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Name: Dave
Birthday: 10/26/1984
Gender: Male


Interests: Education, Learning to write well, Communicating unadulterated, unsolicited, and unedited thought.
Expertise: Being in college, learning theology, and matters of the Bible.
Occupation: Student
Industry: Education/Research


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AIM: King DaveCo
Yahoo: King_DaveCo


Member Since: 9/17/2004

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Monday, February 13, 2006

Technorati Profile


Thursday, January 05, 2006

Moving My Blog...

I've decided to move my blog to a place where I'll have more options and power over my blog and it's lay out.

It is now here: http://dmbennett.wordpress.com/

Book mark it.


Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Research and results....

I just read this article, it's fascinating and relevant to all Christians out there. Let me say one thing before you read it, pay careful attention to the lack of ill-will this Rabbi has against Christianity, and how he nearly beleives Christianity and Judaism to be of the "same spiritual energy". What does that mean? Anywho, some thoughts to ponder and questions to be raised. More importantly is the issue at hand in this article, where has the faith, love, and prayer gone?

My answer, and perhaps an illuded point, post-industrial consumer captialism. That is not an solution, just a complaint, so forgive me for being useless thus far on this one.

P.s. I have nothing against Rabbinic persons or Judaism, and I somewhat dig the lack of ill-will.


Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Reading List Update

Following the path of my sister I too this year will be posting a completed works list, basically for myself, but hey I suppose it couldn't hurt to see if other people are interested:

Dave’s 2006  completed books: 
  • Border Crossings by Rodney Clapp
    • Subject matter: Christian trespasses on popular culture, politics, and art.


Another Response to Blue Like Jazz by Don Miller

I was reading an assignment for one of my classes, which happens to be two treatises one by Emil Brunner, and one by Karl Barth who has heralded in this era in the protestant age of "knowing God". Written and published in 1934 these treatises are very systematic and scientific in layout and proposal. Here is a brief excerpt to show my point:

I have formulated them as Barth's opinions as best as I can. I am not perfectly certain however, whether I have hit upon ever shade of Barth's opinion.

In what follows I set out:
  1. My counter-theses witha very brief scriptural proof.
  2. A discussion of its relation in the history of dogma to the Reformation, to Thomism and to Neo-Protestantism.
  3. A concluding discussion of the theological and practical signifigance of the controversy, i.e. of the interest of theology and the Church in the rejection of the conclsions which Barth draws from his correct fundamental position.
Many times I remember reading in Blue Like Jazz that Miller is tired of himself and others thinking of  Religion in such a mathematical way. The truth is, perhaps Miller is looking at the wrong thing, in essence Miller while using post-modernist thought and arguing against modernist thought, is indeed employing a modernist argument to post-modernist people who are using modernist ideas of knowledge, and he is doing this under the guise of post-modernism.

Now that was rather wordy and perhaps hard to follow, but let me explain. Where Miller sees mathematical and regulated ways of talking at the Bible, I see that as just another way at looking at the Bible as looking at it relationally. Miller is constructing a fundamental theology based on narrative and relationship, while at the same time expecting those who look at it rationally as inherently wrong or biased against this.

If he were a true adherent to post-modernism he would be apt to say that both are paths to finding God, regardless of whether or not he can see it from the point of view presented through Rationality and the scientific method.

Don't take me wrong here, but I am niether a supporter or opponent to either of these views, I think that both have their own nuance and tact, and in their own rights are different means to the same end. I will say this though, experientially I can understand a systemetic way of thinking, I am prone to do so, often times.

I use the example of Emil Brunner above to say one thing: Because he is systematically understanding the Bible and our interaction with it (I.e. Scriptural proofs, a 3-point outline) does not mean that his understanding/faith in God is any more or less important than Don Millers.

Let us free ourselves of negating each other's clearly God given talents and join hands and work to the glory of his kingdom. In other words: let's get along. Let us also not forget the beauty of both systems of thought: without rational systematic "modern" thought our world of ease and technology would never have ascended to become what it is now, and without relational and narrative theology our understanding of Christ and the move towards civil rights would not be as far progressed as it has become. In the end, without the narrative of Jesus, Martin Luther King Jr. might not have been such a determined or peaceful protester.



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