tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6856968518135187295.post6279486333632510555..comments2023-02-16T02:20:54.608-08:00Comments on emerging curiosities: where do i fit in?davidhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03329377359270316276noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6856968518135187295.post-45603813684129359332008-12-21T11:39:00.000-08:002008-12-21T11:39:00.000-08:00You said: wow! so where is my home? i want to be a...You said: <BR/>wow! so where is my home? i want to be a part of a church that isn't afraid of critically thinking about absolutely everything. that learns to live the very grace oriented life it so eloquently articulates and celebrates.<BR/><BR/>Is it really necessary that we think about everything? <BR/><BR/>Do we have to question everything?<BR/><BR/>I think part of the process of this 'think and question'phenomena is that we are possibly insecure in what we believe or have been led to believe?<BR/><BR/>Perhaps it is because what we have been taught or heard that just seems to not ring quite true that we have all these 'questions'?<BR/><BR/>Perhaps it is time to get back to the old masters and hear what they said about issues?<BR/><BR/>I do not trust a book if it is less than 100 years old, general rule, but there is space for movement. I find that despite our ability to access so much information courtesy of the net, we have even less answers and my theory is that we have indulged too many false one liner preachers and have forgotten the old guys who had time to really think things thru - guys like Bullinger, Gillham, Schaeffer etc. (okay, so 2 of those three are less than 100 years old but what they say started out back then.)<BR/><BR/>Dunno if I am making sense - i need to go sleep!<BR/><BR/>:-)<BR/><BR/>PopsAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com