Thursday, February 18, 2010
Monday, February 15, 2010
Book Review: Washington's God
Michael and Jana Novak's book, Washington's God, is must read for anyone refuting George Washington's Christian heritage. Washington's God, broken into three parts, "The Man," "The Faith," and "The Fruit," portrays the first U.S. President's Christian faith as a major in Virginia's army, through his wisdom and guidance during the Revolutionary War, and by his public reflections on religion's support for a robust and free civil society.
At the beginning of Washington's God, Michael and Jana Novak pose three questions:
1. Was Washington a Deist?
At the beginning of Washington's God, Michael and Jana Novak pose three questions:
- Was Washington a deist?
- What is the meaning of the term Providence?
- Did George Washington use Christianity for political purposes, while secretly being a Deist?
1. Was Washington a Deist?
- The Novak's illustrate that Washington believed God to be more than a purely rational "watchmaker" since He intervened at times in human events: "He [Washington] held as a matter of daily practice and frequent prayer the Jewish and Christian view of God, that is, that God interposes his actions in the affairs of history and all through the daily governance of the universe, not by disrupting the laws of nature but by deftly and artistically using the openings discernible in the dazzling array of life's daily contingencies" (224).
- The Novak's argue that Washington did not believe Providence was fate or fortune but as the source of Truth: "Washington did not think that the outcome of the War of Independence was inexorably fixed in some tragic and inescapable way. [...] Washington distinguished clearly between false gods and the true God. One of the key differences in this distinction is the recognition of full, total, and universal sovereignty even over the existence of all things" (225).
- "Anglican Christianity is what he professed. Anglican Christianity is what he acted out. Christian preachers of many faiths recognized him as a model Christian. As we have seen, a family-in-law published much evidence of how the family regarded him as a Christian. [...] His dearest friend, who thought they were two in one soul, his wife, Martha, a quite devout Christian, was certain they were one in mind above all in their mutual confidence in eternal life together. His last words, and her first words on learning that he was gone, were "'Tis well!" - in itself an almost perfect 'Amen'" (226).
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Monday, February 1, 2010
It's Your Destiny Jack!
Less than 24 hours from now, Lost fans will finally begin to gain some closure. Yes, thats right, the Final Season of Lost debuts tomorrow night! Will we get answers? We better...on questions like:
- What happened to Claire?
- Will we find out how Jack's Father was "alive" on the island?
- Is John Locke really dead?
- Where did the polar bears come from?
- Who created the smoke monster?
- Do Sun and Jin finally reunite?
- How will the Jack-Kate-Sawyer love triangle finish?
- Will characters like Charlie, Boone, Mr. Ecko, and Libby return?
- Did Jack's idea to nuke the island really reverse everything the survivors of Oceanic 816 knew/encountered/remembered on the island?
- Will Ben or Widmore win the coming war?
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