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Friday January 16, 2009

Categories: blogging

Was the Hudson crash a miracle?

I prayed a prayer of thanksgiving yesterday when I heard the news that there were no fatalities or injuries after an airliner crashed into the Hudson River. All good things come from God--so says the Bible, and so says my Mom, who is prone to utter "Thank you, Lawd!" (in her Southern Belle drawl) for all sorts of things, from a shining sun to a sale on apples. 

So I followed in her steps yesterday, and am still in awe as I read the stories today. It really is a stupendous, mind-boggling, joy-inducing story. Every person who was on that plane is having the best day of their lives day today--now that they've tasted death, their lives may never be the same. 

hudsonrescue.jpg

But I'm brought up short by all this talk of "Miracle on the Hudson." That sort of language was being used from early on yesterday, when it really did look like something impossible-for-man-but-possible-for-God had occurred. A miracle, strictly speaking, is an event that breaks the laws of nature--something that literally bends the rules of the universe. A barren woman becoming pregnant without help from scientific manipulation is a miracle. A brain tumor vanishing just before surgery is a miracle. 

At first, this crash looked like that. But soon, it became clear that the man flying US Airways flight 1549, Capt. C.B. Sullenberger, had displayed enormous poise and professionalism. Ditching a plane is no easy task, and not something for which one can prepare short of simulated practice. Capt. Sullenberger called on all his faculties to ignore the air controller's advice to divert the plane to Jersey and ditch it in water instead--a procedure that, in an airliner, isn't as simple as gliding toward the ground. 

That's human ability at its finest. It blows my mind that humans can do things like that, and it calls for shouts of joy and thanksgiving. 

But it's not a miracle. 

Update: I was rushing out before, but I should say two words about why this matters: 

1. It matters because it highlights a strange aspect of our media. As the likes of Get Religion and The Revealer are forever pointing out, many fine reporters are tone deaf when it comes to matters of faith. They often don't know what to make of people who believe in, and live by, things supernatural. Some media outlets are downright allergic to religion. (Again, check Get Religion and The Revealer for a running report.) So it's odd, isn't it, to see the media suddenly, liberally, and uncritically using supernatural language? I understand, of course, that a hed writer, if asked, would say s/he doesn't mean it literally, was quoting a witness, etc. Still...it highlights a fascinating incongruity. 

2. It matters because miracles are an important and controversial aspect of Christian doctrine. They are a special and rare category, limited to the such things as I mentioned above and, oh, the resurrection. Christians get this wrong more than anyone, I suppose--it's not uncommon to hear a believer calling things "miracles" that aren't, from sports championships to the sun shining on an outdoor wedding in May. 

And now I'll give it a rest. 


Monday January 12, 2009

Categories: beliefnet, blogging, movies

The Top Comfort Movies

Movie Mom blogger Neil Minow put together a list of the top Comfort Movies--flicks that go down just right on those no-good, crummy, sniffling, sneezing days. Not a bad list, and hard to quibble with something as idiosyncratic as this. But what are your favorite movies for days like that? 

My five faves, in no particular order:

The Karate Kid 

Bottle Rocket 

Annie Hall

The Godfather 

Heat

(Ok, so I like my comfort a little on the morbid side.)

Tuesday December 30, 2008

Mormons and Evangelicals

Dave Banack is Beliefnet's new Mormon blogger, and this week he's launched a discussion series for a book titled How Wide the Divide: An Evangelical and a Mormon in Conversation. The book is 10 years old, but the subjects in it are perennial for those interested in sorting through the differences between the two traditions without rancor. 

I'm a big fan of conversations like this: Beliefnet's Blogalogue series is one of my favorite features, because a staged, serious, civil conversation between two people on opposite sides of issues they hold dear is (1) far too rare and (2) very educational. Banack is already doing a nice job of offering the highlights from How Wide--be sure to tune in, and join in, in the days ahead. 

Saturday December 20, 2008

Categories: blogging, media

Blog of the Year: The Big Picture

Few blogs, or media of any kind, have been as arresting as the Boston Globe's The Big Picture. Alan Taylor's blog tells captivating stories, post after post. Its big pictures offer windows into the small places we never see. 

