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Yearly archive: 2004

Favorite Books in 2004

December 30, 2004, by Doug No comments yet

Not all of these were published in 2004, but I read them this year, and they have been a blessing to me. I would highly recommend all of them.

  • The Ragamuffin Gospel by Brennan Manning (devotional/inspirational)
  • Beyond Foundationalism by Stanley Grenz and John Franke (philosophy/theology)
  • The Sacred Romance by John Eldridge and Brent Curtis (devotional/inspirational)
  • The Next Reformation by Carl Raschke (philosophy/theology)
  • Peace Like A River by Leif Enger (fiction)
  • The Jesus I Never Knew by Philip Yancey (devotional/inspirtational)

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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God With Us

December 18, 2004, by Doug No comments yet

I’ve been contemplating the phrase “God with us,” which is the meaning of the name Emmanuel, given to Jesus. It has been increasingly evident to me that Jesus is “God with us” in the present, not only in the past at the incarnation.

The Point of Grace song “Emmanuel God With Us” brought me to understand this more easily:

Oh Emmanuel, God with us
Spirit revealed in us
That we may be your hope to the world
Oh Emmanuel, God with us
With a light to break the darkness
That we may show your hope to the world
Emmanuel, God with us
Be God in us

It’s not as though the purpose of the Christmas season is to reflect on how thankful we are for Jesus’ birth, but to remind us that God is with us, in us, and is blessing the world through us. It is our light that breaks the darkness, and Jesus is our hope to the world.

I’m sure I’ll find more to say about this in the future, but this has been a reflection upon which I am most grateful to have come across.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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A Conversational Gospel

December 9, 2004, by Doug No comments yet

The King James Version of the Bible translates what we would call “deeds” or “lifestyle” with the word “conversation.” Today, we use the word conversation to denote a dialogue with a person, sometimes more than one person. Connotations could include our lifestyle, but the word doesn’t carry that meaning as much as it did 400 years ago.

Project 42, an endeavor by some friends of mine and I, exists to promote what I am terming a “conversational gospel.” What has become increasingly relevant in Christianity over the past few years, probably the last two decades, is not what we say about Jesus, it’s how we demonstrate Jesus. I don’t believe this is accidental.
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Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Relieving Reliance

November 20, 2004, by Doug No comments yet

Living on a wage that is less than I’ve ever lived on, and still being able to pay my bills and save just a little, has been a blessing for me over the past several months. While sometimes I get a little nervous, it has been relieving to wait on the Lord for provision and blessings. And God has blessed me quite well in accordance with his will for me. I have everything I need, plus some. And I have the freedom to do a few things I am not entitled to be able to do, like go on dates and hang out with friends.

God is good. It’s actually happening to me now, which reminds me of a quote: “Knowledge without experience will always dwell in the realms of doubt.”

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Some Contemplative Thoughts

November 18, 2004, by Doug 3 comments

Here are a few thoughts I’ve been pondering lately, all from books (or quotes from books) I’ve been reading lately;

  • “If you give God the right to yourself, he will make a holy experiment out of you. God’s experiments always succeed.” — Oswald Chambers
  • “Duty is only a substitute for love (of God and of other people), like a crutch, which is a substitute for a leg. Most of us need the crutch at times; but of course it’s idiotic to use the crutch when our own legs (our own loves, tastes, habits, etc.) can do the journey on their own.” –C.S. Lewis
  • “If by evangelicalism we mean a commitment in every generation to the perennially saving message and person of Jesus himself, then we do not have to depend on a historically conditioned and beguiling epistemology that sprang largely out of the social and political ruins of England in the mid-seventeenth centure after a disastrous war.” — Carl Raschke

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Updated: Essay on Salvation

November 17, 2004, by Doug 2 comments

I’ve updated the essay I wrote last year about the message of salvation to a postmodern culture. The updated version is aimed less toward a philosophy of youth evangelism, and more toward evangelizing anyone.

It is not finalized, as nothing like this I write really is. Hopefully it’s a step in the right direction. I’m sure I’ll update and clarify it in the future.
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Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Counting Conversations

November 16, 2004, by Doug No comments yet

Never thought I’d say I just got back from a conversation at a bar with a lesbian. Anyway, a friend from work and I went out afterward to chat about things–politics, religion, Jesus, Christianity, war. She’s a wonderful person with pretty high morals, and in general is a great girl. We have a lot of fun working together.

It was just a reminder to me that, after nearly three hours of talking over hot wings and a game of pool, whether or not I won an argument or gave her extremely well-crafted answers about my faith, the conversation made a difference to both of us. She’s not given up on her atheism, and I’ve not lost my faith. But we’ve both come to understand more about each other, about our respective beliefs, and even life in general.

Her worldview is quite ironically one in which she would fit well in the Kingdom of God. She doesn’t see it, and there are still discrepancies, but many of her ideas sound a lot like Jesus’.

