Saturday, February 25, 2012

Hopped and Bothered; Hangar 24's "Orange Wheat"

I may be adding another series on here. Reviews will be erratic and subject to when I simply have enough money to fish out for something over 7%.

Hangar 24 -- Orange Wheat



Alcohol content 4.6%. Somewhat tangy on the bite. Very strong wheat flavor almost completely overwhelms the orange essence. Crisp. Very clean on the bite. Very light in the mouth, almost pure foam. Unfiltered gives a cloudy and interesting visual appeal, and it tastes unrefined in a complementary way.

Buy if: wanting an improvement over cheap American swill on a hot day.

Overall verdict: Refreshing if overly wheat-driven in flavor.

3 out of 5.

--Nick

Daily Dose of Humor

Thanks to Kris Heenk and Cracked.com.



--Nick

TCM, Let's talk about Sex, part 4 out of 4

Howdy folks. Here is the final and probably most controversial post on The Christian Manifesto. Hope you have your pens ready and your eyes open!

TCM, part 4 out of 4

Enjoy!

--Nick

Friday, February 24, 2012

The Lewis Black Today

“Jerry Falwell said that the reason that September 11th happened, the reason that God allowed it to happen, was because of certain people in our country. People like, and I'm quoting, 'the pagans,' which is a motorcycle group. Feminists; he brought up feminists. [...] And I couldn't believe it, he said that God had actually talked to him and said, these were the people. That was the reason. It was those people, and that was the reason God allowed this to happen. And I thought, 'That's odd.' Because God had called me twelve hours before, and He said the reason He was upset was because of people like Jerry Falwell.”


--Lewis Black

TCM, Let's talk about Sex, part 3 out of 4

Hey folks. Here is part three.


Excerpt: "We are raised in a world with two types of women: virgins and whores. "


Enjoy Part 3 out of 4.


--Nick

Making God Look Good tentative poster


The series will be from the first person perspective of a burned out PR representative who takes a job offered by St. Paul to become God's PR guy for the new generations. Covering topical issues such as the atonement, capital punishment and the sexual revolution, "Making God Look Good" is both insightful, robust and comedic.

"The Onion" meets "Thank You For Smoking."

Enjoy.

--Nick

Daily Dose of Humor


--Nick

TCM, Let's talk about Sex part 2 of 4

Hey folks. As promised, here is part two. I think it is stronger than part one, and delves into some very interesting territory.

TCM: Let's Talk About Sex part 2

--Nick

TCM: Let's talk about Sex part 1 of 4

I'm on staff at The Christian Manifesto, as well as a contributor to the podcast in both the Roundtable Discussion as well as Dual Impressions with J.F. Arnold. Here is the beginning of a (mildly) controversial series written by friend Adrienne Johnston, and I hope your mind is sparked towards something great.


TCM -- Let's Talk About Sex pt 1


*my linking this does not equate to my agreement with said link, though I found myself agreeing with much of it. 


God bless. 


--Nick

A cartoon I drew as a kid



--Nick

The Lewis Black Today

“In my lifetime, we've gone from Eisenhower to George W. Bush. We've gone from John F. Kennedy to Al Gore. If this is evolution, I believe that in twelve years, we'll be voting for plants.” 
--Lewis Black


I personally think we're already adapted a predilection towards chlorophyl. Nom.


--Nick

Christians & the Soul: Nancey Murphy lecture

I found this to be fascinating. I have Alex and Colin to thank for handing this off to me. Nancey Murphy is a Christian philosopher as well as a physicalist, in that she believes that human beings do not possess an immortal soul. She is Professor of Christian Philosophy at Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, CA. She received the B.A. from Creighton University(philosophy and psychology) in 1973, the Ph.D. from University of California, Berkeley (philosophy of science) in 1980, and the Th.D. from the Graduate Theological Union (theology) in 1987.


You should check her out. 

Much could be said, but I think listening to the lecture itself is fascinating. I'm doing it right now. White wine helps.

Radio Lecture

--Nick

"Eternal Fire" or why I believe Annihilationism is a Biblical option

I am not entirely sold on the idea, but I believe that Scripture is very strongly attested towards the perspective of conditional immortality. I recently had to disagree with my university (it is unnecessary to name them) on their doctrinal statement where they included decisive language on the eternal conscious fate of the wicked. I did this just as an exercise, and knew that my perspective more than likely disqualified me. This is not to say that I disrespect or hold this against the university.

I had only a page to write out my disagreement, and I know much more could be said on this issue. So, here it is.

