Long Ago in France, M.K.F. Fisher (1992). Unbelievers: An Emotional History of Doubt, Alec Ryrie (2019). Foreign to Familiar, Sarah A. Lanier (2000). I Bring the Voices of My People, Chanequa Walker-Barnes (2019). A Surprised Queenood in the New Black Sun, Angela Jackson (2017). Passionate for Justice: Ida Wells as Prophet for Our Time, Catherine … Continue reading Reading in 2019 →
Eugene Peterson:
It is the devil’s own work to take the stories Jesus told (and the many other stories that provide so much of the content of our Scriptures) and distill them down to a truth or a moral that we can then use without bothering with the way we use them- unconnected from the people whose names we know or the local conditions in which we have responsibilities, apart from what we know about Jesus, who tells the story. The devil is a great intellectual. He loves getting us to discuss ideas about God. He does some of his best work when he gets us so deeply involved with ideas about God that we are hardly aware that while we are reading or talking about God, God is actually present with us, and the people whom he has placed in our lives to love are right there in front of us…
In order to respond rightly to this voice, this Word-made-flesh voice, we must listen and answer in our actual neighborhoods while eating meals of tuna casserole and spinach salad in the company of people who know us and whose names we know: our spouses and children, friends and fellow workers, just for a start. Nothing in general. Nobody anonymous. No disembodied or unvoiced words.
– “Sir, Let it Alone,” a sermon from Habakkuk 3 and Luke 13 in the wonderful collection of Peterson’s sermons, As Kingfishers Catch Fire.
Apparently it’s been common knowledge for a while, but I’m just hearing about the relative uselessness of the Myers-Briggs test. This is great news as someone who has taken the test many times (as required by different jobs) yet struggles to remember my profile and why it matters, much less how my profile is supposed to interact … Continue reading Can I love you without knowing your Myers-Briggs type? →
A self-explanatory list, mostly an antidote to my own forgetfulness. Most recent reads and views at the top. ———- Books The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism, Edward E. Baptist (2014). Reconstructing the Gospel: Finding Freedom from Slaveholder Religion, Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove (2018). The Theology of Paul the Apostle, James … Continue reading Reading 2017 →
In the small part of the world I inhabit it’s rare that a week goes by during which I don’t talk with someone about self-care. The church I serve has more than its fair share of teachers, social-workers, therapists, and grad students. These are people who are moved by their neighbors’ pain and have given much … Continue reading Self-Care Isn’t Enough →