January 29, 2007
Whole Farm Coop
December 4, 2006
Google Reader Share
Enjoy :)
November 9, 2006
Jesus Camp: The Movie
November 2, 2006
Again, Olberman tells it like it is
October 30, 2006
October 29, 2006
Television worth watching: The Monastery
On tonight's episode one of them men was struggling with how to find meaning in daily recitation of the Psalms in chant. The act of liturgy was difficult for him. The monk he was speaking with said, "I think the secular liturgy is a sports game..." He went on to describe how a football game offers the same flow and pattern of worship. The procession of the teams, the invocation and etc.
It was an image of a worship service that I hadn't thought about before.
Another quote from the Abbott, "Part of maturity is having a conflict and coming out of it."
edit: The show is on TLC
October 27, 2006
Michael J. Fox Responds to Rush Limbaugh
A heartfelt response by Michael J. Fox to Rush Limbaugh.
"Science is an important part of our society." - Michael J. Fox
"Nobody wants Pity... I am not a victim... I am someone in this situation..."
"If there are answers out there we have a right to pursue them..."
"Disease is a non-partisan problem that requires a bipartisan effort"
October 26, 2006
Keith Olberman is now my hero
October 23, 2006
Another Good Quote
"When will Americans learn that 'God Bless America' is not in the Bible?"
Really this idea of God's Country is a bit freaky. Jim Wallis quoted his wife on this one once she moved here from England.
Faith and Politics
Essentially here is what I found interesting about this discussion:
1) It was a discussion and not a heated debate. Both Jim and Greg were civil and in many cases agreed with each other more than they disagreed. I think that is the wonderful thing about their discussion. Both men are Christians and after kingdom things. They go about it in different ways.
2) Jim focussed more on being an independent who considers all the issues and votes the way your faith guides you. Greg focussed more on digging deeper and being a compassionate Christ-centered individual.
3) Both detest the co-opting of one stance as "the Christian stance" and I have to agree. To question anyone's faith as a result of their politics is purely the work of evil.
4) Both think that we should look at all the issues behind being Christian and not just focus on the "big two." Most Christian's would place these issues as abortion and gay marriage and most people polarize their faith based on this. It is much much bigger than all that. Poverty is huge. Gobal warming is huge.
Now on to some general thoughts...
The real issue is that when a party claims Christ and calls another "Unchristian" we are judging. It is not our job to judge. The big two issues are deep down what many people just go with as being the only reason they vote on way or another and that pains me (Greg and Jim as well).
I think that ends most of my general thoughts. My favorite image tonigth came from Jim regarding what a politician looks like. They all look like pilots testing the wind with their finger in the air. They vote whatever way the wind blows them to. We cannot change things by selecting a new "wind-testing politician" to really change things you need to change the wind.
Live blogging Faith and Politics
So, I have gotten my blog set up for email posting just in time to try live blogging the Faith and Politics: Should they Mix? Presentation by Jim Wallis and Gregory Boyd at Bethel University. We shall see how this works. The center space of the auditorium is all Bethel students. Thomas (dydimustk) and Kim and I got here about half an hour early to try and get seats. I am hoping for some fun insights. Essentially Jim Wallis says faith should be a motivator of politics provided the entirity of faith is considered. Greg Boyd says faith and politics should be separate.
September 12, 2006
The Upper Room and Donald Miller
Donald Miller was a sensational speaker. He is the author of Blue Like Jazz and a few other books I have been meaning to read. I may post more on this later.
September 11, 2006
The Blog | George Lakoff: Five Years After 9/11: Drop the War Metaphor | The Huffington Post
"Instead, a war metaphor was chosen: the "War on Terror." Literal --not metaphorical -- wars are conducted against armies of other nations. They end when the armies are defeated militarily and a peace treaty is signed. Terror is an emotional state. It is in us. It is not an army. And you can't defeat it militarily and you can't sign a peace treaty with it."I also think that Lakoff does a tremendous job of getting to the root of a major problem that post-modern America is facing, language.
The Blog | George Lakoff: Five Years After 9/11: Drop the War Metaphor | The Huffington Post
August 28, 2006
LifeSuck
Blah.
August 17, 2006
It's the End of the World As We Know It
Do you think the world will end catastrophically before you die?
My personal thought...
Yes.
My analysis of my thought...
I have always felt like something will go wrong with the world catastrophically. Not like an Armageddon sort of thing, but more like a poof and were done sort of thing. I wonder if that is representative of my personal feeling that "the glass is half empty" when it comes to my chance of having a better life than the previous generation. Based on what I understand, most people in my generation feel that the American dream is dying rather quickly for us non-inheriting millions from our parents sort of people. Frequently I wonder how in the world I could ever afford to have offspring in this country.
Anyhow, I digress and I should get my butt to bed.
Jason
Late Night, lots of thoughts, too much caffine
My hope is that some day soon things will slow down. I don't know how to train my brain to switch off work thoughts. I just worry about getting everything done to the best of my ability.
Well, seeing as it is late and I have an early morning. I might as well head to bed and attempt to sleep again.
The ultimate kicker of tonight... a night where I can't sleep and Dofus (my MMORPG) is offline...
I guess I wasn't supposed to have any escapism tonight.
Later
July 18, 2006
Wicked
It actually got me to the point of analyzing literature again. I seriously had about half a thesis written in my head by intermission. I am still working things up, but the basic gist of the whole thing is "American Civil Religion" as depicted through Wicked.
There is a lot of interesting OZ as god stuff that I encountered as I was watching.
I also thought it was quite interesting to see the parody of a corrupt empire and a deceived population in light of current situations in the United States.
July 17, 2006
The Joys of Airport Security
Today Erin and I are flying out of Chicagp Midway Airport. It has been a long time since I had the pleasure of interacting with TSA. Today they were in rare form. Erin walked through the metal detector and they made her go back through because her shoes might set off the alarm. So she walked back through again without setting off the alarm and had to put her shoes on the Xray. Then I attempted to go through and the guard yelled at me. He said, "don't you see me standing here... What are you going to walk through me?" I looked for a comment card but they don't have one. Clearly they could use some customer service skills.
April 17, 2006
2GB Free Back-up Space
March 15, 2006
Terrible E-mail Forward
Cindy Sheehan asked President Bush, "Why did my son have to die in Iraq?"
Another mother asked President Kennedy, "Why did my son have to die in Viet Nam?"
Another mother asked President Truman, "Why did my son have to die in Korea?"
Another mother asked President F.D. Roosevelt, "Why did my son have to die at Iwo Jima?"
Another mother asked President W. Wilson, "Why did my son have to die on the battlefield of France?"
Yet another mother asked President Lincoln, "Why did my son have to die at Gettysburg?"
And yet another mother asked President G. Washington, "Why did my son have to die near Valley Forge?"
Then, long, long ago, a mother asked, "Heavenly Father, why did my Son have to die on a cross outside of Jerusalem?"
The answers to all these are similar -- "that others may have life and dwell in peace, happiness and freedom."
This was emailed to me with no author and I thought the magnitude and the simplicity were awesome.