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Theology, History & Science
July 16 2007 By virtueonline The Common Cause of a Common Light

Is this shift of energies positive? As a founding member of the Network, I would urge more open discussion about this. Indeed, it is a discussion that has not taken place in any organized, illuminated, and Communion-wide basis, and it needs to, quickly and honestly and without rancor. Obviously, the topic has long been a staple of blog debate. But however informative such debate can be, it is not a substitute for common prayer, discussion, and discernment as a Body in the Lord.

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July 12 2007 By virtueonline International Anglican Consultation Theme: Following Christ...Covenant & Mission

Delegates were assigned to one of these two 'tracks' but came together for two daily plenary sessions where both issues were aired and discussed. Delegates took part in daily worship, prayer and Bible study and worked in small groups. The interplay between these two themes proved very important.

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July 11 2007 By virtueonline The Anglican Covenant: Background and Resources

The Reception Process

As part of the Windsor Reception Process the Primates' Standing Committee asked "How would you evaluate the arguments for an Anglican Covenant set out in paragraph 119 of the Report? How far do the elements included in the possible draft for such a covenant in Appendix Two of the Report represent an appropriate development of the existing life of the Anglican Communion?"

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July 11 2007 By virtueonline LONDON: Tiny tablet provides proof for Old Testament

Searching for Babylonian financial accounts among the tablets, Prof Jursa suddenly came across a name he half remembered - Nabu-sharrussu-ukin, described there in a hand 2,500 years old, as "the chief eunuch" of Nebuchadnezzar II, king of Babylon.

Prof Jursa, an Assyriologist, checked the Old Testament and there in chapter 39 of the Book of Jeremiah, he found, spelled differently, the same name - Nebo-Sarsekim.

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July 07 2007 By virtueonline Penal Substitution Revisited - J. I. Packer

An evangelical theologian, dying, cabled a colleague: 'I am so thankful for the active obedience (righteousness) of Christ. No hope without it.' As I grow old, I want to tell everyone who will listen: 'I am so thankful for the penal substitutionary death of Christ. No hope without it.' That is where I come from now as I attempt this brief vindication of the best part of the best news that the world has ever heard.

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June 19 2007 By virtueonline Papers Show Isaac Newton's Religious Side, Predict Date of Apocalypse

The documents, purchased by a Jewish scholar at a Sotheby's auction in London in 1936, have been kept in safes at Israel's national library in Jerusalem since 1969. Available for decades only to a small number of scholars, they have never before been shown to the public.

In one manuscript from the early 1700s, Newton used the cryptic Book of Daniel to calculate the date for the apocalypse, reaching the conclusion that the world would end no earlier than 2060.

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June 15 2007 By virtueonline Anglican Covenant Draws fire from CofE Liberals and Conservatives

The paper strongly dismisses the notion of a Covenant. It wants to remain with an unwritten constitution. Britain has an unwritten constitution. So who interprets the constitution when matters are in doubt or dispute? Well, the Government Executive, the Houses of Parliament, and the law lords. In other words, the people who run things, the people in power.

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June 09 2007 By virtueonline They Really Saw Him

I think it helps us to understand what sort of history we have in the Gospels. Most history rests mostly on testimony. In other words, it entails believing what witnesses say. We can assess whether we think witnesses are trustworthy, and we may be able to check parts of what they say by other evidence. But in the end we have to trust them. We can't independently verify everything they say. If we could, we wouldn't need witnesses.

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June 02 2007 By virtueonline Bishops' Theology Committee offers Primates' communique study document

Theology Committee chair and Alabama Bishop Henry Parsley told Episcopal News Service that the report is meant for bishops to use in conversation with the people of their dioceses in the three and a half months between now and the mid-September meeting of the House of Bishops in New Orleans.

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