tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5006349.post6745794204981733602..comments2021-11-10T14:14:14.035-05:00Comments on HONEST TO BLOG: Sanctifying The CommonBaushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15081376115291852909noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5006349.post-47421401499624434502010-12-03T22:52:59.534-05:002010-12-03T22:52:59.534-05:00Steve, if you have a copy of Beyond Culture Wars, ...Steve, if you have a copy of <i>Beyond Culture Wars</i>, can you look for any quotations about the non-necessity of doing culture Christianly or impossibility of sanctifying the common or of redemption effecting believers' cultural activity, et.al., and send them to me? I'd certainly appreciate it.<br /><br />I think my further discussion of holy-common and structure-direction will help with your mystification.Baushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15081376115291852909noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5006349.post-91826200575331809032010-12-03T11:00:21.167-05:002010-12-03T11:00:21.167-05:00First, Horton’s 1994 “Beyond Culture Wars” was whe...First, Horton’s 1994 “Beyond Culture Wars” was where I first encountered what you want to describe as “N2K.”<br /><br />But I still remain mystified by whatever talk there is concerning the sanctifying of creation. True, believers necessarily do creation in faith, but I don’t see how this translates into the sanctification of creation. Unless grace really does leak from our fingertips. When I do the same work my unbelieving co-worker does I don’t discern any difference. What seems to distinguish us is faith alone. Now, if eating is the example, then when he eats the bread and drinks the cup, which is to say not in faith, he does something profane. But when he eats a sandwich I fail to see how his unbelief does the same thing.stevehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17604339736220629514noreply@blogger.com