andersoj.org oddments

17 November 2005

To Heal a Fractured World

Filed under: creationcare, reading, sundayschool — andersoj @ 2:37 pm

Recently our adult Sunday School class at Blacksburg Presbyterian has been reading and discussing Jonathan Sacks’ book, The Dignity of Difference. Sacks is the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, and Dignity is an excellent and challenging book I can recommend to anyone who takes seriously the role of religion in public life, and is troubled by the new challenges offered by globalization and related trends.

In the last few days, I have had the pleasure of digging into Sacks’ newest book, To Heal a Fractured World: The Ethics of Responsibility. This is a prophetic book and should be read as such by the faithful in any of the Abrahamic traditions. I offer here a brief excerpt (boldface mine) from the opening chaper (p. 9 in the US Hardback edition):

Why [have I written this book] now? Partly because I am troubled by the face that religion often shows to the postmodern world. Too often it appears on the news, and lodges in the mind, as extremism, violence and agression. Tobe sure, religion is not the cause of conflict in the Balkans, the Middle East or elsewhere. Instead it forms the fault-line along which sides divide. But that in itself is serious. When political conflict is religionized, it is absolutized. What in politics are virtues — compromise, the willingness to listen to both sides and settle for less than one would wish in an ideal world — are, in religion, vices. Religion can therefore act not as a form of conflict-resolution, but, rather, conflict-intensification. This work is my personal protest against suicide-bombers, religiously motivated terrorists and preachers of hate of whatever faith. The religios imperative to which I have tried to give voice in these pages is the one that says: create, do not destroy, for it is my world you are destroying, my creatures you are killing. The only force equal to a fundamentalism of hate is a counter-fundamentalism of love.

To this I add a further concern about religion generally. The prophets warned against a rift between the holy and the good, our duties to God and to our fellow human beings. It still exists today. There are those for whom serving God means turning inward — to the soul, the house of worship and the life of ritual and prayer. There are others for whom social justice has become a substitute for religious observance or God. The result, as I put it later in the book, is like a cerebral lesion between the two hemispheres of the brain. The message of the Hebrew Bible is that serving God and serving our fellow human beings are inseparably linked, and the split between the two impoverishes both. Unless the holy leads us outward toward the good, and good leads us back, for renewal, to the holy, the creative energies of faith run dry. For six days, so the first chapter of Genesis tells us, God created a universe and pronounced it good. On the seventh day he made a stillness in the turning world and declared it holy. Unless we reconnect the holy and the good we do less than justice to the unity that is the hallmark of the monotheistic imagination.

Stern stuff, and sensible. I’ll post more about Sacks’ book as I complete more of it. –JA

6 November 2005

Cleaner Air Is a Biblical Obligation - New York Times

Filed under: church, creationcare — andersoj @ 11:27 pm

The New York Times has the following article: When Cleaner Air Is a Biblical Obligation (soul-sucking registration required) on the environmentalist lobby’s newest ally in congress: Christian Evangelicals. Blink Blink. –JA

5 November 2005

Very Rev. Sam Lloyd on a Christian Conception of Love

Filed under: church — andersoj @ 11:34 pm

The Very Rev. Sam Lloyd, formerly of Trinity Church Boston and now the Dean of the National Cathedral recently gave an excellent sermon on a uniquely unsentimental, Christian concept of love. For those so inclined, the Cathedral also provides a RealAudio stream of the message. An excerpt:

A few years ago I read an account by a Chicago lawyer named Thomas Geoghegan describing his first encounter with a soup kitchen. He was overwhelmed by the unpleasant smells and the terrible shape the men were in, but most of all he was disturbed because he had expected to love the poor and to be filled with a warm glow, and he wasn’t.

And so he complained to his priest friend, who replied, “You’re not down there for self-actualization.” But Geoghegan protested, “I didn’t feel any love for them.” The priest replied,

So what?…The church says nothing about that…Look, these nuns [who run the kitchen] aren’t liberals. They are conservative…They don’t care about “love” in our modern, interpersonal way. We, the liberals, want love: we go to soup kitchens to be loved. The nuns go there to feed people. That’s it. Give them something to eat.

It’s that cool, clear, unsentimental love that you find in people whose lives are given to loving.

Lloyd is an artist. –JA

28 October 2005

Presbyterians Say “No2Torture”

Filed under: bpc, pcusa — andersoj @ 2:19 pm

I have been asked to give a brief presentation on the statement issued by the 2005 Presbyterian Peacemakeing Conference, A Call to Say “No” to Torture. More information and links to a mailing list are available on the accompanying webpage: No2Torture. More information about the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program is available on the PCUSA website.

I’m curious how others respond to this document, and will post a quick precis of my presentation after I give it on Sunday. (full text reproduced here, below the fold…)

Some related links (please post more in the comments…):

(more…)

20 October 2005

Radiohead for Christians

Filed under: church — andersoj @ 5:18 pm

I’m on a Mars Hill Review kick these days. What can I say? Radiohead fans should have a look at the following: Review: The Music of Radiohead –JA

Interviews: A Conversation with Lauren Winner

Filed under: church, reading — andersoj @ 5:14 pm

Mars Hill Review has Interviews: A Conversation with Lauren Winner. Go, Lauren Winner fans, go! –JA

16 October 2005

Sacks on Natural Disasters

Filed under: sundayschool — andersoj @ 9:03 pm

Jonathan Sacks’ recent Credo column in the Times was a reflection and words of hope regarding appropriate religious responses to the recent spate of natural disasters. Sacks is the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, for which there is an excellent website, with links to a variety of Sacks’ other work. –JA

14 October 2005

Ken Myers: Humanitas Lectures

Filed under: church, creationcare, science&religion — andersoj @ 2:53 pm

Ken Myers recently gave the three lectures to a group of faculty and graduate students at Vanderbilt University, under the auspices of the Humanitas Project. The link above provides a PDF transcript of Myers’ lecture, Faithful Stewards or Terrestrial Gods? Christianity and the Chief End of Science and an mp3 audio stream of Word Made Flesh, Flesh Made Whole: The Embodied Character of Salvation and the Basis of Bioethics. Myers is the host of one of my favorite periodicals, the Mars Hill Audio Journal. –JA (more…)

11 October 2005

New Living the Questions page available…

Filed under: bpc, ltq — andersoj @ 11:04 pm

Just a post to note that I’ve put up a dedicated page here to provide links, context, critical reviews, and other resources associated with the Living the Questions curriculum. Please comment on this post or the linked page if you can offer corrections, improved links, or any other critique. –JA

9 October 2005

Holmes Rolston visiting Blacksburg Presbyterian

Filed under: church, creationcare, science&religion, bpc — andersoj @ 6:20 pm

On 16 October 2005, Blacksburg Presbyterian will be hosting speaker Holmes Rolston, Distinguished University Professor from Colorado State University. As a part of BPC’s Peacemaking Sunday events, Professor Rolston will be delivering the sermon as well as joining in a variety of less formal discussions. The theme will be Christian engagement with environmental challenges.

Rolston is a Templeton award winner (2003) and a Gifford Lecturer (topic: “Genes, Genesis, and God”). Those of you with google accounts can read the full text of the book online.

–JA

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