Essays about the challenges of establishing a basis for knowledge.
This was to be chapter one of a book refuting the claim that the Bible is full of antimomies, that divine truth has a "two-foldness" our minds cannot overcome. I never did write that book, but thought this chapter would still be of interest.
My Dec 5, 1991 letter to the editor, responding to E. Calvin Beisner's Sept 17, 1991 letter to the editor, where he responded to my "Heresy or 'Hear Say'?" article when it was first published in Evangelistic Education Ministries' publication "Notes & Qutoes".
A Sept 17, 1991 letter to the editor by E. Calvin Beisner, responding to my "Heresy or 'Hear Say'?" article when it was first published in Evangelistic Education Ministries' publication "Notes & Qutoes".
Makes an argument for tolerance of different theological positions, examining the claim that there has ever been a "historical Christian position." Suggests orthodoxy has more to do with practice, than doctrine.
Examines the reasons for believing that time is an aspect of God's nature, as it is for us.