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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

A New Language for Distress

Right near the start of Mark there is a series of healing narratives. In one of them Jesus heals "the demonized." And, interestingly, this is the only story of the four where we actually see the specific term healed or therapeou appear. And therapeou is actually the least magical explanation for what happens in the story. therapeou is where we get the English word therapy from and that's because in Greek it referred not to the work of healers but to the work of doctors. Now, to use the word doctors in this context is, of course, an anachronism, but in the ancient world, therapeou was used to describe the application of a salve to heal a wound or a plaster cast to heal a broken bone. The primary sense was to care for or to wait upon someone. Medically. Theropuho is not a magical term, it's a therapeutic term. It implies a long, slow process of healing.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

The Social Location of Healing

In the final story of Mark's opening healing sequence, a group of men want their friend made whole, and so does Jesus, but that starts with the stigma that sets him apart from everyone else. Healing is more than the fixing of bones, it is the repair of all that pulls us apart and makes us think we are separate. A woman is healed so she can join the party. The demonized are calmed so they can be seen as neighbors again. A man excluded by leprosy is reintegrated into society. Now, the stigma of sin rooted in a misunderstanding of what health means is wiped clean for those watching. And if that social location of kingdom can slowly take root in our hearts, if we can repent and believe that good news for ourselves and for those near us, then perhaps, as Jesus says, we actually can do greater things than these.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Returning to Ourselves

When you are spiralling and making bad choices, more negative self-talk is rarely the answer. Often, it’s slowing down, stopping even, reflecting on the narratives you tell yourself about yourself so that you can find a better place to move forward from. What we name as sins are the symptoms of not knowing yourself the way God knows you.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

The Divine Warrior Reimagined

Revelation uses this very popular first century literary genre called apocalypse, specifically to upend a lot of our violent fantasies about God. In Revelation 19 John uses an image from Isaiah and he flips it upside down in order completely change the meaning of Scripture. Everything is new in the light of Jesus.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Rethinking Sexual Ethics Through Wisdom

The truth is we don’t subscribe to the specifics of Paul’s sexual ethic today—at all. Paul has some good stuff to say about marriage. In 1 Corinthians 7 he talks about how we use our bodies and sexuality mutually. Really progressive stuff in the first century.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Who Makes the Rules for God?

For many who are most familiar with evangelical expressions of Christianity, Penal Substitutionary Atonement (or PSA) is the only way they have heard the idea of the cross articulated. Like all metaphors, however, this law court image breaks if stretched too far.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Can We Really Say God is Love?

In a recent video, I claimed that the foundational nature of God, above all other descriptors, is love. So in this video, let's talk about where that claim comes from by looking at the concept of the Trinity and then a very brief introduction to Process Theology and thought.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Rethinking Original Sin: A Better Story for Humanity

The framework for original sin that most of us are familiar with comes from a bad interpretation of a bad translation of one verse in one letter from Pual. Unfortunately, however, it has all kinds of implications for we think about ourselves and God. So let's talk about it.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Expanding Imagination Of God

As people deconstruct and reconstruct their faith in more progressive ways there are a few questions that keep coming up. They tend to be variations on three commons themes.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Living on the Margins: A Fresh Look at Romans 13

There is a long and terrible history of Romans 13 being weaponized by those in power against the marginalized. The problem, of course, is that this letter was written not to the powerful at all but instead to a community living in the shadow of a hostile authority.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Swipe Right: When Desire Turns Dangerous

We often hear Jesus' teachings on sexuality and assume he was against desire but that approach fragments our humanity and sets up unreasonable expectations. A better way to understand Jesus' teaching is to hear his caution not against sexual desire but against the dehumanizing of another human being into an object to be used.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Salvation Without Fear: Rethinking the Story of Legion

The gospels contain a few uncomfortable stories of demon possession. How do we read these stories as modern audiences? Should we accept them at a surface level? Do we chalk them up to ancient misunderstandings of mental health issues? Or can we explore to uncover the sophistication of ancient storytelling and look for the parables hidden in these texts?

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

One Choice That Could Change Everything

Okay, we're not talking about science fiction here but there is a way to read the story of Jonah as a re-imagining of history. A story where the question is asked, "What if we had done one thing differently?" What if we had listened to God by caring for the poor and speaking grace to our enemies, and what if that changed everything?

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

Three Lenses for Reading Paul: Conflict, Culture, and Covenant

This one is kinda nerdy and a little long but if you've heard the term The New Perspective on Paul you might be wondering what this is all about. So here's a quick breakdown of some of the major schools of interpretation when it comes to Paul and where the New Perspective fits.

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Jeremy Duncan Jeremy Duncan

After Evangelical: Reclaiming the Gospel in a New Era

Evangelical is a word that has gotten a lot of press lately. The tough part is, Evangelical can mean a lot of different things depending on who you're talking to. So let's walk through the three major eras of Evangelicalism from 19th Century Europe to early 20th Century America to today, and why churches like Commons need to figure out what church looks like after Evangelicalism​.

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