William Pike works at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana. He is an active church layperson and a regular contributor to Kirkus Reviews. Recently he started the website FinancingTheology.com, designed to raise awareness about the need for funding of graduate theological education. He received a bachelor's degree from Harvard University and a Master of Divinity degree from Duke University.
Posts by William Pike:
Moishe (”Jews for Jesus”) Rosen: A Messianic Jew Meets his Maker
“Judaism never saved anybody.”
This short statement, itself enough to invite argument and controversy, comes from the grave. It is extracted from a letter by Jews for Jesus founder Moishe Rosen, written for publication after his death.
That event came on May 19th. Rosen, who was 78, succumbed to pancreatic cancer.
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John Paul II — Five Years Gone
In 1999 I first cracked upon a book by Pope John Paul II called, Crossing the Threshold of Hope. The book had, and continues to have, a profound effect on me as a (Protestant) member of the global Christian community.
On the day I finished it, in the enthusiasm of a twentysomething, I wrote in my journal, “This is a book I will long remember. My respect for John Paul II is tremendously increased by reading these sage words. What a time in history to be alive.”
In March 2005, I finished another book by the pontiff, Rise, Let Us Be On Our Way. Days later, I would watch, along with millions more, as John Paul II passed from this life to the next on April 2, 2005, five years ago this very day.
The Haiti and Lisbon Earthquakes: “Why, God?”
The Great Lisbon Earthquake of 1755 was among the strongest and most devastating natural disasters to befall the modern world. It shook Europe literally, but also spiritually. After all, why would God allow such a tragedy, especially one in which many of the victims were in church no less?
Pat Robertson, and others, have wondered the same question in relation to last week’s earthquake in Haiti.
More Lutherans in Ethiopia than U.S.?!
I recently came across a bit of trivia that stopped me in my tracks:
There are now more Lutherans in the nation of Ethiopia than there are in the largest Lutheran denomination in the United States — the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ELCA).
The Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus, which is the national Lutheran church in Ethiopia, now boasts approximately 5 million members. By comparison, the ELCA stood at just over 4.6 million members in 2008.
Catholic Angling for Anglicans
In a surprise press conference held Tuesday at the Vatican (and announced by text message), it was announced that Pope Benedict XVI had decreed a method whereby dissatisfied Anglicans could join the Roman Catholic Church while keeping many of their existing rituals — and for priests, the right to be married.
The announcement, though not entirely unprecedented, took the religious world a bit by surprise, and added new dimensions to the current global Anglican crisis.
U2 +Eucharist = U2charist
To my wide-eyed wonder I learned that over the past five years churches across America, and indeed across the globe, have been offering entire worship services utilizing the music of rock band U2.
U2charist services are seen as a form of outreach by churches to younger (or, increasingly less young, perhaps) individuals who might not be interested in dropping by to try out a traditional service.
Moreover, they are seen as opportunities for very personal and thoughtful worship, as such well-loved and emotional songs as “Where the Streets Have No Name” and “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” are woven into a Eucharistic service.
Gay Rights and a Tale of Two Churches: The Episcoal vs. the Anglican Church in North America
The Episcopal Church held its triennial General Convention earlier this month in Anaheim, California.
Among other business, the denomination affirmed the right of gays and lesbians to be ordained and then allowed for the development of potential same-sex marriage rites.
Given such rulings, a unified Anglican church in America seems nowhere on the horizon.
World’s Oldest Bible Hits Cyberspace
It is a common saying that the Bible as we know it is a copy of a copy of a copy of a long-lost original.
Now, thanks to the Internet, the world has a chance to see and study the oldest complete copy of the Christian Bible—the Codex Sinaiticus.
Mapping Sin? (Tracking the 7 Deadly Sins in America)
News has slowly been spreading of a Kansas State University geography project titled, “The Spatial Distribution of the Seven Deadly Sins Within Nevada.”
The project was conducted by four graduate researchers for a presentation at the Association of American Geographers’ annual meeting. Besides a close examination of Nevada, the researchers also mapped out the rest of the U.S. as well — the story that has really made the news.
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Just Who is the Dalai Lama?
Toward the end of April I noticed that the Dalai Lama would be visiting the United States for a short tour of Boston and New York. I later read about his visit to Harvard and began to ask myself what I really knew about this ubiquitous figure on the world stage.
The answer: not much.
I then stumbled upon an article by the Dalai Lama himself …