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Responses to our December issue.

Garrhet Sampson / Unsplash / Edits by Rick Szuecs

Joseph’s Simplicity Was Actually Spiritual Maturity

I received this article in the print edition the week before I was scheduled to preach about the angel speaking to Joseph. It was perfect timing. I loved the parallels the article made between Joseph and internally displaced persons.

Jared Martin (Facebook)

My Boss Is a Jewish Construction Worker

I found myself wondering if “construction worker” culturally connotes Jesus’ place in society even more than “builder.” The idea of a builder can still cause one to envision an entrepreneur who designs and builds impressive structures, while a construction worker is more of a manual laborer working for others. But perhaps I am carrying it further than Monson (and the original Greek language) intended.

Kristen Kansiewicz Springfield, MO

Regional building practices in the US, and elsewhere, reflected local availability much more when long-distance transport of heavy materials was less practical. Such architectural evidence is apparent in older buildings and other structures throughout the world. So maybe carpenter and unemployed would have been synonymous in Nazareth. The author seems to imply that the King James Version translators originated the use of carpenter in English in Mark 6:3, although he doesn’t state that directly. Carpenter was, though, used in that verse in earlier English translations by Wycliffe and Tyndale, Matthew’s Bible, and the Geneva Bible.

Maynard Wright Citrus Heights, CA

As a former employee at the University of Northwestern, KTIS, I am proud of the diligent research you’ve done to identify Jesus as a common man. We think of the one who set aside the riches of heaven to take the form of a servant!

Wayne Pederson Naples, FL

We’ve No Less Days to Sing God’s Praise, But New Worship Songs Only Last a Few Years

As the worship teams keep a new rotation, those in the pew don’t know most of these new songs. The up-front folks should be prompters … not star actors!

George Williams Franklin, TN

If a Social Issue Matters to God, the Church Should Be Praying About It

This article says all that I have been thinking for a while about intercessory prayer and gives some fresh ideas how to “do” such prayers in contemporary worship. I would only add 2 Chronicles 20:12: “For we are powerless against this great horde that is coming against us. We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on you” (ESV). I have used that in intercessory prayers and feel it gets the plight and the answer.

John Faris Bangor, Northern Ireland

No One Took Christ Out of Christmas

I am surprised to see no mention of the Puritan view that heavily influenced Great Britain and the British colonies for almost two centuries and the rehabilitation of Christmas in the 19th century, including Dickens’s A Christmas Carol. His Scrooge says several things that indicate that he was not only a miser because of his unfortunate childhood, but that he was also raised as a Puritan and espoused a view of Christmas that was very common.

Wendy Pradels Strasbourg, France

It always brings a smile to my face when I am at a grocery store and “O Holy Night” comes on. Amazing! Especially love the second-to-final paragraph where Dr. Larsen puts the onus on us to celebrate “Christmas in a Christian manner.”

@SundaytoSaturd1 (Twitter)

Disowning ‘Evangelical’ Is a Denial of Responsibility

Perhaps I’m just very old, but evangelical does not seem to mean what it did when I first heard of it, decades ago. In fact, it seems to have gone through several iterations of meaning. In this article, the author neglected to provide even a brief definition of what the term generally refers to for those of us who, being of (old-fashioned and in my case, not Calvinist) mainstream Protestant denominations, are not even sure if we still qualify as “evangelical.” That would make it easier to know if the call to “own it” is speaking to me, too.

Gay Gragson Athens, GA

5 Books on the History of Christmas

I have benefitted greatly both personally and professionally from CT. That is why I am writing with a concern. The last line of one review says, “There is a special place in Hollywood hell for Santa Claus Conquers the Martians.” I don’t believe “Hollywood hell” is a term that CT truly wants to use. It minimizes hell, which is a real place where people who don’t know Christ actually go to experience the eternal, conscious torment all our sins deserve. This is like the opposite of using God’s name in vain, but I believe just as serious.

Luke Hatfield Ripon, WI

Also in this issue

As an editor, I usually prefer precise words to ambiguous ones like “deconstruction.” But at CT, I’m surrounded by good words that require constant clarification and differentiation, “evangelical” chief among them. In fact, frustration with the increasing ambiguity of “evangelical” is a common starting point for many who now describe themselves as deconstructing. In this month’s cover story, theologian Kirsten Sanders offers a helpful definition of deconstruction: “the struggle to correct or deepen naive belief.” Even more helpfully, she rightly sees that struggle as akin to our theological work of knowing and loving God more deeply. As our cover asks this month, aren't you deconstructing, too? -Ted Olsen, executive editor

Cover Story

Wait, You’re Not Deconstructing?

The Church Is Losing Its Gray Heads

Our March Issue: Defining Deconstruction

We Live in a Global Generation

Not All That Glitters Is Photoshopped

News

The Confederate Statues Are Gone. The Work of Repentance Continues.

News

New Brethren Churches Wrestle with Details of Denominational Division

Editorial

We’re Not Mad Enough at Death

Birth Behind Bars: Christians Fight ‘Cruel,’ Outdated Prison Policies

It’s Hamilton’s World. We’re Just Living in It.

Testimony

I Left the New Age Behind When I Read the Old Testament

Excerpt

The Bible Has a Clear and Consistent ‘Party Theology’

Christian Witness After War: A Firsthand Assessment of Armenia and Azerbaijan

Of Orphanages and Armies

News

An AI Aims to be First Christian Celebrity of the Metaverse

News

100 Women Consider Ending Their Pregnancies. How Many Get an Abortion?

News

Gleanings: March 2022

Religious Experiences Are Common. Which Ones Should We Trust?

Review

Denmark Vesey’s Challenge to a Biblically Literate Nation

Review

When Billy Graham Took His Ministry Transatlantic

New & Noteworthy Books

View issue

Our Latest

Excerpt

There’s No Such Thing as a ‘Proper’ Christmas Carol

As we learn from the surprising journeys of several holiday classics, the term defies easy definition.

Glory to God in the Highest Calling

Motherhood is honorable, but being a disciple of Jesus is every woman’s primary biblical vocation.

Advent Doesn’t Have to Make Sense

As a curator, I love how contemporary art makes the world feel strange. So does the story of Jesus’ birth.

Advent Calls Us Out of Our Despair

Sitting in the dark helps us truly appreciate the light.

Public Theology Project

The Star of Bethlehem Is a Zodiac Killer

How Christmas upends everything that draws our culture to astrology.

News

As Malibu Burns, Pepperdine Withstands the Fire

University president praises the community’s “calm resilience” as students and staff shelter in place in fireproof buildings.

The Russell Moore Show

My Favorite Books of 2024

Ashley Hales, CT’s editorial director for print, and Russell discuss this year’s reads.

News

The Door Is Now Open to Churches in Nepal

Seventeen years after the former Hindu kingdom became a secular state, Christians have a pathway to legal recognition.

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