Justice & Power Jeremy Duncan Justice & Power 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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Relationships Jeremy Duncan Relationships 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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God & Theology Jeremy Duncan God & Theology 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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God & Theology Jeremy Duncan God & Theology 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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Relationships Jeremy Duncan Relationships 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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God & Theology Jeremy Duncan God & Theology 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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Scripture Jeremy Duncan Scripture 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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Church & Community Jeremy Duncan Church & Community 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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Faith & Doubt Jeremy Duncan Faith & Doubt Jeremy Duncan

You Are Loved: The Cycle of Grace

We all know we're saved by grace but the truth is we are also changed by grace. Knowing ourselves as God knows us, as loved and welcomed and forgiven is the only thing that can actually transform us. And not understanding that is the root of all sin.

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Scripture Jeremy Duncan Scripture Jeremy Duncan

Clobber Verses and Cultural Constructs

The word "homosexual" doesn't enter the conversation until the 19th century in Germany and isn't used regularly until the 20th century in English. Before that, homosexuality wasn't considered part of someone's identity simply, a thing one might do. Which is why it doesn't enter the translations until around that time. Instead "boy molester" was probably considered a more pressing "sin" culturally to fit the term arsenekotais which is literally "man-bed".

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