1) ETERNAL FIRE

A. I do believe that hell will be eternal in effect (Matthew 25:46) but I do not believe that the punishment is ongoing and conscious. Instead, I believe the payment of sin is death (Romans 6:23) and I do believe that, if suffering was all that was required of Christ, then his death is nonsensical.
B. Matthew 25:41 references "eternal fire," and in the Greek, it is used several different times throughout Scripture. One of them is in Jude verses 3-7, where it explicitly states that Soddom and Gomorrah serve as an example of ' the vengeance of "eternal fire.'" And Soddom and Gomorrah was, according to Genesis 19:24-29, utterly destroyed. The content is known as a "sample" of what will happen. 2 Peter 2:6 explicitly says that God condemned them to '"extinction", making them an example of what will happen to the ungodly.'
C. You also have a host of metaphors to describe the ultimate fate of the wicked. "Like chaff that the wind drives away...the wicked will perish" (Ps 1:4,6). They will be dashed "in pieces like a potter's vessel." (Ps. 2:9). These are merely samples of the imagery the Bible uses to describe utter and complete destruction.

2) INHERENT IMMORTALITY

A. This also is in conjunction with Romans 6:23 in that the only people who are explicitly given eternal life are Christians (John 3:15-16, 10:28, 17:2/ Rom 2:7, I Cor 15:42f, 50, 54/ Gal 6:8/ I John 5:11). I believe that those who reject God's gift will not in fact receive immortality. Any hope we may have had of being inherently immortal was lost in Adam's sin (Gen 3:23-24).  John 3:16 declares that "everyone who believes in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life." James 1:15 states that "sin, when it is fully grown, gives birth to death." I think the Biblical language of destruction describes Annihilationism, and the presupposition of inherent immortality is unfounded.

3) ALL IN ALL

A. The belief that Scripture teaches unending conscious torment is inconsistent with the host of Scriptural revelation elsewhere, especially in regards to God's total victory over sin and death. If hell, and by extension sin and sinners, exists after the cosmic redemption has taken place, then God is not victorious because sin and suffering still exist. If sin still exists after the complete reconciliation of all things (Col 1:20, Eph 1:10), then there is a contradiction.
B. Annihilationism is an excellent way, I think, to hold together the passages about judgment as well as the cosmic redemption exhibited in God's unfailing love and his desire to be "all in all" (I Cor 15:28).

4) CONCLUSION

I go where the evidence leads, and I believe Scripture quite possibly teaches that the wicked will simply be no more after the end of all things. This does not mean I am not open to new evidence or arguments. I do not believe that people who believe in ETC or Universalism lack intelligence or Biblical integrity, so I offer grace as a substitute for contention.

My mind is not set on this topic, and lately I have begun to conduct more research. I still believe annihilationism is a valid view, and will defend it even if I change my mind.

More to come. For additional resources see:

Glenn Peoples -- http://www.beretta-online.com/wordpress/2011/an-open-letter-to-my-traditionalist-friends/

Theopologetics (Podcast/ Blog)

Interview -- Edward Fudge #54-55, Larry Dixon #62-63.
Debate -- Ronnie vs Turretinfan #64-65, Chris Date vs Hiram Diaz #70-71.
Post-Debate Reflections -- #72-74.

Joseph Dear -- http://3-ringbinder.blogspot.com/2010/09/explanation-of-my-controversial-though.html

Hope all is well.

--Nick

Christian Physicalism

A very interesting article on the incarnation and physicalism. I'm undecided on the issue of physicalism, but Glenn offers a compelling case below.


