Letters to the Editor

Readers respond to Gary Bauer’s workplace rules, the Inclusive Bible, and other ChristianityToday.com topics

We’re working on setting up message boards and other ways of making our new ChristianityToday.com site more interactive. Still, we find letters to the editor to be a tried and true “interactive” way of hearing from you. These aren’t all the letters we’ve received (not by a long shot), but they are largely illustrative of them. If you do decide to e-mail us in the future, please include your real name, city, and state. And thanks for your comments.

Eavesdropping: An Open Door Policy (Nov. 11-12, 16, 1999) Of course, Gary Bauer should have considered the “appearance of evil”, especially in this day and age, as proved by the press reports, that people are looking for bad things to say about Christians. If Mr. Bauer is not concerned about it for himself, he certainly should be concerned about it for the Name he bears!Glenda L. Smith

Amassed Media: There Be Gold in Them Thar Fills, Claims Charisma (Nov. 10, 1999) How stupid. If God is handing out such miracles I would expect Him to go for the best. Who, in their right mind, would prefer any kind of filling to whole, natural living teeth??Seamus Stewart-Gray Snohomish, WA

The Battle for the Inclusive Bible (Nov. 5, 1999) I enjoyed the article about the controversy on gender-neutral translations. I take the side against them. I did not appreciate the statement in the early part of the article that said the KJV is sometimes “misleading”. Perhaps the vocabulary is antiquated at times, perhaps it’s on a higher reading level than some can appreciate but there are too many that have found the Lord Jesus as Savior via the KJV to say it is misleading. My objection to the whole thing is that I don’t think the goal for a Gender-neutral translation is a better understanding of Scripture. It’s a quest for more dollars. The moguls that have bought, now own and operate the major Christian publishing houses are looking for publications that sell.

Culture cannot drive translations of God’s Word. That will corrupt it. God’s Word must stand above the fray. I don’t think any child will be stilted by knowing God through a masculine pronoun as indicated in the original languages. They will not be hurt by seeing men being men and women being women. Call the Good News Translation what it is: business, not gospel.J.D. Hallman

Hymns on MTV (Nov. 1, 1999) I found the Jars of Clay article very interesting, and informative. (Although I wouldn’t have missed the lengthy history lesson concerning evangelical hymnody). I do have one reservation: The writer makes the comment that “the music of Jars of Clay invites us to consider again the Jesus on the cross. It dispenses with the triumphalism—the bravado and the posturing—that has infected evangelicalism for more than a century now:” My response to this statement is that yes, it is indeed necessary for us to always consider the cross and to remember the propitiation which gave us eternal life. Yet this is not the main wellspring of our joy for we do not worship a bleeding and suffering Savior, but a fully resurrected and victorious one. One who is alive and well and always working on our behalf. In other words, I don’t blame evangelicalism for stressing the joy and “triumphalism” part of the message, and to give the impression that we must always be focusing on the cross is a distorted view of God’s grace towards us.Rick Larson Lakeville, MN

Cassie Said Yes, They Say No (November 1, 1999) I don’t get all the hype over the Cassie Bernall story. I’m a youth minister and when a telephone sales person called me with an offer for a video of Cassie’s life along with several copies of her mother’s book, I immediately declined. Why? I don’t think she was any sort of a martyr. I believe she would have been shot no matter what she said. I do admire her life change; her conversion. But I don’t think her faith had anything to do with her death, so there is no way she could have been a martyr. Lets let Cassie rest in peace.Richard Jones

Aren’t we missing the point on this issue? The point isn’t how Cassie Bernall died but what God was doing in her life as she was in the midst of living it. I’m more impressed with her growing faith. In one article she is remember by a friend as admitting that her Christian journey was harder than she had expected but that she was sure it was the right journey. How many 40-year-olds can say that! Isn’t that a more important legacy than final utterances? As a youth pastor, I believe you’re doing a disservice to youth when you give the allusion that what you say at the end of your life strengthens or negates the impact your life has.Dave McIntire Wichita, Kansas

Also in this issue

Hymns on MTV: Christian music has traveled a long way from the pages of the Bay Psalm Book to the charts of Billboard magazine. Now Jars of Clay is shaking up Contemporary Christian Music.

Cover Story

Hymns on MTV

by Randall Balmer

Graham Meets with Iraqi Leaders

Jar Boys Meet Sgt. Pepper

Randall Balmer

The Business of the Kingdom

Tim Stafford

God on the Gridiron

Mark A. Kellner

The Battle for the Inclusive Bible

John G. Stackhouse, Jr.

