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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

4/12 part 2




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holy heteroclite:: "The Matrix in Real Life" by Improv ...

 

How Can The Bible Be Authoritative? by N.T. Wright

ntwrightpage.com/Wright_Bible_Authoritative.htm
N.T. Wright ... Second, by what means can the Bible actually exercise its authority? ..... between an improvisation and an actual performance of the final act.

Kevin Vanhoozer Corrects N.T. Wright's 5-Act Hermeneutic ...

derekzrishmawy.com/.../kevin-vanhoozer-corrects-n-t-wrights-5-act-her...
Mar 7, 2014 - Tom Wright has thrice put forward a model for conceiving biblical ... acts are the “authority” for the fifth act, hence the idea of “improvising with a ...

The Five Act Hermeneutic (Scripture and the Authority of ...

deadheroesdontsave.com/2012/06/13/wright/
Jun 13, 2012 - Wright (and this series) started off posing the following questions: If Jesus has authority, ... How does Jesus exercise His authority through the Bible? ... that we are living in the 5th act and are free to improvise within the story.

How to Properly Read the Story of Scripture - Redeeming God

https://redeeminggod.com/how-to-properly-read-the-story-of-scripture/
NT Wright portrays history as a play with five Acts. (I) Creation, (II) Fall, (III) ... In previous posts, we have suggested that the best way to read the Bible is to read it as ... it should not be too difficult to improvise our part of the story in epic fashion.

Saturday Afternoon Book Review: N.T. Wright - Patheos

www.patheos.com/.../saturday-afternoon-book-review-n-t-wright...
Patheos
Jun 18, 2011 - Improvising in the Fifth Act. A review of N. T. Wright, Scripture and the Authority of God: How to Read the Bible Today. By Wesley Vander Lugt.

The Bible in Five Acts | Sharp Iron

https://sharpiron.wordpress.com/2007/10/21/the-bible-in-five-acts/
Oct 21, 2007 - I very much enjoyed N.T.Wright's book on Biblical authority, "The Last ... between an improvisation and an actual performance of the final act.

 



 
"The best description of my career as a writer is, 'At play in the fields of the Lord.' "-
-from new interview with Ray Bradbury on God, here.

This guy keeps getting more God-haunted!

See also:

Ray Bradbury on God

"The best description of my career as a writer is, 'At play in the fields of the Lord.' "-
-from new interview with Ray Bradbury on God, here.
- See more at: http://davewainscott.blogspot.com/search/label/Ray%20Bradbury#sthash.KZBIMUSR.dpuf
I'm guessing this is the first time a speaker at Point Loma Nazarene University (an evangelical Christian school)  began their speech with taking God's name in vain (g__d___).  The nervous but appreciative laughter immediately following is classic.

The second time he repeated the phrase was just a  few minutes minute later (13:00ff):

"Go to the library! Live in the library, for Christ's sake!  Don't spent all your time on the g--d-- computer and all that crap!"

Then again at 14:25...
I wonder if anyone was sorry for inviting him.
I hope not..

Note: This is the same writer's conference that Eugene Peterson spoke at
(LOL.. I don't think EP used any coarse language..though I hear he is gracious towards that habit of Bono's).

By the way, that line about libraries and computers he  also delivered at  University of California.
 He's equal opportunity. It probably didn't even cross his mind to clean up his language while at a Christian venue.

And maybe he meant "for Christ's sake"  literally. (:

He sure loved the name of Jesus the day I met and I prayed for him...
--------------


Enjoy:
 
Follow-up conversation below....delightful. See 15:52ff on religion, and 21:56ff on God ("We are here to witness and celebrate. Otherwise, get the hell out!.. We are here as an audience to the miraculous!"):
Related:

see posts tagged "Ray Bradbury" underneath this post.











  • The Day I Prayed for Ray Bradbury

    davewainscott.blogspot.com/2007/.../day-i-prayed-for-ray-bradbury.htm...

    Sep 1, 2007 - The Day I Prayed for Ray BradburyRay Bradbury smiled at me, and "amen-ed" my prayer. As one who grew up reading and relishing ...
  • holy heteroclite:: David Crowder (the"flippin' semiotician")'s ...

    davewainscott.blogspot.com/.../david-crowder-on-semiotics-and-his.html

    Dec 22, 2012 - holy heteroclite: ..... printing press (6) prostitutes (7) psalms (51) radiohead (13) Ray Bradbury (13) ray van der laan (20) reading the Bible (524)  ...
    You've visited this page 4 times. Last visit: 4/22/15
  • holy heteroclite:: Ray Bradbury and "God in your breast"

    davewainscott.blogspot.com/.../ray-bradbury-and-god-in-your-breast_22...

    Dec 22, 2007 - As a follow up to my The Day I Prayed for Ray Bradbury post.. I found this discussion on Bradbury and Christianity...mostly devoted to whether  ...









  • Following Christ in a World of Distractions (RIP, Ray Bradbury).

