in playing around on the net tonight. i found this facebook group rather comical. apparently the pacman’s whoas are due in part to the conniving peyton manning.
Culture
loss of a national treasure
i am bummed out to read about this loss of one of south korea’s national treasures. adam & jessica are over there teaching and brought it to my attention. it is always sad to see landmarks, especially of the sort that have been around before even the finding of the america’s.
mccain : like hope, but different
for those that liked the obama ‘yes we can’ video we have the mccain mashup equivalent. tip bob
day off links
taking the day off.. if you call getting the car fixed a day off. some links i’m pondering
- that phelps clan is back at it, now their implement is our recent tornados
- Saint Benedict thoughts on Lent
- time has an interview with nt wright… many suggest it
- size does matter.. to sam.. and probably should to us as well
- i missed podcamp nashville, so i will be checking out all the write ups and pics
- oh man.. another book that peaks my interests.. damn you sam!
the declaration of independence reframed
i can’t help but share this. it hit me like a ton of bricks. the follow is an encounter brian mclaren had at davos a few weeks ago.
Another moment – when a Muslim conversation partner introduced me to
a group of Muslims I hadn’t met: "This is my friend, Brian." When
people stop being "that Jew" or "that Christian" or "that Muslim," and
instead become "my friend," followed by a real name … the state of the
world improves a little bit.And another – sitting with a Muslim scholar who explained to me, "If
you want to understand our struggle, think of your own Declaration of
Independence." She rehearsed the lines, known by heart: "… we hold
these truths to be self-evident … created equal … endowed by their
Creator with certain inalienable rights." She asked me what these lines
were intended to do, to accomplish. I replied, "To counter the
pre-modern notion of the divine right of kings with a new notion – of
the God-given rights of individuals." Why, she asked, was it important
to bring God in? "Because God represents an authority higher than a
king’s authority. If God gives individuals rights, a king loses his
right to abrogate them."Then she said, "This is a primary reason why there is such a
religious revival in Islam. Millions of Muslims live under
dictatorships. They need to have their human rights validated
theologically so they can gain freedom from dictators, just as American
colonists wanted to gain freedom from the king in 1776." Sadly, she
added, many of these dictators have remained in power with U.S.
support, which helps explain much of the antipathy toward U.S. foreign
policy. A simple thought, perhaps obvious to many, but it clicked for
me as never before.
1. i like how brian explains the declaration of independence, that God is above kings. so it is no surprise that in that it hit like a ton of bricks… why do we enable other countries to live in a framework that we would not allow ourselves to be in. i am not advocating nation building, like we are experiencing in Afghanistan or Iraq, certainly we did much to help them to where they were. but what if there were other creative means to enable all people to live where God is ultimate authority? even over that of a king or president? hmm..