Bio

Born and raised in Oregon, I've lived most my life on the West Coast, save three years near Minneapolis, Minnesota.  In 2008 I moved to California because Oregon was too liberal for me -- or because I lost my previous job and found an electrical design job in Santa Rosa.  Recent developments have found me back in Oregon working for another branch of the same company.  Also, I am married now.

I live now with my wife, her cats Tawosret and Khufu, and my two birds Nazghûl the World's Most Evil Parakeet and his erstwhile sidekick Pippin Joe.  I've spent way too much time reading and watching science fiction.  I abuse ellipses with wild abandon.


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C. U. Douglas's Profile

C. U. Douglas
Name:
C. U. Douglas
Joined:
Apr 5, 2011

Recent Comments

C. U. Douglas

BrentB67

Pseudodionysius

I am speaking about the literal interpretation from whatever language he delivers them

He preaches in Italian. · 2 hours ago

Thank you and to Joseph also. This seems to be contributing to the issues that have come up lately. Perhaps they aren't the huge issues we make them out to be. · 2 minutes ago

Maybe not, but just the possibilities make for great discussion.

C. U. Douglas
Spin: CBC, I still say dumb.  Present company excluded, of course.   · 10 minutes ago

Tsk, and yet I remain disparaged.

Oregon has a similar problem to California, in that we have a large public employee union thus many contractual obligations to public employees past, present, and future. The end result is that the state needs more revenue than it takes in, and punishes the citizens for being skeptical of the use of funds.

Side note: In the nineties there was an attempt to change the public employee contract benefits through the state's measure system. Though the measure passed, it was challenged and shot down in court.

C. U. Douglas

Midget Faded Rattlesnake

C. U. Douglas: God's grace and mercy is such that it is offered to all, the catch is that we must grasp ahold of that. Christians such as myself believe this, but also there is a day when the opportunity to take what is offered is gone.

I think, though, that it is right to be humble about when this day actually is.

There are scriptural passages that hold out the promise of universal reconciliation as well as scriptural passages that warn of the risk of eternal perdition. Here on earth, where we see only dimly, many dynamics of the life to come are most likely hidden from us, and we should try to distinguish pious speculation from fact.

...

 · 12 minutes ago

I can accept that even beyond death, there may be a possibility for salvation beyond what my temporal eyes can see.

But given the scripture as written, and noting that even Christ himself implied there was only so much time, I assume the negative and spread the Word in hopes that all might be prepared. I believe I'd be remiss to do otherwise.

C. U. Douglas

Nathaniel Wright: C.U.,

It's true. Dice do hate you. A nice set of old worn down polyhedrons snuck into my house last night. They informed me that they had escaped your Crown Royal bag and were demanding asylum. I asked why and they told me a horror story of a die being frozen and then shattered with a hammer. It wasn't clear whether this had actually been done, or if you had been reading the excellent book BONES by GameWrightPress.

Regardless, I welcomed them to my home and informed them that if they didn't perform up to snuff they would be melted down and reforged as Pig Farmer minis. They have been behaving so far. · 9 minutes ago

I knew they were up to something. Stupid polyhedra. Vengeance shall be mine!

C. U. Douglas

God's grace and mercy is such that it is offered to all, the catch is that we must grasp ahold of that. Christians such as myself believe this, but also there is a day when the opportunity to take what is offered is gone. My concern is not that the disbeliever might see God -- but rather that he might see Him unprepared.

C. U. Douglas

Umbra Fractus

C. U. Douglas

Do they like the perceived insurance just in case they turn out to be wrong? Should Judgment Day prove a reality, do they hope to stand before the King of Kings and say, "Yeah, I spent my whole life denying You, but Pope Francis says I get in anyways"? · 1 hour ago

Is there no room in your worldview for sincere disbelief? Why must every non-believer be a denier?

I find it disheartening how many Christians find the idea that God will be merciful threatening to their worldview. · 52 minutes ago

The idea that God is merciful is central to my beliefs. The essential element is that there's no one better than another, that anyone can meet God and be reconciled to God through Christ His Son who redeemed us. It's never how good we are, but what Christ has done that is our salvation.  My His grace I'm redeemed; by His mercy I am forgiven. That grace and mercy is offered to all.

There is nothing wrong with sincere disbelief. Thomas the Apostle is perhaps the most famous, but even he eventually came to accept Christ and God.

