Tag: authorship
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Be Careful What You Ask For Church

The last few weeks have been full of intensive Bible study. (The fruits of that will bear soon in a few articles I’m working on) I cracked a smile at one point, realizing that when the church says to “study your Bible,” is that really what they want? Growing up in a conservative church, there…
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academia, apologetics, archaeology, argument, authorship, bible, Bible study, biblical, christian, church, Church Fathers, conclusions, conservative, critical scholarship, critical thinking, curiosity, deconstruction, Doctrine, dogma, doubt, education, evidence, faith, god, illogical, inconvenient truth, indoctrination, inerrancy, inerrant, inspiration, literalists, logic, pastor, reason, research, resources, scholarship, Science, scripture, scriptures, SDA, study, theology, traditional, truth -
The Trinity – Some Logical Problems and a Few Illogical Proof-texts

It has been brought to my attention that James White never actually got on board with the trinity at all. I relied on a source without fact checking. 100% my fault. It just sounded like something that was probably true. (With the understanding that the SDA church currently believes in the trinity) I have updated…
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academia, apologists, Apostle, Apostles, argument, authorship, belief, bible, biblical, books, certainty, christian, christianity, Christians, church, critical scholarship, debate, deconstruction, deity, divine, Doctrine, dogma, doubt, evidence, exevangelical, fraud, god, Gods, gospels, Greek, heaven, heretic, heretical, Holy Spirit, humor, inspiration, interpretation, jesus, John, literal, Lord, Mark, Matthew, misunderstanding, monotheistic, myth, old testament, Omniscience, Paul, philosophy, postevangelical, reason, religion, research, scholarship, scripture, SDA, Seventh Day Adventism, Seventh Day Adventist, theology, trinity -
Gospel Disagreement & a Brief Gospel History

The timeline of composition and authorship of the gospels raise important-to-consider issues that should not be ignored. If one desires to understand their beliefs beyond a “It must be true as I learned it, because it must be true as I learned it” fallacy, then seeking to answer these questions seems reasonable. Let’s start by…
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