tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4764506766343254616.post3194424626282121074..comments2024-03-26T14:20:38.103-04:00Comments on The Thought Criminal: Because I Missed Easter: Those Problematic CreedsUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4764506766343254616.post-71993318460211467982014-05-02T18:14:13.184-04:002014-05-02T18:14:13.184-04:00That Pelikan stuff is good. Like cool, clean wate...That Pelikan stuff is good. Like cool, clean water on a hot day.<br /><br />Many thanks.Rmjhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06811456254443706479noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4764506766343254616.post-79529012343241891332014-05-02T18:08:53.740-04:002014-05-02T18:08:53.740-04:00More later, but your opening made me think of a re...More later, but your opening made me think of a recent bit at Slate about Shakespeare's supposed atheism (I think I linked it, but anyway....).<br /><br />Lots of good responses (for once!) pointing out the expression of Xianity assumed by the author to be missing from S.'s works was anachronistic: it might have been a proper expression in 19th or 20th century America, but not in Elizabethan England.<br /><br />Aside from the problem of attributing opinions/beliefs to the author more properly attributed to characters.<br /><br />On two different counts, a very poor understanding of hermeneutics and of Christian history. And the post was an excerpt from a book.<br /><br />So it goes.Rmjhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06811456254443706479noreply@blogger.com