Semester Final UTC

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Across
  1. 3. A personal problem that morphs into a cultural problem, leading to a vane, materialistic, and socially dysfunctional society.
  2. 6. A political movement that sought to further Christian conservative ideals.
  3. 9. A practice the Romans engaged in for the public acknowledgement for having taken in poor individuals.
  4. 12. A Protestant movement which sees the essence of Christianity as salvation by faith through grace.
  5. 14. A physical, visual, or auditory expression of human creativity, skill, and imagination.
  6. 16. We must do this to what we hope to change.
  7. 17. Engaging in ridicule, lying, and gossip with information technology commits this sin.
  8. 18. The physical and mental benefits of taking this kind of rest from information technology have recently been learned.
  9. 21. The acceptance of this worldview has led to recent art quality being far from that of past centuries.
  10. 23. Any argument built on generally accepted premises necessarily leading to a conclusion.
  11. 25. Wrote more about theology than he did about physics.
  12. 28. The better technology gets, the more easily it breaks down the clear division between what is real and what is this.
  13. 29. A late-eighteenth century, early-nineteenth century movement popular among some liberal Protestants that sought to eradicate social evils.
  14. 30. The quality or feeling of being thankful.
  15. 31. The process we use to analyzing and evaluating arguments for validity and soundness.
Down
  1. 1. A missionary who made advances in science, politics, and economics in India, in addition to translating the Bible into scores of Indian languages.
  2. 2. Affect culture by altering our habits (e.g., the advancement of technology).
  3. 4. Used L’Abri as a refuge where he could engage with lost people through the discussion of modern culture’s ideas.
  4. 5. What we all ought to be in order to understand our culture and find ways to breathe life into it.
  5. 7. A mental map that helps us interpret and navigate life.
  6. 8. The Christian worldview reminds us that we are here to serve God by doing this to his creation.
  7. 10. Failing to listen as we should or speak out when we should commits this sin.
  8. 11. May persuade people, but it really only manipulates them by arranging arguments deceptively.
  9. 13. A famous group of Christian authors (e.g., C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien) who met to discuss their work.
  10. 15. A state in which a person works intently on something, is able to be creative, and recognizes afterward that it was a pleasurable experience.
  11. 19. Calls Christians out of culture to form alternative communities, modeled after a fifth century monk.
  12. 20. From the origin of the word itself, we see that technology focuses on this, i.e., how we do what we do.
  13. 22. Possible even when people believe in God if the culture no longer views God as relevant.
  14. 24. The Hindu practice of burning a woman to death on the funeral pyre of her husband.
  15. 26. When someone brings up one of these, discussions about Christian truth claims get sidetracked onto an irrelevant issue.
  16. 27. Allows us to read and understand what is affecting our spirit and where our world is in the drama of redemption.