Roman Catholics fall for neo-Calvinists.
Michael Sean Winters closes his reflections on James Bratt‘s biography of Kuyper with a big finish:
It would be wrong to finish this treatment of Bratt’s book without mentioning Kuyper’s most famous quote, uttered in his “sphere sovereignty” speech inaugurating the Free University: “there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: Mine!” All of us, Catholics or Calvinists, must seek to rediscover that insight in our lives and our thought, perhaps not with the comprehensiveness or brilliance that Kuyper brought to the task, but as a check on our willingness to live out the designation “Christian.” It is one of the gifts of Pope Francis that, by word and gesture, he lives this conviction: The environment, the economy, our sexual lives, all of it is not really ours but His. Even our very lives are given to us as if on loan, and there will be a reckoning for how we lived those lives, whether it was for ourselves or for Him. It is this – and ultimately, only this – that distinguishes Christian social and cultural criticism from other flavors. Its absence betrays us as chaplains to the status quo. Its presence, in Kuyper’s life and in our own, can be the occasion for miracles.
When transformation isn’t inspiring enough, work in the possibility of working miracles.
The weather continues to remind me how frail we all are. You want to kill lofty notions of flourishing and transformation? Throw in a triple digit heat wave, a drought, a blizzard, a hurricane, a tornado. No wonder this stuff never gets off the chalkboard, even in San Diego.
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Cosmic Christian
How do ya do
Truckin in style along the avenue
Dum de dum di deedle dee doooo
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Catholicism’s error on cultural transformation (‘civilization of love’) is so obvious it may send me back to my Reformed world. A gag-inducing error.
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