




if (typeof(disqus_iframe_css) == 'undefined') {
	disqus_iframe_css = '';
}
if (typeof(disqus_def_name) == 'undefined') {
	disqus_def_name = '';
}
if (typeof(disqus_def_email) == 'undefined') {
	disqus_def_email = '';
}
if (typeof(disqus_skip_auth) == 'undefined') {
	disqus_skip_auth = false;
}
if (typeof(disqus_default_text) == 'undefined') {
	disqus_default_text = 'Type your comment here.';
}

(function(){
	
	var ie = document.uniqueID
		&& document.compatMode
		&& !window.XMLHttpRequest
		&& document.execCommand ;

	try {
		if(!!ie) {
			document.execCommand("BackgroundImageCache", false, true);
		}
	} catch(e) {};
})();

var Dsq = new function() {
	this.container = document.getElementById('dsq-content');
	this.jsonData = {"reactions": [{"body": "RE: @markvans I think out submission looks different in the Church than it does \"outside\" the church. Just like love bet\u2026 http://disq.us/q98", "author_name": "markvans", "source_url": "http://www.backtype.com/search?q=http%3A//www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/", "id": 1458454, "get_service_url": "http://twitter.com/", "title": "", "url": "http://twitter.com/markvans/statuses/2396732347", "source": "backtype", "get_service_name": "twitter", "avatar_url": "http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitter_production/profile_images/53057848/laughingmark_normal.jpg", "author_url": "", "date_created": "5 months ago", "retweets": []}, {"body": "RE: My belief that Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME is based in the teaching on \u2026 http://disq.us/q4e", "author_name": "markvans", "source_url": "http://www.backtype.com/search?q=http%3A//www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/", "id": 1458455, "get_service_url": "http://twitter.com/", "title": "", "url": "http://twitter.com/markvans/statuses/2394127682", "source": "backtype", "get_service_name": "twitter", "avatar_url": "http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitter_production/profile_images/53057848/laughingmark_normal.jpg", "author_url": "", "date_created": "5 months ago", "retweets": []}, {"body": "RE: The idea of submission goes much deeper than in just Eph 5:21. Mutual submission (which I agree isn't simply just su\u2026 http://disq.us/q45", "author_name": "markvans", "source_url": "http://www.backtype.com/search?q=http%3A//www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/", "id": 1458456, "get_service_url": "http://twitter.com/", "title": "", "url": "http://twitter.com/markvans/statuses/2393914135", "source": "backtype", "get_service_name": "twitter", "avatar_url": "http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitter_production/profile_images/53057848/laughingmark_normal.jpg", "author_url": "", "date_created": "5 months ago", "retweets": []}, {"body": "RE: Sorry for taking so long to reply here...but I want to unpack the \"personalism\" comment. Personalism, as I understan\u2026 http://disq.us/puj", "author_name": "markvans", "source_url": "http://www.backtype.com/search?q=http%3A//www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/", "id": 1400335, "get_service_url": "http://twitter.com/", "title": "", "url": "http://twitter.com/markvans/statuses/2389296739", "source": "backtype", "get_service_name": "twitter", "avatar_url": "http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitter_production/profile_images/53057848/laughingmark_normal.jpg", "author_url": "", "date_created": "5 months ago", "retweets": []}, {"body": "RE: Ah, c'mon Ted...I've been waiting for your response. I tried writing my own, but decided to delete it and wait for y\u2026 http://disq.us/dit", "author_name": "markvans", "source_url": "http://www.backtype.com/search?q=http%3A//www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/", "id": 985084, "get_service_url": "http://twitter.com/", "title": "", "url": "http://twitter.com/markvans/statuses/2125306534", "source": "backtype", "get_service_name": "twitter", "avatar_url": "http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitter_production/profile_images/53057848/laughingmark_normal.jpg", "author_url": "", "date_created": "6 months ago", "retweets": []}, {"body": "RE: Oh, you're too kind. *blush* ;) http://disq.us/dik", "author_name": "markvans", "source_url": "http://www.backtype.com/search?q=http%3A//www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/", "id": 985085, "get_service_url": "http://twitter.com/", "title": "", "url": "http://twitter.com/markvans/statuses/2125073282", "source": "backtype", "get_service_name": "twitter", "avatar_url": "http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitter_production/profile_images/53057848/laughingmark_normal.jpg", "author_url": "", "date_created": "6 months ago", "retweets": []}, {"body": "RE: Ok, I want to just pat myself on the back for the image for this article. I usually choose images with care...but in\u2026 http://disq.us/dig", "author_name": "markvans", "source_url": "http://www.backtype.com/search?q=http%3A//www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/", "id": 985086, "get_service_url": "http://twitter.com/", "title": "", "url": "http://twitter.com/markvans/statuses/2124954292", "source": "backtype", "get_service_name": "twitter", "avatar_url": "http://s3.amazonaws.com/twitter_production/profile_images/53057848/laughingmark_normal.jpg", "author_url": "", "date_created": "6 months ago", "retweets": []}], "has_more_reactions": false, "users": {"jurisnaturalist": {"username": "jurisnaturalist", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "jurisnaturalist", "url": "http://disqus.com/jurisnaturalist/", "registered": true, "linkedin": "", "blog": "http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com", "remote_domain": null, "points": 23, "facebook": "", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/uploads/users/16710/avatar32.jpg", "delicious": "", "is_remote": false, "verified": true, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": ""}, "facebook-714178806": {"username": "facebook-714178806", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "Jason Winton", "url": "http://disqus.com/facebook-714178806/", "registered": true, "linkedin": "", "blog": "http://es-la.facebook.com/people/Jason-Winton/714178806", "remote_domain": 1, "points": 1, "facebook": "http://es-la.facebook.com/people/Jason-Winton/714178806", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/uploads/users/37/4958/avatar32.jpg", "delicious": "", "is_remote": true, "verified": false, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": "Facebook"}, "facebook-1150987616": {"username": "facebook-1150987616", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "Jon Carl Lewis", "url": "http://disqus.com/facebook-1150987616/", "registered": true, "linkedin": "", "blog": "http://www.facebook.com/people/Jon-Carl-Lewis/1150987616", "remote_domain": 1, "points": 1, "facebook": "http://www.facebook.com/people/Jon-Carl-Lewis/1150987616", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/images/noavatar32.png", "delicious": "", "is_remote": true, "verified": false, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": "Facebook"}, "tedtroxell": {"username": "tedtroxell", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "Ted Troxell", "url": "http://disqus.com/tedtroxell/", "registered": true, "linkedin": "", "blog": "", "remote_domain": null, "points": 1, "facebook": "", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/uploads/users/29/9513/avatar32.jpg", "delicious": "", "is_remote": false, "verified": true, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": ""}, "f96694860bfdd6a12a1095f5a9b3754c": {"username": "Maria Kirby", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "Maria Kirby", "url": "http://disqus.com/guest/f96694860bfdd6a12a1095f5a9b3754c/", "registered": false, "linkedin": "", "blog": "http://thoughtloose.blogspot.com/", "remote_domain": null, "points": null, "facebook": "", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/images/noavatar32.png", "delicious": "", "is_remote": false, "verified": false, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": ""}, "paulmunn": {"username": "paulmunn", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "paul munn", "url": "http://disqus.com/paulmunn/", "registered": true, "linkedin": "", "blog": "http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html", "remote_domain": null, "points": 6, "facebook": "", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/uploads/users/35/365/avatar32.jpg", "delicious": "", "is_remote": false, "verified": true, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": ""}, "markvans": {"username": "markvans", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "markvans", "url": "http://disqus.com/markvans/", "registered": true, "linkedin": "in/markvans", "blog": "http://markvans.info", "remote_domain": null, "points": 12, "facebook": "", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/uploads/users/15045/avatar32.jpg", "delicious": "markvans", "is_remote": false, "verified": true, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": ""}, "4ae9b00c6e0a43148025ed6c6223bbf5": {"username": "TW", "tumblr": "", "display_name": "TW", "url": "http://disqus.com/guest/4ae9b00c6e0a43148025ed6c6223bbf5/", "registered": false, "linkedin": "", "blog": "http://tenwarningstotheobloggers.wordpress.com/", "remote_domain": null, "points": null, "facebook": "", "avatar": "http://media.disqus.com/images/noavatar32.png", "delicious": "", "is_remote": false, "verified": false, "flickr": "", "twitter": "", "remote_domain_name": ""}}, "forum": {"use_media": false, "name": "the Jesus Manifesto", "streaming_realtime": false, "url": "jesusmanifesto", "allow_anon_post": true, "reactions_enabled": true, "reply_position": 0, "show_avatar": true, "allow_anon_votes": false, "disqus_auth_disabled": false}, "realtime_enabled": false, "request": {"username": "", "is_global_moderator": false, "sharing": {}, "sort": 4, "forum": "jesusmanifesto", "is_initial_load": true, "is_authenticated": false, "timestamp": "2009-12-10_04:10:49", "remote_domain": "", "page": 1, "is_moderator": false, "display_username": "", "points": null, "subscribe_on_post": 2, "moderator_can_edit": false, "is_remote": false, "is_verified": false, "missing_perm": null}, "realtime_paused": false, "posts": {"10804754": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I appreciate your thoughtfulness, Nathanael, and willingness to dig into things. I also appreciate your lack of interest in the present economic system that many of us refer to as \"capitalism,\" even if that upsets hardcore market enthusiasts. At any rate, you're right to point out differences in the capitalism of cultural theory (in which nerdy people say things like \"narrative transaction\") and the capitalism of economists (which would involve, like, numbers and stuff). I appreciate as well your concern that we not neglect a \"pure form\" of capitalism based on the social critique of capitalism by people in the humanities.<br><br>I'm not sure a pure form of capitalism exists -- or, if it existed at one time it led to what we have now, and I don't think it's possible to go back. Whether it ever existed or not, to suggest that it would be better is, to me, a little like suggesting that riding a unicorn to work would be more environmentally friendly than driving my old truck; it's true enough, but I'm not going to spend a lot of time trying to work it out. <br><br>Since I'm piling on the colorful (or just lame) analogies, I don't fault you for taking an interest in the political and economic landscape of the world at large, and you're correct in your intimation that I don't have a ready substitute -- but there's an extent to which arguing global or national economics is like asking my opinion as to the best way to get to LA when I'm convinced that we simply don't need to be going to LA in the first place (no offense to LA, I just picked it at random). <br><br>The only economic system that I can enthusiastically endorse is a gift economy (which might mean Paul and I agree on something) or some form of anarcho-communism. But these are not practicable on a national scale, and I think your recognition that whatever the ideal might be is not available to the unregenerate speaks to this (even if your concept of the \"ideal\" differs considerably). So pondering the most workable economic system for the world and coming up with some kind of pure capitalism is fair; I'm just not sure I buy it (pun shamelessly intended).<br><br>I picked on capitalism (as I understand it) in this piece not because it is the most heinous example of economic injustice imaginable but because it is our present economic environment, and it is unjust.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_12:55:26", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 13, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10794595, "depth": 3, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10773014": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "So I went to reply and hit \"like\" by accident. Perhaps there's a lesson there.<br><br>I had no doubt you would find something to take me to task on, Paul. You do not disappoint.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_21:34:07", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": true, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10767049, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11893274": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Sorry for taking so long to reply here...but I want to unpack the \"personalism\" comment. Personalism, as I understand it, is an attempt to resist abstraction by relating with the people in front of you. As Dorothy Day wrote that \"it is people who are important, not the masses.\"<br><br>In my comment above, I am not rejecting personalism...in fact, I would consider myself a personalist. However, within personalism there is a danger of collapsing towards individualism (of a sort).<br><br>We are members of one another. Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME. Within that, a personalist perspective refuses to abstract what I mean by \"us.\" There is no abstracted Church...Christ is actually present in the least of these--the brother or sister who struggles. Actual persons (not this abstraction called the \"State\" or programs or \"movements\" are responsible for other persons in need. <br><br>Some personalists and anarchists will challenge abstraction to the point of saying that community itself is too much of an abstraction. And while often rejecting individualism, they will embrace an unmediated understanding of Christ's presence to the extent that we are left with a collective of individuals who are largely unable to submit to one another.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_12:08:49", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 44, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10792437, "depth": 4, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11972127": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I agree with what you say about our interpretation of our experiences, but I think when you try to apply it to the experience itself (and deny \"raw experience\") that's a bunch of hooey. Sensation is there, even if I don't understand it. Images appear to me before I interpret them (and I need not do so). Experience is not just the conceptualization that I make of it. And I don't need to do things to cultivate an experience in order to have an experience (especially with God, who seeks us whether or not we seek him).<br><br>A mother picks up her baby and moves it and feeds it and puts it to bed and the child doesn't know what to make of all that (having no framework yet to interpret it). Yet it's still real and the child is actually moved and cared for, and experiences that in some way. A good analogy, I think, for how God often interacts with us, even before we perceive or understand what is going on.<br><br>I'll be satisfied, Ted, if we can agree about the reality and trustworthiness of \"an encounter with God,\" God's Spirit working within us. It sounds to me like you don't trust it, since it's always filtered through so much of me and my culture, which seems to undermine the whole thing, making us dependent not on God but primarily on the tradition and community that shapes our filters (which are often screwed up). That's what seems to me to be rather \"unedifying.\"<br><br>But please correct me if I'm reading you wrong.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-01_07:07:55", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 4, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11971346, "depth": 12, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10836008": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I probably am not in amongst the flowers, but the vegetables.  If I\u2019m going to flower, I\u2019d like it to produce some fruit.  I\u2019m probably an eggplant, and not the skinny kind.  I taste great once I\u2019ve been grilled (as in this conversation!)<br><br>I do accept most of TULIP.  I also employ mostly modernist methods of discourse.  And I bristle a bit at social construction of reality theories.  I\u2019ve also read too much Ayn Rand.<br><br>That is, I usually want to hold individuals accountable, and not communities.  It seems very difficult to me to relocate the decision-making agency from the individual to the community.  <br><br>However, I fully recognize that the whole is seldom the sum of the parts.  This is actually the vanguard of the sort of macroeconomics being taught by Richard Wager at George Mason University, where I am.  He\u2019s a little late to the game, but he\u2019s first among economists.  The interactions among independent individuals combine to create macro movements which none of these agents intended.  The cars in a traffic jam are all moving forward, while the traffic jam itself is moving backwards.<br><br>I do see salvation as a transforming moment in a person\u2019s life.  I see empowerment of the Holy Spirit as the invitation to join God in His continuing creative work.  I see regeneration as a moment when the self-interested nature of fallen man can be cast off in favor of Christ-interestedness.<br><br>With Ayn Rand and other Objectivists I find it inconsistent with human nature for people to act charitably.  Most charity is imposed by irresponsible people, or is a signaling of power to the recipients and those who observe the gifting.  It is a manipulation, a power-over weapon.  Society itself is an aberration, a power-over construct, a squelching of individuality and dignity.<br><br>But regenerate people are no longer solely self-interested.  We are Christ-interested.  We want to do what we see our Father doing, even as Jesus did.  We want to have a sensitivity to the Spirit to know what He is doing.  We want to say with Brother Lawrence that we don\u2019t even bend to pick up a straw except for the love of God.  We do nothing for reward or personal gain.  We already have our reward, Christ is our reward!  What more could we want?  Our charity asks for nothing in return.  It seeks no political advantage, favor, or position.  We do it in response to the Spirit.  We receive joy alone, the sensation of being used by Him, as our motivation.<br><br>Rand\u2019s philosophy removes the right of anyone to make a claim on the life of anyone else.  The wealthy have no obligation to the poor.  The mother has no claim to her son\u2019s produce.  All social norms which imply such claims are evil.  I\u2019d have to agree that such claims are vehicles for powering-over others, even for the poor to power-over the wealthy.<br><br>As believers we first give up our rights to ourselves to Christ, in acknowledgment of His deity and in acceptance of his salvation.  We remember this in communion.  We then give up our rights to ourselves to the body \u2013 the church \u2013 and grant them the right to make claims on our life.  This is the act of baptism, and the entry point to the community, the only legitimate collective on earth, because it renounces power-over and practices mutual power-under.  Some marry and give our spouses the right to make claims on our lives.  I count marriage among the sacraments for this reason.<br><br>I am resistant to the concept of habit formation in general because I prefer intense sensitivity to the Holy Spirit.  Habit forming cannot tell you when not to help the sick person.  Yet Jesus did not heal everyone.  The goal is not to help and love people, but to love God (ah, here I am reformed again), and to glorify Him.  God is sovereign over the suffering of His innocents.  We don\u2019t have to save them all.  Yet we alone are empowered to save.  It is a hard thought to know that some will not be saved.<br><br>Now, Romans 13.  I often backpedal from anarchism at this point to a minarchism including courts which operate according to common law processes.  God provided Israel with Judges and with a basic set of laws, out of which the people could count on protection of property and enforcement of contracts.  He also established precedents and appeals processes.<br><br>So the authority wields the sword for justice.  Some anarchists suggest the function of courts could be decentralized and subjected to market discipline.  It may be possible.  But I can accept a monopoly among courts.<br><br>Romans 13 is mostly telling the Christian that the method for practicing the gospel is not political rebellion.  Pay your taxes \u2013 just don\u2019t expect them to do any good.<br><br>Beyond this I recognize that the unbelievers will construct power-over institutions, despite our power-under attempts to dismantle them.  We are to be subject to these institutions, recognizing God\u2019s sovereignty, and to use interactions with these institutions as opportunities to demonstrate to peculiarity of the Christian Ethic.  Where such institutions generate injustices were are to step in and offer ourselves as surrogates, or offer to redeem the innocent at our own expense.  We are never to rebel.  Again, the practice is to constantly push public opinion and policy at the margin in the direction of the ideal, never deceiving ourselves as to the possibility of achieving that ideal.  It would be vanity if it were not purely service to Christ.<br><br>There is then, no justification for the formation of a movement.  There are only individuals choosing to be in community, and to be responsive to the Spirit.  There is complete decentralization of action, which God sovereignly directs to His macro-purpose.  We are just to obey.<br><br>Nathanael Snow<br><a href=\"mailto:ndsnow@gmail.com\" rel=\"nofollow\">ndsnow@gmail.com</a>", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-13_07:26:54", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 3, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10821372, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11928625": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "For me, to say that the Holy Spirit was keeping those individuals and communities (which seems redundant, as the members were not independent of the body) faithful is simply a more theological way of saying the same thing. The faithful who went before us are an integral part of that mix. <br><br>Jesus, as far as we know, did not write anything (well, there was that bit in the dirt). He entrusted his teachings to a plurality of others. Peter, when he received his vision in Acts 9, took it to the others to help clarify its meaning and implications for the community.<br><br>And we cannot know about the Holy Spirit in the way you describe without these texts that we believe come to us by the Holy Spirit. There's an unavoidable circularity here. I'm not suggesting an invalidity, I just think we need to own up to that circularity. <br><br>We know Jesus (in part, at least) because his story was preserved in the Gospels. We have the Gospels through the communities that preserved them. We accept particular Gospels (and epistles) because we trust (or at least agree with) those who later deliberated on the canon. And so forth. I'm not denying the work of the Holy Spirit in this process, but describing what it looks like on the ground.<br><br>My list (contemplation, scripture, community) was not intended to be exhaustive, though I think as broad categories they're not half bad. I just want to bring you into my world for a moment, in which there is no single locus of knowing/experiencing God that trumps all others. So, faith in God -- yes! But how does this faith come to us? How is this faith tested? Where do we cultivate this faith? <br><br>The community is more than a collection of individuals, and the church is more than a collection of communities, and our faith tradition is more than the historical record of such communities. I locate the work of the Holy Spirit in this \"more,\" the impetus of a dialectical tension between story and peoplehood (which is not to suggest this as a robust pneumatology, but merely a fragment).<br><br>But I also cannot know the tradition apart from that history, and I don't know that history apart from the communities that preserved it, and I am not a part of that history independently of my involvement in a particular community, and I don't experience community apart from my interaction with this sister or that brother (which is my nod to personalism). Again, this is not intended to be exhaustive or exclusive, but I do think it's indispensible. <br><br>Let me be personal and transparent in a way that might be dangerous in this context (and this early in the morning). My impression is that you've been shaped by one or more bad experiences of community, vicariously if not personally. That's fair. I don't suggest this is as something that invalidates your observations, nor do I suggest that you are colored by your experience in a way that I am not. <br><br>More importantly, you seem to be blessed with a great faith such that what I'm reading as a fierce individualism leans nevertheless in the direction of Jesus. Maybe you do have a kind of prophetic calling, and I see you has having a kind of eremitic or anchorite vocation (the married thing notwithstanding), a bit of a voice calling in (and from) the wilderness. Again, please don't read that as dismissive, and I may not have it quite right. I'm just trying to name what I see.<br><br>So here's the transparent part: my individualism goes the other direction. Left to my own devices, I'm more likely to be an atheist than an anchorite. I need the tether of tradition and community in order to remain faithful. I can't make it on my own, and this surely colors my theological reflections. But I also don't think I'm alone -- or all that unusual.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_05:41:28", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 2, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11911476, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11942453": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Of course I'm not. The outside observer was hypothetical, natch. And yes, there are problems with the wood/fire business. This was just for comedy, and I tried to construct it to more at my expense than you, but of course you're along for the ride. Maybe it wasn't funny.<br><br>As for Pentecost, were you there? Me neither. And probably not the author of Acts. So we're getting it at least secondhand. And the fire in question went -- where? Into (or onto) people? Involving language? And the event then had to be interpreted by Peter in light of Joel's prophecy? Seems like an awful lot of wood there.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_14:16:49", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 3, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11942081, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11917878": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I wasn't trying to prooftext, Paul. I'm no good at it. I was just (somewhat playfully) checking to make sure you weren't too-quickly dismissing a turn of phrase (\"scare quotes\" always catch my eye) with what seems to be a viable pedigree. In other words, those of us who might invoke mutual submission aren't just making stuff up.<br><br>I agree with Mark about the contingency of the gospels, perhaps taking it farther (it's not something we've discussed). The Jesus of the Gospels is a Jesus we know because communities passed down those stories and members of those communities eventually recorded them at least partially as a benefit to those communities. <br><br>Further, my understanding is that prophecies were to be tested, just as tongues were to be interpreted, etc. This is not to say that God never speaks to us from outside our given community, or the church at large -- I certainly believe he speaks to us from the margins. And so on. But the normative means, I think, is through the wisdom of the collected body, and, in the spirit of Chesterton, the communion of the saints. <br><br>[And, as with other things, I would guess that I find the prophetic voice today in places you would not.]<br><br>How, precisely, do I encounter this Master to whom I'm exclusively beholden? If it is through prayer, how do I know I'm not just gazing at my navel? If it is through scripture, how do I learn to read and interpret scripture? And -- to be fair -- if it's in community, how do I know I'm not just drinking the Kool-Aid? I'm not advocating for slavish devotion to a community or a tradition (or clearly you haven't met me). I think these elements -- contemplation, revelation, community -- are to be held in tension.<br><br>Can I ask a personal question? I assure you I am merely curious and there is no trap. Do you see yourself as a prophet? You seem, at any rate, to identify with the prophetic animus in a way that I don't (which is not to suggest that you shouldn't). I just want to see if there's anything to that or if I'm just guilty of blog-comment eisegesis. :)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_20:03:01", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11911476, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10903104": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Ted,<br>I enjoyed your piece very much.  You are very eloquent and have a terrific sense of humor.  I have been impressed with the thoughtful discussions you have had with your readers.<br><br>As I have struggled with how to raise my teenagers, I have come back to the story of the Prodigal Son in hopes to learn something about how to be a gracious parent.  I was struck by the fact that the loving father in the story enabled his wayward son to leave.  And by the fact that even though he was looking for the return of his son, he did not go searching for his son as maybe the story of the lost sheep would imply.<br><br>I thought about your comments of how evangelicals find the need to keep rehearsing the story of the prodigal son with very little emphasis on the faithful son or the father as states of Christian practice/experience.  Since I am a creature of habit, a creature with an appetite, I like reviewing such stories, consuming the grace for my needy soul.  But I have found that instead of creating a rut, leaving me where I began, that I move through the story first as the prodigal conscious of my waywardness in need of grace, then as the older son faithfully following Christ, yet lost in legalism unwilling to live in the grace provided, then as the Father, letting go of my expectations for myself and others, and finally receiving with open arms the contrite spirit, being generous with what has been generously given to me.  This cycle of grace keeps me growing in faith, continually being transformed, rather than frozen in time at a moment of transaction.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-14_20:26:11", "killed": false, "user_key": "f96694860bfdd6a12a1095f5a9b3754c", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": null, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10810720": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Plural doesn't necessarily imply one corporate entity, Ted. It could also be interpreted \"all of you.\"<br><br>And I don't see how that is relevant, unless you are trying to say (as I've heard some say) that Jesus' presence is promised to the church as a whole always, but not necessarily to each of us individually. That's not much of a promise, now is it? \"Lo I am with you always... you as a group that is; I may or may not be with any particular one of you at any particular time...\" <br><br>I also think it's worth saying that making dismissive comments without actually engaging the arguments that are presented to you won't go far in convincing people of your point.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_14:59:38", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 4, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10805896, "depth": 7, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11915845": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "No, as I said before, I think Paul's words about mutual submission have to be interpreted just as his words about wifely submission have to be interpreted. Interpreted in light of Jesus' teaching.<br><br>And, interpreted rightly, Paul's words don't contradict Jesus' teaching, in my opinion. C'mon, we interpret Paul and Peter often in light of Jesus (like about slavery, women, etc). That's not rejecting those guys.<br><br>I think you're going to have to explain your understanding of \"submission\" a little more clearly, Mark. Because I've seen it mostly interpreted as \"obedience\" (throughout church history and in the histories of many Christian communities). And I've heard lots of stories of its misuse in communal situations. <br><br>This is not just a theological argument, but one that very forcefully impacts people's lives, <i>especially</i> in community.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_18:43:20", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11915357, "depth": 10, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10784337": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I was wondering who did the nice job of picking pictures for all the articles.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_00:02:12", "killed": false, "user_key": "f96694860bfdd6a12a1095f5a9b3754c", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": null, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10772684, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11930201": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I have been enjoying reading this discussion.  I might want to add some things later when I have the time and if it hasn't been said already.  I just want to push back a bit on one of your statements Paul.<br><br>The difference is, I didn't come seeking \"community.\" I was seeking Jesus and found his Body. Which is the right way to do it, I think, because we should be followers of Jesus first (and completely), right?<br><br>In my opinion, wrong.  God brings us to himself in a variety of ways, none of which is more holy than the other.  And my guess is that before you were actually seeking Jesus for Jesus sake, you sought God in ways that were much more self centered.  I remember reading a church father discuss this, I can't remember which one at the moment.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_08:00:14", "killed": false, "user_key": "f96694860bfdd6a12a1095f5a9b3754c", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": null, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11928625, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11915357": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "So, Paul, you'd render \"submit to one another\" as irrelevant because you think it is inconsistent with the teachings of Jesus? I'd suggest you need to submit to the voice of God speaking through Paul...<br><br>Alas, here is the problem. In this case, you seem to find that you need not submit to the Tradition that has brought us the teachings on submission contained in the writings of Peter and Paul, because the Gospel accounts (according to Mark, Matthew, Luke and \"John\") seem to call us to something else?<br><br>I don't see any inconsistencies between submission to God and mutual submission. Mutual submission isn't calling my brother or sister \"Master\" it is simply recognizing that our relationship with God is made complete in one another.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_18:25:13", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11914160, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11916064": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I was teasing you a bit, Paul. I should have added a wink ;)<br><br>I agree, of course, about reading all of Scripture in light of Jesus; I don't hold to a \"flat\" view of Scripture. <br><br>I don't equate submission to obedience. In Romans 12-13, Paul seems to liken obedience to turning the other cheek. In danger of being anachronistic, such submission seems more like Gandhi's understanding of <a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satyagraha rel=\"nofollow\">Satyagrah</a> than like whatever we usually think when we hear \"obedience.\" In other words, submission is the opposite of coercion. It is subordinating your will and desire for the good of the other. Submitting to one another is what it \"looks like\" to love one another. Just like wives and husbands are to submit to, and love, one another (which is how I tackle the other parts of that Ephesians passage).", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_18:51:35", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11914160, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "10774114": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Okay, Mark's right. That wasn't much of a response. I'm glad, that, at the very least, you recognized the line as climactic. I could have softened the rhetoric by saying \"this aspect of God only exists,\" or some such, but that wouldn't have done justice to either the sentiment I wanted to express or my understanding of God. Of course your assertion of God's unconditional existence is orthodox, and I have no quarrel with that. <br><br>God's \"isness,\" however, is of little meaning without being made manifest. The contemplative experience of God (yes, I'm familiar, thank you very much, but I don't pray and tell) is mediated through our humanness, or we could not experience it. The prophetic experience is always for others. And most of the time, even in the Bible, God works through human agency, through those willing to open themselves kenotically to not only experience the presence of God (whoop-de-do, St. John of the Cross might say) but to manifest it to others. (God even uses the unaware and unwilling, or those who just happen to be about.)<br><br>This, I think, is very Christian, rooted in the Incarnation. My loaded rhetoric was intended to make visceral the extent to which an ostensibly loving God that is not realized by our willingness to extend that love to others isn't worth a bowl of warm spit.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_22:18:46", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 56, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10767049, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10794595": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Okay, so I'm reading a bit of McCarraher's stuff here.  In what I have found he is not laying out a very precise argument as to how the process he claims Capitalism performs actually works.  Is there a simple outline of how these claims are linked together somewhere?<br>One thing I keep coming across is a squishy idea of \"formation of moral imagination\" or some other such language.<br>The claim appears to be that dwelling in a Capitalist environment shapes people's morals in such a way that they find their only meaning in work and desire, not even consumption.  Window - shopping defines the person living under Capitalism.  Do I have that right?<br>Suppose this is true.  What are the alternatives?<br>Of course, there is the Christian Ethic.  We want to have our moral imaginations shaped to match Christ's sacrificial love for others, sensitive to the unctions of the Spirit.  But this is only possible for the regenerate soul.<br>If we live in a pluralistic society (I hate that word), where the majority of unbelievers (and even professing Christians) can not (or have not) adopted the Christian Ethic, and where through the democratic process and the public forum we have the opportunity to help form the legal environment, what sort of economic system ought we to advocate?<br>Shall we just avoid the discussion altogether?  Just direct all of our energies to serving the least of these, and despair of influencing policy for the better?  Perhaps.<br>But supposing we are to get involved.  We must advocate voluntarism.  We must seek to have privileges repealed.  We must seek equality for all under the law.  We must seek limits to (if not elimination of) arbitrary political mechanisms, which are the granters of unjust privileges.  I perceive each of these as effective power-under methods of serving the poor and oppressed.  I also see them as being consistent with pure capitalism.  I set distributive justice aside as a peculiar function of the church, as I do all concern for the least of these.  While many do, I don\u2019t see why unregenerate people *should* give a damn about the poor or least of these except out of empathy, which is really selfish in its motivations.<br>McCarraher seems to have been reading all of the wrong economists.  Marx and Engels on the one side, and I am supposing the mainstream on the other.  I'd recommend looking into Murray Rothbard and Friedrich von Hayek instead.  Rothbard, in particular, has as his aim when constructing his capitalist system a \"principle of non-aggression\" which is entirely consistent with the Christian Ethic, and he\u2019s an Anarchist.<br>Again, my concern is that in rejecting Capitalism we instead advocate some other more statist system.  The question becomes: would we rather the poor be constantly starving \u2013 as is the case under statism, or constantly hungry \u2013 as McCarraher implies would be their condition under Capitalism.<br>Inasmuch as both are inferior to them being satisfied, I think we would both prefer them hungry rather than starving.  Satisfaction seems to me only possible for the Christian.<br>Many imagine that the random altruism we observe among people might be organized and systematized in order to make it more effective.  Again, this is a pagan desire to concentrate and centralize power, even power for good.  I might argue that power-under actions should not and cannot be centralized.  To do so is to subjugate them to some other law than the movement of the Spirit.  It is to create an idol.  All such imaginations should be rejected.  We really are much stronger when we don't work together for the sake of working together, but only so much as the Spirit directs us to.<br>I may simply have a more pessimistic understanding of unregenerate human nature.   But my outline works whether or not I am right.  Systems which depend upon a more optimistic view of human nature risk failure if they are wrong.<br>Nathanael Snow", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_09:14:44", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 14, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10791134, "depth": 2, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11938924": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I'll try not to be exploitive, Ted (though you may need to forgive me the occasional expletive).<br><br>I don't think I've ever suggested a faith without context. What I said was that the contexts you mention\u2014tradition and community, but also prayer and scripture\u2014are not dependable (worthy of faith) in themselves, and always need to be interpreted or tested.<br><br>My point is quite a practical one, actually (reinforced by experience in community). Voices in tradition say many things. Voices in community say many things. And <i>sometimes</i>, even when those in community around us are speaking with an apparently unanimous voice, what they are saying is <i>not</i> coming from God, is not the voice of God. So their voices must always be judged, tested, interpreted, and cannot themselves be the basis for this judging.<br><br>I'm saying there must be something else that we can trust to help us discern the voice of God <i>in</i> these things (not apart from them). That something else is the Spirit of God living and active in us. Given for precisely that purpose. <br><br>And trust in this Spirit is exactly what we are called to: faith, trust in God.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_12:43:34", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11930538, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11971346": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "FEEL THE POWER!!!!<br><br>Okay, sorry. I took the DISQUS link...<br><br>\"But that doesn't mean the actual experience itself must be interpreted (or mediated), does it?\"<br><br>Actually, yes. But it might be more helpful to speak of contingency. I don't mean that a given experience comes to us in raw form but we can't do anything with it until it is interpreted (and thus are aware of the interpretive process). I mean that the experience never actually comes to us in raw form -- it doesn't exist as such -- because having a certain kind of experience is contingent upon our already having been formed and shaped as a particular kind of person, whether this formation is something we have cultivated actively or is merely a product of being born in a particular time and place.<br><br>The contemplative experience (and I'll stick with that, which could be a discrete event or a constellation of experiences that help to shape our perception of the world) is contingent in this way. Before we ever approach the cloud of unknowing, before we engage in centering prayer, before the Jesus Prayer leaves our lips, before we take up and read in <i>lectio divina</i>, before we pick up that first straw for the love of God, we have been formed as the kind of person who would do such a thing.<br><br>The contemplative experience is contingent upon those practices we engage in as a means of cultivating such experience, and contingent upon being the kind of person who places value on such an experience in the first place. How we understand the experiences that come out of those practices is formed and shaped by the contemplative tradition itself, which provides a frame within which we can understand the experience and without which such an experience might not come to us at all.<br><br>This formation, which can happen in a variety of ways but does not happen apart from the practices, habits, and modes of discourse that characterize the tradition, is why we understand this experience to be an experience of God -- and not just God in the abstract, but the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, as revealed through Jesus Christ. We could narrate this experience differently, and even the fact that we might not think to do so is determined by our formation.<br><br>Contemplatives and mystics in other traditions have similar experiences that they interpret in light of their own traditions. We may or may not consider this to be the same as our experience, but we will do so on the basis of our relationship with our tradition.<br><br>If we conclude that this is irrelevant, that this experience only comes to the believer, then we are saying that it is contingent on our faithfulness and obedience, and what we consider faithfulness and obedience to be is formed and shaped by the particular way in which we relate to our tradition. <br><br>Our decision to use a particular theological language to narrate this experience, or to avoid language, is likewise shaped in this way.<br><br>I will go this far: I think there are experiences available to us that we would both narrate as an encounter with the living God, which you would understand as unmediated and I would not. 99 times out of 100, however, the conversation doesn't need to go there; I suspect most people would not find it edifying.  <br><br>I'm not sure how you would understand my position. For me, the fact that you see the experience as unmediated is already an interpretation.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-01_05:56:47", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 5, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11954471, "depth": 11, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10803316": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I can't speak for Mark, but your summary of what I mean our experience of God being mediated through our humanness seems fair. That this is not different from what other evangelicals might say is not something that bothers me. I might point out, however, that your insistence that such an experience is \"not mediated through anyone else, in that moment\" would seem to presume a concept of the self I'm not sure I can abide. For me, we would do well to recognize that our experience in any moment is always already mediated through our social context. <br><br>The contemplative experience of God, for instance, is interpreted as such by the Christian contemplative, but there's actually nothing that says it must be what they assume it to be. It could be an artifact of a natural brain state cultivated by centering prayer or <em>lectio divina</em>. Someone from a different religion undertaking similar practices would interpret such an experience through a different grid.<br><br>Or, if that is too relativistic and/or reductionistic, let's say the experience is incontrovertibly a personal experience of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Even this is predicated on having been formed, in community, as the sort of person who is prepared for such experiences and to whom God might come in such a way. <br><br>You have a unique predilection for latching onto hyperbole and throttling it within an inch of its life. So -- okay, okay, we can know God through trees.<br><br>But can we? In a sense that does justice to the Incarnation? Can a tree visit me in prison? Wash my feet? Sit up with me in the hospital while my loved one struggles for life? Share bread with a stranger or be the stranger with whom I share my bread? <br><br>As for the Church, we have been down this road before, you and I, and we disagree sharply. I claim no right to decide who is \"in\" or \"out.\" I would include both the institutional church and its dissidents. I might wax poetic and suggest that Christ is to be found wherever bread is shared with a stranger, regardless of the religious affiliation of those involved. <br><br>But none of this is the point. My point, at least, is that those of us who claim any sort of allegiance to Jesus Christ must reckon with our responsibility to embody Christ, to become Christ, to be Christ, because I don't think we have reason to believe that Christ is present any other way. Not that it is necessarily impossible another way, but that to count on it is to forfeit our calling.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_12:22:52", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 8, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10792437, "depth": 4, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11907701": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "\"Submit to one another\" <i>does</i> sound kind of familiar...", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_15:28:16", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 33, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11901739, "depth": 6, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10877049": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Haha!  Many Christians who read Rand walk away believing she\u2019s on to something.  Few make a leap to anarchism.  Fewer still embrace peculiarity.  I\u2019m guessing most Christian Randians haven\u2019t read anyone in the pacifist tradition.  I have even read Piper on Rand, and he misses several key things to be learned from her.<br>And, again, you have summarized my position eloquently.<br>That my thesis provides a guidepost for involvement in the democratic process is most likely the reason I developed it.  You may be quite right that we don\u2019t need to be involved.  I don\u2019t suppose I shown that we must be.  However, if we are going to be involved, I find my thesis most consistent with the Christian Ethic as I understand it.  There are several focal points where my understanding may be significantly flawed.  The only venue for having my thoughts rigorously tested has been the blogs.  (You should see what happens when I make some of these suggestions over at Sojourners or World magazine!)<br>Perhaps my thoughts are useful for radicals who must converse with conservatives who say they believe in free markets, but really just want to maintain the current oligarchy.  Each set of beliefs must be pushed to its limits and tested under various assumptions.  Otherwise the robustness of the theory is left unknown.<br>Anyway, if I have successfully defended my thesis here, I feel very excited indeed.  Not only have I had the opportunity to articulate it more carefully than before, but I have learned to be more careful in explaining my assumptions and in drawing logical connections.  Most importantly I have shown a way to challenge progressives and fundamentalists on their own terms and to move them toward a purer Christian Ethic.<br>Thanks for listening.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-13_22:53:26", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10836008, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11938431": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I would assume the blogs themselves to be inanimate and therefore not amenable to being constructed as consumers.", "is_last_child": true, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_12:29:01", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": true, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11934868, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11945088": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "You left out the second sentence (or I added it after you quoted me):<br><blockquote>I'd say that faith is relinquishing control of that, depending completely on the Spirit (the Someone Else), and letting ourselves be guided in the comparing and testing and discernment. Guided spiritually, God's will pressing on ours (\"unmediated\"?). Which is not individualism at all, but submission to God.</blockquote><br>I thought you'd question that middle line the most.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_15:21:52", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11942152, "depth": 10, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11974786": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Actually, I don't trust it. Nor do I trust community and tradition, or anything else in and of itself. To say that I trust in God is a declaration of faith, and not the presumption that any of my experiences or perceptions is ultimately reliable. (Those are often screwed up, too.)<br><br>God is not my experience of God, and to place value on that experience is itself an act of faith and not an ontological claim.<br><br>That may or may not be satisfying. It may be a bunch of hooey. Heck -- it might just be my interpretation. :)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-01_08:54:34", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 3, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11972127, "depth": 13, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11975301": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I appreciate that confession of trust in God, Ted (that is what you said, right?). But I don't quite understand what kind of trust that can be, if you feel you cannot trust your experience of the God you trust in. It seems awfully disconnected (and I mean \"awful\" compassionately).<br><br>Don't you trust that the almighty God can get past screwed up filters and limited interpreting abilities (or even use them effectively) to actually meet and communicate with you in a clear and trustworthy way?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-01_09:10:20", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 2, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11974786, "depth": 14, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10805896": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Oh, and I should say: kudos for the line about denying spiritual reality. That's new.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_13:23:03", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 5, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10805048, "depth": 6, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11915403": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Yes, I agree prophets are not completely alone. But it often <i>seems</i> that way to them at the time, in their immediate locale and community. This is important for us to realize, because we might find ourselves in that position someday.<br><br>And I agree that submitting to Christ is the same as submitting to his Body\u2014as long as it truly is his Body. So how do we discern that? And yes, the Body is the incarnation of Christ\u2014but it is only truly the Body when it <i>is</i> the incarnation of Christ. I completely agree with your identification of the Body and Christ, but this is always determined by its actually having and demonstrating the nature of Jesus. If (and where and when) it does not, it is not the Body and we should certainly not submit to it. To do so would merely be submitting (once again) to the social Beast.<br><br>It always come back to submitting to and obeying God, and only God. Completely, single-mindedly, unconditionally. \"You have one master, the Christ.\"", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_18:26:52", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11914615, "depth": 7, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10930836": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Too bad Nathanael responded before I had a chance to put my \"analysis\" into print. I guess it won't be as credible now.<br><br>Thanks for the compliment on the pic, Ted. My son made that face after my wife and I told him we'd be selling his crib and blankets, so that he could follow Jesus too. We suggested he pray about it.<br><br>As far as spaces or no spaces...Nathanael is obviously just a straight-forward kind of guy (spaces be cursed!). And you, Ted, are quick but also thorough because of your spaces-in-between posture. Plus, you gives us the \"space\" we need to look up big words (i.e., reified--good explanation, by the way!).", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-15_10:29:11", "killed": false, "user_key": "facebook-714178806", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10818722, "depth": 7, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10836117": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I'm not a fan of Rand (or TULIP), but I'm very impressed by the conclusions you have come to, Nathanael. Especially your understanding of the (at least potential) working of the Spirit in us.<br><br>And I mostly agree with your explanation of Romans 13, except I think the Judges were much more like prophets (sensitive to God's wisdom and will, and chosen by God) than like our modern (elected) enforcers of state law. And then Jesus calls us to much more than the OT models, doesn't he?<br><br>Your understanding of the church also seems quite accurate to me (have you seen what Kierkegaard wrote about it, <a href=\"http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/08/church.html\" rel=\"nofollow\">such as this</a>, or <a href=\"http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/reminders.html\" rel=\"nofollow\">his words here</a>?).", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-13_07:40:24", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10836008, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10818722": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Wait, wait. Now I know this gets us even further off topic, and Nathanael's post was great and I'm dying to get back to it (probably after dinner) but how, Jason (cool pic, btw) does the no-space thing reflect Nathanael's sensibilities? I'm terribly curious. I'm a diehard spaces-between-paragraphs kind of guy. What does that say about me? Is this like analyzing handwriting?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_18:18:19", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 3, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10818553, "depth": 6, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "12028073": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Thinking over some of the conversation here, and remembering my observations during my years in seminary, I think I've realized something about the postmodern approach. Its focus on the ways that our personal points of view and cultural frameworks filter our perceptions and influence our interpretations does offer a \"lofty\" perspective from which to critique, say, the false certainties of evangelicals (quite rightly, I should add). But it also seems to disconnect us from God, in that we can never be sure whether we are hearing God's voice or just hearing our own prejudices or the accumulated formation of our tradition and community.<br><br>So we're left with an apparent detachment, which makes it easier to analyze all the various accounts of God's activity in people's lives, comparing and contrasting their confessions with those of others, which might lead us to any number of interesting conclusions about the nature of religion and belief. But what seems to be left out (conveniently?) is the voice of God speaking directly to us. Presenting us with the choice: believe or reject, act or do not act. The \"voice of God\" becomes an object of detached study, never the prophet Nathan standing before us saying, \"You are the man!\"<br><br>And doesn't that easily turn us into consumers as well? Eagerly devouring and digesting all the various religious confessions and theological viewpoints, churning out our educated theories, without ever having to face the choice, the demand, God's voice speaking directly and clearly to us, his eyes on us waiting for our answer?<br><br>Maybe that guy that asked about \"theoblogs\" had a point...", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-02_08:34:37", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10769095": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "The Lord warns us when He teaches us to pray to avoid vain repetitions, as the heathen do.  Which is directly to the point.  The repetitive nature of the rituals of evangelicalism as you have described them are particularly heathen.  Or pagan-polytheistic.  Let's just say they run against the Christian Ethic.<br><br>From the preacher's point of view, such repetition is an easy way to get away with laziness.  I heard so many sermons on the prodigal son at one church of my youth, that I groan inwardly whenever I discover I am about to hear one again.  Unless, of course, the speaker directs us to consider ourselves the older brother.  You have again refreshed me by encouraging me to empathize with the father.<br><br>The political message communicated by repetition is static.  It says: This is where we are, and where we have been, and as far as we can tell, where we will be.  The action required of the believer is continued penitence, and subjection to the father, and His representatives, the preacher, and the state...<br><br>The medium of repetition encourages stasis - lack of movement.  Apathy.<br><br>Capitalism, as the best that unregenerate souls are capable of on their own, is just as easily derailed by stasis and apathy.  Capitalism has as its aim the satisfaction of human wants by the most efficient means.  When a man becomes apathetic he stops acting productively and becomes nothing but a, a, a consumer.<br>Capitalism works in such a way that in order for a person to become a consumer he has to act productively for others.  But if a person can possibly get for themselves some privilege or entitlement to exact the production of others for themselves for nothing in return, well then its not capitalism any more.<br><br>But that the aim is empty - consumption as a satisfaction of spiritual wants - well, that's the old evangelical reading of the prodigal story.<br><br>What seems to be true is that evangelicals, amongst others, are failing to move beyond stasis, to move past repentance, into action.  The best they seem to achieve is empathy with the older brother.  Hardly at all are we encouraged to live like the prodigal's father.<br>Nathanael Snow", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_19:58:56", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 22, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11919532": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "There is another interpretation of how the gospels were recorded and passed down truthfully: by the work of the Spirit of God keeping individuals and communities faithful in their contributions. It wasn't the historical community that guaranteed it (or that we trust), it was, and still is, God.<br><br>And I think all the ways you mention, Ted, (plus a few more) help us discern the voice of the Master. It must be discerned in prayer, interpreted in scripture, and sorted from the various voices in community\u2014but when they are all saying the same thing we can be pretty sure. (Maybe this is part of what you mean by \"holding them in tension\"?) I think we can also learn from experience what the voice of the Master sounds like, becoming more sensitive to hearing it through all these ways. \"My sheep hear my voice.\" Ultimately, though, there has to be a certain amount of trust (faith) that the Spirit will help us sort it out, just as the Spirit helped the authors and communities sort out the scriptures. <i>That's</i> what we have faith in, rather than in the written word, or our own prayers, or even the consensus of our community. Our faith needs to be in <i>God</i>.<br><br>Prophet, hmmm. Yes, I suppose I do identify with prophetic types, and admire them. Personality-wise I think I'm also more suited for their tasks and challenges (very sensitive to group dynamics and pressures\u2014and group mistakes\u2014and quite introverted, independent-minded, tending toward the mystical). I've tended to take powerfully (even violently?) emotional stands against the group when they seem to be dominating the individual. And I'm extremely anti-institutional, as I'm sure you've noticed. Yes, that's pretty perceptive on your part.<br><br>These days, though, everyone seems to be <a href=\"http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2007/03/ecce-homo.html\" rel=\"nofollow\">\"prophetic\"</a> (even Michelle Obama's starting a garden at the White House was called prophetic). So I'm not sure the term \"prophet\" means much anymore.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_21:18:02", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11917878, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10934448": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Nathan,<br>Just an idea here, but in studying ecosystems and the cooperative structure of biological systems I have discovered that the natural order of things follows an economy very similar to capitalism.  I have not been able to philosophically determine whether or not such a natural system would be under the power of evil influences since the Bible claims power over death as a spiritual victory.  Death being a result of the natural principle of entropy.  However, this side of the resurrection, entropy is necessary for life to exist, so I haven't been able to puzzle it out yet.  Suffice it to say, it is at the least another example of how God turns evil into good.  And if God can do that with entropy, then I would think he could do that with other natural systems such as capitalism.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-15_12:03:26", "killed": false, "user_key": "f96694860bfdd6a12a1095f5a9b3754c", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": null, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10931921, "depth": 3, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11928756": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "By the way, I now have an Aerosmith song in my head. (\"Dream on, dream on...\")", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_05:53:30", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11919605, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10935156": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Maria,<br><br>Thank you. Your reading reminds me of a wonderful treatment of this parable by Henri Nouwen, which follows the same trajectory. It's a viable reading. I did not mean to suggest that every evangelical is hopelessly trapped in the way I describe; in fact, the cultural analysis I attempt in the essay, which was fun to do, is actually something of a sidebar. But I was seeking less to adjure us to a particular personal reading than to point out that if the would-be prodigal is not embraced by a community willing to extend to them the love and grace of the father, then Jesus' parable is just a heartwarming story. <br><br>Ted", "is_last_child": true, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-15_12:23:03", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": true, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10903104, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11919037": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Okay, that makes sense. Earlier I thought of saying that we are to \"be subject to\" (obey) God, and love one another. And I agree with your description of love.<br><br>But then the submission you describe, being the same usage as when Paul talks about \"submitting\" to earthly authorities in Rom 13 (which I agree with), that doesn't seem anything special or unique for relations within the church. It sounds like the way we should love anyone. Is that what you mean?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_20:53:41", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11916064, "depth": 10, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10784448": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Editors select pictures for the articles that they edit.", "is_last_child": true, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_00:08:02", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10784337, "depth": 2, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11942081": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Um, Ted? You're not an \"outside observer\"...<br><br>And I don't think the fire/wood analogy is quite accurate, but I'll go with it for fun. Can I suggest my own response?<br><br>Ted: Well, okay, but we don't experience fire apart from the wood.<br><br>Paul: What about Pentecost?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_14:06:49", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 4, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11941739, "depth": 7, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11941575": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Something Else is fine, because I did mean that (or maybe <i>Someone</i> Else).<br><br>Okay, test them against each other, yes I agree. But then if it's me, the individual doing that comparing and testing, deciding what material (scriptures, traditions, other voices) to work with in the discernment and determining when a satisfactory conclusion is reached... aren't we back to individualism again?