Thursday, June 30, 2005
Wednesday, June 29, 2005
due date
baby is due today...
due dates are odd contrivances.
what do they really mean?
emotionally vexing things they are...
waiting,
waiting,
waiting,
i really want to meet this little person.
soon.
due dates are odd contrivances.
what do they really mean?
emotionally vexing things they are...
waiting,
waiting,
waiting,
i really want to meet this little person.
soon.
Tuesday, June 28, 2005
face
"the face is the gateway to infinity" said emmanuel levinas
in other words, it is only in the context of community that we can know.
know what, whom?
the Self, the Other and the Holy Other.
this is knowing truth. not as propositional but as living.
nietzsche claimed, "there are no facts, only interpretations"
and this is indeed the case, for it is only in dialogue with one another
that our petty "facts" become meaningful truths. text and context are
inseperable.
too long has christianity been wrapped up in greco/roman thinking,
issolating nuggets of knowledge, free-standing statments, and
individual propositions. only now are we re-discovering the wisdom
of hebraic relational thought from which we are so long departed.
lets look into the face of the other and together be thrust into infinity,
a conversation with God.
for more on relationality: martin buber, emmanuel levinas
in other words, it is only in the context of community that we can know.
know what, whom?
the Self, the Other and the Holy Other.
this is knowing truth. not as propositional but as living.
nietzsche claimed, "there are no facts, only interpretations"
and this is indeed the case, for it is only in dialogue with one another
that our petty "facts" become meaningful truths. text and context are
inseperable.
too long has christianity been wrapped up in greco/roman thinking,
issolating nuggets of knowledge, free-standing statments, and
individual propositions. only now are we re-discovering the wisdom
of hebraic relational thought from which we are so long departed.
lets look into the face of the other and together be thrust into infinity,
a conversation with God.
for more on relationality: martin buber, emmanuel levinas
Monday, June 27, 2005
Sunday, June 26, 2005
flannery o'conner

"All my stories are about the action of grace on a character who is not very willing to support it, but most people think of these stories as hard, hopeless and brutal."
"The fact is that the materials of the fiction writer are the humblest. Fiction is about everything human and we are made out of dust, and if you scorn getting yourself dusty, then you shouldn't try to write fiction. It's not a grand enough job for you."
"At its best our age is an age of searchers and discoverers, and at its worst, an age that has domesticated despair and learned to live with it happily."
"In the long run, a people is known, not by its statements or its statistics, but by the stories it tells."
Friday, June 24, 2005
into the mystery
Thursday, June 23, 2005
not that impressive

image copyright: nellis 2005
i'm working on an exegetical/genre paper for a class.
it's on the first pericope in ecclesiastes. we will all agree
with the unnamed wise man and qohelet who come to
the conclusion that indeed: all is meaningless under the
sun. but here it is the inversion of "under the sun" that
acts as the popular "but God..." phrase in the rest of
the old testament. from an above the sun perspective,
all things are infused with meaning because of the
christian eschatological hope of redemption.
david bazan captures this tension between futility and
hope in this short, beautiful and at once aweful lyric:
wouldn't it be so wonderful
if everything were meaningless
but everything is so meaningful
and most everything turns to shit
rejoice!
Wednesday, June 22, 2005
Tuesday, June 21, 2005
meaningful discourse
Meaningful discourse is always about something else, it transcends itself- you could say, it has a trajectory. Bob Dylan once said that art always leads you somewhere- but it never leads you nowhere. It is this characteristic of art that has proven to be difficult for the church. Christians are often fearful of the “hidden” meaning in “secular” media that may lead us astray. I remember the crusade against rock music for its subliminal messages on an album that if played backwards and three times slower could be deciphered as mantras to Satan. I remember the alarm over the New Age movement that had suddenly possessed pop culture in the late 80’s- we followed suit in the logical boycott of everyone’s favorite cartoons. It is this "witch-hunt" stance that marks the evangelical’s participation in the arts with superstition and suspicion, therefore removing us from the conversation and making any “artistic” efforts seem flat, irrelevant and ultimately narcissistic.
The invitation to the concerned Christ-follower is to engage with culture by being in, yet not of the world. Jesus himself articulates this tension in his well-known prayer for the disciples in John 17:6-19. As we begin to dialogue with the world in the arena of culture we will have moments where we exclaim, “Yes! This is my home!” But suddenly, all of creation will counter, “No! This is not your home!” Yet somehow, these seemingly contradictory statements are both correct in that the eschatological nature of our presence here infuses every moment and action with meaning. Turnau understood this when he said that it is hope that trains the imagination to see the world differently and then to follow that sight to act redemptively in culture.
