Friday, November 25, 2011

The Trouble with the English Language

If a dairy farmer by the name of Fred Waye developed a unique method of determining how much whey would would be produced in making milk curd, would it be called, "The Waye Way to Weigh Whey?"

Another short command from a teacher to his student: "Write rite right!"

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Silly Thought

I was getting a shower this morning, and after I finished I reached down to clean out the strainer that catches hair from clogging the drain. There was not a lot of hair there, but enough for me to think, "There's two days of hairing loss." Aging gracefully!

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Wright Wrong Or Just Over the Top

I was considering devoting some of next year's reading to the writings of the former Anglican Bishop of Durham N.T. Wright. Looking into the comments on one of his books,Jesus and the Victory of God, I read this rather sage comment:

"Chesterton said, one of the ways to get home is to stay there. Wright allows that Biblical criticism is taking a more circuitous route, (he himself uses the metaphor of the Prodigal Son), and he almost makes me think the view along the way might be worth it. But if he choses to lecture about the layout of the family farm when he returns, he ought to acknowledge that some of his hearers have been on that ground for a while already. Wright seems less kind to his conservative Christian "elder brethren" than to younger (separated) brethren still sowing wild oats in the far country of historical speculation. This attitude troubles me.

After hundreds of pages of argument, Wright rather abruptly asserts that "Jesus did not know he was God," at least not as one knows one "ate an orange an hour ago." He thinks such self-knowledge would be unbecomingly "supernatural." (Though he doesn't quibble with multiplied loaves or the resurrection.) At this point one gets the feeling that Wright's conclusion (or guess) is based less on historical evidence (which, as another reader points out below, ought to include John, Paul, and other Jewish Christians), but on a desire to keep a souvenir from the far country -- perhaps to show other scholars. Or maybe he just doesn't want to sound too conventional -- publish novelties ("discoveries") or off with your academic head."


I fear that I have an academic penchant, a tendency towards the Wright Weakness. Lord have mercy!!

Love is in the Air



I know she'll love them, but where to get them?

Thanks to Ad Orientem

Monday, November 7, 2011

Friday, November 4, 2011

Adage for the Day

There's no deception like self-deception!

David Bentley Hart

I have recently discovered the writings of Mr. Hart. I bought his book, The Atheist Disillusions, which was one of the best books that I have read in some time. I recommended it to my bishop, who tells me he is greatly enjoying it. That being said, I told a friend that his writings are filled with so many words that I have never encountered before, that I felt like I was back in Kindergarten and I just opened "Dick and Jane," for the first time.

A great Blog dedicated to Hart's writings, called The David B. Hart Appreciation Blog can be found HERE

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Parable's

I have long enjoyed trying to 'see' spiritual allusions in various events or things. I saw one yesterday that I had to play to our Bible Fellowship group. Here is the link to the video:

Living Bridge

I especially love the allusion to Tradition. The father in the video understands the importance of teaching his daughter the ancient way of dealing with the very real and present danger of the world in which they live. He knows that the solution lays in the way of the past, carefully lived and followed in the present, for others in the future. I think that the Tradition of our faith is much the same.

Blessings, Brian+