<br><br>I'd say that faith is relinquishing control of that, depending completely on the Spirit (the Someone Else), and letting ourselves be guided in the comparing and testing and discernment. Guided spiritually, God's will pressing on ours (\"unmediated\"?). Which is not individualism at all, but submission to God.<br><br>How well we are able to do this (our faithfulness) usually has much to do with the honesty and completeness of our submission to God, and our experience (maturity) in being guided by his Spirit. That's what I've seen, anyway. But then I'm often surprised by how God can make himself heard even when I'm trying not to listen or submit.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_13:54:28", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11940179, "depth": 10, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10767049": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "This is well-written, Ted. And I think you accurately describe (diagnose?) the \"narrative satisfaction in the repetition structure\" that many Christians call their spiritual life. That's interesting.<br><br>Your emphasis on the importance of a living community is good, too, though I don't think that is opposed to the usual interpretation of the parable. The evangelicals have a good point in their interpretation, and so do you. <br><br>I think you went a bit overboard, though, with your climactic \"this God only exists to the extent that such love is made manifest in genuine human contact.\" You may not be aware of the contemplative experience of God, but I expect you know of prophetic inspiration, where God is not mediated through another person but is experienced directly, spiritually. God exists quite well, and can make himself known, with or without our help. \"With\" is better (for us), of course. But God exists, period. <br><br>I believe he even once called himself \"I AM.\"", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_18:44:07", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 59, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 1, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10772684": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Ok, I want to just pat myself on the back for the image for this article. I usually choose images with care...but in this one, I deliberately looked for a McDonald's sign with Russian Cyrillic text to go with this Russian Orthodox painting of the Prodigal Son.<br><br>Normally, I don't point out my own handiwork, but I feel fairly proud of my work on this one. ;)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_21:19:35", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 4, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "10931921": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "We are agreed.  The points of departure are much deeper, and I will have to do much more thorough investigation to understand your perspective.<br>You rightly identify the real point of departure as whether the market is a power.  The trivial response, \u201cno,\u201d is unsatisfying.  Where does the onus lie?  Well, on the person who is trying to do the persuading, I suppose, and differences in starting places may indeed leave us at loggerheads.<br>I think I have given an explanation of how emergent phenomenon based on voluntary action can\u2019t hardly be described as a power-over influence.  But if we can remove all power-over actions or attempts, perhaps this influence creeps in and changes the situation.  I am tempted to move the analysis to game theory - which I may for more publishable works.<br>I really appreciate the references.  I will look into them sometime in the future.  I should probably drop the whole discussion for a while, since I have tests to pass, etc.  <br>I found Cavanaugh's On Being Consumed very, very squishy indeed, couldn\u2019t quite finish it.<br>My reformed position is also something that I really need to investigate more.  I left behind (heh) more conservative theological positions (pre-trib, ceasationist, etc.) once I opened up to pacifism.  I have not carefully re-structured my systematic theology again since then.  Of course, you might challenge the very idea of a systematic theology!<br>I must be a total modernist.  I really want for there to be a theory which expounds how exactly the market can be a power.  Mostly it is just asserted that it is.  If something other than modernism in thought is applied, I don\u2019t know how conversations like ours could proceed.  I want for there to be things we can know.<br>Oh, well.<br>Most conversations never get to the place where first premises are exposed, but this one has.  Mark and I also once went fairly deep into a conversation, where my \u201ctwo-Kingdoms\u201d paradigm was exposed.  I don\u2019t know exactly what that means, or what the alternatives might be.  Mark promised to get back to it someday, but has been busy.<br>Anyway, thanks.<br>I\u2019ve reposted our conversation on my blog.<br>Nathan", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-15_11:01:54", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 3, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10927609, "depth": 2, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10791134": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Nathanael,<br><br>Thanks for allowing my thoughts to springboard your own, which I enjoyed. To push things a bit farther, is repentance without action really repentance? This is not to make people feel bad or take them on a guilt trip, but to point out the poverty of a evangelical milieu (of which I am a part) that does not move them past the \"narrative transaction\" and seems to equate salvation with simply feeling really good about being saved. The point is not that we suck (which is unremarkable), but that we're being cheated.<br><br>I think we might have different assessments of capitalism. I don't consider it to be the best of anything, nor do I recognize consumerism as an evil distinct from the system -- capitalism -- that gives rise to it. I would agree with <a href=\"http://www.theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=287\" rel=\"nofollow\">McCarraher</a> here: \"Consumerism is not the problem\u2014capitalism is. Consumerism is the work ethic of consumption, the transformation of leisure and pleasure into duties. Talking about consumerism is a way of not talking about capitalism, and I've come to think that that's the reason why so many people, including Christians, whine about it so much. It's just too easy a target.\"", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_05:45:27", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 16, "is_first_child": true, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10769095, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10810083": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Of course a pure form of capitalism does not exist.  There does not exist a pure form of anything, save Christ.<br>I want to point out that certain systems are dependent upon central direction, and others emerge spontaneously.  I claim that those which emerge spontaneously are better reflections of human nature as it really is.  Power-over influences distort these reflections.  Free markets emerge spontaneously in the absence of too-strong power-over agents.  Free markets are the exact image of how people would interact with one another if power-over were suppressed.  Altruistic cooperation is emphatically not how self-interested individuals (unregenerate) would interact if power-over were suppressed.<br>So, in our interactions with public policy it makes more sense to try to encourage public opinion toward adoption of free markets and other emergent voluntaristic mechanisms rather than the expansion of political franchises and privileges.<br>For example, as Christians we can recognize that the state affords a privilege to married couples which functions as a discount coupon on transactions with the state.  That such a privilege is denied to homosexuals should not make us want to expand the franchise and provide the privilege to homosexuals as well, but rather to repeal the privilege altogether.<br>Again, when some complain that illegal immigrants take advantage of welfare programs, we ought not to encourage the state to extend the welfare programs to all, but rather to repeal them to all, and assume full responsibility for the least of these ourselves.<br>Whether or not any such changes in policy ever take effect, we at least have a right understanding of what the ideal is in each debate and can, by making an argument for radical practice of the Christian Ethic by Christians, and unfettered free voluntarism for others, challenge every premise of the power-over structure.  Such a testimony shuts the mouths of Christian progressives and fundamentalists alike, and surprises those who have never heard the gospel applied to real life and politics so radically.<br>There is incredible value or clout gained, and amazing opportunity for sharing the gospel, when we adopt such a stance toward policies.<br>Again there is both an ideal for Christians to adopt, the Christian Ethic, or the gift economy you spoke of, and a separate ideal for Christians to advocate on behalf of the unregenerate \u2013 that is, for public policy \u2013 which is unfettered voluntarism / anarchism.  Any other system advocates for some power-over agent or other.  It is this advocacy for the power-over which I cannot abide, which must be rooted out from the church wherever it occurs, which has enslaved evangelicalism,  fundamentalism, progressivism, and so many other \u2013isms alike.<br>We must have an ideal in order to know which direction to push policy in (at the margin \u2013 or in individual debates) consistently.  Otherwise we wind up pushing in one direction on one issue and then in the opposing direction on a similar issue.  Witness the right-to-life / pro-war dichotomy, for example.<br>What is difficult about all of this is that in the end, only Christians can do volitional good.  We have to be brutally honest about the self-interested nature of the unregenerate man.  Almost every other system tries to overcome this obstacle by power-over methods.  Only anarcho-capitalism allows each person\u2019s self-interest to work to the benefit of his fellow man, and avoids employing the power-over explicitly.<br>There remains the question of whether the formation of moral imagination by capitalism is a power-over mechanism.  If it is, then it is only so implicitly, certainly not explicitly.  Perhaps that makes it all the more demonic.  I am unclear of the precise way this occurs, and would appreciate being directed to good resources for understanding the mechanisms involved.  Too often I hear that such things all occur through narrative, etc.  Such arguments are too squishy for me, and would be completely un-compelling to most audiences.  I am reluctant to accept or employ them.  I might just have to get over that.<br>I am vitally serious about understanding these issues clearly and honestly.  It is my life\u2019s work, most likely.  To have Stanley Hauerwas meet James Buchanan, if only conceptually in my writings, would be climactic for me.<br>Nathanael Snow<br><a href=\"mailto:ndsnow@gmail.com\" rel=\"nofollow\">ndsnow@gmail.com</a>", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_14:43:40", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 12, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10804754, "depth": 4, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10791156": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "\"I wasn't disappointed.\" Nicely done. <br><br>I'm hoping the whole personalism thing will get unpacked, simply because I want to understand personalism and its implications a little better.<br><br>I agree about the Church being the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world, and also with the complication. We are God to the Other; we find God in the Other.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_05:47:07", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11919605": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Your last post to Mark doesn't give me a \"reply\" option, so I'll chime in here. I don't know what Mark would say but I would suggest that it is the <i>mutual</i> submission that is characteristic of the church. This implies a non-hierarchiality that does not obtain in other relationships. From the perspective of the individual, this might look or feel the same or similar, in that it is indeed the love we are to show everyone. The relationships are to be very different in the church. This is related to why I go so far as to say that I, by myself, am not the body of Christ. I might be Christ-like (a guy can dream, can't he?), but I cannot manifest mutuality all by my lonesome.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_21:21:22", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 2, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11911476, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10821372": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I'm sorry about \"reified.\" To \"reify\" is to make real, or to take as having real substance, or to regard something abstract as having concrete reality. I don't tend to use the term \"regeneration\" myself; the fact that you do, and the way in which you use it, suggest to me that you see something concrete happening in an individual that I don't see in quite the same way.<br><br>The reason I guessed you as Reformed is because of the role regeneration plays in Calvinist theology, and the fact that the word doesn't get used a ton outside those circles. Of course that doesn't automatically make you a TULIP 5-pointer, but I was guessing it put you somewhere in the flower patch.<br><br>It probably won't surprise you at this point that I'm more of a \"social construction of reality\" guy. I don't draw a hard line between the power of the Holy Spirit to effect change in a person's life and our formation in the habits of faith learned in community, which I submit is the normative means by which such power is made manifest. For some this is too bleak or reductionistic, and I understand that.<br><br>So I bristle at a phrase like \"only Christians can do volitional good\" because I don't have a theological mechanism for locating the point at which someone goes from being incapable to capable of such good.<br><br>Now, I'm curious: when dealing with Christian anarchists, people love to bring up Romans 13. There are ways that the Christian radicalism with which I'm most familiar handles this, but the more robust of those ways are rendered unavailable by your \"two anarchisms\" rejoinder to \"two kingdoms\" theology. Can I ask how you handle that?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_19:53:30", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 4, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10813319, "depth": 7, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10792701": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I read the book of James with the rest of the cannon.  I'm not hip to terminology like \"narrative transaction\", but if that means it is keeping people under an ethic of exchange and inhibiting them from moving into an ethic of sacrifice, then you have captured my thought precisely.<br><br>I don't know McCarraher, but I will follow the link and see what I think.<br><br>I can only defend Capitalism as \"the best that unregenerate souls are capable of on their own\" and limit the definition of Capitalism to \"unlimited voluntary exchange.\"  I don't know how a Christian can argue against unbelievers adopting this ethic of exchange.  They are incapable - apart from grace - of anything better.  What would you replace it with?<br><br>The more loaded definitions of Capitalism - those which are intended to protect some set of vested interests, or those which intend to incriminate one class or another - are not what I am interested in.<br><br>I am mostly concerned that the possibility of a pure form of Capitalism is being rejected based upon the mercantilist-empirialist system we now have which is wrongfully labeled \"Capitalism.\"<br><br>Nathanael Snow", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_07:48:32", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10791134, "depth": 2, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11901739": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Thanks for coming back to this, Mark, because I think it gets to the heart of some of the disagreements we've had.<br><br>I love that Dorothy Day quote. But I'm quite not sure where you get \"Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME.\" Or how you can support it. There is only one Jesus; present to \"us\" or to \"me,\" it is the same person, isn't it?<br><br>I'm not sure exactly what you mean by \"present... in a fuller way,\" but it suggests a closer presence or deeper, more complete experience of Jesus. If that's what you mean, I think that <i>sometimes</i> the \"us\" has a fuller experience and sometimes the \"me\" (the individual) does. Usually depending on the spiritual maturity of the people in question, and their willingness to listen at that moment. Doesn't the history of the church clearly demonstrate this? <br><br>In <a href=\"http://www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/#comment-10792437\" rel=\"nofollow\">my previous comment</a> I pointed to examples such as Luther and Kierkegaard, who seemed to be in closer touch with Christ than the vast majority of the church of their time. Of course there are many other examples of prophetic types like these. And the great danger is that the belief that \"Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME (or YOU)\" served then to justify the rejection and condemnation (and sometimes execution) of these prophetic witnesses. I would also say it played a role in justifying Jesus' crucifixion: Who is this <i>individual</i> to be speaking for God\u2014WE, who represent God's people (and uphold the traditions of God's people through history) know God's will much better than this one man.<br><br>Am I wrong here? <br><br>I believe individuals can experience Jesus' presence fully, the same presence that can be experienced fully in community (and we are all called into both individual and communal experience). One Jesus, making himself present to whom he will. These are not in conflict with one another, but support and compliment one another. What is important is not the primacy of \"individual experience\" or \"communal experience\" but whether what we are experiencing is the one, real Jesus.<br><br>And \"submit to one another\"? Aren't we rather called to submit to God? (\"Submit to one another\" has been used again and again by Christian communities to exercise power and dominate individuals. I have first hand experience of this and have heard so many stories....) Yes, God often speaks to us through others, perhaps a group of others, but also through individuals. Which is why we should not put the group over or against the individual, but should be listening for (and submitting to) God's voice speaking through whomever he chooses. Right?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_14:01:53", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 43, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11893274, "depth": 5, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11942152": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "\"I'd say that faith is relinquishing control of that, depending completely on the Spirit (the Someone Else), and letting ourselves be guided in the comparing and testing and discernment. Which is not individualism at all, but submission to God.\"<br><br>How does this come to us? Where and how do we learn that such surrender is what we need, and how to do it?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_14:08:32", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11930538, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10805513": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I love those passages, Paul. I especially love how so many of them are corporate, employing the plural \"you.\" It's a beautiful picture, really: the Church is the Body of Christ, breathing the very Breath of God. I don't see the problem.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_13:13:41", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10805048, "depth": 6, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11920655": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I agree, Mark, though how specifically is it different in the aspect of \"submission\"? <br><br>You mention family life, but usually, even in the best families, there is hierarchy and struggles with somewhat oppressive social dynamics and constructs (that was my experience, at least). Isn't the life of the Body supposed to be something even better? Jesus uses family analogies to describe it, but then also says things that show that his Body is meant to be the one, true family that our biological families can never be.<br><br>I think it is our common (personal) connection with and undivided obedience to God that unites us in a way that blood cannot. And allows us all to be subject to the one Master without needing hierarchies, all being brothers and sisters, as Jesus taught.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_21:53:37", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11919745, "depth": 10, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11939600": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "This makes sense, Paul, and we would seem to agree more than I had assumed. I completely agree, for instance, that all of the various and varied ways in which God comes to us have to be interpreted and tested. <br><br>Your language suggests, however, is that there is Something Else that we test these things against, where all I can see is that we basically test them against each other, and trust that in the aggregate process we end up where we need to be. I don't think this is far from Kierkegaard's leap of faith, for instance. Now maybe this aggregate is that Something Else, and I'm just stubbornly refusing to start there or use conventional theological language to narrate it. <br><br>I'm not particularly offended by expletives, but this <i>is</i> a public forum. :)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_13:03:15", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11930538, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10841362": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "You win the prize for the most interesting use of Rand I think I've seen. Like Paul, I'm not much of a fan, at least philosophically, but she did have a knack for giving her characters boring philosophical monologues (kind of like the <i>Matrix</i> movies).<br><br>In a nutshell, you're suggesting that Rand was right, at least as pertains to the world, and the only way out of Rand's quasi-nihilistic maelstrom of competing self-interests is to have our interests changed through the regenerative power of the Holy Spirit. Since this will happen to a limited number of people, the answer for the rest is the mediation of a free market that allows for something like the \"greater good\" as an emergent property of the interplay of interests, along with a minimal legal apparatus that serves to protect the freedom of the market and wield the sword for the limited purposes suggested by Romans 13.<br><br>To sum up: for the elect, a new heart and a new spirit; for everyone else, the Invisible Hand.<br><br>What I find interesting here is that while other versions of Christian anarchism generally (and it is notoriously difficult to generalize radicalism, but those who study it can't resist trying) recognize that a power-under society is not practicable in the world at large, and will only become universal in the eschaton, you are suggesting that some limited version of such a society is at least theoretically available to the world even if it is unlikely to be realized.<br><br>This would serve to function as a guidepost for involvement in the democratic process -- as Greg Boyd puts it, they ask our opinion, we might as well give it -- while retaining a realistic sense of what is possible in the world.<br><br>But this almost seems an extra step: if the church is a sign, a foretaste, and a herald of what God will bring about in the eschaton, and thus a testimony (however faltering) to an ideal, why a separate ideal for the world that is no more likely to be embraced by the powers that be? I can think of answers that would seem to be consistent with your reasoning, but I don't want to presume.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-13_12:45:15", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10836008, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "12028701": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I realize I may have made it difficult for you to accept this as sincere, but you raise an excellent and challenging point. Thank you.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-02_09:03:24", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10783520": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Thanks Ted. I thought you'd say something like that and I wasn't disappointed. <br><br>Paul, I find so much that you say encouraging, but when it comes to the way in which you understand community I usually disagree a little. Your personalist (at least it feels like personalism) perspective pushes against the way in which I understand the Church to be the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world (although, to complicate matters, I also believe that the poor are the sole incarnation of Christ to the Church).<br><br>Certainly, Christ can reveal himself to someone individually apart from the church, but such revelation is introductory and incomplete. And, as Ted suggests, it isn't entirely unmediated anyways.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_23:21:47", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 55, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10774114, "depth": 2, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11954471": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "FYI, if the missing \"reply\" option is bothering you, you can respond in these discussions via DISQUS and it gives you more flexibility (<a href=\"http://jesusmanifesto.disqus.com/the_prodigal_consumer/?11954065#comment-11954051\" rel=\"nofollow\">go here</a>). And I don't think our droning on is bothering anyone, because I doubt anyone else is paying attention...<br><br>I think we might be missing each other because you seem to be talking about <i>knowledge</i> of an experience, i.e. our understanding or interpretation of any experience is always mediated through our cultural/ideological lenses, etc., and if we try to communicate that knowledge then it must be interpreted by others. <br><br>But that doesn't mean the actual experience itself must be interpreted (or mediated), does it? The touch, the vision, the feeling? (The contemplative tradition even intentionally seeks to avoid interpretation or language and emphasizes the direct experience of God, simply loving and being loved, inexpressibly.)<br><br>It's this actual experience of God that I want others to have for themselves. Not my experience that I offer to them (other than to encourage them that it's possible), but their own experience which connects us not through common language or conceptualization but because we are both actually in touch with the one God.<br><br>I only ask that you don't deny that this is possible.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_20:58:15", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 6, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11954051, "depth": 10, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11929387": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "You realize, Ted, that I'm living in Christian community now, and plan to for the rest of my life? And have for years now, not just nominally either but intimately involved and fully committed?<br><br>Yes, maybe I'm more inclined to solitude, but following Jesus has led me into a life shared closely and intimately with others in the Body. So I've been shown how essential it is, despite my inclinations.<br><br>The difference is, I didn't come seeking \"community.\" I was seeking Jesus and found his Body. Which is the right way to do it, I think, because we should be followers of Jesus first (and completely), right?<br><br>I accept our personal differences (as natural and good) and agree they may contribute to certain misunderstandings. But I'll also insist that, if a tether is needed (and we all need it, I think), \"tradition and community\" are not completely dependable or secure in themselves. Not worthy of our faith. Only God is.<br><br>Abuses aside (and there are plenty of examples in history, to which my own experiences add little), tradition and community need always to be interpreted, don't they? Their myriad of voices tested and challenged to discern where the voice of God is speaking in them? So we must depend on something higher (deeper?) to guide us, and Jesus offered us this, the Spirit of God working in us. This is worthy of faith and complete trust.<br><br>And just like in Jesus' life, this faith is necessary for the Spirit to work. \"Your faith has healed you.\" The full experience of God's presence and guiding is contingent on our utter trust in him.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_06:55:52", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11928625, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11911476": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I suppose you're referring to <a href=\"http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/r/rsv/rsv-idx?type=DIV2&byte=5350729\" rel=\"nofollow\">Eph 5</a>.21, Ted? \"Be subject to one another out of reverence for Christ.\" Right before \"Wives, be subject to your husbands, as to the Lord.\" I'd say the first line is about as problematic as the second, when taken literally and out of context.  (It might also be helpful to notice that this teaching does not seem to appear among Jesus' sayings\u2014correct me if I'm wrong.)<br><br>And the interpretation that \"be subject to one another\" means \"submit to the group (or majority?)\" is far from clear. I'd interpret it \"submit to others when Jesus is speaking through them\" (which fits well with \"out of reverence for Christ\"), and that fits with all the other teachings about obeying God alone, having one master, one Lord.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_16:22:49", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 32, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11907701, "depth": 7, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10805048": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I agree that we are called to embody Christ, Ted. But that is not some \"responsibility\" carried out because \"Christ is [not] present any other way.\" It is simply responding to Jesus' call and being drawn into his body, as Paul puts it so well:<br><blockquote>And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being changed into his likeness from one degree of glory to another; for this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit. (2 Cor 3.18)</blockquote><br>And it is interesting that Paul mentions the Spirit, because that seems notably missing from this discussion so far. Yet the Holy Spirit is the primary way Jesus talks about his presence with us, and this is not a humanly \"mediated\" presence. Some of his last words to his disciples offer them this comfort:<br><blockquote>\"I will not leave you desolate; I will come to you. Yet a little while, and the world will see me no more, but you will see me; because I live, you will live also. In that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you.<br><br>...Judas (not Iscariot) said to him, \"Lord, how is it that you will manifest yourself to us, and not to the world?\"<br><br>Jesus answered him, \"If a man loves me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him....<br><br>\"These things I have spoken to you, while I am still with you. But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you.\" (<a href=\"http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/r/rsv/rsv-idx?type=DIV2&byte=4999196\" rel=\"nofollow\">Jn 14.19-26</a>)</blockquote><br>I can appreciate the desire to push back against evangelical individualistic spirituality, but you seem to be going far overboard and denying major parts of Jesus' teaching (and major parts of spiritual reality) in order to make your point more strongly. I know you are not alone in this. Much of the new \"community\" movement does the same.<br><br>We should most definitely \"count on\" Jesus being present to us whether or not people are Christlike to us, and Jesus being present to others whether or not we manage to be Christlike to them. That was Jesus' promise to us before he ascended. \"Lo I am with you always.\" Always. And <i>that</i> is precisely what we should count on, not the embodiedness of Christians (who have so often and so terribly failed to mediate or embody Jesus to so very many people).<br><br>This does not in any way diminish our call (or motivation) to be like Jesus and embody his presence to others. Because our motivation is not one of duty, or concern that there is no other way for Jesus to be present. Our motivation is the Holy Spirit, real and living and present, God himself present in us, Love in us.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_13:01:39", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 7, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10803316, "depth": 5, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10811707": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I find this very interesting because I resonate with a lot that you say here, but I have been resistant to libertarianism. The common articulations of libertarianism retain the state for precisely the purposes -- the use of force -- that many anarchists reject the state. What you seem to be saying is that something like gift-economy anarchism or anarcho-communism would be great for the church, wherein regeneration makes such arrangements possible, but that for the world at large, the closest possible thing -- anarcho-capitalism, which substitutes the play of market dynamics for the regenerative power of the Holy Spirit -- is as good as it gets, and better than the alternatives.<br><br>Is that close? And let me be honest: I'm intrigued but I'm probably not going to get on board, at least partially because you seem to have a more reified sense of what regeneration means (I'm guessing a Reformed background?) among other things. I'm not convinced you can get Hauerwas and Buchanan in the same universe, but it might make an interesting book.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_15:26:53", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 6, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10810083, "depth": 5, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11915588": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "<i>So how do we discern that? And yes, the Body is the incarnation of Christ\u2014but it is only truly the Body when it is the incarnation of Christ.</i><br><br>Ahh...here it is. This seems like the question worthy of deep reflection. I can agree with what you say here. I personally am NOT a fan of some abstracted definition of Church as \"the Invisible Church.\" There is only the Church in front of me. And it looks like Christ. If it does not, it isn't really the incarnation of that Christ. That isn't to say that some stodgy old First Baptist Church of Whoville is going to Hell if they don't look like Jesus. But it is to say that if it don't look, act, or smell like Jesus than I don't have to submit to it as if it were the embodied Jesus.<br><br>So, how do we discern? If I had more time (this summer has been over-full), I'd craft an article raising this question (that's a hint to anyone out there reading this who feels the mojo and has time).", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_18:34:04", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11915403, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11915088": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "The thing is, language about submission (obedience) <i>to God</i> is found in Jesus' teachings. As well as sayings like this:<br><blockquote>\"You are not to be called rabbi, for you have one teacher, and you are all brethren. And call no man your father on earth, for you have one Father, who is in heaven. Neither be called masters, for you have one master, the Christ.\" (Mt 23.8-10)</blockquote><br>I don't see the submission question being at all unclear in Jesus' teaching (and example). \"You have one master.\"<br><br>As I've been saying, the one Master can speak through anyone, so we should listen for his voice in the words of others. But we do not submit ourselves to any person or group of people. We have one, and only one, master.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_18:15:39", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11914160, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11940179": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Re-reading things (I'm an incorrigible re-reader), I see that you used \"something else\" and I wrote \"Something Else\" and I just want to say I wasn't trying to be cute with that -- I wasn't consciously copping and altering your phrase for polemical purposes. I'm not above it; I just didn't happen to be doing it this time.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_13:18:23", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11930538, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10773335": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Ah, c'mon Ted...I've been waiting for your response. I tried writing my own, but decided to delete it and wait for yours.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_21:50:16", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10773014, "depth": 2, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "10835289": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Ah, the no-spaces was a mere consequence of my typing my response in word and then cutting and pasting.  It may reveal that I am not a Mac man, and that may say a great deal about my sensibilities!  I will now hit the enter button twice, and in so doing return to the spaces-between-paragraphs-style.<br><br>See!", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-13_06:08:23", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10818722, "depth": 7, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11976032": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I think we're at an impasse, because I'm sure I could write something that would make you feel better about things, but I'd be quite aware that we don't really mean the same thing.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": false, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-01_09:34:54", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11975301, "depth": 15, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10820456": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Paul -- You're probably right. I'm being a jerk and I apologize. I'm not sure why, either. I'll email you privately to pursue that end of things.<br><br>As for the topic, I think the most productive thing for me to do is simply admit that I'm riffing on the NT texts, primarily Ephesians, which has a \"high ecclesiology,\" one that expresses the relationship between Christ and the church in terms remarkably similar to the language describing the relationship between God and Christ that led to the formulation of the trinitarian doctrine. <br><br>Anyway, no, I'm not adhering to strict rules of exegesis, and that's probably frustrating. But I don't think I'm doing something that is fundamentally different from what the NT writers did with the OT, and as such I don't think I'm engaging in a practice or making a call to action that is fundamentally at odds with the Christian tradition.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_19:17:13", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10810720, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11981673": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I struck that last bit because even with the disclaimer, it seemed harsh in a way I did not intend. I just meant to invoke an incommensurability; I'm not sure we're playing by the same rules on the same field, and we could ferret that out but to be honest I don't have the steam for it.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": false, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-07-01_11:49:39", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11975301, "depth": 15, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11941739": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "This might impose on your good humor (and the patience of others), but here's how our conversation sounds to the outside observer:<br><br>Ted: I need wood to keep warm.<br><br>Paul: No, what you need is fire.<br><br>Ted: Well, okay, but we don't experience fire apart from the wood.<br><br>Paul: But the wood can't keep you warm. You need fire.<br><br>Ted: True enough, but I only know this \"fire\" you speak of because the wood is burning.<br><br>Paul: The \"wood\" is not enough. In order to keep warm we need Fire. The Fire alone warms us.<br><br>Ted: Look, I'm assuming the \"fire\" bit, okay? It's not like I was going to build a lean-to or anything. But we still need the Wood.<br><br>Paul: What good is the wood without the fire? There's some really wet wood out there.<br><br>Or maybe it sounds more like this:<br><br>Ted: He could grip it by the husks.<br><br>Paul: It's not a matter of where he grips it...", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_13:58:32", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 5, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11901739, "depth": 6, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10772852": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Well done indeed. I love it.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_21:26:02", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": true, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10772684, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11914615": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "My belief that Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME is based in the teaching on spiritual gifts throughout the NT. It is also rooted in the way in which some epistles describe us at being the Temple of God. In the New Testament, it is the Church who reveals Christ, rather than simply individual Christians. <br><br>This isn't to say that we all have to submit to groupthink or to majority. If the Spirit works through us as a Body, there are certainly times when one member speaks a strong word of challenge that doesn't seem to fit within the larger Body...but we ignore such words at our own peril.<br><br>However, my experience is that most of the time, God doesn't speak primarily through the lone prophet. Kierkegaard and Luther are prime examples. Neither were unique in their day. Other prophetic voices were speaking in their day with similar words. The question isn't \"why were they the only ones speaking out\", but \"why were theirs the only voices being heard?\"<br><br>I don't believe that I can submit to God without also submitting to the Body, for she is the incarnation in Christ. I am just a part of the Body. If I have something important to say that corrects the Body, I am to share it humbly. If what I say seems to go against the whole world and the entire Body, then the only way forward is going to be if the Church can hear and submit to the word of God. Is this the group submitting to the individual? No. It is the church being the church.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_17:59:02", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 2, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11901739, "depth": 6, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11934868": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "are theoblogs consumers?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_10:52:16", "killed": false, "user_key": "4ae9b00c6e0a43148025ed6c6223bbf5", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": null, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11919745": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I think out submission looks different in the Church than it does \"outside\" the church. Just like love between family members looks different than love for strangers. Our mutual submission and love in the Body is a far weightier thing, it seems to me, than the love offered in hospitality and in nonviolent love for enemies.<br><br>This is where the epistles are so helpful...especially, perhaps Romans, in guiding us through what the bonds of Christian familial love looks like and what enemy-love looks like to a mixed ethnicity group of Christians in the heart of Empire. It is sad to me that Romans has become a blunt object of intellectual Christendom rather than the radical document that it is intended to be.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_21:26:09", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11914160, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11954051": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I'm \"replying\" as far down the thread as my browser will let me, so pardon the blog-blanket bingo -- but in regards to the middle sentence, you added it later. I might have reacted to it, but then again I might not have addressed it directly. <br><br>Really, there's not much to it: I don't think unmediated experience exists. You do.<br><br>But let's say it does. Then what? This is good for you, I suppose, but it does the rest of us little good. We can't have your experience. You can testify to it, but then we have to interpret that testimony -- just like everything else. (I would suggest that you are always already interpreting even the experience itself, and this even before you try to put it in language, but I suspect you don't see things that way.)<br><br>I don't think we can totally escape the charge of individualism, no matter how we slice things, because the toothpaste of the Cartesian subject won't go back in the tube (and we don't really want it to). So there is always a personal/individual component to our experience, even our experience of (and in) community. <br><br>To me a person is only open to the charge of individualism if he or she regards the individual as more important than or ontologically prior to the overlapping social matrices in which identity is forged. Simply acknowledging our subjectivity is not individualism.<br><br>I'm not sure the individual even exists, as such, apart from those matrices. But now we're in super-squishy territory (that was for Nathanael) and nobody wants to go down that rabbit hole. I don't. Actually, I'm getting tired of reading my own writing. I can only imagine how the others feel... :)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_20:40:19", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 7, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11930538, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10837380": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I'm not claiming to be hip, and can't actually claim to be a Mac person (like them, but don't have one), but based on our conversation above I can see ways in which I am the Justin Long to your John Hodgman. Don't read too much into that.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-13_09:23:08", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10835289, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10813319": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "Your first paragraph has summarized my position brilliantly.<br>I'm unfamiliar with \"reified\" and google didn't help.  What do you mean?<br>I like Piper a bit, but my background is mostly Baptist/evangelical, with a strong helping of Calvary Chapel, until I snuck into a class Hauerwas was teaching at Duke.<br>I attend a Presbyterian church, but still doubt I know how to spell presyptyrian correctly.  I also ask a lot of questions that surprise people in Sunday School.<br>How would you contrast our different perspectives on regeneration?  These fundamentals are often the key to understanding the rest of the conversation.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_16:11:49", "killed": false, "user_key": "jurisnaturalist", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 5, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10811707, "depth": 6, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10811274": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I'm sorry I seemed dismissive, Paul. It's just that I have a hard time perpetuating a discussion with someone who has it all figured out. Your way of thinking seems to be working nicely for you. I wish you well.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_15:14:15", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10810720, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11954065": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Sorry, I missed the Monty Python reference.<br><br>Should we maybe just sing together <a href=\"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zey8567bcg\" rel=\"nofollow\">the Lumberjack Song</a>, and leave it at that? \"Oh, I'm a lumberjack and I'm okay...\"<br><br>(Incidentally, I did happen to use the lava-tree today.)", "is_last_child": true, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_20:40:50", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11953083, "depth": 10, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10821528": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Thanks for that, Ted. It helps a lot.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_20:01:00", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10820456, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10794820": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "thank you.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_09:23:44", "killed": false, "user_key": "facebook-1150987616", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": null, "depth": 0, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11930538": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I assumed you were in Christian community -- in fact an examination of our respective lives might open me to charge that you are more committed to community than I am. There's a deep irony there I trust you will be kind enough not to exploit. Likewise, I presume you don't think me incapable of independent thought. :)<br><br>I'm also not, just to be clear, attempting to reduce our differences to the vagaries of our personal histories. That's a part of things but hardly the whole story. I think there are some pretty significant gaps in our respective epistemological and phenomenological perspectives -- but this isn't the place for that.<br><br>I do not question the primacy of Jesus, nor do I deny the importance of faith in God. You bring that up a lot, and I'd like to point out that I'm not suggesting that we don't need faith in God. But let me push a bit here: how did you know it was Jesus you were seeking? Or, more pointedly: where is this faith in God that exists apart from everything else? I quite literally have no way to conceptualize that. To be honest it starts to sound like magic to me -- which I'd like you to read as saying more about me than it does about you.<br><br>So, faith in God: of course. We agree on this. I do not reduce this to the communal context, but I cannot imagine faith without that context (on some level). So it makes no sense to me to posit faith in God over and against community and tradition, nor (on my side) is a fetishization of community and tradition (which happens often enough) tantamount to faith in God. (C&T being a shorthand for a larger constellation of factors -- hopefully you're tracking.)<br><br>Perhaps I've been unclear -- I'm not trying to play one against the other, but argue that they cannot be separated. Even when a given expression of community goes badly, and we must offer critique and/or prophetic witness, we do so from a place that is (I presume) informed in some way by the larger tradition and offered (on some level) to protect the integrity of the body.  <br><br>I'm not throwing down a gauntlet here, but I don't think you can identify a single way that we know or experience God, or faith in God, that I can't narrate as being related to or contingent upon our participation in and formation by community and tradition. This doesn't prove anything, except maybe my own recalcitrance, but it might help your understanding (and/or confirm some of your suspicions).", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_08:20:22", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 14, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11911476, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11914160": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "The idea of submission goes much deeper than in just Eph 5:21. Mutual submission (which I agree isn't simply just submission to the group will) is found throughout the New Testament writings. <br><br>You're right--language about submission isn't found in Jesus' own teachings. But why is that? Language of the Church is rare as well...language of submission flows out of discussion about the Church.<br><br>All we know about Jesus we learn from the Church. It was early Christians whose oral traditions are captured in the four Gospels. Jesus' teachings shaped the early church, but so too did the Church's own experience of Christ in and through one another. And also through their own personal experiences of Christ, to be sure.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_17:42:59", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 8, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11911476, "depth": 8, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11953083": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I wasn't going for fair -- I was going for comedy. I just needed something with roughly the same contours in order to make fun of us. I considered a line where one of the other usual suspects chimes in to ask when we're going to shut up and roast marshmallows, but I opted for the Monty Python reference instead.<br><br>And yes, invoking Pentecost was clever -- even elicited a wry smile from me. But you didn't think I'd let it go at clever, did you?", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_19:58:09", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 1, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11942453, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11919805": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Well said, Ted. I agree. (And dream on!)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_21:28:29", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11919605, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10772926": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "Oh, you're too kind. *blush* ;)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-11_21:30:05", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10772852, "depth": 2, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "11920832": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I agree. I meant \"family life\" in the ecclesiological sense...I was working off the same metaphor that Paul and others use in talking about the Church. I do believe that the Church is supposed to be much more than just like blood families. <br><br>Indeed, we are called to be subject to One Master as we enter into humble mutual love as brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus, who is our Brother.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-29_21:59:14", "killed": false, "user_key": "markvans", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": true, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11914160, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": true, "is_realtime": false}, "10818553": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "This is a really interesting conversation and I don't mean to diminish the momentum, but I couldn't help noticing, Nathaneal, you went back to your traditional no-spaces-between-paragraphs writing style (which I think better represents your sensibilities!) after a few replies. I definitely prefer it that way (over the easier to read stuff anyway). Keep it coming. And sorry for no serious comment from me.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_18:11:59", "killed": false, "user_key": "facebook-714178806", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 4, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10810083, "depth": 5, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "11944920": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "I think the reason I didn't think the fire/wood analogy is fair was because fire is not an independent being, it is a chemical reaction of which wood (fuel) is a component. But God (the Spirit) is an independent being.<br><br>And I think Pentecost works well (and was pretty witty, I thought) because there fire was a symbol of the presence of the Spirit in the disciples. A gift given to them, something sudden and powerful and real, not just the accumulation of their cultural, social, religious experiences (though, yes, God was also in those, too).", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-30_15:17:36", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 11942453, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10975194": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "It occurs to me that, if you have not done so, you might go back to Marx's <i>Das Kapital</i> to get a feel for anti-capitalist critique. I say this for two reasons: one, Marx is critiquing a version of capitalism closer to what you have in mind, rather than the version we have currently; two, I have to think that Marx would strike you as delightfully crunchy (read: not squishy) modernist discourse. Or he's the birth of the squishy. You decide. :) If you do this, MacIntyre's <i>Marxism and Christianity</i> might be an interesting companion work. (MacIntyre, btw, is a strong influence on Hauerwas.)<br><br>And to clarify: I'm not suggesting that the market is surreptitiously a power-over phenomenon. I'm suggesting that relying on the over/under distinction, which I think helpfully describes the kinds of power that characterize human interaction, might blind us to the ways in which we are held in bondage by social systems. I think there are places in world where, thanks to capitalism, the choice really is between hungry and starving, to allude to a distinction you made above. Of course hungry is better -- but what kind of justice is that? <br><br>If a better way of life is possible, and if the people of God have resources for living such a life, it would seem that our ethical responsibility is to extend that way of life to as many as possible. Sussing out what might be the best they can do otherwise is not, for me, a satisfying exercise, owing at least partially to the fact that I'm not terribly Reformed in my theological thinking (I think you get that).", "is_last_child": true, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-16_06:01:34", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10931921, "depth": 3, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10813922": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "You seem to wish to direct your comments against me personally rather than discussing the topic at hand. I'm not sure why that is, but perhaps it would be better done privately. I can be reached via the e-mail address at the bottom of <a href=\"http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html\" rel=\"nofollow\">this page</a>.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_16:28:54", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10811274, "depth": 9, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10792437": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "I don't quite understand the \"it isn't entirely unmediated\" part, Mark (or Ted), if you're referring to prayer, or some other individual experience of God. Are you saying that since I myself am human and experience God in my own humanness (though not mediated through anyone else, in that particular moment) then that experience of God is \"mediated through my humanness\"? If so, okay. Though I don't think, with that definition, you're saying anything significantly different than any evangelical would say.<br><br>The most important question here, I think (and this comes from church history and my own experience in a number of communities), is that if \"the Church [is] the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world,\" who does this Church include? Does it include Martin Luther, after his excommunication? How about <a href=\"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simone_Weil\" rel=\"nofollow\">Simone Weil</a>, who never officially joined the organized church? Or Soren Kierkegaard, who left the state church of his time (and launched his \"Attack on Christendom\")? All of these, and many other \"prophetic\" types found inspiration and the confidence to challenge or oppose \"the church\" of their day, and they found it through their personal experience of God. The community always needs correction, and God picks and inspires and uses individuals as he wills to speak to the community when it seems to have lost its way.<br><br>Yes, this revelation is \"for\" the church. But my point is that, in cases of prophetic challenge such as I have described, these individuals are often denounced and condemned (even killed) by \"the community\" on the grounds that \"the Church is the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world.\"<br><br>I agree that the church is a very important revelation of Christ to the world, but \"sole\" seems hard to back up. What about nature? Psalm 19 refers to this (and Paul references it when talking of evangelism in Romans 10.18):<br><blockquote>The heavens are telling the glory of God;<br>and the firmament proclaims his handiwork.<br>...their voice goes out through all the earth,<br>and their words to the end of the world.</blockquote>Perhaps you would say this is \"introductory and incomplete.\" Sure. But it is not an insignificant revelation of God.<br><br>There's also the question of those people in the world who, for various reasons, never encounter Christians. Can they have no experience of God? Does God not speak to them? I think we have ample evidence that he does. And I believe Jesus shows himself to the extent people are willing to receive him, \"by any means necessary\" (to quote Malcom X). <br><br>God's revelation is not limited by our ability to mediate it to others.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-12_07:31:20", "killed": false, "user_key": "paulmunn", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "6 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 54, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10783520, "depth": 3, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10927609": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": true, "message": "[I'm replying here because we're slamming up against the margins, which strikes me as an interesting phrase.]<br><br>I think you've done a good job presenting your thoughts, and it's clear that you've put a lot of thought into working things out. I'm unconvinced, for reason that are not necessarily internal to your project, but it helps me see at least one of my conservative/libertarian friends in a different light and may afford me a different approach to our conversations, which don't usually go well. He has no use for Christian radicalism on my terms; he may be more amenable to yours.<br><br>Your thoughts are coherent and I certainly think you have something to contribute to the larger discussion. I do think your system is predicated on seeing life and scripture through the lens of modernist discourse, and I don't feel the need to address that beyond pointing out that there are other lenses, and this will partially determine the kind of audience you're able to appeal to. Pursuing that further would take us much farther afield; just know that it's out there. I also think your thoughts are predicated on Reform theology, perhaps more than you recognize, which not to cast aspersions on that theology but to point out an additional consideration of audience.<br><br>You had asked about resources for the critique of capitalism, and I can't think of anything that addresses your question directly, though I can point to some titles that will put you in the ballpark. Most of it, however, is squishy stuff by people who use the word \"narrate\" a lot. There's an article by John Milbank called \"Stale Expressions\" that informed my essay. Try <a href=\"http://sce.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/21/1/117\" rel=\"nofollow\">this link</a> if your school subscribes to Sage; otherwise try googling it. Hardt and Negri's <em>Empire</em> might be worth a look. I would assume that Cavanaugh's <em>On Being Consumed</em> would be helpful but I haven't read it. You might also try Alisdair MacIntyre's <em>After Virtue</em> and/or <em>Dependent Rational Animals</em> as an alternative to Randian ethics that I don't think is super-squishy.<br><br>A charge that I think your thesis is open to, and for which you may want to be prepared, is that -- at least in what you have described so far -- it doesn't account for the possibility that the market is among the principalities and powers against which we are called to wage war. The market is a system, and not something we can really control. The diehard libertarian says: of course, we only screw things up when we try to control it. This strikes me as a tacit acknowledgment of the quasi-godlike status of the market, which is my point. Even the \"invisible hand\" metaphor speaks to this. You recognize the potential oppression in social systems but seem to limit your critique to overt power-over dynamics. Since the market as a system of control does not appear this way, you regard it as inert (or you seem to), which I find ethically problematic. <br><br>You could address this by rejecting such a reading of the powers (which follows Wink but also Yoder and Berkhof) and making a robust argument that the market is no more a principality or a power than, say, gravity. I probably wouldn't buy it, but it would do the work. You could also incorporate it by arguing that subjection to the ruler of the powers of the air is the lot of the unbeliever, which is why Paul can narrate expulsion from the social and economic care of the assembly as handing someone over to Satan. That would make for an interesting conversation. But hey, this is your life's work, not mine, and I don't want to sound too much like your thesis advisor. :)<br><br>Anyway, fun stuff. Thanks for indulging me.", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-15_09:30:17", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 4, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10769095, "depth": 1, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}, "10975227": {"up_voted": false, "ip": "", "has_replies": false, "message": "What if capitalism is not a natural system, but a parody of natural systems, one that is contingent upon levels of sociological development that are themselves problematic? Just a thought. :)", "is_last_child": false, "can_reply": true, "down_voted": false, "real_date": "2009-06-16_06:03:48", "killed": false, "user_key": "tedtroxell", "has_been_anonymized": false, "edited": false, "author_is_moderator": false, "from_request_user": false, "votable": true, "date": "5 months ago", "approved": true, "num_replies": 0, "is_first_child": false, "email": "", "parent_post_id": 10934448, "depth": 4, "points": 0, "author_is_creator": false, "is_realtime": false}}, "integration": {"receiver_url": "http://jesusmanifesto.com/does-not-exist/", "theme": 4, "reply_position": false, "disqus_logo": false}, "timer": {"timer_url": "http://localhost:8005", "thread_id": "21272085", "user_id": "anonymous", "forum_id": "6124", "hash": 4518758494227716751}, "thread": {"total_posts": 0, "paginate": false, "per_page": 0, "slug": "the_prodigal_consumer", "num_pages": 1, "days_alive": 0, "realtime_paused": true, "id": 21272085, "num_posts": 96, "closed": false, "queued": false, "killed": false}, "reactions_limit": 10, "context": {"show_reply": true, "use_fb_connect": true, "forum_facebook_key": "1a1bdc1b204664881be4e1b12416ddaf", "use_yahoo": false, "subscribed": false, "use_twitter_signin": true, "use_openid": true, "realtime_speed": 5000}, "reactions_start": 0, "settings": {"debug": false, "disqus_url": "http://disqus.com", "media_url": "http://media.disqus.com"}, "media_url": "http://media.disqus.com"};
	/* */ this.jsonData.cookie_messages = {"user_created": null, "post_has_profile": null, "post_twitter": null, "post_not_approved": null}; this.jsonData.session = {"url": null, "name": null, "email": null}; /* */

	
	this.curPageId = 'dsq-comments';

	this.frames = {};
};

var disqus_popup_reference = null;

if(typeof DsqLocal == 'undefined') {
	DsqLocal = {};
}



/**
 * Dsq.Strings: UI strings
 */
Dsq.Strings = new function() {
	this.ADD_NEW_COMMENT = "Add New Comment";
	this.LOG_INTO_DISQUS = "Log into DISQUS";
	this.USE_MEDIA = "Use Media";
	this.LOGOUT = "Logout";
	this.SHARING_OPTIONS = "Sharing options";
	this.SHARE_ON = "Share on";
	this.TWEET_THIS_COMMENT = "Tweet this comment";
	this.SHARE_ON_NEWSFEED = "Share on news feed";
	this.SEND_UPDATE_TO_YAHOO = "Send update to Yahoo!";
	this.REBLOG_ON = "Reblog on";
	this.CONFIGURE_OPTIONS = "Configure options";
	this.POST_AS = "Post as";
	this.SORT_BY = "Sort by";
	this.SUBSCRIBE_BY_EMAIL = "Subscribe by email";
	this.SUBSCRIBE_BY_RSS = "Subscribe by RSS";
	this.POPULAR_NOW = "Popular now";
	this.BEST_RATING = "Best Rating";
	this.NEWEST_FIRST = "Newest first";
	this.OLDEST_FIRST = "Oldest first";
	this.HIGHLIGHTED = "Highlighted";
	this.UNSUBSCRIBE = "Unsubscribe";
	this.REQUIRED = "Required";
	this.OPTIONAL = "Optional";
	this.YOU_ARE_COMMENTING_AS_A = "You are commenting as a";
	this.LOGIN_BELOW = "Login below";
	this.PLEASE_LOGIN_BELOW_TO_COMMENT = "Please login below to comment.";
	this.SUBSCRIBE_TO_ALL_COMMENTS_BY_EMAIL = "Subscribe to all comments by email";
	this.DO_NOT_SUBSCRIBE_TO_COMMENTS = "Do not subscribe to comments";
	this.REALTIME_UPDATING_IS = "Real-time updating is";
	this.ENABLED = "enabled";
	this.PAUSED = "paused";
	this.PAUSE = "Pause";
	this.RESUME = "Resume";
	this.SHOW = "Show";
	this.JUST_NOW = "Just now";
	this.REPLY = "Reply";
	this.EDIT = "Edit";
	this.FLAG = "Flag";
	this.MODERATE = "Moderate";
	this.CANCEL = "Cancel";
	this.REPLYING_TO = "Replying to";
	this.REPORT_MISSING_REACTIONS = "Report missing reactions";
	this.POST_A_COMMENT = "Post a comment";
	this.FLAG_INAPPROPRIATE_COMMENT = "Flag inappropriate comment";
	this.FLAGGED = "Flagged";
	this.NO = "No";
	this.YES = "Yes";
	this.NEVER_MIND = "Never mind";
	this.ARE_YOU_SURE_YOU_WOULD_LIKE_TO_REPORT_THIS_COMMENT_TO_A_MODERATOR = "Are you sure you would like to report this comment to a moderator";
	this.THIS_WILL_FLAG_COMMENTS_FOR_MODERATORS_TO_TAKE_ACTION = "This will flag comments for moderators to take action";
	this.TO_RATE_PLEASE_LOG_IN = "To rate, please log in";
	this.JUST_A_MOMENT = "Just a moment...";
	this.GUEST = "Guest";
	this.NAME = "Name";
	this.EMAIL = "Email";
  this.WEBSITE = "Website";
  this.SETTINGS = "Settings";
  this.MODERATOR_OPTIONS = "Moderator options: ";
  this.MODERATE_OPTIONS = "Moderate Options";

