Newsweek In Favor Of Hell

Rel­e­vant Mag­a­zine brought an unex­pect­ed arti­cle to my atten­tion. In Why We Need Hell, TooNewsweek jour­nal­ist Ken­neth Wood­ward argues for the impor­tance of Hell as an induce­ment for moral liv­ing.

This is a side­bar arti­cle to the main Why We Need Heav­en, which is a dis­cus­sion of the rival Jew­ish, Mus­lim, and Chris­t­ian per­spec­tives on the after­life and the way they impact the news.

I found quote par­tic­u­lar­ly amus­ing: (Speak­ing of the Koran’s promise of heav­en­ly orgies) Georgetown’s Voll doesn’t think that the vir­gins car­ry much weight with the Pales­tin­ian mar­tyrs; unlike the Ira­ni­ans in the 1980s, teenagers on the West Bank do have access to sex. More seduc­tive is that you would have “a house, reg­u­lar food, pros­per­i­ty,” he says. “You would have flow­ing water; some­one wouldn’t be bomb­ing your well. If you had lived with­out all that stuff for the first 15 or 20 years of your life, heav­en would sound pret­ty good with or with­out 72 vir­gins.” Hmmm… I’m guess­ing Voll does­n’t know any teenage boys.

And of course, Ernest Hem­ing­way wrote that he thought of heav­en as “two love­ly hous­es in town; one where I would have my wife and chil­dren and be monog­a­mous and love them tru­ly and well and the oth­er where I would have my nine beau­ti­ful mis­tress­es on nine dif­fer­ent floors.” Hmm… log­i­cal con­sis­ten­cy was­n’t one of Hem­ing­way’s dom­i­nant con­cerns.

The author buys some unfor­tu­nate inter­pre­ta­tions of the devel­op­ment of the after­life in Jew­ish the­ol­o­gy, and enjoys play­ing with the notion that both the sui­cide bombers and their vic­tims think they’re going to heav­en (and that their ene­mies are going to hell). Over­all, it’s a pret­ty inter­est­ing read (if not a good course in the­ol­o­gy).

Supper With Pastor Richard Cook

A great meet­ing with our exec­u­tive pres­byter is cloud­ed by some bad news about Chi Alpha.

Tonight Paula and I were able to meet Richard Cook and his wife for sup­per at the local Chili’s. Pas­tor Cook pas­tors Spir­it of Life Church in San Car­los, and is also one of the North­ern California/Nevada exec­u­tive pres­byters.

We had a great time! Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Broth­er Cook was able to con­firm some bad news that I received when I met with Pas­tor Beis­er. It seems that Chi Alpha has a very neg­a­tive rep­u­ta­tion with the Assem­blies of God church­es in the Bay Area. The rea­sons aren’t par­tic­u­lar­ly impor­tant (at least not worth broad­cast­ing over the Inter­net), but the ram­i­fi­ca­tions for our min­istry are going to be pret­ty rad­i­cal. It will def­i­nite­ly affect how quick­ly we can reach full fund­ing so that we can begin min­is­ter­ing on cam­pus.

Please pray that God will give us favor with local church­es and will give us wis­dom in relat­ing to the church­es that feel they’ve been burned by Chi Alpha in the past.

Funding Evangelical Scholarship

Emergesque just turned me on to a great arti­cle about evan­gel­i­cals in acad­e­mia.

The arti­cles focus­es on the neces­si­ty of large foun­da­tions (espe­cial­ly the Lil­ly Endow­ment and the Pew Char­i­ta­ble Trusts) to pro­vide fund­ing for evan­gel­i­cal schol­ars (things like research and sab­bat­i­cals cost mon­ey!)

Some­thing I find pret­ty inter­est­ing: the evan­gel­i­cal schol­ars seem to be good invest­ments: “As mea­sured by schol­ar­ly pro­duc­tiv­i­ty, foun­da­tions sup­port­ing evan­gel­i­cal schol­ar­ship have received an unusu­al­ly high return on their invest­ment. A study by the Nation­al Endow­ment for the Human­i­ties found that 45 per­cent of their grant recip­i­ents had pub­lished books with­in six years of receiv­ing their grants. By con­trast, a study of schol­ars receiv­ing grants from the Pew Evan­gel­i­cal Schol­ars Pro­gram found that 90 per­cent had fin­ished their books with­in six years.”

There’s a relat­ed arti­cle from 2000 in the The Atlantic Month­ly

John Ashcroft: Son of a Preacher Man

The August 4th San Fran­cis­co Chron­i­cle has a fas­ci­nat­ing arti­cle on John Ashcroft called Son of a Preach­er Man. The arti­cle is pret­ty fac­tu­al, although the jour­nal­ist’s dis­like of Ashcroft’s val­ue sys­tem shows through.

