What the UMC Really Just Did
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
3d ago
Image from Wikimedia Commons This past week, the United Methodist Church (UMC) during its first general conference meeting since 2019 voted to end its longstanding ban on the ordination of “self-avowed practicing homosexuals.” Delegates also voted to prevent clergy and UMC churches from being punished for holding same-sex weddings. The 93% approval by the delegates was not surprising considering the earlier departure of more than 7,000 conservative churches over the issue, most joining the newly formed Global Methodist Church. The vote is making headlines. But it’s not the real news. What the ..read more
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The Real Unforgivable Sin
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
1w ago
Photo by Julio Rionaldo (Unsplash) I don’t know who needs to read this; I just know that many do. Do you know what the unforgivable sin is?  The only unforgivable sin is rejecting the forgiveness of God. So embrace that forgiveness. Here’s what God promises about that forgiveness. First, God promises to forget about your sin. This is what the Bible records God saying through the prophet Jeremiah: “I’ll wipe the slate clean for each of them. I’ll forget they ever sinned!” (Jeremiah 31:34, Msg). That’s right. When you are forgiven, God gets a case of holy amnesia. You may have gone to God ..read more
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The Mark of a Political Christian
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
1w ago
Photo by PartTime Portraits (Unsplash) There is to be one defining mark of a political Christian. In the biography of Jesus written by John, we have the poignant final words and prayers of Jesus to and for His disciples before His death on the cross. It is considered by many to be among the most moving sections of the New Testament.  So what occupied Jesus during the moments before His death?  Not surprisingly, He wanted the world to know that His death was a sacrificial one—that He was laying down His life for theirs, paying the price for their sins, offering that death as a gift s ..read more
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Foundational Thinking About Immigration
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
2w ago
Photo by Greg Bulla (Unsplash) According to a recent Gallup poll, Americans cited immigration as the most important problem facing our country. I don’t know anyone, no matter where they stand on how to solve the immigration issue, who doesn’t think that what we are facing right now is a mess for everyone concerned. The key concern has to do with illegal immigration. Losing control of our borders. And no one wants to lose control. And for obvious reasons. In 2023 alone, U.S. Border Patrol reported more than 2.4 million encounters with migrants on the Mexican border. Texas has a backlog of near ..read more
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A Most Overlooked Scripture
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
2w ago
Photo by Tim Wildsmith (Unsplash) On more than one occasion and prompted by more than one news cycle, my mind has turned to a very obscure passage in the Bible that is often overlooked. Joshua, the great leader of the people of Israel and successor to Moses, was leading the people into the Promised Land. After crossing the Jordan River, the very first city they encountered was the city of Jericho, a city hostile to the coming of the Israelites. It soon became clear this was going to be an armed conflict. However, God had something else in mind. To demonstrate that the Promised Land was going ..read more
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On the Banning of Books
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
3w ago
Photo by Pixabay (Pexels) Each year, at around this time, the American Library Association releases its list of most-challenged books from the previous year. Translation: the books that people petitioned to be banned from (largely) public school libraries. We now know that the three books most targeted by ban campaigns last year were: Gender Queer, an autobiographical graphic novel written by nonbinary author Maia Kobabe. All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson, who has very publicly maintained that all of his books are going to live in the “wheelhouse of queerness.” This Book is Gay ..read more
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Surprising Mourners for the Decline of Christianity
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
3w ago
Photo by Matthew Hernandez (Unsplash) In an interview with LBC in London, famed atheist Christopher Dawkins offered two startling admissions: first, that he mourned the loss of much of what reflects the Christian faith in the world, and second, that he would consider himself a “cultural” Christian. He stated: I do think we are culturally a Christian country. I call myself a cultural Christian. I’m not a believer, but there is a distinction between being a believing Christian and a cultural Christian.... I love hymns and Christmas carols and I sort of feel at home in the Christian ethos, and I ..read more
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Listen to the Music
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
1M ago
Photo by Josh Sorenson (Pexels) The Telegraph, one of the U.K.’s newspapers of record, recently reported on a study published in the journal Scientific Reports of 12,000 English-speaking songs produced between 1980 and 2020.    Results?  Modern songs have been dumbed down since the ’80s and are now more repetitive. Specifically, there has been a trend across genres toward the “simplification of lyrics and an overuse of choruses.” Further, the “vocabulary range has also shrunk and the structure of the songs made more predictable.” The combination of streaming platforms and the s ..read more
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Religious Change in America: They Buried the Lead
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
1M ago
Photo by David McEachan (Pexels) For a brief period following graduate school, I worked for a denomination as its leadership consultant for preaching and worship. My first assignment was to steward an already-existing program for churches titled, “Let’s All Go to Church.” It was a growth campaign for churches, and one clearly designed to capitalize on people’s innate sense that they should, indeed, go to church.  That was 1991. Even then I knew that it was a conceptual mess and was built on a terribly outdated assessment of culture. My first self-assignment? Instead of “Let’s All Go to C ..read more
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Four Years Later
Church & Culture Blog
by James Emery White
1M ago
Photo by Kelly Sikkema (Unsplash) There have been some interesting post-apocalyptic movies that play off the length of time following a cataclysmic event. 28 Days Later comes to mind. What would someone write about our own, very real event if titled Four Years Later? Yes, it’s been four years since March 2020 when the world faced the COVID-19 pandemic and, in countless ways, shut down. It now seems like a distant memory, something we prefer not to think about. It’s gone, we’ve moved on… let’s forget about it. Fair enough. Except for one thing.  It did change us.  All things COVID mi ..read more
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