2026 Reads: The Inescapable Love of God by Thomas Talbott 📚
Another re-read in prep for some talks I’m doing. So, so good.
Hi, I'm Chris.
Gospel or Grift?
One more quote from David W. Congdon’s Varieties of Christian Universalism, this one from Congdon himself:
There are few ideas more distinctively Christian than the assumption that our theologies ought to reinforce our own rightness in practicing this particular religion, whether through apologetic efforts to “prove” the truth of our doctrines or kerygmatic efforts to scare people into conversion by proclaiming the ungodly terrors that await them if they should fail to say a magical prayer or participate in an enchanted ritual.
The moment a theologian comes along and announces this to be a bunch of immoral hogwash, they are lambasted for destroying any rationale for faith. Which is truly a remarkable admission. The implication is that no one would be a Christian if they were not forced into it, either intellectually or emotionally—or, in the case of colonialism, physically. Christians who are invested in the evangelistic spread of their religion would do well to think long and hard about where this anxiety comes from and what it says about the god they claim to believe in. When any theology that does not support the agenda of ever-increasing church growth and missionary expansion is treated as a threat to the faith, it is hard not to conclude that said faith is less of a gospel and more of a grift–a spiritual multi-level marketing scheme.
Food for thought.
More recent longform writing...
- Barth: Christians as a living promise to the unbelieving world
- Asking the hard questions: not a crisis of faith, but rooted in faith
- My favorite cover of Radiohead's Fake Plastic Trees: The Normals
- When "Christian Parenting" leaves families without the skills for actual relationships
- [Link] Pushing an Anti-Trans Agenda is Telling On Yourself
- For Epiphany: Brian Zahnd's Meditation on the Magi
- My 2025 Reading in Review
- This is not usually how wine gets discussed at the office...
- Had Jesus Never Lived…
- Jersak: the immutability and impassability of God's love