Trey Ferguson
Goodreads Author
Member Since
January 2021
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/pastortrey05
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Theologizin' Bigger: Homilies on Living Freely and Loving Wholly
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An Untidy Faith: Journeying Back to the Joy of Following Jesus
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“The closer you get to the centers of power, the more attractive Caesar’s gospel sounds to you. It does not require a conscious decision. A passive acceptance of the status quo will suffice. Before you know it, you’ve become a chaplain to an empire.”
― Theologizin' Bigger: Homilies on Living Freely and Loving Wholly
― Theologizin' Bigger: Homilies on Living Freely and Loving Wholly
“I find it curious that the Bible allowed so many authors in a collection so important to setting the trajectory of a people. In my Protestant tradition, we acknowledge sixty-six books of the Bible. Within those sixty-six writings, who would dare to venture counting the number of fingerprints on those pages? In the collection known as the Psalms alone, a whole gang of psalmists are identified as contributors. That’s to say nothing of letters like Hebrews, where no author is identified. And let’s not get started on books where biblical scholars aren’t so convinced that the author named in the book actually owned the hand moving the quill. I won’t lie to you: I feel like God chose an awfully sloppy process if the goal was for us to receive each and every single word as though it were spoken by the mouth of the same God. God could’ve given it all to Moses on Sinai that first time and provided a little more uniformity to all of this. But that is not what happened. Instead, we are left with a collection of various writings: wisdom literature, poems, songs, letters, teachings, sermons—and even some stories that seem a lot like what we’d now consider folktales. We even have some writings put in there twice. Either God is a sloppy editor, or the voice of the people was preserved in the text on purpose. If God is a sloppy editor, then the Bible is of marginal value. If the voice of the people is preserved in this text, then the Bible is an invitation to seek God in our history, present, and future.”
― Theologizin' Bigger: Homilies on Living Freely and Loving Wholly
― Theologizin' Bigger: Homilies on Living Freely and Loving Wholly
“The ethos we ascribe to the archetype of success in our society does not lead to rewards in the society of God. For this reason, Jesus once said that it would be easier for a camel to squeeze through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Winning in God’s reign looks a whole lot like losing here on earth.”
― Theologizin' Bigger: Homilies on Living Freely and Loving Wholly
― Theologizin' Bigger: Homilies on Living Freely and Loving Wholly





























