Tuesday, January 29, 2008
"about me"
Following is my facebook bio (mentioned in the initial post) that I couldn't reduce enough to fit the facebook word count. I will copy and paste it "as is," and then revise and expand it some (if I can figure out how) since I now have apparently endless freedom to do so. I am breaking it up into two posts, the second of which is essentially a list of some of the many really important things I have learned from Reformed thinkers.
My heritage is Jewish; my upbringing was liberal Jewish, but I was a practical atheist until I experienced a radical conversion to Christianity at the age of 27. A strong influence had been the book Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis. I spent the next 15 years as basically your garden variety crypto-Arminian, anti-creedal, pietistic, baptistic, legalistic, individualistic, biblicist, activist, dispensationlist, culture warring American evangelical (and now I have to catch my breath ...).
Roughly four years ago, I experienced another radical conversion - to Reformed Christianity. I had been influenced by the likes of J.I. Packer, John Piper, and Francis Schaeffer - but the real revolution occurred for me through reading John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion (which is far and away the most pastoral and helpful work on the Christian life I have ever read). I followed this with readings from Martin Luther (On the Bondage of the Will), Jonathan Edwards (The Freedom of the Will, etc.), the Puritans and Reformed scholastics, the Reformed confessions, and contemporary Reformed thinkers.
Years ago, I aspired to be an illustrator, and I have a BFA in Illustration from Art Center College of Design. I work with a Christian non-profit organization (which I will refrain from naming here for the time being out of respect for the possibility that my co-workers may not want to be associated with some of the ideas expressed on this blog) that I have been involved with almost since becoming a Christian. Along the way, I got an MA in Intercultural Studies (missiology) from the Fuller School of World Mission. I am a member of an Orthodox Presbyterian church.
My heritage is Jewish; my upbringing was liberal Jewish, but I was a practical atheist until I experienced a radical conversion to Christianity at the age of 27. A strong influence had been the book Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis. I spent the next 15 years as basically your garden variety crypto-Arminian, anti-creedal, pietistic, baptistic, legalistic, individualistic, biblicist, activist, dispensationlist, culture warring American evangelical (and now I have to catch my breath ...).
Roughly four years ago, I experienced another radical conversion - to Reformed Christianity. I had been influenced by the likes of J.I. Packer, John Piper, and Francis Schaeffer - but the real revolution occurred for me through reading John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion (which is far and away the most pastoral and helpful work on the Christian life I have ever read). I followed this with readings from Martin Luther (On the Bondage of the Will), Jonathan Edwards (The Freedom of the Will, etc.), the Puritans and Reformed scholastics, the Reformed confessions, and contemporary Reformed thinkers.
Years ago, I aspired to be an illustrator, and I have a BFA in Illustration from Art Center College of Design. I work with a Christian non-profit organization (which I will refrain from naming here for the time being out of respect for the possibility that my co-workers may not want to be associated with some of the ideas expressed on this blog) that I have been involved with almost since becoming a Christian. Along the way, I got an MA in Intercultural Studies (missiology) from the Fuller School of World Mission. I am a member of an Orthodox Presbyterian church.
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