Big is bad, but small isn’t necessarily beautiful. It’s just that everywhere I look, I can’t see the end of what I’m seeing. Everything is too big and it should be smaller.
Perhaps the easiest place to make this case is in national electoral politics, which we in Canada recently sleepwalked through (a blessed brevity compared to […]
Tag Archive for 'metanarrative'
As my last post indicated, I’m currently reading James K.A. Smith’s Who’s Afraid of Postmodernism?: Taking Derrida, Lyotard, and Foucault to Church. He’s helping me to understand the phenomenon of postmodern philosophy much better than any other tutor I’ve had previously. He is actually familiar with each author’s writings (particularly Derrida) and is therefore able […]
I’m reading Truth Is Stranger Than It Used to Be: Biblical Faith in a Postmodern Age by J. Richard Middleton & Brian Walsh right now and I’m really enjoying it. It’s a ten year old book, but I’m finding that it speaks well into much of the current fascination with all things “postmodern.” I’m only […]
I went out for coffee today with my friend Cam. It’s been great having him here in between terms at Regent. He’s gotta be easily among the top ten people on planet earth, but he doesn’t always think so…
Anyways, we talked over a nice cup of java over the joys and perils of theology. […]
The following is a quoted portion from the article What is the Gospel? written by Scot McKnight for Next-Wave Ezine. I discovered it while burrowing through cyberspace and I found the discussion here to be an enlightening one about a surely crucial issue. Click the link above to keep reading and here his […]

