All About MYTH: A Quick Response to a Facebook Discussion on Myth, the Gospels, and Jesus

I have not been posting too much this month because I have been busy with other things. Nevertheless, in light of a recent extensive Facebook discussion (and since I had to get my mind off the Cubs meltdown in the World Series), I thought I’d write this quick post. Let me say up front, I…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 17): Monaticism and Pagan Europe

When it comes to Church history, we must always remember that oftentimes the true impact of Christianity is to be found far away from the halls of power. While the majority of popes in the West during the Byzantine Age were turning Rome into a brothel, there were countless devout and holy men and women…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 16)–A Hodgepodge of Information about Christianity, Slavery, and the Differences Between East and West

The reason why I have not posted anything in the past week or so will soon become obvious. As I’ve been looking at the next section of my “Ways of the Worldviews” manuscript, I see that it is somewhat of a hodgepodge of material, and quite frankly, I haven’t been in the mood to try…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 15): Christian Philosophy in the Byzantine Age–(Actually, This is Mostly on Augustine!)

One of the things I have come to realize as I have read up on Christian history is that the impact Christianity had on all areas of life cannot be over-stated. Ever since the Enlightenment, Church history has largely suffered slander, whereas most people associate the time of history between the rise of Constantine and…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 14): The Rise of Constantine and the Development of Byzantine Christianity

On October 28th, 312 AD, the tetrarch Constantine defeated his fellow tetrarch Maxentius, at the battle of the Milvian Bridge. The night before the battle Constantine had a heavenly vision—the famous Chi-Rho (the first two letters in the name “Christ”)—and heard a voice say, “In this, conquer!” That experience marked Constantine’s conversion to Christianity. He…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 13): The Byzantine Age (313 AD-1054 AD)–The “Middle Ages” that Never Were

The “Middle Ages” That Never Were Most history books lump the time between the rise of Constantine and the Renaissance as the “Middle Ages,” or the “Medieval Period,” or the “Dark Ages.” As most people have now just come to assume, ancient Greece and Rome was a golden age of philosophy and reason, but then…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 12): Christian Persecution in the Roman Empire

Now we come to the final topic regarding early Christianity in the Roman Empire: persecution. Two things must be said up front: first, despite what some might think (I mean, it’s what I thought growing up), Christians were not continually persecuted for 300 years until the rise of Constantine the Great. That being said, persecution…

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Answers in Genesis, Radiometric Dating, and the Denial of Science (I’ll Take David Hume Behind Door Number 3!)

After a while, there’s only so much you can say about the claims of young earth creationist groups like Ken Ham’s Answers in Genesis. As I wrote in my book, The Heresy of Ham, the entire “gospel” of Answers in Genesis (which really is no gospel at all) can be boiled down to five basic…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 11): Early Christian Philosophers–Tertullian and Irenaeus of Lyons

In my last post, I began to look at a number of Christian philosophers from the first couple of centuries of the early Church who proved themselves to be some of the most influential philosophers of their time. I looked at Justin Martyr, Athenagoras of Athens, Clement of Alexandria, and Origen of Alexandria. In this…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 10): Early Christian Philosophers: Justin Martyr, Athenagoras of Athens, Clement of Alexandria, and Origen of Alexandria

As was discussed in last week’s post, not only was Christianity probably the most significant counter-cultural movement in history in terms of practical, day to day morality, Christianity also gave rise to a philosophical paradigm, based on the historical realities of Christ’s resurrection and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, that both challenged…

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