Building a new city in the midst of the old city, one syllable at a time by writing, editing, rapping, praying, and that sort of thing.

neopolis.me // neopolismedia.com

 

RazorMouth.com - An online webzine of “cutting-edge Christianity”
Joel J. Miller’s brainchild, RM was a largely Protestant theological webzine for the average Christian. We covered culture, theology, beer, cigars, politics, as well as practical matters (like family life), with regular contributions from David Bahsen, Jeremy Lott, Dale Meador, P. Andrew Sandlin, R.C. Sproul Jr., John Whitehead (and a few other guys), with occasional contributions from Douglas Wilson and others.
We covered the gamut. Theological topics included Federal Vision (before we knew there was one), Law/Gospel, and end times; we reviewed or discussed movies like Legally Blonde, Bruce Almighty, and Matrix; we danced about to the tunes of Joy Electric, Vigilantes of Love, and Death Cab for Cutie; and there was plenty about libertarian politics.
It was great fun and a headache all wrapped into one. Joel and I remember those days with both a chuckle and a cringe.
I was the Managing Editor and a contributor from roughly 2001 to 2005, or something like that. It was primarily through RazorMouth that I figured out how to write and learned a thing or two about editing. (Thanks, Joel!)
(The domain now belongs to someone else entirely, and we have nothing to do with that.)

RazorMouth.com - An online webzine of “cutting-edge Christianity”

Joel J. Miller’s brainchild, RM was a largely Protestant theological webzine for the average Christian. We covered culture, theology, beer, cigars, politics, as well as practical matters (like family life), with regular contributions from David Bahsen, Jeremy Lott, Dale Meador, P. Andrew Sandlin, R.C. Sproul Jr., John Whitehead (and a few other guys), with occasional contributions from Douglas Wilson and others.

We covered the gamut. Theological topics included Federal Vision (before we knew there was one), Law/Gospel, and end times; we reviewed or discussed movies like Legally Blonde, Bruce Almighty, and Matrix; we danced about to the tunes of Joy Electric, Vigilantes of Love, and Death Cab for Cutie; and there was plenty about libertarian politics.

It was great fun and a headache all wrapped into one. Joel and I remember those days with both a chuckle and a cringe.

I was the Managing Editor and a contributor from roughly 2001 to 2005, or something like that. It was primarily through RazorMouth that I figured out how to write and learned a thing or two about editing. (Thanks, Joel!)

(The domain now belongs to someone else entirely, and we have nothing to do with that.)