Daily Prayers:
- A. Book of Common Prayer
- A. Book of Common Prayer 2
- A. Divine Hours
- A. Evening Prayer (Anglican)
- A. Morning Prayer (Anglican)
- Celtic Prayer
- Creeds of Christendom
- Eastern Orthodox Prayers
- Lectionary
- Liturgy of the Hours
- Missio Dei
Emerging Movement:
- Andrew Jones
- Andrew Perriman
- Anthony Stiff
- Art Boulet
- Bob Robinson
- Br. Maynard
- Dan Kimball
- David Fitch
- Dogwood Abbey
- Ecclesia Network
- Emerging Women
- Eugene Cho
- Henrik Holmgaard
- Jamie Arpin-Ricci
- Jazz Theologian
- John Frye
- John Lagrou
- Jonny Baker
- JR Briggs
- Leonard Hjamarlson
- LeRon Shults
- Lukas McKnight
- Peggy Brown
- Sivin Kit
- Stephen Shields
- Steve McCoy
- Steve Taylor
- Tamara Buchan
- The Practicing Church
- Tim Miekley
- Todd Hiestand
- Tom Smith (RSA)
- Tony Jones
Other sites I frequent:
- Allan Bevere
- Andy Rowell
- Attie Nel
- Barna
- Brad Boydston
- Chris Ridgeway
- CC Blogs
- Don Johnson
- Ed Gilbreath
- Erika Haub (Carney)
- Faith Blogging
- Falsani
- Fr. Rob
- Hummers
- iMonk
- James McGrath
- Jim Martin
- John Stackhouse
- JR Woodward
- Karen Spears Zacharias
- Laura Barringer
- LaVonne Neff
- LeaderFOCUS
- LL Barkat
- Luke/Annika
- Mark Galli
- Mark Roberts
- Michael Kruse
- Nexus
- Owen Youngman
- Ted Gossard
- Tom Wright
Recommended Online Readings:
Scholarly Books I’ve written:
- Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels
- Hist Jesus Anthology
- Interpreting the Synoptic Gospels
- Introducing NT Interpretation
- Jesus and His Death
- Jesus in Memory (ed.)
- New Vision for Israel
- Synoptics: Biblio
- The Face of New Testament Studies
- Who Do They Say I Am?
Scholarship Online:
- Apollos
- Books & Culture
- ChristianityToday
- CS Lewis
- EAC
- Early Xian Writings
- Euaggelion
- Gospels
- Jesus and His Death Blog
- Karl Barth Online
- Mark Goodacre’s Weblog
- Online Journals Access
- Online Pseudepigraph
- Pete Enns
- Prime Time Jesus
- Theopedia
- ThinkTank
Stuff online:
- 5 Streams
- Big Muddy
- Catalyst Scripture
- Catching the Wave
- DaVinci Code
- Forgiveness
- Future or Fad?
- Gospel of Judas
- High Calling
- Interview on Emerging
- Interview with LL Barkat
- IVCF Eikons
- IVCF Gospel
- John Bunyan
- Keys of the Kingdom
- Lake Emerging
- Mary in CT
- Missional in Seattle
- Missional Matrix
- Nativity Story
- Never Alone
- New Perspective
- Pepperdine Interview
- Professor as Scholar
- Recl Mind Mary 1
- Robust Gospel
- Social Justice
- Trojan Horse 2
- WiredParish Mary Interview
- Word/World NPP














posted May 4, 2010 at 5:39 pm
Oh my GRAVY!
This is a seering and all-the-way-Hartian response that is long overdue to the recent repositories of the new atheists (I won’t adorn them with proper nounly spellings).
posted May 4, 2010 at 5:45 pm
I feel like I am talking too much lately, sorry about that.
Thanks for this. My 17 year old son is an atheist and he is a better christian than most christians I know. I get to debate theology with him forever and his arguments are well thought out and worthy. Better than mine in many cases.
His atheism is much better than his christianity ever was. If there is a heaven he is going there.
Dave
ha! I like Captcha – was joyriding (that’s good for my wayward son…)
posted May 4, 2010 at 10:28 pm
A truly profound atheist is someone who has taken the trouble to understand, in its most sophisticated forms, the belief he or she rejects, and to understand the consequences of that rejection.
I wonder how many Christians are ‘truly profound’ Christians, based on this standard.
posted May 5, 2010 at 9:31 am
Interesting response by Myers. I would respond that he misses the point though. He’s amusingly reinforcing Hart’s piece by attacking things he’s not even trying to say. His critiques of the New Atheists (which should be strongly differentiated as a specific group within atheism) are pretty spot on.
Hart isn’t trying to prove there is a God in his piece and makes it quite clear that you can’t get to the Christian God through the cosmological argument. What he’s saying is they’re absolutely uninterested in trying to comprehend what they’re arguing against, which I think some of them have openly admitted, comparing religion to believing in unicorns. Sure, I haven’t invested a bunch of time in confirming my disbelief in unicorns, but I’m not writing books about it either.
Atheism is here to stay, but this crop of “New” ones are absolutely horrid philosophers. Their only real contribution will be to give dull atheists something to shout about. The smart ones I know backed away from Dawkins, Hitchens, Myers, Overall and company a long time ago.
Ok, ok, Myers is right on one thing: The piece itself was dangerously close to TL;DR, but then again, some points just can’t be made in 2,000 words.
posted May 5, 2010 at 10:51 am
Sure, I haven’t invested a bunch of time in confirming my disbelief in unicorns, but I’m not writing books about it either.
As soon as there’s a “White House Office Of Unicorn-Based Programs”, I’ll regard this as a fair and honest comparison. :->
Atheism is here to stay, but this crop of “New” ones are absolutely horrid philosophers.
In my experience, their philosophy hasn’t been that bad. Their chief sin is not using the terminology of philosophy (see comment #30 here).