April 9, 2009
February 26, 2009
Rebooting the King Jesus Podcast
Its been almost three years since I have recorded a podcast for this. Well the time has come for a reboot. Gone are the days of a guy rambling on about a random topic. Now it will be a few guys rambling about a random topic.
April 9, 2006
Thoughts from the dad of a baby girl – KJP #35
- Click to listen 3.5 MB
- Stroll through the woods
- Chat about the birth of our daughter
- various thoughts on parenting
- Mention new Odeo feature
- Talk about the migration from a blogspot blog to wordpress.com for my podcast feed, and how feedburner helped out
February 17, 2006
November 9, 2005
Former Jesus Freak on the emergent church
I appreciated this take on the emergent church from Dave Black (sorry, no permalink available blog, November 5, 2005)
I so appreciate all of the articles and links you kind people have sent me on the emergent church. I do praise the Lord that the Holy Spirit has led the younger generation of Christians into understanding the weaknesses of the institutionalized church. I feel that they are very much like those of us in the 1960s who were part of the so-called Jesus Movement. However, I also feel that the new generation is in a place of grave danger because, realizing that much of what is called evangelical Christianity has terrible weaknesses, they tend to ignore the weaknesses of their own movement. Just as the Jesus Movement (of which I was a part) was eccentric in its overemphasis on experience and on Jesus as our “friend,” so the emergent church not only fails to argue its case biblically but actually considers propositional truth largely irrelevant. Therefore I think that the emergent church is so completely destructive in the finding of truth that I would not for a moment even seem to equate it with the New Testament church. The profound connection I see between doctrine, spirituality, and the whole spectrum of reality veritably shouts a “no” to the wrong emphases in both emergent Christianity and non-emergent Christianity and a “yes” to the New Testament vision of Christ’s Body. I am convinced that both emergers and non-emergers are taught against too a narrow a backdrop. Some are fighting exclusively the old battle of the Reformation concerning the great doctrines of the faith, while others are seeking exclusively the answers to really deep spiritual issues such as the meaning of life, communion with God, and personal peace. The marvelous thing is that the Bible has such wonderful and clear answers not only to our intellectual questions but to the spiritual ones as well. I feel that most of the reformed churches have let the pendulum swing too far in one direction in thinking that if only the right doctrines were taught all would be well, while emergers have concentrated almost exclusively on the opposite area of relationships. I am becoming increasingly convinced that since God is both light and love (this is the message of 1 John) it is our calling as Christians to act in such a way as to demonstrate the character of God as both ultimate reality and ultimate relationship. Failure to show forth either of these is, in my opinion, equally a perversion of the gospel. We must display both truth and love simultaneously. I am convinced that what is needed today is a fundamental recommitment to the twofold emphasis of the primitive New Testament church upon apostolic doctrine and apostolic practice (Acts 2:42) — in other words a recommitment to both orthodoxy and orthopraxy. It seems to me, having read with interest a great deal of what the emergers are saying, that they understand the need for this. They are properly repulsed by a form of Christianity that stresses the external signs without the internal realties. And because of this, I sense that their numbers will grow among those in Christendom who are seeking a balance in showing forth the love of God and the holiness of God. It is my firm belief that doctrinal rightness is extremely important, but only as a starting point to go on to a living relationship with God. At the same time, the church still has the duty of guarding the truth and proclaiming the gospel to the lost, and this cannot be reduced to non-verbal actions. God willing, Becky and I will be doing both in Ethiopia in just a few short weeks.
October 26, 2005
Who owns your music? – KJP #33
- A quick podcast about music –
- Free your children from growing up under the threat of litigation –
- How music shapes our lives –
- Recomending the TanFastic Podcast –
- Recomending This Week in Tech –
(photo is completly unrelated to this podcast but its better than not having a photo 🙂
August 12, 2005
Infant Baptism – KJP #32
- My thoughts on why we baptized our children
- Baptism links from Gregg Strawbridge
- Policy statement for the denomination that we attend on baptism
- Requesting feedback and questions, I would like to do a follow up podcast to address thoughts from others. Leave a comment, or email us.
August 9, 2005
July 27, 2005
Just a response to Mark Cuban – KJP #30
- A rant about this article –
- Podcasting’s Nonstar System By Greg Lindsay in Business 2.0 –
- My dad wanted me to post this even though it a few weeks old –
- Actual posting of this podcast is on Aug 8th 2005 so it is a little outdated, but hey its my podcast and I can post as late as I want –
- One day the podbat will be released and my laziness to post podcasts will not matter.
July 25, 2005
OPML Editor released, London Tube justice, – KJP #29
- More thoughts/details on Odeo –
- OPML Editor is live baby, Thanks Dave! –
- My thoughts on the London bombings, harsh justice, the reality of terror.
- Researcher finds more lynchings than U.S. knew