Yeah. Over the last 12 months, I've studied about Gnosticism, Early Church Fathers, the Emerging Church movement, Orthodoxy, Early Celtic Christianity and how it differs from Roman and Orthodox Catholicism, and a few other things. What launched me into all of that research was a situation I was in. I was the worship leader at a church (modern praise and worship). I was removed from my post by the pastor because he didn't like my style. He was looking for something more multi-cultural, but would up choosing black gospel, which I have never been exposed to in my life. I decided to study worship... how it developed; how the early church did it; how modern churches worship, and it led me to where I am now. I've found more meaning in a liturgical church than the freeform church I was attending. But that's just me. I'm still exploring worship in all of its aspects. There's lots of good stuff there.

What I was getting at in all that is this. I studied history in college, and I love research. The history of Christianity is something I've never took seriously till just lately. Would that more people would take their faith as serious as the Jews and the Muslims. They can defend their faith better than your average Christian, because they understand where their faith came from. Christians don't take the time to study this. They just plod along and believe everything their pastor tells them.