| Tony Dungy.
Former
Super Bowl-winning coach and current NBC football analyst Tony Dungy became the
latest target for the "Thought Police" last week, when he said he
wouldn't have drafted openly gay player Michael Sam because of the distractions
it would cause for the team.
Said
Dungy, "I wouldn't have [drafted] him. Not because I don't believe Michael
Sam should have a chance to play, but I wouldn't want to deal with all of it.
It's not going to be totally smooth ... things will happen."
And
for his innocuous comments, Dungy was dubbed the "World's Worst Person in
Sports" by ESPN's Keith Olbermann, and other swift attacks on Dungy came
from all over.
Further
Reading
|
Monday, 28 July 2014
'Thought Police' Target NFL Super Bowl-Winning Coach for 'Intolerance', Charisma Magazine
What we talk about when we talk about evangelism, Christian Today, Justin Welby
Evangelism is such a word. For Christians, it's the name for an activity that some love and others hate – it's a passion for some and an embarrassment for others. For non-Christians, it's a word that can send them running to the hills, feeling they are in danger of having something 'done' to them. (I wonder which of these descriptions fits you – and what you've experienced in the name of evangelism to make you feel this way?)
Given
all this controversy around the word, it was no surprise that when, on taking
office last year, I declared evangelism as one of the three priorities for my
ministry. Some people thought I was
profoundly misguided, while others jumped for joy.
However,
it's my belief that if only we truly 'got' evangelism, we, the Church would
live to show what it meant. And to 'get' it means to receive it, and to give
it. Continually. And if we lived what we spoke of, and spoke of what we lived,
no-one would have to point at the Church and wonder what it was for.
Further
Reading
4) A
View on the ChurchUniversalism Is Next for the Soft Love Crowd
Universalism Is Next for the Soft Love Crowd

According to Steve Chalke, the traditional teaching of God's wrath being poured out on His Son on the cross "stands in total contradiction to the statement 'God is love.'"
But couldn't it be just as easily argued that any type of future punishment for the lost, especially if it does not result in their ultimate salvation, "stands in total contradiction to the statement 'God is love'"?
After all, why would a loving God punish someone or judge someone when there's no hope of their redemption? Wouldn't that be utterly cruel?
And what about all the nice people who don't believe just as we do? Are they eternally lost? And let's not forget all the "gay Christians" (by which I mean those who claim to follow Jesus and practice homosexuality at the same time). Surely a loving God would not condemn nice people like them.
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