Keep Hoping and Pray
The tragedies occurring in Pakistan have devastated Christians around the world. Pakistani Christians are at risk in our hospitals, our schools and..
Creating and curating trustworthy resources for the church, the Presbyterian Outlook connects disciples of Jesus Christ through compelling and committed conversation for the proclamation of the Gospel.
The tragedies occurring in Pakistan have devastated Christians around the world. Pakistani Christians are at risk in our hospitals, our schools and..
By Walter Brueggemann
Eerdmans. 2002. 150 pp. Pb. $15.
ISBN 0-8028-3930-4
— reviewed by James K. Mead, Orange City, Iowa
Every preacher and teacher — and everyone who listens to sermons and lessons — cares about the theme Walter Brueggemann addresses in Ichabod Toward Home, based on his 2001 Stone Lectures at Princeton Seminary. Using the Ark Narrative in 1 Samuel 4-6 to explore what the church does when it stands before a biblical text, Brueggemann contends that the story of the ark’s capture, exile and return offers an alternative vision of the church’s proclamation and life in the world.
I have always had a strong desire to be tried for heresy. Heretics are exciting people while orthodoxy such as mine is completely unremarkable and rather dull. I am not so daring as to want to be convicted of heresy but to be charged with heresy would be a great delight. I assume that every physician longs to get sick so he can diagnose himself.
By Andrew Purves.
WJKP. 2001. 160 pp. Pb. $16.95.
ISBN 0-664-22241-2
— reviewed by Richard Ray, Bristol, Va.
Turning this little book by Andrew Purves over, weighing it from hand to hand, I realized that I could not easily write an impersonal response to it. I knew its author too well. During the past few years in which we were colleagues at Pittsburgh Seminary we often discussed its basic themes.
More than 60 years ago, in an era of enormous instability and hardship, my father often journeyed into remote regions of North..
In memoriam: Robert McAfee Brown The drums of war are getting louder. A pre-emptive strike against Iraq is emerging as a major..
There are certain things about which people disagree regarding the recent ruling of the General Assembly Permanent Judicial Commission in the Ronald Wier case — a case alleging that the installation of a gay elder at Second church, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., violated the rules. But there seems consensus on at least this much:
CHICACO — Trying to find out what's in the hearts of people out in the church, the Task Force on Peace, Unity and Purity of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) held a series of focus groups at the General Assembly this summer — asking people to speak to speak out about the task force's work and their own concerns.
The schedule for discussions that the Theological Task Force for Peace, Unity and Purity has proposed calls for each of its next four meetings to focus on a basic theological topic and a basic theme of Presbyterian polity, governance and history, as follows:
The United Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), formed by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and the United Presbyterian Church of North America in 1957, elected Edler Garnet Hawkins the first black moderator (1964) ever to so serve these denominations. Of course from the days of Samuel Cornish and Henry Highland Garnet to the organization of the Afro-American Presbyterian Council in Philadelphia (1894), through the years of "Jim Crow" institutionalized as "separate but equal" by the Supreme Court in 1897, Presbyterian blacks made their voices heard about Christian faith and life, breaking down some, not many, walls of segregation in the church.
God has given the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) a moment of grace to dream new dreams, to see new visions, to lay aside the weapons of warfare, and to rethink mission and strategy on a truly grand scale.
At the end of a quarter century of nearly continuous contentiousness, it is as if a boil has been lanced, followed by an experience of relief, a weary contingent of God’s people wanting to move beyond the trenches that divided and to move forward into a future of obedience and service.
By Michael L. Lindvall.
Geneva. 2001. 135 pp. Pb. $11.95.
ISBN 0-664-50142-7
— reviewed by Bill Klein, Lexington, Va.
Anyone familiar with Michael Lindvall’s book, The Good News from North Haven (reprint expected Summer 2002), will welcome his most recent effort. The Christian Life is another in the expected 12-volume Foundations of Christian Faith series being commissioned by the Office of Theology and Worship of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and published by Geneva Press.
CHICAGO — Sensing that it has a mountain of work before it and not an equivalent amount of time, the Theological Task Force on Peace, Unity and Purity in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) has approved what it calls "a plan for moving ahead" — essentially, a blueprint for how it will order its work in the months to come.
According to the Apostle Paul we are commanded not to think more highly of ourselves than we ought, but to think of ourselves with sober judgment (Romans 12:3). This is naturally easier said than done. My grown children still do not always think soberly -- a situation that occurs every time they disagree with me.
LOUISVILLE — Take one student with a heart for children at a Presbyterian seminary. Add one dose of inspiration, courtesy of the Children's Defense Fund.
Gently fold in kids, dozens of them, many from the inner city, with braids and big smiles and often an arms-length relationship with reading. Throw in some books from African-American authors and some college students looking to be role models.
Among the "accomplishments of the 214th General Assembly," the editor of The Outlook states that "the General Assembly affirmed the necessity of compliance with the standards" for ordination that have been the source of judicial decision and orders in the past two years. Actually all the Assembly did was to disapprove the overture from Shenango Presbytery and the amended minority report response to that overture.
Before commissioners had exchanged final hugs; before Moderator Fahed Abu-Akel had issued his last "holy"; and long before the TV screens went blank, the 214th General Assembly in Columbus, Ohio, had been labeled: "the Prozac Assembly" and "the do-no-harm Assembly" were two popular monikers.
A better description might be "the 70-30 Assembly."
In advance of the meeting of the 214th General Assembly in Columbus, Ohio, conventional wisdom held that there would be very little real work to be done since virtually all matters relating to human sexuality were off the table this time around.
As it turned out, though, commissioners not only did real and important work, they even dealt effectively with a few sexuality related issues.
The 214th General Assembly approved a capital funds drive for $40 million for new church development here at home and missionary support abroad. It is called "The New Initiative" and it is the first capital funds campaign for General Assembly agencies in the last 10 years.
AUSTIN, Texas — Theodore J. "Ted" Wardlaw, 49, pastor since 1991 of Central church, Atlanta, has been called to the presidency of Austin Seminary beginning in mid-November.
Wardlaw's nomination to become the seminary's ninth president was approved by seminary trustees on July 1. He will take office on the retirement of Robert M. Shelton, who has served the seminary for 31 years, as a professor of homiletics, academic dean and, for the last five years, as president.
Peter Marshall, born just 100 years ago in Coatbridge, Scotland, shot across our American sky, a ministerial star of the 1940s and 1950s. With a technical and mining school education, Marshall docked at Ellis Island in 1927, and worked as a day laborer in the East and South until experiencing a call to minister. He enrolled in Columbia Seminary in 1928, graduated magna cum laude and was ordained in 1931. He had already made a name for himself during the Depression with a sermon, 'Singing in the Rain,' which he preached all over Georgia.
For weeks The Presbyterian Outlook has expressed editorial hopes that the 214th General Assembly would be a Pentecost Assembly — one in..
There is reportedly a minister shortage throughout the country. As a seminary president, a week doesn't go by without an inquiry from a church to recommend the good pastor for their congregation. Who is that good pastor and how do we recognize that person when we are searching?
The results of a new survey of Presbyterian Outlook readers support the view that the deeper division in the church is primarily about whether the Bible is authoritative. Also, while most wish there were less conflict in the PC(USA), still more are willing to tolerate different viewpoints, even if it results in conflict.
One of the first casualties of war is the truth. Sadly, the theological divisions within our denomination have apparently developed into full-scale war because attempts at reporting the truth have declined. The Presbyterian Layman has chosen to ignore all journalistic standards and displayed complete disregard for the lives of the people whom they have chosen to attack.
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