Author Archives: Jay F Guin

About Jay F Guin

My name is Jay Guin, and I’m a retired elder. I wrote The Holy Spirit and Revolutionary Grace about 18 years ago. I’ve spoken at the Pepperdine, Lipscomb, ACU, Harding, and Tulsa lectureships and at ElderLink. My wife’s name is Denise, and I have four sons, Chris, Jonathan, Tyler, and Philip. I have two grandchildren. And I practice law.

An Email about Authority and Mathematics, Part 5 (“Spirit and truth”)

Having considered the broader context of John 4:23-24 in the last post, let’s now look at the context in John’s Gospel. Spirit In chapter 3, John had just related the story of Jesus and Nicodemus (“born of water and Spirit”), … Continue reading

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An Email about Authority and Mathematics, Part 4 (Introduction to “Spirit and truth”)

I’ve written on John 4:23-24 several times. It’s a critical passage in understanding the New Testament’s doctrine of worship — and much, much more. And it’s one of those passages that is almost always misunderstood because we come to looking … Continue reading

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An Email about Authority and Mathematics, Part 3 (Binding Examples)

We pick up with Minghui’s responses to my examples for authorized things that do not meet the standards of CENI. (For those readers coming in late, I’m attempting to show that CENI/the Regulative Principle are not real rules, and indeed … Continue reading

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An Email about Authority and Mathematics, Part 2 (CENI explained)

Last week, I posted “An Email about Authority and Mathematics” in response to a question I received re a young brother, a mathematician, with questions re certain traditional Church of Christ teachings. On Tuesday, my mathematician brother, whom I now … Continue reading

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A.J. McCarron and Leonard Fournette

A.J. McCarron is, famously, the starting quarterback for Alabama, winner of second place in the Heisman, proud owner of three national championship rings, and the boyfriend of Katherine Webb, Sports Illustrated swimsuit model. He is also the friend of A.J. … Continue reading

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From the Comments: On lament, contentment, and the nature of obedience

Mark asked, If it were wrong to cry out to G-d, why did He listen and answer their cries? And if lament is part of the Canon and worked, then how can it be wrong? Or did it become wrong … Continue reading

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John Mark Hicks: “A Disciple Seeking to Follow Jesus into the World for the Sake of the World to the Glory of God”

John Mark Hicks is a professor at Lipscomb University (my alma mater, but he arrived after I was graduated) and one my most favorite bloggers — because I learn so much studying at his feet. As I mentioned in the … Continue reading

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Les Ferguson, Jr.: Desperately Wanting to Believe Again

Most readers are likely aware of Les’s story. His blog, “Desperately Wanting to Believe Again,” offers intensely personal insights into his struggles to cope with horrific personal tragedy in light of his faith in Jesus. From Les Ferguson, Jr.’s November … Continue reading

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Megachurches: Is bigger better?

Continuing with comments that really should have been posts (this combines two) — Charles asked, “Is there something about a 2,000 person congregation that is inherently superior to 10 200-person congregations?” Yes. Economists would call it economies of scale. Others … Continue reading

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A Framework for Discussing Baptism

I am again borrowing from the comments, this time from a series of comments by me under Paul and the Faithfulness of God: Baptism and the Eucharist. For a little background, I reference N. T. Wright’s point that baptism serves … Continue reading

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