complete mess in places, but there are a few fun moments.