In case you did­n’t know it, John Ashcroft (our cur­rent U.S. Attor­ney Gen­er­al) is an Assem­blies of God layper­son, and his father J. Robert Ashcroft was respon­si­ble for the found­ing of Chi Alpha.

Scientists And Their Gods

Note: this was orig­i­nal­ly an excerpt from the arti­cle men­tioned at the begin­ning. Since then, I’ve added a few oth­ers and I’ve also done some fur­ther research on most of the sci­en­tists.

In Sci­en­tists And Their Gods, Dr. Hen­ry F. Schae­fer (Chris­t­ian, Nobel nom­i­nee, Stan­ford grad, and the third most-quot­ed chemist in the world) writes about the fact that there are many Chris­tians who work in the hard sci­ences. I was par­tic­u­lar­ly inter­est­ed to note that three (four count­ing the author) have con­nec­tions to Stan­ford.

Some nota­bles:

Robert Grif­fiths, “mem­ber of our U.S. Acad­e­my of Sci­ences, Otto Stern pro­fes­sor of physics at Carnegie Mel­lon Uni­ver­si­ty received one of the most cov­et­ed awards of the Amer­i­can Phys­i­cal Soci­ety in 1984 on his work in phys­i­cal mechan­ics and ther­mo­dy­nam­ics. Physics Today said he is an evan­gel­i­cal Chris­t­ian who is an ama­teur the­olo­gian and who helps teach a course on Chris­tian­i­ty and sci­ence.” (inci­den­tal­ly, he’s a Stan­ford grad)

Richard Bube “For many years, Bube was the chair­man of the depart­ment of mate­ri­als sci­ence at Stan­ford and car­ried out foun­da­tion­al work on sol­id state physics con­cern­ing semi­con­duc­tors. He said:There are pro­por­tion­ate­ly as many athe­is­tic truck dri­vers as there are athe­is­tic sci­en­tists.”

John Suppe, “Mem­ber of the U.S. Acad­e­my of Sci­ences and not­ed pro­fes­sor of geol­o­gy at Prince­ton, expert in the are of tec­ton­ics, began a long search for God as a Chris­t­ian fac­ul­ty mem­ber. He began attend­ing ser­vices in the Prince­ton Chapel, read­ing the Bible and oth­er Chris­t­ian books.”

Charles H. Townes “My can­di­date for the sci­en­tist of the cen­tu­ry is Char­lie Townes. (Of course, he is a friend of mine and there could be some bias here.) He did some­thing fair­ly sig­nif­i­cant when he dis­cov­ered the laser. He almost got a sec­ond Nobel Prize for the first obser­va­tion of an inter­stel­lar mol­e­cule.”

Arthur Schawlow: “won a Nobel Prize in physics, 1981, serves as physics pro­fes­sor at Stan­ford and iden­ti­fies him­self as a Chris­t­ian.”

Allan Sandage: “the world’s great­est obser­va­tion­al cos­mol­o­gist, an astronomer at the Carnegie Insti­tu­tion, was called the Grand Old Man of cos­mol­o­gy by The New York Times when he won a $1 mil­lion prize from the Roy­al Swedish Acad­e­my of Sci­ences.”

William Phillips yet anoth­er Nobel lau­re­ate. Read a fas­ci­nat­ing arti­cle about him.

David Cole: a Berke­ley bio­chemist. Could­n’t find a bio page on him.

Fran­cis Collins: direc­tor of the Human Genome Project, the largest sci­en­tif­ic project ever under­tak­en, Dr. Collins once said I’d call myself a seri­ous Chris­t­ian. That is some­one who believes in the real­i­ty of Christ’s death and res­ur­rec­tion, and who tries to inte­grate that into dai­ly life and not just rel­e­gate it to some­thing you talk about on Sun­day morn­ing. (source) Inci­den­tal­ly, Collins was an athe­ist who became a believ­er after attain­ing his doc­tor­ate.

Arno Pen­zias said “The best data we have are exact­ly what I would have pre­dict­ed had I had noth­ing to go on but the five books of Moses, the Psalms, the Bible as a whole.” (read more about him)

Owen Gin­gerich, pro­fes­sor of astron­o­my at Har­vard and a devout Chris­t­ian, said “I can only imag­ine that God, as a pow­er­ful force in the uni­verse, could put on many dif­fer­ent faces. If God is in fact all-pow­er­ful, there’s no rea­son why this all-pow­er­ful force in the uni­verse could not rep­re­sent itself and relate to the self-con­scious human beings, in some fash­ion, through com­mu­ni­ca­tion with human beings. And how do you com­mu­ni­cate? Through prophets of all ages.” (source)

Relat­ed Sto­ries

last updat­ed 5/21/2005: added Owen Gin­gerich

Emil and Vipul Come to Visit

Host­ing a prospec­tive Stan­ford stu­dent while he checks out the cam­pus.

emil_and_vipul_pic.jpg Right now we’re blessed to have under our roof one Emil Geiger and one Vipur Shar­ma. Emil is a Chi Alpha stu­dent from Lou­siana State Uni­ver­si­ty, and is hop­ing to get his mas­ter’s in engi­neer­ing from Stan­ford.

