Is God really Good? Can God be Trusted?

Psalm 73 – Reflections of a Struggling Believer

Psalm 73 is a wisdom psalm that is expressed in the language of lament. Wisdom literature seeks to answer the questions of life, and tries to explains God’s role in human affairs. The writer of this psalm has come to a crisis of faith and in this crisis, he cries out. The ancient Hebrew theologians tried to answer the most perplexing of questions: If God is good, why does evil abound? Why do good people suffer and evil people prosper?

Continue reading “Is God really Good? Can God be Trusted?”

FacebooktwitterFacebooktwitter

The Discipline of Peer Review

One of the most important disciplines I learned while pursuing my education was peer review. All assignments were graded by my professors. Occasionally, a professor would submit assignments to fellow classmates for their review. In fact, in the preaching class I teach at Pentecostal Theological Seminary the final project, the student’s presentation of a sermon, is graded through the process of peer review in which fellow students listen and critique the sermon.

Continue reading “The Discipline of Peer Review”

FacebooktwitterFacebooktwitter

Celebrating Five Years at PTS

This month, August 2022, I celebrate five years serving at Pentecostal Theological Seminary. After 37 years serving as a local church pastor, 22 years serving in ministerial development, terms of service on the South Georgia Church of God State Council and State Ministries Board, and 12 years on the denominational Division of Education board, I was invited to join the staff and faculty at PTS. I was honored then, and I remain honored to serve the church at PTS as Assistant Professor of Pastoral Ministries and Executive Director of PTS Thrive.

Continue reading “Celebrating Five Years at PTS”

FacebooktwitterFacebooktwitter

Celebrating the Life of Carmen Rodgers Murray

Jesus declared, “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die” (John 11:25–26 NRSV).

Even so, our hearts are broken. The grief is bitter. I will not offer superficial platitudes in an effort to comfort hearts that cannot be comforted. Nor will I try to answer questions that are beyond comprehension. Instead, I will try to give voice to the bitter sorrow all of us are experiencing. I will try to speak for Carmen and share with you her fears and her faith. Finally, I will try to give voice to our hope that is in Christ Jesus.

Continue reading “Celebrating the Life of Carmen Rodgers Murray”

FacebooktwitterFacebooktwitter

This is what I believe about God…

I have written six articles in an effort to engage dialogue about the nature and character of God . My presentations are faithful to the historic confessions of the Faith. I have consistently appealed to inspired scripture. Furthermore, I have sought to demonstrate continuity with the historic Christian tradition. At no time have I suggested that the creedal language of Father, Son, and Spirit should be changed. Rather, I consistently affirm the traditional confession of the Faith. I do not seek to compromise with or capitulate to the postmodern deconstruction of Christian doctrine. I am convinced that sound doctrine transcends the winds and waves of socio-political concerns and will stand the tests of time.

Continue reading “This is what I believe about God…”

FacebooktwitterFacebooktwitter

Why I Oppose the Sexualization of God

Warning… this is an explicit post!

According to ancient Egyptian mythology, the chief god rose out of the primordial swamps as a male deity. He then masturbated and with his semen he created the other gods and goddesses. The gods and goddesses copulated together, with humans, and even with animals. The sexualization of the gods was understood as a fertility cult. The Pharaoh of Egypt was the son of the great sun god. That’s what happens when we imagine that the gods are like ourselves – creatures with bodies and genitalia. It was the sexualized fertility cults that were strictly forbidden by the God of Israel. Images of Baal (male god) and Asherah (female god) were to be burned.

Continue reading “Why I Oppose the Sexualization of God”

FacebooktwitterFacebooktwitter