Here are some blog posts I have made, on overcoming fear.
Thoughts about God, culture, and the Real Jesus.
Several years ago I was with Craig Keener in his office. I remember asking him some questions, to tap into his exhaustive biblical and theological knowledge.
One question was this: What would be good books you would recommend to more deeply study the person of Jesus? He walked me around his library, and pointed out some books. One of them was Familiar Stranger: An Introduction to Jesus of Nazareth , by scholar Michael McClymond. Craig simply said, "McClymond is very good."
I bought and read it.
McClymond became a scholar for me to pay attention to.
One of his more recent books is The Devil's Redemption: A New History and Interpretation of Christian Universalism. McClymond "explores what the church has taught about universal salvation and hell and critiques universalism from a biblical, philosophical, and theological standpoint. He shows that the effort to extend grace to everyone undermines the principle of grace for anyone."
Craig Keener says: "A timely and fascinating book on a crucial topic that probably only an omnicompetent historical theologian like Michael McClymond could write. McClymond shows that while the notion of universal salvation has attractive features, it does not have a very encouraging spiritual or theological track record in the history of the church."
Amos Yong (Fuller Sem.) says: "Erudite! Encyclopedic! Exhaustive! A universal discussion that leaves no stone unturned, no stream uncharted, and no argument untouched. Even as McClymond is unflinching in defending the historic orthodox consensus against the idea of universal salvation, his is a generous orthodoxy, the persuasiveness of which undoubtedly rests at least in part on his having taken time to listen to marginal voices and seriously grapple with the broadest extent of their claims within local and even global contexts. It will be a long time before universalist theologians will be able to make a compelling case that is as comprehensive as that of The Devil's Redemption."
Here is Paul Copan's Christianity Today interview with McClymond: "How Universalism, ‘the Opiate of the Theologians,’ Went Mainstream."
(My old praying chair, by the river in our backyard.)
I am writing this on a Monday.
Yesterday, on Sunday, Linda and I spent the morning and afternoon in community with our church family.
This morning I am reading Revelation 1:4-8. The word 'revelation' (apocalypse) means "an unveiling." Like when you take the lid off a simmering pot of stew and look inside at the ingredients.
In the book of Revelation God takes the lid off the pot, and John the Revelator looks inside. What does he see? Scot McKnight writes:
“Revelation symbolically transforms the world into a battlefield in which the forces of the dragon are assembled against the forces of God.”
Craig Keener writes: “God has a plan larger than the details that we can see, and that we fit into his plan for history, the goal of which is a people who will constitute a kingdom and priests.”
John writes Revelation from the position of solitariness. Henri Nouwen says that solitude with God is the place of "the great encounter." He writes:
"Every time we enter into solitude we withdraw from our windy, earthquaking, fiery lives and open ourselves to the great encounter. The first thing we often discover in solitude is our own restlessness, our drivenness, and compulsiveness, our urge to act quickly, to make an impact, and to have influence; and often we find it very hard to withstand the temptation to return as quickly as possible to the world of “relevance.” But when we persevere with the help of a gentle discipline, we slowly come to hear the still, small voice and to feel the gentle breeze, and so come to know the Lord of our heart, soul, and mind, the Lord who makes us see who we really are." (Nouwen, Clowning in Rome)
Tomorrow is Tuesday. As is my habit, I'll find a quiet place, alone with God, and pray. I've been doing these alone-times with God since 1977. I write about my experiences and encounters and understanding in my book Praying: Reflections on 40 Years of Solitary Conversations with God.
In this quiet place, I experience the Great Encounter.

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