Rob Bell

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Rob Bell

Rob Bell (b. 1970) is the founder and teaching pastor of Mars Hill Bible Church in Grandville, Michigan. He is author of Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith (2005), a somewhat controversial book appealing to Gen-Xers. Some associate Bell with the Emerging church movement,[1] however, he purposefully avoids the label. [citation needed]

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Biographical information

Bell is the son of U.S. District Court Judge Robert Holmes Bell, and played guitar in a variety of bands from high school through his time in seminary. He earned a bachelor's degree in Psychology in 1992 from Wheaton College, and also graduated from Fuller Theological Seminary before moving to Grand Rapids and founding Mars Hill Bible Church in 1999. Bell named the church after the location in Greece, mentioned in Acts 17. Bell is featured in a short series of direct-to-DVD devotional films called NOOMA, from the phonetic spelling of the Greek word pneuma, which means wind or spirit. He also has two tour dvds ("Everything Is Spiritual" and "The Gods Arent Angry") and has conducted a third one named after his second book "Sex God".

Quotes from his book Velvet Elvis

Inspiration and Hermeneutics

Sola Scriptura

Heaven and Hell

The Fall

Ultimate Reality

Criticism of doctrinal method

"According to Mr. Bell there are two ways to approach doctrine: as a brick or a spring. The brick approach to doctrine is solid, unmoving and unchanging. It has no life. It is the wrong approach. A spring has life; it is flexible, and it is constantly changing. Rob Bell believes all doctrines are springs. By embracing such a view of doctrine and truth Mr. Bell drives a wedge between reality and doctrinal truth. He creates a paradox where there isn't one. Bell views doctrines as 'statements about our faith that help give words to the depth that we are experiencing.'" [2]

Notes

  1. Ken Silva, Rob Bell, Yoga Masters and Jesus? at Christian Worldview Network, 10/31/2006.
  2. Postmodern Liberalism: A Christian Critique of Rob Bell's Velvet Elvis from The Outlook, January 2006, Volume 56, No. 1, by Rev. Casey Freswick at Reformed Fellowship Inc. See also Vol. 56, No. 2.

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Criticism

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