  // Thread moderator actions
  this.CLOSE_THREAD = "Close thread";
  this.OPEN_THREAD = "Open thread";
  this.REMOVE_THREAD = "Remove thread";
  this.RESTORE_THREAD = "Restore thread";
  this.ACTIONS = "Actions";
};
// Dsq.Strings

/**
 * Dsq.FmtStrings: functions that return interpolated UI strings
 */
Dsq.FmtStrings = new function() {
	// Seems we have to use named interpolation for Django to translate. Investigate more.
	this.LOGGED_IN_AS = function(username) {
		return Dsq.Utils.interpolate('Logged in as %(username)s', {username:username});
	};

	this.LOGOUT_FROM = function(disqus) {
		return Dsq.Utils.interpolate('Logout from %(disqus)s', {disqus:disqus});
	};

	this.SHOWING_COMMENTS_FULL = function(total, num) {
		if (num === 1) {
			return Dsq.Utils.interpolate("Showing <span id='dsq-num-posts'>%(num)s</span> of <span id='dsq-total-posts'>%(total)s</span> comment", {num:num, total:total});
		} else {
			return Dsq.Utils.interpolate("Showing <span id='dsq-num-posts'>%(num)s</span> of <span id='dsq-total-posts'>%(total)s</span> comments", {num:num, total:total});
		}
	};

	this.SHOWING_COMMENTS_WITHOUT_PAGINATION = function(num) {
		if (num === 1) {
			return Dsq.Utils.interpolate("Showing <span id='dsq-num-posts'>%(num)s</span> comment", {num:num});
		} else {
			return Dsq.Utils.interpolate("Showing <span id='dsq-num-posts'>%(num)s</span> comments", {num:num});
		}
	};

	this.NUMBER_OF_COMMENTS = function(num) {
		return Dsq.Utils.interpolate(
			(num == 1
				? '%(num)s comment'
				: '%(num)s comments'
			), {num:num});
	};

	this.NUMBER_OF_LIKES = function(num) {
		return Dsq.Utils.interpolate(
			(num == 1
				? '%(num)s like'
				: '%(num)s likes'
			), {num:num});
	};

	this.NUMBER_OF_POINTS = function(num) {
		return Dsq.Utils.interpolate(
			(num == 1
				? '%(num)s point'
				: '%(num)s points'
			), {num:num});
	};
};
// Dsq.FmtStrings





Dsq.CSRF_TOKEN = '3a1994e3330279e78957da82fb64f754';
Dsq.COMMENTS_RE = /(<li.*?id="?dsq-comment-(\d+)"?.*?>)((?:.|\s)*?)(<\/li>)/gim;
Dsq.POST_RE = /(<div.*?id="?dsq-comment-header-(\d+)"?.*?>)((?:.|\s)*?)(<\/div>)\s*(<div.*?class="?dsq-comment-body"?.*?>)((?:.|\s)*)(<\/div>)/gim;
Dsq.POST_BODY_RE = /\s*(<div.*?id="?dsq-comment-message-(\d+)"?.*?>)((?:.|\s)*)(<\/div>)/gim;
// HACK: Safari ends with "-->" while other browsers end with "--&gt;" as expected.
Dsq.MEDIA_POST_RE = /&lt;!--\[(.*?)\]--(?:>|&gt;)/gim;



var FragmentPacket = function(reader, writer, writer_url, is_child, receiveCallback) {
	var that = this;
	this.reader = reader;
	this.writer = writer;
	this.writer_url = writer_url;

	this.is_child = is_child || false;
	this.receiveCallback = receiveCallback;

	this._lastHash = null;

	this._accumMsg = '';

	this._lastSeqno = 0;

	this.MAX_DATA_LEN	= 1024;

	this.WAIT_TIME		= 10;

	this.READY		= 0x1;
	this.WRITING	= 0x2;
	this.FIN		= 0x4;
	this.ACK		= 0x8;

};

FragmentPacket.prototype.createListener = function() {
	var that = this;
	var listener = function() {
		that.recv();
	};
	return window.setInterval(listener, 10);
};

FragmentPacket.prototype.log = function(msg) {



};

FragmentPacket.prototype.recv = function() {
	var hash;
	if (/MSIE/.test(navigator.userAgent)) {

		hash = this.reader.name;
	} else {

		var hashIndex = this.reader.location.href.indexOf('#');
		if (hashIndex == -1) {
			return;
		}
		hash = this.reader.location.href.substring(hashIndex+1);
	}
	var flags = parseInt(hash.substring(0, 4), 10);
	var seqno = parseInt(hash.substring(4, 24), 10);
	var data  = hash.substring(24);

	if (this._lastHash !== hash) {
		this._lastHash = hash;
		this.log('recv: ' + hash);

		this.log(' flags: ' + flags);
		this.log(' seqno: ' + seqno + ' len: ' + hash.substring(4, 24).length + ' (' + hash.substring(4, 24) + ')');
		this.log(' data: ' + data + ' len: ' + data.length);

		this._lastSeqno = seqno;

		if (flags & this.WRITING) {
			this._accumMsg += data;
			this.sendFlag(this.ACK, seqno);
			if (flags & this.FIN) {
				this.log('recv finished: ' + decodeURIComponent(this._accumMsg));
				this.receiveCallback(decodeURIComponent(this._accumMsg));

				this._accumMsg = '';

				this.sendFlag(this.READY | this.ACK, this._lastSeqno);
			}
		}
	}

	return {
		flags: flags,
		seqno: seqno,
		data: data
	};
};

FragmentPacket.prototype.sendRawPacket = function(packet) {
	if (/MSIE/.test(navigator.userAgent)) {
		this.writer.name = packet;
	} else {

		this.writer.location.href = this.writer_url + '#' + packet;
	}

};

FragmentPacket.prototype.sendFlag = function(flag, seqno) {
	this.sendRawPacket(this._zerofill(flag, 4) + this._zerofill(seqno, 20));
};

FragmentPacket.prototype.send = function(msg) {
	this._send(0, encodeURIComponent(msg));
};

FragmentPacket.prototype._send = function(packetNum, msg) {
	var that = this;
	var recvBuf = this.recv();

	if (packetNum === 0) {

		if (!(recvBuf.flags & this.READY)) {
			this.log('client is not ready, waiting...');
			window.setTimeout(function() { that._send(packetNum, msg); }, this.WAIT_TIME);
			return;
		}
	} else {

		if (!( (recvBuf.flags & this.ACK) && (recvBuf.seqno === this._lastSeqno) )) {
			this.log('waiting for ack from client...');
			window.setTimeout(function() { that._send(packetNum, msg); }, this.WAIT_TIME);
			return;
		} else {
			this.log('received ack: ' + this._lastSeqno + ' ' + recvBuf.seqno);
		}
	}

	var flags = this.WRITING;
	var num_packets = Math.ceil(msg.length / this.MAX_DATA_LEN);
	this.log('num_packets: ' + num_packets);

	if (num_packets === packetNum) {

		this.log('message successfully sent!');
		this.sendFlag(this.READY | this.ACK, this._lastSeqno);
		return true;
	}

	this._lastSeqno++;

	if (packetNum == num_packets-1) {
		flags |= this.FIN;
	}

	var data = msg.substring(packetNum * this.MAX_DATA_LEN, (packetNum+1) * this.MAX_DATA_LEN);
	var packet = this._zerofill(flags, 4) + this._zerofill(this._lastSeqno, 20) + data;

	this.log('sending raw packet: ' + packet);
	this.sendRawPacket(packet);

	return this._send(packetNum + 1, msg);
};

FragmentPacket.prototype._zerofill = function(num, width) {
	var retval = num.toString();
	var retval_len = retval.length;
	for (var i = 0; i < width - retval_len; i++) {
		retval = '0' + retval;
	}
	return retval;
};

var PostMessagePacket = function(receiver, receiveCallback, id, receiverId) {
	var that = this;
	this.receiver = receiver;
	this.receiveCallback = receiveCallback;
	this.id = id;


	this.receiverId = receiverId;
};

PostMessagePacket.prototype.createListener = function() {
	var that = this;

	var listener = function(e) {

		if (!that.id) {
			that.id = e.data;
			return;
		}


		var id = e.data.split(';')[0];
		if (id !== that.id) {
			return;
		}
		var data = e.data.substring(e.data.indexOf(';') + 1);

		that.receiveCallback(data);
	};

	if (typeof window.attachEvent == 'function') {
		window.attachEvent('onmessage', listener);
	} else if (typeof window.addEventListener == 'function') {
		window.addEventListener('message', listener, false);
	} else {
		throw new Error('No method found to create event listener for PostMessagePacket.');
	}
};

PostMessagePacket.prototype.send = function(msg) {



	var needs_reget = false;
	try {
		if (typeof this.receiver.id == 'undefined' || typeof this.receiver.postMessage == 'undefined') {
			needs_reget = true;
		}
	} catch(e) {


	}
	if (needs_reget && typeof this.receiverId != 'undefined') {
		this.receiver = document.getElementById(this.receiverId).contentWindow;
	}

	var packet;
	if (!msg) {

		packet = this.id;
	} else {
		packet = this.id + ';' + msg;
	}
	this.receiver.postMessage(packet, '*');
};

PostMessagePacket._last_unique_id = null;
PostMessagePacket._get_unique_id = function() {
	var id = (new Date()).getTime();
	if (id == PostMessagePacket._last_unique_id) {
		id++;
	}
	PostMessagePacket._last_unique_id = id;
	return id.toString();
};

var JsonRpc = function() {

	this.ids = {};

	this.objectToJSON = function(obj) {
		var json = '';
		var results = [];

		if (obj === undefined || obj === null) {
			return 'null';
		}

		switch (obj.constructor) {
			case Object:
				for (var property in obj) {
					if (obj.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
						results.push(this.objectToJSON(property) + ': ' + this.objectToJSON(obj[property]));
					}
				}
				json = '{' + results.join(', ') + '}';
				break;
			case Array:
				for (var i = 0; i < obj.length; i++) {
					results.push(this.objectToJSON(obj[i]));
				}
				json = '[' + results.join(', ') + ']';
				break;
			case Number:
			case Boolean:
				json = obj.toString();
				break;
			case String:

				var specialChars = {'\b': '\\b', '\t': '\\t', '\n': '\\n', '\f': '\\f', '\r': '\\r', '\\': '\\\\'};

				json = obj.replace(/[\x00-\x1f\\]/g, function(match) {
					var ch = specialChars[match];
					return ch ? ch : '\\u00' + match.charCodeAt().toPaddedString(2, 16);
				});

				json = '"' + json.replace(/"/g, '\\"') + '"';
				break;
			default:

				json = 'null';
				break;
		}

		return json;
	};

	this.createHandler = function(send_func, registered_funcs) {
		var that = this;
		var handler = function(message) {

			try {
				var rpc = eval('(' + message + ')');
			} catch(e) {
				alert('bad JSON: ' + message);
				return;
			}
			if (rpc.method) {

				if (!registered_funcs[rpc.method]) {
					return;
				}

				var retval = registered_funcs[rpc.method].apply(null, rpc.params);
				if (rpc.id) {
					var response = {
						result: retval,
						error: null,	// TODO
						id: rpc.id
					};
					send_func(that.objectToJSON(response));
				}
			} else if(rpc.result) {

				if (!that.ids[rpc.id]) {
					return;
				}

				that.ids[rpc.id](rpc.result);
				delete that.ids[rpc.id];
			}
		};
		return handler;
	};

	this.execute = function(send_func, method, params, response_callback) {
		response_callback = response_callback || null;
		var id = (response_callback) ? (new Date()).getTime() : null;

		var request = {
			method: method,
			params: params,
			id: id
		};

		send_func(this.objectToJSON(request));

		if (id) {
			this.ids[id] = response_callback;
		}
	};
};
JsonRpc = new JsonRpc();

var ParentMessenger = function(childUrl, receiverUrl, container, receiveCallback) {


	if (navigator.userAgent.indexOf('Safari') >= 0 && parseInt(navigator.userAgent.substring(navigator.userAgent.indexOf('Version/') + 8), 10) == 3) {
		throw new Error("unsupported.");
	} else if (window.opera) {
		throw new Error("unsupported.");
	}



	if (!receiverUrl &&
		navigator.userAgent.indexOf('Gecko') >= 0 &&
		parseFloat(navigator.userAgent.slice(navigator.userAgent.indexOf('rv:') + 3, navigator.userAgent.indexOf('rv:') + 6)) < 1.9) {
		throw new Error("unsupported.");
	}


	if (/msie/i.test(navigator.userAgent) && !/opera/i.test(navigator.userAgent)) {


		if (document.domain == window.location.hostname) {
			receiverUrl = '';
		}
	}

	var that = this;
	this.childUrl = childUrl;
	this.receiverUrl = receiverUrl;
	this.container = container || document.body;

	this.packetHandler = null;


	this._ready = false;
	this._error = false;


	var _createReceiverForFragmentPacket = function() {

		that.receiver = document.createElement('iframe');
		that.receiver.src = receiverUrl;
		that.receiver.id = 'receiver_' + (new Date()).getTime();
		that.receiver.name = that.receiver.id;

		that.receiver.frameBorder = '0';
		that.receiver.frameSpacing = '0';
		that.receiver.style.borderStyle = 'none';

		var receiver_onload = function() {
			var receiver = document.getElementById(that.receiver.id).contentWindow;

			try {
				receiver.document.body.innerHTML = '';
			} catch(e) {

				that._error = true;
			}
			receiver.document.body.style.padding = '0px';
			receiver.document.body.style.margin = '0px';

			var child = receiver.document.createElement('iframe');
			child.id = 'child';
			child.name = 'child';
			child.src = that.childUrl;

			child.frameBorder = '0';
			child.frameSpacing = '0';
			child.style.borderStyle = 'none';
			child.style.width = '100%';
			child.style.height = '100%';
			receiver.document.body.appendChild(child);

			that.child = receiver.document.getElementById('child').contentWindow;
			that.receiver = receiver;

			that.packetHandler = new FragmentPacket(that.receiver, that.child, that.childUrl, false, receiveCallback);

			that._listener = that.packetHandler.createListener();

			that.packetHandler.sendFlag(that.packetHandler.READY, 0);

			that._ready = true;
		};

		that.receiver.onreadystatechange = function() {
			if (this.readyState == 'complete') {
				receiver_onload();
			}
		};

		that.receiver.onload = receiver_onload;







		if (Dsq.Utils.ie) {
			if (that.container.clientWidth === 0) {

				var _waitForWidth = function() {
					if (that.container.clientWidth > 0) {
						Dsq.Utils.fixIframesIE(that.container.id);
					} else {
						window.setTimeout(_waitForWidth, 100);
					}
				};
				_waitForWidth();

				that._once = false;
				that.receiver.onresize = function() {
					if (!that._once) {
						Dsq.Utils.fixIframesIE(that.container.id);
					}
					that._once = true;
				};
			}
		}

		that.container.appendChild(that.receiver);
	};


	var _createReceiverForPostMessage = function() {

		var receiver_onload = function() {

			that.packetHandler.send();
			that._ready = true;
		};

		var id = PostMessagePacket._get_unique_id();
		var receiverId = 'child_' + id;


		ParentMessenger['_receiver_onload_' + receiverId] = receiver_onload;

		that.container.innerHTML += '<iframe ' +
			'src="' + childUrl + '" ' +
			'id="' + receiverId + '" ' +
			'name="' + receiverId + '" ' +
			'onload="ParentMessenger._receiver_onload_' + receiverId +'();" ' +
			'></iframe>';

		that.receiver = document.getElementById(receiverId).contentWindow;
		that.packetHandler = new PostMessagePacket(that.receiver, receiveCallback, id, receiverId);
		that._listener = that.packetHandler.createListener();
	};

	if (typeof window.postMessage == 'function') {
		_createReceiverForPostMessage();
	} else {
		_createReceiverForFragmentPacket();
	}

};

ParentMessenger.prototype.sendMessage = function(message) {
	var that = this;
	if (!this._ready) {

		window.setTimeout(function() { that.sendMessage(message); }, 10);
		return;
	}
	this.packetHandler.send(message);
	return true;
};

Dsq.NewFrames = function(url) {
	this.url = url;
};

Dsq.NewFrames.prototype.init = function(onFailure) {
	var that = this;

	try {
		this.messenger = new ParentMessenger(this.url, Dsq.jsonData.integration.receiver_url, this.container, this.receive_callback);
	} catch(e) {
		if (typeof onFailure == 'function') {
			onFailure();
		}
	}

	if (typeof onFailure == 'function') {
		var iId = window.setInterval(function() {
			if (typeof that.messenger == 'undefined') {
				window.clearInterval(iId);
				return;
			}
			if (that.messenger._ready) {
				window.clearInterval(iId);
			} else if (that.messenger._error) {
				window.clearInterval(iId);
				onFailure();
			}
		}, 10);
	}
};

Dsq.NewFrames.prototype._execute = function(method, args, callback) {
	var that = this;
	if (typeof that.messenger == 'undefined') {
		return false;
	}
	JsonRpc.execute(
		function(msg) { that.messenger.sendMessage(msg); },
		method,
		args || [],
		callback);
	return true;
};

Dsq.ReplyFrame = function(container, parent_post_id) {
	var that = this;
	this.container = container;
	this.parent_post_id = parent_post_id;

	var sendFunc = function(msg) {

		Dsq.Debug.log('Dsq.ReplyFrame.sendFunc');
		that.messenger.sendMessage(msg);
	};


	var postComment_onSuccess = function(response) {
		Dsq.jsonData.posts[response.message.id] = response.message.post_meta;
		if (!Dsq.jsonData.users[response.message.post_meta.user_key]) {
			Dsq.jsonData.users[response.message.post_meta.user_key] = response.message.user_meta;
		}


		var reply_position = (typeof(disqus_insert_wrt_sort) == 'undefined' 
			? (Dsq.jsonData.forum.reply_position ? -1 : null) 
			: (Dsq.jsonData.request.sort == 2 ? null : -1));
		
		if (response.message.post_meta.approved) {
			Dsq.Post.insert(response.message.post_meta.parent_post_id || reply_position, response.message.id, response.message.post_meta.message);
		}

		Dsq.Templates.postComment_onSuccess(response, parent_post_id, response.message.id);
	};

	var postComment_onFailure = function(response) {
		Dsq.Popup.popModal(response.message, 'Error');
		Dsq.Templates.postComment_onFailure(response, parent_post_id, response.message.id);
	};

	var editComment_onSuccess = function(response) {
		var post_id = parent_post_id;
		var message = Dsq.$('dsq-comment-message-' + post_id);
		
		message.innerHTML = response.message;
		Dsq.Templates.toggleEdit(post_id);
		Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(false);
	};
	
	var editComment_onFailure = function(response) {
		var post_id = parent_post_id;
		
		Dsq.Popup.popModal('Sorry, there was an error editing this comment.', 'Edit Error');
		Dsq.Templates.toggleEdit(post_id);
		Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(false);
	};

	var getUserByEmail_onSuccess = function(response) {
		var msg = response.message;
		var fields = Dsq.Templates.getFormFields(parent_post_id);

		if (msg.username) {

			Dsq.Templates.lightboxAuthenticate(parent_post_id, 'login', {
				'username': msg.username,
				'display_name': msg.display_name,
				'avatar_url': msg.avatar_url,
				'verified': msg.verified,
				'email': fields.email.value
			});
		} else {

			Dsq.Templates.lightboxAuthenticate(parent_post_id, 'register');
		}
	};

	var validateAuth_onSuccess = function(response, auth_choice) {
		Dsq.Templates.postComment(parent_post_id, null, true, auth_choice);
	};

	var validateAuth_onFailure = function(response, auth_choice) {
		var pid = parent_post_id ? '-' + parent_post_id : '';
		var msg = response.message;

		if (auth_choice == 'register') {
			var fields = ['email', 'username', 'password'];

			for (var i = 0; i < fields.length; i++) {
				var field = fields[i];
				var errorDiv = Dsq.$('dsq-' + field + '-errors' + pid);

				if (msg[field]) {
					errorDiv.innerHTML = msg[field];
				} else {
					errorDiv.innerHTML = '';
				}
			}
		} else if (auth_choice == 'login') {
			Dsq.$('dsq-lightbox-errors' + pid).innerHTML = '<p>We couldn\'t log you in. Please verify your login.</p>';
		}
		
		Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(false);
	};

	this.receive_callback = JsonRpc.createHandler(sendFunc, {
		'postComment.onSuccess': postComment_onSuccess,
		'postComment.onFailure': postComment_onFailure,
		'editComment.onSuccess': editComment_onSuccess,
		'editComment.onFailure': editComment_onFailure,		
		'getUserByEmail.onSuccess': getUserByEmail_onSuccess,
		'validateAuth.onSuccess': validateAuth_onSuccess,
		'validateAuth.onFailure': validateAuth_onFailure,
		'reload': function() { window.location.reload(); }
	});

	this.url = Dsq.Urls.REPLY +
		'?' + (new Date()).getTime() +
		'&f=jesusmanifesto' +
		'&t=the_prodigal_consumer' +
		'&ff=' + Dsq.Thread.ff +
		'&default_text=' + disqus_default_text +
		'&ifrs=' + encodeURIComponent(disqus_iframe_css);
	if (this.parent_post_id) {
		this.url += '&parent_post=' + this.parent_post_id;
	}
};

Dsq.ReplyFrame.prototype = new Dsq.NewFrames(Dsq.ReplyFrame.url);

Dsq.ReplyFrame.prototype.post = function(author_name, author_email, author_url, authenticate, sharing_services, subscribe) {
	this._execute('postComment', [author_name, author_email, author_url, authenticate, sharing_services, subscribe]);
};

Dsq.ReplyFrame.prototype.edit = function(post_id, message) {
	this._execute('editComment', [post_id, message]);
};

Dsq.ReplyFrame.prototype.setState = function(parent_post_id, depth) {
	this._execute('setState', [parent_post_id, depth]);
};

Dsq.ReplyFrame.prototype.getUserByEmail = function(email) {
	this._execute('getUserByEmail', [email]);
};

Dsq.ReplyFrame.prototype.validateAuth = function(auth_choice, email, username, password) {
	this._execute('validateAuth', [auth_choice, email, username, password]);
};

Dsq.ReplyFrame.prototype.authenticateFacebook = function(session, forum_url) {
	this._execute('authenticateFacebook', [session, forum_url]);
};

	Dsq.Facebook = function() {
	var that = this;

	var handleSessionData = function(session) {

		var forum_url = Dsq.jsonData.forum.url;




		if (typeof disqus_facebook_forum != 'undefined') {
			forum_url = disqus_facebook_forum;
		}
		Dsq.frames.reply_0.authenticateFacebook(session, forum_url);
	};

	var onLogin = function() {
		FB.Connect.getSignedPublicSessionData(handleSessionData);
	};

	this.login = function() {
		FB.Connect.requireSession(onLogin, true);
	};
};
Dsq.Facebook = new Dsq.Facebook();


	






Dsq.Themes = {};

Dsq.Themes.narcissus = new function() {
	this.addPostContainer = 'dsq-form-area';
	this.textareaContainer = 'dsq-textarea-wrapper';



	
	this.header = function() {
		var comments_count, total_posts, num_posts;
		var html = '';
		var missing_perm_tmpl;

		if (Dsq.jsonData.request.missing_perm) {
			missing_perm_tmpl = Dsq.Templates.missingPermissions();
			if (missing_perm_tmpl) {
				html += '<div class="dsq-missing-permissions">' + missing_perm_tmpl + '</div>';
			}
		}

		total_posts = Dsq.jsonData.thread.total_posts;
		num_posts = Dsq.jsonData.thread.num_posts;

		if (total_posts) {
			comments_count = Dsq.FmtStrings.SHOWING_COMMENTS_FULL(total_posts, num_posts);
		} else {
			comments_count = Dsq.FmtStrings.SHOWING_COMMENTS_WITHOUT_PAGINATION(num_posts);
		}

		html += ' \
		<div id="dsq-comments-title"> \
			<h3>' + comments_count + '</h3> \
		</div> \
		';

		html += ' \
		<div class="dsq-options"> \
			<span class="dsq-item-sort">'
				+ Dsq.Strings.SORT_BY + ' \
				<select id="dsq-sort-select" onchange="Dsq.Thread.sortBy(this.value);"> \
					<option value="hot" ' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.sort == 4 ? 'selected="selected"' : '') + '>' + Dsq.Strings.POPULAR_NOW + '</option> \
					<option value="best" ' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.sort == 3 ? 'selected="selected"' : '') + '>' + Dsq.Strings.BEST_RATING + '</option> \
					<option value="newest" ' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.sort == 2 ? 'selected="selected"' : '') + '>' + Dsq.Strings.NEWEST_FIRST + '</option> \
					<option value="oldest" ' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.sort == 1 ? 'selected="selected"' : '') + '>' + Dsq.Strings.OLDEST_FIRST + '</option> \
				</select> \
				&nbsp; \
			</span> \
			<span class="dsq-subscribe-email"> \
				<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/email.png" style="width:12px;height:12px;vertical-align:middle"> \
				<span id="dsq-subscribe">'
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.context.subscribed
						? '<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.subscribe(0); return false">' + Dsq.Strings.UNSUBSCRIBE + '</a>'
						: '<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.subscribe(1); return false">' + Dsq.Strings.SUBSCRIBE_BY_EMAIL + '</a>')
				+ '</span> \
			</span> \
			<span class="dsq-subscribe-rss" style="width:12px;height:12px;vertical-align:middle"> \
				<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/bullet-feed.png" alt="" /> \
				<a href="http://jesusmanifesto.disqus.com/the_prodigal_consumer/latest.rss">' + Dsq.Strings.SUBSCRIBE_BY_RSS + '</a> \
			</span> \
		</div> \
		';

		
		
			html += Dsq.Templates.realtime();
			html += Dsq.Templates.showThreadSettings();
			html = Dsq.Templates.postBox() + html;

		
		

		return html;

	};
	
	this.footer = function() {
		var html = '';

		html += Dsq.Templates.pagination();


		html += Dsq.Templates.reactions();

		
			html += Dsq.Templates.trackbacks();
		


		if (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_global_moderator) {
 			html += ' \
				<div class="dsq-global-moderator-extras">'
					+ '<strong>shortname:</strong> ' + Dsq.jsonData.forum.url
					+ '<strong>thread id:</strong> ' + Dsq.jsonData.thread.id
					+ '<strong>thread slug:</strong> ' + Dsq.jsonData.thread.slug
				+ '</div> \
			';
		}

		return html;
	};
	
	this.realtime = function() {
		var html = '';
		
		if (Dsq.jsonData.realtime_enabled) {
			html += '<div id="dsq-realtime-options" class="dsq-options">'
					 + Dsq.Strings.REALTIME_UPDATING_IS + ' <strong id="dsq-realtime-status" style="text-transform: lowercase">' + Dsq.Strings.ENABLED + '</strong>. \
					 <a href="#" id="dsq-realtime-toggle" style="text-transform: capitalize"></a> \
					</div>';
		}

		if (!Dsq.jsonData.forum.streaming_realtime) {
			html += ' \
				<div style="display: none" id="dsq-realtime-alert" class="dsq-realtime-alert"><span id="dsq-realtime-queued"></span> <a href="#" id="dsq-realtime-show"></a></div> \
			';
		}
		
		return html;
	};

	this.showThreadSettings = function() {
		if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator) {
			return '';
		}

		html = '<div id="dsq-thread-settings" class="dsq-thread-settings">' + Dsq.Strings.MODERATOR_OPTIONS;
		html += '<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.showSettings(); return false;">' + Dsq.Strings.SETTINGS + '</a>';
		html += '<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.showModeratorActions(); return false;">' + Dsq.Strings.MODERATE + '</a>';
		if (Dsq.jsonData.forum.reactions_enabled && Dsq.jsonData.reactions.length === 0) {
			html += '<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Reaction.reportMissingReactions(); return false;">'
						+ Dsq.Strings.REPORT_MISSING_REACTIONS
						+ '</a>';
		}
		html +='</div>';

		return html;
	};

	this.postBox = function(post_id, use_fallback_iframe) {


		var html;
		var display_sharing_options = Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated;

		if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated && Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled && !Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post) {
			return '';
		}
		
		if (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote) {


			if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.hasOwnProperty(Dsq.jsonData.request.remote_domain)) {
				display_sharing_options = false;
			}
		}
		
		if (post_id) {
			var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
			var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_meta.user_key];				
		}
		
		var pid = post_id ? '-' + post_id : '';

		var _requestUserInfo = function() {
			var html;



			var user_has_email = false;

			html = '<div class="dsq-request-user-info"> <!-- // If authenticated --> \
				<a href="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + Dsq.Urls.LOGOUT + '?ctkn=' + Dsq.CSRF_TOKEN + '" class="dsq-request-user-logout">' + Dsq.Strings.LOGOUT + '</a> \
				<table> \
					<tr> \
						<td rowspan="2">'
							+ (!Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled ? '<a href="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + Dsq.Urls.REQUEST_USER_PROFILE + '">' : '')
								+ '<img src="' + Dsq.Urls.REQUEST_USER_AVATAR + '" width="48" height="48" class="dsq-request-user-avatar">'
							+ (!Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled ? '</a>' : '')
						+ '</td> \
						<td class="dsq-request-user-name">'
								+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote
									 ? '<span class="dsq-badge-small dsq-badge-' + Dsq.jsonData.request.remote_domain + '">' + Dsq.jsonData.request.remote_domain + '</span>'
									 : (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_verified
											? '<span class="dsq-badge-small dsq-badge-verified">Verified</span>'
											: '<span class="dsq-badge-small dsq-badge-registered">Registered</span>'))
							+ (!Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled ? ' <a href="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + Dsq.Urls.REQUEST_USER_PROFILE + '">' : '') 
								+ Dsq.jsonData.request.display_username 
							+ (!Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled ? '</a>' : '')
							+  (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote && user_has_email ? ' <small>(<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.remoteAccountSettings(); return false;">change settings</a>)</small>' : '')
							+  (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote && !Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled ? ' <small>(<a href="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/profile/info/" target="_blank">change name</a> or <a href="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/profile/avatar/" target="_blank">picture</a>)</small>' : '')
						+ '</td> \
					</tr> \
					<tr> \
						<td class="dsq-request-user-stats"> \
							<span><big>' + Dsq.jsonData.request.comments_count + '</big> ' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.comments_count == 1 ? 'comment' : 'comments') + '</span> \
							<span><big>' + Dsq.jsonData.request.likes_count + '</big> ' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.likes_count == 1 ? 'like' : 'likes') + '</span> \
							<span><big>' + Dsq.jsonData.request.points + '</big> ' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.points == 1 ? 'point' : 'points') + '</span> \
						</td> \
					</tr> \
				</table> \
			</div> \
			';
			return html;
		};

		var _loginOptions = function() {
			var html;
			html = ' \
			<div class="dsq-authenticate"> \
				<p class="dsq-autheneticate-copy">'
				+ (Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post
					? Dsq.Strings.YOU_ARE_COMMENTING_AS_A + ' <a class="dsq-help" title="Click for more information" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.helpBadges(); return false">Guest</a>. ' + Dsq.Strings.OPTIONAL + ': ' + Dsq.Strings.LOGIN_BELOW + '.'
					: Dsq.Strings.REQUIRED + ': ' + Dsq.Strings.PLEASE_LOGIN_BELOW_TO_COMMENT + '.')
				+ '</p> \
				<ul class="dsq-login-buttons">'
					+ (!Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled ? '<li class="dsq-login-button"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.login(); return false"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/themes/narcissus/login-disqus.gif" /></a></li>' : '')
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.context.use_fb_connect ? '<li class="dsq-login-button"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Facebook.login(); return false;"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/themes/narcissus/login-facebook.gif" /></a></li>' : '')
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.context.use_twitter_signin ? '<li class="dsq-login-button"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Twitter.startTwitterConnect(); return false"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/themes/narcissus/login-twitter.gif" /></a></li>' : '')
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.context.use_openid ? '<li class="dsq-login-button"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.OpenID.requestURL(); return false" ><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/themes/narcissus/login-openid.gif" /></a></li>' : '')
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.context.use_yahoo ? '<li class="dsq-login-button"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Yahoo.startYahooConnect(); return false"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/themes/narcissus/login-yahoo.gif" /></a></li>' : '')
				+ '</ul> \
			</div> \
			';
			return html;
		};

		if (!Dsq.jsonData.context.show_reply) {


			if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated) {



				return '<div id="dsq-form-area" style="display:none"><div id="dsq-textarea-wrapper"></div></div>' + _loginOptions();
			} else {
				return '';
			}
		}

		html = ' \
		<div id="' + (post_id 
			? 'dsq-reply-post-' + post_id
			: 'dsq-new-post')
		 	+ '" class="dsq-post-area"> \
			<div class="dsq-dc-logo"> \
				<a href="http://disqus.com/comments" target="_blank"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/themes/narcissus/disqus-logo.png"></a> \
			</div>'
			+ (post_id 
				? '<h3>' + Dsq.Strings.REPLYING_TO + ' ' + userData.display_name + '</h3>'
				: '<h3>' + Dsq.Strings.ADD_NEW_COMMENT + '</h3>')
			+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated 
				? _requestUserInfo()
				: _loginOptions() )
			+ '<div id="dsq-form-area' + pid + '">'
			+ '<div class="dsq-textarea"> \
				<div class="dsq-textarea-wrapper" id="dsq-textarea-wrapper' + pid + '"></div> \
			</div>'
			+ (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated
			? ' \
			<div class="dsq-post-fields"> \
				<form action="." method="GET" onsubmit="Dsq.Templates.postComment(' + post_id + ', this, false); return false;"> \
				<table> \
					<tr> \
						<td class="dsq-post-fields-left"><div class="dsq-input-wrapper"><input id="dsq-field-name' + pid + '" type="text" value="' + (disqus_def_name ? disqus_def_name : (Dsq.jsonData.session.name ? Dsq.jsonData.session.name : Dsq.Strings.NAME + '" class="dsq-placeholder')) + '" onfocus="Dsq.Templates.handlePlaceholder(event, this, \'name\')" onblur="Dsq.Templates.handlePlaceholder(event, this, \'name\')" /></div></td> \
						<td class="dsq-post-fields-right"><div class="dsq-input-wrapper"><input id="dsq-field-website' + pid + '" type="text" value="' + (Dsq.jsonData.session.url ? Dsq.jsonData.session.url : Dsq.Strings.WEBSITE + ' (' + Dsq.Strings.OPTIONAL.toLowerCase() + ')" class="dsq-placeholder') + '" onfocus="Dsq.Templates.handlePlaceholder(event, this, \'website\')" onblur="Dsq.Templates.handlePlaceholder(event, this, \'website\')" /></div></td> \
					</tr> \
					<tr> \
						<td class="dsq-post-fields-left"><div class="dsq-input-wrapper"><input id="dsq-field-email' + pid + '" type="text" value="' + (disqus_def_email ? disqus_def_email : (Dsq.jsonData.session.email ? Dsq.jsonData.session.email : Dsq.Strings.EMAIL + '" class="dsq-placeholder')) + '" onfocus="Dsq.Templates.handlePlaceholder(event, this, \'email\')" onblur="Dsq.Templates.handlePlaceholder(event, this, \'email\')" /></div></td> \
						<td class="dsq-post-fields-right"> \
							<div class="dsq-subscribe"> \
								<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Templates.chooseSubscribe(' + post_id + '); return false" class="dsq-subscribe-menu"><span id="dsq-subscribe-select' + pid + '">' + (Dsq.jsonData.request.subscribe_on_post ? Dsq.Strings.SUBSCRIBE_TO_ALL_COMMENTS_BY_EMAIL : Dsq.Strings.DO_NOT_SUBSCRIBE_TO_COMMENTS) + '</span> <small>&#9660;</small></a> \
								<ul class="dsq-panel" id="dsq-subscribe-menu' + pid + '"> \
									<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Templates.setSubscribe(2, this, ' + post_id + '); return false">Subscribe to all comments by email</a></li> \
									<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Templates.setSubscribe(0, this, ' + post_id + '); return false">Do not subscribe to comments</a></li> \
								</ul> \
								<input id="dsq-subscribe-on-post' + pid + '" type="hidden" value="' + Dsq.jsonData.request.subscribe_on_post + '" /> \
							</div> \
						</td> \
					</tr> \
				</table> \
				</form> \
			</div>'
			: '')
			+ '<div class="dsq-post-footer"> \
				<div class="dsq-sharing-options" ' + (!display_sharing_options ? 'style="display:none;"' : '') + '> \
					<button class="dsq-button-small" onfocus="document.getElementById(\'dsq-post-button' + pid + '\').focus();"><span>' + Dsq.Strings.SHARING_OPTIONS + ' <small>&#9660;</small></span></button> \
					<div class="dsq-panel"> '
						+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.twitter !== undefined
								&& Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.twitter.enabled === true
							? '<div><input type="checkbox" id="dsq-sharing-twitter' + pid + '"'
								  + (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.twitter.auto === true ? 'checked=true' : '') + '/> \
									<label for="dsq-sharing-twitter' + pid + '">' + Dsq.Strings.SHARE_ON + ' Twitter</label> \
								 </div>'
							: '')
						+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.facebook
								&& (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.facebook.enabled === true ||
										(Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote && Dsq.jsonData.request.remote_domain == 'facebook'))
							? '<div><input type="checkbox" id="dsq-sharing-facebook' + pid + '"'
									+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.facebook.auto === true ? 'checked=true' : '') + '/> \
									<label for="dsq-sharing-facebook' + pid + '">' + Dsq.Strings.SHARE_ON + ' Facebook</label> \
								 </div>'
							: '')
						+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.yahoo !== undefined
								&& Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.yahoo.enabled === true
							? '<div><input type="checkbox" id="dsq-sharing-yahoo' + pid + '"'
									+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.yahoo.auto === true ? 'checked=true' : '') + '/> \
									<label for="dsq-sharing-yahoo' + pid + '">' + Dsq.Strings.SHARE_ON + ' Yahoo!</label> \
								</div>'
							: '')
						+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.tumblr !== undefined
								&& Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.tumblr.enabled === true
							? '<div><input type="checkbox" id="dsq-sharing-tumblr' + pid + '"'
									+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.tumblr.auto === true ? 'checked=true' : '') + '/> \
									<label for="dsq-sharing-tumblr' + pid + '">' + Dsq.Strings.SHARE_ON + ' Tumblr</label> \
								 </div>'
							: '')
						+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.wordpress !== undefined
								&& Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.wordpress.enabled === true
							? '<div><input type="checkbox" id="dsq-sharing-wordpress' + pid + '"'
									+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.wordpress.auto === true ? 'checked=true' : '') + '/> \
									<label for="dsq-sharing-wordpress' + pid + '">' + Dsq.Strings.SHARE_ON + ' Wordpress</label> \
								 </div>'
							: '')
						+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.movabletype !== undefined
							  && Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.movabletype.enabled === true
							? '<div><input type="checkbox" id="dsq-sharing-movabletype' + pid + '"'
									+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.movabletype.auto === true ? 'checked=true' : '') + '/> \
									<label for="dsq-sharing-movabletype' + pid + '">' + Dsq.Strings.SHARE_ON + ' Movable Type</label> \
							   </div>'
							: '')
						+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.typepad !== undefined
							  && Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.typepad.enabled === true
							? '<div><input type="checkbox" id="dsq-sharing-typepad' + pid + '"'
									+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.sharing.typepad.auto === true ? 'checked=true' : '') + '/> \
								  <label for="dsq-sharing-typepad' + pid + '">' + Dsq.Strings.SHARE_ON + ' TypePad</label> \
							   </div>'
							: '')
						+ '<div><a href="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/profile/connections/" target="_blank" class="dsq-configure-options">' + Dsq.Strings.CONFIGURE_OPTIONS + '</a></div>'
					+ '</div> \
				</div>'
				+ '<button class="dsq-button" id="dsq-post-button' + pid + '" onclick="Dsq.Templates.postComment(' + post_id + ', this, false)"><span>' + Dsq.Strings.POST_AS + ' '
				+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.display_username
					? Dsq.jsonData.request.display_username
					: Dsq.Strings.GUEST)
				+ '</span></button>'
				+ (post_id
					? '<button class="dsq-button" id="dsq-cancel-button' + pid + '" onclick="Dsq.Post.toggleReply(' + post_id +', this)"><span>' + Dsq.Strings.CANCEL + '</span></button>'
					: '')
			+ '</div>'
			+ '</div>' // end dsq-form-area
		+ '</div> \
		';
		
		return html;
	};




	this.appendPost = function(post_id) {
		var html = '<div id="dsq-append-post-' + post_id + '"></div>';
		return html;
	};

	this.postPrependHeader = function(post_id) {
		var html;
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_meta.user_key];
		
		html = ' \
		<table> \
			<tr> \
				<td id="dsq-header-avatar-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-header-avatar" onmouseover="Dsq.Post.dropProfile(' + post_id + ')"> \
					<a id="dsq-avatar-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-avatar" href="' + userData.url + '" onclick="Dsq.Popup.popProfile(' + post_id + '); return false;">'
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.forum.show_avatar
					? '<img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.users[_meta.user_key].avatar + '" alt="" />'
					: '')
				+ '</a> \
				</td> \
				<td class="dsq-comment-header-meta"> \
		';

