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 <title>all Laura Nasrallah stories</title>
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 <title>The inside scoop on the Apostle Paul</title>
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 <description>&lt;!--paging_filter--&gt;&lt;p&gt;Laura Nasrallah&#039;s newest book, &quot;An Ecstasy of Folly: Prophecy and Authority in Early Christianity,&quot; argues that, in early Christian communities, dreams, visions, and prophecies were often central to communication and to people&#039;s understanding of the way things were -- far different from the prevailing modern notion that such occurrences are always part of the fringe. In early Christianity, debates often centered on whether a mystical or a rational approach was correct -- debates that resonate today. &quot;Obviously, some Christian communities today violently disagree about whether tongues and prophecies are still possible in the present or whether those are delusions on the part of other Christians,&quot; Nasrallah says. &quot;So even today we find rhetoric of madness and accusations of misunderstanding God&#039;s plan for history. In terms of contemporary politics, even on NPR and in other news media since September 11, 2001, you hear a lot of language that characterizes Islam or Arabs (certainly problematic categories, which aren&#039;t synonymous!) as stuck in a certain time period, as underdeveloped, as needing help. And today&#039;s widespread rhetoric of introducing people to democracy is undergirded by a certain understanding of history and the inevitability of historical progress; it can function covertly as a critique of Arabs or of Muslims as people who need to modernize, who need to &#039;get with the program&#039; of globalization.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
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 <pubDate>Mon, 26 Mar 2007 05:35:21 -0400</pubDate>
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