Discipleship is not so much
about radical commitment as it is about radical love, and the disciplines are not so much about spiritual formation as about love formation.
Not exact matches
Radical commitment is an important concept, but it is not what the Christian life is all
about.
From the pulpit of a church, speaking to a live audience
about religious diversity, Obama sarcastically belittled America's Judeo - Christian heritage and degraded its adherents with trite remarks typical of any atheistic antagonist, saying things like: «Whatever we were, we are no longer a Christian nation,» «The Sermon on the Mount is a passage that is so
radical that our own defense department wouldn't survive its application» and «To base our policy making upon such
commitments as moral absolutes would be a dangerous thing.»
Conservatives mock
radical college professors and celebrities who pop off
about politics, but those (sometimes ridiculous) lefties are actually making an effort to reach that vast muddle of Americans who don't already have firm political
commitments.
He was all
about transparency, frankness and a
commitment to love and grace, no matter who we were dealing with, way too
radical for our supposedly progressive Non-denominational Evangelical church.
Ismail supports his post-E3 tweets regarding how he sees Sony's indie policy at the moment, telling me that «the lack of indies at the E3 showcase is such a
radical shift from the indie focus of earlier E3s that many independent developers are wondering whether working with Sony right now offers any stability, and stability is what those developers need when making
commitments about console development.»