Leading evangelical scholar defends the 7th day Sabbath!

Martin Weber
Martin Weber Member, Logos Employee Posts: 545
edited November 20 in Resources Forum

An exciting defense of the 7th day Sabbath comes from a leading evangelical scholar on the Logos Academic Blog. He provides concise and insightful quotes you can use in Bible studies and evangelistic campaigns. Visit www.facebook.com/LogosSDA and read the first posting.

Comments

  • Thanks for posting this. Interesting perspective that he takes.

    Mission: To serve God as He desires.

  • Mike Pettit
    Mike Pettit Member Posts: 1,041 ✭✭

    I wonder how this posts fits into the forum rules, which presumably even Logos product managers should be encouraged to follow:

    • Please keep your discussions focused on Logos Bible Software: our software, products, websites, company, tools, etc.
    • Please do not discuss or debate biblical, theological, or other controversial topics. Use one of the many web forums intended for these kinds of discussions. 

  • Martin Weber
    Martin Weber Member, Logos Employee Posts: 545

    Mike, I understood that it's OK on denominational forums to mention that particular faith group's doctrine (without debating, discussing or even mentioning the doctrine of other denomination).

    I did refrain from posting this information on the general Logos Forum and also on Facebook, except for the Logos SDA Facebook page. I even kept it off of Logos SDA Twitter.

    But I may be have been mistaken in what I did post. Thank you for your calling this to my attention.

    Here at the office, all of the various denominational representatives (both Protestant and Catholic) operate in harmony under "one Lord, one faith and one baptism." They are all my dear brothers. Such camaraderie in Christ is a value throughout the various Logos forums and other social media as well.

    Martin Weber /  SDA product manager

  • DMB
    DMB Member Posts: 13,620 ✭✭✭

    I don't think the forum is like at the Logos office.  They don't chat about the viability of prophetesses and whether their theology is correctly quoted (as two Logos MVPs were doing in another thread today).  Prophets?  Well now, that'd be ok.  Unless it's the wrong denomination and wrong century.

    "If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.