Doctoral Options: What to do?
I have to decide from where I am going to earn my doctorate. Should I go to Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary or Liberty? If I go to Southwestern, I would have to drive several hours to Fort Worth every week. If I study at SWBTS, I will major in Old Testament. I was considering Liberty on-line. If I go that route, I would major in Theology and Apologetics.
Assyrian Christian Groups
"The leader of the Assyrian Church is the Catholicos-Patriarch. Originally, the Patriarch was elected by bishops. During a long period of intense persecution by Muslim rulers, the practice of passing the office from patriarch to his nephew began. This led to inadequate leadership. The position of Patriarch was religious and political. As non-Muslims, Assyrians were Dhimmis ("people of the book" which means a group that is tolerated but denied equal rights by the Islamic community). The Patriarch was the recognized leader of this particular group of dhimmis by the Muslims rulers. This hereditary system resulted in the Chaldean schism, led in 1553 by John Sulaqa. A previous Church of the East Patriarch was Mar Shimon XXIII who was assassinated by an Assyrian in San Jose, California in November 1975 after he had retired from office and married. (Assyrians still remember the murder of Mar Shimon XXI by a Kurdish chieftain in 1918 but seem to be embarrassed by the fact than an Assyrian murdered the Patriarch and while I have had many encounters with Assyrians, I have never heard them talk about the murder of Mar Shimon XXIII.) The patriarch of the Church of the East Mar Dinkha IV (born 1935) has led the Assyrian community from Illinois. Mar Dinkha has made efforts to unite the Church of the East with the Roman Catholic Church. However, this led to turmoil, conflict and a lawsuit with his priest who was representing the Assyrian Church to the Roman Catholic Church. There is also an Assyrian group that calls itself the Ancient Church of the East. This faction has had its own Patriarch, Mar Addai II, and follows the old calendar. (Mar Shimun XXIII introduced the modern Gregorian Calendar but the Ancient Church of the East prefers the older Julian Calendar. Mar Addai II resided in Baghdad.) There are also Assyrian Protestants. Many Assyrian Protestants belong to the Presbyterian Church due to the fact that Presbyterians came to Iran during the 1800s to work with the Assyrians."
The above quote was in "The Assyrians: The Oldest Christian People" and "Saint Thaddeus and the King of the Assyrians." I took it out because it might hurt the feelings of Assyrians. It is factually accurate. Some Assyrians are completely devoted to their Patriarch Mar Dinkha. So, I will try to be sensitive to their feelings.
Monastic Orders
Here in Cleveland we have some Anglican monks. One is a Benedictine and the other is Franciscan. It is interesting to see Protestant Monastic Orders when we tend to think of Monks and Nuns as strictly Catholic. Most monasteries were destroyed in the Anglican and in the Lutheran Reformations, but, in both traditions some endured. The question is, are Monastic orders biblical? Now, we know from history at the time of Christ, there were Jewish Monastic orders. It is obvious that the "Qumran community" that is credited with composing the Dead Sea Scrolls was a monastic order. Also, Philo of Alexandria describes to orders of Jewish monks, the Essenes and the Thereaputuae. Josephus also describes Essenes as a type of monastic order. Now, Jews describe themselves as this worldly, and criticize Christians as having withdrawn from the world citing monasteries as an example. This is obviously incorrect. Probably the only reason monastic orders died out among the Jews is that they were exiled from their homeland and as a small community they were unable to sustain them. Now, we have established from the historical and archeological record that there were Jewish monastic orders we must now move on to the next question, is such a practice biblical? I believe it is, in the Prophetic tradition. Isaiah had a family as did Hosea. Other prophets, such as Jeremiah, took a vow of celibacy. It seems that Elijah never took a wife. After Elijah, the "School of the Prophets" developed. This seems to be something akin to a monastic order. In the New Testament, John the Baptist most likely never married. He also apparently had gathered a group of followers around him who lived in a religious community. In the New Testament, we also see a group of women who were widows who apparently gave themselves over to prayer and religious work. They seem to be a type of nun. So, apparently, the tradition of monastic orders isn't pagan but actually derives from the Jewish tradition and even biblical practice in the Old and New Testaments. I desire to marry but see nothing wrong with those who renounce marriage for God. Jesus did it. Phillips daughters did it (or at least some of them did). John's revelation says that the 144,000 prophets in the last days will be celibate. Paul was celibate. I think that the Eastern Churches (Syriac-Aramaic, Coptic, Greek, ect.) are correct to allow those who are called to ministry to marry if they so choose. They also have monastic orders. Although it is no longer actually practiced, traditionally, any devout Catholic male could be chosen to be pope. The actually practice now is that only Cardinals become popes. I believe that leaders from the Church should be chosen from the monastaries and from the parish pastors. However, I don't believe in the whole idea of popes.
