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Dan Wilkinson

Top 10 Unfundamentalist Christians Posts of 2015

December 24, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Christian Issues

It’s been a great year on the UC blog. I took over the helm of this little corner of the Internet in May and since then have worked hard to try and maintain the high standard that John Shore set when he originally founded this group. (By the way, you have gotten in on John’s Kickstarter campaign, right? Trust me, you don’t want to let it slip by!)

Below are our most popular post from this past year, and while I’m proud to have published each and every one of them, I’m also equally proud to have published posts that didn’t necessarily generate thousands of pageviews. Such posts are often part of our Christian Spirituality category — if you’re looking for something a little more contemplative I encourage you to check them out as well.

Finally, if you have some writing you’d like to share, I’m always looking for contributors. Or, if you’d just like to ask a question or make a suggestion about UC, this blog, or life in general, please drop me a line via our contact form.

Your “Deeply Held Religious Belief” Isn’t BiblicalIn our most-viewed post of the year, April Kelsey makes a great case for why trying to claim your bigotry is supported by the Bible just doesn’t work.

“40 Questions For Christians Now Waving Rainbow Flags”UC’s own Buzz Dixon brilliantly responds to questions about same-sex marriage asked by Kevin DeYoung of The Gospel Coalition.

The Duggars: Privilege and Personal IrresponsibilityUC’s resident Duggar aficionado Don Burrows blogs about his favorite… [Read more…] about Top 10 Unfundamentalist Christians Posts of 2015

A Gay Pastor Explains What the Bible Really Says About Homosexuality

October 12, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Christian Issues, LGBT

Unfundamentalist Christians founder John Shore recently shared a letter from a gay Christian who is struggling with his sexuality and faith. Among the many encouraging comments on that post was one from a gay pastor who beautifully explained his understanding of the Bible, Christianity, and sexuality.

This pastor graciously agreed to let me share his comment as blog post here. He wishes to remain anonymous because he is not out to his congregation (though he is out to his church’s leadership), but he describes himself as:

a gay pastor who spent decades running from my true affections. But now, after years of denial and fear, I finally realize that God lovingly formed me to be who I am, in my mother’s womb, and that the Lord embraces me as his loved gay child. The Truth has set me free, and I am free indeed.

Here’s his wonderful response to the letter writer on John’s blog:

May I respond to your concern about Romans 1? Paul was not saying that idolatry turns people gay; rather, he was saying that idolatry led to participation in shameful acts of lust. I believe most of the participants were heterosexuals who were acting contrary to their nature. Let me explain, using Cybele worship as an illustration.

Ten to fifteen years before Paul wrote his letter to Rome, Emperor Claudius permitted the worship of Cybele, a mother goddess, to take place in Rome. There were prominent temples to the goddess in Rome (where the letter was being sent to) and in Corinth (where Paul… [Read more…] about A Gay Pastor Explains What the Bible Really Says About Homosexuality

Putting Words in Paul’s Mouth: “Women: Shut Up!”

September 30, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Christian History, Christian Issues

1 Corinthians 14.34−35 reads:
Women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church.

Here Paul writes in unambiguous terms a dictum applicable not just to a single church, but to “the churches,” repeating his injunction twice: women should remain silent, they aren’t allowed to speak, and then, in case you’re still looking for a way around this rule, he reminds us that “it is disgraceful” for women to speak in church. Paul couldn’t have been any clearer on the issue. Reading the text at face value, there’s simply no room for interpreting away his command.

Despite this clarity, few Christians actually follow Paul’s command. It’s often explained away as a cultural artifact, perhaps addressing a specific situation involving a group of unruly wives in Corinth. But an across-the-board prohibition against women speaking that’s applicable to the modern church? Surely not!

However, there are some significant textual issues behind these verses that cast doubt on whether Paul actually penned them.

First, it isn’t at all clear where these two verses actually belong in the text. Depending on which manuscript tradition you study, these verse appear either after v. 33 or after v. 40. There’s roughly equal manuscript support for each reading, so it’s not so much a… [Read more…] about Putting Words in Paul’s Mouth: “Women: Shut Up!”

I'm not a fan of the Pope and you shouldn't be either

September 22, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Christian Issues, Current Events

As the hullabaloo over Pope Francis’ visit to America reaches a fever pitch, it’s important to keep in mind some sobering realities about the organization he leads.

