Will Shetterly posted some great stories on his “Sharing Stories” blog on Sunday. I’m particularly fond of “The Princess Who Kicked Butt”. (Gotta love authors who post fiction for free — now we gotta get out there and buy some of their books!)
Spring watch
It didn’t feel that cold when I went out to take a walk this evening, but the wind was chilly. It was a raw damp spring wind that reminds you that we could still get snow. I had had a busy day at work, with more than the usual ups and downs. It was six o’clock when I finally left the office. I was going to take just a short walk before making dinner. But I kept thinking about the work day, the thoughts tumbling all around inside me. Carol was going to be at a meeting this evening. Dinner could wait. I kept walking.
When I finally got home at 7:30, all those tumbling thoughts had come to rest. And I had walked hard enough and long enough and fast enough that it felt warm and almost springlike outside.
Reading Trollope
Needing a good novel to occupy my attention, I happened across Anthony Trollope’s The Duke’s Children. It has turned out to be a good book for me to read right now. Trollope is gentle with his characters:– he makes you see their deepest motivations; and he shows you when they lie to themselves or misjudge the people around them; but he is gentle with them, and you feel that you want to know them. In his autobiography, Trollope writes that his characters lived for him, or that he lived with them, and that he liked them. He had enough affection for them that he sometimes couldn’t kill them off even when the plot demanded it, and the same characters appear in novel after novel because (he says) he liked them that much.
I don’t read Trollope for his prose style; his prose is adequate but sometimes the seams show. Nor do I read Trollope for his plots, for his plots can be a little too creaky. But I do find myself caring for his characters. I still get upset when I think about the ending of The Small House at Allington, because I cared about the characters.
Too many novelists (especially recently) do not treat their characters well:– they treat their characters as disposable entertainment modules, or as commodities, or as inferior beings, or as superstructure upon which to hang a plot, a concept, or a philosophy. Too often this is the way the world treats real human beings:– as disposable, or as commodities, or as inferior beings, or as superstructure on which to hang political power. I suspect the real reason I wanted to read Trollope right now is because of the ongoing presidential election campaign, in which the candidates seem to treat the United States populace as mere pawns, things to be polled, bought, and moved about on a political chessboard; this political campaign is not being gentle with anyone.
Gospel of Judas
Biblical scholar April DeConick reports on the recent Codex Judas Congress on her blog: “The CJC did result in at least one consensus. It was agreed that the Gospel of Judas was written as a critique of mainstream or Apostolic Christianity…. What was the critique about? All agreed that the eucharist was being critiqued in the text. Some thought also baptism.”
Water cooler conversation
“Hey, didja see it on YouTube?”
“What?”
“That crazy preacher guy. You know, the religious leader that presidential candidate follows?”
“Oh yeah, him.”
“What a nut case. Ya know what he said? He said, ‘You impostors. Damn you! You slam the door of Heaven’s domain in people’s faces.’ [1] What’s up with a preacher saying ‘damn you’? Isn’t that swearing?”
“Huh. I didn’t know he said that.”
“Yeah, doesn’t it sound like he’s a communist or something? I saw this other video clip where he said, ‘Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.’ [2] Hey, in my church I learned that you gotta earn your daily bread. This preacher sounds like a goddam Commie who wants to give everything away to homeless.”
“Jeez, he sounds like a radical nut.”
“You don’t know the half of it. He also said the peacemakers are children of God. [3] You know what that means — he’s one of those anti-war nuts that wants us to pull out of Iraq and leave it to the terrorists. Anyway, that’s what Brush Limburger said on his radio show.”
“Christ, that’s pretty bad.”
“Well, it gets worse. If you look at those picture of him, he looks like a hippie nut, with that long hair braided down his neck. And I’m telling you, he doesn’t look exactly white, if you know what I mean. Like maybe he’s Middle Eastern, where all these terrorists are coming from. [4]”
“Hoo, boy. You think the guy is a terrorist?”