His year-end retrospective is a masterwork, something to give yourself time to gaze at and think through. It's hard to choose just one representative, but I'll offer this photo of Maasai warriors in a bow-and-arrow battle with the Kalenjin tribe in Kenya: 

maasaiwarriors.jpg
Obviously, you should head over to the Big Picture to see this and the whole retrospective in all its mind-boggling glory.

Wednesday December 17, 2008

Can Liberal Christians be Fundamentalists?

So asks Scot McKnight, prompted by a feisty exchange he had with Paul Raushenbush and the commenters at Raushenbush's blog, which was prompted by Steve Waldman's interview with Rick Warren

The "evangelicals vs. fundamentalists" moment was the part of the Warren interview that most piqued my interest, too. I'm anxious for more conversation about the way fundamentalism--which takes many different forms all over the world--has come to be understood as a certain public stance more than a set of core convictions, and the conversation happening at McKnight's blog today is a great place to begin. 

Monday December 8, 2008

Categories: blogging

Merry Christmas to Alan Jacobs fans

The good news: Alan Jacobs has a new blog at Culture11. The too-good-to-be-true news (warning: Geek Ahead): he says the blog will be about "technologies of reading and research and, well, knowledge." Woah. Thank goodness for venture capital, aye Culture11? Tapping Jacobs for...

Friday December 5, 2008

Categories: beliefnet, blogging

Free Trip to Africa

This is Josh. He's a student at a small college in Pennsylvania, and I had the pleasure of calling him a couple days ago to tell him he'd won the trip to Africa we sponsored with Children's HopeChest. He'll be...

Thursday November 20, 2008

Categories: blogging, politics

Straight Talk on Gay Marriage

Pun intended. Starting today, two of our bloggers--Tony Jones and Rod Dreher--will begin a debate discussion Beliefnet Blogalogue on same sex marriage. They'll post on their respective blogs and link back to one another. Here's what's unique about this discussion, and why...

Thursday November 6, 2008

Categories: beliefnet, blogging

Welcoming Scot McKnight and Tony Jones to Beliefnet

Join me in welcoming two new blogs to Beliefnet: Jesus Creed, crafted by the careful hands of Scot McKnight, and The New Christians, the brainchild of Tony Jones. Jesus Creed, long one of the web's most popular religion blogs, is that...

Wednesday October 29, 2008

Categories: blogging

Top Christian Blogs on Blogs.com

Blogs.com asked for a list of the top 10 Christian blogs. The list I offered is not the most representative, I admit, and it's very idiosyncratic. It's a combination of blogs I've been reading for years, blogs I return to for occasional...

Friday October 24, 2008

Categories: blogging

The Unshakeable, October 24 Edition

Each Friday, I'll try to post a few things--maybe 3, maybe 10--that stuck with me this week, wouldn't leave me alone, and probably won't be going anywhere anytime soon. IOW, the best kind of reading.This week's list:From Culture11.com, Thomas Chatteron...

Wednesday October 22, 2008

Daniel Clark's culture shock

Last Friday, I was working at Wisdom Tea House (a dream of a place) when my friend Daniel Clark came in to join me for the afternoon. "30 hours ago I was in a jungle," he said as he sat...

Monday October 13, 2008

Forgive this Blog

I still consider Text Message to be in beta form, and it's a good thing, aye? Please forgive the blue background, odd layout, and any other oddities you see here in the coming days. We've just launched a rebuild and...

Tuesday September 30, 2008

Categories: blogging

Now and Later

To the 11 of you who have discovered this blog so far: My launch timing could hardly have been worse. Posting has been and will continue to be light until October 9 because Beliefnet behind-the-scenes work is booming--with results you'll...

Thursday September 18, 2008

Soft Pre-Launch

The sidebar over yonder tells you all you need to know about the readiness of this here blog. I have not had time this week to get things up and running as they should be (and just think of all...

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About Text Messages

This blog is no longer updated and is closed for comments. We welcome your comments about Christianity in our Christianity forums.

Patton Dodd is a senior editor for Beliefnet and the author of My Faith So Far: A Story of Conversion and Confusion (Jossey-Bass).

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