The Pope has been widely lauded for his seemingly revolutionary statements, such as:

“Who am I to judge?”
“there is no Catholic God”
“when God looks at a gay person, does he endorse the existence of this person with love, or reject and condemn this person? We must always consider the person.”
“How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor”
“Proselytism is solemn nonsense, it makes no sense.”

But these missives are little more than symbolic gestures entirely devoid of meaningful and substantive change. They’re reminiscent of a slick politician who promises hope and change in order to please his constituency, but behind the scenes continues to conduct business as usual.

And the Catholic Church is a business, one with enormous power. In America, the Catholic Church has 74 million members, employs 1 million people and spends $170 billion yearly. And that’s just in the United States. World-wide there are some 1.2 billion Catholics and vast financial resources.

But the size and power of the Catholic Church isn’t necessarily cause for alarm. What is troubling are many of the beliefs espoused by the Church, beliefs that are fully supported by the Pope and which every Catholic, whether they like them or not, are supposed to believe. These aren’t obscure bits of theological ephemera, they’re… [Read more…] about I'm not a fan of the Pope and you shouldn't be either

I caused a bomb scare on a military installation and got in less trouble than Ahmed Mohamed

September 20, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Current Events

View image | gettyimages.com

I hadn’t even thought of this story in relation to the Ahmed Mohamed incident until I saw this tweet and realized that I knew exactly what happens when there’s really a bomb scare — because I’d once caused one myself — and that Ahmed’s story bore no resemblance to my own experience.

It was the summer of 2008 and I was installing WiMAX internet service for a three-story support building located in the middle of an Air Force base.

The project involved accessing the roof through a trapdoor in a bathroom on the third floor, setting up an antenna on the roof, running a cable down the outside of the building to the middle of the second floor, drilling a hole through the brick wall for the cable to enter the building, pulling a hundred feet of cable through that hole to the inside of the building, and then running the cable through various conduits and ceilings and walls to reach its final location in the basement.

I had finished drilling the hole through the wall and was in the middle of pulling the cable into the building when someone came jogging up the hallway telling everyone to evacuate immediately. I dropped my tools and filed out of the building along with the hundred or so other people who worked there.

We gathered at the designated evacuation point about a block away and watched as fire engines, police cars and an EOD team — complete with bomb suit and bomb robot — surrounded the building. Word quickly spread that… [Read more…] about I caused a bomb scare on a military installation and got in less trouble than Ahmed Mohamed

Love in the Anthropocene

September 17, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Book Reviews

“How will love arise in a world without nature as we have known it?” This is the central question of Love in the Anthropocene (OR Books, $18), a newly-released collection of two essays and five short stories jointly written by environmental philosopher Dale Jamieson and novelist Bonnie Nadzam.

Against the backdrop of a near-future earth that has been indelibly altered by humanity, Jamieson and Nadzam tell bittersweet stories of love: a father and daughter go on a fishing trip to an artificial park in which every tree, rock, stream, and fish are the product of technological design; two men rekindle a relationship while the city’s homeless are being deported to avoid rising sea levels; three female friends take a vacation from working at a refugee camp to enjoy the artificial pleasures of a domed city; a couple meets in a yoga class and carries on a virtual love affair; a blind date leads to an encounter with the world’s last living tiger.

Love in the Anthropocene has an agenda, but it is an agenda with more questions than answers. The authors address issues of environmental change “by telling stories and sharing meditations, not by issuing predictive declarations that are supposed to provide answers.” These carefully crafted vignettes, replete with moments of quiet beauty as well as deep unease, thoughtfully consider humanity’s effect on nature and nature’s effect on us.

At its heart, this is a book about what is real and about why we value that… [Read more…] about Love in the Anthropocene

The Punctuation Mark That Might Change How You Read Romans

September 11, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Christian Issues

One of our all-time most viewed posts on the UC blog is Don Burrows’ Romans 1:26-27: A Clobber Passage That Should Lose Its Wallop. Drawing upon the work of Calvin Porter, Burrows argues that Romans 1:18-32 is best understood as “boilerplate, Hellenistic Jewish material that attacks the Gentiles.”

He goes on to cite Porter’s conclusion that “in 2:1-16, as well as through Romans as a whole, Paul, as part of his Gentile mission, challenges, argues against, and refutes both the content of the discourse and the practice of using such discourses. If that is the case then the ideas in Rom. 1.18-32 are not Paul’s. They are ideas which obstruct Paul’s Gentile mission theology and practice.”

In short, Romans 1:18-32 is a rhetorical passage representing the voice of Hellenistic Judaism, and Romans 2 is Paul’s voice arguing against that viewpoint.