		
		return html;
	};
	
	this.postAppendHeader = function(post_id) {
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		var html;
		var parent_display_name = '';
		
		if(_meta.parent_post_id) {

			var _parent_meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[_meta.parent_post_id];

			if (_parent_meta) {
				var parentUserData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_parent_meta.user_key];
				parent_display_name = parentUserData.display_name;
			}
		}

		html = ' \
		<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/themes/narcissus/moderator.png" class="dsq-moderator-star" title="Moderator" /> \
		<span class="dsq-comment-header-time"><a href="#comment-' + post_id + '" onclick="Dsq.Popup.permalink(' + post_id + ')" title="Permalink">' + (_meta.is_realtime ? Dsq.Strings.JUST_NOW : _meta.date) + '</a></span> '
		+ (_meta.parent_post_id && parent_display_name
			? '<a href="#comment-' + _meta.parent_post_id + '" title="Jump to comment">in reply to ' + parent_display_name + '</a>'
			: '')
		+ '</td> \
		<td id="dsq-like-pts-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-comment-header-likes">'
		+ (_meta.points
			? _meta.points + Dsq.Utils.pluralize(_meta.points, ' person', ' people') + ' liked this.'
			: '')
		+ '</td> \
		</tr> \
		</table> \
		';
		return html;
	};

	this.preBody = function(post_id) {
		var html = '';
		return html;
	};

	this.postFooter = function(post_id) {
		var html;
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		if(_meta.killed || !_meta.approved) { return ''; }
		
		html = ' \
		<div class="dsq-comment-footer" id="dsq-comment-footer-' + post_id + '"> \
			<div class="dsq-comment-footer-left">'
				+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator || Dsq.jsonData.request.is_global_moderator
					? '<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Templates.moderateOptions(' + post_id+ '); return false">' + Dsq.Strings.MODERATE + '</a>'
					: '')
				+ '<a href="#" id="dsq-post-report-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-post-report" onclick="Dsq.Post.report(' + post_id + ', false); return false;">' + Dsq.Strings.FLAG + '</a> \
			</div> \
			<div class="dsq-comment-footer-right">'
				+ (_meta.votable 
					? '<span id="dsq-like-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-like">'
					+ (!_meta.up_voted
						? '<button class="dsq-button-small" onclick="Dsq.Post.rate(this, ' + post_id + ', 1)" >Like</button>'
						: 'You liked this.&nbsp;&nbsp;')
					+ '</span>'
					: '')
				+ (_meta.can_reply && !_meta.has_replies && _meta.from_request_user
					? '<button class="dsq-button-small dsq-post-edit" onclick="Dsq.Post.edit(this, ' + post_id + ')" >' + Dsq.Strings.EDIT + '</button>'
					: '')
				+ (_meta.can_reply
					? '<span class="dsq-comment-footer-reply" id="dsq-comment-footer-reply-' + post_id + '" onclick="Dsq.Post.toggleReply(' + post_id +', this)"> \
						<button class="dsq-button-small">' + Dsq.Strings.REPLY + '</button> \
						<button class="dsq-comment-footer-reply-tab">' + Dsq.Strings.REPLY + '</button><span></span> \
					</span>'
					: '')
			+ '</div> \
		</div> \
		';
		
		return html;
	};



	
	this.showRetweets = function(id, limit, element_id /* Optional */) {
		var source, html = '';

		for (var i = 0, reaction; reaction = Dsq.jsonData.reactions[i]; i++) {
			if (reaction.id === id) {
				source = reaction.retweets;
			}
		}

		if (source) {
			if (limit === 0) {
				limit = source.length;
			}

			for (var j = 0; j < limit; j++) {
				var rt = source[j];
				html += '<a href="' + rt.url + '">' + rt.author_name + '</a>'	+ ((j === (limit - 1)) ? '.' : ', ');
			}
		}

		if (element_id === undefined) {
			return html;
		}

		var element = document.getElementById(element_id);
		element.innerHTML = html;
		return element;
	};

	this.showMoreReactions = function(reactions, has_more, start, limit) {
		var link = document.getElementById('dsq-show-more-reactions');
		var container = link.parentNode;
		container.removeChild(link);

		for (var i = 0, reaction; reaction = reactions[i]; i++) {
			var el = Dsq.Templates.generateReactionHTML(reaction);
			if (el) {
				container.innerHTML += el;
			}
		}

		if (has_more) {
			var d = Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url;
			var f = Dsq.jsonData.forum.url;
			var t = Dsq.jsonData.thread.id;
			var s = start;
			var l = limit;

			var handler = 'Dsq.Utils.execScript(\'' + d + '/forums/' + f + '/more_reactions.js?t=' + t + '&s=' + s + '&l=' + l + '\', true); return false;';
			container.innerHTML += '<li id="dsq-show-more-reactions" class="dsq-show-more-reactions"><button class="dsq-button-small" onclick="' + handler + '">Show more reactions</button></li>';
		}
	};

	this.generateReactionHTML = function(reaction) {
		if (reaction.body === null || reaction.body == '') {
			return;
		}

		if (reaction.author_name === '') {
			reaction.author_name = '&nbsp;';
		}

		if (reaction.url === '') {
			reaction.url = reaction.get_service_url;
		}

		var item = '<li class="dsq-comment dsq-reaction" id="dsq-reaction-' + reaction.id + '">'
			+ '<div class="dsq-comment-header"> \
			<table> \
			<tr> \
			<td class="dsq-header-avatar"> \
			';

		if (reaction.author_url && reaction.author_url !== '') {
			item += '<a target="_blank" href="' + reaction.author_url +'" class="dsq-avatar">';
		}

		if (reaction.avatar_url && reaction.avatar_url !== '') {
			item += '<img src="' + reaction.avatar_url + '"/>';
		} else {

			item += '<img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.media_url + '/images/noavatar92.png"/>';
		}

		var service_icon = (reaction.get_service_name == 'trackback' || reaction.get_service_name == 'pingback' ? 'rss' : reaction.get_service_name.replace(' ', ''));
		item += (reaction.author_url && reaction.author_url !== ''
				? '</a>'
				: '')
			+ '</td>'
			+ '<td><cite class="dsq-comment-cite">' + reaction.author_name + '</cite> <span class="dsq-comment-header-time">' + reaction.date_created + '</span></td>'
			+ '<td class="dsq-comment-header-likes"></td>'
			+ '</tr></table></div>' // end dsq-comment-header
			+ '<div class="dsq-reaction-header" \
				<table> \
					<tr> \
						<td class="dsq-reaction-header-left">'
							+ '<img class="dsq-service-icon" src="' + Dsq.jsonData.media_url + '/images/reactions/services/' + service_icon + '.png" />'
							+ ' From <a class="dsq-service-name" target="_blank" href="' + reaction.url + '">' + reaction.get_service_name + '</a> '
							+ 'via <a href="' + reaction.source_url + '">' + (reaction.source == 'backtype' ? 'BackType' : 'UberVU') + '</a>'
						+ '</td>'
						+ '<td class="dsq-reaction-header-right">';

			if(reaction.retweets) {
				var num_retweets = reaction.retweets.length;
				if (num_retweets > 0) {
					if (num_retweets == 1) {
						item += 'One more retweet from <a href="' + reaction.retweets[0].url + '">'  + reaction.retweets[0].author_name + '</a>';
					} else {
						item += (num_retweets + ' more retweets from ');
						item += '<span id="dsq-reaction-retweets-' + reaction.id + '">';
						var n_tweets = (num_retweets > 3) ? 3 : num_retweets;
						item += Dsq.Templates.showRetweets(reaction.id, n_tweets);
						if (n_tweets != num_retweets) {
							item += '</span> <a onclick="Dsq.Templates.showRetweets(' + reaction.id + ', 0, \'dsq-reaction-retweets-' + reaction.id + '\');'
								+ 'this.parentNode.removeChild(this); return false;" href="#">Show all</a>';
						}
					}
				}
			}	
			item += '</td></tr> \
			</table> \
			</div>' // end dsq-reaction-header
			+ '<div class="dsq-comment-body"> \
				<div class="dsq-comment-message">' + reaction.body + '</div>'
			+ '</div> \
			<div class="dsq-comment-footer"> \
				<div class="dsq-comment-footer-left"> \
				</div>'
				+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator || Dsq.jsonData.request.is_global_moderator 
					? ' \
					<div class="dsq-comment-footer-right"> \
						<button class="dsq-button-small dsq-hide-reaction" onclick="Dsq.Reaction.hide(' + reaction.id + ')">Hide</button> \
					</div>'
					: '')
			+ '</div>'
		item += '</li>'; /* Reaction HTML ends */
		return item;
	};

	this.reactions = function() {
		var html, reaction;

		if (Dsq.jsonData.reactions === undefined || Dsq.jsonData.reactions.length === 0) {
			return '';
		}

		html = '';
		for (var i = 0; reaction = Dsq.jsonData.reactions[i]; i++) {
			var item = Dsq.Templates.generateReactionHTML(reaction);
			if (item) {
				html += item;
			}
		}

		if (Dsq.jsonData.has_more_reactions) {
			var d = Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url;
			var f = Dsq.jsonData.forum.url;
			var t = Dsq.jsonData.thread.id;
			var s = Dsq.jsonData.reactions_start;
			var l = Dsq.jsonData.reactions_limit;

			var handler = 'Dsq.Utils.execScript(\'' + d + '/forums/' + f + '/more_reactions.js?t=' + t + '&s=' + s + '&l=' + l + '\', true); return false;';
			html += '<li id="dsq-show-more-reactions" class="dsq-show-more-reactions"><button class="dsq-button-small" onclick="' + handler + '">Show more reactions</button></li>';
		}

		return '<h3 id="dsq-reactions-title" class="dsq-h3-reactions">Reactions</h3><ul id="dsq-reactions" class="dsq-reactions">' + html + '</ul>';
	};
	
	this._popupGeneric = function(content) {
		return ' \
		<div class="dsq-popup-container"> \
			<table> \
				<tbody> \
					<tr> \
						<td class="dsq-popup-tl"></td><td class="dsq-popup-b"></td><td class="dsq-popup-tr"></td> \
					</tr> \
					<tr> \
						<td class="dsq-popup-b"></td> \
						<td class="dsq-popup-body"> \
							<div class="dsq-popup-content"> \
								<div class="dsq-popup-title"> \
									<button class="dsq-button-small" style="float:right" onclick="Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true)">Close</button>' 
									+ content['header'] 
								+ '</div>'
								+ content['body']
							+ '</div> \
							<div class="powered-by"><a href="http://disqus.com/comments/">Powered by <img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/disqus-logo.png" alt="Disqus Comments" style="margin-bottom:-5px" /></a></div> \
						</td> \
						<td class="dsq-popup-b"></td> \
					</tr> \
					<tr> \
						<td class="dsq-popup-bl"></td><td class="dsq-popup-b"></td><td class="dsq-popup-br"></td> \
					</tr> \
				</tbody> \
			</table> \
		</div> \
		';
	};



	
	this.chooseSubscribe = function(post_id) {

		var pid = post_id ? '-' + post_id : '';
		var menu = Dsq.$('dsq-subscribe-menu' + pid);
		
		menu.style.display = menu.style.display == 'block' ? 'none' : 'block';
		
	};
	
	this.setSubscribe = function(value, el, post_id) {

		var pid = post_id ? '-' + post_id : '';
		var input = Dsq.$('dsq-subscribe-on-post' + pid);
		var select = Dsq.$('dsq-subscribe-select' + pid);
		var menu = Dsq.$('dsq-subscribe-menu' + pid);
		
		select.innerHTML = el.innerHTML;
		input.value = value;
		this.chooseSubscribe(post_id);
	};
	
	this.getFormFields = function(post_id) {

		var fields = {};
		var pid = post_id ? '-' + post_id : '';
		var name = Dsq.$('dsq-field-name' + pid);
		var email = Dsq.$('dsq-field-email' + pid);
		var website = Dsq.$('dsq-field-website' + pid);
		var username = Dsq.$('dsq-field-username' + pid);
		var password = Dsq.$('dsq-field-password' + pid);

		fields = {
			'name': name,
			'email': email,
			'website': website,
			'username': username,
			'password': password
		}
		
		return fields;
	}
	
	this.validateFields = function(post_id) {
		
		if(Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated) { return true; }
		
		var fields = Dsq.Templates.getFormFields(post_id);
		
		var nameField = fields.name;
		var websiteField = fields.website;
		var emailField = fields.email;
		
		websiteField.value = (websiteField.value == Dsq.Templates.placeholder['website']) ? '' : websiteField.value;
		
		var v = [{

			validator: Dsq.Validators.name,
			value: nameField.value
		}, {

			validator: Dsq.Validators.email,
			value: emailField.value
		}, {

			validator: Dsq.Validators.url,
			value: websiteField.value
		}];
		
		return Dsq.Validators.validate(v, function(e) { Dsq.Popup.popModal(e, 'Oops...') } );
	};
	
	this.checkExistingUser = function(post_id) {
		var fields = Dsq.Templates.getFormFields(post_id);		
		Dsq.Popup.loading(post_id);
		
		if (post_id) {
			Dsq.frames['reply_' + post_id].getUserByEmail(fields.email.value);
		} else {
			Dsq.frames['reply_0'].getUserByEmail(fields.email.value);
		}
	};

	this.validateAuth = function(el_clicked, post_id, auth_choice) {
		var fields = Dsq.Templates.getFormFields(post_id);
		var email = fields.email ? fields.email.value : '';
		var username = fields.username ? fields.username.value : '';
		var password = fields.password ? fields.password.value : '';
		
		Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(el_clicked, post_id);
		
		if (post_id) {
			Dsq.frames['reply_' + post_id].validateAuth(auth_choice, email, username, password);
		} else {
			Dsq.frames['reply_0'].validateAuth(auth_choice, email, username, password);
		}
	};

	this.lightboxUpdateEmail = function(post_id, new_email) {
		var fields = Dsq.Templates.getFormFields(post_id);
		fields.email.value = new_email;
	};

	this.lightboxAuthenticate = function(post_id, auth_choice, auth_data) {
		var title, body;
		var pid = post_id ? '-' + post_id : '';

		if(typeof(auth_data) == 'undefined') {
			var auth_data = Dsq.Templates.getFormFields(post_id);
		}

		d = auth_data;

		switch(auth_choice) {
			case 'register':
				var suggestedUsername = d.name.value.replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9-]/g,'').toLowerCase();
			
				title = Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post ? 'Optional:' : 'Required:';
				title += ' Register a <img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/disqus-profile.png" alt=Disqus Profile" />';

				body = ' \
				<ul class="dsq-lightbox-register-reasons"> \
				<li>Verify your comments</li> \
				<li>Edit and delete comments</li> \
				<li>Manage comments and replies</li> \
				</ul> \
				';

				body += ' \
				<div class="dsq-lightbox-auth-fields"> \
					<table> \
						<tr> \
							<td>Email</td> \
							<td><input type="text" value="' + d.email.value + '" onchange="Dsq.Templates.lightboxUpdateEmail(' + post_id + ', this.value)" /><div id="dsq-email-errors' + pid + '"></div></td> \
						</tr> \
						<tr> \
							<td>Username</td> \
							<td><input id="dsq-field-username' + pid + '" type="text" value="' + suggestedUsername + '"/><div id="dsq-username-errors' + pid + '"></div></td> \
						</tr> \
						<tr> \
							<td>Password</td> \
							<td><input id="dsq-field-password' + pid + '" type="password" /><div id="dsq-password-errors' + pid + '"></div></td> \
						</tr> \
					</table> \
					<div class="dsq-lightbox-switch-auth"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Templates.lightboxAuthenticate(' + post_id + ',\'login\'); return false">Login instead</a></div> \
				</div> \
				<div id="dsq-lightbox-errors' + pid + '" class="dsq-lightbox-errors"></div> \
				<div class="dsq-lightbox-submit"> \
					<div class="dsq-lightbox-auth-post"><button class="dsq-button" onclick="Dsq.Templates.validateAuth(this, ' + post_id + ',\'' + auth_choice + '\')">Register and Post comment</button></div>'
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post
						? '<div class="dsq-lightbox-auth-skip"><button class="dsq-button-small" onclick="Dsq.Templates.postComment(' + post_id + ', this, true)">Just post as a Guest</button></div>'
						: '')
				+ '</div> \
				';
				break;
			case 'login':
				title = Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post ? 'Optional:' : 'Required:';
				title += ' Login to your <img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/disqus-profile.png" alt=Disqus Profile" />';
				body = '';
				
				if(d.avatar_url) {
					body += '<div class="dsq-lightbox-recognized"><table><tr>';
					body += '<td><img src="' + d.avatar_url + '" alt="" /></td>';
					body += '<td><span class="dsq-badge ' + (d.verified ? 'dsq-badge-verified' : 'dsq-badge-registered') + '">' + (d.verified ? 'Verified' : 'Registered') + '</span></td>';
					body += '<td>Hey <strong>' + d.display_name + '</strong>, is that you? Login below to claim this comment.';
					body += '</tr></table></div>';
				}

				body += ' \
				<div class="dsq-lightbox-auth-fields"> \
					<table> \
						<tr> \
							<td>Username or Email</td> \
							<td><input id="dsq-field-username' + pid + '" type="text" value="' + (d.avatar_url ? d.username : '') + '" /></td> \
						</tr> \
						<tr> \
							<td>Password <a href="http://disqus.com/forgot" target="_blank">(cannot log in?)</a></td> \
							<td><input id="dsq-field-password' + pid + '" type="password" /></td> \
						</tr> \
					</table> \
					<div class="dsq-lightbox-switch-auth"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Templates.lightboxAuthenticate(' + post_id + ',\'register\'); return false">Register instead</a></div> \
				</div> \
				<div id="dsq-lightbox-errors' + pid + '" class="dsq-lightbox-errors"></div> \
				<div class="dsq-lightbox-submit"> \
					<div class="dsq-lightbox-auth-post"><button class="dsq-button" onclick="Dsq.Templates.validateAuth(this, ' + post_id + ',\'' + auth_choice + '\')">Login and Post comment</button></div>'
					+ (Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post
						? '<div class="dsq-lightbox-auth-skip"><button class="dsq-button-small" onclick="Dsq.Templates.postComment(' + post_id + ', this, true)">Just post as a Guest</button></div>'
						: '')
				+ '</div> \
				';
				break;
			default:
				break;
		}
		Dsq.Popup.lightbox(body, title, post_id);
		Dsq.$('dsq-field-username' + pid).focus();
	};
	
	this.buttonsToRestore = [];
	this.setLoadingButton = function(btn, post_id) {
		var pid = post_id ? '-' + post_id : '';
		if (btn) {

			var loadingBtn = document.createElement('button');
			loadingBtn.id = btn.id + '-loading';
			loadingBtn.innerHTML = '<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/loading-lite.gif" alt="" /> Just a moment...';
			loadingBtn.className = btn.className + ' dsq-post-loading';
			btn.parentNode.appendChild(loadingBtn);
			btn.style.display = 'none';
			var cancelBtn = Dsq.$('dsq-cancel-button' + pid);
			if(cancelBtn) { cancelBtn.style.display = 'none'; this.buttonsToRestore.push(cancelBtn); }
			this.buttonsToRestore.push(btn);
		} else {

			var buttons = this.buttonsToRestore;
			for(var i = 0; i < buttons.length; i++) {
				buttons[i].style.display = 'inline';
				Dsq.Utils.deleteNode(Dsq.$(buttons[i].id + '-loading'));
			}
		}
		
	};

	this.postComment = function(post_id, el_clicked, force, auth_choice) {
		var append_id = post_id ? '-' + post_id : '';
		var fields = Dsq.Templates.getFormFields(post_id);

		if (Dsq.Templates.validateFields(post_id)) {

			if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated && !force &&
				((!Dsq.Utils.readCookie('skipped_auth') && !disqus_skip_auth && !Dsq.jsonData.forum.disqus_auth_disabled) || !Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post)) {
				Dsq.Templates.checkExistingUser(post_id);
				return false;
			}
			var params = [];
			if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated) {
				params.push(fields.name.value,
					fields.email.value,
					fields.website.value);

				if (auth_choice == 'login' || auth_choice == 'register') {
					params.push({
						auth_choice: auth_choice,
						username: fields.username.value,
						password: fields.password.value,
						email: fields.email.value
					});
				} else {
					params.push(null);
				}

				params.push(null /* sharing options */, Dsq.$('dsq-subscribe-on-post' + append_id).value);
			} else {
				var service_checked = function(name) {
					var el = Dsq.$('dsq-sharing-' + name + append_id);
					return (el !== null && el.checked === true) ? '1' : '0';
				};
				params.push(null, null, null, null, {
					tw: service_checked('twitter'),
					fb: service_checked('facebook'),
					tr: service_checked('tumblr'),
					wp: service_checked('wordpress'),
					mt: service_checked('movabletype'),
					tp: service_checked('typepad'),
					yh: service_checked('yahoo')
				});
			}

			var frame = Dsq.frames['reply_' + (post_id ? post_id : 0)];
			frame.post.apply(frame, params);

			if (el_clicked) {
				Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(el_clicked, post_id);
			}
			
			if (force) {
				Dsq.Utils.createCookie('skipped_auth', true);	
			}
			
		} else {
			return false;
		}
	};

	this.editComment = function(el_clicked, post_id) {
		var edited_message = Dsq.$('dsq-edit-textarea-' + post_id).value;

		Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(el_clicked, post_id);
		Dsq.frames['edit_' + post_id].edit(post_id, edited_message);
	};

	this.toggleEdit = function(post_id) {
		var body = Dsq.$('dsq-comment-body-' + post_id);
		var message = Dsq.$('dsq-comment-message-' + post_id);

		if (!Dsq.Post.stateEditToggled[post_id]) {


			message.style.display = 'none';
			if (Dsq.$('dsq-edit-' + post_id)) {
				Dsq.$('dsq-edit-' + post_id).style.display = 'block';
			} else {

				var edit_area = document.createElement('div');
				edit_area.id = 'dsq-edit-' + post_id;
				edit_area.className = 'dsq-edit dsq-textarea';
				edit_area.innerHTML = ' \
				<div class="dsq-textarea-wrapper"> \
					<textarea class="dsq-edit-textarea" id="dsq-edit-textarea-' + post_id + '">' + message.innerHTML + '</textarea> \
				</div> \
				<div class="dsq-save-edit"> \
					<button onclick="Dsq.Templates.editComment(this, ' + post_id + ')" class="dsq-button-small">Save Edit</button> \
				</div> \
				<div id="dsq-edit-iframe-' + post_id + '" style="display: none"></div> \
				';

				body.appendChild(edit_area);

				if (!Dsq.frames['edit_' + post_id]) {
					var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
					Dsq.frames['edit_' + post_id] = new Dsq.ReplyFrame(Dsq.$('dsq-edit-iframe-' + post_id), post_id);
					Dsq.frames['edit_' + post_id].init();
					Dsq.frames['edit_' + post_id].setState(post_id, _meta.depth);
				}
			}
		} else {

			message.style.display = 'block';
			Dsq.$('dsq-edit-' + post_id).style.display = 'none';
		}
		
		Dsq.Post.stateEditToggled[post_id] = !Dsq.Post.stateEditToggled[post_id];
	};
	
	this.edit = function(el, post_id) {

		Dsq.Templates.toggleEdit(post_id);
	};

	this.toggleReply = function(post_id, button) {
		
		if(!this.stateReplyToggled[post_id]) {

			if (Dsq.$('dsq-reply-post-' + post_id)) {
				Dsq.$('dsq-append-post-' + post_id).style.display = 'block';
			} else {
				Dsq.$('dsq-append-post-' + post_id).innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.postBox(post_id);
				var container = Dsq.$('dsq-textarea-wrapper-' + post_id);
				if (!Dsq.frames['reply_' + post_id] && container) {
					var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
					Dsq.frames['reply_' + post_id] = new Dsq.ReplyFrame(container, post_id);
					Dsq.frames['reply_' + post_id].init(function() {

						Dsq.$('dsq-append-post-' + post_id).innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.postBox(post_id, true);
						Dsq.$('dsq-form-area-' + post_id).innerHTML = '';

						var theme = (typeof disqus_frame_theme == 'undefined') ? 'default' : disqus_frame_theme;
						Dsq.Iframes.showReplyIframeInContainer(Dsq.$('dsq-form-area-' + post_id), post_id, {theme: theme});

					});
					Dsq.frames['reply_' + post_id].setState(post_id, _meta.depth);
				}
			}
			Dsq.$('dsq-append-post-' + post_id).className = 'dsq-append-post';
			Dsq.$('dsq-comment-footer-reply-' + post_id).className = 'dsq-comment-footer-reply-active';
			
		} else {

			Dsq.$('dsq-append-post-' + post_id).style.display = 'none';
			Dsq.$('dsq-append-post-' + post_id).className = '';
			Dsq.$('dsq-comment-footer-reply-' + post_id).className = 'dsq-comment-footer-reply';
		}
		
		this.stateReplyToggled[post_id] = !this.stateReplyToggled[post_id];

		if(Dsq.Utils.ie && this.stateReplyToggled[post_id]) {

		}

		Dsq.Events.fire(Dsq.Events.REPLY_IFRAME_TOGGLED, {
			postId: post_id,
			opened: this.stateReplyToggled[post_id]
		});
	};
	
	this.moderateOptions = function(post_id) {
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_meta.user_key];
		
		if(!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator && !Dsq.jsonData.request.is_global_moderator) { return false; }

		var html;
		
		html = ' \
		<div class="dsq-moderate-options"> \
		<table>'
		+ (_meta.email ? '<tr><td>Email</td><td>' + _meta.email + '</td></tr>' : '')
		+ (_meta.ip ? '<tr><td>IP address</td><td>' + _meta.ip + '</td></tr>' : '')
		+ '<tr> \
			<td>Actions</td> \
			<td><ul>'
			+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.moderator_can_edit
				? '<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.edit(this, ' + post_id + '); Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true); return false;">Edit Comment</a></li>'
				: '')
			+ '<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.removePost(' + post_id + ', 1); Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true); return false;">Delete Comment</a></li> \
			<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.reportSpam(' + post_id + '); Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true); return false;">Mark Spam</a></li> \
			<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.blacklist(' + post_id + '); return false">Block User</a></li> \
			</ul></td> \
			</table> \
		</div> \
		';
		
		html += '<p>Go to the full <a href="http://disqus.com/comments/moderate/" target="_blank">moderate panel</a> for more options.</p>';
		
		return Dsq.Popup.popModal(html, 'Moderate Options', post_id);
	};
	
	this.placeholder = {
		'class': 'dsq-placeholder',
		'name': Dsq.Strings.NAME,
		'email': Dsq.Strings.EMAIL,
		'website': Dsq.Strings.WEBSITE + ' (' + Dsq.Strings.OPTIONAL.toLowerCase() + ')'
	};
	
	this.handlePlaceholder = function(evt, el, key) {
		var placeholder = Dsq.Templates.placeholder[key];
		var className = Dsq.Templates.placeholder['class'];
		
		switch(evt.type) {
			case 'focus':
				if(el.value == placeholder) {
					el.value = '';
					el.className = '';
				}
				break;

			case 'blur':
				if(el.value == '') {
					el.value = placeholder;
					el.className = className;
				}
				break;
			default:
				break;
		}
	};
	
	this.paginate = function(page, el_clicked) {

		var extra_params = '';

		if(typeof disqus_per_page != 'undefined') {
			extra_params += '&per_page=' + disqus_per_page;
		}
		if(typeof disqus_sort != 'undefined') {
			extra_params += '&sort=' + disqus_sort;
		}

		Dsq.$('dsq-pagination').innerHTML += '<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/loading-small.gif">';
		
		if(el_clicked) {
			Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(el_clicked);
		}
		
		Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/thread.js'
			+ '?slug='	+ 'the_prodigal_consumer'
			+ '&p='		+ page
			+ extra_params);
	};
	
	
	this.rate = function(el, id, vote) {


		if(Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated || Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_votes) {
			if(vote == 1) {
				Dsq.$('dsq-like-' + id).innerHTML = '<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/loading-small.gif">';
			}
			Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/vote.js'
				+ '?post_id='    + id
				+ '&vote='        + vote);
		} else {
			Dsq.Popup.login('To rate, please log in');
		}
	};

	this.voted = function(post_id, points, vote) {

		Dsq.$('dsq-like-pts-' + post_id).innerHTML = points + Dsq.Utils.pluralize(points, ' person', ' people') + ' liked this.';

		if(vote) {
			Dsq.$('dsq-like-' + post_id).innerHTML = 'You liked this.&nbsp;&nbsp;';
		}
	};




	this.postComment_onSuccess = function(response, parent_post_id, post_id) {
		var approved = response.message.post_meta.approved;

		if (parent_post_id) {
			Dsq.Post.toggleReply(parent_post_id);
		}

		Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true);
		
		if (approved) {
			Dsq.Post.incrementPostCount();
			Dsq.Post.outlineComment(post_id);
		} else {			
			var unapproved_msg = 'Thanks for posting!\
	 Your comment must be approved by a moderator before appearing here.\
			';
			Dsq.Popup.popModal(unapproved_msg, 'Comment awaiting approval', post_id);
		}

		var sharing_results = response.message.sharing_results;
		var sharing_errors = '';
		for (var service in sharing_results) {
			if (sharing_results.hasOwnProperty(service) === true) {
				if (sharing_results[service].error === true) {
					sharing_errors += service + ', ';
				}
			}
		}

		if (sharing_results.facebook && sharing_results.facebook.callback) {
			FB.ensureInit(function() {
				FB.Connect.streamPublish('', sharing_results.facebook.attachment);
			});
		}

		if (sharing_errors !== '') {
			var message = 'Your comment was posted, but there were errors sharing with the following connections: ';
			message += sharing_errors.replace(/,\s$/, '');
			message += '<p><a href="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/profile/connections" target="_blank">Configure your connections here</a></p>'
			Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, 'Sharing options');
		}

		Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(false);
	};

	this.postComment_onFailure = function(response, parent_post_id, post_id) {

		Dsq.Templates.setLoadingButton(false);
	};
};




// TODO: It might be faster to use string methods to find all <li (...) </li> blocks and pass to Dsq.PostHandler manually.
Dsq.CommentsHandler = function(str, head, post_id, content, tail, offset, s) {
	var prepend_post = Dsq.Templates.prependPost(post_id);
	var append_post = Dsq.Templates.appendPost(post_id);

	content = content.replace(Dsq.POST_RE, Dsq.PostHandler);
	Dsq.Templates.postLoopCounter++;
	head = Dsq.Templates.Filters.commentContainer(post_id, head);
	return prepend_post + head + content + tail + append_post;
};

Dsq.PostHandler = function(str, h_head, post_id, h_content, h_tail, b_head, b_content, b_tail, offset, s) {
	var prepend_header = Dsq.Templates.postPrependHeader(post_id);
	var append_header = Dsq.Templates.postAppendHeader(post_id);
	var prepend_body = Dsq.Templates.preBody(post_id);
	var append_body = Dsq.Templates.postBody(post_id);
	var append_footer = Dsq.Templates.postFooter(post_id);

	b_content = b_content.replace(Dsq.POST_BODY_RE, Dsq.PostBodyHandler);
	return h_head + prepend_header + h_content + append_header + h_tail + b_head + prepend_body + b_content + append_body + b_tail + append_footer;
};

Dsq.PostBodyHandler = function(str, head, post_id, content, tail, offset, s) {
	content = Dsq.Templates.Filters.commentContent(post_id, content);
	return head + content + tail;
};

Dsq.MediaPostHandler = function(str, args, offset, s) {
	args = args.split(' ');
	if(args[0] == 'seesmic') {
		return '<br />' + Dsq.Templates.mediaSeesmic(args[1], args[2]);
	}
	return '';
};


/**
 * Shorcuts
 */
Dsq.$ = function(element) { return document.getElementById(element); };
Dsq.$b = document.body || document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0];


/**
 * Dsq.Debug: Logging functions.
 */

Dsq.Debug = new function() {this.log=function(s){};this.profile=function(f){if(typeof f == 'function')return f();else return eval(f);};};


/**
 * Dsq.Urls: URL paths
 */
Dsq.Urls = new function() {
	this.LOGIN = '/profile/login/';
	this.LOGOUT = '/logout/';
	this.REPLY = 'http://jesusmanifesto.disqus.com/the_prodigal_consumer/reply.html';
	this.REQUEST_USER_PROFILE = '/AnonymousUser/';
	this.REQUEST_USER_AVATAR = 'http://media.disqus.com/images/noavatar92.png';
};
// Dsq.Urls

/**
 * Dsq.Validators: Validation for form fields
 */
Dsq.Validators = new function() {
	this.VALID_EMAIL_RE = /^[a-z0-9\-\_\+]+(\.[a-z0-9\-\_\+]+)*\@(([a-z0-9\-\_\+]+(\.[a-z0-9\-\_\+]+)*)+\.[a-z]{2,}|([0-9]+\.){3}[0-9]+)$/i;
	this.name = function(name) {
		var error = false;

		if(typeof Dsq.Templates.placeholder !== 'undefined' &&
		   name == Dsq.Templates.placeholder.name) {
			error = true;
		}
		if(name.length <= 1) {
			error = true;
		}

		if(error) {
			return "Please enter a name to comment.";
		} else {
			return true;
		}
	};
	this.email = function(addr) {
		if(Dsq.Validators.VALID_EMAIL_RE.test(addr)) {
			return true;
		} else {
			return "Please enter a valid email to comment.";
		}
	};
	this.url = function(addr) {
		if(!addr || addr.indexOf('.') != -1) {
			return true;
		} else {
			return "Please check your website URL (this field is optional).";
		}
	};

	this.validate = function(bulk_validation, failure_callback) {
		failure_callback = failure_callback || function(e){ alert(e); };

		for(var i = 0; i < bulk_validation.length; i++) {
			v = bulk_validation[i];
			ret = v.validator(v.value);
			if(ret !== true) {
				failure_callback(ret);
				return false;
			}
		}
		return true;
	};
};

/**
 * Dsq.Utils: Generic utility functions.
 */
Dsq.Utils = new function() {
	this.ie = /msie/i.test(navigator.userAgent) && !/opera/i.test(navigator.userAgent);
	this.ie7 = (document.all && !window.opera && window.XMLHttpRequest) ? true : false;
	this.ie6 = (!window.XMLHttpRequest) ? true: false;
	this.webkit = navigator.userAgent.indexOf('AppleWebKit/') >= 0;
	this.gebiFromElementCollectionCache = {};
	this._styleSheet = null;

	this.gebiFromElement = function(el, id, tag) {
		// This only method only helps IE.
		if(!this.ie) {
			return Dsq.$(id);
		} else {
			var cacheKey = el.id + '-' + tag;
			tag = tag || 'div';
			if(typeof this.gebiFromElementCollectionCache[cacheKey] != 'undefined') {
				collection = this.gebiFromElementCollectionCache[cacheKey];
			} else {
				collection = el.getElementsByTagName(tag);
				this.gebiFromElementCollectionCache[cacheKey] = collection;
			}

			for(var i = 0; i < collection.length; i++) {
				if(collection[i].id == id) {
					return collection[i];
				}
			}
			return null;
		}
	};

	this.execOnReady = function(func) {
		var node = document.createElement('document:ready');
		try {
			node.doScroll('left');
			func();
			node = null;
		} catch(err) {
			setTimeout(function() { Dsq.Utils.execOnReady(func); }, 10);
		}
	};


	// Courtesy of http://www.quirksmode.org/js/cookies.html
	this.createCookie = function(name,value,days) {
		if (days) {
			var date = new Date();
			date.setTime(date.getTime()+(days*24*60*60*1000));
			var expires = "; expires="+date.toGMTString();
		}
		else var expires = "";
		document.cookie = name+"="+value+expires+"; path=/";
	};

	this.readCookie = function(name) {
		var nameEQ = name + "=";
		var ca = document.cookie.split(';');
		for(var i=0;i < ca.length;i++) {
			var c = ca[i];
			while (c.charAt(0)==' ') c = c.substring(1,c.length);
			if (c.indexOf(nameEQ) == 0) return c.substring(nameEQ.length,c.length);
		}
		return null;
	};

	this.eraseCookie = function(name) {
		Dsq.Utils.createCookie(name,"",-1);
	};

	this.deleteNode = function(node) {
		if(node) {
			this.deleteChildren(node);
			if(typeof node.outerHTML != 'undefined') { node.outerHTML = ''; }
			else if(node.parentNode) { node.parentNode.removeChild(node); }
			delete node;
		}
	};

	this.deleteChildren = function(node) {
		if(node) {
			for(var x = node.childNodes.length-1; x >= 0; x--) {
				var childNode = node.childNodes[x];
				if(childNode.hasChildNodes()) { this.deleteChildren(childNode); }
				if(typeof childNode.outerHTML != 'undefined') { childNode.outerHTML = ''; }
				else node.removeChild(childNode);
				delete childNode;
			}
		}
	};

	this.findPos = function(obj) {
		var curleft = 0;
		var curtop = 0;
		if (obj.offsetParent) {
			do {
				curleft += obj.offsetLeft;
				curtop += obj.offsetTop;
			} while (obj = obj.offsetParent);
		}
		return [curleft,curtop];
	};

	this.getWindowSize = function() {
		var windowWidth = -1;
		var windowHeight = -1;

		if(typeof(window.innerWidth) == 'number') { //Non-IE
			windowWidth = window.innerWidth;
			windowHeight = window.innerHeight;
		} else if(document.documentElement) { // IE 6+ in 'standards compliant mode'
			windowWidth = document.documentElement.clientWidth || document.body.clientWidth;
			windowHeight = document.documentElement.clientHeight || document.body.clientHeight;
		}

		return [windowWidth, windowHeight];
	}

	this.getScrollPos = function() {
		var scrollWidth, scrollTop;

		if(document.documentElement && (document.documentElement.scrollTop || document.documentElement.scrollWidth)) {
			scrollWidth = document.documentElement.scrollWidth;
			// IE is weird here.  If no doctype is provided, document.body.scrollTop is 0,
			// otherwise document.documentElement.scrollTop is 0.
			scrollTop = document.documentElement.scrollTop || document.body.scrollTop;
		} else if(document.body.scrollTop && document.body.scrollWidth) {
			scrollWidth = document.body.scrollWidth;
			scrollTop = document.body.scrollTop;
		}

		return [scrollWidth, scrollTop];
	}

	this.addEventListener = function(instance, eventName, listener) {
		var listenerFn = listener;
		if (instance.addEventListener) {
			instance.addEventListener(eventName, listenerFn, false);
		} else if (instance.attachEvent) {
			listenerFn = function() {
				listener(window.event);
			};
			instance.attachEvent("on" + eventName, listenerFn);
		} else {
			throw new Error("Event registration not supported");
		}
		return {
			instance: instance,
			name: eventName,
			listener: listenerFn
		};
	};

	this.removeEventListener = function(event) {
		var instance = event.instance;
		if (instance.removeEventListener) {
			instance.removeEventListener(event.name, event.listener, false);
		} else if (instance.detachEvent) {
			instance.detachEvent("on" + event.name, event.listener);
		}
	};

	this.fixIframesIE = function(id) {
		var disqusThread = Dsq.$(disqus_container_id);
		var iframes = disqusThread.getElementsByTagName('iframe');

		if(id) {
			var container = Dsq.$(id);
		} else {
			var container = Dsq.$('dsq-content');
		}

		for(i = 0; i < iframes.length; i++) {
			if (container) {
				iframes[i].style.width = container.offsetWidth;
			}
		}
	};

	this.getElementsByClassName = function(oElm, strTagName, strClassName) {
	/* Credit: Jonathan Snook [http://www.snook.ca/jonathan], Robert Nyman [http://www.robertnyman.com] */
		var arrElements = (strTagName == "*" && oElm.all)? oElm.all : oElm.getElementsByTagName(strTagName);
		var arrReturnElements = new Array();
		strClassName = strClassName.replace(/\-/g, "\\-");
		var oRegExp = new RegExp("(^|\\s)" + strClassName + "(\\s|$)");
		var oElement;
		for(var i = 0; i < arrElements.length; i++) {
			oElement = arrElements[i];
			if(oRegExp.test(oElement.className)) {
				arrReturnElements.push(oElement);
			}
		}
		return (arrReturnElements);
	};

	this.postToUrl = function(url, post_data, opt_redirect) {
		var form = document.createElement('form');
		var iframe_container = document.createElement('div');
		var id = 'dsq-temp-iframe-' + (new Date()).getTime();

		form.method = 'POST';
		form.action = url;
		if (!opt_redirect) {
			form.target = id;
		}
		iframe_container.innerHTML = '<iframe style="display:none" name="' + id + '" id="' + id + '"></iframe>';

		for(var key in post_data) {
			if(post_data.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
				var input = document.createElement('input');
				input.name = key;
				input.type = 'hidden';
				input.value = post_data[key];

				form.appendChild(input);
			}
		}

		Dsq.$b.appendChild(iframe_container);
		Dsq.$b.appendChild(form);
		form.submit();
	};

	// Strips integer id from id of element in the form ('some-id-###')
	this.extractId = function(e) {
		var chunks = e.id.split('-');
		if(chunks.length <= 1) {
			return 0;
		} else {
			return parseInt(chunks[chunks.length-1]);
		}
	};

	this.getStyle = function(el, styleProp) {
		if(el.currentStyle) {
			var y = el.currentStyle[styleProp];
		} else if(window.getComputedStyle) {
			var y = document.defaultView.getComputedStyle(el, null).getPropertyValue(styleProp);
		}

		if(y == 'transparent' || y == '') {
			this.getStyle(el.parentNode, styleProp);
		} else {
			return y;
		}
	};

	this.execScript = function(url, append_qs, container) {
		var script = document.createElement('script');
		append_qs = typeof append_qs == 'undefined' ? true : append_qs;
		container = container || Dsq.container;

		if(append_qs) {
			var j = (url.indexOf('?') >= 0) ? '&' : '?';
			url += j + (new Date()).getTime();
		}
		script.type = 'text/javascript';
		script.charset = 'UTF-8';
		script.src = url;
		container.appendChild(script);
		return script;
	};

	this.pluralize = function(num, singular, plural) {
		return (num != 1) ? plural || 's' : singular || '';
	};

	this.getRequestParams = function(queryString /* optional */) {
		var pairs, tuple;
		var params = {};

		queryString = queryString || window.location.search.substring(1);
		pairs = queryString.split('&');

		for (var i = 0, pair; pair = pairs[i]; i++) {
			tuple = pair.split('=');
			params[tuple[0]] = (tuple[1] || true);
		}

		return params;
	};

	this.addCssRule = function(selector, styleText, index) {
		var stylesheet;
		index = index || 0;

		if(!this._styleSheet) {
			var styleEl = document.createElement('style');
			document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(styleEl);
			this._styleSheet = styleEl.sheet;
			if(!this._styleSheet) {
				// IE does not like our newly created stylesheet.
				this._styleSheet = document.styleSheets[document.styleSheets.length-1];
			}
		}
		stylesheet = this._styleSheet;

		if(stylesheet.insertRule) {
			var ruleText = selector + ' { ' + styleText + ' }';
			if(index == -1) {
				index = stylesheet.cssRules.length;
			}
			stylesheet.insertRule(ruleText, index);
		} else if(stylesheet.addRule) {
			stylesheet.addRule(selector, styleText, index);
		}
	};

	this.forEachIn = function(obj, callback) {
		for(var key in obj) {
			if(obj.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
				callback(key, obj[key]);
			}
		}
	};

	this._interpolateGlobalContext = {
		// values that get used a lot and are global to the request
		'profile_url': Dsq.Urls.REQUEST_USER_PROFILE,

		'disqus_url': Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url,
		'media_url': Dsq.jsonData.settings.media_url,
		'request_username': Dsq.jsonData.request.username,
		'request_display_username': Dsq.jsonData.request.display_username,
		'forum_name': Dsq.jsonData.forum.name
	};

	this.renderFromContextStack = function(key, contexts) {
		// Returns the first instance of `key` in the array of objects `contexts` or else ''
		for (var i=0; i<contexts.length; i++) {
			if (contexts[i][key] !== undefined) {
				return String(contexts[i][key]);
			}
		}
		throw new Error('key ' + key + ' not found in context');
	};

	var that = this;
	this.interpolate = function(fmt, opt_localContext) {
		// Interpolate `fmt` named-format string with an assumed global context.
		// Based on `interpolate` in django.views.i18n
		var contextStack = [opt_localContext || {}, that._interpolateGlobalContext];
		return fmt.replace(/%\(\w+\)s/g, function(match){
			return that.renderFromContextStack(match.slice(2,-2), contextStack);
		});
	};

	this.stripTags = function(s) {
		// Removes HTML tags from `s`
		return s.replace(/(<([^>]+)>)/g,"");

	};

	this.assert = function(b) {
		if (!b) {
			throw new Error('Assertion error.');
		}
	};

};
// Dsq.Utils

/**
 * Dsq.Popup: Popup helper functions.
 */
Dsq.Popup = new function() {
	this.timeHide = new Array();
	this.timeShow = new Array();
	this.activePopup = {};
	this.profileCache = {};
	this.statusCache = {};

	this.showTimer = function(post_id) {
		// clear the hide timer
		clearTimeout(this.timeHide[post_id]);

		// start the timer
		if(!Dsq.Popup.profileIsOn && !Dsq.Thread.adminIsOn) {
			this.timeShow[post_id] = setTimeout("Dsq.Popup.popProfile(\"" + post_id + "\")", 400);
		}
	};

	this.hideTimer = function(post_id) {
		// clear the show timer
		clearTimeout(this.timeShow[post_id]);
	};

	this.updateProfile = function(username) {
		// Callback from /embed/profile.js
		if (this.statusCache[username]) {
			var statusEl = Dsq.$('dsq-profile-status-' + username);
			statusEl.innerHTML = this.statusCache[username];
			statusEl.style.display = 'block';
		}

		if (this.profileCache[username]) {
			var _cache = this.profileCache[username];

			var _genhtml = function(text) { return '<span><big>' + text + '</big></span>'; };
			var _no_comments = _genhtml(Dsq.FmtStrings.NUMBER_OF_COMMENTS(_cache.comments_count));
			var _no_likes = _genhtml(Dsq.FmtStrings.NUMBER_OF_LIKES(_cache.likes_count));
			var _no_points = _genhtml(Dsq.FmtStrings.NUMBER_OF_POINTS(_cache.points));

			var statsEl = Dsq.$('dsq-popup-profile-user-stats-' + username);
			statsEl.innerHTML = '';

			if (Dsq.jsonData.users[username].registered) {
				statsEl.innerHTML = _no_comments + _no_likes;
			}
			statsEl.innerHTML += _no_points;

			var activeSites = '';
			for (var i = 0; i < _cache.active_sites.length; i++) {
				var site = _cache.active_sites[i];
				activeSites += '<li><a href="' + site.url + '"> \
					<img src="' + site.favicon + '"/ width="16" height="16"/></a>\
					<a href="' + site.url + '">' + site.name + '</a></li>';
			}
			if (activeSites !== '') {
				Dsq.$('dsq-popup-profile-active-sites-' + username).innerHTML = activeSites;
			} else {
				Dsq.$('dsq-popup-profile-active-sites-' + username).innerHTML = 'This site.';
			}

			var moderatedSites = '';
			for (var i = 0; i < _cache.moderated_sites.length; i++) {
				var site = _cache.moderated_sites[i];
				moderatedSites += '<li><a href="' + site.url + '"> \
					<img src="' + site.favicon + '"/ width="16" height="16"/></a>\
					<a href="' + site.url + '">' + site.name + '</a></li>';
			}
			if (moderatedSites !== '') {
				Dsq.$('dsq-popup-profile-moderated-' + username).innerHTML = moderatedSites;
			} else {
				Dsq.$('dsq-popup-profile-moderated-wrapper-' + username).innerHTML = '';
			}
		}

