September 14th, 2009
I’d like to say more about bounded sets before moving on to other approaches to church. Picture a bounded set approach to church as a circle in the form of a ring. Members of the group fulfill certain criteria and become members of the group thereby. It’s pretty clear who is a member of the group and who isn’t. People are either “all in” or “all out.” The boundary is comprised of whatever beliefs and behaviors are viewed by the church in question as essential for membership in the group. Keep in mind that boundaries like this include both formal statements (like creeds and defined positions on various moral-behavioral issues), cultural factors (as is the case with ethnic churches of many kinds) and other informally enforced boundaries (things which are accepted or rejected by group members through various forms of social sanction or pressure).
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Tags: boundaries, bounded set, c.s. lewis, categories, centered set, divorce, doctrine, enforcement, evangelism, fuzzy set, groups, Joy Davidman, nets, Pentecostals, remarriage, set theogy, tongues
Posted in centered sets | 17 Comments »
September 3rd, 2009
When Jesus appears vividly and visually in your prayers–not like he stood before Saul of Tarsus, perhaps, but like he can surprise us when we slip into a silence that comes alive visually–well, you take notice. I’ve been praying for over thirty years as a Jesus follower and I can only think of three times that this happened. Each one feels as real or more real than ordinary reality and each one is seared into my memory. Each has taken me years to digest. Thank God he doesn’t show up this way more often. I’d be on overload.
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Tags: divorce, environmnet, evangelism, gay, Jesus, nets, remarried, sciene, Scientific American
Posted in centered sets | 16 Comments »