More Links
It has been quite some time since anything was posted on this blog. The pre-Holy Week guest posts have dried up (although hopefully my youngest brother will have sent me something before the weekend). I am presently enjoying my mid-semester break, although not a whole lot has been achieved so far. We have eaten a lot, entertained a number of people, caught up on some DVD watching and played far too much Settlers of Catan and Canasta. I have probably only read no more than one hundred and fifty pages or so of various books within the last couple of days.
Later today we are having more people over for a big meal, prior to a Desperate Housewives evening that my housemate Simon is organizing. I think that I will probably opt out of that (and not just because Desperate Housewives jumped the shark a while back). Tomorrow we have an all-day Lord of the Rings session, where we will be watching the three extended versions back-to-back. I will try and get some study done this evening to help me to justify a full day off. We have a 24-athon planned for next week, which should be even more intense. Hopefully, the LoTR day will help me to get in shape for that.
The following are some of the various things that have caught my attention online over the last few days.
I haven’t read either of them yet, but David Field has posted links to two Oak Hill dissertations, one on Romans 2:1-16 and another on Romans 8:13.
In other words, faith isn’t something we are to try to work up in ourselves. It isn’t some inner state of certainty to which we somehow attain. God, in his mercy towards us, does not require us to hold within our heads at one moment the whole truth of Christianity, and to assent to it. Rather, he comes to us with concrete, audible promises: “Your sins are forgiven”; “Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ”; “This is my body, given for you… this cup is the new testament in my blood, shed for you for the forgiveness of your sins”. Faith is believing the promise we are hearing right now.
Read his whole post here.
The church set up various institutional forms of hospitality, including hospitals for the rejected and marginalized sick and weak. But the early church fathers also said that individual believers were supposed to show the same hospitality. Christine Pohl writes of Chrysostom: “Even if the needy person could be fed from common funds, Chrysostom asked, ‘Can that benefit you? If another man prays, does it follow that you are not bound to pray?’ He urged his parishioners to make a guest chamber in their own houses, a place set apart for Christ — a place within which to welcome ‘the maimed, the beggars, and the homeless.’”
It is quite easy to be charitable from a distance. The effort necessary to slow the frenetic pace of our lives down to be able to extend personal care and hospitality to people in need, rather than merely donating money is considerable. I have been very blessed by the example of my parents in this respect. Over the years we have taken many needy people into our home to live with us, for periods of time varying from a few days to a number of months. We have taken in itinerants, homeless people, students, recovering drug addicts and many others. Whilst our hospitality has been abused on more than one occasion, the experience of sharing your life with people in need is such a valuable and eye-opening one that I don’t think that we have any major regrets, even though we might do things slightly differently in the future. Quite apart from anything else, you learn a lot about yourself and your own weaknesses and failings.
Leithart also has some great posts on Jane Austen: ‘Keeping us Reading’, ‘Austen and Prejudice’ and ‘Communal Judgment, Communal Argument’.
-
3 Comments so far
Leave a commentThe strange thing is that I didn’t intend at the beginning to go the higher-critical route and reject all the Gospels except Mark in a bid to overthrow the institutional church. It just seemed like the best place for the argument to go.
Just a word on Kathryn Tanner. I read her book The Politics of God: Christian Theologies and Social Justice last year. I thought it was the most infuriating theological book I’d ever read. Perhaps I need to read more theologians to discover that there are much more infuriating works out there.
I’ll be specific. Tanner very carefully in the first part of her book outlined some theological and methodological considerations about how theology can function to deal with some difficult and persistent social questions (if christians have consistently found justification for injustice in their past theologies, is it worthwhile to think theology can provide a way forward?). While her lines of thought were not what I would have pursued, I thought she addressed the issues with considerable care.
In the second half of the book, prof Tanner tried to work out some social implications of the careful work of the first part. Suddenly all careful thought evaporated. God (without much argument at all) MUST look like a contemporary liberal. Somehow the question of the virtue of tolerance is the foremost question of the day. Absent entirely were any considerations of how the scriptures spoke about social questions. Vast fields of (perhaps unconscious?) assumptions abound, assumptions which would put prof. Tanner at odds with the vast majority of the church prior to the 20th C.
While I’m sure professor Tanner is ok with the idea of “new” directions in theological work, it does seem to distance her from any sort of catholicity in the way I understand that term.