		// Reposition popup after full HTML is rendered
		if(Dsq.Popup.activePopup && Dsq.Popup.activePopup.el) {
			Dsq.Popup.initPopup(Dsq.Popup.activePopup.el, Dsq.Popup.activePopup.id, Dsq.Popup.activePopup.type);
		}

	};

	this.showCookieMsgs = function() {
		var title = '';
		var message = '';
		var numAlerts = 0;

		Dsq.Utils.forEachIn(Dsq.jsonData.cookie_messages, function(k, v) {
			if (!v) return;

			switch(k) {
				// Cookie: Twitter
				case 'post_twitter':
					if (v === 'error') {
						title = 'Twitter Error!';
						message += '<li id="dsq-msg-twitter-error">Oops, we couldn\'t tweet this comment. Please check your <a href="http://disqus.com/account/services">account settings</a>.</li>';
					} else {
						var _msg = v.split(':');
						title = 'Tweeted!';
						message += '<li id="dsq-msg-twitter-success">Your comment was successfully tweeted. <a href="http://twitter.com/' + _msg[0] + '/status/' + _msg[1] + '">Click here to view the tweet</a>.</li>';
					}
					break;
				// Cookie: Unapproved Post
				case 'post_not_approved':
					title = 'Comment awaiting approval by a moderator';
					message += '<li id="dsq-msg-post-not-approved">Your comment must be approved by a moderator before appearing here.</li>';
					break;
				// Cookie: Profile Found
				case 'post_has_profile':
					title = 'Use your existing commenter profile';
					message += '<li id="dsq-msg-post-has-profile">You have just posted your commment as a <span class="dsq-badge-guest">Guest</span>, but you may already have a <span class="logo-disqus">Disqus</span> Profile.<br /><br /><a href="http://disqus.com/claim">Log in and claim this comment!</a></li>';
					break;
				case 'user_created':
					var _data = v.split(':');
					title = 'Profile created!';
					message += '<li id="dsq-msg-user-created">You have just created a <span class="logo-disqus">Disqus</span> Profile, the best way to claim, manage, and track your comments all over the web. \
					<br /><br />A confirmation is being sent to <strong>' + _data[1] + '</strong>. Please check for this email in order to verify your profile. \
					<ul class="dsq-list-tick"> \
						<li>Your username is <strong>' + _data[0] +'</strong>. <a href="http://disqus.com/people/' + _data[0] + '/" target="_blank">Click here to view your public profile</a>.</li> \
						<li>Be sure to set your profile picture, as well as connect your <span class="dsq-badge-facebook">Facebook</span> and <span class="dsq-badge-twitter">Twitter</span> accounts. <a href="http://disqus.com/account/" target="_blank">Click here for account settings</a>.</li> \
					</ul> \
					</li>'
					break;
				default:
					break;
			}
			numAlerts++;
		});

		if(numAlerts > 1) {
			message = '<ul class="dsq-list-bluebullet">' + message;
			message += '</ul>';
			title = 'Thanks for posting!';
		}
		if(numAlerts > 0) {
			if(typeof(disqus_cookie_msgs) == 'function') {
				disqus_cookie_msgs(message, title);
			} else {
				Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, title);
			}
		}
	};

	this.helpBadges = function(post_id) {
		var html = ' \
			<ul class="dsq-popup-help"> \
				<li><span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-verified">Verified</span> has a <span class="logo-disqus">Disqus</span> Profile with a confirmed email address.</li> \
				<li><span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-registered">Registered</span> has a <span class="logo-disqus">Disqus</span> Profile, but has not yet confirmed his or her email address.</li> \
				<li><span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-guest">Guest</span> is not logged in with any account and has not claimed his or her comments.</li> \
				<li class="dsq-help-otheraccts">Other accounts</li> \
				<li><span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-facebook">Facebook</span> is using his or her Facebook profile via Facebook Connect.</li> \
				<li><span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-twitter">Twitter</span> is using his or her Twitter profile via Twitter Sign-in.</li> \
				<li><span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-openid">OpenID</span> is using his or her OpenID.</li> \
			</ul> \
		';

		this.popModal(html, 'Help: Types of Commenters', post_id);
		return;
	};

	this.permalink = function(post_id) {
		var header = 'Link to this comment';
		var body = '<strong>You are anchored to</strong>:<br />' + document.location.protocol + '//' + document.location.host + document.location.pathname + document.location.search + '#comment-' + post_id;

		this.popModal(body, header, post_id);
	};

	this.login = function(header, body) {
		var h = header || 'Login or Register';
		var b = body || '';
		b += Dsq.Templates.frameLogin({id: 'dsq-popup-login'});
		b += '</iframe>'; // HACK: Sometimes there is something funky with the IFRAME SRC that causes no end tag
		this.popModal(b, h, null, true, 'dsq-popup-login');
	};

	this.blacklist = function(id) {
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[id];
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_meta.user_key];
		var title = 'Add to Blacklist';
		var message = ' \
		Adding this person to the blacklist will block him or her from commenting on this site. Check the following types that you would like to add to the blacklist:'
		+ (userData['registered'] ?
			'<div class="dsq-blacklist-option"> \
				<input id="dsq-blacklist-username" type="checkbox" checked> \
				<label for="dsq-blacklist-username"><strong>Username</strong>: ' + userData['username'] + '</label> \
			</div>'
			: '')
		+ (_meta.email ?
			'<div class="dsq-blacklist-option"> \
				<input id="dsq-blacklist-email" type="checkbox" checked> \
				<label for="dsq-blacklist-email"><strong>Email address</strong>: ' + _meta.email + '</label> \
			</div>'
			: '')
		+ '<div class="dsq-blacklist-option"> \
			<input id="dsq-blacklist-ip" type="checkbox" onclick="Dsq.$(\'dsq-blacklist-ip-warning\').style.display=\'block\'"> \
			<label for="dsq-blacklist-ip"><strong>IP address</strong>: ' + _meta.ip + '</label> \
		</div> \
		';

		message += ' \
			<p id="dsq-blacklist-ip-warning" style="display:none">	\
				Note: Blocking this person\'s IP address may also unintentionally prevent others, who share his/her IP address, from commenting on this site. \
				This may include people who are sharing the same computer, living in the same house, or using the same Internet provider. Only block an IP address as a last resort. \
			</p> \
		';

		message += ' \
			<p style="text-align:center"><button onclick="Dsq.Post.blockUser(' + id + '); this.disabled=true; this.innerHTML=\'Just one moment...\'">Add to Blacklist</button></p> \
		';

		Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, title);
	};

	this.remoteAccountSettings = function() {
		var body = '';
		// Set up IFrame.
		var params = {};
		var base_url = 'http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/_auth/embed/remote_settings/';
		var attributes = {id: 'dsq-popup-account-settings'};
		if (typeof disqus_frame_theme != 'undefined') {
			params['theme'] = disqus_frame_theme;
		}

		body = Dsq.Templates._frameGeneric(base_url, params, attributes);
		this.popModal(body, 'Account Settings', null, true, 'dsq-popup-account-settings');
	};

	this.popModal = function(message, title, post_id, use_listener, extra_classes) {
		var container = document.createElement('div');
		var header, body;

		Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true);

		if(typeof(title) == 'undefined') { title = ''; }
		if(typeof(use_listener) == 'undefined') { use_listener = true; }

		if(post_id) {
			container.id = 'dsq-popup-message-' + post_id;
		} else {
			container.id = 'dsq-popup-message';
		}

		header = title;
		body = message;

		container.innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.popupModal(header, body);
		Dsq.Popup.initPopup(container, post_id, 'message', extra_classes);
		if(use_listener) {
			Dsq.Popup.popupListener = Dsq.Utils.addEventListener(document, 'mouseup', Dsq.Popup._closePopup);
		}
	};

	this.popAlert = this.popModal;

	this.loading = function(post_id) {
		var title = Dsq.Strings.JUST_A_MOMENT;
		var body = '<div style="text-align:center; padding: 5px 0 10px 0"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/loading.gif" alt="" /></div>'
		Dsq.Popup.lightbox(body, title, post_id);
	};

	this.lightbox = function(message, title, post_id) {
		// Wraps Dsq.Popup.popModal

		var overlay = document.createElement('div');
		overlay.id = 'dsq-overlay';
		overlay.className = 'dsq-overlay';
		Dsq.$b.appendChild(overlay);
		
		Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, title, post_id, false, 'dsq-lightbox');
	};

	this.popProfile = function(post_id, userKey) {
		var post = Dsq.jsonData['posts'][post_id];
		if (post && post.has_been_anonymized) {
			Dsq.Popup.popModal('This message was anonymized by its previous owner.', 'Anonymized', post_id);
			return;
		}

		if(post_id) {
			userKey = Dsq.jsonData['posts'][post_id].user_key;	
		}
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][userKey];
		var elId = 'dsq-popup-profile-' + userKey;
		var container = document.createElement('div');

		if(this.activePopup.el) {
			this._closePopup(null, true);
			if(this.activePopup.linkClicked) {
				this.activePopup.linkClicked = false;
				return;
			}
		}

		container.id = elId;
		container.innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.popupProfile(userKey);

		this.initPopup(container, post_id, 'profile');
		this.popupListener = Dsq.Utils.addEventListener(document, 'mouseup', this._closePopup);

		if(!this.profileCache[userKey]) {
			Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/embed/profile.js'
				+ '?username=' + userKey
				+ '&anon=' + (userData['registered'] ? 0 : 1)
				+ '&f=' + Dsq.jsonData['request'].forum);
		} else {
			this.updateProfile(userKey);
		}
	};

	this._closePopup = function(e, force) {
		var activePopup = Dsq.Popup.activePopup.el;
		var id = Dsq.Popup.activePopup.id;
		var link = 'dsq-avatar-' + id; // HACK: Specific to profile toggle target

		// HACK: This event should be gone if there is no active popup.
		if(!activePopup) {
			return;
		}
		if(force || !Dsq.Popup.isClicked(e, activePopup.id)) {
			// TODO: This is breaking iE?
			if(Dsq.Popup.popupListener) {
				Dsq.Utils.removeEventListener(Dsq.Popup.popupListener);
			}
			
			// Kill overlay
			var overlay = Dsq.$('dsq-overlay');
			if(overlay) { Dsq.Utils.deleteNode(overlay); }
			
			try {
				Dsq.Utils.deleteNode(activePopup);
			} catch(e) {
				// HACK: IE6 throws an error when using deleteNode() with a node containing a <table> in the html.
				activePopup.parentNode.removeChild(activePopup);
			}
			Dsq.Popup.activePopup = {};
		}

		if(!force && Dsq.Popup.isClicked(e, link)) {
 			Dsq.Popup.activePopup.linkClicked = true;
		}

	};

	this.initPopup = function(popup, post_id, type, extra_classes) {
		popup.className = 'dsq-popup dsq-popup-' + type + ' ' + (extra_classes ? extra_classes : '');
		if(Dsq.Utils.ie6 || Dsq.Utils.ie7) {
			// HACK: We can't modify the body before it's ready, so we need
			//       to use an IE-safe "DOMReady" workaround before loading
			//       our popup.
			Dsq.Utils.execOnReady(function() {Dsq.$b.appendChild(popup); });
		} else {
			Dsq.$b.appendChild(popup);
		}

		popup.style.display = 'block';

		var xPos = (Dsq.Utils.getWindowSize()[0] - popup.offsetWidth) / 2;
		var yPos = (Dsq.Utils.getWindowSize()[1] - popup.offsetHeight) / 2;

		if(Dsq.Utils.ie6) {
			yPos += Dsq.Utils.getScrollPos()[1];
		}

		popup.style.left = xPos + 'px';
		popup.style.top = yPos + 'px';

		Dsq.Popup.activePopup = {
			'el' : popup,
			'id' : post_id,
			'type': type,
			'linkClicked' : false
		};
	};

	this.isClicked = function(e, id) {
		var t = e.target || e.srcElement;
		while(t && t.parentNode) {
			if(t.id == id) {
				return true;
			}

			t = t.parentNode;
		}
		return false;
	};
};
// Dsq.Popup

/**
 * Dsq.Templates
 */
Dsq.Templates = new function() {
	/*
	 * Counter keeping track of the number of posts iterated over.
	 */
	this.postLoopCounter = 0;
	this.filters = {};
	this.addPostContainer = 'dsq-post-add';
	this.textareaContainer = 'dsq-post-add';

	this.registerTemplate = function(name, func) {
		this['$$_' + name] = func;

		if(typeof DsqLocal.Filters != 'undefined'
		&& typeof DsqLocal.Filters[name] == 'function') {
			// Push filters to this.filters to unify code.
			this.filters[name] = this.filters[name] || [];
			this.filters[name].push(DsqLocal.Filters[name]);
		}

		this[name] = function() {
			var ret;

			if(typeof DsqLocal.Templates != 'undefined'
			&& typeof DsqLocal.Templates[name] == 'function') {
				ret = DsqLocal.Templates[name].apply(this, arguments);
			}

			if(ret === undefined) {
				ret = this['$$_' + name].apply(this, arguments);
			}

			if(this.filters[name]) {
				var args = [ret];

				args.push.apply(args, arguments);
				for(var i = 0; i < this.filters[name].length; i++) {
					ret = this.filters[name][i].apply(this, args);
				}
			}

			return ret;
		};
	};

	this.registerFilter = function(name, func) {
		this.filters[name] = this.filters[name] || [];
		this.filters[name].push(func);
	};

	/**
	 * Dsq.Templates.Filters
	 */
	this.Filters = new function() {
		this.commentContainer = function(post_id, s) {
			var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
			var classes = [];
			if(Dsq.jsonData.request.page > 1) {
				classes.push('dsq-append');
			}

			//
			// Extra classes used for custom themes
			//

			if(_meta.depth) {
				classes.push('dsq-comment-child', 'dsq-depth-' + _meta.depth, 'dsq-parent-is-' + _meta.parent_post_id);
			}


			//

			if(_meta.author_is_creator) {
				// TODO: We need to deprecate the "special" class since it is not properly prefixed.
				classes.push('special', 'dsq-special');
			}
			if(_meta.author_is_moderator) {
				classes.push('dsq-moderator');
			}
			classes.push(['dsq-odd', 'dsq-even'][Dsq.Templates.postLoopCounter % 2]);

			s = s.substring(0, s.lastIndexOf('>'));
			return s + ' class="dsq-comment ' + classes.join(' ') + '" style="margin-left:' + _meta.depth*30 + 'px">';
		};

		this.commentContent = function(post_id, s) {
			var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
			if (_meta.killed) {
				return '<em>Comment removed.</em>';
			} else if (!_meta.approved) {
				return '<em>This comment was flagged for review.</em>';
			}

			s = s.replace(Dsq.MEDIA_POST_RE, Dsq.MediaPostHandler);
			return s;
		};
	};

	//
	// Thread
	//
	// TODO: These need to be stripped of all Django template tags.

	this.authPost = function() {
		if (!Dsq.jsonData.context.show_reply) {
			return '';
		}
		var result = [];
		result = result.concat([
				'<div id="dsq-auth"',
						Dsq.jsonData.integration.reply_position ? 'class="dsq-auth-bottom"' : '',
						'>',
					'<div class="dsq-by">',
						'<a href="http://disqus.com" target="_blank">',
							(Dsq.jsonData.integration.disqus_logo ?
								Dsq.Utils.interpolate('<img src="%(media_url)s/images/embed/by-disqus.png" alt="discussion by DISQUS">') :
								Dsq.Utils.interpolate('<img src="%(media_url)s/images/embed/dsq-button-120x19.png" alt="discussion by DISQUS">')
							),
						'</a>',
					'</div>',
					'<div class="dsq-auth-header">',
						'<h3 id="dsq-add-new-comment" class="dsq-h3-addcomment">',
								Dsq.Strings.ADD_NEW_COMMENT,
						'</h3>',
						'<div id="dsq-login">',
						(!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated && Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post
								? '<p class="dsq-login-message" id="dsq-login-message">You are commenting as a <a class="dsq-help" title="Click for more information" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.helpBadges(); return false">Guest</a>. You may select one to log into:</p>'
								: '')
		]);
		if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated) {
			result = result.concat([
							Dsq.Utils.interpolate(
								'<a id="dsq-login-toggle" href="%(disqus_url)s%(login_url)s?next=article:%(thread_id)s" onclick="Dsq.Popup.login(); return false"><img class="dsq-login-icon" src="%(media_url)s/images/dsq-profile-btn.png" title="%(log_into)s" alt="%(log_into)s"/></a>',
								{login_url: Dsq.Urls.LOGIN, thread_id: Dsq.jsonData.thread.id, log_into: Dsq.Strings.LOG_INTO_DISQUS}
								),
							'&nbsp; ',
							(Dsq.jsonData.context.use_fb_connect ?
								'<div id="dsq-fbc-login" onlogin="DisqusFbcParentController.onLogin()" size="medium" background="light" length="short" style="display:inline; margin-right:7px"></div>' :
								''
							),
							(Dsq.jsonData.context.use_twitter_signin ?
								Dsq.Utils.interpolate(
									'<div id="dsq-twitter-login" class="dsq-twitter-login" onclick="Dsq.Twitter.startTwitterConnect();" style="display:inline; cursor: pointer"><img src="%(media_url)s/images/twitter-signin-short.png" style="margin-right:7px" /></div>', {}) : ''),
							(Dsq.jsonData.context.use_openid ?
								Dsq.Utils.interpolate(
									'<div id="dsq-openid-login" class="dsq-openid-login" onclick="Dsq.OpenID.requestURL();" style="display:inline; cursor:pointer;"><img src="%(media_url)s/images/openid-login-button.png"/></div>', {}
								) : '')
			]);
		}
		result = result.concat([
						'</div>', // dsq-login
					'</div>', // dsq-auth-header
					'<div id="dsq-authenticated" class="dsq-authenticated" ',
						Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated ? 'style="display:block"' : '',
						'>',
						'<div class="dsq-authenticated-pic">',
								Dsq.Utils.interpolate('<a href="%(url)s" title="%(request_display_username)s">' +
																			'<img class="dsq-post-avatar" src="%(avatar_url)s" alt="" /></a>',
																			{avatar_url: Dsq.Urls.REQUEST_USER_AVATAR,
																			url: (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote
																					 ? Dsq.jsonData.request.url
																					 : Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + Dsq.Urls.REQUEST_USER_PROFILE) }),
						'</div>',
						'<div class="dsq-authenticated-info">',
							'<ul>',
								'<li>',
									(Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote
										? Dsq.FmtStrings.LOGGED_IN_AS(
												Dsq.Utils.interpolate('<a href="%(url)s" title="%(request_display_username)s">%(request_display_username)s</a>', {url:Dsq.jsonData.request.url})
										  )
										: Dsq.FmtStrings.LOGGED_IN_AS(
												Dsq.Utils.interpolate('<a href="%(disqus_url)s%(profile_url)s" title="%(request_display_username)s">%(request_display_username)s</a>')
											)
									),
								'</li>',
								'<li class="logout">',
									(!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote
										? Dsq.Utils.interpolate('<img class="dsq-login-icon" src="%(media_url)s/images/dsqicon12.png" alt="%(logged_in_as)s"/>&nbsp',
											{logged_in_as: Dsq.FmtStrings.LOGGED_IN_AS(Dsq.jsonData.request.display_username)})
										: ''),

									(!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote
										? Dsq.Utils.interpolate('<a href="%(disqus_url)s%(logout_url)s?ctkn=%(csrf_token)s" title="%(logout_from_disqus)s">',
											{logout_url: Dsq.Urls.LOGOUT, csrf_token: Dsq.CSRF_TOKEN, logout_from_disqus: Dsq.FmtStrings.LOGOUT_FROM('DISQUS')})
										: ((Dsq.jsonData.request.remote_domain == 'twitter')
												? Dsq.Utils.interpolate('using Twitter (<a href="%(disqus_url)s%(logout_url)s?ctkn=%(csrf_token)s" title="Logout">Logout</a>)',
												 {logout_url: Dsq.Urls.LOGOUT, csrf_token: Dsq.CSRF_TOKEN})
												: ((Dsq.jsonData.request.remote_domain == 'openid')
													 ? Dsq.Utils.interpolate('using OpenID (<a href="%(disqus_url)s%(logout_url)s?ctkn=%(csrf_token)s" title="Logout">Logout</a>)',
													 {logout_url: Dsq.Urls.LOGOUT, csrf_token: Dsq.CSRF_TOKEN})
													 : ''
													)
											)
									),

									(!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_remote ? Dsq.FmtStrings.LOGOUT_FROM('<span class="logo-disqus">DISQUS</span>') : ''),
									'</a>',
								'</li>',
							'</ul>',
						'</div>',
					'</div>'
		]);
		if (Dsq.jsonData.context.use_fb_connect) {
			result = result.concat([
					'<div id="dsq-fbc-authenticated" class="dsq-authenticated">',
						'<div id="dsq-fbc-profilepic" class="dsq-authenticated-pic" uid="loggedinuser" type="FB.XFBML.ProfilePic" size="square" facebook-logo="true"></div>',
						'<div class="dsq-authenticated-info">',
							'<ul>',
								'<li>',
									'Logged in as <span id="dsq-fbc-name" uid="loggedinuser" type="FB.XFBML.Name" linked="true" useyou="false"></span>',
								'</li>',
								'<li class="logout">using Facebook Connect <a href="#" onclick="javascript:DisqusFbcParentController.logout();return false;">(Logout)</a></li>',
							'</ul>',
						'</div>',
					'</div>'
			]);
		}
		result = result.concat([
				'</div>', // dsq-auth
				'<div id="dsq-toolbar-items">',
				'</div>'
		]);
		result = result.concat([
					//
					//
					//
				((!Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_post && !Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated) ?
					// Needs to be translated:
					('<p id="dsq-no-anon-msg">Required: Please log into <span class="logo-disqus">Disqus</span> ' +
					(Dsq.jsonData.context.use_fb_connect ? 'or connect with Facebook ' : '') +
					(Dsq.jsonData.context.use_twitter_signin ? 'or sign in with Twitter ' : '') +
					(Dsq.jsonData.context.use_openid ? 'or sign in using OpenID ' : '') +
					Dsq.Utils.interpolate('to comment on <strong>%(forum_name)s</strong>.</p>')) :
					''
				),
				'<div id="dsq-post-add"></div>',
				'<div style="margin:10px 0">',
				((Dsq.jsonData.forum.use_media) ?
						'<a href="#" id="dsq-media-link" onclick="Dsq.Post.showMenu(this, false, \'media\'); return false">' + Dsq.Strings.USE_MEDIA + ' <small>&#9660;</small></a>' :
						''),
				'</div>'
		]);
		return result.join('');
	};


	this.header = function() {

		var html = '\<h3 id="dsq-comments-count" class="dsq-h3-commentcount">\
	 <span id="dsq-num-posts">96</span> Comments\
	 &nbsp;\
	 <span class="dsq-item-feed">\
	 <a href="http://jesusmanifesto.disqus.com/the_prodigal_consumer/latest.rss"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/bullet-feed.png"></a>\
	 </span>\
	 </h3>\
	 <div id="dsq-options" style="margin:15px 0">\
	 <span class="dsq-item-sort">\
	 Sort by\
	 <select id="dsq-sort-select" onchange="Dsq.Thread.sortBy(this.value);">\
	 <option value="hot" selected="selected">Popular now</option>\
	 <option value="best" >Best Rating</option>\
	 <option value="newest" >Newest first</option>\
	 <option value="oldest" >Oldest first</option>\
	 </select>\
	 &nbsp;\
	 </span>\
	 <span class="dsq-item-cp"><a href="http://jesusmanifesto.disqus.com/the_prodigal_consumer/">Community Page</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>\
	 <span class="dsq-item-subscribe">\
	 <img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/email.png" style="width:12px;height:12px;vertical-align:middle">\
	 <span id="dsq-subscribe">\
	 <a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.subscribe(1); return false">Subscribe by email</a>\
	 </span>\
	 </span>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-alerts">\
	 </div>\
		';

		
			html = Dsq.Templates.authPost() + html;
		

		
		if (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator) { 
			html = ' \
			<div class="dsq-alert-message dsq-upgrade-message"> \
				<strong>Disqus upgrade available.</strong> Hi ' + Dsq.jsonData.request.display_username + ', this message is being displayed to you because you are a moderator of this site. <a href="#" onclick="Dsq.$(\'dsq-upgrade-message\').style.display=\'block\';this.style.display=\'none\';return false">Click here for details.</a> \
				<div style="display:none; margin-top:10px;" id="dsq-upgrade-message"> \
					A new theme is available with added features. <a href="http://disqus.com/comments/settings/' + Dsq.jsonData.forum.url + '/?p=customize">To change your theme, click here</a> and choose the theme Narcissus. \
					If you do not upgrade, you are missing out on features such as: real-time commenting, new sign-in integrations, and an upgrade interface. \
					<strong>This message will automatically go away in one week.</strong> \
				</div> \
			</div> \
			' + html; 
		}
		return html;
	};

	this.footer = function() {
		var html = Dsq.Templates.pagination();

		

		html += Dsq.Templates.reactions();

		
			html += Dsq.Templates.trackbacks();
		

		return html;
	};

	this.pagination = function() {
		var html = '';
		
		if (Dsq.$('dsq-pagination')) { Dsq.$('dsq-pagination').innerHTML = ''; }
		if (!Dsq.jsonData.thread.paginate) { return ''; }

		//
		// TODO: num_paginator still uses the template tag for pagination, 
		// 		while append_paginator does it all in JavaScript.
		//		This should all be in JavaScript.
		//

		if (Dsq.jsonData.thread.num_pages > 1 && Dsq.jsonData.request.page < Dsq.jsonData.thread.num_pages) {
			html = ' \<a class="dsq-paginate-append-text" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.paginate(Dsq.jsonData.request.page + 1, this); return false">Show more comments...</a>\
	 <button class="dsq-button-small dsq-paginate-append-button" onclick="Dsq.Thread.paginate(Dsq.jsonData.request.page + 1, this);">Load more comments</button>\
			';
		}
		
		if (Dsq.$('dsq-pagination')) {
			Dsq.$('dsq-pagination').innerHTML = html;
			return '';
		} else {
			return '<div id="dsq-pagination" class="dsq-pagination">' + html + '</div>';
		}
	};

	this.trackbacks = function() {
		var html = '';

		if(typeof DsqLocal != 'undefined' && DsqLocal.trackback_url && DsqLocal.trackbacks) {
			var trackbacks = DsqLocal.trackbacks;
			var trackback_url = DsqLocal.trackback_url;
		} else {
			var trackbacks = [
			
			
			];
			var trackback_url = 'http://jesusmanifesto.disqus.com/the_prodigal_consumer/trackback/';
		}

		html += '<div class="dsq-item-trackback">Trackback URL&nbsp;&nbsp;<input class="dsq-trackback-url" onclick="this.select()" readonly="true" value="' + trackback_url + '"></div>';

		if(trackbacks.length) {
			html += '<ul id="dsq-references">'
			for(var i = 0; i < trackbacks.length; i++) {
				var trackback = trackbacks[i];
				html += '<li><cite><a href="' + trackback.author_url + '" rel="nofollow">' + trackback.author_name + '</a></cite> \
						<p class="dsq-meta">' + trackback.date + '</p> \
						<p class="dsq-content">' + trackback.excerpt + '</p></li>';
			}
			html += '</ul>';
			html = '<h3 class="dsq-h3-trackbacks">Trackbacks</h3>' + html;
		}

		return html;
	}

	this.showRetweets = function(id, limit, element_id /* Optional */) {
		var source, html = '';

		for (var i = 0, reaction; reaction = Dsq.jsonData.reactions[i]; i++) {
			if (reaction.id === id) {
				source = reaction.retweets;
			}
		}

		if (source) {
			if (limit === 0) {
				limit = source.length;
			}

			for (var j = 0; j < limit; j++) {
				var rt = source[j];
				html += '<a href="' + rt.url + '">' + rt.author_name + '</a>'	+ ((j === (limit - 1)) ? '.' : ', ');
			}
		}

		if (element_id === undefined) {
			return html;
		}

		var element = document.getElementById(element_id);
		element.innerHTML = html;
		return element;
	};

	this.showMoreReactions = function(reactions, has_more, start, limit) {
		var link = document.getElementById('dsq-show-more-reactions');
		var container = link.parentNode;
		container.removeChild(link);

		for (var i = 0, reaction; reaction = reactions[i]; i++) {
			var el = Dsq.Templates.generateReactionHTML(reaction);
			if (el) {
				container.innerHTML += el;
			}
		}

		if (has_more) {
			var d = Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url;
			var f = Dsq.jsonData.forum.url;
			var t = Dsq.jsonData.thread.id;
			var s = start;
			var l = limit;

			var handler = 'Dsq.Utils.execScript(\'' + d + '/forums/' + f + '/more_reactions.js?t=' + t + '&s=' + s + '&l=' + l + '\', true); return false;';
			container.innerHTML += '<li id="dsq-show-more-reactions"><a href="#" onclick="' + handler + '">Show more reactions</a></li>';
		}
	};

	this.generateReactionHTML = function(reaction) {
		if (reaction.body === null || reaction.body == '') {
			return;
		}

		if (reaction.author_name === '') {
			reaction.author_name = '&nbsp;';
		}

		if (reaction.url === '') {
			reaction.url = reaction.get_service_url;
		}

		/* Reaction HTML begins */
		var item = '<li class="dsq-reaction" id="dsq-reaction-' + reaction.id + '">'
			+ '<div class="dsq-reaction-header">'
			+ '<div class="dsq-header-avatar">';

		if (reaction.author_url && reaction.author_url !== '') {
			item += '<a target="_blank" href="' + reaction.author_url +'">';
		} else {
			item += '<a target="_blank" href="#" onclick="return false;">';
		}

		if (reaction.avatar_url && reaction.avatar_url !== '') {
			item += '<img src="' + reaction.avatar_url + '"/>';
		} else {
			item += '<img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.media_url + '/images/noavatar32.png"/>';
		}

		var service_icon = (reaction.get_service_name == 'trackback' || reaction.get_service_name == 'pingback' ? 'rss' : reaction.get_service_name.replace(' ', ''));
		item += '<img class="dsq-service-icon" src="' + Dsq.jsonData.media_url + '/images/reactions/services/' + service_icon + '.png"/>'
			+ '</a></div>'
			+ '<cite><span>' + reaction.author_name + '</span></cite>'
			+ '<span class="dsq-header-meta"><a class="dsq-header-time">' + reaction.date_created + '</a></span>'
			+ '</div><div class="dsq-reaction-body">'
			+ '<div class="dsq-reaction-message">' + reaction.body + '</div>'
			+ '<div class="dsq-reaction-footer">From <a class="dsq-service-name" target="_blank" href="' + reaction.url + '">' + reaction.get_service_name + '</a> '
			+ 'via <a href="' + reaction.source_url + '">' + (reaction.source == 'backtype' ? 'BackType' : 'UberVU') + '</a>'
			+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator || Dsq.jsonData.request.is_global_moderator ? '&nbsp;&bull;&nbsp;<a class="dsq-hide-reaction" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Reaction.hide(' + reaction.id + '); return false;">Hide</a>' : '') + '</div></div>';

		if(reaction.retweets) {
			var num_retweets = reaction.retweets.length;
			if (num_retweets > 0) {
				item += '<div class="dsq-reaction-retweets">';
				if (num_retweets == 1) {
					item += 'One more retweet from <a href="' + reaction.retweets[0].url + '">'  + reaction.retweets[0].author_name + '</a>';
				} else {
					item += (num_retweets + ' more retweets from ');

					item += '<span id="dsq-reaction-retweets-' + reaction.id + '">';
					var n_tweets = (num_retweets > 15) ? 15 : num_retweets;
					item += Dsq.Templates.showRetweets(reaction.id, n_tweets);

					if (n_tweets != num_retweets) {
						item += '</span> <a onclick="Dsq.Templates.showRetweets(' + reaction.id + ', 0, \'dsq-reaction-retweets-' + reaction.id + '\');'
							+ 'this.parentNode.removeChild(this); return false;" href="#">Show all</a>';
					}
				}
				item += '</div>';
			}
		}

		item += '</li>'; /* Reaction HTML ends */
		return item;
	};

	this.reactions = function() {
		var html, reaction;

		if (Dsq.jsonData.reactions === undefined || Dsq.jsonData.reactions.length === 0) {
			return '';
		}

		html = '';
		for (var i = 0; reaction = Dsq.jsonData.reactions[i]; i++) {
			var item = Dsq.Templates.generateReactionHTML(reaction);
			if (item) {
				html += item;
			}
		}

		if (Dsq.jsonData.has_more_reactions) {
			var d = Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url;
			var f = Dsq.jsonData.forum.url;
			var t = Dsq.jsonData.thread.id;
			var s = Dsq.jsonData.reactions_start;
			var l = Dsq.jsonData.reactions_limit;

			var handler = 'Dsq.Utils.execScript(\'' + d + '/forums/' + f + '/more_reactions.js?t=' + t + '&s=' + s + '&l=' + l + '\', true); return false;';
			html += '<li id="dsq-show-more-reactions"><a href="#" onclick="' + handler + '">Show more reactions</a></li>';
		}

		return '<h3 class="dsq-h3-reactions">Reactions</h3><ul id="dsq-reactions" class="dsq-reactions">' + html + '</ul>';
	};
	
	this.missingPermissions = function() {
		return '';
	};

	//
	// Post
	//

	this.prependPost = function(post_id) {
		var html = '<div id="comment-' + post_id + '"></div>';
		return html;
	};

	this.appendPost = function(post_id) {
		var html = '<div id="dsq-comment-reply-' + post_id + '"></div>';
		return html;
	};

	this.postPrependHeader = function(post_id) {
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_meta.user_key];

		var _includeServices = function() {
			var userServices = Dsq.Post.getUserServices(null, post_id);
			var html = '';
			var hiddenThreshold = 3; // Define # of services to show before stuffing them in hidden div

			for(var i = 0; i < userServices.length; i++) {
				html +=
				(i == hiddenThreshold
					? '<li id="dsq-drop-hidden-' + post_id +'" class="dsq-drop-hidden"><ul>'
					: '')
				+ '<li class="dsq-drop-services"> \
					<a class="dsq-service-' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '" href="' + userServices[i].url + '" target="_blank"> \
						<img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.media_url + '/images/embed/services/' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '.png" alt="' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '">'
					+ userServices[i].name
					+ '</a> \
				</li>';
			}

			if(i >= hiddenThreshold) {
				html += '</ul></li> \
				<li id="dsq-drop-more-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-drop-more"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.dropProfileMore(this, '+ post_id + '); return false"><small>&#9660;</small></a></li> \
				';
			}
			return html;
		};

		return ' \
			<div class="dsq-header-avatar" id="dsq-header-avatar-' + post_id + '" onmouseover="Dsq.Post.dropProfile(' + post_id + ')"> \
				<a id="dsq-avatar-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-avatar" href="' + userData.url + '" onclick="Dsq.Popup.popProfile(' + post_id + '); return false;">'
			+ (Dsq.jsonData.forum.show_avatar
				? '<img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.users[_meta.user_key].avatar + '" alt="" />'
				: '')
			+ '</a>'
			+ '</div> \
		';
	};

	this.postAppendHeader = function(post_id) {
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];

		return ''
			+ (_meta.author_is_moderator
				? '<img class="dsq-mod-star" src="http://media.disqus.com/images/bullet-star.png" title="Moderator" alt="" />'
				: '')
			+ '<span class="dsq-header-meta"> \
				<a id="dsq-time-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-header-time" href="#comment-' + post_id + '" title="Permalink">' + _meta.date + '</a> \
			</span>';
	};

	this.preBody = function(post_id) {
		return '';
	}

	this.postBody = function(post_id) {
		// TODO: Deprecate flagging conditional
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		return ''
			+ (_meta.edited
				? '<p class="dsq-editedtxt">(Edited by a moderator)</p>'
				: '')
			;
	};

	this.postFooter = function(post_id) {
		// TODO: Use media should be conditional
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		if(_meta.killed) { return ''; }

		return ' \
			<div class="dsq-comment-footer" id="dsq-comment-footer-' + post_id + '"> \
				<div id="dsq-points-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-likedtxt">'
				+ (_meta.points
					? _meta.points + Dsq.Utils.pluralize(_meta.points, ' person', ' people') + ' liked this comment.'
					: '')
				+ '</div>'
				+ '<ul class="dsq-comment-options dsq-list-style">'
				+ (_meta.votable
					? '<li class="dsq-list-first dsq-rate" id="dsq-rate-cont-' + post_id + '">'
					+ (!_meta.up_voted
						? '<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.rate(this, ' + post_id + ', 1); return false;">Like</a>'
						: 'You liked this.') + '</li>'
					: '')
				+ '<li class="dsq-report' + (!_meta.votable ? ' dsq-list-first' : '') + '" id="dsq-post-report-' + post_id + '"><a href="#" class="dsq-post-report" onclick="Dsq.Post.report(' + post_id + ', false); return false;">Report</a></li> \
				</ul> \
				<ul class="dsq-list-style">'
				+ (_meta.can_reply
					? '<li class="dsq-list-first"><a href="#" id="dsq-reply-link-' + post_id +'" onclick="Dsq.Post.toggleReply(this, ' + post_id +'); return false;">Reply</a></li>'
					: '')
				+ (_meta.can_reply && !_meta.has_replies && _meta.from_request_user
					? '<li id="dsq-edit-el-' + post_id + '"><a id="dsq-edit-link-' + post_id + '" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.edit(this, ' + post_id + '); return false;">Edit</a></li>'
					: '')
				+ '<li class="' + (!_meta.can_reply ? 'dsq-list-first' : '') + '" id="dsq-more-el-' + post_id + '"><a id="dsq-more-link-' + post_id + '" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.showMenu(this, ' + post_id + ', \'more\'); return false">More <small>&#9660;</small></a></li>'
				+ (Dsq.jsonData.forum.use_media
					? '<li id="dsq-media-el-' + post_id +'" style="display:none"><a id="dsq-media-link-' + post_id + '" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.showMenu(this, ' + post_id + ', \'media\'); return false">Use Media <small>&#9660;</small></a></li>'
					: '')
				+ '</ul>'
				+ '<div id="dsq-reply-bar-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-reply-bar" style="display:none"> \
						<div id="dsq-reply-bar-items-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-reply-bar-items"> \
						</div> \
						<div id="dsq-reply-bar-auth-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-reply-bar-auth"> \
							 \
								 \
								 	<a href="#" class="dsq-help dsq-reply-req-opt" title="You are commenting as a Guest. You may choose to log into an existing DISQUS Profile, your Facebook, Twitter or OpenID account to comment on the Jesus Manifesto" onclick="Dsq.Popup.helpBadges(); return false">Optional:</a> \
								 \
								<img class="dsq-login-icon" src="http://media.disqus.com/images/dsq-favicon-16x16.png" alt="" /> \
								<a id="dsq-reply-login-' + post_id + '" href="http://disqus.com/profile/login/?next=article:21272085" onclick="Dsq.Popup.login(); return false">Login</a> \
								 \
									&nbsp;or&nbsp; \
									<img class="fb_login_image" src="http://static.ak.fbcdn.net/images/fbconnect/login-buttons/connect_light_small_short.gif" alt="Facebook Connect"/> \
									<a href="#" onclick="FB.Connect.requireSession(DisqusFbcParentController.onLogin); return false;">Connect</a> \
								 \
								&nbsp;or&nbsp; \
									<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/twitter-signin-icon.png" alt="" /> \
									<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Twitter.startTwitterConnect(); return false">Sign-in</a> \
								 \
								&nbsp;or&nbsp; \
									 <img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/openid-login-icon.png" alt="" /> \
									 <a href="#" onclick="Dsq.OpenID.requestURL(); return false">OpenID</a> \
								 \
							 \
						</div> \
					</div> \
					<div id="dsq-reply-' + post_id + '"></div> \
			</div> \
		';
	};

	//
	// Iframes
	//

	this._makeAttributes = function(attributes) {
		// Makes a tag attributes string out of an object.
		// Caller is responsible for making sure nothing needs to be escaped.
		var result = [];
		for (key in attributes) {
			result.push(' ' + key + '="' + attributes[key] + '"');
		}
		result = result.join('');
		return result;
	};

	this._frameGeneric = function(base_url, params, attributes) {
		if(typeof(disqus_callback_params) == 'undefined') {
			disqus_callback_params = '';
		}

		var default_params = {
			// TODO: These should be moved to Dsq.jsonData.
			'f'				: 'jesusmanifesto',
			't'				: 'the_prodigal_consumer',
			// Do we need encodeURIComponent here?
			'ifrs'			: encodeURIComponent(disqus_iframe_css),
			'to_redirect'	: encodeURIComponent(window.location),
			'cbp'			: disqus_callback_params,
			'ff'			: Dsq.Thread.ff,
			'fc'			: Dsq.Thread.fc,
			'ac'			: Dsq.Thread.ac,
			'default_text'	: disqus_default_text
		};

		base_url += '?' + (new Date()).getTime();
		// Add params to default_params.
		if(params) {
			for(var key in params) {
				if(params.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
					default_params[key] = encodeURIComponent(params[key]);
				}
			}
		}
		// Build querystring.
		for(var key in default_params) {
			if(default_params[key] && default_params.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
				base_url += '&' + key + '=' + default_params[key];
			}
		}

		return [
			'<iframe marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" hspace="0" vspace="0" frameborder="0"',
			(' allowtransparency="true" src="' + base_url + '"'),
			this._makeAttributes(attributes),
			'</iframe>'].join('');
	};

	this.frameLogin = function(opt_attributes) {
		var params = {};
		var base_url = 'http://disqus.com/embed/login.html';
		var attributes = opt_attributes || {};
		attributes['class'] = 'dsq-post-login';

		if(typeof disqus_frame_theme != 'undefined') {
			params['theme'] = disqus_frame_theme;
		}
		return this._frameGeneric(base_url, params, attributes);
	};

	this.frameReply = function(post_id, extra_params, attributes) {
		// Returns the HTML for a reply iframe. Called by Dsq.Iframes.setReplyIframeToContainer
		var _meta = (typeof post_id != 'undefined') ? Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id] : false;
		var base_url = Dsq.Urls.REPLY;
		var params = {
			'def_email'		: disqus_def_email,
			'def_name'		: disqus_def_name
		};
		if(extra_params) {
			for(var key in extra_params) {
				if(extra_params.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
					params[key] = extra_params[key];
				}
			}
		}
		if(_meta) {
			params['parent_post'] = post_id;
		}
		if(typeof disqus_per_page != 'undefined') {
			params['per_page'] = disqus_per_page;
		}
		if(typeof disqus_frame_theme != 'undefined') {
			params['theme'] = disqus_frame_theme;
		}
		if(Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated) {
			attributes['class'] += '-authenticated';
		}
		return this._frameGeneric(base_url, params, attributes);
	};

	this.frameEdit = function(post_id) {
		var _meta = (typeof post_id != 'undefined') ? Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id] : false;
		var base_url = 'http://disqus.com/embed/edit.html';
		var params = {
			'p' : post_id
		};
		return this._frameGeneric(base_url, params, {'class': 'dsq-post-edit', 'name': 'dsq-edit_' + post_id + '-frame'});
	};

	//
	// Menus
	//

	this.menuMore = function(post_id) {
		// TODO: "Remove post" button should hide menu.
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_meta.user_key];
		return ' \
			<li><a href="#comment-' + post_id + '" onclick="Dsq.Popup.permalink(' + post_id + ')">Link</a></li> \
			<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.popProfile(' + post_id + '); return false;">Profile</a></li>'
	+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator || Dsq.jsonData.request.is_global_moderator
		? '	<li class="dsq-menu-sep"></li>' + (_meta.email ? '<li class="dsq-admin-email">' + _meta.email + '</li>' : '')
		+ '	<li class="dsq-admin-ip">' + _meta.ip + '</li> \
			<li class="dsq-menu-sep"></li>'
		+ (Dsq.jsonData.request.moderator_can_edit
			? ' <li class="dsq-admin-edit"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.edit(this, ' + post_id + '); return false;">Edit Comment</a></li>'
			: '')
		+ ' <li class="dsq-remove"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.removePost(' + post_id + ', 1); return false;">Remove Comment</a></li> \
			<li class="dsq-report-spam"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.reportSpam(' + post_id + '); return false;">Mark Spam</a></li> \
			<li class="dsq-block-user"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.blacklist(' + post_id + '); return false">Block User</a></li>'
		: '');
	};

	this.menuMedia = function(post_id) {
		return ' \
			<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.toggleMediaReply(this, ' + post_id + ', \'seesmic\'); return false;">Record video</a></li> \
		';
	};

	this.dropProfile = function(post_id) {
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id];
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][_meta.user_key];

		var _includeServices = function() {
			var userServices = Dsq.Post.getUserServices(null, post_id);
			var html = '';
			var hiddenThreshold = 3; // Define # of services to show before stuffing them in hidden div

			for(var i = 0; i < userServices.length; i++) {
				html +=
				(i == hiddenThreshold
					? '<li id="dsq-drop-hidden-' + post_id +'" class="dsq-drop-hidden"><ul>'
					: '')
				+ '<li class="dsq-drop-services"> \
					<a class="dsq-service-' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '" href="' + userServices[i].url + '" target="_blank"> \
						<img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.media_url + '/images/embed/services/' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '.png" alt="' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '">'
					+ userServices[i].name
					+ '</a> \
				</li>';
			}

			if(i >= hiddenThreshold) {
				html += '</ul></li> \
				<li id="dsq-drop-more-' + post_id + '" class="dsq-drop-more"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Post.dropProfileMore(this, '+ post_id + '); return false"><small>&#9660;</small></a></li> \
				';
			}
			return html;
		};


		var menu = '<li class="dsq-drop-showlnk"><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup.popProfile(' + post_id + '); return false;">Expand &#8663;</a></li>';
		var pointsMessage = '';
		if (userData['registered']) {
			pointsMessage = 'with ' + userData['points'] + ' points (more points are better).';
		}

		if (userData['is_remote']) {
			var domain = userData['remote_domain_name'];
			menu += '<li class="dsq-drop-badge" title="' + userData['display_name'] + ' is a ' + domain + ' user ' + pointsMessage + '" onclick="Dsq.Popup.helpBadges()">';
			menu += '<span class="dsq-badge-' + domain.toLowerCase() + '">' + domain + '</span></li>';
		} else if (userData['registered']) {
			if (userData['verified']) {
				menu += '<li class="dsq-drop-badge" title="' + userData['display_name'] + ' has a verified commenter profile ' + pointsMessage + '" onclick="Dsq.Popup.helpBadges()">';
				menu += '<span class="dsq-badge-verified">Verified</span></li>';
			} else {
				menu += '<li class="dsq-drop-badge" title="' + userData['display_name'] + ' has a registered, but unverified, commenter profile ' + pointsMessage + '" onclick="Dsq.Popup.helpBadges()">';
				menu += '<span class="dsq-badge-registered">Registered</span></li>';
			}
		} else {
			menu += '<li class="dsq-drop-badge" title="' + userData['display_name'] + ' has not claimed this commenter profile." onclick="Dsq.Popup.helpBadges()"><span class="dsq-badge-guest">Guest</span></li>';
		}

		menu += _includeServices();
		return menu;
	};

