Great episode! I thoroughly enjoyed hearing about how these different perspectives influence our hermeneutics.
@davidhendrickse225610 сағат бұрын
MINDBLOWING!! For me this was highly radicle and to Ms Mburu's point that theology is being viewed through the unique cultural experience of people and this now offering a different perspective was so insightful. I am deeply challenged and motivated to think deeper and wider as I read, understand and apply scripture.
@mutsvaivКүн бұрын
Being in the UK, I've found it challenging to share a belief/theology that acknowledges the spiritual realm, i.e., angels and demons, in light of the Bible's story. Some Christians strongly disbelieve that God has a council of heavenly beings and their active/passive role in the Bible. A discussion on hermeneutics is needed. People's filters for interpreting biblical text need to be widened.
@EnigmaFox-qr2fw2 күн бұрын
I just realized that I intuitively see the past, present and future as manifestation of the present. I tend to think "the past" and '"the future" are presentist notions of the PRESENT. so, I can't perceive the future or past per se but the present, aside from how I likely assimilated into western notions of time, being adopted from Russia, which hamper my cognitive abilities apparently. however, this video is forcing me to realize I see the present as spoken from the idea of "past, present, future" paradigm.. a paradigm i don't always align with. to me, the present is the "past, present, future" but liminally indistinguishable aspects of the present. my notion of time may just align with my WM (WORKING MEMORY) and PS
@solamediaorgКүн бұрын
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