It’s a powerful interpretation that challenges the conservative perspective on this passage and decisively undermines a key point in the anti-gay theological agenda.

But though I find Burrows’ (and Porter’s) arguments compelling, one point about their conclusion has always bothered me: our English Bibles don’t clearly support this interpretation.

Burrows rightly makes much of the use of the vocative in Romans 2:1 (ὦ ἄνθρωπε — “O man” — often translated “whoever you are”) as a signal that Paul is now addressing his interlocutor in the previous passage. But this subtlety is lost on modern English readers who aren’t… [Read more…] about The Punctuation Mark That Might Change How You Read Romans

Why I Have Compassion for Defiant Court Clerk Kim Davis  

September 7, 2015 by Chuck Queen in Current Events

Kim Davis, the Rowan County clerk who has refused to issue marriage licenses, has been all over the news and internet this past week. Last Thursday U.S. District Judge David Bunning sent her to jail. The couples who originally sued in the case asked Bunning to fine her but not jail her. Bunning said that sending her to prison was his only alternative because he did not believe she would comply with his order if she were fined.

I have to admit I have looked at this woman with some disdain. I have thought, “Oh great, another example here in Kentucky (where I am from and where I minister) of Christian fundamentalism and religious hypocrisy to showcase to the world.” For the most part, when I heard her name mentioned on television or came across another news story or opinion piece about her I felt frustration welling up within me.

But something happened this past week that pierced through my defense mechanisms and touched my true self. I don’t know why, but when I read an article earlier in the week before the judgment by Bunning that talked about the real possibility of her being held in contempt of court (I knew this already, but for some reason when I read it this time) somehow the Spirit broke through. At least, that is how I understand it. Others may think differently.

Here’s what happened: I felt compassion. I experienced sympathy. I was moved with pity and sorrow.

Here’s why: It makes sense when someone faces consequences for standing up for what is just and fair and… [Read more…] about Why I Have Compassion for Defiant Court Clerk Kim Davis  

5 Ways You Can Help the Syrian Crisis

September 4, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Current Events

Although the Syrian conflict has been going on for almost five years, it’s taken graphic images of dead children washing up on Turkish beaches for the world to really pay attention. The photos are disturbing, but it’s also disturbing that so many of us have largely ignored the Syrian crisis until we were confronted by heartbreaking images of suffering and death.

Over 12 million people in Syria are in need of humanitarian assistance, over 5 million children have been affected by the crisis, over 7 million people have been displaced internally in Syria and over 4 million have been displaced to other countries. It’s a crisis of massive scale, and there’s no sign that it is going to get better any time soon.

As with most major crises, the best way to help is by giving financial support to those who can make the biggest difference.

To that end, here are five charities who are doing important work on the ground in the affected regions and who could use our donations. Each of these organizations has an “A” rating with Charity Watch and a 4-star rating with Charity Navigator.

Please consider giving to at least one of them…or even all five.

Save the Children — “Save the Children’s emergency responders are working across Europe providing aid and support. But they need your help to reach more refugee children. Your support will help us reach desperate children across Europe and in other locations where refugees are on the move.”

Mercy Corps — “Your gift to our Syria… [Read more…] about 5 Ways You Can Help the Syrian Crisis

Why I Support Kim Davis

September 3, 2015 by Dan Wilkinson in Current Events

View image | gettyimages.com

Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis refuses to issue same-sex marriage licenses because doing so would violate her religious beliefs. While I vehemently disagree with Davis’ beliefs about same-sex marriage, I wholeheartedly support her for taking a stand for what she thinks is moral, and I admire her willingness to maintain her convictions in the face of enormous pressure. It’s an example that many of us would do well to heed.

With rare exceptions, I don’t think anyone should have to do something that violates their sincerely-held moral convictions. If morality has any meaning at all, then it’s something we should stand up for, regardless of political, social and even legal circumstances. Morality isn’t something that we should simply set aside for the sake of convenience, it’s something we should uphold no matter what the consequences.

And yes, there will be consequences. Every moral choice has implications that we must live with. In this case, Davis seems prepared to face the consequences of her stand. How many of us would be willing to face fines, jail, loss of our job and public humiliation over a moral issue? How many of us would instead choose the far easier path of capitulation?

Unfortunately, much of the discussion surrounding this case is focused on tangential issues. I’ve seen far too many attacks on Davis that focus on her alleged hypocrisy, especially in regards to her checkered marital history, as well as her apparent willingness to… [Read more…] about Why I Support Kim Davis

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