Although I believe that non-material things exist (God being the most obvious such thing), when it comes to human beings I’m a physicalist, a monist, call it what you will. We, unlike God, are physical beings. And yet, like all Christians (i.e. this is one of the doctrinal litmus tests for being a Christian), I believe that in the person of Jesus, God became one of us.
Every now and then a fellow Christian tells me that this means I’ve got a real problem on my hands. Physicalism, it is alleged, just doesn’t allow for a non-material being like God the Son to become man, if men are physical. The orthodox view, I am told, has no problems here. The pre-existent non-material person (God the Son) could become human and we would have no trouble describing this if humans themselves are non-material beings (or beings that have a non-material part at least).
But is all of this true? Am I the one with a problem, while my dualist friends have none at all? I’ll grant that it’s very easy to name the event of the incarnation in dualist terms – that is, to apply labels to what took place. The non-material Logos took to himself a human body and soul and became fully man while remaining fully God. There. That was easy. But clearly I’ve explained absolutely nothing. I’ve just put labels on what I am alleging to have taken place. Labelling is just as easy for the physicalist, like so: The non-material Logos became flesh and dwelt among us. But again, nothing is explained here. This is merely a profession of faith about what, in the very broadest of terms, happened.
Once or twice someone has taken the risk of trying to snare physicalism in Christological heresy, and in my view been less than unsuccessful. That said, I do wonder how fair it is to try to have a “gotcha” type of victory against physicalism on the grounds that it can’t give a fully satisfying account of how God in Christ became fully human. I say this because dualism, in my view, can’t either. In fact such is the minefield of Christology that it’s very easy when trying to actually explain it, to slip into a view that is historically regarded as heretical.
Example 1. Back in 1993 Christian apologist William Lane Craig debated atheist Frank Zindler on whether the evidence best supports Christianity or atheism. Bill won, hands down. But during the Q and A session, a member of the audience asked Bill how he could account for the idea that God became human in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. Here, Bill supposed, dualism would be able to swoop in to provide a swift and easy solution.
I believe that human beings are units that have immaterial and physical portions. And in essence what the incarnation says is that the mind or the soul of Jesus of Nazareth was the Second Person of the Trinity. And therefore, I don’t see any more difficulty in having an incarnation of a divine mind than I do in having an incarnation in our own case of a human finite mind.
William Lane Craig and Frank R. Zindler, Atheism vs. Christianity: Where Does the Evidence Point?, 1993
Students of church history or theology may recognise this as the view dubbed “Apollinarianism,” the view expounded by Apollinaris the Younger, Bishop of Laodicea in the fourth century. It is the view that shared the dualism of most Christians, with a physical body and an immaterial soul. However, whereas most Christians would have thought of us as having a human body and a human soul, Apollinarius said that Jesus had a human body and a divine soul, and that his divine soul being united to a human body constituted him being incarnated. Essentially, the non-physical son of God put on the clothing of a human body.
Those same students will also be aware that orthodox Christianity condemned Apollinarianism. The view was overtly rejected by several Church Councils, and the Council of Constantinople in 381 added Apollinarianism to the list of heresies. Although educated theologians might have a refined enough understanding of the complexities to steer clear of Apollinarianism, simply based on personal experience I maintain that it is the view held by the majority of everyday evangelical: That God the Son, the immaterial being, entered a material human body and lived out his days as a man on earth.
Bill is not alone among evangelicals who have trodden on a proverbial hidden landmine here. J P Moreland affirms the view that Bill expressed in the quote above at some length in a book co-authored by Craig and Moreland, Philosophical Foundations of a Christian Worldview, in which they speak quite favourably of Apollinarianism. Systematic Theologian Millard Erickson, a champion of Christological Orthodoxy among Evangelicals, wrote a substantial work on the incarnation in 1991: The Word Became Flesh: A Contemporary Incarnational Christology. In it, one of the things he sets out to do is to address a whole range of questions that the doctrine of the incarnation raises. One set of such questions has to do with whether or not Jesus was capable of sin. Millard says that he would have been capable, and then discusses what might have happened had Jesus actually sinned – or rather, what might have happened to prevent Jesus actually doing so:
At the very brink of the decision to sin, where that decision had not yet taken place, but the Father knew it was about to be made, the Second Person of the Trinity would have left the human nature of Jesus, dissolving the incarnation…. Had the Logos departed, Jesus would not have died. That would only have been the case only if the person had been merely divine, only the Logos, as various forms of Apollinarianism required. Rather, Jesus would have survived, but would have “slumped” to mere humanity, and sinful mere humanity at that.
Millard J. Erickson, The Word Became Flesh (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1991), 563-564.
True enough, Erickson has avoided Apollinarianism. But what is now left in its place? The possibility suggested by Erickson is that when the divine Logos departs from the human nature, the divine person returning to the Father and the human person Jesus continuing to live in Israel. Now we have, not a divine soul with a human body, but in fact two people capable of living apart: one human and one divine. It may not be Apollinarianism, but it is another heresy equally clearly condemned by Orthodoxy: Nestorianism. Nestorianismdepicted Jesus’ “human nature as a complete man, and represented the Incarnation as the assumption of a man by the Word.” There is a clear similarity here with the Ebionite Heresy, where Jesus of Nazareth was a person who was not divine, and upon whom the divine Spirit (Christ) descended. In fact, if the incarnation could be terminated in the way that Erickson suggests, the Ebionite view is essentially correct. I have sympathy for Erickson’s plight. He doesn’t want to fall into Apollinarianism, and he is lumbered with the task of saying that in the incarnation you’ve got a human body and soul – which in dualism generally counts as a complete human person, and you’ve also got the immaterial Logos – God the Son, who was surely a person from eternity past. It’s hard to put all that together and still have no more than exactly one person!
I’m not an Apollinarian or a Nestorian. But at the same time, I would definitely not relegate Craig or Erickson to the legions of the damned – far from it! But then, I’m not someone who thinks (to hijack the language of the Epistle of James) that whoever affirms the entire faith but goes awry on one fine detail shall be found guilty of rejecting it all. The fact is that sorting out the fine details of complex doctrines that none of us think God has spoken explicitly or at length about through Scripture is a perilous business, and we should extend grace to one another.
