“But I wish you had tap danced”:  Why good interpretation of Scripture, historical theology and contemporary conversation partners matters

Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

As noted previously, David and Jonathan Gibson have beef with John Stevens over his book “The fight of your life.”  Some of their critique is rather peculiar.  They acknowledge that it is a short, pastoral work (in fact it was based on a series of talks” and then complain that rather than engaging at length… Continue reading “But I wish you had tap danced”:  Why good interpretation of Scripture, historical theology and contemporary conversation partners matters