FWIW.
Hm, I am not sure slow-reading is the opposite of speed-reading. It seems to me the first article you mentioned is more about controlled-speed-reading. This may involve slow-reading as well as ’skimming’.
The question is how to gain the wisdom what particular speed is required really. A writer can not give that advice, because it depends on the reader. The reader should have to read the contents before knowing what speed to adapt.
Still, I think I will give this control of speed methodology some attention I think over the coming months, but I don’t know about learning the skill. The biggest question I have is wether it may be preferable to stay ‘naive’ on the subject, with regard to the skill of speed-reading. Is it possible to enjoy reading after gaining that skill? I think that that may be another skill to learn actually.
Just like it is near-impossible for a heavy cigarette smoker to later find out what it means to enjoy smoking, i.e. the joy of smoking a pipe or a cigar. Smoking cigarettes is about fast inhalation to get back inside and perhaps the fulfilment of a habit of need, it is about conforming, the fight against after-taste, it is smelly - disgusting yet unavoidable. Smoking a pipe or cigar is about form and shape, taste, smell - aesthetics and art. I have seen cigarette smokers waste a good cigar (and their appetite). I have ‘tasted’ cigarettes and was utterly disgusted.
Will the skill of (controlled-)speed-reading waste my senses how to enjoy it reading itself?
Leave a comment
Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>
3 Comments so far
Leave a comment
The strange thing is that I didn’t intend at the beginning to go the higher-critical route and reject all the Gospels except Mark in a bid to overthrow the institutional church. It just seemed like the best place for the argument to go.
By Pirate on 03.28.07 10:30 pm
Just a word on Kathryn Tanner. I read her book The Politics of God: Christian Theologies and Social Justice last year. I thought it was the most infuriating theological book I’d ever read. Perhaps I need to read more theologians to discover that there are much more infuriating works out there.
I’ll be specific. Tanner very carefully in the first part of her book outlined some theological and methodological considerations about how theology can function to deal with some difficult and persistent social questions (if christians have consistently found justification for injustice in their past theologies, is it worthwhile to think theology can provide a way forward?). While her lines of thought were not what I would have pursued, I thought she addressed the issues with considerable care.
In the second half of the book, prof Tanner tried to work out some social implications of the careful work of the first part. Suddenly all careful thought evaporated. God (without much argument at all) MUST look like a contemporary liberal. Somehow the question of the virtue of tolerance is the foremost question of the day. Absent entirely were any considerations of how the scriptures spoke about social questions. Vast fields of (perhaps unconscious?) assumptions abound, assumptions which would put prof. Tanner at odds with the vast majority of the church prior to the 20th C.
While I’m sure professor Tanner is ok with the idea of “new” directions in theological work, it does seem to distance her from any sort of catholicity in the way I understand that term.
FWIW.
By Paul Baxter on 03.29.07 4:59 pm
Hm, I am not sure slow-reading is the opposite of speed-reading. It seems to me the first article you mentioned is more about controlled-speed-reading. This may involve slow-reading as well as ’skimming’.
The question is how to gain the wisdom what particular speed is required really. A writer can not give that advice, because it depends on the reader. The reader should have to read the contents before knowing what speed to adapt.
Still, I think I will give this control of speed methodology some attention I think over the coming months, but I don’t know about learning the skill. The biggest question I have is wether it may be preferable to stay ‘naive’ on the subject, with regard to the skill of speed-reading. Is it possible to enjoy reading after gaining that skill? I think that that may be another skill to learn actually.
Just like it is near-impossible for a heavy cigarette smoker to later find out what it means to enjoy smoking, i.e. the joy of smoking a pipe or a cigar. Smoking cigarettes is about fast inhalation to get back inside and perhaps the fulfilment of a habit of need, it is about conforming, the fight against after-taste, it is smelly - disgusting yet unavoidable. Smoking a pipe or cigar is about form and shape, taste, smell - aesthetics and art. I have seen cigarette smokers waste a good cigar (and their appetite). I have ‘tasted’ cigarettes and was utterly disgusted.
Will the skill of (controlled-)speed-reading waste my senses how to enjoy it reading itself?
By Elbert on 03.30.07 2:42 pm
Leave a comment
Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>