That brings me to my view. I have once heard someone say that any Christian with a physicalist view of human beings must commit to Apollinarianism and say that the non-material Logos took a human body like a hand in a glove. But of course, this is merely a misrepresentation of a physicalist view about human persons. Physicalism is not just a strict dualism minus the soul (leaving a passive body), and we certainly would not think of the human body as anything like glove. On the contrary, the human mind – what dualists take to be the human soul – is produced by the body. The accusation of Apollinarianism really does not get off the ground when aimed at physicalism. Perhaps a more plausible – although still mistaken – accusation of Christological heresy to throw at physicalism would be that of Eutychianism, the view named after Euthyches of Constantinople, that in the incarnation there are not really two natures but one new nature that is neither human nor divine, but a sort of halfway house. After all, doesn’t it seem that physicalism has to somehow bundle everything that Jesus was into one physical entity?
Even if that is what physicalism does, the accusation of Eutychianism cannot stick, because a substance is not a nature – even in classical theology (in classical theology, having a nature or form is what makessomething a substance).
I want to tread carefully, because there are people who I respect who have said that the Christological implications of physicalism bother them. I do not mean to describe them all in the way I am about to but this does apply to some: Sometimes we disagree with a position, we think we’ve found a problem for it, and because we disagree with that point of view and cherish our own we quite frankly don’t want there to be a solution for those who hold that point of view, so even if we’re not really sure how our own point of view copes with the issue, we declare – with more confidence than we really deserve – that the position in question is in an irresolvable bind. I recall someone telling me – as a reason for me to give up physicalism – that he told a theologically minded friend who he respected that some take a physicalist view of human nature and still say that Christ became human, and that his friend’s immediate reply was “heresy!” This fellow stressed to me that his friend was able to spit this reply out “without even thinking.” I recall thinking at the time – “it sure sounds like it!” Like any new way of thinking about the incarnation, given the complexity of that doctrine, a physicalist view of human nature deserves the time to be turned over in the mind and probed carefully – as does the doctrine of the incarnation itself – to see if there might be some way of preserving the essentials in a way just as cogent as a dualist view. I take those essentials to be that Jesus Christ is truly man and truly God, that he had always been God prior to the incarnation, that he is one and only one person both actually and potentially, and that he maintains two distinct nature (i.e. his human nature is not divine and his divine nature is not human).
In fact some provocative and I think quite persuasive explanation of how a physicalist and yet orthodox view of the incarnation (orthodox in the sense of maintain these four essentials) has been explored in more than one place by Oliver Crisp. He points out where the conflict lies: Traditional Christology has taught that Christ’s human nature involved having a “rational soul,” that is, a human, immaterial soul. The Athanasian Creed refers to Christ being a perfect man “of a reasonable soul and human flesh subsisting.” But the point in saying this was to stress that Jesus didn’t just have part of a human, but he had a fully human nature, not lacking in any part. My take has always been that a physicalist can maintain this without believing in a rational or reasonable soul in the dualist sense, provided the physicalist thinks that a complete human does not have a rational or reasonable soul in the dualist sense. Fortunately, this is precisely what we do think. It was refreshing to see Crisp make this same point. He uses the term “restricted materialism” to mean “materialism as a view about human persons, but not necessarily about everything that exists.” He says:
Now, it may be that the Fathers of Chalcedon thought that the only way to rebut Apollinarianism was to fall back upon some version of substance dualism. But the restricted materialist would be right to point out that if this is true, the Fathers of Chalcedon were mistaken. For it turns out that restricted materialism is consistent with Christ having the requisite sort of irreducibly mental life necessary for being fully human, such that Apollinarianism is blocked. Yet restricted materialism postulates no human soul in order to do so. One might construe the Chalcedonian claim that Christ had a ‘rational soul’, that is, a human nous, to mean the mental part or component of a human being. … But that, the materialist will point out, is consistent with the tenets of restricted materialism given local property dualism, and is also anti-Apollinarian. Such reasoning does justice to what Chalcedon says about Christ’s ‘rational soul’, without appeal to an immaterial substance.
Oliver Crisp, God Incarnate: Explorations in Christology (London: T & T Clark, 2009), 152.
In the end, Crisp suggests a kind of cost benefit analysis. There are costs to being a Christian physicalist when it comes to Christology – just as there are costs involved in dualism. One such cost for dualism, noted by Crisp, is that if one takes a Cartesian view of the soul and believes that having a body is not essential to being human, then they must say – as Craig and Moreland do explicitly (Philosophical Foundations of a Christian Worldview, 609) that becoming embodied was not necessary for Christ to become truly human. The incarnation was literally unnecessary in order for the Logos to become human! But of course, not all dualists need be Cartesians. One cost for materialism is that it simply would not persuade anyone who thinks that the “reasonable soul” in the Athanasian Creed had to be thought of in dualist terms. I have no doubt that the framers of that creed did think of that term in terms of dualism, but I hope at least some dualists will appreciate why the same intention of that creed can be upheld without maintain dualism about human persons. Another cost, one that Crisp acknowledges to be substantial, is that of tradition. Orthodox theologians since Chalcedon have thought of Christ’s rational human soul in dualist terms, and this understanding has thus become a mainstay of Christology – yet physicalists maintain that this view is mistaken.
Still, this leaves not fully answered the precise relationship of the divine Logos to the physicality that is a human being. I confess to not being overly worried by this fact, since all orthodox dualist formulations that I know of leave more or less unanswered the question of the precise relationship between the divine Logos and the human soul and body (I say “orthodox” here in such a way as to exclude those who, with Craig and Moreland, effectively have the same question to answer as a physicalist, since the appear to remove the ordinary human rational soul from the picture). You could call this the problem of interaction – which, so my dualist friends tell me, is no problem at all. I happen to think it may be a problem in terms of everyday mundane human life, but perhaps less of a problem if we have already accepted that the event in question – the incarnation – is nothing short of miraculous.
At the very least, my request would be that we don’t number a person among the heretics simply because they fall afoul of the duty to be able to account for their view in the ludicrously precise and yet at the same time often completely opaque turns of phrase that one finds in historical Christology. Do I affirm that God the Son became man in the person of Jesus, and that he was and is one person with a human nature and a divine nature? Absolutely! Can I give a full account of this by appealing to philosophical anthropology? No, and for that matter I have yet to meet anyone who in my view has succeeded where I fail.
Glenn Peoples