  •   Ray Bradbury - Prophet From God?
  • - See more at: http://davewainscott.blogspot.com/search/label/Ray%20Bradbury#sthash.6XQS2XPp.dpuf







  • Following Christ in a World of Distractions (RIP, Ray Bradbury).

  •   Ray Bradbury - Prophet From God?
  • - See more at: http://davewainscott.blogspot.com/search/label/Ray%20Bradbury#sthash.oTWUwYqq.dpuf


     From Mandy Smith's The Vulnerable Pastor, pp. 122-124:

    Being a woman can feel like weakness.  When you are a woman, your  own body teaches you your limits. From the time you're small, there is always someone bigger, with a stronger body and a deeper voice. And as you grow, you learn how little control you have over your own body, from a sometimes painful, often embarrassing inconvenience that will visit you every month to the strange season of having a person growing inside of you for 9 months. When the little bundle makes its appearance, your body goes from creator of life to sustainer of life. All kinds of new systems kick into gear. It's a miraculous process but one completely beyond your control. As you go from mother to grandmother, your body begins to change again, throwing you into a state of confusion as the steady cycles you have grown accustomed to become syncopated and erratic and then finally stop altogether.

    If being a woman teaches humility and collaboration, isn't it a strength to be a woman?

    Inhabiting this ever-changing form forces you to acknowledge (even celebrate) your limits and to sense your responsibility to and reliance upon the broader community.

     So if being a woman teaches humility and collaboration, isn't it a strength to be a woman?

    In the church, these are leadership skills.

    Being an artist can feel like weakness.  If you're an artist, you are spurred on by an unending search for truth and beauty. You can have your breath stolen by the smallest, seemingly insignificant thing and be unfit for anything else but crying or singing or writing about it for the rest of the day. And once you've found that tiny sign of hope, you must make sense of it. And so you make things to process and express it, trying to capture all the feeling and meaning for others through the limited media of notes and words and paint. You step into a creative process that is sometimes cruel and raw, a little too close for comfort. Then, with shaking hands, you put that outpouring of your soul into a public form and hope that someone understands.


    If creative people know how to find truth and beauty, even when it's hidden in brokenn
     ess, if they're comfortable with mystery, failure, and vulnerability, isn't it a strength to be an artist?

    In the church, these are leadership skills.
     

    Being an outsider can feel like weakness. Being on the outside means always having that vague sense that you didn't get the inside joke. You feel like a child again as you have to learn things that are obvious and basic to everyone else. But over time you compensate. You learn not only to speak but to listen in other languages. You become self-aware as those things which were once transparent about yourself (back when everyone around you was the same as you) are suddenly glaringly visible. For the first time you feel the weight of the lens of your own culture, your own assumptions, and eventually, you learn how to switch glasses.

    If being displaced helps us relate to the ways God's people have always been the sojourners, isn't it meaningful to be displaced?

    If outsiders know how to be flexible and self-aware, to communicate in a relevant way in many contexts, isn't it a strength to be an outsider?

    In the church, these are leadership skills.


    Being an introvert can feel like weakness. Thinking of the perfect answer a day after the question makes you feel dumb, even though your belated but perfectly-worded response is more insightful than the one given by the quick-thinker in the room. Needing to recover from extended periods with people draws labels like "anti-social," even though you may have great social skills. Longing for depth and complexity and silence makes you feel like a precious egg-head in a world hungry for sound bites and noise.


    If introverts know how to listen, and are unafraid of silence, depth, and authenticity, isn't it a strength to be an introvert?

     Similar article
     ---



    More by Mandy on women and weakness -- KKKKK






  • Following Christ in a World of Distractions (RIP, Ray Bradbury).

  •   Ray Bradbury - Prophet From God?
  • - See more at: http://davewainscott.blogspot.com/search/label/Ray%20Bradbury#sthash.oTWUwYqq.dpuf







  • Following Christ in a World of Distractions (RIP, Ray Bradbury).

  •   Ray Bradbury - Prophet From God?
  • - See more at: http://davewainscott.blogspot.com/search/label/Ray%20Bradbury#sthash.oTWUwYqq.dpuf

    4 comments:

    1. This was the first thing that popped up when I searched Mark De Raud on Google - https://m.facebook.com/miacuppacaffe/posts/737482939643688 - I sure hope he saw this by now.
      - Rachel Catrina

      ReplyDelete
    2. This is the paint I like from Mark De Raud because it inspires me love, carefulness, and generosity.
      https://scontent.fsnc1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/58344_139565946088672_2913591_n.jpg?oh=8b6b96fec085454028920b29bcc4e7dd&oe=577C0268

      ReplyDelete
    3. Mark illustrated the cover to a book called My Home Town: A Fairy Tale of Two Cities to help encourage people to read. I like the random objects in the background of this picture, ALMOST as much as I like the man's facial expression.

      http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17676826-my-home-town

      -Bridget Webster

      ReplyDelete