Fighting Over The New Testament
Friday, August 24th, 2007Real Live Preacher has some good points about abuse of the New Testament over at Fighting Over The New Testament.
Real Live Preacher has some good points about abuse of the New Testament over at Fighting Over The New Testament.
Seems to be a flurry of news articles in the past week or so about various organizations and institutions altering Wikipedia articles concerning themselves. Which shouldn’t surprise anyone really, should it? Anyone can edit Wikipedia articles and, indeed, is encouraged to, and that includes institutions. What might be more interesting would be some more analysis on what specific things are being modified. I’m with Russell Brown who notes that ‘it would be wise not to go off the deep end about it.’ (Public Address | Hard News | More Wikipedia Scanning | Aug 20, 2007 09:16).
Related links:
Fred, over at slacktivist: Green evangelicals, points to an interesting article ABC News: Saving God’s Earth: Evangelicals Go Green which looks at the swing within American evangelicalism to recover a biblical view of creation care. Fred’s also got his own extended commentary on the piece which is worth reading too.
Related links:
Various stuff in Greenflame · Environment including Greenflame · Churches and creation care and Greenflame · Evangelicals and the Environment.
Today the electric kettle (jug) needed to be replaced. A trivial event, you think – simply go out an buy one. After all, all a kettle does is heat the water in it to boiling and, if you’re lucky, then turn itself off. Useful for making tea and all that.
So off I went (with fourth-born in tow) to various shops – having done the obligatory pricing research via the net. Now a kettle is a personal sort of thing. You start the day with it, you end the day with it. It tracks you through the day. Choosing a kettle is a matter of great reflection (more so if stainless steel), and so one needs to go and look at them, pick them up, pretend to be ‘mother’ with one, flick switches, check out temperature-dependent colour-change panels, and take lids off and put them on.
Ah, the lid. Many a kettle today tempted us with its sleek lines, vast capacities and filter funnels, but if you can’t get the blessed lid on and off quickly, safely and have it stay on securely then the kettle is useless to me. Filling the kettle is not some optional step (unless you only possess a kettle to look good on the kitchen bench and match the toaster and blender).
Some kettles had flimsy designer lids that will not last the distance (of all components we break lids most often); others had cool push-button, slow motion automated lid opening mechanisms (which fourth-born thought were great, and hence I relegated to the pile of kettles that might be treated unwisely as toys by children who are learning to use one); and several had lids I (with my multiple degrees) could not figure out how to open. I do not want to have to be trained to fill my kettle. Early mornings are bad enough without struggling to make the morning cuppa.
I left with high hopes of finding a new kettle to bring me to a place of heightened oneness with the universe (through the sacrament of tea) and instead left three shops a broken man and without a kettle. (Though I did pick up a new Pyrex bowl to replace the one I dropped last week).
On a whim I popped into a different store well out of our way. Serendipitously it was ‘the great kettle sale’ day there – 50% off! Bought identical kettle to the one that was retired today. No lofty heights of new kettle experiences for me – though I know how to get the lid off it with my eyes shut (so to speak – because that would be a silly thing to do, wouldn’t it?).
The Ideas slot on Sunday morning on Radio NZ National was about virtual worlds, including both positive and negative voices about their effects on individuals and wider society.
Audio available via podcast or from the link on the Ideas page. (Be aware that the default audio format is WMA. If you want MP3 then you have to change your audio preferences on the RNZ web site).
Couple of interesting links from PBS Religion and Ethics this week. One on the tension between therapy and enhancement in healthcare and the other on the continuing rise of the “prosperity gospel”. I can see a time when the latter might preach the ‘abundant life’ with all the material trimmings includes the genetic enhancements for believers and their offspring.
Satirical piece over at LarkNews.com: Virtual Pastors please picky church-goers. I’d laugh more, but I can see it actually happening (given that congregations try to do it in real life sometimes).
Simon and Paul are back on virtualtheology.net. This time a series on the church. Go have a listen.
As part of some part-time work I’m doing at the moment I’m doing some distance/flexible learning implementation using Moodle (a free, open source course management system for online learning). So here’s a few links I’ve found useful over the past couple of weeks.
Sigh! If only as much effort was spent on engaging with the contents between the covers instead of with the covers themselves. See Gun-wielding Christians snap up camo Bibles online – 14 Aug 2007 – NZ Herald.