	//
	// Popups
	//

	this._popupGeneric = function(content) {
		return ' \
		<div class="dsq-popup-content"> \
			<div class="dsq-popup-top"></div> \
			<div class="dsq-popup-body" class="clearfix"> \
				<div class="dsq-popup-body-padding"> \
					<div class="dsq-popup-header"> \
						<a class="dsq-close-link" href="#" onclick="Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true); return false"><img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/modal-close.png" alt="" /></a>'
						+ content['header']
					+ '</div>'
					+ content['body']
					+ '<div class="powered-by"><a href="http://disqus.com/comments/">Powered by <img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/embed/disqus-logo.png" alt="Disqus Comments" style="margin-bottom:-5px" /></a></div> \
				</div> <!-- padding --> \
			</div> <!-- body --> \
			<div class="dsq-popup-bottom"></div> \
		</div> \
		';
	};

	this.popupProfile = function(user_key) {
		var userServices = Dsq.Post.getUserServices(user_key, null);
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][user_key];
		var headerHtml = '';
		var bodyHtml = '';
		var content = {};

		var _includeServices = function() {
			var html = '';
			for(var i = 0; i < userServices.length; i++) {
				html +=
				(i == 0
					? '<h4>Connections</h4><ul>'
					: '')
				+ '<li> \
					<img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.media_url + '/images/embed/services/' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '.png" alt="' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '" title="' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '" /> \
					<a class="dsq-service-' + userServices[i].name.toLowerCase() + '" href="' + userServices[i].url + '" target="_blank">'
					+ userServices[i].name
					+ '</a> \
				</li>'
				+ (i+1 == userServices.length ? '</ul>' : '');
			}
			return html;
		};

		headerHtml = ' \
			<table> \
				<tr> \
					<td> \
						<a class="dsq-profile-userurl" href="' + userData.url + '"><img class="dsq-popup-profile-avatar" src="' + userData['avatar'] + '" alt="" /></a> \
					</td> \
					<td> \
						<div class="dsq-popup-profile-user"> \
							<h3>' + userData['display_name'] + '</h3> \
							<div class="dsq-popup-profile-user-stats" id="dsq-popup-profile-user-stats-' + user_key + '">Loading...</div> \
						</div> \
					</td> \
				</tr> \
			</table> \
		';

		bodyHtml = ' \
			<div class="dsq-popup-profile-state"> \
				This is a&nbsp;<span class="'
					+ (userData['registered']
						? (userData['verified']
							? ' dsq-badge-verified'
							: (userData['is_remote']
								? ' dsq-badge-' + userData['remote_domain_name'].toLowerCase()
								: ' dsq-badge-registered')
							)
							: ' dsq-badge-guest') + '">'
			+ (userData['registered']
				? (userData['verified']
					? 'Verified'
					: (userData['is_remote']
						 ? userData['remote_domain_name']
						 : 'Registered')
					)
				: 'Guest')
			+ '</span>&nbsp;commenter profile.'
			+ '&nbsp;<a class="dsq-profile-userurl" href="' + userData.url + '"><strong>View more comments </strong></a>'
			+ (!userData['points']
				? '<p class="dsq-popup-notice">If this is you, <a href="http://disqus.com/profile" target="_blank">claim it now</a> to manage your comments.</p>'
				: '')
			+ ((userData['registered'] && !userData['verified'] && (Dsq.jsonData.request.username && (Dsq.jsonData.request.username == userData['username'])) && !userData['is_remote'])
				? '<p class="dsq-popup-notice"><strong>Alert</strong>: You have not verified this account. <a href="http://disqus.com/verify">Verify it now.</a></p>'
				: '')
			+ '</div> \
			<div id="dsq-profile-status-' + user_key + '" class="dsq-popup-profile-status" style="display:none"></div> \
			<div class="dsq-popup-profile-snapshot"> \
				<table> \
					<tr> \
						<td> \
							<div id="dsq-popup-profile-active-sites-wrapper-' + user_key + '"> \
								<h4>Most active sites</h4> \
								<ul id="dsq-popup-profile-active-sites-' + user_key + '"> \
									<li>Loading...</li> \
								</ul> \
							</div> \
						</td> \
						<td>'
							+ _includeServices()
							+ '<div id="dsq-popup-profile-moderated-wrapper-' + user_key + '"> \
								<h4>Moderator of</h4> \
								<ul id="dsq-popup-profile-moderated-' + user_key + '"> \
									<li>Loading...</li> \
								</ul> \
							</div> \
						</td> \
					</tr> \
				</table> \
			</div> \
			';

		content = {
			'header': headerHtml,
			'body': bodyHtml
		};

		return this._popupGeneric(content);
	};

	this.popupReblog = function() {
		var headerHtml = '';
		var bodyHtml = '';
		var content = {};

		headerHtml = ' \
			<cite><span>Reblog this comment</span></cite> \
		';

		bodyHtml = ' \
			<div id="dsq-reblog-form" class="dsq-reblog-form"> \
			</div> \
		';

		content = {
			'header': headerHtml,
			'body': bodyHtml
		};

		return this._popupGeneric(content);
	};

	this.popupModal = function(title, message) {
		var headerHtml = '';
		var bodyHtml = '';
		var content = {};

		headerHtml = ' \
			<h3>' + title + '</h3> \
		';

		bodyHtml = message;

		content = {
			'header': headerHtml,
			'body': bodyHtml
		};

		return this._popupGeneric(content);
	};

	this.alertContent = function(name, post_id) {
		var alert = {
			'post_not_approved': {
				'title': 'Comment awaiting approval by a moderator',
				'message': 'Thanks for posting. Your comment must be approved by a moderator before appearing here.'
			},
			'post_has_profile': {
				'title': 'Use your existing commenter profile',
				'message': 'You have just posted your commment as a <span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-guest">Guest</span>, but you may already have a <span class="dsq-badge dsq-badge-registered">Registered</span> commenter profile.<br /><br /><a href="http://disqus.com/claim">Log in and claim this comment!</a>'
			}
		};
		return alert[name] || false;
	};

	//
	// Actions
	//

	this.voted = function(post_id, points, vote) {
		// Update number of points
		Dsq.$('dsq-points-' + post_id).innerHTML = points + Dsq.Utils.pluralize(points, ' person', ' people') + ' liked this comment.';

		// Update link text
		if(vote) {
			Dsq.$('dsq-rate-cont-' + post_id).innerHTML = 'You liked this.';
		}
	};

	this.subscribed = function(status) {
		var title, message;

		if(status) {
			title = 'Subscribed!';
			message = 'You have subscribed to this comment thread. New comments will be sent directly to your email inbox, where you may read and respond by email.';
			Dsq.$('dsq-subscribe').innerHTML = ' \
				<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.subscribe(0); return false">Unsubscribe</a> \
			';
		} else {
			title = 'Unsubscribed';
			message = 'You have unsubscribed to this comment thread. New comments will no longer be sent to your email inbox.';
			Dsq.$('dsq-subscribe').innerHTML = ' \
				<a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.subscribe(1); return false">Subscribe by email</a> \
			';
		}

		Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, title);

	};
	
	this.highlighted = function() {
		Dsq.Popup.popModal('This comment has been highlighted.', 'Highlighted comment');
	};

	//
	// Media
	//

	this.mediaSeesmic = function(id, thumb) {
		return ' \
			<div id="dsq-seesmic-' + id + '_preview" class="dsq-seesmic-preview"><a href="http://www.seesmic.com/video/' + id + '" target="_blank" class="see_link">&nbsp;</a> \
				<div style="display:block;width:160px; height:120px; border:none; background-image:url(http://t.seesmic.com/thumbnail/' + thumb + ')"> \
					<div id="dsq-seesmic-' + id + '_hide" class="seePlayOverlay" style="display:none;"><img onclick="see_play_video(\'' + id + '\',false)" src="http://media.disqus.com/images/seesmic/stopOverlay.png" width="50" height="50" style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand; padding-top: 30px; padding-left: 50px" alt="" /></div> \
					<div id="dsq-seesmic-' + id + '_show" class="seePlayOverlay"><img onclick="see_play_video(\'' + id + '\',true)" src="http://media.disqus.com/images/seesmic/playOverlay.png" width="50" height="50" style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand; border:none; padding-top: 30px; padding-left: 50px" alt="" /></div> \
				</div> \
			</div> \
			<div id="' + id + '_content" style="display:block; width:100%; padding-top:5px"></div> \
		';
	};

	//
	// Callbacks
	//

	this.postComment_onSuccess = function(parent_post_id) {
		// Increment post count
		var num_posts = Dsq.$('dsq-num-posts');
		var total_posts = Dsq.$('dsq-total-posts');
		
		if (num_posts) { 
			num_posts.innerHTML = parseInt(num_posts.innerHTML) + 1;
		}
		if (total_posts) { 
			total_posts.innerHTML = parseInt(total_posts.innerHTML) + 1;
		}
	};
};
// Dsq.Templates


/**
 * Dsq.Post
 */
Dsq.Post = new function() {
	this.openedMenu = {};
	this.menuEventListener = null;
	this.stateReplyToggled = {};
	this.stateEditToggled = {};
	this.stateRecordLink = {};

	/**
	 * Inserts a new post into the document.
	 *
	 * @param after_id {Number}	Insert a post before specified id.  If after_id
	 *							evaluates to false, then post in the front.  If
	 *							after_id is -1, post at the end.
	 */
	this.insert = function(after_id, id, message, author) {
		// Skeleton template from thread_posts.html.
		var skeleton = ' \
			<li id="dsq-comment-%(id)s"> \
				<div id="dsq-comment-header-%(id)s" class="dsq-comment-header"> \
					<cite id="dsq-cite-%(id)s" class="dsq-comment-cite"> \
						<a id="dsq-author-user-%(id)s" href="%(author_url)s" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">%(author_name)s</a> \
					</cite> \
				</div> \
				<div id="dsq-comment-body-%(id)s" class="dsq-comment-body"> \
					<div id="dsq-comment-message-%(id)s" class="dsq-comment-message">%(message)s</div> \
				</div> \
			</li> \
		';
		var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[id];
		var _user_meta = Dsq.jsonData.users[_meta.user_key];
		var markup = Dsq.Utils.interpolate(skeleton, {
			id: id,
			message: message,
			author_url: _user_meta.blog,
			author_name: _user_meta.display_name
		});
		var div = document.createElement('div');
		markup = markup.replace(Dsq.COMMENTS_RE, Dsq.CommentsHandler);
		div.innerHTML = markup;

		if (after_id === -1) {
			Dsq.$('dsq-comments').appendChild(div);
		} else if (!after_id) {
			Dsq.$('dsq-comments').insertBefore(div, Dsq.$('dsq-comments').firstChild);
		} else if (Dsq.$('dsq-comment-' + after_id)) {
			// Get next node after "after_id", so we can insert before it.
			// If "after_id" is the last comment, the target node is the
			// last node.
			
			// var append_post_id = Dsq.Templates.appendPost(after_id).replace('<div id="','').replace('"></div>', '');
			var append_post_id = 'dsq-append-post-' + after_id;
			var node = Dsq.$(append_post_id);
			while (node = node.nextSibling) {
				if (!node || node.nodeType == 1) { // 1 == Node.ELEMENT_NODE
					break;
				}
			}
			if (!node) {
				node = Dsq.$(append_post_id);
			}
			node.parentNode.insertBefore(div, node);
		}
	};

	this.incrementPostCount = function() {
		
		var num_posts = Dsq.$('dsq-num-posts');
		var total_posts = Dsq.$('dsq-total-posts');

		if (num_posts) {
			num_posts.innerHTML = parseInt(num_posts.innerHTML, 10) + 1;
		}
		if (total_posts) {
			total_posts.innerHTML = parseInt(total_posts.innerHTML, 10) + 1;
		}
	}
	
	this.outlineComment = function(post_id) {
		Dsq.$('dsq-comment-' + post_id).className += ' dsq-comment-outline';
		setTimeout("(function () { Dsq.Post.clearOutlineComment(" + post_id + ") })()", 3000);
	};
	
	this.clearOutlineComment = function(post_id) {
		Dsq.$('dsq-comment-' + post_id).className = Dsq.$('dsq-comment-' + post_id).className.replace('dsq-comment-outline', '');
	};

	this.showMenu = function(el, id, name) {
		var anchorPos = Dsq.Utils.findPos(el);
		var menu = document.createElement('ul');

		if(this.openedMenu) {
			if(this.openedMenu.linkClicked) {
				this.openedMenu.linkClicked = false;
				return;
			}
		}

		switch(name) {
			case 'more':
				menu.innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.menuMore(id);
				break;
			case 'media':
				menu.innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.menuMedia(id);
				break;
			default:
				break;
		}

		// Add menu to document body
		menu.id = 'dsq-menu-' + id;
		menu.className = 'dsq-menu';
		Dsq.$b.appendChild(menu);

		// Position and show
		anchorPos[1] += 15;
		menu.style.left = anchorPos[0] + 'px';
		menu.style.top = anchorPos[1] + 'px';
		menu.style.display = 'block';

		// Set global reference
		this.openedMenu = {
			'el' : menu,
			'id' : id,
			'name' : name,
			'linkClicked' : false
		};

		// Set listener
		this.menuEventListener = Dsq.Utils.addEventListener(document, 'mouseup', this._hideMenu);
	};

	this._hideMenu = function(e) {
		var el = e.target || e.srcElement;
		var openedMenu = Dsq.Post.openedMenu.el;
		var id = Dsq.Post.openedMenu.id;

		if(!id) {
			var link = 'dsq-' + Dsq.Post.openedMenu.name + '-link';
		} else {
			var link = 'dsq-' + Dsq.Post.openedMenu.name + '-link-' + id;
		}

		if(!openedMenu) {
			return;
		}

		if(!Dsq.Popup.isClicked(e, openedMenu.id)) {
			openedMenu.style.display = 'none';
			Dsq.Utils.removeEventListener(Dsq.Post.menuEventListener);
			Dsq.Utils.deleteNode(openedMenu);

		} else {
			// Hide the menu if a link was clicked inside the menu.  We can't
			// completely remove the menu until the onclick event on the link
			// fires, but the menuEventListener will prevent multiple menus
			// from polluting the DOM.
			if(el && typeof el.href != 'undefined') {
				openedMenu.style.display = 'none';
				Dsq.Post.openedMenu.el = null;
			}
		}

		if(Dsq.Popup.isClicked(e, link)) {
 			Dsq.Post.openedMenu.linkClicked = true;
		}
	};


	this.getUserServices = function(user_key, id) {
		if(!user_key && id) {
			var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[id];
			user_key = _meta.user_key;
		}
		var userData = Dsq.jsonData['users'][user_key];
		var userServices = [];

		// Keep a full list of supported services. This is the order they will display in the drop-profile.
		// Each service must have a corresponding case in _buildServiceUrl()
		var supportedServices = ['blog', 'twitter', 'facebook', 'tumblr'];

		function _buildServiceUrl(serviceName) {
			var data = userData[serviceName];
			var services = {
				blog:		function(d) { return d; },
				twitter:	function(d) { return d; },
				facebook:	function(d) { return d; },
				tumblr:		function(d) { return 'http://' + d + '.tumblr.com'; }
			};
			return services[serviceName](data);
		}

		for(var i = 0; i < supportedServices.length; i++) {
			if(userData[supportedServices[i]]) {
				var serviceUrl = _buildServiceUrl(supportedServices[i]);
				userServices.push({'name' : supportedServices[i], 'url' : serviceUrl});
			}
		}
		return userServices;
	}

	this.dropProfile = function(id) {
		var dp = Dsq.$('dsq-drop-profile-' + id);

		// IE6 needs JS to display/hide. All other browsers use CSS.
		if(dp) {
			if(Dsq.Utils.ie6) dp.style.display = (dp.style.display == 'inline') ? 'none' : 'inline';
			return false;
		} else {
			dp = document.createElement('ul');
		}

		dp.id = 'dsq-drop-profile-' + id;
		dp.className = 'dsq-drop-profile';

		if(Dsq.Utils.ie6) { dp.style.display = 'inline'; }

		var container = Dsq.$('dsq-header-avatar-' + id);
		dp.innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.dropProfile(id);
		container.appendChild(dp);
	};

	this.dropProfileMore = function(el, id) {
		var hiddenItems = Dsq.$('dsq-drop-hidden-' + id);

		hiddenItems.style.display = 'inline';
		el.parentNode.style.display = 'none';
	};

	this._updateReplyLinks = function(el, id) {
		// Update "reply / cancel" links based on state.
		var displayDict = {};

		if(id) {
			if(this.stateReplyToggled[id]) {
				el.innerHTML = 'Cancel';
				displayDict['media'] = 'inline';
				displayDict['edit'] = 'none';
			} else {
				el.innerHTML = 'Reply';
				displayDict['media'] = 'none';
				displayDict['edit'] = 'inline';
			}
		}

		for(var key in displayDict) {
			if(displayDict.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
				var	linkEl = Dsq.$('dsq-' + key + '-el-' + id),
					spacer = Dsq.$('dsq-' + key + '-spacer-' + id);

				if(linkEl) {
					linkEl.style.display = displayDict[key];
					if(spacer) spacer.style.display = displayDict[key];
				}
			}
		}
	};

	this._updateMediaLinks = function(el, id) {
		// Update "use media / cancel" links based on state.
		var appendId = (id) ? ('-' + id) : '';
		var link = Dsq.$('dsq-media-link' + appendId);

		if(this.stateRecordLink[id]) {
			link.innerHTML = 'Cancel Media';
			link.onclick = function() { Dsq.Post.toggleMediaReply(link, id); return false; };
		} else {
			link.innerHTML = 'Use Media <small>&#9660;</small>';
			link.onclick = function() { Dsq.Post.showMenu(link, id, 'media'); return false; };
		}
	};

	this.toggleReply = function(el, id) {
		// Create reply IFrame
		if (window.disqus_use_postmessage) {
			if (!this.stateReplyToggled[id]) {
				Dsq.$('dsq-reply-' + id).style.display = 'block';
				Dsq.$('dsq-reply-bar-' + id).style.display = 'block';
				// Create IFrame if it doesn't exist.
				if (!Dsq.frames['reply_' + id]) {
					var _meta = Dsq.jsonData.posts[id];
					Dsq.frames['reply_' + id] = new Dsq.ReplyFrame(Dsq.$('dsq-reply-frame-' + id), id);
					Dsq.frames['reply_' + id].init();
					Dsq.frames['reply_' + id].setState(id, _meta.depth);
				}
			} else {
				Dsq.$('dsq-reply-' + id).style.display = 'none';
				Dsq.$('dsq-reply-bar-' + id).style.display = 'none';
			}
		} else {
			// DEPRECATED
			if(!this.stateReplyToggled[id]) {
				// Reply toolbar
				Dsq.$('dsq-reply-bar-' + id).style.display = 'block';
				Dsq.Iframes.showReplyIframeInContainerIfAllowed(Dsq.$('dsq-reply-' + id), id);
			} else {
				Dsq.$('dsq-reply-bar-' + id).style.display = 'none';
				Dsq.Iframes.hideAllInContainer(Dsq.$('dsq-reply-' + id));
				if(this.stateRecordLink[id]) {
					// HACK: Cancel media before canceling self.
					this.toggleMediaReply(Dsq.$('dsq-media-link-' + id), id);
				}
			}
		}

		this.stateReplyToggled[id] = !this.stateReplyToggled[id];
		this._updateReplyLinks(el, id);

		if(Dsq.Utils.ie) { Dsq.Utils.fixIframesIE('dsq-reply-' + id); }

		Dsq.Events.fire(Dsq.Events.REPLY_IFRAME_TOGGLED, {
			postId: id,
			opened: this.stateReplyToggled[id]
		});
	};

	this.toggleMediaReply = function(el, id, xtype) {
		id = id || 0;
		if(id) {
			var container = Dsq.$('dsq-reply-' + id);
		} else {
			var container = Dsq.$('dsq-post-add');
		}

		if(!this.stateRecordLink[id]) {
			Dsq.Iframes.showReplyIframeInContainer(container, id, {xtype:xtype}, 'dsq-post-video');
		} else {
			Dsq.Iframes.showReplyIframeInContainer(container, id);
		}
		this.stateRecordLink[id] = !this.stateRecordLink[id];
		this._updateMediaLinks(el, id);

		if(Dsq.Utils.ie) { Dsq.Utils.fixIframesIE(); }
	};

	this.edit = function(el, id) {
		Dsq.$('dsq-comment-message-' + id).innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.frameEdit(id);
		el.parentNode.style.display = 'none';
		if(Dsq.Utils.ie) { Dsq.Utils.fixIframesIE('dsq-comment-message-' + id); }
	};

    this.rate = function(el, id, vote) {
		if(Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated || Dsq.jsonData.forum.allow_anon_votes) {
			if(vote == 1) {
                Dsq.$('dsq-rate-cont-' + id).innerHTML = '<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/loading-small.gif">';
            }

            Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/vote.js'
                + '?post_id='    + id
                + '&vote='        + vote);

		} else {
			Dsq.Popup.login(Dsq.Strings.TO_RATE_PLEASE_LOG_IN);
		}
    };

	this.report = function(id, confirmed) {
		if(confirmed) {
			Dsq.Utils.postToUrl('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/the_prodigal_consumer/post_report/', {'post_id': id});
			Dsq.Popup.popModal('Thank you. This comment has been flagged for moderator attention.', 'Successfully flagged');
			Dsq.Utils.deleteNode(Dsq.$('dsq-post-report-' + id));
		} else {
			var title = Dsq.Strings.FLAG_INAPPROPRIATE_COMMENT;
			var message = Dsq.Strings.ARE_YOU_SURE_YOU_WOULD_LIKE_TO_REPORT_THIS_COMMENT_TO_A_MODERATOR + '? \
			<br /><br /> \
			<button onclick="Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true)"><strong>' + Dsq.Strings.NO + '</strong>, ' + Dsq.Strings.NEVER_MIND + '</button>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<button onclick="Dsq.Post.report(' + id + ', true);"><strong>' + Dsq.Strings.YES + '</strong>, ' + Dsq.Strings.FLAG_INAPPROPRIATE_COMMENT + '</button><br /><br />'
			+ Dsq.Strings.THIS_WILL_FLAG_COMMENTS_FOR_MODERATORS_TO_TAKE_ACTION + '. \
			';

			Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, title, id);
		}
	};



	this.showAlert = function(id, msg) {
		var msgEl = Dsq.$('dsq-comment-message-' + id);
		var alert = '<div class="dsq-comment-alert">' + msg + '</div>';

		msgEl.innerHTML = alert + msgEl.innerHTML;
	};

};
// Dsq.Post


/**
 * Dsq.Thread
 */
Dsq.Thread = new function() {
	this.fc = null;
	this.ff = null;
	this.ac = null;

	
	this.adminIsOn = false;

	
	
	

	this.hlComment = null;
	this.hlCommentClass = null;

	this.getNextComment = function(el) {
		var start_id = el.id;
		while(el = el.nextSibling) {
			if(el.id && el.id.indexOf('dsq-comment-') != -1 && el.id != start_id) {
				return el;
			}
		}
		return null;
	};

	this.getActiveCommentId = function() {
		if (document.URL.indexOf('#comment-') >= 0) {
			var anchor = document.URL.slice(document.URL.indexOf('#') + 1);
			return anchor.replace('comment-', '');
		}
		return null;
	};

	this.highlightAnchor = function() {
		var i = this.getActiveCommentId();
		if (i == null) return false;
		var id = 'dsq-comment-' + i;
		var hash = window.location.hash;

		// Toggle the hash incase the comment isn't available when the page loads
		// for WebKit-based browsers.
		if (Dsq.Utils.webkit) {
			window.location.hash = '';
			window.location.hash = hash;
		}

		this.hlComment = Dsq.$(id);
		// Adding this conditional guard pending #289
		if (!this.hlComment) {
			return;
		}
		this.hlCommentClass = this.hlComment.className;
		this.hlComment.className += ' dsq-hl-anchor';

		setTimeout("Dsq.Thread.highlightClear()", 3000);
	};

	this.highlightClear = function() {
		if (!this.hlComment) {
			return;
		}
		this.hlComment.className = this.hlCommentClass;
	};

	this.login = function(toggle) {
		// toggle id is #dsq-reply-login-[id]
		var postId;
		if(toggle.id.indexOf('dsq-reply-login') != -1) {
			postId = toggle.id.slice(16);
			var container = Dsq.$('dsq-reply-' + postId);
		} else {
			var container = Dsq.$('dsq-post-add');
		}

		if(toggle) {
			if(toggle.className == 'dsq-login-active') {
				Dsq.Iframes.showReplyIframeInContainerIfAllowed(container, postId);
				toggle.className = '';
			} else {
				Dsq.Iframes.showLoginIframeInContainer(container, postId);
				toggle.className = 'dsq-login-active';
			}
		} else {
			Dsq.Iframes.showLoginIframeInContainer(container, postId);
		}

		if(Dsq.Utils.ie) { Dsq.Utils.fixIframesIE(); }
	};


	this.paginate = function(page, el_clicked, per_page) {
		// Use extra_params to pass any override parameters that we need to persist.
		var extra_params = '';

		// "Per page" can either be overriden by providing it as an argument
		// (per-call) or setting the disqus_per_page override variable (global).
		if(typeof per_page == 'undefined') {
			per_page = null;
		}
		if(typeof disqus_per_page != 'undefined' && per_page === null) {
			per_page = disqus_per_page;
		}

		if(typeof disqus_sort != 'undefined') {
			extra_params += '&sort=' + disqus_sort;
		}
		if(per_page !== null) {
			extra_params += '&per_page=' + per_page;
		}

		Dsq.$('dsq-pagination').innerHTML += '<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/loading-small.gif">';
		
		if(el_clicked) {
			el_clicked.style.display = 'none';
		}
		
		Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/thread.js'
			+ '?slug='	+ 'the_prodigal_consumer'
			+ '&p='		+ page
			+ extra_params);
	};

	this.sortBy = function(sort) {
		var disqus_script = document.createElement('script');
		var disqus_date = new Date();

		if (location.hash != '') {
			location.hash = '#disqus_thread';
		}

		if(typeof(disqus_url) == 'undefined') {
			disqus_url = disqus_href;
		}
		disqus_script.type = 'text/javascript';
		disqus_script.src = 'http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/thread.js'
			+ '?slug='	+ 'the_prodigal_consumer'
			+ '&sort='	+ sort
			+ '&title='
			+ '&'		+ disqus_date.getTime();

		Dsq.$('dsq-comments').innerHTML = '<img src="http://media.disqus.com/images/loading.gif">';
		Dsq.container.appendChild(disqus_script);
	};

	this.subscribe = function(status, email) {
		// `status` is an int -- 1 to subscribe, 0 to unsubscribe
		if(Dsq.jsonData.request.is_authenticated || email) {
			// If authenticated user OR anonymous email provided

			if(email) {
				Dsq.Popup._closePopup(null, true);
			}

			Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/subscribe.js'
				+'?status=' 	+ status
				+ '&slug='		+ 'the_prodigal_consumer'
				+ '&email=' 	+ encodeURIComponent(email));

		} else if(!email) {
			// If anonymous user and no email has been provided yet, prompt for email

			var title = 'Subscribe to this comment thread';
			var message = ' \
				New comments will be sent directly to your email inbox! \
				<div class="dsq-subscribe-submit"> \
					<p><strong>Enter your email address below.</strong></p> \
					<input type="text" id="dsq-subscribe-email"> \
					<button onclick="Dsq.Thread.subscribe(1, Dsq.$(\'dsq-subscribe-email\').value)">Subscribe</button> \
				</div> \
			';

			Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, title);
		}
	};

	this.showSettings = function() {
		if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator) {
			return;
		}

		/* The form has to be re-designed when more options will come out. */
		var html = 'Automatically close comments after <input size="3" id="dsq-thread-days-alive" value="' + Dsq.jsonData.thread.days_alive + '" type="text" /> days. Existing comments will still be displayed.<br /><br />(Using 0 days will disable this feature)<br /><br />'
								 + '<button onclick="Dsq.Thread.updateDaysAlive();" class="dsq-button-small"><span>Save</span></button>'
								 + '<span id="dsq-thread-settings-status" class="dsq-options-status"></span>';

		Dsq.Popup.popModal(html, 'Settings');
	};

  this.showModeratorActions = function() {
      if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator) {
          return;
      }

      var html = '<div class="dsq-moderate-options"><table><tr>' +
                 '<td>' + Dsq.Strings.ACTIONS + '</td><td><ul>';
      html += '<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.toggleClosed(); return false;">' +
              (Dsq.jsonData.thread.closed ? Dsq.Strings.OPEN_THREAD : Dsq.Strings.CLOSE_THREAD) +
              '</a></li>';
      html += '<li><a href="#" onclick="Dsq.Thread.toggleKilled(); return false;">' +
              (Dsq.jsonData.thread.killed ? Dsq.Strings.RESTORE_THREAD : Dsq.Strings.REMOVE_THREAD) +
              '</a></li>';
      html += '</ul></td></tr></table></div>' +
              '<p>Go to the full <a href="http://disqus.com/comments/moderate-threads/" target="_blank">moderate panel</a> for more options.</p>';
      Dsq.Popup.popModal(html, Dsq.Strings.MODERATE_OPTIONS);
  };

	this.updateDaysAlive = function() {
		  var days = Dsq.$('dsq-thread-days-alive').value;
		  var status = Dsq.$('dsq-thread-settings-status');
		  Dsq.Utils.postToUrl('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/update_days_alive.js', {days:days,thread:Dsq.jsonData.thread.id});
		  status.innerHTML = 'Saved!';
		  window.setTimeout(function() { status.innerHTML = ''; }, 1000);
	};

  this.toggleClosed = function() {
      Dsq.Utils.postToUrl('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/toggle_thread_closed.js', {thread:Dsq.jsonData.thread.id});
      window.setTimeout(function() { window.location.reload(); }, 500);
  };

  this.toggleKilled = function() {
      Dsq.Utils.postToUrl('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/toggle_thread_killed.js', {thread:Dsq.jsonData.thread.id});
      window.setTimeout(function() { window.location.reload(); }, 500);
  };
};
// Dsq.Thread

Dsq.Events = function() {
	var obj = {};

	// Private
	var handlers = {};
	var getHandlers = function(event) {
		if (handlers[event] === undefined) {
			handlers[event] = [];
		}
		return handlers[event];
	};

	// Public
	// Value keys : postId, node, xtype
	obj.REPLY_IFRAME_CREATED = 1;
	// Value keys : postId, opened
	obj.REPLY_IFRAME_TOGGLED = 2;
	obj.fire = function(event, opt_value) {
		if (!event) {
			throw new Error('Unknown event');
		}
		var value = opt_value || {};
		for (var i=0; i<getHandlers(event).length; i++) {
			getHandlers(event)[i](value);
		}
	};
	obj.addHandler = function(event, callback) {
		getHandlers(event).push(callback);
	};

	return obj;
}();

/**
 * Dsq.Realtime
 */
Dsq.Realtime = new function() {
	var initialized = false;
	var interval = null;
	var last_checked = Dsq.jsonData.request.timestamp;
	var new_posts = [];
	var ongoing_request = false;
	var prev_script = null;

	function updateNewPostCount() {
		Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-alert').style.display = new_posts.length ? 'block' : 'none';

		Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-queued').innerHTML = new_posts.length
		+ ' new '
		+ Dsq.Utils.pluralize(new_posts.length, 'comment', 'comments')
		+ Dsq.Utils.pluralize(new_posts.length, ' was', ' were')
		+ ' just posted.';

		Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-show').innerHTML = '(' + Dsq.Strings.SHOW + ')';
	}

	function insertNewPosts() {
		var post_id = null;
		var after_id = Dsq.$('dsq-sort-select').value === 'oldest' ? -1 : null;

		for (var i=0; i<new_posts.length; i++) {
			post_id = new_posts[i];
			Dsq.Post.insert(after_id, post_id, Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id].message);
			Dsq.Post.incrementPostCount();
			Dsq.Post.outlineComment(post_id);
		}
		new_posts = [];
	}

	this.enableInterval = function() {
		interval = setInterval(Dsq.Realtime.check, Dsq.jsonData.context.realtime_speed);
		Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-status').innerHTML = Dsq.Strings.ENABLED;
		Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-toggle').innerHTML = '(' + Dsq.Strings.PAUSE + ')';
	}

	this.disableInterval = function() {
		if (interval) {
			clearInterval(interval);
			interval = null;
		}
		Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-status').innerHTML = Dsq.Strings.PAUSED;
		Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-toggle').innerHTML = '(' + Dsq.Strings.RESUME + ')';
	}

	this.toggleInterval = function() {
		if (!interval) {
			Dsq.Realtime.enableInterval();
		} else {
			Dsq.Realtime.disableInterval();
		}
		return false;
	}

	this.initialize = function() {
		if (!initialized) {
			initialized = true;
			Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-toggle').onclick = this.toggleInterval;
			if (!Dsq.jsonData.forum.streaming_realtime) {
				Dsq.$('dsq-realtime-show').onclick = this.show;
				updateNewPostCount();
			}
			if (Dsq.jsonData.thread.realtime_paused) {
				Dsq.Realtime.disableInterval();
			} else {
				Dsq.Realtime.enableInterval();
			}
		}
	}

	this.show = function() {
		insertNewPosts();
		updateNewPostCount();
		return false;
	}

	this.check = function() {
		if (!ongoing_request && Dsq.jsonData.realtime_enabled) {
			if (prev_script) {
				prev_script.parentNode.removeChild(prev_script);
			}
			ongoing_request = true;
			prev_script = Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/forums/21272085/realtime.js?timestamp=' + last_checked);
		}
	};

	this.update = function(timestamp, posts, users) {
		ongoing_request = false;
		last_checked = timestamp;

		if (users) {
			for (var user_id in users) {
				if (users.hasOwnProperty(user_id)) {
					if (!Dsq.jsonData.users[user_id]) {
						Dsq.jsonData.users[user_id] = users[user_id];
					}
				}
			}
		}

		if (posts) {
			for (var post_id in posts) {
				if (posts.hasOwnProperty(post_id)) {
					if (!Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id]) {
						Dsq.jsonData.posts[post_id] = posts[post_id];
						new_posts.push(post_id);
					}
				}
			}

			if (Dsq.jsonData.forum.streaming_realtime) {
				insertNewPosts();
			} else {
				updateNewPostCount();
			}
		}
	};

}();

// DEPRECATED
Dsq.Iframes = function() {
	// Different style of object from the above. Hoping to switch to this for some reason.
	var obj = {};

	// Private
	var showIframeInContainer = function(container, id, markup) {
		// Look through container for iframes, hiding them, except show one that matches id
		// If none of them matched id, create a new iframe using markup and insert it.
		// Returns the iframe node if and only if it was newly created.
		var found = false;
		for (var i=0; i<container.childNodes.length; i++) {
			var child = container.childNodes[i];
			if (child.nodeName == 'IFRAME') {
				if (child.id == id) {
					child.style.display = 'block';
					found = true;
				} else {
					child.style.display = 'none';
				}
			}
		}
		if (found) {
			return;
		}
		// The iframe wasn't found, so construct it and add it to the container.
		// Don't use innerHTML because it might reload iframes
		var div = document.createElement('div');
		div.innerHTML = markup;
		var iframe = div.childNodes[0];
		div.removeChild(iframe);
		container.appendChild(iframe);
		return iframe;
	};

	// Public
	obj.makeReplyIframeId = function(opt_postId, opt_xtype) {
		var id = 'dsq-post-add-iframe';
		if (opt_xtype) {
			id += '-' + opt_xtype;
		}
		if (opt_postId) {
			id += '-' + opt_postId;
		}
		return id;
	};
	obj.makeLoginIframeId = function(opt_postId) {
		if (!opt_postId) {
			return 'dsq-login-iframe';
		}
		return 'dsq-login-iframe-' + opt_postId;
	};
	obj.makeReplyIframeName = function(opt_postId, opt_xtype) {
		var name = 'dsq-reply-frame';
		if (opt_xtype) {
			name += '-' + opt_xtype;
		}
		if (opt_postId) {
			name += '-' + opt_postId;
		}
		return name;
	};
	obj.showReplyIframeInContainer = function(container, opt_postId, opt_extraParams, opt_className) {
		// Construct the id so we can check if it's already present.
		// Hide any other iframes we find, and show this one if it's found.
		var params = opt_extraParams || {};
		// use xtype in the id and name so we can distinguish media replies from text replies:
		var id = Dsq.Iframes.makeReplyIframeId(opt_postId, params.xtype);
		var name = Dsq.Iframes.makeReplyIframeName(opt_postId, params.xtype);
		var attributes = {
			'id': id,
			'name': name,
			'class': opt_className || 'dsq-post-reply'
			};
		var markup = Dsq.Templates.frameReply(opt_postId, opt_extraParams, attributes);
		var iframe = showIframeInContainer(container, id, markup);
		// It was newly created
		if (iframe) {
			Dsq.Events.fire(Dsq.Events.REPLY_IFRAME_CREATED, {
				postId: opt_postId,
				node: iframe,
				xtype: params.xtype
			});
		}
	};
	obj.showLoginIframeInContainer = function(container, opt_postId) {
		var id = Dsq.Iframes.makeLoginIframeId(opt_postId);
		var markup = Dsq.Templates.frameLogin({id: id});
		showIframeInContainer(container, id, markup);
	};
	obj.showReplyIframeInContainerIfAllowed = function(container, opt_postId) {
		if (Dsq.jsonData.context.show_reply) {
			obj.showReplyIframeInContainer(container, opt_postId);
		} else {
			obj.hideAllInContainer(container);
		}
	};
	obj.hideAllInContainer = function(container) {
		for (var i=0; i<container.childNodes.length; i++) {
			var child = container.childNodes[i];
			if (child.nodeName == 'IFRAME') {
				child.style.display = 'none';
			}
		}
	};

	return obj;
}();

Dsq.Twitter = new function() {
	var that = this;

	this.startTwitterConnect = function() {
		var popupParams = 'location=0,status=0,width=800,height=400';
		that._twitterWindow = window.open(Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/_ax/twitter/begin/', 'twitterWindow', popupParams);
		that._twitterInterval = window.setInterval(that.completeTwitterConnect, 1000);
	};

	this.completeTwitterConnect = function() {
		if (that._twitterWindow.closed) {
			window.clearInterval(that._twitterInterval);
			window.location.reload();
		}
	};
};

Dsq.Yahoo = new function() {
	var that = this;

	this.startYahooConnect = function() {
		var popupParams = 'location=0,status=0,width=800,height=400';
		that._yahooWindow = window.open(Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/_ax/yahoo/begin/', 'yahooWindow', popupParams);
		that._yahooInterval = window.setInterval(that.completeYahooConnect, 1000);
	};

	this.completeYahooConnect = function() {
		if (that._yahooWindow.closed) {
			window.clearInterval(that._yahooInterval);
			window.location.reload();
		}
	};
};

Dsq.OpenID = new function() {
	var that = this;

	this.requestURL = function() {
		var message = '<table class="dsq-openid-form"><tr><td style="vertical-align:top;" rowspan="2"><img src="' + Dsq.jsonData.settings.media_url + '/images/openid-icon-100x100.png" /></td>';
		message += '<td><label for="dsq-openid-url">OpenID URL:</label></td><td><input type="text" id="dsq-openid-url" /></td></tr>';
		message += '<tr><td><label for="dsq-openid-username">Display name:</label></td><td><input type="text" id="dsq-openid-username" /></td></tr>';
		message += '<tr><td class="dsq-openid-submit" colspan="3"><input type="button" value="Sign in" onclick="Dsq.OpenID.startConnect();" /></td></tr>';
		message += "</table>";

		Dsq.Popup.popModal(message, 'Sign in using OpenID');
	};

	this.startConnect = function() {
		var isblank = function(str) {
			return /^\s*$/.test(str);
		};

		var openid_url = Dsq.$('dsq-openid-url').value;
		var username = Dsq.$('dsq-openid-username').value;

		if (isblank(openid_url)) {
			return;
		}

		var popupParams = 'location=0,status=0,width=800,height=500';
		var url = Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/_ax/openid/begin/' + '?url=' + encodeURIComponent(openid_url) + '&username=' + encodeURIComponent(username);
		that._openidWindow = window.open(url, 'openidWindow', popupParams);
		that._openidInterval = window.setInterval(that.completeConnect, 1000);
	};

	this.completeConnect = function() {
		if (that._openidWindow.closed) {
			window.clearInterval(that._openidInterval);
			window.location.reload();
		}
	};
};

Dsq.Reaction = new function() {
	var that = this;

	this.hide = function(id) {
		Dsq.Utils.execScript('http://disqus.com/forums/jesusmanifesto/hidereaction.js?' + 'reaction_id=' + id);
	};

	this.reportMissingReactions = function() {
		if (!Dsq.jsonData.request.is_moderator || !Dsq.jsonData.forum.reactions_enabled) {
			return;
		}

		if (Dsq.jsonData.thread.queued) {
			Dsq.Popup.popModal('Your report has been received. The system will automatically search for new reactions; if any are found, they will be displayed on this comment thread.<br/><br/>Thank&nbsp;you.',
												 'Reported missing reactions');
			return;
		}

		Dsq.Utils.execScript(Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + '/forums/jesusmanifesto/queueurl.js');
	};
};

Dsq.CNN = function() {
	var obj = {};

	obj.authenticate = function() {
		var url = Dsq.jsonData.settings.disqus_url + "/saml/cnn/try/";
		Dsq.Utils.postToUrl(url, {'target': document.location}, true);
	};

	return obj;
}();


if(Dsq.Utils.ie6) {
	(function() {
		DSQ_HEADER_AVATAR_RE = /<div class="dsq-header-avatar"(.*?)>/gim;
		Dsq.Templates.registerFilter('postPrependHeader', function(html, post_id) {
			// Add "onmouseout" for dsq-header-avatar for dropProfile
			// functionality since IE6 cannot use :hover.
			function _headerAvatarReplace(content, inner, _unused, html) {
				return '<div class="dsq-header-avatar" '
					+ inner
					+ ' onmouseout="Dsq.Post.dropProfile(' + post_id + ')">';
			}
			html = html.replace(DSQ_HEADER_AVATAR_RE, _headerAvatarReplace);
			return html;
		});
	})();
}









(function() {
	//
	// Load theme.  This overrides the base templates with template functions
	// from the respective themes.
	//
	if (Dsq.jsonData.integration.theme == 4) {
		var theme = 'narcissus';
		// HACK: Set variable on window to use post message.
		window.disqus_use_postmessage = true;

		
		for(var prop in Dsq.Themes[theme]) {
			if(Dsq.Themes[theme] && Dsq.Themes[theme].hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
				Dsq.Templates[prop] = Dsq.Themes[theme][prop];
			}
		}
		
		for(var prop in Dsq.Post) {
			if(Dsq.Themes[theme] && Dsq.Themes[theme].hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
				Dsq.Post[prop] = Dsq.Themes[theme][prop];
			}
		}
	}

	//
	// Register templates.  This must be done after all themes are loaded.
	//
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('authPost', Dsq.Templates.authPost);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('header', Dsq.Templates.header);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('footer', Dsq.Templates.footer);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('trackbacks', Dsq.Templates.trackbacks);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('reactions', Dsq.Templates.reactions);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('prependPost', Dsq.Templates.prependPost);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('appendPost', Dsq.Templates.appendPost);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('postPrependHeader', Dsq.Templates.postPrependHeader);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('postAppendHeader', Dsq.Templates.postAppendHeader);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('preBody', Dsq.Templates.preBody);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('postBody', Dsq.Templates.postBody);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('postFooter', Dsq.Templates.postFooter);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('_popupGeneric', Dsq.Templates._popupGeneric);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('voted', Dsq.Templates.voted);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('popupProfile', Dsq.Templates.popupProfile);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('postBox', Dsq.Templates.postBox);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('pagination', Dsq.Templates.pagination);
	Dsq.Templates.registerTemplate('postComment_onSuccess', Dsq.Templates.postComment_onSuccess);

})();

