Author Archives: Richard Heyduck

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About Richard Heyduck

Pastor of Hardy Memorial Methodist Church, a Global Methodist Congregation. PhD Fuller Seminary MDiv Asbury Seminary BA Southwestern University

Wittgenstein & Lindbeck

I tried making this comment on his blog post, but for some reason it wouldn’t let me. Eric Lee posts on the relationship between Ludwig Wittgenstein and George Lindbeck (particularly in his The Nature of Doctrine). One thing I remember … Continue reading

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Denominational Identity

Knowing who you are and what you stand for as a denomination is a good thing. Aligning your identity with the bible is a good thing for Christians to do. But some groups seem to take this to extremes. Dr. … Continue reading

Posted in Bible, Current events, Politics, Theology, United Methodism | 5 Comments

Wearing Religious Genes

Let’s imagine for a moment that there are four theories of the nature of truth. The correspondence theory, the coherence theory, the pragmatic theory and the Nietschean theory. Very briefly: The Correspondence theory says that a statement/idea is true if … Continue reading

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Sermon, “Ending Well” is up

My last message of 2006, Ending Well, is now online. At all stages of life we find ourselves reaching the end – of school, of a job, of a career, of a year – of life itself. How do we … Continue reading

Posted in Bible, Podcast, Pursuing Jesus, Spirituality, Theology | 1 Comment

Chafing at Accountability

Accountability is one of the Big Words here in the Texas Annual Conference (of the UMC) these days. Sure, we’ve always had accountability. “Pay your apportionments or else!” “Don’t run off with a woman other than your wife, or else!” … Continue reading

Posted in Current events, Leadership, Local church, United Methodism | Leave a comment

The Necessary Failure of Crusading

Dimitri Simes writes in today’s Wall Street Journal: But sending more brigades to pursue the same crusade is unlikely to bring success — at least not on an American political timetable. The problem is not just the incompetent management of … Continue reading

Posted in Current events, Economics, Islam, Politics | 2 Comments

Someone (else) to blame

Daniel Henninger writes about the tendency for congressional ethics reform to be aimed at outsiders in today’s Wall Street Journal Opinion Journal. While people get trapped from time to time in these ethics codes, we stil see plenty of unethical … Continue reading

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Good News from Indiana – a Challenge to Us

Tim Stevens reports that their congregation saw 942 people make professions of faith last year. He’s on staff at Granger Community Church, a United Methodist congregation in northern Indiana. In an earlier post he said their average attendance for the … Continue reading

Posted in church growth, Evangelism, United Methodism | 4 Comments

A New Career Path – Let’s get fired!

Seth Godin reports: Today, Bob Nardelli, their [Home Depot] CEO, got fired. He probably got fired for insulting his investors (his annual meeting will go down in history) and for alienating employees and customers. He appeared to go out of … Continue reading

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Being a (Practicing) Christian

There have been some interesting posts on religion at the Corner this morning. John Derbyshire quotes and comments on a correspondent: From a person who really should know, though he asks that his name and clerical status not be posted: … Continue reading

Posted in Politics, Theology | Leave a comment