• Home
  • About
  • Podcast Archive
  • Subscribe (RSS)
  • Subscribe (iTunes)
  • Deacons

Homebrewed Christianity

Equipping grassroots theologians for creative thinking, engaging, and living.

You are here: Home / 2011 / Archives for October 2011

Please help write a Post on Process

October 31, 2011 by Bo Sanders 33 Comments

As you may know, we are working on something big: an Emergent Conversation with Process Theology about “the Living and Life Giving God”.

We have lots of friends – including Rachel Held Evans and Kurt Willelms (Pangea Blog) – that are going to help us talk to normal everyday people about Process thought and why it would benefit them to at least engage with and maybe even convert to this open & relational school of thought. Doug Pagitt recently posted on it and the comments that followed were really interesting.

So here is where I need some help:

  • What ideas and concepts do we need to make sure to cover (that y’all have found most helpful)?
  • What difficulties doe we need to address?
Recently, Bruce Epperly  [with his new book] put out a fantastic post on Bob Cornwall’s blog. I might borrow some of that…
God is intimately connected with the world – God provides a vision of possibilities for every moment of experience.
I’m thinking about starting it this way:

Forget what you know. The universe does not work the way were were told it did.

  1. We do not live in a three tiered universe with God above the clouds and Hell below the earth.
  2. The binary options like God as transcendent or immanent doesn’t really work for anyone.

To move into the house of Process is not like adding a room onto your already existing home. Think of Extreme Home Makeover, the family has to move out for the renovation. The old home is rotten. It’s why your on the show. You don’t get to live in the house anymore – and especially not while the construction is going on.

 

So – what questions, concerns, issues, or ideas do you have? 

 

Filed Under: engaging, latest, thinking

Religious Pluralism, Christology & Process with Monica A. Coleman: Homebrewed Christianity 123

October 30, 2011 by Bo Sanders 8 Comments

Monica A. Coleman is Assc. Professor of Constructive Theology and African American Religions at Claremont School of Theology.

She is the author of Making a Way Out of No Way: A Womanist Theology (Innovations: African American Religious Thought), The Dinah Project: A Handbook for Congregational Response to Sexual Violence, and a contributor to the new Creating Women’s Theology: A Movement Engaging Process Thought.

In this interview she talks about books by John Hick, John Cobb and Paul Knitter among others.

You can follow her blog and all the other media projects that she does at http://monicaacoleman.com/.

She is indeed a master tweeter and Patheos Progressive Christian Blogger.

Standard Podcast [ 1:01:19 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: engaging, features, podcast Tagged With: christology, john cobb, John Hick, Paul Knitter, pluralism, process theology

the Cancer of Criticism

October 30, 2011 by Bo Sanders Leave a Comment

The following concern has been expressed in a number of ways: does being a part of a system take away the possibility of bringing a substantial critique?

  • Can one gain the needed perspective to level a valid critique on the program as a whole if one is a participant?
  •  Is it possible to escape ones location and particular constructs to the degree that a valid attempt might be made at a critique of the enterprise one is socialized in?

I believe that it is.

I draw my inspiration for analogy from the cancer cell. A cancer is comprised of the same biological material as the body that gives rise to it. They share the same biological makeup and DNA. The difference is that the cancer cell is participating in a different narrative than the other cells that make up its host body. This narrative in turn directs the cancerous cells to behave differently from the organism that houses it and behave in such a way that undermines that body to the point of threatening its very existence.

Aware critiques  are in this same way cancerous to their host organism. Though it is comprised of the same genetic material and from the same biological makeup, it operates in such a way to undermine the dominant project and subvert the enterprise altogether. Aware critiques are housed within systemic frameworks and are inherently (genetically) of the same substance.

I argue that location determines the resulting direction of critique. Aware critiques may originate from the center and provided a valid critique.

Admittedly, it is not sufficient on its own but it remains credible none the less. I actually think that it may carry more weight in most scenarios than a critique that comes from the outside and non-invested,  as they may be dismissed as mere complaint.

There is a significant voice and substantive critique that can come only from those who participate in any given system as it is.


		
Filed Under: latest, post-something, thinking

Blog Round-Up

October 28, 2011 by Bo Sanders Leave a Comment

I was at Soularize for a week and have been playing catch up this week. Here are the 4 best blog posts I read while I was away:

  • Julie Clawson on the end of Soularize and the future of the emergent conversation
  • Bruce Epperly (who I interviewed here) on why the progressive church needs process theology
  • John Cobb on “Would Jesus Occupy Wall Street?“
  • Roger Olson on Narrative Theology  and Christian Smith’s new book “The Bible Made Impossible“
It will be nice to dive back into the conversation and unveil some new stuff we have in the works!
What interesting things have you been reading lately? 
Filed Under: latest

What’s brewing in the next two weeks

October 28, 2011 by Bo Sanders Leave a Comment

We are back from Soularize in San Diego and wanted to let everyone know what is on tap for the coming weeks.

Doug Pagitt and Church in the Inventive Age is out today.

Next up is Monica A. Coleman for a little talk about, among other things,  pluralism.

We have an Insurrection with Peter Rollins‘ talk at Claremont before Soularize.

Then we will put out a special interview that Mike Morrell did with a pentecostal-charismatic signs & wonders style pastor and theologian.
I have been crafting a mini-master class that will go with that interview entitled “Pentecost for Progressives” to help those looking to reconcile the two.

