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Thursday January 15, 2009

Categories: Bible, Culture

R. Crumb's literal Genesis comic

The famous comic artist has been laboring over a comic retelling of Genesis for ages, and it's apparently coming in 2009. Everywhere I've seen this mentioned on the web, people use the word "literal" to describe it, as in "it's a literal adaptation!" I have no idea what that could possibly mean in this case, but if it's that he simply draws the events of Genesis as they occur in the pages of Genesis...well, why wouldn't he? Genesis is freaky, beautiful, crazy, hysterical, awesome, wild, R-Rated stuff. It doesn't exactly need R. Crumb to give it intrigue, whatever your flannel-graph memories tell you. 

But in any event, I can't wait to see it. Here's a sneek peak (I think):

crumbgenesis.jpg



Monday December 29, 2008

Jake Busey's Christian Killer

A month or so ago I announced that I was looking for movies with Christian killers, and many of you helped out with titles that hadn't occurred to me. I've since seen more religiously motivated violence on screen than I care to recount, and I have a long way to go, but I'm enjoying this project (which is for my dissertation) and learning a lot.

So far, the worst--most ridiculous and far-fetched--Christian killer I've seen is Jake Busey's 
jakebusey.jpg
revivalist-terrorist in Robert Zemeckis' Contact. The whole movie is pretty ridiculous, some outstanding cinematic effects aside. Every character is a caricature, and the point of the movie seems to be that whatever we're exploring--whether science or religion--in the end we're really just exploring (say it with me) ourselves. If only MST3K were still around to give this movie the proper treatment. 

Busey's Christian revivalist hates Jodie Foster's scientist, though we're never told why; the fact that he's a fundamentalist is apparently explanation enough. Eventually, he straps a bomb to his chest and blows himself, a few scientists, and an expensive alien communication machine to kingdom come. 

Which raises a question: What's the precedent for characterizing a Christian extremist as a suicide bomber? Timothy McVeigh might count, or maybe abortion clinic protestors of earlier days, but is this mostly an example of Hollywood's general tone-deaf-ness when it comes to religion? I'm not saying representations of, say, Arab Americans are any better, but still--why this conflation of Christian extremism and suicide bombing? What do you make of a characterization like this? 


Monday December 29, 2008

Categories: Culture, Family, Patton Dodd

Let's see, where were we...?

Last Tuesday, I wrote that Haggard post, did some holiday volunteering, went home to wrap some presents, and somehow managed to stay offline for most of the next 5 days. 

Which is to say: Christmas was splendid. Truly peaceful. I finally got around to reading The Road by Cormac McCarthy (holy crap, what a novel), watched a billion episodes of "30 Rock" with my wife after the kids were in bed, made merry with extended family on 4 separate occasions, watched my kids delight in old-fashioned toys, went on runs with Krista Tippett on the iPod, cooked, cooked, cooked, drank some holiday libations, shared dinner with old friends, went to church, and basically enjoyed a string of days. 

So, if you've stopped by, sorry for the relative silence. 

Oh, and an announcement: Tony Jones has left the building, but his blog is in some very promising hands that I hope you'll check out. Over the next week, The New Christians is sure to be home to some rich conversation (misbehaving commenters notwithstanding). 

Tuesday December 2, 2008

Categories: Culture

Jesus in Italy and Hand-Rolled Pasta

como.jpgTwo months ago, my wife and I took a trip to Italy. We saved for this trip for ages, cancelled it a time or two due to complications with kids and cross-country moves, saved for it all over again, and finally got to take the trip (sans-children, thanks to the kindness of grandparents) a few months shy of our 10-year anniversary. 

We visited Lake Como in northern Italy at the Switzerland border, then spent a few days in the Cinque Terra in Liguria. We cancelled most sight-seeing plans we had, skipping Rome, Vienna, Florence, et al. Instead, we rested. Read thick novels. Drank wine. Hiked. Ate slow meals. Strolled small villages. Drank more wine. 

It was Mary Poppins, and I wouldn't change a thing about the trip. 

The one drawback to nixing our intentions to tour Italian cities was that I missed a chance to gape at study the religious art I long to see. I intended to come back to Colorado with material for an article about a Protestant looking for Jesus in Italy, reporting on the current state of the museum sites and our responses to them. I was curious to know if my flirtations with Catholicism would flower or fold under the Sistine ceiling. 

As it turns out, I didn't need to go to Rome to encounter something Christlike. On the first full day of our trip, we took a cooking class at Il Caminetto, a restaurant in a village nestled in the hills above Varenna. Chef Moreno picked us in in Varenna, along with another couple, and drove us the few miles to his restaurant, which is in the same small structure that has been his home since birth. His wife was in a separate vehicle picking up a few other tourists from the UK. 

The class was supposed to last for about 3 hours, but it went all day long. We were an inquisitive, talkative bunch, enjoying one another's company and the presence of Chef Moreno and his wife, Rosella. We asked questions about his heritage--his family has been in the area for 1000 years--and the development of cuisine culture in northern Italy. He explained in broken English how northern Italian personalities and food traditions differ from those in the south, how the cold, narrow, mountainous north has resulted in a more closed-in people, quite distinct from the large, gregarious southern Italian personalities we're accustomed to from stereotypes. 

Chef Moreno also patiently explained the details of his food preparation, making sure we understood the subtleties involved in making pasta, risotto, pastry wraps, tomato sauce and more from scratch. As he did spoke, pausing to thoughtfully answer our questions about his culture, I felt like I entered a whole new way of being.  He gave his entire day away, going far past the time we had paid for, and as we let him, my sense of days began to change. 

