“Only churches and bars are on that list” this article says referring to places concealed hand guns are banned in Arkansas. Apparently they’re voting on lifting the ban.
I have to say, I’m all for 2nd amendment rights, but I really have to wonder what would make this necessary. For meetings of presbytery I would understand, but for worship?
Author Archives: scott
Baptism Service Gone Horribly Wrong
Here’s a story of a tragic baptism service in South Africa.
Four people drowned on Sunday morning during two separate church baptism ceremonies in Eldorado Park in Johannesburg and Bloemfontein in the Free State, police said.
Protestants more loyal to toothpaste brand than church
Some Americans are more loyal to their toothpaste or toilet paper than to their religious denomination, making those consumers more choosy about Charmin or Colgate than they are about church, according to a new survey.
Media and the Message: Part 2
I don’t mean for this to turn into a series, but this article showing that most people don’t actually read web content was in my Google reader this morning.
(Link now corrected, thanks John!)
Media and the Message
I was reading a series discussing the effects of the internet on the way we read and think. (Here’s a good place to start if you’re interested.)
I found it interesting for several reasons, primarily because I’ve noticed the profound effect my writing tool has on my own work. I’ve been paying more attention to my workflow since I’m writing so much more, I guess that’s part of the point of doing a PhD. Anyway, I’ve noticed how the computer screen is a helpful tool for trying out different arrangements i.e. outlining a chapter or section. It’s so much easier to grab bits and cut and paste them in different orders. However, when I’ve been drafting sections, when I come to a complicated collection of paragraphs I have to grab a pencil and notepad to work out the flow. Cutting and pasting — even deleting and retyping seems to produce a huge jumble. I’ve also noticed how much easier it is to just write in plain text rather than on a word processor. It is so distracting to have things `auto-formatted’ or `corrected’ and have to fiddle with getting them back to the way you want them. Maybe I’m just easily distracted, but I was using one program that didn’t keep the fonts consistent when I pasted quotes from my notes and the differences in fonts made it unusable for me.
I also believe that those who worry about the effects of the internet on the way we think are absolutely correct. The effects of the format information is presented has had a profound impact on the way people process information and communicate with one another throughout history. Oral civilizations remembered lenghty epics because the story was presented in memorable poetry. As societies came to rely more on writing, the form of narratives changed. One of the best examples of the impact of technology on thought in my own line of work is the sermon. If you were to compare a sermon from the 17th Century Puritans to any sermon preached in the past few decades they would be hardly recognizable as the same genre. Ignoring what doctrine would be tought older sermons would be much longer and exponentially more complex. I would guess the average sermon today would be between fifteen and twenty-five minutes long, maybe a little longer in more conservative denominations, but certainly under and hour. However, even these longer sermons, at least the ones that I have listened to, follow a rather simplistic progression of thought and often contain multiple illustrations of a single point and a good deal of repetition. Older sermons would make several points with several sub-points that would require attention and memory. I know the Puritan sermons are not exemplary of all earlier times — they were in fact the product of literacy, that is people whose thinking was formed by reading the printed word. The same sort of thing could be seen in political debates. I find it pretty frightening to watch our televised `town hall meetings’ with presidential candidates when I consider that our political constitution was designed for the self governance of people who could follow the the types of arguments presented in the Lincoln-Douglas debates.
Encyclopedia of Christian Civilization “too Christian”?
I came across this article this morning.
A quote from the editor of the destroyed series: “This is probably the first instance of mass book-burning in the 21st century.”
Miami Abortion Clinic Investigation
I saw this story this morning about a woman went to an abortion clinic to have her 23 week-old fetus aborted. While there she delievered while waiting on the doctor to arrive. One of the clinic’s owners cut the umblilical chord, put the baby in a bag and threw it out.
The article contains the statement “The case has riled the anti-abortion community, which contends the clinic’s actions constitute murder.”
Lack of rural pastors
Collin Hansen at Out of Ur has some good comments about the lack of rural minister:
New Lutheran Vestments?
Hospitality
We had two visitors with us last night for our Wednesday evening fellowship meal and Bible study. Andrew and Jacob, two young men from Wisconsin are bicycling through the area. Apparently they got off course yesterday after biking from Jackson, TN in the rain. One of our church members found them in the area and invited them to a warm meal and offered a place to stay for the night. This isn’t the first time I feel like our member’s cooking, friendship and generosity is the best sermon preached in our congregation.
They’ve been biking for about three weeks and plan to be back home before Christmas. Sounds like a fun time. We’ll be praying things continue to go well for ya’ll.
Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares. (Hebrews 13:2)