Learning from the persecuted Church
The ‘Seize the Day’ podcast for August is now online. In it, John Ayrton is talking to Andy Dipper, the CEO of Release International, about what we can learn from the persecuted Church. Last in series. Go here to listen.
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The new atheism and ‘God: new evidence’
The ‘new atheists’ have succeeded in obtaining a high profile in the media: Richard Dawkins’ book ‘The God Delusion’ sold more than two million copies, and spent a year on the NY Times best-seller list. His latest book, ‘The Greatest Show on Earth’ is now being widely promoted. A few years ago, UK Channel 4 [...]
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What’s different about the ‘new atheism’?
Is the ‘new atheism’ just the same old same old, but with a different skin? Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, says not, according to a recent blog post by Michael Patton. Mohler identifies the following key differences (my words, not his, nor Patton’s): It celebrates atheism, rather than mourning the loss of [...]
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Gallio the governor of Corinth
Junius Annaeus
Gallio was the son of Seneca the rhetorician and brother of Seneca the
philosopher, and was the Roman governor of Achaia (in present-day Greece).
An inscription naming Gallio found at Delphi says that he was a 'friend
of Caesar', and dates his governorship to AD 51 or 52.
Paul spent 18 months
in Corinth, which overlapped with Gallio's governorship. Acts
chapter 18 verses 12-17 records how the Jews tried to make a case
against him in the Roman courts, but Gallio refused to hear it, taking
the view that it was an internal Jewish religious dispute. Gallio was
executed by the maniac emperor
Nero in AD 65
Why
is the Delphi inscription important?
- because it confirms
the historical accuracy of the book of Acts - real people in real
places
- because it
fixes a date in Paul's life
- because it
shows that one Roman provincial authority at this time regarded the
new Christian movement as part of Judaism, rather than as something
completely separate.
Back to 'Real people: real places'