Ontology 101

October 31, 2007 at 11:44 pm | In faith, theology | Leave a Comment

The Episcopal Church (of which I am a member) will likely split in the next few years from the larger Anglican Communion over the contentious issue of homosexuality. This, a brief excerpt from somewhere in the middle of the “St. Andrew’s Day Statement” issued by the Church of England in 1995, is the most liberating word I’ve come across on the subject:

“At the deepest ontological level, therefore, there is no such thing as ‘a’ homosexual or ‘a’ heterosexual; there are human beings, male and female, called to redeemed humanity in Christ, endowed with a complex variety of emotional potentialities and threatened by a complex variety of forms of alienation.”

The entire text appears here and is well worth reading: http://www.episcopalian.org/cclec/paper-st-andrews-day.htm

Transforming Culture

October 31, 2007 at 9:13 pm | In Art, faith | Leave a Comment

Am trying to come up with a convincing institutional rationale for getting sent to this conference (as described in an email I received today): 

How would you like to engage with people like Jeremy Begbie, Eugene Peterson, and Andy Crouch about “a vision for the church and the arts”? The Transforming Culture symposium in Austin, TX will bring together pastors, church leaders and artists to discuss the Church’s relation to the arts and to artists. If you are interested in exploring the ways in which we can encourage a more theologically informed, biblically grounded, liturgically sensitive, artistically alive and missionally shrewd vision for the Church and the arts, then we welcome you join us April 1-3, 2008 for a lively and enriching conversation. Check out the details at http://www.transformingculture.org/. The discussion will focus on three areas:

  • The arts and the corporate worship of the church (its liturgical actions and its sacred spaces).
  • The arts and the pastoral care of artists (the discipleship and community formation of artists).
  • The arts and the renewal of the culture (the impact against the zeitgeist, the redemption of the centers of art).

Thinking in Taglines

October 31, 2007 at 8:31 pm | In 9 to 5 | 3 Comments
Tags:

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In an institution, taglines are necessary to convey the ethos of the place, or to help galvanize a vision. Lately we are trying to be more “green” in our PR work, and to raise awareness of entrenched (and often unexamined) ways of publicizing events and programs. What Would Sustainable PR Look Like? we ask ourselves.

Sometimes brainstorming takes an unexpected turn and reveals more than we intend. There’s at least occasional tension between staff and faculty at any college, and ours is no exception. At one staff meeting, we came up with a few taglines of our own, but which won’t ever make it onto a poster or the website: 

Staff: We’re Smart, Too

Staff: We, Too, Have Degrees

NRSV and holy “flame wars”

October 30, 2007 at 12:58 pm | In faith | Leave a Comment

I am not a fanatic about inclusive language, but one of the things I appreciate about the NRSV is its sensible use of “brothers and sisters” when both genders are meant (it does not change pronouns for deity). Few things can stir up a  flame war in the evangelical blogosphere quicker than disagreements about the relative merits of translations of the Bible. I’m weary of the argument that there’s no problem with the generic use of “he,” “man” and “brothers” because these also—of course—automatically reference women. They once did, but in the vernacular no longer do, and there’s no use saying this is not the case, because saying it doesn’t make it so. The vernacular is where we live. The vernacular—how words are actually, not ideally, used and perceived by people—is a primary concern of Bible translation.

There would be something jarring nowadays, for example, about a child-rearing manual that referred to the child only as “he.” It would not have been jarring thirty years ago. Language changes gradually with usage, and prescriptive rules shift gradually to account for usage. This is not a political statement; it’s just the way things work in the real world. I learned this in grad school, by the way, and want to say here that it’s entirely possible to be a descriptivist about language without being a relativist in your theology. I would wager that, in time, “they” (and “them” and “their”) may well become grammatically acceptable gender-neutral singular pronouns in written English. We already use these quite commonly in our speech: “Go up to the front of the store and look for a clerk and I’m sure they can help you.”

Party, and a plug for amateur theologians

October 29, 2007 at 12:45 am | In faith, theology | Leave a Comment

This weekend we had a party for a friend turning 50 and a few (16; she has many more) of her friends. Somehow it all worked, though if you’re hosting, you’re in a kind of parallel state of consciousness—assessing things like when to shepherd people from table back into the living room for coffee and birthday cake—too soon and you risk cutting short some great conversations, too late and people get restless.  It’s a little like theater, another post for another time.  

In attendance were two young R.C. priests, one of whom reported having officiated at 15 funerals in 10 days—more than normal, he said, but not much more. This is what the priest shortage looks like “on the ground.” Their parishes are north of Boston and they seem remarkably cheerful, all things considered. A portion from an email the next day from the other one:   

“Regarding something you mentioned in your last email, one of the most memorable lessons learned in Church history class (Anglican and Roman) was that before the rise of a professional theologians’ “guild” in the late Middle Ages (abetted, no doubt, by a drop in literacy rates and a move away from the vernacular), all theology was done in an ecclesial context, in response to challenges, controversies, and difficulties, as the Church endeavored to carry out the Great Commission.  Most of the patristic classics were written by bishops, priests, or monks responding to the pastoral challenges of the day in their local churches.  Therefore, in a very real sense, all theological endeavors — and all theologians — were amateur.  This is not to say it was not learned — quite the contrary — but pre-medieval Christian theology stuck pretty close to the questions posed by the life and work of the Church, rather than by philosophical speculation on the part of the theologian.  So, hooray for amateur theologians, who have many illustrious forebears numbered among their ranks!”