C. U. Douglas

Side note: When I play a game with kids, I never let them win. If they are going to win it's because they played/rolled better. A lot of times it's because of the latter. I'm positive that dice hate me.

C. U. Douglas

Dave Molinari

NoWayerMan: It all goes back to the greens.

The Feds took over forest lands and ended logging rights. To compensate for lost revenues, they offered the money to help the state "transition to a new economy". The funding was supposed to be short term, but the state never found a new way to get the cash (became dependent) and the Feds renewed the grant repeatedly, until they didn't.

I guess you could say the environmentalists have been engaging in a war on women. · 14 hours ago

As an Oregonian, this is completely accurate. They torpedoed an industry for which they relied upon for 100 years and have nothing to show for it except higher taxes for the employed and a lot more forest fires. · 1 hour ago

Quite true -- I'm also Oregon-born. We had a large timber industry that was killed by environmentalists and then by the Federal government "feeding the bears" for the decades that followed. We've communities that pretty much survive on subsidies and Wal-Mart.

C. U. Douglas

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

Fred Cole: I'm sure this comes as a great comfort to the atheist community. · 12 hours ago

Actually, the reaction of the atheist community has been surprising to me. They seem to be really into their interpretation of what Pope Francis said. I can't figure out why.

Anyway, we already were discussing this on a previous thread and it's probably worth visiting that one, too. · 3 hours ago

Yeah, the atheist reaction seems odd. I mean, if God really doesn't exist, why does it matter what the Pope says about redemption and salvation?

Do they like the perceived insurance just in case they turn out to be wrong? Should Judgment Day prove a reality, do they hope to stand before the King of Kings and say, "Yeah, I spent my whole life denying You, but Pope Francis says I get in anyways"?

C. U. Douglas

Civil Sense

C. U. Douglas: Wait ... what if I choose Ringo? Where does that place me politically? · 4 hours ago

Low-information voter :-) · 52 minutes ago

Once again I play straight man. I'll set 'em up, you'll knock 'em out of the park.

C. U. Douglas

Midget Faded Rattlesnake

Another link courtesy of Simcha Fisher, to a blog by a beleaguered Episcopalian.

Incidentally, the above beleaguered Episcopalian's blog links to a rather delightful time-waster, a six-question quiz entitled, "Which Church Father are you?"

I'm Origen, apparently. (Not exactly a surprise.) I'd bet James of England is also an Origen -- except for the bit about the kitchen shears:

You are Origen! You do nothing by half-measures. If you’re going to read the Bible, you want to read it in the original languages. If you’re going to teach, you’re going to reach as many souls as possible, through a proliferation of lectures and books. If you’re a guy and you’re going to fight for purity … well, you’d better hide the kitchen shears.

Fun, I got:

You are St. Jerome! You’re a passionate Christian, fiercely devoted to Jesus Christ and his Church. You are willing to labor long hours in the Lord’s vineyard, and you have little patience with those who are less willing or able to work as you do. Your passions often carry you into temptation zones of wrath, lust, and pride.

C. U. Douglas

On further speculation, it seems my George MacDonald reference is most apt in this case. Huffpo is listening for what they want to hear, not what they need to hear.

C. U. Douglas

So when we are faced with someone tormented, Schori's response is, "You're different and that's just fine!" Is this correct?

I suppose if her kids asked for fish and eggs, she'd give them snakes and scorpions as well.

C. U. Douglas

Wait ... what if I choose Ringo? Where does that place me politically?

C. U. Douglas

KC Mulville: Probably the Jesuits' best theologian of recent memory, Karl Rahner, had a well-known theory about "anonymous Christians." The distinction is that Christ saves everyone, not anything or anyone else ... but that it isn't necessary that the recipient of salvation realize that it was Christ who did the saving.

As a Jesuit, the Pope would be intimately familiar with that theory.  It's pretty much part of a Jesuit's DNA. However, someone reporting on it probably wouldn't know it as well, and would interpret it differently than how Francis meant it. It strikes me as unlikely that the HuffPo would be all that expert on the idea. · 2 hours ago

I'm afraid I'm not familiar with that theory as well. I appreciate the clarification.

I will note that Huffpo seems to be making a career out of misreading the Pope's words entirely.

C. U. Douglas

I'm a pessimist at heart. I just have no confidence this is making as much an effect as we'd like to believe.

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