It’s a lot of fun hav­ing them around (side note: they’re very appre­cia­tive of the XBox that the South­west Mis­souri State Chi Alpha group blessed up with).

Reflections on Christian Scholarship

One of our chief goals is to inte­grate our bib­li­cal and aca­d­e­m­ic per­spec­tives on life. If you think it’s hard as an under­grad, just wait for grad school!

To help you out, Leader U has a spe­cial set of arti­cles relat­ed to Chris­t­ian schol­ar­ship.

Some that caught my eye:

Check out On Inte­grat­ing Your Faith for a brief set of relec­tions on com­bin­ing your schol­ar­ship and spir­i­tu­al­i­ty. I liked the inno­vat­ed idea of tithing your research.

I was also struck by The Call­ing of a Chris­t­ian Pro­fes­sor (mean­ing a Chris­t­ian pro­fes­sor at a sec­u­lar school). If that’s what God is call­ing you to do, check it out!

Also con­sid­er The Out­ra­geous Idea of Chris­t­ian Schol­ar­ship. George Mars­den argues that “Chris­t­ian per­spec­tives should make at least as much dif­fer­ence as fem­i­nist per­spec­tives.” Hear, hear!

Final­ly, you might want to check out Toward Inte­grat­ing Your Life and Work for a chal­lenge towards view­ing schol­ar­ship as a voca­tion that mat­ters to God.

Dogs Can Do Math

This is sort of an off­beat post that caught my eye: dogs have rudi­men­ta­ry math abil­i­ties (CNN).

That’s right: Fido knows the dif­fer­ence between one and two. The research will be pub­lished in an upcom­ing issue of Ani­mal Cog­ni­tion final fan­ta­sy vii advent chil­dren divx down­load . For more details, check out the report on New Sci­en­tist.

Lunch with the Pastor of Glad Tidings Church

Brief notes about my lunch with For­rest Beis­er, pas­tor of Glad Tid­ings Church.

Today I had the good for­tune of meet­ing with Pas­tor For­rest Beis­er of Glad Tid­ings Church for lunch.

It was a great meet­ing! I’ll be speak­ing at their Wednes­day evening ser­vice August 14th, build­ing up to their big evan­ge­lis­tic ral­ly with Bub­ba Paris of the San Fran­cis­co 49ers. How fun!

Inci­den­tal­ly, Glad Tid­ings has a long and dis­tin­guished his­to­ry of min­istry in San Fran. Among the many notable events that caught my eye, I thought it par­tic­u­lar­ly cool that Bethany Bible Col­lege had its hum­ble ori­gins in this church.

God is faith­ful­ly bring­ing us into con­tact with peo­ple with whom we can part­ner to see Stan­ford reached with the gospel!

Stanford in The Movies

Movies about Stan­ford or fea­tur­ing Stan­ford.

Here’s anoth­er win­dow on Stan­ford’s influ­ence: Stan­ford in Hol­ly­wood. Dis­claimer: I haven’t seen these. I got them by search­ing for Stan­ford at imdb.com

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Steal­ing Har­vard is about one man’s life of crime to pay for his neice to attend the exor­bi­tant­ly priced Stan­ford. Lat­est totals: $27,204 tuition + $4,450 room + $4,230 board. That’s $35,884 a year!

Inva­sion: Stan­ford 1991 A. D. fea­tures two alien jan­i­tors try­ing to take over the world after cloning two fresh­men. It got a rat­ing of 8.7 on the Inter­net Movie Data­base, but I’m think­ing that with only sev­en votes the direc­tors and pro­duc­ers cast them all. 🙂

In Orange Coun­ty a bright stu­dent tries des­per­ate­ly to get into Stan­ford after his guid­ance coun­selor sends in the wrong tran­scripts by mis­take. (thanks to Brad Lauster for notic­ing that I mistyped the movie name).

Inter­est­ing­ly enough, I could­n’t find ref­er­ences to any of these movies on Stan­ford’s web­site. I guess they’re not too proud of their movie rep­re­sen­ta­tion…

Still, yet anoth­er (admit­ted­ly minor) way that Stan­ford is influ­enc­ing our cul­ture!
Check out the more sig­nif­i­cant rea­sons Stan­ford is one of the world’s most sig­nif­i­cant mis­sion fields!