Followers

Showing posts with label Gospel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gospel. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

Blogging to Communicate the Gospel


Alice C. Linsley


This blog began on March 22, 2007 and will soon be seven years running. Thanks to all who read, comment and email me with your thoughts, observations, concerns and questions. You stretch me spiritually and intellectually.

Some readers use the links at Just Genesis to visit other blogs and websites. These are blogs that I believe readers of Just Genesis will find helpful and interesting. One is written by an Anglican Traditionalist who is also very evangelical, Bishop Chislett. Bishop David's blog is always informative and theologically grounded in the catholic tradition.  I met him when I went to Australia to speak at the Forward in Faith Conference about 5 years ago.

Another link is to the blog of an Orthodox priest Stephen Freeman. His posts are thoughtful and inspiring. Virtueonline is a great site for Anglican news and views, and Naturalis Historia is the informative blog of an old-earth Christian geologist.

I have also included links to my other blogs: Ethics Forum; Biblical Anthropology and Philosophers' Corner.

Standing on My Head is the blog of Fr. Dwight Longenecker, a Roman Catholic priest. Fr. Longenecker is always engaging and often very humorous. Here is what he says about blogging the Gospel:

"My blog, Standing on My Head has a daily readership of about 2,000 people. They visit my blog from across the USA and around the world. They come back for my own peculiar blend of Catholicism, comment on converts, apologetics, humor, inspiration and personal information. Not only can I publish instantly and globally, but the medium is friendly. Regulars make comments and discussions get started on what I have posted." (Read more here.)

Clergy who like to write and have good communication skills should launch out into the blogging waters. Fishers of men belong at sea! The technological side is not too difficult to master, and once you get going, you’ll be surprised by the number of people you touch.

What to write? Proclaim the Gospel! Keep it short and pithy. Most importantly, speak the truth simply and with enthusiasm, and before you let down your net make sure you have spent time with God. Before Christ told the disciples to let down their nets he told them to “cast out into the deep.”

Related reading:  The Apostle Paul: Rules for Blogging; Thoughts on Blogging; Who is Jesus?; Pope Francis says the internet is "a gift from God"



Friday, April 6, 2012

Thoughts on "Rightly Dividing the Word"

Alice C. Linsley




In a letter to Timothy, the Apostle Paul advises the younger man to "Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth."  II Tim. 2:15

What does it mean to "rightly divide" the word of truth?  Paul answers that question when he tells Timothy that it requires study motivated by the desire to please God.

What was Timothy to study since the New Testament did not yet exist?  He was to study the Old Testament, which along with Saint Paul's enlightened guidance, was all he needed. Today we have the New Testament and are blessed also to have the writings of the Church Fathers.

But how are we to interpret what we read in the Bible so that we too may find favor with God?

Some insist that only a literal interpretation leads to a proper understanding of biblical truth.  They pursue the "plain sense of the word."

Others insist that cultural context should be taken into consideration. They are interested in biblical history and in the discoveries of biblical archaeology.

Still others believe that "rightly dividing the word" involves study of how the various books came to be compiled. They recognize that each book represents a different type of literature and believe that sources and traditions influence what the authors have written.

Most people who pick up the Bible probably recognize that there is value in all of these approaches. They may not be committed to any one of them.  They read the Bible because they sense the Spirit speaking to them through its pages.  They come with sorrow, desperation, hopes and needs and God meets them in the Psalms or in the writings of the Evangelists.

The main thing is to read the Bible from cover to cover to gain a picture of the scope of God's work in the world.  Don't read it only once.  Read regularly and use different versions.  Read prayerfully and trust that God's word never fails.

Most of the difficult passages of the Bible are explained in other places in the Bible and have been expounded upon by the Church Fathers.  Therefore, private interpretation is not justified.  Interpreting the Bible contrary to what the Bible and the Church Fathers say is dangerous and the opposite of "rightly dividing the word."

Some accuse me of private interpretation in what I write at Just Genesis.  I admit to some speculation based on the information that is available, but I believe that the substance of Genesis is historically accurate and what is revealed there is truly of God. I attempt to do as Saint Paul says.  I study, trusting that God speaks through Genesis and that He holds me accountable for every word I write. Therefore, my brothers and sisters, I ask your prayers.


Related reading:  Reading Scripture with the Church Fathers