One of my favorite thinkers Tweeted the other day about the Word of the Year: post-truth. He said: https://twitter.com/MiroslavVolf/status/799645275425894400 That phrase, "father of lies," comes from Jesus in John 8 when he's describing the devil. We live in a world where "truth" is a relative thing and a matter of experience. We often argue arguing about what it means, and the world often comes to the same pluralistic postmodern response. For many people, the truth is merely circumstantial. Truth is relative. Meaning is something that is up-for-grabs. God is a figment of our imagination.
Truth, love, and making peace on Thanksgiving
Truth, love, and making peace on Thanksgiving
Truth, love, and making peace on Thanksgiving
One of my favorite thinkers Tweeted the other day about the Word of the Year: post-truth. He said: https://twitter.com/MiroslavVolf/status/799645275425894400 That phrase, "father of lies," comes from Jesus in John 8 when he's describing the devil. We live in a world where "truth" is a relative thing and a matter of experience. We often argue arguing about what it means, and the world often comes to the same pluralistic postmodern response. For many people, the truth is merely circumstantial. Truth is relative. Meaning is something that is up-for-grabs. God is a figment of our imagination.