Last Week’s Reading: Willy Wonka, the End of Church, and British Food.
Rachel Held Evans continues to interact with Smith’s The Bible Made Impossible (one of my favorite books of 2011), this week she examines the differences between Biblicism and a Christocentric Hermeneutic.
Ray Hollenbach with Sinners in the Hands of Willy Wonka.
David Nilsen Embraces the Crazy.
Kevin DeYoung explains Why He Hopes Real Books Never Die, while Marc Cortez reflects on The Value of Reading Fiction.
Joel Willits writes an Invitation to Lent, and Roger Olson suggests some Lenten Meditations for Baptists.
Diana Butler Bass writes of The End of Church, while Rodney Stark suggests the statistics don’t support all our worrying.
Tim Keller begins Blogging About Evolution at BioLogos.
Joy discusses at the Adventist origins of Young Earth Creationism.
McCracken with When Doctrine Stays Quiet.
The Rosewood Initiative tries new ways of being Church-with-the-neighborhood.
Daniel Kirk begins a series on Narrative Theology.
Who needs the Bible when you have Systematic Theology?
Dining After ‘Downton Abbey’: Why British Food Had a Bad Reputation For So Long.
Finally, a brilliant video from Richard Bauckham which summarizes the argument he made in Jesus and the Eyewitnesses.

Always nice to have some new reading to explore. Thanks.