Monthly Archives: October 2009

For the Single Ladies (and Guys)

Recently, Boundless blogger Suzanne Hadley Gosselin asked a few interesting questions.  I’m gonna pose them here; who knows, could yield some interesting comments!

If you are a single guy, what do you wish the girls around you knew? If you are a single woman, what do you wish you could tell guys?

One request: be honest!  No need to just parrot what you think makes you sound spiritual.

Free Photo Booth

Now this is funny!

True Colors

The following video is a clip of a debate on abortion at McGill University.  Take special note at what starts to happen at around the 1 minute mark when pro-lifer Jo Ruba gets up to make his opening statement.

Aah, yes.  The new tolerance shows its fangs.

Truly ironic, isn’t it?  For some folks, free speech only applies to those views of which they already approve.

I hope the protesters realize they didn’t do the pro-choice case any favors.  If I was a pro-choicer, I’d be hissing at them to knock it off, because they make the pro-choice side look downright fearful.

Thanks for the reference, Neil!

A Darn Good Day

The seniors I teach are embarking on their research paper this week.  For many of them, it’s “freak out” time.

It’s an enjoyable time for me, though, for most of the students choose interesting topics, many of which I’m quite familiar with.  Today, a surprising number of girls chose abortion, for instance.  All of them except one were arguing for the pro-life position, and the one girl that wasn’t solidly in that camp was leaning that way.  She was pro-choice with pro-life intuitions (most girls that choose the topic argue the pro-life position, I’ve found).  This is all very encouraging to me, if only from an anecdotal standpoint.

I was able to discuss sources with them and point them towards some excellent pro-life papers and books, all written from a scholarly view.  I also pointed them towards what many consider the most famous pro-choice argument ever made: the “violinist” argument of Judith Jarvis Thompson (after I mentioned the paper, one student even found it in a book she checked out!).  I’ve lost count of the times I’ve ran into that paper ever since my college freshman ethics course.
Why would I point them to that source?  I’m not worried: quite a few of the pro-life sources I pointed them towards do an excellent job of answering Jarvis’ argument.  Besides, why should I fear?  When the truth is put next to the lie, truth wins every time.  In my mind, this experience will do nothing but strengthen their ability to argue and dialogue effectively  in the public square.

Then there was another student–one of the many class clowns in this one particular class.  Good kid…makes class interesting.

I asked him what he was doing his paper on.  “Religion and war,” he said.  “I love arguing those topics…I HATE religion!  Religion has caused so much bloodshed over the years.”

Hmmm..Ok.  Well, I’m kinda glad he chose the topic, because I know a thing or two about it.

Without overwhelming him or outright showing my cards, I brought up the fact that he’d need to even-handedly deal with counter-arguments to his thesis (same point I made to the pro-lifers…that’s why I mentioned the Thompson paper) and I pointed him towards “Christianity’s Real Record,” a paper on the whole “religion and bloodshed” deal by Greg Koukl.  Before that, though, I asked him why he hated religion, and he told me about his experience in private school.  Supposedly, a priest told him he was going to hell.  “Why would that matter?” I asked.  “That’s horrible,” he replied, “don’t impose your beliefs on me.” (the judgment was directed towards the priest, not me.)  Supposedly the priest did just that.

This was curious to me.  I mean, I get the fact that many in our modern society are offended at that.  It’s just, well, why is offense a good reason to reject a religion or claim?  If I have cancer, that fact might horrify and offend me, but that’s not the question I’ll be asking.  The real issue is, “do I have cancer?”  In that respect, the bottom line question the student should ask is, “does hell, completely aside from my feelings in the matter, really exist?”

I hope that question really makes him think twice about putting anything like that in his research paper (using his feelings of offense as a litmus test for truth).  Offense isn’t much to stand on when you are writing what is supposed to be a scholarly paper.

Today’s Ivory Tower Ideas…

Dang!  I’m currently going through a history of philosophy series by R.C Sproul.  Brian, at Apologetics 315, has a few more courses to add.
Lovin it.  I’m a junkie.  Good stuff good stuff!

And in case you think it’s all hot air, remember: ideas have consequences…ideas have consequences.

Today’s ivory tower ideas are tomorrow’s battle cries.

Pop-Spirituality: Empty Calories for the Soul

Sorry for not posting substantive stuff over the past few days…you know…life.  Plus, working on a few other writing projects (!!!).

For now, feast your minds on the following podcast from Dr. John Mark Reynolds and friends:

Oprah-Style Religion: Choosing the Truth over ‘The Secret’

Description:

One of the most popular trends in modern spirituality is the “visualization” approach, which claims that health, wealth, and happiness are only a positive thought away. These principles seem harmless, perhaps even beneficial for everyday life–but are there dangers below the surface? What’s in store for the many who follow these coffee-shop religions?

Listen as Dr. John Mark Reynolds and Dr. Paul Spears, professors at the Torrey Honors Institute, are joined by foremost apologist and Biola University professor Dr. Craig Hazen to discuss pop culture’s attempts at piety, and how Christians can counter the claims of modern spiritual gurus.

Scrumptious.

Homosexuality and Public Schools

I just finished watching “Tolerance and Teaching Homosexuality in Government Schools” by Chris Neiswonger.

He makes some good points.  Highly recommended.