Jesus the Cold Case: Mark Keown Responds to the documentary by Bryan Bruce


“Through the program Bryan Bruce drew on a range of scholars like NZ’s own Lloyd Gering, Bishop Spong, Dominic Crossan and others. Without exception, the scholars drawn on are a particular breed of liberals (e.g. Jesus Seminar) with a particular viewpoint and agenda i.e. they reject the Scriptures and revision them radically reinterpreting Christianity through a liberal skeptical lens. They pick and choose which bits of the Bible they prefer, rejecting others. Now, unbeknown to Bruce and many others, there are a vast array of biblical scholars and theologians out there who find their views incorrect at many levels. Some names that did not feature in this are N.T. Wright, Ben Witherington, Craig Blomberg, Don Carson and Richard Bauckham, among many others. Most if not all the things discussed in the program have been discussed in biblical scholarship. Through the program we hear ‘most/some/all biblical scholars’ again and again – let the reader know, his confidence is misplaced and arrogant. He does not have any idea what ‘most, some and all’ biblical scholars think, he has not done his homework. It is absolutely unacceptable to present such a biased perspective when there is mountains of scholarship that can be brought alongside what he put together to critique it.” Mark Keown

Bryan Bruce, filmaker

Bryan Bruce, filmaker

 

Source: Mark Keown: Jesus the Cold Case: A Response

 

A Short History Of Messianic Judaism – ONE FOR ISRAEL Ministry


There have always been Jewish people who believed in Yeshua, but the path of Messianic Judaism has taken many interesting turns throughout history.

Source: A Short History Of Messianic Judaism – ONE FOR ISRAEL Ministry

The Sun Magazine |from Wrong Turn:Interview with Rupert Sheldrake


sheldrake

Sheldrake: If the information were carried only in the genes, then all the cells of the body would be programmed identically, because they contain the same genes. The cells of your arms and legs are genetically identical to those of your bones, cartilage, and tissues. If the genes are the same, then the development of some cells into arms and others into legs must depend on nongenetic influences. In my work I describe a “nested hierarchy” of morphogenetic units that coordinate the fields of limbs, muscles, and so forth.

There’s a lot about us that genetics can’t explain. In studies, identical twins separated at birth show remarkable similarities. Perhaps both develop a strong interest in stock-car racing and art. There are no “stock-car- and art-loving” genes.

The researchers who launched the Human Genome Project expected to find that we have a hundred thousand genes, but the final tally is more like twenty-three thousand. A fruit fly has seventeen thousand genes. A sea urchin has twenty-six thousand. Rice has thirty-eight thousand genes! Humans are more mechanically complicated than rice, so why don’t we have more genes?

Scientists have identified about fifty human genes associated with height, but research shows that together those fifty genes account for only about 5 percent of a person’s height. Most of the heritability is missing, and that’s a big problem for genetic theories of how the body works. My theories offer a better solution to the “missing heritability” problem. Geneticists say, “Give us another ten years, and we’ll have it all figured out. We just need more computing power and gene sequencing. That’s all.” I have a wager with developmental biologist Lewis Wolpert: if by May 1, 2029, he can’t predict all the details of an organism based on the genome of a fertilized egg, he loses.

The Sun is an independent, ad-free monthly magazine that for more than forty years has used words and photographs to invoke the splendor and heartache of being human. The personal essays, short stories, interviews, poetry, and photographs that appear in its pages explore the challenges we face and the moments when we rise to meet those challenges. Writing from The Sun has won the Pushcart Prize, been published in Best American Short Stories and Best American Essays, and been broadcast on National Public Radio.

Source: The Sun Magazine | Wrong Turn

The Artistry of Nature — Mere Inkling


This picture of flamingos is delightful. That they “randomly” arranged themselves into a silhouette of themselves is amazing. Or, perhaps a divine hand painted this glorious portrait? “What a fanciful thought,” poets muse. “How absurd!” atheists groan. “Is he serious?” realists wonder. “Now that’s something to ponder…” people of faith think. “Of course God has fashioned […]

via The Artistry of Nature — Mere Inkling

William Deresiewicz on the Ivy League, Mental Illness, and the Meaning of Life – The Atlantic


“Ultimately, colleges have inherited the spiritual mission of churches. As religious beliefs have declined with the rise of science, especially among educated people, people started to turn elsewhere to ask the big questions: What does life mean? What is the world about? People turned to works of art, to literature, music, theater, philosophy, which were in turn brought into college curricula.”

How an elite education can lead to a cycle of grandiosity and depression

Source: William Deresiewicz on the Ivy League, Mental Illness, and the Meaning of Life – The Atlantic