Wow, I’ve not written for two weeks!

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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A Beautiful Day

October 30, 2004, by Doug 1 comment

After work on Wednesday, I decided that instead of getting on the Metro right away, I’d walk around D.C. and get on a different Metro in order to just “take in” the city. I always love being in D.C., because it gives me a sense of grandeur. Plus it was a great day outside, and I needed a little exercise.

So I put on some U2 on my iPod and walked around. I walked down by the FBI building, the Navy Memorial, and some buildings on Pennsylvania Avenue. A sense of prestige, wisdom, and majesty always overwhelms me when I walk around in Washington, with the way the buildings were designed, who occupied them, and the things they represented. I think the representation of the buildings mean more to me than anything. Here I was, in my nation’s capital, where the leaders of our country work, where the President lives, and where museums galore represent the history, fervor, and passion of the American Way. And a sense of peace, that God was around, whether actively, passively, approvingly or not, came over me. And for that moment, and for a little while longer, I had no cares in the world. The God who has blessed us and given us a free land for nearly 250 years also loves me, cares for me, blesses me, paid for my sin, mercifully and abundantly gives to me. And it’s as though the reason for my experience in D.C. was not so I could have this awesome, breathtaking and wonderful walk, though that happened; it’s because the feelings I had gave glory back to God in a rush of vision and glory of the Majesty in heaven.

So when A Beautiful Day came on, a whole new understanding and sense of warmth came over me, like grace and love flowing from God on an undeserving sinner like me.

It’s odd in another way, because most of the experiences I get like that are when I’m out in the woods, on a mountaintop, near a lake surrounded by mountains, or when I see snow falling. But D.C. always “gets me” like that.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Faith Moving Forward

October 14, 2004, by Doug 3 comments

Recently the pastors at my church used an illustration about faith, and the illustration is familiar to many people, Christian or non-Christian. And I’ve heard it before, even used it myself to make a point. But something has always made me feel uneasy about the illustration, and I think I’ve figured out what that is, and I’d like to offer a better illustration, something that could work as a more complete illustration.

Illustration: There is a chair in front of you; you believe the chair is stable, supportive, and will do everything it is intended to do. But until you sit in the chair, your “belief” is worthless.

Now, this illustration makes an incredible point: belief/assent without action is not real, saving faith. However, while the illustration serves the point, what is missing is faith in action. A chair does not move, is not dynamic, has no road on which to move. There is no “result” in a chair, other than not falling on your back side. It sustains and supports, both of which are important aspects of faith.

But I think the illustration could and must go further. I don’t believe that faith is about a stable focal position, represented in the chair illustration by “sitting down.” While a certain position is necessary in faith, a direction is also equally, if not more, important.

New illustration: There is a bicycle in front of you. You say that the bicycle can hold you up, it can move forward, it can get you places. You say you believe that the bicycle will do what it has been made to do. Yet until you get on the bike and ride it, your belief in that bicycle is not real, saving faith.

I believe that a fundamental part of faith is that it is active, dynamic, moving forward. In particular, the moving forward of the faith of the Church. The chair illustration cannot bring out those elements of faith. Just getting on the bicycle seat is not enough to claim “real, saving faith.” A moving-forward, progressing-in-practice faith is necessary to effect salvation. Anything less is just a moment-in-time event, a “faith action” that doesn’t produce, provide, or persevere.

The Chair illustration says, I’m standing (or sitting) firmly. The Bike illustration says, I’m moving forward confidently. The Chair says, I support those who trust in me. The Bike says, I mobilize and stabilize those who trust in me. The Chair says, Trusting in me proves your faith is real. The Bike says, Trusting in me proves your faith is active. Do you see how it goes further?

I suppose one could argue that the “action” in the Chair illustration is the actual sitting in the chair, rather than the chair itself in action. And I think the point is valid. But the real issue I’m trying to point out is that one does not “get on” a faith that is static and immobile, but one that is moving forward (more realistically with a crowd of cyclists), gaining momentum (hopefully), and going somewhere. In short, I think the Bike illustration works better and can serve more illustrative purposes. But like all illustrations, taken too far they don’t work.

Scriptural support? Read James, I guess. That’s about all I can say. I’m sure I’ll get flack about this, but that’s okay, cuz it’s probably not complete, and flack will help my direction become more complete and stable (see how I avoid any notion of “position” and things “static”? There’s a reason for this!)

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Douglas Adams and Postmodern Thought

October 4, 2004, by Doug No comments yet

Douglas Adams has always used philosophical and logical comedy in his writings. I’ve been listening to the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy on my iPod, and I’m becoming more and more convinced of the postmodern ethos that characterizes his thought.

“I’ve gone off the idea of progress. It’s overrated.”

If there were ever a post-Enlightenment statement, “the path of progress” is an obvious representation of that philosophy. Arthur Dent claims it’s overrated, which is exactly the kind of thought a postmodern would likely have.

