Monday, July 17, 2006

Methodist Blogs Weekly Roundup # 74

Here's the week in review in the Methodist blogosphere:

Allan Bevere pondered what it means to die well and that part of living a life centered on God means doing trivial things.

Andy Bryan asked about the domains of truth and the Bible (Best of the Methodist Blogosphere!).

Andy Stoddard lectionary blogged for July 10, 11, 13, and 14.

Beth Quick wrote about our personal empathic relationships to suffering.

Betty Newman prayed that she remain under God's umbrella.

Brian Russell explored how the Lord's claim over Israel may be read by different translations of a Hebrew participle. He also wrote about how the Church is afraid of engaging the modern world.

Bruce Alderman wrote about how different OT writers described justice and that Left Behind and The DaVinci Code are both gnostic works.

Richard Hall wrote about God's judgment of us at our deaths.

Cole Wakefield is concerned about the spread of Islamic extremism and how it is incompatible with progressive politics.

Dave Faulkner preached on how people recognize and identify Jesus.

Dave Camphouse wrote about church membership management software.

Derek Tang wrote about Israeli-Hezobollah war.

Sally Coleman wrote about falling in (true) love.

Steve Heyduck wrote about the luxurious lives of champion racehorses.

Greg Hazelrig wrote about helping each other out in the Christian community and how we live as though we are ashamed of the Gospel.

Greg Lee preached on living as though we have an afterlife, the Cross event in our lives, and wrote about how spoiled each of us is.

Henry Neufield wrote about KJVonlyism, the relative importance of scholastic authority in supporting evolutionary arguments, his skepticism about a future peace between Israelis and Palestinians, and God's intellectual expectations from us.

Jay Voorhees wrote that ministry communications should focus more on the story being told than the medium of that message (Best of the Methodist blogosphere!)

Josh Tinley wrote about the US Senate race in Tennessee.

Larry Hollon wrote about the loss of community in the West.

Mitchell Lewis wrote about why soldiers value honor, that Christian pacifists cannot advocate government laws and still be pacifists (Best of the Methodist Blogosphere!), and the concept of blood sacrifice in the OT.

Matt Carlisle wrote about net neutrality.

Michael Daniel wrote about United Methodists who reject infant baptism and the Israeli-Hezbollah war.

Michelle Hargrave reviewed the new Pirates of the Caribbean movie.

Jeff Lutz wrote about methodological problems in studying global warming.

Neil Bishop wrote about how people relate to death.

Jared Williams wrote about Superman as a Christfigure.

Theresa Coleman has a particular Wesleyan sacramental view on visiting the sick.

Sandpiper wrote about running the Christian race, Philip Yancy's insights into the character of Job, and tearing down the false walls in our faith practice.

Dale Lature wrote about Modernism's relationship to Christianity.

Wayne Cook wrote about the nature of dancing with God.

Tony Mitchell preached on responding to evil. He also explained his view that war is always wrong.

Russ Phillips wrote about what the North Indiana Conference is teaching about tithing.

Kevin Barker wrote about bumper sticker theology.

Lorna Koskela wrote about memory stones in the OT the power of God's calling.

Gerry Charlotte Phelps wrote about an agnostic's analysis of why the UMC is shrinking, but the SBC is growing.

Christopher Gudger-Raines wrote about the faith of a man undergoing chemotherapy.

Additions? Corrections? Do you know of a blog that should be added to the MBWR? Would you like to receive the MBWR via e-mail? Leave a note in the comments or e-mail locustsandhoney2005 at yahoo dot com!

UPDATE: Lorna Koskela added.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Gerry Charlotte Phelps added.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Christopher Gudger-Raines added.

7 comments:

Jim said...

Thanks for doing the roundup.

Based on the comments I got for last year's post on Lakewood Church's mission work (Content Needed), I think some folks might be interested in my Lakewood Church Mission Update post from this week.

It was posted last Monday, so I think it was on the cusp of last week's round-up.

see-through faith said...

I wrote several posts about my recent encounter with new-wine, including one called stones

The Bible study comparing Pentecost to normal life was really good. I blogged about that and another about God's call to ministry here

If you don't beleive the prophetic still is operational today, you probably won't like these posts (not that that's why you skipped me YET AGAIN John!) but that's what new-wine is all about. And I love it. Who'd have thought that the Anglican church in England could impact Finns (grin) including methdodists. God surely works in wonderful and amazing ways.


here

John said...

Sorry, Lorna. It wasn't intentional. We had sudden thunderstorms yesterday so I shut down and unplugged the computer in a hurry and I guess that I didn't check to see if it had saved your citations properly. But I did read and link to your blog yesterday; I just didn't start at the right point after the storm passed. Sorry. It was not an intentional deletion.

Andy B. said...

Thanks John.

Michael said...

My continued gratitude to you, John, for the time and trouble you put into this round-up.

Christopher said...

For two weeks in a row, I've been left off of the Weekly roundup. It's true I was away for a bit. But I am back and have posted some good things. I hope that this is just an oversight and I realize that I am not entitled to any PR. But if there are other reasons for the omissions, I hope you will let me know.

John said...

Your second July 12 entry should have been added. I'll fix it this morning. Your first July 12 entry was too short for inclusion and your July 3 entry was on a purely personal subject. So these were automatically excluded.

But any post, even if below the 4-paragraph minimum or on any subject can be included upon request. Further explanation can be found here.