For the link, Physicalism and the Incarnation

--Nick

13 Things That Make Me a Lousy Evangelical

Well. First things first, I consider myself Evangelical. But, I figured I'd take a shot at this since Rachel Held Evans did the same.

Link: http://rachelheldevans.com/lousy-evangelical

I often find myself at odds with other Evangelical Christians, and this sometimes manifests itself in caricatures about my beliefs and perspectives. I tend to have some habits about my approach which seems to be non-mainstream:

1. I never err on the side of tradition. I generally question orthodoxy and do not believe it is by nature true. It gets a vote, never a veto.

2. I think inerrancy is a broad term that can include many assorted perspectives.

3. I tend to question God's "plan" for suffering, usually when people chalk up events and offer a spin of said plans to incorporate speculative motives.

4. I tend to get into debates very quickly.

5. I hold to a traditional view of hell, though I strongly differ with other Christians on what "traditional" actually means. My belief on hell is still considered a minority perspective within Christendom.

6. I'm registered as a Republican, though most would consider me a moderate to liberal one. I'm unsold on the death penalty, I think marijuana ought to be legalized (for fiscal and non-personal reasons), I generally mistrust all authority, and would be considered liberal on issues such as immigration and alternative energy. I would be conservative from an economic standpoint as well as abortion.

7. I didn't like Blue Like Jazz or Don't Waste Your Life.

8. I'd vote for a Mormon. Just not the one most people seem to lean towards.

9. Ironically, I'm an exclusivist and think this is consistent with the inclusivist understanding of Scripture.

10. I was once a trinitarian heretic. Of course, I was 7 years old. I still don't understand the trinity, and haven't for over 3 years.

11. I have no issue with sharing DNA with a gorilla. Nor do I believe that Genesis must be understood in a literal sense. I'm agnostic on Genesis.

12. My favorite movie is Sin City. My favorite video game series is Grand Theft Auto. My favorite beverage tends to be between German beers and dark rum.

13. I'm actually comfortable with the label Evangelical, as opposed to many in my generation who prefer "spiritual."

I hope we can still be friends.

--Nick

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Making God Look Good -- Holy PR preface


DISCLAIMER:

"The contents of this book are solely of the author and his experiences. Any quotes related to people like Jerry Falwell, Richard Dawkins or Pat Robertson are entirely in your own mind."

Dictated, not read, the Big Man Upstairs.