I recently read "Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years" by Dairmaid MacCulloch. It is a horrible book. The man must be a homosexual. The subject comes up in his books ALL the time. The book would better be titled "A Queer History of Christianity." Also, he begins by saying he will use political correct terminology because he wants to be sensitive to the feelings and perspectives of others. Then he spills out his hateful contempt for Pentecostals, Evangelicals and the United States of America. He does include the Coptic and Syriac churches in his history. But he really doesn't go into much depth-it is a rather shallow treatment. So, including the history of Aramaic and Egyptian Christianity is an improvement since most church histories are Euro-centric, however, other textbooks (such as "The History of the World Christian Movement") do a much better job. MacCulloch book is dripping with hatred and contempt for Evangelicals and Americans. It is pretty awful. In this book, however, he describes the papacy as one of the world's longest running monarchies. He is correct. The pope is a king. This topic is also explored in Absolute Monarchs: A History of the Papacy by John Julius Norwich. As a Protestant, I don't agree with Catholicism (if I did, I would be a Catholic-and that will never happen) but I don't view Catholics as the enemy. In this evil day I think that Christians of all denominations need to acknowledge our differences but at the same time work together on common goals.
Pope Defends Traditional Values: Victor L. Simpson, Associated Press September 24, 2011
FREIBURG, Germany (AP) — Pope Benedict XVI called Saturday for a common front with Orthodox Christians to defend traditional church values, warning of threats posed by abortion and gay marriage. Facing discontent within his German flock, the pope said religion must not be banished from public life and that Christian churches "are walking side by side" in the battle. "They speak up jointly for the protection of human life from conception to natural death," he told a meeting of Orthodox Christians on the third day of a visit to his native Germany. "Knowing, too, the value of family and marriage, we as Christians attach great importance to defending the integrity and the uniqueness of marriage between one man and one woman from any kind of misinterpretation," he said. "Here the common engagement of Christians, including many Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Christians, makes a valuable contribution to building up a society equipped for the future."
Recently, an envoy from the Russian Orthodox Church has met with both the Protestant Churches and even the Aramaic Assyrian Church of the East. The Russian Orthodox Church is concerned about social decline, especially that which is represented by the radical political homosexual movement. The idea is that Christians irrespective of denomination, must come together to protect the home and society from attempts to mainstream deviant sexual behavior.
Senator: Consider military action against Pakistan, September 25, 2011 WASHINGTON (AP) — A Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee said Sunday that the U.S. should consider military action against Pakistan if it continues to support terrorist attacks against American troops in Afghanistan. "The sovereign nation of Pakistan is engaging in hostile acts against the United States and our ally Afghanistan that must cease, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina told "Fox News Sunday." He said if experts decided that the U.S. needs to "elevate its response," he was confident there would be strong bipartisan support in Congress for such action. Graham did not call for military action but said "all options" should be considered. He said assistance to Pakistan should be reconfigured and that the U.S. should no longer designate an amount of aid for Pakistan but have a more "transactional relationship" with the country. "They're killing American soldiers," he said. "If they continue to embrace terrorism as a part of their national strategy, we're going to have to put all options on the table, including defending our troops."
I am 100% behind the War on Islamic Terror. I have served twice and hope to again. I also think we should expand the war into new fronts such as Pakistan.
