Follow Josh on Google+ Follow J0shTucker on Twitter

When I was a sophomore in high school, there was much about me that I realized I didn’t like. In response to this realization, I made a critical decision that had a profound effect on the person I am, even to this day.

I decided that that’s just the way I am is a horrible, terrible excuse, and it’s not good enough. Correspondingly, I decided that I ought to have much more control over who and how I am than most people seem to want to recognize. I decided that I ought to be able to decide who I want to be, and be that person.
Read the rest…

October 15, 2011 · 1 comment

The Problem of Evil is a philosophical question that goes something like this:

If God is omnibenevolent (fully good), omnipotent (all powerful) and omniscient (all knowing), why does evil exist?

Put differently, the problem asks how a good God, fully aware of every evil and fully capable of preventing it, could allow evil to exist.

To answer this question, philosophers and theologians have taken a variety of approaches, leading to a field of study known as theodicy, which specifically attempts to explain and/or prove how a God with these three qualities can coexist with a world rife with evil. However, in thinking about it, I can’t help wondering if we’re not getting ahead of ourselves by posing the question in this way.

Read the rest…

September 22, 2011 · 4 comments

In late 2006, I left the church, disillusioned with the self-centered nature of the Christian experience and the church’s near inability to reach out to those beyond its own walls. For a brief period, I was part of a local iteration of the Emergent Church movement, though that was short lived, as the group I was a part of were interested in a kind of faith experience that did not appeal to me.

Around the same time, something happened that raised in my mind a number of questions that I considered very serious, which completely shook my world and threatened tremendous possible ramifications for my faith as a Christian. A series of unexpected sources of inspiration, confusion, and clarity took me on a journey filled with numerous difficult questions, considerable doubt, ample inaction, and far too much wasted time. I questioned Christianity at a level more basic than I had ever before thought that I would, and as my old roommate Dave recently said to me, “I tell you, if you’ve never had to question even the most basic tenets of Christianity, it can be brutal. Really brutal.” Dave was unequivocally correct.

Read the rest…

October 11, 2009 · Comment

I know it’s cliché to describe it as such, but a few years ago I began a journey. This journey led me through a sort of crisis of faith, where much of what I believed in was called into question. There were moments when I wasn’t sure I could consider myself a Christian, though such moments were brief and tentative, at best. Nearly three years later, I believe I have arrived at the end of this journey, and I am ready to begin a new one. But first, let me tell you what I’ve been through put myself through.

Read the rest…

October 1, 2009 · 3 comments

On Monday, while driving to Wichita, I stumbled across a radio preacher teaching on Revelation. To me this virtually guaranteed, as it always had in the past, complete disaster, so I stuck around to shake my head disapprovingly at the fallout.

But instead of a complete disaster, what followed was an incredibly sound and profoundly meaningful discourse on Revelation, chapters 1 and 2. Most importantly, Nancy Leigh DeMoss delivered a message that I needed to hear: That from a Biblical perspective, there is no such thing as an “unchurched Christian,” and that no matter how frustrating being part of a local church may be at times, it’s simply not an option. And for good reason.

Read the rest…

September 18, 2009 · 2 comments