 

Remember: its rude to hog the brew, share some with your friends!  and feel free to call the phone-in line at 678-590-brew.
keep it touch with us on FaceBook  

Filed Under: latest Tagged With: upcoming

Doug Pagitt Wants the Church to get Inventive: Homebrewed Christianity 122

October 27, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 3 Comments

 Doug Pagitt is a church planter, author, social media consultant, radio host, and all around good dude. This week he joins us for a conversation about his new book Church in the Inventive Age and we have a great time.  It’s sure to get your brain a flowing and your mouse a clickin’ (to amazon through THIS link so I get credit and you get your Pagitt for the pooper plane reading).

If for some reason you don’t listen to Doug’s radio show you should.  If you are a smart phone user check out Stitcher (the world’s greatest App) and stream both Homebrewed & Doug!

Give us a Holla on the HBC Hotline! 678-590-BREW!

Standard Podcast [ 1:09:23 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: emergent, features, podcast

Slave Free Earth: Cathy and Will Henderson on human trafficking

October 14, 2011 by Bo Sanders Leave a Comment

Cathy and Will Henderson are the founders of Slave Free Earth. The problem of human trafficking has become a global epidemic. It has suprassed arms (guns) and is second only to drugs in illegal sales.

Visit to SlaveFreeEarth.com to connect, learn, volunteer and support this movement.

The Interview starts in minute 6 after Elgin Fuller explains the dangers of his favorite movie – Cars 2.

 

Standard Podcast [ 44:56 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: engaging, features, news, podcast, thinking

John Caputo on the Future of Continental Philosophy: Homebrewed Christianity 121

October 13, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 6 Comments

 The one and only, living legend, and Homebrewed frequenter John Caputo is back!  Think of this as a pump primer for the HBC-3d with Caputo at Soularize.  Both his first and second visit rocked the podcast.  Even more exciting are these class lectures Caputo is sharing here at HBC.  These lectures, as we say in the intro, are theological cat nip for theology nerds. Enjoy.

Caputo Writes lots of books.  He mentions Some Philosophers…Ray Brassier’s Nihil Unbound: Enlightenment and Extinction and Quentin Meillassoux’s After Finitude.

* We are excited about Doug Pagitt coming to Soularize!

* ‘Like’ John Caputo on facebook

Standard Podcast Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: features, philosophy, podcast, pomo, thinking

the appeal of Open Theology

October 11, 2011 by Bo Sanders 4 Comments

In this week’s TNT, we talked about Open Theology (amongst other things) and I put forward a theory that I wanted float here and see what others thought.

Open Theology (we stated) was primarily:

  • A) grounded in a reading of Scripture – versus other schools of theology that are a result of philosophical or systematic concerns.
  • B) focused on a specific aspect of concentration: the opened ended nature of the future.

This explains why Open does not even attempt to account for everything ( atonement theories for instance) or provide a totalizing system as other schools of thought sometimes do.

 So my theory is this: I have found that Open Theology tends to appeal primarily to folks – often of some fashion of evangelical persuasion,  past or present – who get trapped between three other boundaries.

  1. That theologies based on philosophy require a priori commitments before one can even begin to interact with the ideas. Philosophical theologies like Process are too abstract and require too many mental gymnastics. When someone looks into Process (or many other schools) and wades into the explanation against substance/matter and its replacement with packets of time/moments/actualities – it is just too much jabber-talkie and vocabulary.
  2. That Biblical Scholarship is too much work behind the text before one ever gets to the text. In fact, that work behind the text may keep one from engaging the text much at all. Biblical Scholarship has become so elaborate, contentious, and contradictory that it is intimidating to even begin. Sometimes you just want to read the Bible and talk about what it means! 
  3. That the round-and-round cul-de-sac conversations of bumper-sticker Calvinism vs. ‘Arminianism’ are exhausting and pointless. Open thought gets you out of that endless loop of antiquated argumentation.*

This is the appeal of Open Theology. It avoids the a priori assumptions of so much philosophical theology, it gets you into the text instead of spending all your time behind the text and it gets you out of the repetitive circular logic of centuries past.
Those three thing appeal to a distinct group of people.

 

*  (I’m not talking about real Calvin-Calvinist like the honorable Paul Capetz.)

Filed Under: bible stuff, church history, engaging, latest, philosophy, thinking Tagged With: Aminian, calvinism, open theology, Roger Olson

Open Theology, Process, Historical Jesus & the Global South: TNT for Oct 5

October 10, 2011 by Bo Sanders 9 Comments

In this week’s TNT (Theology Nerd Throwdown) Tripp and Bo respond to questions about Open Theology, the Historical Jesus and end in the Global South.

Some of the books they mention are:

  • The Most Moved Mover by Clark Pinnock
  • Beyond Liberalism and Fundamentalism by Nancey Murphey
  • God of the Possible by Greg Boyd
  • The Openess of God by Clark Pinnock
  • The Nature of Love: a theology  by Thomas Jay Oord
If you wanted to follow up with ‘Hitchhickers’s Guide to Jesus‘  you can listen here [link]
It is not too late to register for SOULarize - October 18-20 2011
Standard Podcast [ 1:07:47 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: engaging, latest, podcast, thinking, TNT Tagged With: Global South, Historical Jesus, open theology, Process
« Older Posts

Search

Support the brew

The latest

  • There is no Evangelical Orthodoxy
  • Postmodern Youth Ministry Under the Influence…
  • Theology Nerds Are Sexy…the shirt
  • Ministers Taking their Parts Out In Public!
  • What God doesn’t say and how not to read the Bible
  • TNT: Eschatology – Resurrection call and response

Transforming Christian Theology

The Homebrewed Hosting Service

Host Unlimited Domains on 1 Account Happy Holidays! Download a FREE audiobook today!

Friends

Return to top of page

Copyright © 2012 · Delicious Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Podcast powered by podPress v8.8.10.12