Dsq.container.className = "clearfix";
Dsq.container.innerHTML = ' \
<ul id="dsq-comments">\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10767049">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10767049" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10767049" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10767049" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10767049" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10767049" class="dsq-comment-message">This is well-written, Ted. And I think you accurately describe (diagnose?) the "narrative satisfaction in the repetition structure" that many Christians call their spiritual life. That\'s interesting.<br><br>Your emphasis on the importance of a living community is good, too, though I don\'t think that is opposed to the usual interpretation of the parable. The evangelicals have a good point in their interpretation, and so do you. <br><br>I think you went a bit overboard, though, with your climactic "this God only exists to the extent that such love is made manifest in genuine human contact." You may not be aware of the contemplative experience of God, but I expect you know of prophetic inspiration, where God is not mediated through another person but is experienced directly, spiritually. God exists quite well, and can make himself known, with or without our help. "With" is better (for us), of course. But God exists, period. <br><br>I believe he even once called himself "I AM."</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10773014">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10773014" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10773014" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10773014">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10773014" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10773014" class="dsq-comment-message">So I went to reply and hit "like" by accident. Perhaps there\'s a lesson there.<br><br>I had no doubt you would find something to take me to task on, Paul. You do not disappoint.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10773335">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10773335" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10773335" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10773335" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10773335" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10773335" class="dsq-comment-message">Ah, c\'mon Ted...I\'ve been waiting for your response. I tried writing my own, but decided to delete it and wait for yours.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10774114">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10774114" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10774114" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10774114">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10774114" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10774114" class="dsq-comment-message">Okay, Mark\'s right. That wasn\'t much of a response. I\'m glad, that, at the very least, you recognized the line as climactic. I could have softened the rhetoric by saying "this aspect of God only exists," or some such, but that wouldn\'t have done justice to either the sentiment I wanted to express or my understanding of God. Of course your assertion of God\'s unconditional existence is orthodox, and I have no quarrel with that. <br><br>God\'s "isness," however, is of little meaning without being made manifest. The contemplative experience of God (yes, I\'m familiar, thank you very much, but I don\'t pray and tell) is mediated through our humanness, or we could not experience it. The prophetic experience is always for others. And most of the time, even in the Bible, God works through human agency, through those willing to open themselves kenotically to not only experience the presence of God (whoop-de-do, St. John of the Cross might say) but to manifest it to others. (God even uses the unaware and unwilling, or those who just happen to be about.)<br><br>This, I think, is very Christian, rooted in the Incarnation. My loaded rhetoric was intended to make visceral the extent to which an ostensibly loving God that is not realized by our willingness to extend that love to others isn\'t worth a bowl of warm spit.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10783520">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10783520" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10783520" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10783520" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10783520" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10783520" class="dsq-comment-message">Thanks Ted. I thought you\'d say something like that and I wasn\'t disappointed. <br><br>Paul, I find so much that you say encouraging, but when it comes to the way in which you understand community I usually disagree a little. Your personalist (at least it feels like personalism) perspective pushes against the way in which I understand the Church to be the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world (although, to complicate matters, I also believe that the poor are the sole incarnation of Christ to the Church).<br><br>Certainly, Christ can reveal himself to someone individually apart from the church, but such revelation is introductory and incomplete. And, as Ted suggests, it isn\'t entirely unmediated anyways.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10792437">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10792437" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10792437" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10792437" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10792437" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10792437" class="dsq-comment-message">I don\'t quite understand the "it isn\'t entirely unmediated" part, Mark (or Ted), if you\'re referring to prayer, or some other individual experience of God. Are you saying that since I myself am human and experience God in my own humanness (though not mediated through anyone else, in that particular moment) then that experience of God is "mediated through my humanness"? If so, okay. Though I don\'t think, with that definition, you\'re saying anything significantly different than any evangelical would say.<br><br>The most important question here, I think (and this comes from church history and my own experience in a number of communities), is that if "the Church [is] the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world," who does this Church include? Does it include Martin Luther, after his excommunication? How about <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simone_Weil" rel="nofollow">Simone Weil</a>, who never officially joined the organized church? Or Soren Kierkegaard, who left the state church of his time (and launched his "Attack on Christendom")? All of these, and many other "prophetic" types found inspiration and the confidence to challenge or oppose "the church" of their day, and they found it through their personal experience of God. The community always needs correction, and God picks and inspires and uses individuals as he wills to speak to the community when it seems to have lost its way.<br><br>Yes, this revelation is "for" the church. But my point is that, in cases of prophetic challenge such as I have described, these individuals are often denounced and condemned (even killed) by "the community" on the grounds that "the Church is the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world."<br><br>I agree that the church is a very important revelation of Christ to the world, but "sole" seems hard to back up. What about nature? Psalm 19 refers to this (and Paul references it when talking of evangelism in Romans 10.18):<br><blockquote>The heavens are telling the glory of God;<br>and the firmament proclaims his handiwork.<br>...their voice goes out through all the earth,<br>and their words to the end of the world.</blockquote>Perhaps you would say this is "introductory and incomplete." Sure. But it is not an insignificant revelation of God.<br><br>There\'s also the question of those people in the world who, for various reasons, never encounter Christians. Can they have no experience of God? Does God not speak to them? I think we have ample evidence that he does. And I believe Jesus shows himself to the extent people are willing to receive him, "by any means necessary" (to quote Malcom X). <br><br>God\'s revelation is not limited by our ability to mediate it to others.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10803316">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10803316" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10803316" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10803316">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10803316" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10803316" class="dsq-comment-message">I can\'t speak for Mark, but your summary of what I mean our experience of God being mediated through our humanness seems fair. That this is not different from what other evangelicals might say is not something that bothers me. I might point out, however, that your insistence that such an experience is "not mediated through anyone else, in that moment" would seem to presume a concept of the self I\'m not sure I can abide. For me, we would do well to recognize that our experience in any moment is always already mediated through our social context. <br><br>The contemplative experience of God, for instance, is interpreted as such by the Christian contemplative, but there\'s actually nothing that says it must be what they assume it to be. It could be an artifact of a natural brain state cultivated by centering prayer or <em>lectio divina</em>. Someone from a different religion undertaking similar practices would interpret such an experience through a different grid.<br><br>Or, if that is too relativistic and/or reductionistic, let\'s say the experience is incontrovertibly a personal experience of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Even this is predicated on having been formed, in community, as the sort of person who is prepared for such experiences and to whom God might come in such a way. <br><br>You have a unique predilection for latching onto hyperbole and throttling it within an inch of its life. So -- okay, okay, we can know God through trees.<br><br>But can we? In a sense that does justice to the Incarnation? Can a tree visit me in prison? Wash my feet? Sit up with me in the hospital while my loved one struggles for life? Share bread with a stranger or be the stranger with whom I share my bread? <br><br>As for the Church, we have been down this road before, you and I, and we disagree sharply. I claim no right to decide who is "in" or "out." I would include both the institutional church and its dissidents. I might wax poetic and suggest that Christ is to be found wherever bread is shared with a stranger, regardless of the religious affiliation of those involved. <br><br>But none of this is the point. My point, at least, is that those of us who claim any sort of allegiance to Jesus Christ must reckon with our responsibility to embody Christ, to become Christ, to be Christ, because I don\'t think we have reason to believe that Christ is present any other way. Not that it is necessarily impossible another way, but that to count on it is to forfeit our calling.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10805048">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10805048" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10805048" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10805048" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10805048" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10805048" class="dsq-comment-message">I agree that we are called to embody Christ, Ted. But that is not some "responsibility" carried out because "Christ is [not] present any other way." It is simply responding to Jesus\' call and being drawn into his body, as Paul puts it so well:<br><blockquote>And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being changed into his likeness from one degree of glory to another; for this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit. (2 Cor 3.18)</blockquote><br>And it is interesting that Paul mentions the Spirit, because that seems notably missing from this discussion so far. Yet the Holy Spirit is the primary way Jesus talks about his presence with us, and this is not a humanly "mediated" presence. Some of his last words to his disciples offer them this comfort:<br><blockquote>"I will not leave you desolate; I will come to you. Yet a little while, and the world will see me no more, but you will see me; because I live, you will live also. In that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you.<br><br>...Judas (not Iscariot) said to him, "Lord, how is it that you will manifest yourself to us, and not to the world?"<br><br>Jesus answered him, "If a man loves me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him....<br><br>"These things I have spoken to you, while I am still with you. But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you." (<a href="http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/r/rsv/rsv-idx?type=DIV2&byte=4999196" rel="nofollow">Jn 14.19-26</a>)</blockquote><br>I can appreciate the desire to push back against evangelical individualistic spirituality, but you seem to be going far overboard and denying major parts of Jesus\' teaching (and major parts of spiritual reality) in order to make your point more strongly. I know you are not alone in this. Much of the new "community" movement does the same.<br><br>We should most definitely "count on" Jesus being present to us whether or not people are Christlike to us, and Jesus being present to others whether or not we manage to be Christlike to them. That was Jesus\' promise to us before he ascended. "Lo I am with you always." Always. And <i>that</i> is precisely what we should count on, not the embodiedness of Christians (who have so often and so terribly failed to mediate or embody Jesus to so very many people).<br><br>This does not in any way diminish our call (or motivation) to be like Jesus and embody his presence to others. Because our motivation is not one of duty, or concern that there is no other way for Jesus to be present. Our motivation is the Holy Spirit, real and living and present, God himself present in us, Love in us.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10805513">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10805513" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10805513" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10805513">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10805513" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10805513" class="dsq-comment-message">I love those passages, Paul. I especially love how so many of them are corporate, employing the plural "you." It\'s a beautiful picture, really: the Church is the Body of Christ, breathing the very Breath of God. I don\'t see the problem.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10805896">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10805896" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10805896" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10805896">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10805896" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10805896" class="dsq-comment-message">Oh, and I should say: kudos for the line about denying spiritual reality. That\'s new.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10810720">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10810720" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10810720" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10810720" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10810720" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10810720" class="dsq-comment-message">Plural doesn\'t necessarily imply one corporate entity, Ted. It could also be interpreted "all of you."<br><br>And I don\'t see how that is relevant, unless you are trying to say (as I\'ve heard some say) that Jesus\' presence is promised to the church as a whole always, but not necessarily to each of us individually. That\'s not much of a promise, now is it? "Lo I am with you always... you as a group that is; I may or may not be with any particular one of you at any particular time..." <br><br>I also think it\'s worth saying that making dismissive comments without actually engaging the arguments that are presented to you won\'t go far in convincing people of your point.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10811274">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10811274" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10811274" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10811274">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10811274" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10811274" class="dsq-comment-message">I\'m sorry I seemed dismissive, Paul. It\'s just that I have a hard time perpetuating a discussion with someone who has it all figured out. Your way of thinking seems to be working nicely for you. I wish you well.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10813922">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10813922" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10813922" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10813922" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10813922" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10813922" class="dsq-comment-message">You seem to wish to direct your comments against me personally rather than discussing the topic at hand. I\'m not sure why that is, but perhaps it would be better done privately. I can be reached via the e-mail address at the bottom of <a href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" rel="nofollow">this page</a>.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10820456">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10820456" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10820456" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10820456">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10820456" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10820456" class="dsq-comment-message">Paul -- You\'re probably right. I\'m being a jerk and I apologize. I\'m not sure why, either. I\'ll email you privately to pursue that end of things.<br><br>As for the topic, I think the most productive thing for me to do is simply admit that I\'m riffing on the NT texts, primarily Ephesians, which has a "high ecclesiology," one that expresses the relationship between Christ and the church in terms remarkably similar to the language describing the relationship between God and Christ that led to the formulation of the trinitarian doctrine. <br><br>Anyway, no, I\'m not adhering to strict rules of exegesis, and that\'s probably frustrating. But I don\'t think I\'m doing something that is fundamentally different from what the NT writers did with the OT, and as such I don\'t think I\'m engaging in a practice or making a call to action that is fundamentally at odds with the Christian tradition.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10821528">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10821528" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10821528" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10821528" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10821528" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10821528" class="dsq-comment-message">Thanks for that, Ted. It helps a lot.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11893274">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11893274" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11893274" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11893274" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11893274" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11893274" class="dsq-comment-message">Sorry for taking so long to reply here...but I want to unpack the "personalism" comment. Personalism, as I understand it, is an attempt to resist abstraction by relating with the people in front of you. As Dorothy Day wrote that "it is people who are important, not the masses."<br><br>In my comment above, I am not rejecting personalism...in fact, I would consider myself a personalist. However, within personalism there is a danger of collapsing towards individualism (of a sort).<br><br>We are members of one another. Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME. Within that, a personalist perspective refuses to abstract what I mean by "us." There is no abstracted Church...Christ is actually present in the least of these--the brother or sister who struggles. Actual persons (not this abstraction called the "State" or programs or "movements" are responsible for other persons in need. <br><br>Some personalists and anarchists will challenge abstraction to the point of saying that community itself is too much of an abstraction. And while often rejecting individualism, they will embrace an unmediated understanding of Christ\'s presence to the extent that we are left with a collective of individuals who are largely unable to submit to one another.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11901739">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11901739" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11901739" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11901739" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11901739" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11901739" class="dsq-comment-message">Thanks for coming back to this, Mark, because I think it gets to the heart of some of the disagreements we\'ve had.<br><br>I love that Dorothy Day quote. But I\'m quite not sure where you get "Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME." Or how you can support it. There is only one Jesus; present to "us" or to "me," it is the same person, isn\'t it?<br><br>I\'m not sure exactly what you mean by "present... in a fuller way," but it suggests a closer presence or deeper, more complete experience of Jesus. If that\'s what you mean, I think that <i>sometimes</i> the "us" has a fuller experience and sometimes the "me" (the individual) does. Usually depending on the spiritual maturity of the people in question, and their willingness to listen at that moment. Doesn\'t the history of the church clearly demonstrate this? <br><br>In <a href="http://www.jesusmanifesto.com/2009/06/the-prodigal-consumer/#comment-10792437" rel="nofollow">my previous comment</a> I pointed to examples such as Luther and Kierkegaard, who seemed to be in closer touch with Christ than the vast majority of the church of their time. Of course there are many other examples of prophetic types like these. And the great danger is that the belief that "Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME (or YOU)" served then to justify the rejection and condemnation (and sometimes execution) of these prophetic witnesses. I would also say it played a role in justifying Jesus\' crucifixion: Who is this <i>individual</i> to be speaking for God—WE, who represent God\'s people (and uphold the traditions of God\'s people through history) know God\'s will much better than this one man.<br><br>Am I wrong here? <br><br>I believe individuals can experience Jesus\' presence fully, the same presence that can be experienced fully in community (and we are all called into both individual and communal experience). One Jesus, making himself present to whom he will. These are not in conflict with one another, but support and compliment one another. What is important is not the primacy of "individual experience" or "communal experience" but whether what we are experiencing is the one, real Jesus.<br><br>And "submit to one another"? Aren\'t we rather called to submit to God? ("Submit to one another" has been used again and again by Christian communities to exercise power and dominate individuals. I have first hand experience of this and have heard so many stories....) Yes, God often speaks to us through others, perhaps a group of others, but also through individuals. Which is why we should not put the group over or against the individual, but should be listening for (and submitting to) God\'s voice speaking through whomever he chooses. Right?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11907701">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11907701" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11907701" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11907701">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11907701" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11907701" class="dsq-comment-message">"Submit to one another" <i>does</i> sound kind of familiar...</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11911476">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11911476" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11911476" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11911476" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11911476" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11911476" class="dsq-comment-message">I suppose you\'re referring to <a href="http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/r/rsv/rsv-idx?type=DIV2&byte=5350729" rel="nofollow">Eph 5</a>.21, Ted? "Be subject to one another out of reverence for Christ." Right before "Wives, be subject to your husbands, as to the Lord." I\'d say the first line is about as problematic as the second, when taken literally and out of context.  (It might also be helpful to notice that this teaching does not seem to appear among Jesus\' sayings—correct me if I\'m wrong.)<br><br>And the interpretation that "be subject to one another" means "submit to the group (or majority?)" is far from clear. I\'d interpret it "submit to others when Jesus is speaking through them" (which fits well with "out of reverence for Christ"), and that fits with all the other teachings about obeying God alone, having one master, one Lord.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11914160">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11914160" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11914160" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11914160" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11914160" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11914160" class="dsq-comment-message">The idea of submission goes much deeper than in just Eph 5:21. Mutual submission (which I agree isn\'t simply just submission to the group will) is found throughout the New Testament writings. <br><br>You\'re right--language about submission isn\'t found in Jesus\' own teachings. But why is that? Language of the Church is rare as well...language of submission flows out of discussion about the Church.<br><br>All we know about Jesus we learn from the Church. It was early Christians whose oral traditions are captured in the four Gospels. Jesus\' teachings shaped the early church, but so too did the Church\'s own experience of Christ in and through one another. And also through their own personal experiences of Christ, to be sure.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11915088">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11915088" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11915088" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11915088" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11915088" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11915088" class="dsq-comment-message">The thing is, language about submission (obedience) <i>to God</i> is found in Jesus\' teachings. As well as sayings like this:<br><blockquote>"You are not to be called rabbi, for you have one teacher, and you are all brethren. And call no man your father on earth, for you have one Father, who is in heaven. Neither be called masters, for you have one master, the Christ." (Mt 23.8-10)</blockquote><br>I don\'t see the submission question being at all unclear in Jesus\' teaching (and example). "You have one master."<br><br>As I\'ve been saying, the one Master can speak through anyone, so we should listen for his voice in the words of others. But we do not submit ourselves to any person or group of people. We have one, and only one, master.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11915357">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11915357" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11915357" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11915357" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11915357" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11915357" class="dsq-comment-message">So, Paul, you\'d render "submit to one another" as irrelevant because you think it is inconsistent with the teachings of Jesus? I\'d suggest you need to submit to the voice of God speaking through Paul...<br><br>Alas, here is the problem. In this case, you seem to find that you need not submit to the Tradition that has brought us the teachings on submission contained in the writings of Peter and Paul, because the Gospel accounts (according to Mark, Matthew, Luke and "John") seem to call us to something else?<br><br>I don\'t see any inconsistencies between submission to God and mutual submission. Mutual submission isn\'t calling my brother or sister "Master" it is simply recognizing that our relationship with God is made complete in one another.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11915845">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11915845" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11915845" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11915845" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11915845" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11915845" class="dsq-comment-message">No, as I said before, I think Paul\'s words about mutual submission have to be interpreted just as his words about wifely submission have to be interpreted. Interpreted in light of Jesus\' teaching.<br><br>And, interpreted rightly, Paul\'s words don\'t contradict Jesus\' teaching, in my opinion. C\'mon, we interpret Paul and Peter often in light of Jesus (like about slavery, women, etc). That\'s not rejecting those guys.<br><br>I think you\'re going to have to explain your understanding of "submission" a little more clearly, Mark. Because I\'ve seen it mostly interpreted as "obedience" (throughout church history and in the histories of many Christian communities). And I\'ve heard lots of stories of its misuse in communal situations. <br><br>This is not just a theological argument, but one that very forcefully impacts people\'s lives, <i>especially</i> in community.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11916064">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11916064" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11916064" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11916064" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11916064" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11916064" class="dsq-comment-message">I was teasing you a bit, Paul. I should have added a wink ;)<br><br>I agree, of course, about reading all of Scripture in light of Jesus; I don\'t hold to a "flat" view of Scripture. <br><br>I don\'t equate submission to obedience. In Romans 12-13, Paul seems to liken obedience to turning the other cheek. In danger of being anachronistic, such submission seems more like Gandhi\'s understanding of <a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satyagraha rel="nofollow">Satyagrah</a> than like whatever we usually think when we hear "obedience." In other words, submission is the opposite of coercion. It is subordinating your will and desire for the good of the other. Submitting to one another is what it "looks like" to love one another. Just like wives and husbands are to submit to, and love, one another (which is how I tackle the other parts of that Ephesians passage).</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11919037">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11919037" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11919037" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11919037" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11919037" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11919037" class="dsq-comment-message">Okay, that makes sense. Earlier I thought of saying that we are to "be subject to" (obey) God, and love one another. And I agree with your description of love.<br><br>But then the submission you describe, being the same usage as when Paul talks about "submitting" to earthly authorities in Rom 13 (which I agree with), that doesn\'t seem anything special or unique for relations within the church. It sounds like the way we should love anyone. Is that what you mean?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11919745">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11919745" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11919745" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11919745" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11919745" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11919745" class="dsq-comment-message">I think out submission looks different in the Church than it does "outside" the church. Just like love between family members looks different than love for strangers. Our mutual submission and love in the Body is a far weightier thing, it seems to me, than the love offered in hospitality and in nonviolent love for enemies.<br><br>This is where the epistles are so helpful...especially, perhaps Romans, in guiding us through what the bonds of Christian familial love looks like and what enemy-love looks like to a mixed ethnicity group of Christians in the heart of Empire. It is sad to me that Romans has become a blunt object of intellectual Christendom rather than the radical document that it is intended to be.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11920655">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11920655" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11920655" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11920655" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11920655" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11920655" class="dsq-comment-message">I agree, Mark, though how specifically is it different in the aspect of "submission"? <br><br>You mention family life, but usually, even in the best families, there is hierarchy and struggles with somewhat oppressive social dynamics and constructs (that was my experience, at least). Isn\'t the life of the Body supposed to be something even better? Jesus uses family analogies to describe it, but then also says things that show that his Body is meant to be the one, true family that our biological families can never be.<br><br>I think it is our common (personal) connection with and undivided obedience to God that unites us in a way that blood cannot. And allows us all to be subject to the one Master without needing hierarchies, all being brothers and sisters, as Jesus taught.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11920832">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11920832" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11920832" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11920832" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11920832" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11920832" class="dsq-comment-message">I agree. I meant "family life" in the ecclesiological sense...I was working off the same metaphor that Paul and others use in talking about the Church. I do believe that the Church is supposed to be much more than just like blood families. <br><br>Indeed, we are called to be subject to One Master as we enter into humble mutual love as brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus, who is our Brother.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11917878">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11917878" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11917878" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11917878">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11917878" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11917878" class="dsq-comment-message">I wasn\'t trying to prooftext, Paul. I\'m no good at it. I was just (somewhat playfully) checking to make sure you weren\'t too-quickly dismissing a turn of phrase ("scare quotes" always catch my eye) with what seems to be a viable pedigree. In other words, those of us who might invoke mutual submission aren\'t just making stuff up.<br><br>I agree with Mark about the contingency of the gospels, perhaps taking it farther (it\'s not something we\'ve discussed). The Jesus of the Gospels is a Jesus we know because communities passed down those stories and members of those communities eventually recorded them at least partially as a benefit to those communities. <br><br>Further, my understanding is that prophecies were to be tested, just as tongues were to be interpreted, etc. This is not to say that God never speaks to us from outside our given community, or the church at large -- I certainly believe he speaks to us from the margins. And so on. But the normative means, I think, is through the wisdom of the collected body, and, in the spirit of Chesterton, the communion of the saints. <br><br>[And, as with other things, I would guess that I find the prophetic voice today in places you would not.]<br><br>How, precisely, do I encounter this Master to whom I\'m exclusively beholden? If it is through prayer, how do I know I\'m not just gazing at my navel? If it is through scripture, how do I learn to read and interpret scripture? And -- to be fair -- if it\'s in community, how do I know I\'m not just drinking the Kool-Aid? I\'m not advocating for slavish devotion to a community or a tradition (or clearly you haven\'t met me). I think these elements -- contemplation, revelation, community -- are to be held in tension.<br><br>Can I ask a personal question? I assure you I am merely curious and there is no trap. Do you see yourself as a prophet? You seem, at any rate, to identify with the prophetic animus in a way that I don\'t (which is not to suggest that you shouldn\'t). I just want to see if there\'s anything to that or if I\'m just guilty of blog-comment eisegesis. :)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11919532">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11919532" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11919532" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11919532" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11919532" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11919532" class="dsq-comment-message">There is another interpretation of how the gospels were recorded and passed down truthfully: by the work of the Spirit of God keeping individuals and communities faithful in their contributions. It wasn\'t the historical community that guaranteed it (or that we trust), it was, and still is, God.<br><br>And I think all the ways you mention, Ted, (plus a few more) help us discern the voice of the Master. It must be discerned in prayer, interpreted in scripture, and sorted from the various voices in community—but when they are all saying the same thing we can be pretty sure. (Maybe this is part of what you mean by "holding them in tension"?) I think we can also learn from experience what the voice of the Master sounds like, becoming more sensitive to hearing it through all these ways. "My sheep hear my voice." Ultimately, though, there has to be a certain amount of trust (faith) that the Spirit will help us sort it out, just as the Spirit helped the authors and communities sort out the scriptures. <i>That\'s</i> what we have faith in, rather than in the written word, or our own prayers, or even the consensus of our community. Our faith needs to be in <i>God</i>.<br><br>Prophet, hmmm. Yes, I suppose I do identify with prophetic types, and admire them. Personality-wise I think I\'m also more suited for their tasks and challenges (very sensitive to group dynamics and pressures—and group mistakes—and quite introverted, independent-minded, tending toward the mystical). I\'ve tended to take powerfully (even violently?) emotional stands against the group when they seem to be dominating the individual. And I\'m extremely anti-institutional, as I\'m sure you\'ve noticed. Yes, that\'s pretty perceptive on your part.<br><br>These days, though, everyone seems to be <a href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2007/03/ecce-homo.html" rel="nofollow">"prophetic"</a> (even Michelle Obama\'s starting a garden at the White House was called prophetic). So I\'m not sure the term "prophet" means much anymore.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11919605">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11919605" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11919605" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11919605">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11919605" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11919605" class="dsq-comment-message">Your last post to Mark doesn\'t give me a "reply" option, so I\'ll chime in here. I don\'t know what Mark would say but I would suggest that it is the <i>mutual</i> submission that is characteristic of the church. This implies a non-hierarchiality that does not obtain in other relationships. From the perspective of the individual, this might look or feel the same or similar, in that it is indeed the love we are to show everyone. The relationships are to be very different in the church. This is related to why I go so far as to say that I, by myself, am not the body of Christ. I might be Christ-like (a guy can dream, can\'t he?), but I cannot manifest mutuality all by my lonesome.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11919805">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11919805" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11919805" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11919805" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11919805" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11919805" class="dsq-comment-message">Well said, Ted. I agree. (And dream on!)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11928756">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11928756" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11928756" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11928756">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11928756" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11928756" class="dsq-comment-message">By the way, I now have an Aerosmith song in my head. ("Dream on, dream on...")</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11928625">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11928625" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11928625" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11928625">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11928625" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11928625" class="dsq-comment-message">For me, to say that the Holy Spirit was keeping those individuals and communities (which seems redundant, as the members were not independent of the body) faithful is simply a more theological way of saying the same thing. The faithful who went before us are an integral part of that mix. <br><br>Jesus, as far as we know, did not write anything (well, there was that bit in the dirt). He entrusted his teachings to a plurality of others. Peter, when he received his vision in Acts 9, took it to the others to help clarify its meaning and implications for the community.<br><br>And we cannot know about the Holy Spirit in the way you describe without these texts that we believe come to us by the Holy Spirit. There\'s an unavoidable circularity here. I\'m not suggesting an invalidity, I just think we need to own up to that circularity. <br><br>We know Jesus (in part, at least) because his story was preserved in the Gospels. We have the Gospels through the communities that preserved them. We accept particular Gospels (and epistles) because we trust (or at least agree with) those who later deliberated on the canon. And so forth. I\'m not denying the work of the Holy Spirit in this process, but describing what it looks like on the ground.<br><br>My list (contemplation, scripture, community) was not intended to be exhaustive, though I think as broad categories they\'re not half bad. I just want to bring you into my world for a moment, in which there is no single locus of knowing/experiencing God that trumps all others. So, faith in God -- yes! But how does this faith come to us? How is this faith tested? Where do we cultivate this faith? <br><br>The community is more than a collection of individuals, and the church is more than a collection of communities, and our faith tradition is more than the historical record of such communities. I locate the work of the Holy Spirit in this "more," the impetus of a dialectical tension between story and peoplehood (which is not to suggest this as a robust pneumatology, but merely a fragment).<br><br>But I also cannot know the tradition apart from that history, and I don\'t know that history apart from the communities that preserved it, and I am not a part of that history independently of my involvement in a particular community, and I don\'t experience community apart from my interaction with this sister or that brother (which is my nod to personalism). Again, this is not intended to be exhaustive or exclusive, but I do think it\'s indispensible. <br><br>Let me be personal and transparent in a way that might be dangerous in this context (and this early in the morning). My impression is that you\'ve been shaped by one or more bad experiences of community, vicariously if not personally. That\'s fair. I don\'t suggest this is as something that invalidates your observations, nor do I suggest that you are colored by your experience in a way that I am not. <br><br>More importantly, you seem to be blessed with a great faith such that what I\'m reading as a fierce individualism leans nevertheless in the direction of Jesus. Maybe you do have a kind of prophetic calling, and I see you has having a kind of eremitic or anchorite vocation (the married thing notwithstanding), a bit of a voice calling in (and from) the wilderness. Again, please don\'t read that as dismissive, and I may not have it quite right. I\'m just trying to name what I see.<br><br>So here\'s the transparent part: my individualism goes the other direction. Left to my own devices, I\'m more likely to be an atheist than an anchorite. I need the tether of tradition and community in order to remain faithful. I can\'t make it on my own, and this surely colors my theological reflections. But I also don\'t think I\'m alone -- or all that unusual.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11929387">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11929387" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11929387" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11929387" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11929387" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11929387" class="dsq-comment-message">You realize, Ted, that I\'m living in Christian community now, and plan to for the rest of my life? And have for years now, not just nominally either but intimately involved and fully committed?<br><br>Yes, maybe I\'m more inclined to solitude, but following Jesus has led me into a life shared closely and intimately with others in the Body. So I\'ve been shown how essential it is, despite my inclinations.<br><br>The difference is, I didn\'t come seeking "community." I was seeking Jesus and found his Body. Which is the right way to do it, I think, because we should be followers of Jesus first (and completely), right?<br><br>I accept our personal differences (as natural and good) and agree they may contribute to certain misunderstandings. But I\'ll also insist that, if a tether is needed (and we all need it, I think), "tradition and community" are not completely dependable or secure in themselves. Not worthy of our faith. Only God is.<br><br>Abuses aside (and there are plenty of examples in history, to which my own experiences add little), tradition and community need always to be interpreted, don\'t they? Their myriad of voices tested and challenged to discern where the voice of God is speaking in them? So we must depend on something higher (deeper?) to guide us, and Jesus offered us this, the Spirit of God working in us. This is worthy of faith and complete trust.<br><br>And just like in Jesus\' life, this faith is necessary for the Spirit to work. "Your faith has healed you." The full experience of God\'s presence and guiding is contingent on our utter trust in him.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11930201">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11930201" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11930201" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11930201" href="http://thoughtloose.blogspot.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Maria Kirby</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11930201" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11930201" class="dsq-comment-message">I have been enjoying reading this discussion.  I might want to add some things later when I have the time and if it hasn\'t been said already.  I just want to push back a bit on one of your statements Paul.<br><br>The difference is, I didn\'t come seeking "community." I was seeking Jesus and found his Body. Which is the right way to do it, I think, because we should be followers of Jesus first (and completely), right?<br><br>In my opinion, wrong.  God brings us to himself in a variety of ways, none of which is more holy than the other.  And my guess is that before you were actually seeking Jesus for Jesus sake, you sought God in ways that were much more self centered.  I remember reading a church father discuss this, I can\'t remember which one at the moment.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11930538">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11930538" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11930538" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11930538">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11930538" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11930538" class="dsq-comment-message">I assumed you were in Christian community -- in fact an examination of our respective lives might open me to charge that you are more committed to community than I am. There\'s a deep irony there I trust you will be kind enough not to exploit. Likewise, I presume you don\'t think me incapable of independent thought. :)<br><br>I\'m also not, just to be clear, attempting to reduce our differences to the vagaries of our personal histories. That\'s a part of things but hardly the whole story. I think there are some pretty significant gaps in our respective epistemological and phenomenological perspectives -- but this isn\'t the place for that.<br><br>I do not question the primacy of Jesus, nor do I deny the importance of faith in God. You bring that up a lot, and I\'d like to point out that I\'m not suggesting that we don\'t need faith in God. But let me push a bit here: how did you know it was Jesus you were seeking? Or, more pointedly: where is this faith in God that exists apart from everything else? I quite literally have no way to conceptualize that. To be honest it starts to sound like magic to me -- which I\'d like you to read as saying more about me than it does about you.<br><br>So, faith in God: of course. We agree on this. I do not reduce this to the communal context, but I cannot imagine faith without that context (on some level). So it makes no sense to me to posit faith in God over and against community and tradition, nor (on my side) is a fetishization of community and tradition (which happens often enough) tantamount to faith in God. (C&T being a shorthand for a larger constellation of factors -- hopefully you\'re tracking.)<br><br>Perhaps I\'ve been unclear -- I\'m not trying to play one against the other, but argue that they cannot be separated. Even when a given expression of community goes badly, and we must offer critique and/or prophetic witness, we do so from a place that is (I presume) informed in some way by the larger tradition and offered (on some level) to protect the integrity of the body.  <br><br>I\'m not throwing down a gauntlet here, but I don\'t think you can identify a single way that we know or experience God, or faith in God, that I can\'t narrate as being related to or contingent upon our participation in and formation by community and tradition. This doesn\'t prove anything, except maybe my own recalcitrance, but it might help your understanding (and/or confirm some of your suspicions).</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11938924">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11938924" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11938924" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11938924" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11938924" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11938924" class="dsq-comment-message">I\'ll try not to be exploitive, Ted (though you may need to forgive me the occasional expletive).<br><br>I don\'t think I\'ve ever suggested a faith without context. What I said was that the contexts you mention—tradition and community, but also prayer and scripture—are not dependable (worthy of faith) in themselves, and always need to be interpreted or tested.<br><br>My point is quite a practical one, actually (reinforced by experience in community). Voices in tradition say many things. Voices in community say many things. And <i>sometimes</i>, even when those in community around us are speaking with an apparently unanimous voice, what they are saying is <i>not</i> coming from God, is not the voice of God. So their voices must always be judged, tested, interpreted, and cannot themselves be the basis for this judging.<br><br>I\'m saying there must be something else that we can trust to help us discern the voice of God <i>in</i> these things (not apart from them). That something else is the Spirit of God living and active in us. Given for precisely that purpose. <br><br>And trust in this Spirit is exactly what we are called to: faith, trust in God.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11939600">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11939600" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11939600" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11939600">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11939600" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11939600" class="dsq-comment-message">This makes sense, Paul, and we would seem to agree more than I had assumed. I completely agree, for instance, that all of the various and varied ways in which God comes to us have to be interpreted and tested. <br><br>Your language suggests, however, is that there is Something Else that we test these things against, where all I can see is that we basically test them against each other, and trust that in the aggregate process we end up where we need to be. I don\'t think this is far from Kierkegaard\'s leap of faith, for instance. Now maybe this aggregate is that Something Else, and I\'m just stubbornly refusing to start there or use conventional theological language to narrate it. <br><br>I\'m not particularly offended by expletives, but this <i>is</i> a public forum. :)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11940179">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11940179" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11940179" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11940179">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11940179" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11940179" class="dsq-comment-message">Re-reading things (I\'m an incorrigible re-reader), I see that you used "something else" and I wrote "Something Else" and I just want to say I wasn\'t trying to be cute with that -- I wasn\'t consciously copping and altering your phrase for polemical purposes. I\'m not above it; I just didn\'t happen to be doing it this time.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11941575">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11941575" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11941575" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11941575" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11941575" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11941575" class="dsq-comment-message">Something Else is fine, because I did mean that (or maybe <i>Someone</i> Else).<br><br>Okay, test them against each other, yes I agree. But then if it\'s me, the individual doing that comparing and testing, deciding what material (scriptures, traditions, other voices) to work with in the discernment and determining when a satisfactory conclusion is reached... aren\'t we back to individualism again?<br><br>I\'d say that faith is relinquishing control of that, depending completely on the Spirit (the Someone Else), and letting ourselves be guided in the comparing and testing and discernment. Guided spiritually, God\'s will pressing on ours ("unmediated"?). Which is not individualism at all, but submission to God.<br><br>How well we are able to do this (our faithfulness) usually has much to do with the honesty and completeness of our submission to God, and our experience (maturity) in being guided by his Spirit. That\'s what I\'ve seen, anyway. But then I\'m often surprised by how God can make himself heard even when I\'m trying not to listen or submit.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11942152">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11942152" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11942152" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11942152">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11942152" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11942152" class="dsq-comment-message">"I\'d say that faith is relinquishing control of that, depending completely on the Spirit (the Someone Else), and letting ourselves be guided in the comparing and testing and discernment. Which is not individualism at all, but submission to God."<br><br>How does this come to us? Where and how do we learn that such surrender is what we need, and how to do it?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11945088">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11945088" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11945088" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11945088" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11945088" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11945088" class="dsq-comment-message">You left out the second sentence (or I added it after you quoted me):<br><blockquote>I\'d say that faith is relinquishing control of that, depending completely on the Spirit (the Someone Else), and letting ourselves be guided in the comparing and testing and discernment. Guided spiritually, God\'s will pressing on ours ("unmediated"?). Which is not individualism at all, but submission to God.</blockquote><br>I thought you\'d question that middle line the most.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11954051">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11954051" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11954051" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11954051">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11954051" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11954051" class="dsq-comment-message">I\'m "replying" as far down the thread as my browser will let me, so pardon the blog-blanket bingo -- but in regards to the middle sentence, you added it later. I might have reacted to it, but then again I might not have addressed it directly. <br><br>Really, there\'s not much to it: I don\'t think unmediated experience exists. You do.<br><br>But let\'s say it does. Then what? This is good for you, I suppose, but it does the rest of us little good. We can\'t have your experience. You can testify to it, but then we have to interpret that testimony -- just like everything else. (I would suggest that you are always already interpreting even the experience itself, and this even before you try to put it in language, but I suspect you don\'t see things that way.)<br><br>I don\'t think we can totally escape the charge of individualism, no matter how we slice things, because the toothpaste of the Cartesian subject won\'t go back in the tube (and we don\'t really want it to). So there is always a personal/individual component to our experience, even our experience of (and in) community. <br><br>To me a person is only open to the charge of individualism if he or she regards the individual as more important than or ontologically prior to the overlapping social matrices in which identity is forged. Simply acknowledging our subjectivity is not individualism.<br><br>I\'m not sure the individual even exists, as such, apart from those matrices. But now we\'re in super-squishy territory (that was for Nathanael) and nobody wants to go down that rabbit hole. I don\'t. Actually, I\'m getting tired of reading my own writing. I can only imagine how the others feel... :)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11954471">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11954471" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11954471" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11954471" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11954471" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11954471" class="dsq-comment-message">FYI, if the missing "reply" option is bothering you, you can respond in these discussions via DISQUS and it gives you more flexibility (<a href="http://jesusmanifesto.disqus.com/the_prodigal_consumer/?11954065#comment-11954051" rel="nofollow">go here</a>). And I don\'t think our droning on is bothering anyone, because I doubt anyone else is paying attention...<br><br>I think we might be missing each other because you seem to be talking about <i>knowledge</i> of an experience, i.e. our understanding or interpretation of any experience is always mediated through our cultural/ideological lenses, etc., and if we try to communicate that knowledge then it must be interpreted by others. <br><br>But that doesn\'t mean the actual experience itself must be interpreted (or mediated), does it? The touch, the vision, the feeling? (The contemplative tradition even intentionally seeks to avoid interpretation or language and emphasizes the direct experience of God, simply loving and being loved, inexpressibly.)<br><br>It\'s this actual experience of God that I want others to have for themselves. Not my experience that I offer to them (other than to encourage them that it\'s possible), but their own experience which connects us not through common language or conceptualization but because we are both actually in touch with the one God.<br><br>I only ask that you don\'t deny that this is possible.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11971346">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11971346" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11971346" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11971346">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11971346" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11971346" class="dsq-comment-message">FEEL THE POWER!!!!<br><br>Okay, sorry. I took the DISQUS link...<br><br>"But that doesn\'t mean the actual experience itself must be interpreted (or mediated), does it?"<br><br>Actually, yes. But it might be more helpful to speak of contingency. I don\'t mean that a given experience comes to us in raw form but we can\'t do anything with it until it is interpreted (and thus are aware of the interpretive process). I mean that the experience never actually comes to us in raw form -- it doesn\'t exist as such -- because having a certain kind of experience is contingent upon our already having been formed and shaped as a particular kind of person, whether this formation is something we have cultivated actively or is merely a product of being born in a particular time and place.<br><br>The contemplative experience (and I\'ll stick with that, which could be a discrete event or a constellation of experiences that help to shape our perception of the world) is contingent in this way. Before we ever approach the cloud of unknowing, before we engage in centering prayer, before the Jesus Prayer leaves our lips, before we take up and read in <i>lectio divina</i>, before we pick up that first straw for the love of God, we have been formed as the kind of person who would do such a thing.<br><br>The contemplative experience is contingent upon those practices we engage in as a means of cultivating such experience, and contingent upon being the kind of person who places value on such an experience in the first place. How we understand the experiences that come out of those practices is formed and shaped by the contemplative tradition itself, which provides a frame within which we can understand the experience and without which such an experience might not come to us at all.<br><br>This formation, which can happen in a variety of ways but does not happen apart from the practices, habits, and modes of discourse that characterize the tradition, is why we understand this experience to be an experience of God -- and not just God in the abstract, but the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, as revealed through Jesus Christ. We could narrate this experience differently, and even the fact that we might not think to do so is determined by our formation.<br><br>Contemplatives and mystics in other traditions have similar experiences that they interpret in light of their own traditions. We may or may not consider this to be the same as our experience, but we will do so on the basis of our relationship with our tradition.<br><br>If we conclude that this is irrelevant, that this experience only comes to the believer, then we are saying that it is contingent on our faithfulness and obedience, and what we consider faithfulness and obedience to be is formed and shaped by the particular way in which we relate to our tradition. <br><br>Our decision to use a particular theological language to narrate this experience, or to avoid language, is likewise shaped in this way.<br><br>I will go this far: I think there are experiences available to us that we would both narrate as an encounter with the living God, which you would understand as unmediated and I would not. 99 times out of 100, however, the conversation doesn\'t need to go there; I suspect most people would not find it edifying.  <br><br>I\'m not sure how you would understand my position. For me, the fact that you see the experience as unmediated is already an interpretation.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11972127">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11972127" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11972127" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11972127" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11972127" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11972127" class="dsq-comment-message">I agree with what you say about our interpretation of our experiences, but I think when you try to apply it to the experience itself (and deny "raw experience") that\'s a bunch of hooey. Sensation is there, even if I don\'t understand it. Images appear to me before I interpret them (and I need not do so). Experience is not just the conceptualization that I make of it. And I don\'t need to do things to cultivate an experience in order to have an experience (especially with God, who seeks us whether or not we seek him).<br><br>A mother picks up her baby and moves it and feeds it and puts it to bed and the child doesn\'t know what to make of all that (having no framework yet to interpret it). Yet it\'s still real and the child is actually moved and cared for, and experiences that in some way. A good analogy, I think, for how God often interacts with us, even before we perceive or understand what is going on.<br><br>I\'ll be satisfied, Ted, if we can agree about the reality and trustworthiness of "an encounter with God," God\'s Spirit working within us. It sounds to me like you don\'t trust it, since it\'s always filtered through so much of me and my culture, which seems to undermine the whole thing, making us dependent not on God but primarily on the tradition and community that shapes our filters (which are often screwed up). That\'s what seems to me to be rather "unedifying."<br><br>But please correct me if I\'m reading you wrong.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11974786">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11974786" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11974786" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11974786">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11974786" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11974786" class="dsq-comment-message">Actually, I don\'t trust it. Nor do I trust community and tradition, or anything else in and of itself. To say that I trust in God is a declaration of faith, and not the presumption that any of my experiences or perceptions is ultimately reliable. (Those are often screwed up, too.)<br><br>God is not my experience of God, and to place value on that experience is itself an act of faith and not an ontological claim.<br><br>That may or may not be satisfying. It may be a bunch of hooey. Heck -- it might just be my interpretation. :)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11975301">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11975301" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11975301" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11975301" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11975301" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11975301" class="dsq-comment-message">I appreciate that confession of trust in God, Ted (that is what you said, right?). But I don\'t quite understand what kind of trust that can be, if you feel you cannot trust your experience of the God you trust in. It seems awfully disconnected (and I mean "awful" compassionately).<br><br>Don\'t you trust that the almighty God can get past screwed up filters and limited interpreting abilities (or even use them effectively) to actually meet and communicate with you in a clear and trustworthy way?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11976032">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11976032" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11976032" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11976032">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11976032" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11976032" class="dsq-comment-message">I think we\'re at an impasse, because I\'m sure I could write something that would make you feel better about things, but I\'d be quite aware that we don\'t really mean the same thing.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11981673">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11981673" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11981673" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11981673">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11981673" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11981673" class="dsq-comment-message">I struck that last bit because even with the disclaimer, it seemed harsh in a way I did not intend. I just meant to invoke an incommensurability; I\'m not sure we\'re playing by the same rules on the same field, and we could ferret that out but to be honest I don\'t have the steam for it.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11914615">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11914615" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11914615" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11914615" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11914615" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11914615" class="dsq-comment-message">My belief that Christ is present within US in a fuller way than Christ is present in ME is based in the teaching on spiritual gifts throughout the NT. It is also rooted in the way in which some epistles describe us at being the Temple of God. In the New Testament, it is the Church who reveals Christ, rather than simply individual Christians. <br><br>This isn\'t to say that we all have to submit to groupthink or to majority. If the Spirit works through us as a Body, there are certainly times when one member speaks a strong word of challenge that doesn\'t seem to fit within the larger Body...but we ignore such words at our own peril.<br><br>However, my experience is that most of the time, God doesn\'t speak primarily through the lone prophet. Kierkegaard and Luther are prime examples. Neither were unique in their day. Other prophetic voices were speaking in their day with similar words. The question isn\'t "why were they the only ones speaking out", but "why were theirs the only voices being heard?"<br><br>I don\'t believe that I can submit to God without also submitting to the Body, for she is the incarnation in Christ. I am just a part of the Body. If I have something important to say that corrects the Body, I am to share it humbly. If what I say seems to go against the whole world and the entire Body, then the only way forward is going to be if the Church can hear and submit to the word of God. Is this the group submitting to the individual? No. It is the church being the church.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11915403">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11915403" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11915403" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11915403" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11915403" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11915403" class="dsq-comment-message">Yes, I agree prophets are not completely alone. But it often <i>seems</i> that way to them at the time, in their immediate locale and community. This is important for us to realize, because we might find ourselves in that position someday.<br><br>And I agree that submitting to Christ is the same as submitting to his Body—as long as it truly is his Body. So how do we discern that? And yes, the Body is the incarnation of Christ—but it is only truly the Body when it <i>is</i> the incarnation of Christ. I completely agree with your identification of the Body and Christ, but this is always determined by its actually having and demonstrating the nature of Jesus. If (and where and when) it does not, it is not the Body and we should certainly not submit to it. To do so would merely be submitting (once again) to the social Beast.<br><br>It always come back to submitting to and obeying God, and only God. Completely, single-mindedly, unconditionally. "You have one master, the Christ."</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11915588">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11915588" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11915588" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11915588" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11915588" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11915588" class="dsq-comment-message"><i>So how do we discern that? And yes, the Body is the incarnation of Christ—but it is only truly the Body when it is the incarnation of Christ.</i><br><br>Ahh...here it is. This seems like the question worthy of deep reflection. I can agree with what you say here. I personally am NOT a fan of some abstracted definition of Church as "the Invisible Church." There is only the Church in front of me. And it looks like Christ. If it does not, it isn\'t really the incarnation of that Christ. That isn\'t to say that some stodgy old First Baptist Church of Whoville is going to Hell if they don\'t look like Jesus. But it is to say that if it don\'t look, act, or smell like Jesus than I don\'t have to submit to it as if it were the embodied Jesus.<br><br>So, how do we discern? If I had more time (this summer has been over-full), I\'d craft an article raising this question (that\'s a hint to anyone out there reading this who feels the mojo and has time).</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11941739">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11941739" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11941739" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11941739">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11941739" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11941739" class="dsq-comment-message">This might impose on your good humor (and the patience of others), but here\'s how our conversation sounds to the outside observer:<br><br>Ted: I need wood to keep warm.<br><br>Paul: No, what you need is fire.<br><br>Ted: Well, okay, but we don\'t experience fire apart from the wood.<br><br>Paul: But the wood can\'t keep you warm. You need fire.<br><br>Ted: True enough, but I only know this "fire" you speak of because the wood is burning.<br><br>Paul: The "wood" is not enough. In order to keep warm we need Fire. The Fire alone warms us.<br><br>Ted: Look, I\'m assuming the "fire" bit, okay? It\'s not like I was going to build a lean-to or anything. But we still need the Wood.<br><br>Paul: What good is the wood without the fire? There\'s some really wet wood out there.<br><br>Or maybe it sounds more like this:<br><br>Ted: He could grip it by the husks.<br><br>Paul: It\'s not a matter of where he grips it...</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11942081">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11942081" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11942081" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11942081" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11942081" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11942081" class="dsq-comment-message">Um, Ted? You\'re not an "outside observer"...<br><br>And I don\'t think the fire/wood analogy is quite accurate, but I\'ll go with it for fun. Can I suggest my own response?<br><br>Ted: Well, okay, but we don\'t experience fire apart from the wood.<br><br>Paul: What about Pentecost?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11942453">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11942453" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11942453" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11942453">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11942453" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11942453" class="dsq-comment-message">Of course I\'m not. The outside observer was hypothetical, natch. And yes, there are problems with the wood/fire business. This was just for comedy, and I tried to construct it to more at my expense than you, but of course you\'re along for the ride. Maybe it wasn\'t funny.<br><br>As for Pentecost, were you there? Me neither. And probably not the author of Acts. So we\'re getting it at least secondhand. And the fire in question went -- where? Into (or onto) people? Involving language? And the event then had to be interpreted by Peter in light of Joel\'s prophecy? Seems like an awful lot of wood there.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11944920">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11944920" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11944920" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11944920" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11944920" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11944920" class="dsq-comment-message">I think the reason I didn\'t think the fire/wood analogy is fair was because fire is not an independent being, it is a chemical reaction of which wood (fuel) is a component. But God (the Spirit) is an independent being.<br><br>And I think Pentecost works well (and was pretty witty, I thought) because there fire was a symbol of the presence of the Spirit in the disciples. A gift given to them, something sudden and powerful and real, not just the accumulation of their cultural, social, religious experiences (though, yes, God was also in those, too).</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11953083">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11953083" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11953083" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11953083">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11953083" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11953083" class="dsq-comment-message">I wasn\'t going for fair -- I was going for comedy. I just needed something with roughly the same contours in order to make fun of us. I considered a line where one of the other usual suspects chimes in to ask when we\'re going to shut up and roast marshmallows, but I opted for the Monty Python reference instead.<br><br>And yes, invoking Pentecost was clever -- even elicited a wry smile from me. But you didn\'t think I\'d let it go at clever, did you?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11954065">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11954065" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11954065" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11954065" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11954065" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11954065" class="dsq-comment-message">Sorry, I missed the Monty Python reference.<br><br>Should we maybe just sing together <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zey8567bcg" rel="nofollow">the Lumberjack Song</a>, and leave it at that? "Oh, I\'m a lumberjack and I\'m okay..."<br><br>(Incidentally, I did happen to use the lava-tree today.)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10769095">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10769095" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10769095" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10769095" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10769095" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10769095" class="dsq-comment-message">The Lord warns us when He teaches us to pray to avoid vain repetitions, as the heathen do.  Which is directly to the point.  The repetitive nature of the rituals of evangelicalism as you have described them are particularly heathen.  Or pagan-polytheistic.  Let\'s just say they run against the Christian Ethic.<br><br>From the preacher\'s point of view, such repetition is an easy way to get away with laziness.  I heard so many sermons on the prodigal son at one church of my youth, that I groan inwardly whenever I discover I am about to hear one again.  Unless, of course, the speaker directs us to consider ourselves the older brother.  You have again refreshed me by encouraging me to empathize with the father.<br><br>The political message communicated by repetition is static.  It says: This is where we are, and where we have been, and as far as we can tell, where we will be.  The action required of the believer is continued penitence, and subjection to the father, and His representatives, the preacher, and the state...<br><br>The medium of repetition encourages stasis - lack of movement.  Apathy.<br><br>Capitalism, as the best that unregenerate souls are capable of on their own, is just as easily derailed by stasis and apathy.  Capitalism has as its aim the satisfaction of human wants by the most efficient means.  When a man becomes apathetic he stops acting productively and becomes nothing but a, a, a consumer.<br>Capitalism works in such a way that in order for a person to become a consumer he has to act productively for others.  But if a person can possibly get for themselves some privilege or entitlement to exact the production of others for themselves for nothing in return, well then its not capitalism any more.<br><br>But that the aim is empty - consumption as a satisfaction of spiritual wants - well, that\'s the old evangelical reading of the prodigal story.<br><br>What seems to be true is that evangelicals, amongst others, are failing to move beyond stasis, to move past repentance, into action.  The best they seem to achieve is empathy with the older brother.  Hardly at all are we encouraged to live like the prodigal\'s father.<br>Nathanael Snow</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10791134">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10791134" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10791134" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10791134">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10791134" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10791134" class="dsq-comment-message">Nathanael,<br><br>Thanks for allowing my thoughts to springboard your own, which I enjoyed. To push things a bit farther, is repentance without action really repentance? This is not to make people feel bad or take them on a guilt trip, but to point out the poverty of a evangelical milieu (of which I am a part) that does not move them past the "narrative transaction" and seems to equate salvation with simply feeling really good about being saved. The point is not that we suck (which is unremarkable), but that we\'re being cheated.<br><br>I think we might have different assessments of capitalism. I don\'t consider it to be the best of anything, nor do I recognize consumerism as an evil distinct from the system -- capitalism -- that gives rise to it. I would agree with <a href="http://www.theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=287" rel="nofollow">McCarraher</a> here: "Consumerism is not the problem—capitalism is. Consumerism is the work ethic of consumption, the transformation of leisure and pleasure into duties. Talking about consumerism is a way of not talking about capitalism, and I\'ve come to think that that\'s the reason why so many people, including Christians, whine about it so much. It\'s just too easy a target."</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10792701">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10792701" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10792701" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10792701" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10792701" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10792701" class="dsq-comment-message">I read the book of James with the rest of the cannon.  I\'m not hip to terminology like "narrative transaction", but if that means it is keeping people under an ethic of exchange and inhibiting them from moving into an ethic of sacrifice, then you have captured my thought precisely.<br><br>I don\'t know McCarraher, but I will follow the link and see what I think.<br><br>I can only defend Capitalism as "the best that unregenerate souls are capable of on their own" and limit the definition of Capitalism to "unlimited voluntary exchange."  I don\'t know how a Christian can argue against unbelievers adopting this ethic of exchange.  They are incapable - apart from grace - of anything better.  What would you replace it with?<br><br>The more loaded definitions of Capitalism - those which are intended to protect some set of vested interests, or those which intend to incriminate one class or another - are not what I am interested in.<br><br>I am mostly concerned that the possibility of a pure form of Capitalism is being rejected based upon the mercantilist-empirialist system we now have which is wrongfully labeled "Capitalism."<br><br>Nathanael Snow</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10794595">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10794595" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10794595" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10794595" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10794595" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10794595" class="dsq-comment-message">Okay, so I\'m reading a bit of McCarraher\'s stuff here.  In what I have found he is not laying out a very precise argument as to how the process he claims Capitalism performs actually works.  Is there a simple outline of how these claims are linked together somewhere?<br>One thing I keep coming across is a squishy idea of "formation of moral imagination" or some other such language.<br>The claim appears to be that dwelling in a Capitalist environment shapes people\'s morals in such a way that they find their only meaning in work and desire, not even consumption.  Window - shopping defines the person living under Capitalism.  Do I have that right?<br>Suppose this is true.  What are the alternatives?<br>Of course, there is the Christian Ethic.  We want to have our moral imaginations shaped to match Christ\'s sacrificial love for others, sensitive to the unctions of the Spirit.  But this is only possible for the regenerate soul.<br>If we live in a pluralistic society (I hate that word), where the majority of unbelievers (and even professing Christians) can not (or have not) adopted the Christian Ethic, and where through the democratic process and the public forum we have the opportunity to help form the legal environment, what sort of economic system ought we to advocate?<br>Shall we just avoid the discussion altogether?  Just direct all of our energies to serving the least of these, and despair of influencing policy for the better?  Perhaps.<br>But supposing we are to get involved.  We must advocate voluntarism.  We must seek to have privileges repealed.  We must seek equality for all under the law.  We must seek limits to (if not elimination of) arbitrary political mechanisms, which are the granters of unjust privileges.  I perceive each of these as effective power-under methods of serving the poor and oppressed.  I also see them as being consistent with pure capitalism.  I set distributive justice aside as a peculiar function of the church, as I do all concern for the least of these.  While many do, I don’t see why unregenerate people *should* give a damn about the poor or least of these except out of empathy, which is really selfish in its motivations.<br>McCarraher seems to have been reading all of the wrong economists.  Marx and Engels on the one side, and I am supposing the mainstream on the other.  I\'d recommend looking into Murray Rothbard and Friedrich von Hayek instead.  Rothbard, in particular, has as his aim when constructing his capitalist system a "principle of non-aggression" which is entirely consistent with the Christian Ethic, and he’s an Anarchist.<br>Again, my concern is that in rejecting Capitalism we instead advocate some other more statist system.  The question becomes: would we rather the poor be constantly starving – as is the case under statism, or constantly hungry – as McCarraher implies would be their condition under Capitalism.<br>Inasmuch as both are inferior to them being satisfied, I think we would both prefer them hungry rather than starving.  Satisfaction seems to me only possible for the Christian.<br>Many imagine that the random altruism we observe among people might be organized and systematized in order to make it more effective.  Again, this is a pagan desire to concentrate and centralize power, even power for good.  I might argue that power-under actions should not and cannot be centralized.  To do so is to subjugate them to some other law than the movement of the Spirit.  It is to create an idol.  All such imaginations should be rejected.  We really are much stronger when we don\'t work together for the sake of working together, but only so much as the Spirit directs us to.<br>I may simply have a more pessimistic understanding of unregenerate human nature.   But my outline works whether or not I am right.  Systems which depend upon a more optimistic view of human nature risk failure if they are wrong.<br>Nathanael Snow</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10804754">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10804754" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10804754" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10804754">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10804754" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10804754" class="dsq-comment-message">I appreciate your thoughtfulness, Nathanael, and willingness to dig into things. I also appreciate your lack of interest in the present economic system that many of us refer to as "capitalism," even if that upsets hardcore market enthusiasts. At any rate, you\'re right to point out differences in the capitalism of cultural theory (in which nerdy people say things like "narrative transaction") and the capitalism of economists (which would involve, like, numbers and stuff). I appreciate as well your concern that we not neglect a "pure form" of capitalism based on the social critique of capitalism by people in the humanities.<br><br>I\'m not sure a pure form of capitalism exists -- or, if it existed at one time it led to what we have now, and I don\'t think it\'s possible to go back. Whether it ever existed or not, to suggest that it would be better is, to me, a little like suggesting that riding a unicorn to work would be more environmentally friendly than driving my old truck; it\'s true enough, but I\'m not going to spend a lot of time trying to work it out. <br><br>Since I\'m piling on the colorful (or just lame) analogies, I don\'t fault you for taking an interest in the political and economic landscape of the world at large, and you\'re correct in your intimation that I don\'t have a ready substitute -- but there\'s an extent to which arguing global or national economics is like asking my opinion as to the best way to get to LA when I\'m convinced that we simply don\'t need to be going to LA in the first place (no offense to LA, I just picked it at random). <br><br>The only economic system that I can enthusiastically endorse is a gift economy (which might mean Paul and I agree on something) or some form of anarcho-communism. But these are not practicable on a national scale, and I think your recognition that whatever the ideal might be is not available to the unregenerate speaks to this (even if your concept of the "ideal" differs considerably). So pondering the most workable economic system for the world and coming up with some kind of pure capitalism is fair; I\'m just not sure I buy it (pun shamelessly intended).<br><br>I picked on capitalism (as I understand it) in this piece not because it is the most heinous example of economic injustice imaginable but because it is our present economic environment, and it is unjust.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10810083">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10810083" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10810083" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10810083" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10810083" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10810083" class="dsq-comment-message">Of course a pure form of capitalism does not exist.  There does not exist a pure form of anything, save Christ.<br>I want to point out that certain systems are dependent upon central direction, and others emerge spontaneously.  I claim that those which emerge spontaneously are better reflections of human nature as it really is.  Power-over influences distort these reflections.  Free markets emerge spontaneously in the absence of too-strong power-over agents.  Free markets are the exact image of how people would interact with one another if power-over were suppressed.  Altruistic cooperation is emphatically not how self-interested individuals (unregenerate) would interact if power-over were suppressed.<br>So, in our interactions with public policy it makes more sense to try to encourage public opinion toward adoption of free markets and other emergent voluntaristic mechanisms rather than the expansion of political franchises and privileges.<br>For example, as Christians we can recognize that the state affords a privilege to married couples which functions as a discount coupon on transactions with the state.  That such a privilege is denied to homosexuals should not make us want to expand the franchise and provide the privilege to homosexuals as well, but rather to repeal the privilege altogether.<br>Again, when some complain that illegal immigrants take advantage of welfare programs, we ought not to encourage the state to extend the welfare programs to all, but rather to repeal them to all, and assume full responsibility for the least of these ourselves.<br>Whether or not any such changes in policy ever take effect, we at least have a right understanding of what the ideal is in each debate and can, by making an argument for radical practice of the Christian Ethic by Christians, and unfettered free voluntarism for others, challenge every premise of the power-over structure.  Such a testimony shuts the mouths of Christian progressives and fundamentalists alike, and surprises those who have never heard the gospel applied to real life and politics so radically.<br>There is incredible value or clout gained, and amazing opportunity for sharing the gospel, when we adopt such a stance toward policies.<br>Again there is both an ideal for Christians to adopt, the Christian Ethic, or the gift economy you spoke of, and a separate ideal for Christians to advocate on behalf of the unregenerate – that is, for public policy – which is unfettered voluntarism / anarchism.  Any other system advocates for some power-over agent or other.  It is this advocacy for the power-over which I cannot abide, which must be rooted out from the church wherever it occurs, which has enslaved evangelicalism,  fundamentalism, progressivism, and so many other –isms alike.<br>We must have an ideal in order to know which direction to push policy in (at the margin – or in individual debates) consistently.  Otherwise we wind up pushing in one direction on one issue and then in the opposing direction on a similar issue.  Witness the right-to-life / pro-war dichotomy, for example.<br>What is difficult about all of this is that in the end, only Christians can do volitional good.  We have to be brutally honest about the self-interested nature of the unregenerate man.  Almost every other system tries to overcome this obstacle by power-over methods.  Only anarcho-capitalism allows each person’s self-interest to work to the benefit of his fellow man, and avoids employing the power-over explicitly.<br>There remains the question of whether the formation of moral imagination by capitalism is a power-over mechanism.  If it is, then it is only so implicitly, certainly not explicitly.  Perhaps that makes it all the more demonic.  I am unclear of the precise way this occurs, and would appreciate being directed to good resources for understanding the mechanisms involved.  Too often I hear that such things all occur through narrative, etc.  Such arguments are too squishy for me, and would be completely un-compelling to most audiences.  I am reluctant to accept or employ them.  I might just have to get over that.<br>I am vitally serious about understanding these issues clearly and honestly.  It is my life’s work, most likely.  To have Stanley Hauerwas meet James Buchanan, if only conceptually in my writings, would be climactic for me.<br>Nathanael Snow<br><a href="mailto:ndsnow@gmail.com" rel="nofollow">ndsnow@gmail.com</a></div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10811707">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10811707" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10811707" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10811707">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10811707" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10811707" class="dsq-comment-message">I find this very interesting because I resonate with a lot that you say here, but I have been resistant to libertarianism. The common articulations of libertarianism retain the state for precisely the purposes -- the use of force -- that many anarchists reject the state. What you seem to be saying is that something like gift-economy anarchism or anarcho-communism would be great for the church, wherein regeneration makes such arrangements possible, but that for the world at large, the closest possible thing -- anarcho-capitalism, which substitutes the play of market dynamics for the regenerative power of the Holy Spirit -- is as good as it gets, and better than the alternatives.<br><br>Is that close? And let me be honest: I\'m intrigued but I\'m probably not going to get on board, at least partially because you seem to have a more reified sense of what regeneration means (I\'m guessing a Reformed background?) among other things. I\'m not convinced you can get Hauerwas and Buchanan in the same universe, but it might make an interesting book.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10813319">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10813319" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10813319" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10813319" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10813319" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10813319" class="dsq-comment-message">Your first paragraph has summarized my position brilliantly.<br>I\'m unfamiliar with "reified" and google didn\'t help.  What do you mean?<br>I like Piper a bit, but my background is mostly Baptist/evangelical, with a strong helping of Calvary Chapel, until I snuck into a class Hauerwas was teaching at Duke.<br>I attend a Presbyterian church, but still doubt I know how to spell presyptyrian correctly.  I also ask a lot of questions that surprise people in Sunday School.<br>How would you contrast our different perspectives on regeneration?  These fundamentals are often the key to understanding the rest of the conversation.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10821372">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10821372" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10821372" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10821372">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10821372" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10821372" class="dsq-comment-message">I\'m sorry about "reified." To "reify" is to make real, or to take as having real substance, or to regard something abstract as having concrete reality. I don\'t tend to use the term "regeneration" myself; the fact that you do, and the way in which you use it, suggest to me that you see something concrete happening in an individual that I don\'t see in quite the same way.<br><br>The reason I guessed you as Reformed is because of the role regeneration plays in Calvinist theology, and the fact that the word doesn\'t get used a ton outside those circles. Of course that doesn\'t automatically make you a TULIP 5-pointer, but I was guessing it put you somewhere in the flower patch.<br><br>It probably won\'t surprise you at this point that I\'m more of a "social construction of reality" guy. I don\'t draw a hard line between the power of the Holy Spirit to effect change in a person\'s life and our formation in the habits of faith learned in community, which I submit is the normative means by which such power is made manifest. For some this is too bleak or reductionistic, and I understand that.<br><br>So I bristle at a phrase like "only Christians can do volitional good" because I don\'t have a theological mechanism for locating the point at which someone goes from being incapable to capable of such good.<br><br>Now, I\'m curious: when dealing with Christian anarchists, people love to bring up Romans 13. There are ways that the Christian radicalism with which I\'m most familiar handles this, but the more robust of those ways are rendered unavailable by your "two anarchisms" rejoinder to "two kingdoms" theology. Can I ask how you handle that?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10836008">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10836008" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10836008" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10836008" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10836008" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10836008" class="dsq-comment-message">I probably am not in amongst the flowers, but the vegetables.  If I’m going to flower, I’d like it to produce some fruit.  I’m probably an eggplant, and not the skinny kind.  I taste great once I’ve been grilled (as in this conversation!)<br><br>I do accept most of TULIP.  I also employ mostly modernist methods of discourse.  And I bristle a bit at social construction of reality theories.  I’ve also read too much Ayn Rand.<br><br>That is, I usually want to hold individuals accountable, and not communities.  It seems very difficult to me to relocate the decision-making agency from the individual to the community.  <br><br>However, I fully recognize that the whole is seldom the sum of the parts.  This is actually the vanguard of the sort of macroeconomics being taught by Richard Wager at George Mason University, where I am.  He’s a little late to the game, but he’s first among economists.  The interactions among independent individuals combine to create macro movements which none of these agents intended.  The cars in a traffic jam are all moving forward, while the traffic jam itself is moving backwards.<br><br>I do see salvation as a transforming moment in a person’s life.  I see empowerment of the Holy Spirit as the invitation to join God in His continuing creative work.  I see regeneration as a moment when the self-interested nature of fallen man can be cast off in favor of Christ-interestedness.<br><br>With Ayn Rand and other Objectivists I find it inconsistent with human nature for people to act charitably.  Most charity is imposed by irresponsible people, or is a signaling of power to the recipients and those who observe the gifting.  It is a manipulation, a power-over weapon.  Society itself is an aberration, a power-over construct, a squelching of individuality and dignity.<br><br>But regenerate people are no longer solely self-interested.  We are Christ-interested.  We want to do what we see our Father doing, even as Jesus did.  We want to have a sensitivity to the Spirit to know what He is doing.  We want to say with Brother Lawrence that we don’t even bend to pick up a straw except for the love of God.  We do nothing for reward or personal gain.  We already have our reward, Christ is our reward!  What more could we want?  Our charity asks for nothing in return.  It seeks no political advantage, favor, or position.  We do it in response to the Spirit.  We receive joy alone, the sensation of being used by Him, as our motivation.<br><br>Rand’s philosophy removes the right of anyone to make a claim on the life of anyone else.  The wealthy have no obligation to the poor.  The mother has no claim to her son’s produce.  All social norms which imply such claims are evil.  I’d have to agree that such claims are vehicles for powering-over others, even for the poor to power-over the wealthy.<br><br>As believers we first give up our rights to ourselves to Christ, in acknowledgment of His deity and in acceptance of his salvation.  We remember this in communion.  We then give up our rights to ourselves to the body – the church – and grant them the right to make claims on our life.  This is the act of baptism, and the entry point to the community, the only legitimate collective on earth, because it renounces power-over and practices mutual power-under.  Some marry and give our spouses the right to make claims on our lives.  I count marriage among the sacraments for this reason.<br><br>I am resistant to the concept of habit formation in general because I prefer intense sensitivity to the Holy Spirit.  Habit forming cannot tell you when not to help the sick person.  Yet Jesus did not heal everyone.  The goal is not to help and love people, but to love God (ah, here I am reformed again), and to glorify Him.  God is sovereign over the suffering of His innocents.  We don’t have to save them all.  Yet we alone are empowered to save.  It is a hard thought to know that some will not be saved.<br><br>Now, Romans 13.  I often backpedal from anarchism at this point to a minarchism including courts which operate according to common law processes.  God provided Israel with Judges and with a basic set of laws, out of which the people could count on protection of property and enforcement of contracts.  He also established precedents and appeals processes.<br><br>So the authority wields the sword for justice.  Some anarchists suggest the function of courts could be decentralized and subjected to market discipline.  It may be possible.  But I can accept a monopoly among courts.<br><br>Romans 13 is mostly telling the Christian that the method for practicing the gospel is not political rebellion.  Pay your taxes – just don’t expect them to do any good.<br><br>Beyond this I recognize that the unbelievers will construct power-over institutions, despite our power-under attempts to dismantle them.  We are to be subject to these institutions, recognizing God’s sovereignty, and to use interactions with these institutions as opportunities to demonstrate to peculiarity of the Christian Ethic.  Where such institutions generate injustices were are to step in and offer ourselves as surrogates, or offer to redeem the innocent at our own expense.  We are never to rebel.  Again, the practice is to constantly push public opinion and policy at the margin in the direction of the ideal, never deceiving ourselves as to the possibility of achieving that ideal.  It would be vanity if it were not purely service to Christ.<br><br>There is then, no justification for the formation of a movement.  There are only individuals choosing to be in community, and to be responsive to the Spirit.  There is complete decentralization of action, which God sovereignly directs to His macro-purpose.  We are just to obey.<br><br>Nathanael Snow<br><a href="mailto:ndsnow@gmail.com" rel="nofollow">ndsnow@gmail.com</a></div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10836117">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10836117" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10836117" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10836117" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10836117" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10836117" class="dsq-comment-message">I\'m not a fan of Rand (or TULIP), but I\'m very impressed by the conclusions you have come to, Nathanael. Especially your understanding of the (at least potential) working of the Spirit in us.<br><br>And I mostly agree with your explanation of Romans 13, except I think the Judges were much more like prophets (sensitive to God\'s wisdom and will, and chosen by God) than like our modern (elected) enforcers of state law. And then Jesus calls us to much more than the OT models, doesn\'t he?<br><br>Your understanding of the church also seems quite accurate to me (have you seen what Kierkegaard wrote about it, <a href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/08/church.html" rel="nofollow">such as this</a>, or <a href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/reminders.html" rel="nofollow">his words here</a>?).</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10841362">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10841362" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10841362" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10841362">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10841362" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10841362" class="dsq-comment-message">You win the prize for the most interesting use of Rand I think I\'ve seen. Like Paul, I\'m not much of a fan, at least philosophically, but she did have a knack for giving her characters boring philosophical monologues (kind of like the <i>Matrix</i> movies).<br><br>In a nutshell, you\'re suggesting that Rand was right, at least as pertains to the world, and the only way out of Rand\'s quasi-nihilistic maelstrom of competing self-interests is to have our interests changed through the regenerative power of the Holy Spirit. Since this will happen to a limited number of people, the answer for the rest is the mediation of a free market that allows for something like the "greater good" as an emergent property of the interplay of interests, along with a minimal legal apparatus that serves to protect the freedom of the market and wield the sword for the limited purposes suggested by Romans 13.<br><br>To sum up: for the elect, a new heart and a new spirit; for everyone else, the Invisible Hand.<br><br>What I find interesting here is that while other versions of Christian anarchism generally (and it is notoriously difficult to generalize radicalism, but those who study it can\'t resist trying) recognize that a power-under society is not practicable in the world at large, and will only become universal in the eschaton, you are suggesting that some limited version of such a society is at least theoretically available to the world even if it is unlikely to be realized.<br><br>This would serve to function as a guidepost for involvement in the democratic process -- as Greg Boyd puts it, they ask our opinion, we might as well give it -- while retaining a realistic sense of what is possible in the world.<br><br>But this almost seems an extra step: if the church is a sign, a foretaste, and a herald of what God will bring about in the eschaton, and thus a testimony (however faltering) to an ideal, why a separate ideal for the world that is no more likely to be embraced by the powers that be? I can think of answers that would seem to be consistent with your reasoning, but I don\'t want to presume.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10877049">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10877049" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10877049" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10877049" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10877049" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10877049" class="dsq-comment-message">Haha!  Many Christians who read Rand walk away believing she’s on to something.  Few make a leap to anarchism.  Fewer still embrace peculiarity.  I’m guessing most Christian Randians haven’t read anyone in the pacifist tradition.  I have even read Piper on Rand, and he misses several key things to be learned from her.<br>And, again, you have summarized my position eloquently.<br>That my thesis provides a guidepost for involvement in the democratic process is most likely the reason I developed it.  You may be quite right that we don’t need to be involved.  I don’t suppose I shown that we must be.  However, if we are going to be involved, I find my thesis most consistent with the Christian Ethic as I understand it.  There are several focal points where my understanding may be significantly flawed.  The only venue for having my thoughts rigorously tested has been the blogs.  (You should see what happens when I make some of these suggestions over at Sojourners or World magazine!)<br>Perhaps my thoughts are useful for radicals who must converse with conservatives who say they believe in free markets, but really just want to maintain the current oligarchy.  Each set of beliefs must be pushed to its limits and tested under various assumptions.  Otherwise the robustness of the theory is left unknown.<br>Anyway, if I have successfully defended my thesis here, I feel very excited indeed.  Not only have I had the opportunity to articulate it more carefully than before, but I have learned to be more careful in explaining my assumptions and in drawing logical connections.  Most importantly I have shown a way to challenge progressives and fundamentalists on their own terms and to move them toward a purer Christian Ethic.<br>Thanks for listening.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10818553">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10818553" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10818553" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10818553" href="http://es-la.facebook.com/people/Jason-Winton/714178806" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Jason Winton</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10818553" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10818553" class="dsq-comment-message">This is a really interesting conversation and I don\'t mean to diminish the momentum, but I couldn\'t help noticing, Nathaneal, you went back to your traditional no-spaces-between-paragraphs writing style (which I think better represents your sensibilities!) after a few replies. I definitely prefer it that way (over the easier to read stuff anyway). Keep it coming. And sorry for no serious comment from me.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10818722">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10818722" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10818722" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10818722">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10818722" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10818722" class="dsq-comment-message">Wait, wait. Now I know this gets us even further off topic, and Nathanael\'s post was great and I\'m dying to get back to it (probably after dinner) but how, Jason (cool pic, btw) does the no-space thing reflect Nathanael\'s sensibilities? I\'m terribly curious. I\'m a diehard spaces-between-paragraphs kind of guy. What does that say about me? Is this like analyzing handwriting?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10835289">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10835289" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10835289" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10835289" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10835289" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10835289" class="dsq-comment-message">Ah, the no-spaces was a mere consequence of my typing my response in word and then cutting and pasting.  It may reveal that I am not a Mac man, and that may say a great deal about my sensibilities!  I will now hit the enter button twice, and in so doing return to the spaces-between-paragraphs-style.<br><br>See!</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10837380">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10837380" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10837380" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10837380">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10837380" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10837380" class="dsq-comment-message">I\'m not claiming to be hip, and can\'t actually claim to be a Mac person (like them, but don\'t have one), but based on our conversation above I can see ways in which I am the Justin Long to your John Hodgman. Don\'t read too much into that.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10930836">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10930836" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10930836" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10930836" href="http://es-la.facebook.com/people/Jason-Winton/714178806" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Jason Winton</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10930836" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10930836" class="dsq-comment-message">Too bad Nathanael responded before I had a chance to put my "analysis" into print. I guess it won\'t be as credible now.<br><br>Thanks for the compliment on the pic, Ted. My son made that face after my wife and I told him we\'d be selling his crib and blankets, so that he could follow Jesus too. We suggested he pray about it.<br><br>As far as spaces or no spaces...Nathanael is obviously just a straight-forward kind of guy (spaces be cursed!). And you, Ted, are quick but also thorough because of your spaces-in-between posture. Plus, you gives us the "space" we need to look up big words (i.e., reified--good explanation, by the way!).</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10927609">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10927609" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10927609" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10927609">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10927609" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10927609" class="dsq-comment-message">[I\'m replying here because we\'re slamming up against the margins, which strikes me as an interesting phrase.]<br><br>I think you\'ve done a good job presenting your thoughts, and it\'s clear that you\'ve put a lot of thought into working things out. I\'m unconvinced, for reason that are not necessarily internal to your project, but it helps me see at least one of my conservative/libertarian friends in a different light and may afford me a different approach to our conversations, which don\'t usually go well. He has no use for Christian radicalism on my terms; he may be more amenable to yours.<br><br>Your thoughts are coherent and I certainly think you have something to contribute to the larger discussion. I do think your system is predicated on seeing life and scripture through the lens of modernist discourse, and I don\'t feel the need to address that beyond pointing out that there are other lenses, and this will partially determine the kind of audience you\'re able to appeal to. Pursuing that further would take us much farther afield; just know that it\'s out there. I also think your thoughts are predicated on Reform theology, perhaps more than you recognize, which not to cast aspersions on that theology but to point out an additional consideration of audience.<br><br>You had asked about resources for the critique of capitalism, and I can\'t think of anything that addresses your question directly, though I can point to some titles that will put you in the ballpark. Most of it, however, is squishy stuff by people who use the word "narrate" a lot. There\'s an article by John Milbank called "Stale Expressions" that informed my essay. Try <a href="http://sce.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/21/1/117" rel="nofollow">this link</a> if your school subscribes to Sage; otherwise try googling it. Hardt and Negri\'s <em>Empire</em> might be worth a look. I would assume that Cavanaugh\'s <em>On Being Consumed</em> would be helpful but I haven\'t read it. You might also try Alisdair MacIntyre\'s <em>After Virtue</em> and/or <em>Dependent Rational Animals</em> as an alternative to Randian ethics that I don\'t think is super-squishy.<br><br>A charge that I think your thesis is open to, and for which you may want to be prepared, is that -- at least in what you have described so far -- it doesn\'t account for the possibility that the market is among the principalities and powers against which we are called to wage war. The market is a system, and not something we can really control. The diehard libertarian says: of course, we only screw things up when we try to control it. This strikes me as a tacit acknowledgment of the quasi-godlike status of the market, which is my point. Even the "invisible hand" metaphor speaks to this. You recognize the potential oppression in social systems but seem to limit your critique to overt power-over dynamics. Since the market as a system of control does not appear this way, you regard it as inert (or you seem to), which I find ethically problematic. <br><br>You could address this by rejecting such a reading of the powers (which follows Wink but also Yoder and Berkhof) and making a robust argument that the market is no more a principality or a power than, say, gravity. I probably wouldn\'t buy it, but it would do the work. You could also incorporate it by arguing that subjection to the ruler of the powers of the air is the lot of the unbeliever, which is why Paul can narrate expulsion from the social and economic care of the assembly as handing someone over to Satan. That would make for an interesting conversation. But hey, this is your life\'s work, not mine, and I don\'t want to sound too much like your thesis advisor. :)<br><br>Anyway, fun stuff. Thanks for indulging me.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10931921">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10931921" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10931921" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10931921" href="http://naturalaw.failuretorefrain.com" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">jurisnaturalist</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10931921" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10931921" class="dsq-comment-message">We are agreed.  The points of departure are much deeper, and I will have to do much more thorough investigation to understand your perspective.<br>You rightly identify the real point of departure as whether the market is a power.  The trivial response, “no,” is unsatisfying.  Where does the onus lie?  Well, on the person who is trying to do the persuading, I suppose, and differences in starting places may indeed leave us at loggerheads.<br>I think I have given an explanation of how emergent phenomenon based on voluntary action can’t hardly be described as a power-over influence.  But if we can remove all power-over actions or attempts, perhaps this influence creeps in and changes the situation.  I am tempted to move the analysis to game theory - which I may for more publishable works.<br>I really appreciate the references.  I will look into them sometime in the future.  I should probably drop the whole discussion for a while, since I have tests to pass, etc.  <br>I found Cavanaugh\'s On Being Consumed very, very squishy indeed, couldn’t quite finish it.<br>My reformed position is also something that I really need to investigate more.  I left behind (heh) more conservative theological positions (pre-trib, ceasationist, etc.) once I opened up to pacifism.  I have not carefully re-structured my systematic theology again since then.  Of course, you might challenge the very idea of a systematic theology!<br>I must be a total modernist.  I really want for there to be a theory which expounds how exactly the market can be a power.  Mostly it is just asserted that it is.  If something other than modernism in thought is applied, I don’t know how conversations like ours could proceed.  I want for there to be things we can know.<br>Oh, well.<br>Most conversations never get to the place where first premises are exposed, but this one has.  Mark and I also once went fairly deep into a conversation, where my “two-Kingdoms” paradigm was exposed.  I don’t know exactly what that means, or what the alternatives might be.  Mark promised to get back to it someday, but has been busy.<br>Anyway, thanks.<br>I’ve reposted our conversation on my blog.<br>Nathan</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10934448">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10934448" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10934448" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10934448" href="http://thoughtloose.blogspot.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Maria Kirby</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10934448" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10934448" class="dsq-comment-message">Nathan,<br>Just an idea here, but in studying ecosystems and the cooperative structure of biological systems I have discovered that the natural order of things follows an economy very similar to capitalism.  I have not been able to philosophically determine whether or not such a natural system would be under the power of evil influences since the Bible claims power over death as a spiritual victory.  Death being a result of the natural principle of entropy.  However, this side of the resurrection, entropy is necessary for life to exist, so I haven\'t been able to puzzle it out yet.  Suffice it to say, it is at the least another example of how God turns evil into good.  And if God can do that with entropy, then I would think he could do that with other natural systems such as capitalism.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10975227">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10975227" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10975227" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10975227">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10975227" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10975227" class="dsq-comment-message">What if capitalism is not a natural system, but a parody of natural systems, one that is contingent upon levels of sociological development that are themselves problematic? Just a thought. :)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10975194">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10975194" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10975194" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10975194">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10975194" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10975194" class="dsq-comment-message">It occurs to me that, if you have not done so, you might go back to Marx\'s <i>Das Kapital</i> to get a feel for anti-capitalist critique. I say this for two reasons: one, Marx is critiquing a version of capitalism closer to what you have in mind, rather than the version we have currently; two, I have to think that Marx would strike you as delightfully crunchy (read: not squishy) modernist discourse. Or he\'s the birth of the squishy. You decide. :) If you do this, MacIntyre\'s <i>Marxism and Christianity</i> might be an interesting companion work. (MacIntyre, btw, is a strong influence on Hauerwas.)<br><br>And to clarify: I\'m not suggesting that the market is surreptitiously a power-over phenomenon. I\'m suggesting that relying on the over/under distinction, which I think helpfully describes the kinds of power that characterize human interaction, might blind us to the ways in which we are held in bondage by social systems. I think there are places in world where, thanks to capitalism, the choice really is between hungry and starving, to allude to a distinction you made above. Of course hungry is better -- but what kind of justice is that? <br><br>If a better way of life is possible, and if the people of God have resources for living such a life, it would seem that our ethical responsibility is to extend that way of life to as many as possible. Sussing out what might be the best they can do otherwise is not, for me, a satisfying exercise, owing at least partially to the fact that I\'m not terribly Reformed in my theological thinking (I think you get that).</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10772684">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10772684" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10772684" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10772684" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10772684" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10772684" class="dsq-comment-message">Ok, I want to just pat myself on the back for the image for this article. I usually choose images with care...but in this one, I deliberately looked for a McDonald\'s sign with Russian Cyrillic text to go with this Russian Orthodox painting of the Prodigal Son.<br><br>Normally, I don\'t point out my own handiwork, but I feel fairly proud of my work on this one. ;)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10772852">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10772852" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10772852" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10772852">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10772852" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10772852" class="dsq-comment-message">Well done indeed. I love it.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10772926">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10772926" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10772926" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10772926" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10772926" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10772926" class="dsq-comment-message">Oh, you\'re too kind. *blush* ;)</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10784337">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10784337" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10784337" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10784337" href="http://thoughtloose.blogspot.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Maria Kirby</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10784337" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10784337" class="dsq-comment-message">I was wondering who did the nice job of picking pictures for all the articles.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10784448">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10784448" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10784448" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10784448" href="http://markvans.info" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">markvans</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10784448" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10784448" class="dsq-comment-message">Editors select pictures for the articles that they edit.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10791156">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10791156" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10791156" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10791156">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10791156" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10791156" class="dsq-comment-message">"I wasn\'t disappointed." Nicely done. <br><br>I\'m hoping the whole personalism thing will get unpacked, simply because I want to understand personalism and its implications a little better.<br><br>I agree about the Church being the sole incarnation and revelation of Christ to the world, and also with the complication. We are God to the Other; we find God in the Other.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10794820">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10794820" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10794820" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10794820" href="http://www.facebook.com/people/Jon-Carl-Lewis/1150987616" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Jon Carl Lewis</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10794820" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10794820" class="dsq-comment-message">thank you.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10903104">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10903104" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10903104" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-10903104" href="http://thoughtloose.blogspot.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Maria Kirby</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10903104" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10903104" class="dsq-comment-message">Ted,<br>I enjoyed your piece very much.  You are very eloquent and have a terrific sense of humor.  I have been impressed with the thoughtful discussions you have had with your readers.<br><br>As I have struggled with how to raise my teenagers, I have come back to the story of the Prodigal Son in hopes to learn something about how to be a gracious parent.  I was struck by the fact that the loving father in the story enabled his wayward son to leave.  And by the fact that even though he was looking for the return of his son, he did not go searching for his son as maybe the story of the lost sheep would imply.<br><br>I thought about your comments of how evangelicals find the need to keep rehearsing the story of the prodigal son with very little emphasis on the faithful son or the father as states of Christian practice/experience.  Since I am a creature of habit, a creature with an appetite, I like reviewing such stories, consuming the grace for my needy soul.  But I have found that instead of creating a rut, leaving me where I began, that I move through the story first as the prodigal conscious of my waywardness in need of grace, then as the older son faithfully following Christ, yet lost in legalism unwilling to live in the grace provided, then as the Father, letting go of my expectations for myself and others, and finally receiving with open arms the contrite spirit, being generous with what has been generously given to me.  This cycle of grace keeps me growing in faith, continually being transformed, rather than frozen in time at a moment of transaction.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-10935156">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-10935156" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-10935156" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-10935156">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-10935156" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-10935156" class="dsq-comment-message">Maria,<br><br>Thank you. Your reading reminds me of a wonderful treatment of this parable by Henri Nouwen, which follows the same trajectory. It\'s a viable reading. I did not mean to suggest that every evangelical is hopelessly trapped in the way I describe; in fact, the cultural analysis I attempt in the essay, which was fun to do, is actually something of a sidebar. But I was seeking less to adjure us to a particular personal reading than to point out that if the would-be prodigal is not embraced by a community willing to extend to them the love and grace of the father, then Jesus\' parable is just a heartwarming story. <br><br>Ted</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11934868">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11934868" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11934868" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-11934868" href="http://tenwarningstotheobloggers.wordpress.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">TW</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11934868" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11934868" class="dsq-comment-message">are theoblogs consumers?</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-11938431">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-11938431" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-11938431" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-11938431">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-11938431" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-11938431" class="dsq-comment-message">I would assume the blogs themselves to be inanimate and therefore not amenable to being constructed as consumers.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-12028073">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-12028073" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-12028073" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <a id="dsq-author-user-12028073" href="http://cimarronline.blogspot.com/2004/05/paul-munn.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">paul munn</a>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-12028073" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-12028073" class="dsq-comment-message">Thinking over some of the conversation here, and remembering my observations during my years in seminary, I think I\'ve realized something about the postmodern approach. Its focus on the ways that our personal points of view and cultural frameworks filter our perceptions and influence our interpretations does offer a "lofty" perspective from which to critique, say, the false certainties of evangelicals (quite rightly, I should add). But it also seems to disconnect us from God, in that we can never be sure whether we are hearing God\'s voice or just hearing our own prejudices or the accumulated formation of our tradition and community.<br><br>So we\'re left with an apparent detachment, which makes it easier to analyze all the various accounts of God\'s activity in people\'s lives, comparing and contrasting their confessions with those of others, which might lead us to any number of interesting conclusions about the nature of religion and belief. But what seems to be left out (conveniently?) is the voice of God speaking directly to us. Presenting us with the choice: believe or reject, act or do not act. The "voice of God" becomes an object of detached study, never the prophet Nathan standing before us saying, "You are the man!"<br><br>And doesn\'t that easily turn us into consumers as well? Eagerly devouring and digesting all the various religious confessions and theological viewpoints, churning out our educated theories, without ever having to face the choice, the demand, God\'s voice speaking directly and clearly to us, his eyes on us waiting for our answer?<br><br>Maybe that guy that asked about "theoblogs" had a point...</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 <li id="dsq-comment-12028701">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-header-12028701" class="dsq-comment-header">\
	 <cite id="dsq-cite-12028701" class="dsq-comment-cite">\
	 <span id="dsq-author-user-12028701">Ted Troxell</span>\
	 </cite>\
	 </div>\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-body-12028701" class="dsq-comment-body">\
	 <div id="dsq-comment-message-12028701" class="dsq-comment-message">I realize I may have made it difficult for you to accept this as sincere, but you raise an excellent and challenging point. Thank you.</div>\
	 </div>\
	 </li>\
	 </ul>\
';