Iranian Navy Plans to Send Ships Near U.S. Waters
By Justin Fishel
Published September 27, 2011 | FoxNews.com The Iranian navy plans to move naval vessels out of the Persian Gulf and into the Atlantic Ocean, "near maritime borders of the United States," the Tehran Times reported Tuesday. According to the English-language paper based in Tehran, the announcement came from a top Iranian naval officer on Tuesday. "As the global arrogance (forces of imperialism) have a (military) presence near our sea borders, we also plan to have a strong presence near the U.S. sea borders with the help of the soldiers who are loyal to the vali-e faqih (supreme jurisprudent)," said Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari, as quoted and paraphrased by the Tehran Times. "We've been pushing freedom of the seas for years and the Iranian navy can go wherever it wants," said Pentagon Spokesman Capt. John Kirby.
US tells court bin Laden photos must stay secret
By RICHARD LARDNER - Associated Press
Southern Baptists vote on name-change
Is the Red Heifer Sacrifice a Symbol of Jesus?
Death, Burial, and the Afterlife in the Biblical World by Rachel S. Hallote
- Traveling overseas alone can be very dangerous for young women
- Human trafficking and sexual trafficking are ignored-but very real problems
- Certain immigrant communities, especially coming from Islamic regions, represent a threat to their host countries
- Saudi Arabians, and other Arabian Gulf Oil states, are behind international crime-particularly human trafficking in young women
Iranian Pastor Faces Execution for Refusing to Recant Christian Faith By Joshua Rhett Miller Published September 28, 2011 | FoxNews.com An Iranian pastor who has refused to recant his Christian faith now faces execution as early as Wednesday after his sentence was upheld by an Iranian court. Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani, a 34-year-old man who maintains he has never been a Muslim as an adult, has Islamic ancestry and therefore must recant his faith in Jesus Christ, the 11th branch of Iran's Gilan Provincial Court determined. Iran's supreme court has previously ruled that the trial court determine if Nadarkhani had been a Muslim prior to converting to Christianity. The judges, according to the American Center for Law & Justice, demanded that Nadarkhani recant his Christian faith before submission of evidence. Despite the fact that the judgment is against current Iranian and international laws, and is not codified in Iranian penal code, the judge stated that they have to uphold the previous decision of the 27th Branch of the Supreme Court in Qom. When asked to repent, Nadarkhani stated: "Repent means to return. What should I return to? To the blasphemy that I had before my faith in Christ?" "To the religion of your ancestors, Islam," the judge replied, according to the American Center for Law & Justice. "I cannot," Nadarkhani said. Nadarkhani is the latest Christian cleric to be imprisoned in Iran for his religious beliefs. According to Elam Ministries, a United Kingdom-based organization that serves Christian churches in Iran, there was a significant increase in the number of Christians arrested solely for practicing their faith between June 2010 and January. A total of 202 arrests occurred during that six-month period, including 33 people who remained in prison as of January. Earlier in 2010, an Assyrian evangelical pastor, Rev. Wilson Issavi, had been imprisoned for 54 days for allegedly converting Muslims prior to being released in March 2010, Elam officials told FoxNews.com.
Course Instructs Journalists to Take Note That Jihad 'Not a Leading Cause of Death'
By Judson Berger, Fox News A new online journalism course on Islam appears to downplay the threat posed by global jihad groups, suggesting reporters keep the death toll from Islamic terrorism in "context" by comparing that toll to the number of people killed every year by malaria, HIV/AIDS and other factors. "Jihad is not a leading cause of death in the world," the online course cautions studying journalists. While that is technically true, researchers at the Culture and Media Institute who examined the online program took exception to that and numerous other claims made in the Poynter News University course. Dan Gainor, vice president at the institute, said the course is sweeping these threats "under the rug," while watering down the section on jihad with inappropriate comparisons. "Infectious disease, we have government structures to prevent that, and that's great ... in radical Islam we have not even one organization but several organizations that are constantly seeking to kill Americans and others too," he said. "It seems like journalists should not be involved in trying to downplay that."
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