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Barry Danylak

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Barry Danylak


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Since 2012 Barry has served as the Pastor of Single Adult Ministries for one of Canada’s largest evangelical churches (Centre Street Church, Calgary, AB) developing and overseeing missional communities of single adults. Barry offers deep understanding of singleness in the biblical context from his research in the ancient world and New Testament (PhD, University of Cambridge, Faculty of Divinity). His biblical theology of singleness (Redeeming Singleness: How the Storyline of Scripture Affirms the Single Life, Crossway: 2010) has been used in seminary courses, mission conferences and spiritual retreats. Barry also serves as Adjunct Professor of Theology for Rocky Mountain College in Calgary, AB.

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Quotes by Barry Danylak  (?)
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“The capability to remain single is thus to be regarded as a spiritual gift, and it is characterized by three predominant features: a life of simplicity free from the stresses of spouse and family; a life that finds sufficiency in the blessings of Christ alone apart from the experiences of sexual intimacy, marital companionship, and physical family; and a life ready and free for service to the King in whatever way he should call.”
Barry Danylak, Redeeming Singleness: How the Storyline of Scripture Affirms the Single Life

“In the second instance God is the subject and Eve is the indirect object. This time Eve acknowledges that God appointed another offspring. She names this son Seth, meaning “substitute,” which is also an apparent wordplay on the Hebrew verb shith for “placing” or “appointing.” The contrast in the type of birth is expressed in the names of Eve’s sons. Cain is the result of Eve’s own act of getting a man, whereas Seth is God’s provision of an appointed offspring. In her effort, Eve bears sinful progeny of violence and ultimate death. But God provides through her another offspring that ultimately brings life and hope. The theme of offspring as a special provision of God is a recurring one throughout the book of Genesis. It is a theme that reinforces a fundamental difference between the God of the Old Testament and fertility deities popular among Israel’s ancient Near Eastern neighbors.10 Unlike the gods of other Semitic traditions, the God of Israel has no female consort and is not worshiped by means of cultic prostitution. Most importantly, the God of Israel is not manipulated by human beings as in the case of other fertility-oriented religions, where, through the worship and sacrifices of human beings, the gods were stimulated to replenish the earth. But from the first generation of humankind, Genesis emphasizes by contrast that it is God alone who provides the appointed offspring.”
Barry Danylak, Redeeming Singleness: How the Storyline of Scripture Affirms the Single Life

“The prominence of offspring as a central motif of God’s blessing in Genesis might seem to emphasize the importance of human beings marrying and having children as the essential means to realize and effect God’s blessing upon the world. Instead, the emphasis is that the offspring of the covenant that ultimately mediates God’s blessing to the world is ultimately a provision of God himself rather than of human initiative. It serves to underscore the theological reality of our full dependence upon God for the provision of all the blessings he wishes to bestow.”
Barry Danylak, Redeeming Singleness: How the Storyline of Scripture Affirms the Single Life



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