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Special Edition: A Meditation on Death

Two deaths in the family of Vocaris Media prompted this meditation on the Last Things

An episode of the Thinking with the Church podcast, hosted by Chris Altieri, titled "Special Edition: A Meditation on Death" was published on January 30, 2017 and runs 19 minutes.

January 30, 2017 ·19m · Thinking with the Church

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Two deaths in the family of Vocaris Media prompted this meditation on the Last Things

Two deaths in the family of Vocaris Media prompted this meditation on the Last Things
1st Corinthians (2002) Dr. Robert L. Dean Jr. As Dr. Dean points out in the introduction to this 117-lesson study, 1st Corinthians is an epistle written to address problems in one of the worst congregations ever, the church at Corinth. Virtually every problem that a local church can have was present in Corinth.This epistle is a fantastic illustration of how the culture around us can dominate our thinking if we don't renovate our thinking with the word of God. It also illustrates that Christians operating on human viewpoint can actually Thinking With Your Bible Doxa Church Equipping the Church to think biblically about cultural and theological issues of the day. From Doxa Church in Rocklin, California. Grouper: Podcast for Church Leaders Gary Moritz Helping you swim with the fish in the church world. Gary Moritz will encourage and coach you in today’s church topics and struggles, and will revitalize your thinking, your church, and your focus. We are all fish swimming upstream to Jesus, so let’s do it together. Christianity, the Backstory Elliott Smith Looking between the lines of Church history and the New Testament. The narrative that Christianity is based on includes assumptions that are easy to miss, assumptions that are also fundamental premises. Like the idea that this religion is well connected with the man we all know as Jesus.This podcast puts that narrative into straight forward terms, and applies critical thinking to see if it makes sense. Premise: it’s supposed to make sense. And if it doesn’t, in behind the Church’s story there might be a cohesive, credible story that does make sense.Christianity is open for critique
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