Running with Jonah

The Movie Missionary

Matt Donnelly

Are Christians Required to Tithe?

D. A. Carson

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from November 15, 1999

Who Do Artists Say That I Am?

Karen L. Mulder

Take Ten Commandments and Call Me in the Morning

by Archibald D. Hart

New and Noteworthy: Theology

How to Silence Scripture

Scouts’ Dishonor

Conservatives Voice Support for Bauer

Jody Veenker

An Education with a Backbeat

Yvi Martin in Greenville

New Indictment in Fraud Case

Chuck Fager

In Brief: November 15, 1999

NBC Purchases Chunk of Pax TV

Malcolm Foster

Four Priests Resume Teaching Duties

Jody Veenker

Gun-Toting Missionaries Given Light Sentences

Odhiambo Okite

Vatican Amends Indulgences Doctrine

Jody Veenker

70 Christians Arrested While at Church

Compas Direct News Service

Evangelical Leader Leaves Wife for Man

In Brief: November 15, 1999

Neopaganism’s Bewitching Charms

Loren Wilkinson

Shopping for the Real Me, Part 1 of 3

Lee Knapp

Shopping for the Real Me, Part 2 of 3

Lee Knapp

Shopping for the Real Me, Part 3 of 3

Lee Knapp

NCC to Undergo Major Restructuring to Solve Financial Woes

Jerry L. Van Marter

New Laws Protect Homosexuals

Why I Hate The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc

Ronald F. Maxwell

1984 50 Years Later

John Wilson

NCC Celebrates 50 Years of American Ecumenism

Jerry L. VanMarter, Ecumenical News International, in Cleveland

Hindus Protest Papal Visit to India

Open-Door Policy Part 3

Sarah E. Hinlicky and Lauren F. Winner

The Greatest Pokemon Match Ever: Pikachu vs. God at the Cineplex

Steve Lansingh

Smile God Loves You!

Steve Lansingh

The Messenger: A Story of Joan of Arc

Peter T. Chattaway

Feed the Children Battles Controversy

Jody Veenker

Amassed Media: Hooray for Holywood

Turkmen Authorities Fine Release Baptist Pastor

Felix Corley, Compass Direct

Sydney's Archbishop Overrules Decision to Allow Lay Presidency

Jeannie Zakharov Ecumenical News International, in Sydney

Wire Story

Christians Protest Proposed Mosque

Religion News Service

Violence Mars Bonnke's Revival

Odhiambo Okite

America Legislates for the World! ' Part 1

Hazem Abdou

America Legislates for the World! ' Part 2

Dr. Hassan Abu Talib

Apologetics' Missing Links

Matt Donnelly

Haunted by the Style Czarina

Michael G. Maudlin, Managing Editor.

Letters

Evangelism: To the Jew First?

Keith Hinson.

Sudan Oil Exports Draw Protests

Debra Fieguth.

Oregon: From Cult Site to Teen Camp

by Art Moore.

Intelligent Design: Searching for a Blueprint

Tony Carnes in New York City.

Editorial

The Wall’s Long Shadow

Editorial

Our Unoriginal Sin

View issue

Our Latest

Who Writes History When There Is No Winner?

Lebanon’s civil war is a taboo subject. A group of Christians and Muslims is broaching it.

Review

Review: Angel Studios’ ‘David’

Peter T. Chattaway

Artistically, it’s ambitious. Narratively, it works. But it’s no “The Prince of Egypt.”

My Son’s Last Christmas at Home

Christmastime comes with its own losses and longings. God understands them.

Analysis

Bondi Beach Shooting Compels Christians to Stand with Jews

The Bulletin with Josh Stanton and Robert Stearns

Jewish-Christian friendships offer solace and solidarity after antisemitic violence.

The Russell Moore Show

David Platt on All You Want for Christmas

What if the most radical thing about Christmas isn’t that God came near—but that he came to serve?

Excerpt

The Story Behind Handel’s ‘Messiah’

The Bulletin with Charles King

Meet the unlikely characters who defined this musical classic.

News

The Christians Helping People Enslaved by Cybercrime Scam Centers

Erin Foley in Mae Sot, Thailand

After Myanmar’s military raided a compound, a network of ministries helps trafficking victims return home.

Dreaming Against the Machine

Technologies like AI privilege “growth” and “effectiveness” over imagination and inefficiency. God operates differently.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube