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Outraged at Outrage!!!: The Galli Report

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Unfortunately for Some, ‘All Scripture Is Inspired …’ | ‘Better, Faster, Stronge

Unfortunately for Some, ‘All Scripture Is Inspired …’ | ‘Better, Faster, Stronger’ | Perfecting the Free Throw | [View online]( [Give Now]( Advertisement [The Galli Report]( [Home]( [Podcast]( [Subscribe]( Friday, April 5, 2019 Outraged at Outrage!!! Just kidding! But my internal interest meter has recently been drawn to articles about outrage for some reason. I’ve narrowed it down to two I liked best. The first argues that “[Outrage Mobs Might Be More Forgiving If They Believed in Hell](.” Author Nathanael Blake spends time exploring the thought of Plato and Aristotle about character, as well as that of Jesus. The second explores what geniuses in history got right but also so much they got wrong. Like Isaac Newton, one of the most influential scientists of all time who believed in Bible codes and alchemy. [The article]( is a roundabout way of encouraging grace and humility: Consider the debate over “outrage culture”. Most of this focuses on moral outrage. Some smart person says something we consider evil, and so we stop listening to her or giving her a platform. … I think there’s a similar phenomenon that gets less attention and is even less defensible—a sort of intellectual outrage culture. “How can you possibly read that guy when he’s said [stupid thing]?” I don’t want to get into defending every weird belief or conspiracy theory that’s ever been. … I just want to say it probably wasn’t as stupid as Bible codes. And yet, Newton. Unfortunately for Some, ‘All Scripture Is Inspired …’ Every Bible reader has what is called a canon within the canon, meaning books and passages they come back to time and again, and therefore books and passages we never read. This is not the best way to read the Bible, but at least most of us still hold on to the whole Bible just in case someday we want to read the more uncomfortable passages. Some readers have been more open about what they consider “real” Scripture. Like Thomas Jefferson, who ignored miraculous stories (including the Resurrection) from his New Testament and literally cut out and pasted into a new book those passages of the Gospels he found edifying, calling it The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth. Or take the ancient heretic Marcion, who chopped away the whole Old Testament thinking it didn’t portray God well. Recently I’ve been made aware of [a missionary Bible from the 19th century]( that edited the Scripture in a particularly pernicious way: English missionaries seeking to convert enslaved Africans toiling in Britain’s Caribbean colonies around the beginning of the 19th century preached from Bibles that conveniently removed portions of the canonical text. They thought these sections, such as Exodus, the Book of Psalms, and the Book of Revelation, could instill in slaves a dangerous hope for freedom and dreams of equality. These are known as “Slave Bibles,” and one is on display at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, DC. ‘Better, Faster, Stronger’ Andy Crouch has wise things to say about a lot of topics, but when it comes to technology, he is at his wisest. [Like this book review]( of Jacob Shatzer’s survey [Transhumanism and the Image of God](. But neither Crouch nor the Union University professor lets us off the hook by merely pointing out the problem with “those” transhumanists: While Shatzer helpfully pushes back on transhumanism with this Christian perspective, his most helpful contribution is showing how all of us, very much including Christians, are already embracing habits of life—he calls them “liturgies of control”—that train us to accept the transhumanist promise of “better, faster, stronger” and, perhaps, “realer.” These liturgies—the daily ways we choose virtual relationships over embodied ones or neglect the places we actually live for faraway or entirely imagined ones—make it all too possible that most Christians will offer no effective resistance to “better, faster, stronger” as it beckons us onward. Perfecting the Free Throw At least one group of people should be getting better at one skill: making free throws. As the NCAA March Madness Tournament comes to a conclusion, with many games being decided at the free-throw line, you may want to read (maybe during those interminable time-outs at the end of these games) “[Free Throws Should Be Easy. Why Do Basketball Players Miss?](” Grace and peace, [Mark Galli] [Mark Galli] [Mark Galli](mailto:GalliReport@christianitytoday.com) Editor-in-Chief, Christianity Today [How God Worked Through CT in 2018]( [How God Worked Through CT in 2018]( Download the new CT Ministry Report to see how donors helped advance thoughtful Christian journalism by reaching 35 million leaders last year. [Read more]( Advertisement More from Christianity Today [Jewish Christians Are Recovering Their Distinctive Religious Heritage]( Spirituality [Jewish Christians Are Recovering Their Distinctive Religious Heritage]( A growing group of Jews who believe in Jesus is crossing boundaries to revive their identity and restore unity in the church. Deborah Pardo-Kaplan [Read More]( [God Saved Me From Suicide]( TESTIMONY [God Saved Me From Suicide]( I wanted nothing to do with faith. That changed the night I tried to take my own life. Alia Joy [Read More]( [Christians Are on All Sides of the Immigration Debate]( [Quick to Listen]( [Christians Are on All Sides of the Immigration Debate]( How the church can help Americans better listen to each other on a radioactive topic. Morgan Lee [Read More]( [View All of our Latest]( In the magazine [April]( Cover Story [How a Major Database Tracked Thailand’s Church-Planting Revival]( A movement in Southeast Asia shows how real-time reporting is building Great Commission connections. [How the Bible Project Is Using Video to Get People into Scripture Again]( [Transhumanism and the Cult of ‘Better, Faster, Stronger’]( [View Full Issue]( [Subscribe Now]( Related Newsletters [CT Books]( Each issue contains up-to-date, insightful information about today’s culture, plus analysis of books important to the evangelical thinker. [Sign Up Now]( [Christianity Today Connection]( Get the inside story with this official newsletter of the global media ministry. [Sign Up Now]( Advertisement Follow Us: [Follow on Facebook]( [Follow on Twitter]( [RSS]( Want to stay informed but a little short on free time? Try The Galli Report, a weekly newsletter giving you 5 must-read articles for thought leaders handpicked by CT Editor Mark Galli. The Galli Report Delivered free via email to subscribers Weekly. [Subscribe]( to this newsletter. You are currently subscribed as {EMAIL}. [Subscribe]( to more newsletters like this. Manage your [email preferences]( or [unsubscribe](. Copyright ©2019 Christianity Today 465 Gundersen Drive, Carol Stream, IL 60188 All rights reserved. [Privacy Policy]( | [Advertise]( | [Subscribe to CT]( | [Give Now]( Christianity Today is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.

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