“Hey, all I know is he doesn’t like us Americans. There was this other YouTube clip of him preaching, and he said, ‘How much longer must I be among you? How much longer must I put up with you?’ [5] You can lay money on it that he wants to bring down the American government. [6]”
“Man. Thanks for telling me all this.”
“Yeah, well, I’m just trying to keep America safe. No way am I going to vote for anyone who follows a religious nut like that — I’m a good law-abiding Christian, not some kind of Commie peacenik who wants to bring down the American government.”
“They should just execute guys like that.”
Notes:
[1] Words of Jesus of Nazareth, Matthew 23.23, Scholar’s Version translation.
[2] Words of Jesus of Nazareth, Matthew 5.4, King James Version.
[3] Words of Jesus of Nazareth, Matthew 5.9, from the King James Version.
[4] Scholars generally agree that Jewish men in Jesus’s time wore their hair long and braided; as for Jesus’s skin color, it could have been a light to medium brown.
[5] Words of Jesus of Nazareth, Mark 9.19, New Revised Standard Version.
[6] Not to belabor the point, but Pilate accused Jesus of being “King of the Jews,” i.e., a possible political threat to the government.
Friday videos
Just over a year ago, I started posting short videos on this blog, with the goal of posting a new video each week. The most popular videos have been the ones dealing with the Bible from a liberal religious perspective; least popular have been the videoblog entries. With 40+ videos online and a total of 4,700+ total views, the online videos are a small but important part of this blog’s overall traffic.
At the moment, I’ve stopped production to think about what direction I might want to take. Your suggestions, as always, are most welcome — you can leave your ideas in the comments section. And I’ll be rolling out new videos beginning in April, with new theme music and a new look.
Thirty-nine
Happy birthday to my father, who’s thirty-nine. Just like Jack Benny.
My take on Jeremiah Wright
Jeremiah Wright, the recently retired minister of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, strikes me as the best kind of prophetic preacher, someone who speaks without sugar-coating his moral and religious message for the comfort of his listeners. Jeremiah Wright now has the misfortune of being Barack Obama’s former minister, and Wright is being trashed because he preached a prophetic message, a few seconds of which have been replayed as sound bites on national media in recent days.
But preachers have to answer to religious standards, not political standards. We are not bound to preach patriotism for the United States, we are bound to preach the permanent truths that we find in our religious traditions. It may not be politically acceptable to do so, but we preachers at times may be called to point out that our country cannot legitimately take the moral high ground until we face our own moral failings with candor. And we prophetic preachers may find ourselves called to proclaim, for example, that ongoing racism demonstrates that some white Americans do not treat their neighbors as they themselves would like to be treated. No one likes to hear that they have moral failings; this is one reason why some of the things we preachers say are not appreciated.
Politicians, on the other hand, have a very different task from preachers. Politicians do not speak prophetically; they speak in order to build political consensus. As a preacher, I am not surprised when I hear Barack Obama trashing Jeremiah Wright’s sermons. Wright preaches a religious truth: Our country has done moral wrongs, and those of us who are religious persons need to engage in repentance and forgiveness for those wrongs. Obama’s political truth is different; he needs to distance himself from Wright and build a political consensus.
It should be obvious by now that I’d rather hear Jeremiah Wright preach than Barack Obama speak. As a preacher, I might want to take Obama to task for sugar-coating our country’s moral failings. But then, I guess I should accept that he’s only a politician and thus is in the business of sugar-coating moral truths (from my point of view, anyway).
One last point: I wonder why we have not heard about Hillary Clinton’s minister, and John McCain’s minister. If I had a presidential candidate in my congregation, I trust they would be embarrassed by some of the moral stands I have taken; if they weren’t embarrassed, I would take that to mean that I had been sugar-coating moral truths.
50 years of the peace symbol
The peace symbol made its first public appearance on Good Friday, 1958, in Trafalgar Square, London, as the symbol of the nuclear disarmament movement. BBC News has a history of the peace symbol here. The peace symbol comes from semaphore symbols: an “N” superimposed on a “D”, for nuclear disarmament.