How would things be different if followers of Jesus saw culture as the interplay between "General Revelation" (God's self-disclosure in creation) and "Common Grace" (God's good gifts to humankind) ? Wouldn't cultural engagment actually be, on some level, a conversation with God himself?
in response to:
Turnau III, Theodore A. (2002). Reflecting theologically on popular culture as meaningful: the role of sin, grace, and general revelation. Calvin Theological Journal: 270-296.
The invitation to the concerned Christ-follower is to engage with culture by being in, yet not of the world. Jesus himself articulates this tension in his well-known prayer for the disciples in John 17:6-19. As we begin to dialogue with the world in the arena of culture we will have moments where we exclaim, “Yes! This is my home!” But suddenly, all of creation will counter, “No! This is not your home!” Yet somehow, these seemingly contradictory statements are both correct in that the eschatological nature of our presence here infuses every moment and action with meaning. Turnau understood this when he said that it is hope that trains the imagination to see the world differently and then to follow that sight to act redemptively in culture.
How would things be different if followers of Jesus saw culture as the interplay between "General Revelation" (God's self-disclosure in creation) and "Common Grace" (God's good gifts to humankind) ? Wouldn't cultural engagment actually be, on some level, a conversation with God himself?
in response to:
Turnau III, Theodore A. (2002). Reflecting theologically on popular culture as meaningful: the role of sin, grace, and general revelation. Calvin Theological Journal: 270-296.
Monday, June 20, 2005
Sunday, June 19, 2005
for gentlemen and scholars
Saturday, June 18, 2005
my lover and i
Friday, June 17, 2005
a passing
jane g. nellis
1917-2005
88 yrs old
nana, i honor your memory and
am inspired by your heart that bled
for this broken world. thankyou.
Thursday, June 16, 2005
Out of at Home
She sent him out to get some eggs, milk and a bottle of their favorite
She didn’t mention what else they were out of at home
The market was alive with happenings. He bumped into their dentist
Who said remind her to floss then tossed a box of red candies in his cart
The gent at the meat counter said none today?
He returned a disappointed no and eyed a young lady in line
Flowers for the wife? said a voice from a stand
He glanced at the list and shook his head without a look up
He would do the least and get by
Let her no room to point or accuse
So he filled up the basket with the things she had asked for
And went back to what they were out of at home
She didn’t mention what else they were out of at home
The market was alive with happenings. He bumped into their dentist
Who said remind her to floss then tossed a box of red candies in his cart
The gent at the meat counter said none today?
He returned a disappointed no and eyed a young lady in line
Flowers for the wife? said a voice from a stand
He glanced at the list and shook his head without a look up
He would do the least and get by
Let her no room to point or accuse
So he filled up the basket with the things she had asked for
And went back to what they were out of at home
Wednesday, June 15, 2005
a view of the sound
the metaphor of the moment
birth.
what is the relationship between
a piece of art and the artist?
obviously there is the connection of story.
the story of the piece cannot be told without
a mention of the story of the artist.
when i encounter a piece, i want to know its story
so that i can experience it as it was intended to be.
but i also do not want to know...
existentially speaking-
the piece should be experienced for what it is and
for what it may become for me in the moment i
encounter it.
for it takes on a life of its own, does it not?
often embodying aspects of truth or reality the artist
had not even begun to imagine nor intend.
it develops a voice.
the connections to birth and childrearing are many.
so let me sit with the piece a while longer
and later its story will be heard...
what is the relationship between
a piece of art and the artist?
obviously there is the connection of story.
the story of the piece cannot be told without
a mention of the story of the artist.
when i encounter a piece, i want to know its story
so that i can experience it as it was intended to be.
but i also do not want to know...
existentially speaking-
the piece should be experienced for what it is and
for what it may become for me in the moment i
encounter it.
for it takes on a life of its own, does it not?
often embodying aspects of truth or reality the artist
had not even begun to imagine nor intend.
it develops a voice.
the connections to birth and childrearing are many.
so let me sit with the piece a while longer
and later its story will be heard...
Thursday, June 09, 2005
where shall you take me?
Saturday, June 04, 2005
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