Streets and statues, truth and reconciliation

Especially for my friends in my home state, Virginia. My Virginia friends of my generation know what it was like to grow up there in the 1960s. I remember writing “reports” for assignments in elementary school and junior high school. I remember making covers for them. I used stencils that we bought at the stationeryContinue reading “Streets and statues, truth and reconciliation”

Faithful stewardship?

In February a Florida congressman introduced a bill to “terminate the Environmental Protection Agency”; that’s unlikely to happen soon, but slightly subtler minds are pressing for ways to inhibit the work of the EPA and related agencies. I understand and to some extent sympathize with the impulse to maximize self-reliance and the scope of individualContinue reading “Faithful stewardship?”

On the impossibility of failing to condemn anti-Semitism

This note responds to a reply to an earlier—and too brief, and in its brevity perhaps a bit careless—comment of mine decrying our president’s response to a question about rising threats of anti-Semitic violence. So here I want to say something a little more carefully. I am grateful to anyone who reads my posts, andContinue reading “On the impossibility of failing to condemn anti-Semitism”

Rebuke-slogans that I will not use, and what I think we must say instead

I have been seeing a lot of a couple of three-word slogans: “Not my president!” and “Get over it!” I think I understand both, but I reject both, and a third to which I think they reduce, and choose to affirm a fourth. 1. The first is Not my president! I cannot say “My president!”Continue reading “Rebuke-slogans that I will not use, and what I think we must say instead”

Politics and hope: Thoughts from Charles Mathewes

What now? Denial? Despair? Attack? Retreat? Exhaustion? How about some teaching and learning for the long haul? Christians cannot afford to be tired of politics, or worse yet, to be apolitical—as if that were even possible. We have to be more deeply and wisely and Christianly political. Although Christianity (unlike Judaism and Islam) does notContinue reading “Politics and hope: Thoughts from Charles Mathewes”

Tu quoque, yer mom!, and the way forward

Current events have me remembering some long-forgotten terms from informal logic. The general category is popular fallacies. One in particular that we saw almost every time a criticism was voiced against someone was the tu quoque fallacy. You can read about it in Wikipedia. Tu quoque is Latin for “you also.” What we saw inContinue reading “Tu quoque, yer mom!, and the way forward”

Hard questions, correct answers, and pastoral wisdom

This is mostly for my evangelical friends, about pastors. It takes off from a recent NY Times op-ed piece but goes beyond it to say something about pastoral leadership and how we respond to it. Perhaps some of you saw and appreciated Tim Keller’s answers to questions from Nicholas Kristof . I saw them andContinue reading “Hard questions, correct answers, and pastoral wisdom”

A leaf from the journal of a theological publisher

I guess in any line of work one invited to lead will now and then gather the team and ask: what do we imagine we are doing? If you take someone who might really rather be reading the ancients reading the Bible and put him in that position in your publishing company, you might getContinue reading “A leaf from the journal of a theological publisher”