In search of church

October 26, 2007 at 6:43 pm | In faith | 2 Comments

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In my inbox this morning, from a young colleague:

in other news (since you’ve somehow ended up my church-search guru), we
went to “X” church last sunday. i will start by saying that the
sermon was great…”X” is a good speaker, and utilizes narrative
in an engaging way. however, my restless and overly-critical mind was
awed and confused by the ‘mega-church’ mentality. a computer check-in
system (reminiscent of logan airport), a long arm video camera that
swoops around the sanctuary, and the worst (WORST) contemporary music. a
notable line from the first song:
“Your love is everlasting,
it’s an everlasting love”

while tautologies are indeed a logical proof, i struggle to understand
why they merit being sung.

so here i am, loving the drop of spiritual syrup i received, but still
feeling like i’m missing out on some artist-loving, genuine community.
ugh!
hope all is well…
cheers  

The meaning of the word “is”: the Eucharist Quiz

October 26, 2007 at 9:58 am | In faith, theology | Leave a Comment

The latest fun theology quiz: http://quizfarm.com/quiz_repository/new/8081/. Are you Zwingli, Luther or Calvin; Orthodox, Catholic or Unitarian? I am Orthodox (not officially). An interesting journey for one born mainline Presbyterian (think: high school church summer camps with themes like “Awareness”). Must have been all that Schmemann, whose For the Life of the World and other celebrations of Eucharistic theology have been seminal for many.    

Chaplain for a week

October 26, 2007 at 9:36 am | In Art, faith | 3 Comments

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(Above: “let me try to pull you free,” by Anthony Falcetta, image used by permission). Below, good words from a favorite blogger, an Episcopal priest who served as chaplain for a group of artists during this year’s CIVA (Christians in Visual Arts) summer workshops, held at Gordon College in Wenham, Massachusetts.   

“The emotional power and the non-rational, non-propositional aspect of the arts have just a little too much in common with spiritual experience for some people not to be threatened. (And I hasten to say that artistic experience per se is probably one of the most slippery and dangerous idols out there, because it uses so many of the same faculties as spiritual experience and the two easily overlap. I know someone who got to his deathbed having assumed art was enough to take him all the way; then he found out it couldn’t.)”  

http://untiltranslucent.blogspot.com/2007/07/ive-been-sort-of-chaplain-this-week-for.html

Draft Q

October 25, 2007 at 3:23 pm | In Writing | 2 Comments

Advice to fiction writers: do a freewrite and ask your main character what he or she thinks about what you’ve written about them so far. Do they have any objections, clarifications? Here’s what mine said to me about the psychotic break he experienced at age 18:

“Of this, if nothing else, I am absolutely certain: this was the point that bisected my life into before and after. I struggle to explain. People either understand or they don’t. Mostly they don’t. They have tried to make me believe it was grandiose delusions I was experiencing that day, but the opposite is true. If anything I knew for the first time my smallness in relation to everything else that was out there. Either that or I was in a much bigger place and had to adjust my reckoning of myself accordingly. How could I not? How could any reasonable person not?  It was the precise opposite of a hallucination.”

“Movement, sharp debate and the virile language of deep and powerful emotion”

October 25, 2007 at 3:07 pm | In faith, theology | Leave a Comment

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“It is not dry manuals (full as these may be of unquestionable truths) that plausibly express to the world the truth of Christ’s Gospel, but the existence of the saints, who have been grasped by Christ’s Holy Spirit. And Christ himself saw no other kind of apologetics.” Hans Urs von Balthasar, Glory of the Lord, vol. 1, p. 494

“Hans Urs von Balthasar is a theologian whom one never reads indifferently. He himself decried the ‘sleek and passionless’ theological treatise as the sole form of theological presentation; and while never suggesting any abandonment of theological rigor, he urged upon theology ‘movement, sharp debate (quaestio disputata) [and] the virile language of deep and powerful emotion’ [ET1, 204]. Thus, if readers of Balthasar’s oeuvre are often left to marvel at the sheer range and erudition of his presentation, just as much they are left puzzling over the undeniable risk of his ‘creative invention,’ it is when they come to his treatment of the saints—those men and women of prayer who have taken their sanctification by the triune God most seriously—that they become most profoundly aware of the passion and intensity of his theological itinerary.”

David Moss, “The Saints,” in The Cambridge Companion to Hans Urs von Balthasar, ed. Edward T. Oakes, SJ, and David Moss (Cambridge University Press, 2004)

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