Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Sunday, March 30. 2014A Movie: The Gospel of JohnRe-posted - This 2003 movie, which had the misfortune of being overshadowed by Gibson's The Passion and was never released in theaters, would make a good Christmas present. Sticking tightly to the language and sequence of this very literary Gospel which was written 2 centuries after Christ's death, the 3-hour version captures all of the key moments of Christ's ministry, and is especially good at capturing the rabble-rousing, reckless and provocative style of his ministry and its inevitable culmination on the cross. It's easy to see why people wanted him out of the way - he was a big trouble-maker and no-one was insulated from his demands or his harsh judgements. Not a go-with-the-flow guy, and John depicts more the Jesus of Truth than the sweet Jesus of Love, yet love of God is the whole story. The role of Pilate is small but fascinating, and made it clear that we are all Pilates. What would I have done? Probably what Pilate did. Captain Vere in Billy Budd. The story of Pilate is a Greek tragedy, and I feel sympathy for his fate. My only complaint about the film is that Jesus spends more time talking about his relationship with God than he does preaching the rest of his message that was to change the world. I am not a Bible student - but that focus is a reflection of John's Gospel, which was a message to gentiles - "He is in me and I am in Him" - obviously not a message designed to engage the Jews of the time: "Crucify him. Crucify him." The Jews were not quite ready for a Messiah, nor is anyone, anywhere, any time. How are we to know whether a messiah is the real thing? Pilate is us, and the Jews are us. A holy dream in which we ourselves play every role, as we do in all dreams. Anyway, powerful and very moving stuff, and the narration by Plummer adds a lot. It is something special. Tuesday, March 25. 2014The Rise of Secular ReligionDaniel Goldman reviews Joseph Bottum's new book. One quote:
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Sunday, March 23. 2014Qorbanot at Lent This season of Lent naturally has me thinking about the theme of sacrifice. I wondered when Jews gave up ritual sacrifice, and was interested to learn that the tradition was to eat the sacrificed animal - sharing it with the priest who no doubt got the filet, and to let the guts burn to ashes. In Christianity, Christ is the unblemished Lamb of God. Those are the roots of Christ's instructions about what we now call "Communion." "This is my flesh, take of it and eat." Qorbanot: Sacrifices and Offerings
Thursday, March 20. 2014Wesleyan Wisdom: Remembering what Wesley really preachedWhat he preached:
Sunday, March 16. 2014PurimThis weekend is Purim. Bruce usually keeps us up to date on the Jewish holidays, but I'll fill in during his semi-sabbatical. Purim: A Wacky Tribute to Life - The Talmud's advice for this holiday: get drunk. Purim 2014 -- What Queen Esther can still teach us
Friday, March 14. 2014A hospital in Niger
"Do unto others..." The Christians loved - and touched - this guy. Love that goes around - it doesn't matter whether it comes back around or not but, in some ways, it's more wonderful when it doesn't. We Christians are taught to give of ourselves, and not to take, as a way of life. The capacity to be reflectors of divine grace: that is the "life in abundance" which was promised. My friend does quite a bit of that, via SIM.
Sunday, March 9. 2014Lenten studies
Here's a better link to a choice of 3 free online Lenten studies.
Wednesday, March 5. 2014Memento homo, quia pulvis es, et in pulverem reverteris.The 40-odd days following Ash Wednesday culminating in the prayer-laden and introspective Easter Vigil are the time when all Christians focus most intently on their relationship with the living Christ, and His role in their lives and in their hearts. I usually welcome Lent with hope, and excitement about discovering where this year's Lenten journey might lead me. It is the gravitational center of my year. Plant roots wake up and start growing months before the spring buds begin to swell. Lent is my root-growing time, and I hope it will be that this year. Sunday, February 23. 2014Movie recommendationInto Great Silence (2005) "One of the transporting film experiences of this or any other year." --Boston Globe Friday, February 7. 2014Awe and Religion
Creation, existence, and our awareness of these things, are the greatest miracles. "There are two ways to live: you can live as if nothing is a miracle; you can live as if everything is a miracle." Albert Einstein Thursday, February 6. 2014I am not really a religious man"I am not really a religious man, only a sinner in a sailor suit" he says. A few days ago, at a National Day of Prayer gathering in Washington D.C., Coast Guard Rear Admiral William Lee ditched his prepared speech, and delivered a scathing indictment of federal rules regarding expression of faith in the military. The video has just now become available. Sunday, January 26. 2014Gladwell on his faith
Sunday, January 12. 2014Humorous AtheistPenn is a warm and delightful fellow, and a good talker. He riffs, free associates. He makes the case that the desire for afterlife is ungrateful. "If God told you to kill your firstborn, would you do it?" I would not.
Sunday, January 5. 2014God's DilemmaFrom Mead's essay:
Wednesday, January 1. 2014Virgin Birth
Sunday, December 29. 2013Not from today's Lectionary: Saint Francis' Prayer
Image: Giotto's St. Francis of Assisi, preaching to the birds Wednesday, December 25. 2013The Beatitudes Christians believe, as I understand it, that Jesus was the "son" of God, "son" being used figuratively to describe a human-like incarnation of the deity which was made manifest by the resurrection and other remarkable phenomena. Don't ask me to explain the Trinity - it's a mystery to me. To non-believers, it sounds like science fiction, but even non-believers and Doubting Thomases have no doubt that Jesus (the Latinized version of Yeshua, Joshua) was an inspired and spiritually revolutionary rabbi who has been rocking the world since he lived. For Christmas, the Beatitudes (beginning with Matthew 5), the beginning of The Sermon on the Mount. "And he opened his mouth and taught them, saying: Sunday, December 22. 2013Not from today's LectionaryMatthew 1:18-25 Now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way. When his mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit. Her husband Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace, planned to dismiss her quietly. But just when he had resolved to do this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the child conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins. All this took place to fulfil what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet: Look, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall name him Emmanuel, Mystic NativityBotticelli's Mystic Nativity (1501). Sandro became more devout as he grew older. Sunday, December 8. 2013Advent and baby fir treesThe time from the start of Advent to Christmas is like a short spiritual pregnancy. What's the miracle of Christmas? That Christ can be born in all of us, anywhere, any time, at any season, to make us fully human and complete by linking the divine spark in our pagan, fallen souls to the holy. Is it a shame, or a blessing, that we have to really need Him before we will put our precious selves aside, just a bit, to let Him into our lives? While my Puritan ancestors would never celebrate the "Roman" (eg "Anti-Christ") feast of Christmas, I find it to be an emotional reminder of that miracle which exists in the present, not the past. And the totally pagan, Germanic tree is a perfect metaphor for transformation - ordinary baby firs, like all of us (miracle enough right there), with the potential to be transformed by light and truth and beauty and brotherly love. At Maggie's Farm HQ, this transformation, from ordinary fir tree to Holy Spirit-illuminated tree, is what we pray for. (Hold the tinsel, please.) It's not decor, it's a symbol of our potential.
Wednesday, November 27. 2013Trust in God, or G-d, in Thanksgiving season and Hanukah season
As a Christian, I am always interested in our Jewish foundations, but I am not very well-informed. I felt this was good from Daniel Greenfield (Sultan Knish): Jewish Culture, Revelation and Continuity:
Saturday, November 23. 2013Ordination of the weakA reader sends this inspiring link, partly about ordination of women: 'Because Beset with Weakness . . . '
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