“This bypass has got to be built, and it is going to be built…there aren’t any alternatives.”

The inevitable progression of mankind was the modern philosophy. “We’re evolving, we’ve gained a lot of knowledge, we’re working on the experiments to produce more knowledge, and there’s no way of stopping it.”

What to make of it?

I think Arthur Dent’s comments reflect an honest re-thinking of what the human’s drive has done to him. Environmentalists feel this when it comes to building highways all over the place. Considering the alternative is another way of saying, “It may not necessarily be so…” But if you were to listen further in the program, Arthur offers no alternative. The conversation goes nowhere. Here is how Adams represents the postmodern “alternative”–which is virtually nonexistant. To be sure, progress isn’t necessarily the wrong direction. But a realization that the “old” choice may not be the best choice is on the table.

Here is where we are. Postmodernism doesn’t offer alternatives to every modern concept. It offers suggestions to the old, ingrained way of doing things. It offers a humble act of reflection every thinking person should engage in.

While I am just beginning to realize how contemplative a person I am, that realization has helped to further my contemplation of Scripture, tradition, dialogue, and other experiences that I have. I’m quickly becoming thoughtful of nearly every action that I take, and if you have known me for very long, that is a big change for me, but a necessary one.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Top Ten Non-fiction Books

September 22, 2004, by Doug No comments yet

This is an updated list of books since I earlier published this entry in April 2004. Only a few have changed, but a couple have been replaced. There is no real preferential order, but the first few are really my favorites.

  1. unLearning Church by Michael Slaughter
  2. The Sacred Romance by Brent Curtis and John Eldridge
  3. The Divine Conspiracy by Dallas Willard
  4. Desiring God by John Piper
  5. A New Kind of Christian by Brian McLaren
  6. Let the Nations Be Glad by John Piper
  7. Intimate Allies by Dan Allendar and Tremper Longman, III
  8. Adventures in Missing the Point: How the Culture-controlled Church Neutered the Gospel by Brian McLaren and Tony Campolo
  9. The Misery of Job and the Mercy of God by John Piper
  10. A Case for Amillennialism by Kim Riddlebarger

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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He Can’t Win

September 11, 2004, by Doug 13 comments

President Bush will win this year’s election, I am confident. It won’t be by much, it won’t be easily received by those against him, but I believe he will win.

Today, as 9/11 is being remembered by our nation, I believe a renewed understanding that George W. Bush is not entirely responsible for the economic recession we have experienced. Fox News has numerous people explaining that the economic recession was because of at least two reasons: (1) the online business decline, and (2) the attack on 9/11.

But liberals are intent on blaming Bush, or at least attributing to him many faults that have happened in the past four years. Let me address a few.

“He didn’t listen to his advisors when going to Iraq.” Many are blaming him for not listening to his advisors (which is probably a legit accusation) by not sending the number of troops necessary to win the peace in Iraq. But let’s say Bush sent the 200-300 thousand troops necessary. I can hear them chanting and ranting: “He’s sending too many!” Because the more you send, the quicker the casualties climb, and the more of “our family members and friends” may die. He’d lose that argument.

“No net job gain under this administration.” Let’s say Al Gore was elected president. 9/11 comes, Gore does his best to rally the country together, and let’s say he even commanded the troops to go to Iraq and did everything that was told by Bush’s advisors. Would our economy be any better? If John Kerry had been President the last four years, would our economy have been any better?

“The President concocted a war for political gain.” Yeah, right! If anything, it hurt him more than helped his ratings. President Bush clearly pays little to no attention to the polls. He does what a leader should do: what he believes is right for the country.

“Iraq was a distraction from the real war on terrorism.” Perhaps. And we probably should have captured Bin Laden by now. But imagine the scenario if we hadn’t gone to Iraq and brought down Saddam.

Avoided Iraq Current Scenario
Dictator who had ability to produce, distribute, and fund weapons of mass destruction would still have those abilities. Even though we never found them in Iraq, we know he had the “weight” among the terrorists in the Middle East. Saddam is gone, the number of terrorists have been reduced, the abilities mentioned to the left don’t exist now.
Libya (sp?) may not have given up their WMDs. Libya did give up their WMDs.
Terrorists would be planning, and possibly implementing attacks on the United States and other nations. Terrorists have been pre-occupied with on the defensive rather than being on the offensive.

Honestly, I believe we are safer. I believe President Bush has made our world safer. But I would also admit that Al Gore, if elected, would have also endeavored to make our county safer and less prone to attacks. Definitely in a different way, but still in an intensive way.

I will offer one thought about Bush’s policies. While his idea was to give us tax breaks, I think perhaps they came a little too early. When we have a war to pay for, perhaps tax breaks could have waited. But then again, would our economy be recovering like it is now without more money in the pockets of Americans? I don’t know, it’s not that easy.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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