Hevosmiles ,
Fitting 32 years of Studying God Word at a Stanford University level is harder to communicate than the topic itself . I hope you will reread each of my posts and look forward to answering any questions . Hope I didn't disappoint your expectations .
What exactly does "fitting" mean in this sentence? Are you trying to tell us you studied at Stanford for 32 years, or you were a professor there, or you used to go for coffee there before hitting the stacks.?
I'm working on a PhD, and nothing you are saying has the slightest hint of a Master's or Bachelor's degree, let alone a PhD.
Then, there is the whole issue of Stanford being apostate, with whole centers for the study of Buddhism and Islam, philosophy* and a lot of syncretism? Or basically a very, very little bit of Jesus?
This from their ads for prospective students:
"The Department of Religious Studies brings a variety of disciplinary perspectives to bear on the phenomenon of religion for the purpose of understanding and interpreting the history, literature, thought, social structures, and practices of the religious traditions of the world. Comprised of a dozen regular faculty with particular strengths in the study of Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, and Judaism...
Religious Studies works closely with several related programs at Stanford: the Department of Philosophy, with which it offers a combined undergraduate major; the Ho Center for Buddhist Studies; the Taube Center for Jewish Studies; the Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies; the McCoy Center for Ethics in Society; and the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies"
And this, concerning their choice of leaders;
"
Stanford's Anti-Christian Lesbian Ordained Priest
Two years ago, Stanford University hired their atheist "chaplain" John Figdor, and now, the new Dean for Religious Life is likewise an alumni of Harvard Divinity School: Jane Shaw is an ordained priest of the Church of England, and a self-declared lesbian, who says that churches must stop "doing religion all the time" and welcome people without converting them.
“I think the great crisis of our day is climate change and the environment.”
-- The Very Reverend Dr. Jane Shaw"
If you really went there, which I doubt, you have been infuenced by a totally apostate divinity school. However, in view of your poor writing skills, let's just leave this little misstep as a lie. Hmm, I wonder if that is a reportable offence?
*Not saying that philosophy isn't valuable. Questioning the KIND of worldview one might study in philosophy at Stanford.