Christian Faculty and Staff Fellowship meets April 10
Join the Christian Faculty Network for a lunch gathering on 4/10 - Finishing up Love Your God With All Your Mind.
Come to the Christian Faculty Network lunch meeting on Wednesday, April 10 at 11:45 AM (done by 12:45 PM). We meet at the Baptist Campus Ministries building (University Boulevard and 4th Avenue).
Plan on the best meal deal in town: You can get lunch there for $1 thanks to the generosity of local churches. Don't forget to thank the church workers for what they do for the students.
Thank you kindly to Phil Bishop for making Nate Mirza available to us. We'll come back to our book at the next meeting and focus on Chapters 6 and 7. This last half of the book will get very interesting.
Our book for this term: Love Your God with
All Your Mind: The Role of Reason in the Life of the Soul by
J.P. Moreland (NavPress, 2012). The title is linked to Amazon. Make sure to get
the 2012 version.
- It's an updated version of the book from 1997. If you have the 1997
edition, you'll find Chapters 7-9 are different. The other chapters have
few changes. It's OK to use your older copy, however, because there is
some good material in those older chapters. We won't include those chapters
in the final exam!
- Moreland makes the case for the intellectual appeal and rigor of Christianity. It has a cultural, worldview, and apologetics outlook and is relevant to us who want to be salt and light in the groves of academe. The book can be a basis for other readings we would do.
Click here to get outlines of the book chapters.
It's time to think about a book for next term.
I created an interest survey of books to consider for next term. Don't worry. There are only 5 books on the list plus one wild card, and I pasted the abstract for each book for your reference. If you choose the wild card, I'll use my despotic powers and select the book for the term. Otherwise, we'll go with the book ranked most highly by everyone.
I came across an interesting study about the relationship between newsworthiness and political usefulness bias by Hal Pashler and Gail Heriot. It's not on a specifically Christian topic, but it highlights the importance of staying sharp in our thinking. From the discussion: "The results provide clear support for the idea that, when people try to assess the newsworthiness of hypothetical news stories, their judgements are biased by the degree to which the news story provides ‘ammunition’ for their own political beliefs and preferences: the better the ammunition, the greater their estimates of the news value of a story."
On April 10 back in the day:
- 1829. William Booth, founder and first general of the Salvation
Army, was born in Nottingham, England.
- 1868. Brahms’ Requiem was first performed in the cathedral of
Bremen. Brahms created this masterpiece by taking texts from the German
Lutheran translation of the Bible.
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