OK, you gotta check out this comic. I have to admit that I laughed and laughed! (How very irreverent of me...)
Oatmeal's Rollerblading Jesus
"Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert." Isaiah 43:19
Saturday, May 21, 2011
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Intently Haphazard
Today's class discussion reminded me of a poem by Denise Levertov. I love the image of the intently haphazard movements of the dog. Who knows where we will go or what we will do if we follow the dog...
Overland to the Islands
Let's go—much as that dog goes,
intently haphazard. The
Mexican light on a day that
‘smells like autumn in Connecticut’
makes iris ripples on his
black gleaming fur—and that too
is as one would desire—a radiance
consorting with the dance.
Under his feet
rocks and mud, his imagination, sniffing,
engaged in its perceptions—dancing
edgeways, there's nothing
the dog disdains on his way,
nevertheless he
keeps moving, changing
pace and approach but
not direction—‘every step an arrival.’
Let's go—much as that dog goes,
intently haphazard. The
Mexican light on a day that
‘smells like autumn in Connecticut’
makes iris ripples on his
black gleaming fur—and that too
is as one would desire—a radiance
consorting with the dance.
Under his feet
rocks and mud, his imagination, sniffing,
engaged in its perceptions—dancing
edgeways, there's nothing
the dog disdains on his way,
nevertheless he
keeps moving, changing
pace and approach but
not direction—‘every step an arrival.’
Denise Levertov, Overland to the Islands, 1958
Friday, May 13, 2011
On Hope
I love the 'goodle doodle' today (Martha Graham dancers)! A few years ago, a student in one of my theology classes did a paper and presentation on gesture in dance as a theological space for envisioning and living into the distance between promise and hope in eschatology.
She used the gesture of Martha Graham in particular--as you can see in this picture. As Christians, we practice this distance between promise and hope on a regular basis. With the Psalmist, we cry out “How long, O Lord? How long?” Why do we have to wait for the fulfillment of both God’s lament in Jesus Christ as well as the divine protest found in Christ’s resurrection? We live in the in-between. Hope is the space where we practice this fulfillment in our lives. Faith propels us into this unknown yet anticipated future in God and are moved into a practice of love.
I love thinking about how dance can help us to re-invigorate the ‘gesture’ of hope, of how we practice from here to there, from there to here. It is the fullness of the gesture (as demonstrated in Martha Graham's choreography) that forms our imagination.
I was recently at the Forum on Music and Christian Scholarship conference where a number of papers reminded me of the potential of music to call to us and induce a response similar to Martha Graham's 'gesture of hope'. Dr. Ferdia Stone-Davis argued that musical beauty could move us from a place of disenchantment (a lack of hope) to a place of re-enchantment (hope). Time is reinvested with meaning and we are moved outward. Dr. Bruce Ellis Benson contended that a model of improvisation could help us understand how beauty can move us into a pattern of call and response. Again, that we are moved outward, moved into the action of faith and hope. Finally, Dr. Randolph Johnson did a paper on how Brahms in his German Requiem was able to sound out the fullness of the gesture of hope. In the Requiem, Brahms is able to hold together the paradoxical time/space of suffering, mourning and future glory.
This is what Jeremy Begbie calls “redeemed time” in music. Music can take time and hand it back to us. Time is restructured (moves from disorder to order in the music) and we are able to sort through our thoughts and emotions. Especially when someone dies, we need this to help us grieve in healthy ways. I believe that music does not only sooth our pain, but can also help us feel deeply the loss of a loved one. Through the music we are able to gesture into the hope of our promised life in eternity with the triune God. We are not always able to believe in the promises of God fully, but we can practice into them. And I believe that music and dance can show us how expectant waiting can be formed in us. Come Holy Spirit!
She used the gesture of Martha Graham in particular--as you can see in this picture. As Christians, we practice this distance between promise and hope on a regular basis. With the Psalmist, we cry out “How long, O Lord? How long?” Why do we have to wait for the fulfillment of both God’s lament in Jesus Christ as well as the divine protest found in Christ’s resurrection? We live in the in-between. Hope is the space where we practice this fulfillment in our lives. Faith propels us into this unknown yet anticipated future in God and are moved into a practice of love.
I love thinking about how dance can help us to re-invigorate the ‘gesture’ of hope, of how we practice from here to there, from there to here. It is the fullness of the gesture (as demonstrated in Martha Graham's choreography) that forms our imagination.
I was recently at the Forum on Music and Christian Scholarship conference where a number of papers reminded me of the potential of music to call to us and induce a response similar to Martha Graham's 'gesture of hope'. Dr. Ferdia Stone-Davis argued that musical beauty could move us from a place of disenchantment (a lack of hope) to a place of re-enchantment (hope). Time is reinvested with meaning and we are moved outward. Dr. Bruce Ellis Benson contended that a model of improvisation could help us understand how beauty can move us into a pattern of call and response. Again, that we are moved outward, moved into the action of faith and hope. Finally, Dr. Randolph Johnson did a paper on how Brahms in his German Requiem was able to sound out the fullness of the gesture of hope. In the Requiem, Brahms is able to hold together the paradoxical time/space of suffering, mourning and future glory.
This is what Jeremy Begbie calls “redeemed time” in music. Music can take time and hand it back to us. Time is restructured (moves from disorder to order in the music) and we are able to sort through our thoughts and emotions. Especially when someone dies, we need this to help us grieve in healthy ways. I believe that music does not only sooth our pain, but can also help us feel deeply the loss of a loved one. Through the music we are able to gesture into the hope of our promised life in eternity with the triune God. We are not always able to believe in the promises of God fully, but we can practice into them. And I believe that music and dance can show us how expectant waiting can be formed in us. Come Holy Spirit!
Conference in Seattle
Christians for Biblical Equality are having their annual conference here in Seattle this summer. Our own Dr. Hollins will be one of the speakers. The title of the conference is "Building Biblical Community: Transforming Sex, Power and Prejudice" and will take place from July 29th through the 31st. Check it out!
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
On Beauty
Today was the first day of the Beauty class. Not surprisingly, we discussed our definition of 'beauty'. In honor of defining beauty, I thought I would share a quote from Annie Dillard about the mystery of it all...
“Beauty itself is the language to which we have no key; it is the mute cipher, the cryptogram, the uncracked, unbroken code. And it could be that for beauty, as it turned out for French, that there is no key, that ‘oui’ will never make sense in our language but only in its own, and that we need to start all over again on a new continent, learning the strange syllables one by one.”
Annie Dillard, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, 107
Monday, May 2, 2011
Arcabas
Arcabas, Resurrection, 2003 (part of a polyptych) |
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