『Theology and Identity』のカバーアート

Theology and Identity

Theology and Identity

著者: David A. Clark PhD University of Roehampton London
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The person that I see myself to be is shaped by what I believe about God. The person that I see God to be is shaped by what I believe about myself. Theology and Identity are deeply intertwined. As an historical theologian, I want to know what people at different moments in history have believed about the God of the Bible and what they have believed about themselves. We here explore questions such as: What kind of personal and community identity does the Bible foster? And, How have deficiencies in our own self-identity tainted our understanding of God?David A. Clark PhD, University of Roehampton, London キリスト教 スピリチュアリティ 聖職・福音主義
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  • 2_8 Contradiction in the Bible: If God doesn’t tempt us, why do we pray ‘lead us not into temptation’?
    2025/06/06

    Does God tempt people or doesn’t he?

    James 1:13 says, ‘Let no one say when he is tempted, “I am being tempted by God,” for God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempts no one.’ But then we have this very tricky petition in the Lord’s Prayer where Jesus taught his followers to pray: 'lead us not into temptation'.

    Why would Christians pray ‘don’t bring into temptation' if this is something that God categorically doesn’t do?

    Over the past 2000 years, no phrase in the Bible has been subject to more debate, more re-translation, and more re-interpretation than ‘lead us not into temptation’. In this episode, we begin with a brief look at this history of the debate. Then, we offer a new angle. What changes in our understanding of this prayer if, instead of 'temptation', we think about the idea of 'testing'?


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    24 分
  • 2:7 What you (probably) didn’t know about Jesus’ teaching on forgiveness
    2025/05/17

    Every major religion teaches on the importance of forgiving those who have sinned against us. But no other religion provides the same rationale for forgiveness that we find in the teachings of Jesus. What Jesus taught is unique in history. And as we look closely at what he had to say, we find that its very radical.

    The consequences for not forgiving others are catastrophic. The reward for forgiving others is something that surpasses imagination.

    In this episode we look at the 5th petition of the Lord’s Prayer: ‘forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.’

    On the surface, it seems like a basic request. We’re acknowledging that we have sinned. We’re asking God for forgiveness. And as a corollary, we’re making a commitment to God that we will forgive others. Beneath the surface of this seemingly simple petition, however, lies a very rich and challenging theology that many Christians have never deeply explored.

    Today we are going to look at 2 elements of Jesus’ radical teaching on the importance of forgiving others.

    The first point is that among the followers of Jesus a person’s eligibility to be forgiven by the father is dependent on his willingness to forgive others. That is to say that a Christian who does not forgive others is not eligible to receive forgiveness from God.

    No other teacher, either in the Hebrew tradition of the Old Testament, or any other major world religion, ever taught that our forgiveness from God depends on our choice to forgive others.

    The second point is that in biblical and Christian teaching, the choice to forgive others is at the very heart of transformation into the image of God, and the union of heaven and earth that is envisioned in the Lord's Prayer.


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    25 分
  • 2:6 'Give us this day our daily bread' What does this really mean?
    2025/05/02

    As we continue in our series on the Lord's Prayer, we arrive at the petition 'give us this day our daily bread.' We here find that the followers of Jesus are taught not only pray for their own personal needs, but for the needs of their community. This prayer does not say ‘give me this day my daily bread,’ but rather 'give us today our daily bread.'

    In the Western, individualistic capitalistic mindset – our primary concern is often individual prosperity. We all want to gather to ourselves as much as we can possibly accumulate. In the Lord's Prayer, Jesus is not challenging the right of an individual to have wealth. But he is challenging the heart of the wealthy person who fails to pay attention the needs of those in his community.


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    24 分

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