Hey, that's me!
Hey, that's me!
Theo wrote
“For some, however, this thinking serves as a kind of epistemological wedge, prying apart fundamentalist assumptions and deconstructing familiar dichotomies, leaving them wrestling with many of the same things the emerging church is wrestling with. The particular (and narrow) interest in eschatology leads to interest in the historical Jesus and Christian origins, which lands one squarely in a postfoundationalist theological environment.”
In my journey I arrived at pomo and TM almost simultaneously. Both areas of thought have resonated with places in my artistic nature that have been there for years but never found full expression. I’ve often felt as if I’m doubly branded in my interaction and communication within the church. When your heart has been opened to an alternate reality that you become more and more convinced is real and true, yet it seems to find no place in the foundationalist world of reality, the tension grows. It’s encouraging therefore to find others who are at a similar point in their journey.
Thanks Andrew and Theo for engaging in this conversation
peace
Paul
- Good -- and timely -- questions By: (07/01/2004 - 14:39)
- Grown-up theology? By: (08/01/2004 - 19:30)
- Growing Pains By: (09/01/2004 - 14:25)
- Emerging By: (14/01/2004 - 19:34)
- TM By: (01/09/2004 - 23:17)
- Emerging By: (14/01/2004 - 19:34)
- Growing Pains By: (09/01/2004 - 14:25)
- Hey, that's me! By: (08/01/2004 - 19:11)
- Grown-up theology? By: (08/01/2004 - 19:30)
- Transmillennialism™ By: (06/01/2004 - 19:59)

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