Author: Fred Sanders
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Neuroscience Talk May Be Literally Re-Wiring Your Brain
Brain-talk is everywhere these days. And while I love a good functional MRI as much as the next citizen, lately I’ve become alert to the way all of this brain-and-neuron rhetoric functions. It has a conjuring power, giving an aura of sciencey power to absolutely any topic. Reporters still bug their eyes out of their head…
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Why George MacDonald Hated Adoption
The doctrine of salvation can hardly be unfolded more grandly or clearly than in the terms of adoption: that God pays the price of accepting sinners into the life of sonship; that becoming like Christ means having his Father as our Father, his Spirit of sonship as the Spirit of our sonship; that the eternal…
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The Center of Athanasius’ Theology
Most people who read the writings of Athanasius are struck by his singlemindedness. Most of his writings are ad hoc, responses to provocations in the hectic, decades-long argument with Arianism. Yet his theological vision is undistractable. He seems to be a pastoral satellite orbiting one vast doctrinal planet. What about that planet? Everybody who studies…
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What Trinitarian Theology is For (LATC 2014 Lecture)
At the 2014 Los Angeles Theology Conference, I presented a paper that gave an overview of the work that the doctrine of the Trinity does in systematic theology. It was the first plenary session of this conference called Advancing Trinitarian Theology, and my task was to kick things off for the many fine papers and…
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How Not To Fight Calvinists
This isn’t a post about how-to-not-fight Calvinists, because a clear theological dispute can be a good thing. It’s a post about how-not-to-fight them; it’s about one specific tactic that I think is both inaccurate and unproductive. When a good, vigorous Calvinists-vs-Anticalvinists fight gets going, things tend to escalate quickly (to quote Will Ferrell, not Will Farel).…
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Okay, NOW Racism’s Over, Right?
Back in March, Torrey prof Jamie Campbell and her husband Andrew posted here at Scriptorium about their experiences and understandings of racial identity. Their stated goal was to help get past a set of platitudes about race that are over-used, simplistic, and ambiguous: “We’re all the same on the inside; everybody is equal; I am…
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Comparative Dogmatics
Here’s a resource I recommend for teaching theology: George Benedict Winer’s Comparative View of the Doctrines and Confessions of the Various Communities of Christendom. It’s from the nineteenth century, so it’s public domain, and you can read the original German edition here, and the English translation here. The whole book is interesting, but I’d especially like to draw…
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Sacramental Punctuation
One of the interesting moments of disagreement at the recent Future of Protestantism discussion was when Leithart and Trueman tried to come to terms with each other on the place of sacraments in Christian worship. Leithart spoke movingly of the Lord’s supper as the high point of the weekly Christian liturgy. Trueman insisted that Protestant…
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Green Message Culture
For some years now, I’ve had the vague sensation that the ads about ecology and environment have changed over the course of my life. I grew up with lots of nature documentaries, and also with the “Give a Hoot, Don’t Pollute” and “crying Indian” ad campaigns, plus the energy crisis of the Carter years and…
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Dorothy L. Sayers, The Theologian Who Wasn’t
Dorothy L. Sayers (1893-1957) was a serious amateur theologian who viewed her task as taking the creed and re-stating it so people could hear and understand it. But she wouldn’t want me to call her a theologian. I’m calling her one because I think every Christian is in some sense a theologian –either a good one…
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Right But Resourceless
Protestantism, it seems to me, is right in what it recognizes as the authority of tradition: tradition has a relative and limited authority which must be strictly subordinated to the authority of the word of God in Scripture. Here are three brief examples of the Reformation position (these are just off the top of my…
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Oneness Pentecostalism: An Analysis
Not Your Grandpa’s Anti-Trinitarianism It is a disturbing fact that the most vigorous form of anti-trinitarianism currently on the market is to be found within the sphere of conservative evangelicalism. In the nineteenth century, the dominant variety of anti-trinitarianism was the old-world Unitarianism which found fertile soil in America. (See Earl Morse Wilbur, A History…