By David Montoya on Jan 12, 2021 07:00 am Pseudonymity and pseudepigraphy denote the practice of ascribing written works to someone other than the author—that is, the works in question are falsely (pseud-) named (onoma, “name”) or attributed (epigraphos, “superscription”). This must not be confused with anonymity, in which no formal claim is made (e.g., Matthew, John and Hebrews are all formally anonymous). Similarly one must distinguish between pseudepigraphical and apocryphal works. The word apocrypha is tied rather more to notions of canon than to notions of authenticity. The matter of false attribution played little or no part in the identification of the fourteen or fifteen books or parts of books that constitute the Apocrypha, most of which Roman Catholics view as deuterocanonical. A book is either canonical or apocryphal (or, for Roman Catholics, deuterocanonical), regardless of whether or not it is pseudepigraphical. Although pseudonymity and pseudepigraphy are today used almost synonymously, only the latter term has been traced... Read on » By Brian Auten on Jan 11, 2021 01:21 pm Today’s Show Notes:Episode 004 – Responding to Memes and Talking About the Trinity In this episode, Brian Auten and Chad Gross talk about podcasts, memes, and talking about the Trinity. 0:50 – A few podcasts we listen to: ID The Future, Frank Turek, The Briefing with Albert Mohler, Unbelievable? with Justin Brierley, Reasonable Faith, Defenders, Like Trees Walking with Mike J. Nelson (Mystery Science Theater 3000), Think Biblically, Stand to Reason (Greg Koukl), Real Atheology.8:10 – Responding to memes, “Jesus never talked about abortion,” and the case against abortion.21:30 – How might we turn conversation stoppers into conversation starters? Dealing with nervousness, pressure, and anxiety responding to arguments.34:15 – One approach for talking about the Trinity with kids. The strengths and shortcomings of Trinity analogies. The Trinity is a solution, not a problem. Record your questions here. (Or Email them to us here.) Subscribe in iTunes here.Subscribe on Spreaker here.Subscribe... Read on » By Mark Lester on Jan 11, 2021 10:17 am The One Minute Apologist Bobby explores the recent moral failure of Christian Leaders and how the church should move forward. Unbelievable? It's often been argued that the prosperity and welfare of Scandinavian countries such as Denmark, Norway and Sweden are proof that secular societies get on better than religious ones. Capturing Christianity In this interview, I chat with author Tom Holland about his book “Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World.” In it, he argues that our morals and ethics are not universal but are instead the fruits of a very distinctive civilization. Concepts such as secularism, liberalism, science, and homosexuality are deeply rooted in a Christian seedbed. Read on » | |
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