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jesus christ

The I Dig Jesus Meme: My Response

June 28th, 2007 @ 6:39 pm by Rich | Share This | 25 comments
Filed under: Blogging, Religion, Random Miscellany

I Dig Jesus!For the second time in my short life as a blogger, I've been meme-tagged by an evil blogging compatriot hoping to provoke me into playing a silly blog-tagging game, generating more content, and generally surrendering to mass hysteria.

Okay. I'm in! But only because I'm a sucker for attention. And because, like the "One Book Meme," this question interests me, and I like it.

By the way, I was tagged by Carl Thomas over at the Revival Blog who, believe it or not, actually got a touch snarky with me in his post. This is a bit like playing touch football, only instead of being touched, or tagged, or merely pushed, you get a wedgie:

Rich — If he completes it, (remember that "imminent" post on Ted Haggard

Carlton D. Pearson: The Charismatic Bishop of Heresy

March 6th, 2006 @ 5:25 am by Rich | Share This | 130 comments
Filed under: Pentecostal, Religion, Rage and Rants, Bible and Theology
Update (07/14/2007): "Carlton Pearson: The closest to God you’ll probably ever get"

On Heresy

Bishop Carlton PearsonWhat is heresy? The textbook definition is simply:

  • An opinion or a doctrine at variance with established religious beliefs … or
  • A controversial or unorthodox opinion or doctrine.

And right alongside that definition — at least on this weblog, anyhow — you can find a picture of Bishop Carlton D. Pearson who wants to "rewrite the theology of the charismatic world" by preaching a "Gospel of Inclusion" asserting that Christ's death conclusively reconciled all mankind to God — whether we realize it or not — and that the only separation between man and God's grace is subjective, illusionary, and exists only in unenlightened minds (Carlton Pearson, "Jesus Savior of the World/Gospel of Inclusion — Position Paper," Higher Dimension website, viewed March 5, 2006).

More on that later, but first.…


Is the Church broken?

November 25th, 2005 @ 1:55 am by Rich | Share This | 24 comments
Filed under: Pentecostal, Religion, Rage and Rants

Travis Johnson, over at The Edge Church Think Tank, posted an article bemoaning the incredible shrinking church: “The Great Shrinking Church. What Gives?!?!” First, he cites some statistics from The American Church:

  • 18.7%: Americans in church in 2000
  • 18.0%: Americans in church in 2003
  • 11.7%: Americans projected to be in church by 2050
  • 4,600: New churches from 1990–2000
  • 38,802: How many new churches there should have been in order to keep pace with American population.

That America is becoming an increasingly secular nation is no surprise. That traditional church style seems increasingly irrelevant in the “naughties” and that church numbers are in decline—again—no surprise.

So, taking an unflinching look at the numbers (there was more cited), Travis concludes:

“In my mind, those statistics absolutely prove that we MUST move every single priority to the side burner. Establishing new churches and transitioning declining churches needs to be

Megiddo, Church, & Prison. Or, “Wait’ll the warden sees this!”

November 8th, 2005 @ 4:28 pm by Rich | Share This | 4 comments
Filed under: Religion, Links
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Megiddo Prison Church

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Stranger in a Strange Land: John Wilson reflects on Anne Rice

November 6th, 2005 @ 2:11 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: Fiction, Bookshelf, Religion, Links

The ever-brilliant (and most widely-read man I know) John Wilson over at Books & Culture, reflects on the pre-conversion writing of Anne Rice (especially Interview with the Vampire) and concludes with a comment on her conversion (see: “The Vampire and the Cross”). John’s take on Rice’s writing is succinct and spot-on:

“I finished the novel with the sense of moral contamination that some books leave us with.”

But he doesn’t end there. He concludes his analyses by recounting a review of the 1997 anthology, The Anne Rice Reader: Writers Explore the Universe of Anne Rice, edited by Katharine Ramsland. In his review (never published, unfortunately), Wilson writes, presciently:

In short, there was a profound contradiction at the heart of Rice's work. And so I

Anne Rice’s ‘Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt’ is in hand

October 31st, 2005 @ 2:33 pm by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: Fiction, Bookshelf, Religion, Links, Random Miscellany

Okay, I stopped by Border’s on the way home from a medical followup today, and I picked up Anne Rice’s Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt. I’ll soon be diving into it. Already I’m concerned. A phrase from the back of the book jacket caught my eye: the young Jesus Christ is described as a “nature mystic.” Maybe I misread that.

I will follow up with a review as soon as I can make it through the book. Assuming it’s not so laborious that it worsens my illness, that is.

So far, the reviews on Amazon are lightweight and glowing.

See my previous post: “Anne Rice channels the Jesus you never knew…

[tags]A-N-Roquelaure, Anne-Rampling, Anne-Rice, Howard-Allen-OBrien, Christ-the-Lord, Christopher-Rice, Evangelical, Howard-Allen-Frances-OBrien, jesus, christ, Jesus-Christ, Out-of-Egypt, Vampire-Lestat, literature, fiction, homosexuality, novel, Pentecostal, religious-fiction, review, http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0375412018[/tags]

Anne Rice channels the Jesus you never knew…

October 24th, 2005 @ 6:50 pm by Rich | Share This | 3 comments
Filed under: Fiction, Bookshelf, Religion, Links

So, the word is out: On November 1, 325,000 copies of Anne Rice’s latest literary offering will be hitting the shelves. Big deal, right? Yes. When the main character is no longer a blood-sucking vampire but is, instead, the seven-year old, blood-shedding savior: Jesus Christ. (Listen to an audio excerpt at MSNBC.)

I was clued-in to this only a few hours ago (October 25), but already the blogosphere is heating up over her latest book, Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt, and the print media is not far behind. Sadly, the print outlets are exploring neither Rice’s 1998 conversion (“return”) to Catholic Christianity, nor the depths of her change—if any. If you’re up to the lackluster press, check out Newsweek|MSNBC’s “The Gospel According to Anne,” Canada.com’s review, “



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