Theology
Nov 9th, 2010 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Faith, Features, Preaching, Theology
I. You shall not make for yourself an idol out of Scripture.
This is a particular temptation among evangelicals who hold a very high view of Scripture. We forget that our highest calling is not to have a relationship with the Bible but with Jesus Christ of whom the Bible testifies. (John 5:39)
II. You shall honor the Scriptures as sufficient.
We have a common temptation to get “behind the text” or discover what “really happened.” While archeology and other disciplines are incredibly important, we must not forget that what God has given in the Scriptures is enough for life and faith.
III. You shall remember the metanarrative and keep it wholly.
In my experience more Christians can recap the meta-narrative of the Star Wars saga…
Posted in Faith, Features, Preaching, Theology |
12 comments
Nov 4th, 2010 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Culture, Faith, Features, Theology
Scott Nehring has an article at Relevant asking a great question: why are Christian movies so bad? He describes Christian movies in terms many of us have heard before: “intellectually vacant,” “disconnected from reality,” he says they suffer from “substandard production values, stilted dialogue and childish plots.”So why are they so bad? According to Nehring the issue is evangelical isolationism. He says that dating back to the 1960s, many Christians became uncomfortable with popular culture and retreated into “cocoons”-safe places for Christians to hide from the big, bad culture and where they could discuss what they “hoped the world was like rather than dealing with how things are.”This isolation resulted in “poorly trained artists” and Christian filmmakers not “playing with the big boys.” He calls today’s
…
Posted in Culture, Faith, Features, Theology |
18 comments
Jun 29th, 2010 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Features, Theology
Pixar Studio deserves the avalanche of awards it has won. Every time I think they’re about to blow it with an impossible story (a French rat in a five-star restaurant, a nearly silent film about robots in love) they manage to prove me wrong. Toy Story 3 was no exception. I was worried that they were pushing the franchise too far. The first two films were fantastic, but a third? Surely they’re going to “jump the shark” this time. Wrong again. It was brilliant…the best of the bunch.
There is plenty to praise about the movie, but I want to focus on just one thing—the monkey. The hideous, hilarious, and haunting monkey! For those who have not yet seen the…
Tags: bible, evil, hell, Job, lord of the rings, movie, pixar, satan, toy story 3
Posted in Features, Theology |
5 comments
Feb 23rd, 2010 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Culture, Faith, Features, Theology
One of the most popular blog posts I’ve written was a theological exploration of evil through the lens of the film, The Dark Knight. To continue the theme of superhero movies and theology, let’s talk about Superman.
After traveling a few weeks ago, I retuned home late one evening after the kids were in bed. After debriefing with my wife, I decided to vegetate by watching Superman Returns…the effort by director Bryan Singer to “reboot” the Superman movie franchise for Warner Brothers. Most critics, including myself, were very disappointed by the film. Superman Returns gives homage to Richard Donner’s Superman films (starring Christopher Reeve) by lifting characters, plot devices, dialogue, and even laugh lines from the original movies. But it had none of the Donner films’ magic.
The…
Posted in Culture, Faith, Features, Theology |
No Comments »
Feb 18th, 2010 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Culture, Faith, Features, Formation, Politics, Theology
Yesterday was Ash Wednesday, the start of the Lenten season prior to Holy Week and Easter Sunday. Vice President Joe Biden sparked curiosity when he appeared in public and on television with a smudge of ash on his forehead. One news anchor in the UK had no idea what it was. “What’s happened to his head?” asked Kay Burley on Sky News. “It looks like he’s walked into a door!” The co-host speculated that he had fallen on the ice while attending the Winter Olympics. (As if we needed more evidence that Britain is an utterly post-Christian secular culture.)
Biden is a practicing Catholic, and the ash was part of the Ash Wednesday mass he had attended earlier in the day. While usually associated with Roman Catholic…
Posted in Culture, Faith, Features, Formation, Politics, Theology |
2 comments
Sep 10th, 2009 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Features, Formation, Theology
A few months ago I flew down to Dallas to interview Matt Chandler for Leadership Journal. Chandler has been getting a lot of attention in recent years–both for the rapid growth of his church as well as his outspoken adherence to Reformed theology. I must admit, I had some hesitations about interviewing another very popular, very young, very “successful” pastor. Without giving away my biases…I’ve not had a great experience with people who fit that description.
I was pleasantly surprised by Chandler. Not only did he offer thoughtful, reflective, and self-aware responses to our questions (rare qualities among large church pastors who tend to be “doers” more than “thinkers”), he was also humble. But Chandler isn’t known as a touchy-feely. He likes speaking boldly and even abrasively about…
Posted in Church, Features, Formation, Theology |
11 comments
Sep 9th, 2009 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Culture, Features, Politics, Theology
Next month I will be participating on a panel with a Jewish rabbi, a secular humanist, a Muslim, and a Buddhist. The event is part of the Interfaith Youth Core’s “Leadership for a Religiously Diverse World” conference. For most of my life I have been very comfortable in interfaith settings. In college I even majored in comparative religion and greatly appreciated my interactions with people holding other worldviews and theologies. In general I am very supportive of Christians learning about other faiths with the goal of fostering respect and understanding.But last week a judge in Quebec has pushed the value of interfaith education to a new degree, and I’m curious to hear what you think.
Here’s the scoop. Last year schools in Quebec introduced a new…
Posted in Culture, Features, Politics, Theology |
6 comments
Sep 2nd, 2009 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Faith, Features, Theology
Do you believe your work matters to God? That question has been on my mind as I prepare a sermon for September 20th. It seems like people in the church are often celebrated for what they do within the church or through the church or for the church, but we offer little attention or affirmation for the labor done outside the institutional structures of the church. The message we subtly communicate is that the 2 or 4 percent of a person’s time spent engaged in activities related to the church are what matter to God–they “count”–but the 95+ percent of the time they spend at work, with family, preparing meals, changing diapers, or mowing the lawn don’t really matter to God unless they incorporate church/missionary actions into those…
Posted in Church, Faith, Features, Theology |
6 comments
Jul 8th, 2009 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Culture, Features, Leadership, Theology
The following article was published in the Spring 2009 issue of Leadership Journal. I wrote the piece with Brandon O’Brien. What isn’t mentioned in the article is that Eboo Patel and I grew up together in Glen Ellyn, IL. We attended the same elementary, junior high, and high school. We lost touch after graduation and reconnected for this article. The full piece can be read on Leadership’s website.
Eboo Patel is not the most likely seminary professor. His credentials are not the issue. Patel earned his doctorate from Oxford University, and he is a respected commentator on religion for The Washington Post and National Public Radio. He has spoken in venues across the world, including conferences for evangelical church leaders.
What makes Eboo…
Posted in Church, Culture, Features, Leadership, Theology |
3 comments