(function() {
	
	





Dsq.Debug.profile(function() {
	if(Dsq.jsonData.request.page == 1 && Dsq.jsonData.request.is_initial_load) {
		Dsq.container.innerHTML = Dsq.Templates.header() + Dsq.container.innerHTML + Dsq.Templates.footer();
	}
	Dsq.$(Dsq.curPageId).innerHTML = Dsq.$(Dsq.curPageId).innerHTML.replace(Dsq.COMMENTS_RE, Dsq.CommentsHandler);
}); // Dsq.Debug.Profile

// HACK: Resetting cache because we're done with.
Dsq.Utils.gebiFromElementCollectionCache = null;


	
	
	var dsq_styleEl = document.getElementById(disqus_container_id);
	var dsq_anchorEl = document.getElementsByTagName('a')[0];
	
	Dsq.Thread.fc = Dsq.Utils.getStyle(dsq_styleEl, 'color');
	if(dsq_anchorEl) { Dsq.Thread.ac = Dsq.Utils.getStyle(dsq_anchorEl, 'color'); }
	Dsq.Thread.ff = Dsq.Utils.getStyle(dsq_styleEl, (Dsq.Utils.ie || window.opera ? 'fontFamily' : 'font-family'));
	// For Safari / Opera: strip quotes.
	Dsq.Thread.ff = Dsq.Thread.ff.replace(/['"]/g, '');
	Dsq.Thread.fc = encodeURIComponent(Dsq.Thread.fc);
	Dsq.Thread.ac = encodeURIComponent(Dsq.Thread.ac);
	Dsq.Thread.ff = encodeURIComponent(Dsq.Thread.ff);

	
	
	
	if(Dsq.$(Dsq.Templates.addPostContainer)) {
		// TODO: Check to see if theme uses postmessage.
		if (window.disqus_use_postmessage) {
			Dsq.frames['reply_0'] = new Dsq.ReplyFrame(Dsq.$(Dsq.Templates.textareaContainer));
			Dsq.frames['reply_0'].init(function() {
				// Use fallback iframe
				Dsq.$(Dsq.Templates.addPostContainer).innerHTML = '';
				var theme = (typeof disqus_frame_theme == 'undefined') ? 'default' : disqus_frame_theme;
				Dsq.Iframes.showReplyIframeInContainer(Dsq.$(Dsq.Templates.addPostContainer), null, {theme: theme});
				// if(Dsq.Utils.ie) { Dsq.Utils.fixIframesIE(); }
			});
		} else {
			// DEPRECATED
			Dsq.Iframes.showReplyIframeInContainer(Dsq.$('dsq-post-add'));
		}
	}

	
	

	
	if(document.location.hash != '') {
		document.location.hash = document.location.hash.substring(1);
	}

	Dsq.Popup.showCookieMsgs();

	
	if(document.location.search != '' && location.hash != '#disqus_thread') {
		var reply_id = Dsq.Utils.getRequestParams().dsq;
		if(reply_id) { document.location.hash = 'comment-' + reply_id; }
	}

	
	if((typeof OB_Script != 'undefined') && (typeof OB_versionNum != 'undefined')) {
		if(navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Firefox") != -1) {
			if(window.frames['dsq-reply-frame']) {
				window.frames['dsq-reply-frame'].location = Dsq.Urls.REPLY + (new Date()).getTime() + '&f=jesusmanifesto&t=the_prodigal_consumer&to_redirect=' + encodeURIComponent(window.location) + '&ifrs=' + encodeURIComponent(disqus_iframe_css);
			}
		}
	}

	if (Dsq.jsonData.integration.theme == 4) {
		if (Dsq.jsonData.realtime_enabled) {
			Dsq.Realtime.initialize();
		}
	}

	



	window.ExecuteWhen = (function () {
	var obj = {}
	
	// Private
	var running = false;
	var timer = null;
	var pending = [];
	var startTimer = function() {
		running = true;
		timer = setInterval(obj.heartBeat, 100);
	};
	var stopTimer = function() {
		running = false;
		clearInterval(timer);
	};
	
	// Public
	obj.add = function (condition, code) {
		pending.push([condition,code]);
		this.heartBeat(); //!
		if (!running) {
			startTimer();
		}
	};
	obj.heartBeat = function() {
		if (!pending.length) {
			stopTimer();
		}
		var newPending = [];
		for (var i=0; i<pending.length; i++) {
			var cond = pending[i][0];
			var code = pending[i][1];
			// FIXME: if cond or code throw an error, they never get removed from pending
			if (cond()){
				code();
			}
			else {
				newPending.push([cond, code]);
			}
		}
		pending = newPending;
	};
	return obj;
})();

// also used in embed_thread.js:
window.fbIsReady = function () {return window.FB && FB.init;};
// NOTE: This script gets executed again without threadEl
//       set when we are loaded again as the fbc_receiver.
//       In this case, we don't need the hidden container.

if(!window.FB || !FB.init) {
	if(window.Dsq && Dsq.container) {
		// container is not present when init.js is loaded from an xd-receiver iframe; in this case,
		// we don't need the FB_HiddenContainer anyway.
		var fbDiv = document.createElement('div');
		fbDiv.id = "FB_HiddenContainer";	// Required or else FeatureLoader will execute a document.write.
		fbDiv.style.position = 'absolute';	// This is intentionally not setting display to none as this breaks
		fbDiv.style.top = '-10000px';		// Flash in Safari.
		fbDiv.style.left = '-10000px';
		fbDiv.style.width = '0px';
		fbDiv.style.height = '0px';
		Dsq.container.appendChild(fbDiv);
	}
	var fbJS = document.createElement('script');
	fbJS.type = "text/javascript";
	fbJS.src = "http://static.ak.connect.facebook.com/js/api_lib/v0.4/FeatureLoader.js.php";
	document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(fbJS);

	ExecuteWhen.add(window.fbIsReady,
		function () {
			// HACK: This is a workaround FBC's single domain limitation by
			//		 allowing sites to create multiple forums with different
			//		 Facebook API keys.  This must be used in conjunction with
			//		 disqus_facebook_forum (see authenticateFacebook).
			var facebook_api_key = '1a1bdc1b204664881be4e1b12416ddaf';
			if (typeof disqus_facebook_api_key != 'undefined') {
				facebook_api_key = disqus_facebook_api_key;
			}

			FB.init(facebook_api_key, window.facebookXdReceiverPath || null,
				{fetchSignedPublicSessionData: true});
		});
}


	


if(typeof(disqus_callback) == 'function') {
	var callback_params = Dsq.Utils.getRequestParams()['dsq_cbp'] || null;

	// We don't care about any errors in third-party code
	try {
		disqus_callback(callback_params);
	} catch (x) {
		if (typeof(console) != 'undefined' && typeof(console.log) == 'function') {
			// But it would be nice to let developers know about them
			console.log(x);
		}
		// pass
	}

	// HACK: We don't know if the callback wraps our container, which may
	// possibly result in a new DOM element.
	Dsq.container = document.getElementById('dsq-content');
}

})();