For one whole day, I focused on one thing, one environment, and mostly on one person. That happened 9 weeks ago, and I've not yet gotten over it. 

I realize this is a typical American experience of other cultures; I've experienced it previously in China and Mexico, and indeed in subcultures within the States that are less given over to busyness. Still, it was revelatory. 

In the weeks months 2 or 3 years before this trip, I've kept an insane pace. Graduate school + kids + writing + media work + homeownership and various other commitments have encouraged in me a constant rush, a continuous partial attention to a range of data and disturbance. In an earlier season of life, I was proud of the fact that I was generous with my time. I lingered in the presence of friends, family, and strangers, and encouraged them to linger in turn. In recent years, I've hardly had a lunch where I wasn't wondering about the emails and text message I was missing--or just responding to messages during the meal. 

The day with Chef Moreno put me on Italian time, or at least his version of it. I didn't rush the rest of that week, and I've been working hard at breaking my bad time habits since returning home. 

I received all this as a measure of grace. It's a grace I very much need. Since Italy, I've made more time for silence and solitude, whether that means fasting through lunch, getting up early, or descending downstairs late at night. I've begun to learn to sit in complete contemplation, and I've given myself fully into whatever moment I'm in: talking to my wife or a friend, playing with my kids, cooking complicated or ordinary meals, diving deep into a novel, like I used to. Strangely, I've also gotten more done, and more done well, in these past weeks. 

A few weeks ago, I made Chef Moreno's hand-rolled pasta. It took forever. Forever. It won't take as long from now on--I just wasn't very good at it, and my 7000-foot elevation complicated matters just a bit. But thanks to Chef Moreno and his witness to a better way of living, I liked that it took a long time, and was grateful that he invited me into a new-old way of being in time. 

moreno.jpg

Wednesday November 19, 2008

Categories: Culture

7 Delightful Things

For a variety of reasons, it's been a distressing week. And it's only Wednesday. And I didn't sleep last night. Times like these, nothing to do but think about delightful things. Here are 7:

1. The new Life photo archive.

2. The Marshall McLuhan scene in Annie Hall. 



3. Valerie's gratefulness updates

4. Max Fischer's extracurricular activities. 


5. Bel and Henry. 

6. The Manitou Incline

7. How often I get to look at this:

PPsunset.jpg

Monday November 17, 2008

Categories: Culture

The Filmmaker of Light

Vanity Fair reports on an internal memo from Painter of Light Thomas Kinkade in which he outlines 16 principles for making a film modeled on his paintings. (The film is called "Christmas Cottage"--which could also be the name of virtually...

Friday November 14, 2008

Categories: Culture

Three things from Steve Martin

Steve Martin's Born Standing Up is the most fun weekend reading I've done in a long time. Pensive yet page-turning. Three moments I'll remember:1. While studying Wittgenstein in college--which Martin was paying for by doing standup comedy--Martin was wrestling with whether...

Wednesday November 12, 2008

Categories: Culture

Culture War and context

On election night, a Facebook (and real life!) friend, Brandon, posted a status update to the effect that Americans were naive for voting for Obama. I took issue with Brandon's remark, which he had first delivered to me over iChat,...

Thursday October 30, 2008

Categories: Culture

More grist for the atheists-as-fundamentalists mill

Alan Jacobs on Richard Dawkins' suspicion of Harry Potter:It strains credulity, does it not, that someone of Dawkins's education and intelligence could believe that there is no difference between allowing children to read fantasy stories or fairy tales and "bringing...

Tuesday October 21, 2008

Categories: Christianity, Culture, movies

The Dishonesty of 'Fireproof'

At The Daily Beast, Daniel Radosh (who, incidentally, started a Beliefnet book club for his "Rapture Ready") uses the occasion of the Christian blockbuster "Fireproof" to make a larger point about insular Christian entertainment: Not only does it speak exclusively to...

Monday October 20, 2008

Categories: Culture, Religion, media, movies

Is Bill Maher a secular fundamentalist?

In my post on "Religulous," I made the point that Bill Maher exudes a shockingly self-righteous certitude in his own position--and at the movie's end, literally preaches a gospel of Maherism and warns doom for all who don't see his...

Saturday October 18, 2008

Categories: Culture

Dr. Oliver's Islam

Congratulations to my dear friend and BU colleague Martyn Oliver, who passed his dissertation defense yesterday in Boston. (He's also getting hitched in 3 weeks--not a bad autumn.) I've had the pleasure of reading bits of his dissertation, which is...

Thursday October 16, 2008

Categories: Church, Culture

While We Wait for 'Culture Making'...

Coming soon in this space: an interview with Andy Crouch on his invaluable new book, Culture Making. Andy's book is one of the wisest books on the subject of culture I've ever read, and it's the single best work on...

Friday October 10, 2008

Don Lattin's Jesus Freaks

One of the most unshakeable reading experiences I've had in the last year is Don Lattin's Jesus Freak: A True Story of Murder and Madness on the Evangelical Edge. Taking a cue from Jon Krakauer's Under the Banner of Heaven,...

Friday October 10, 2008

If it's happening in Colorado Springs...

Brandon Fibbs, a longtime Colorado Springs resident, political junkie, movie reviewer for Christianity Today, and current DC resident, reads Timothy Egan's recent blog post on cultural and political shifts in Colorado Springs and adds some observations of his own:I recently...

Friday October 10, 2008

Categories: Culture, media, movies, politics

Best Political Film (or, Frank Capra is a Fascist)

  The latest YouTube video from the always delightful, always informative Reel Geezers offers a brief history of Hollywood's political films, focusing mostly on movies about the electoral process. They cover some of my own favorites--Born Yesterday, The Candidate--and also...

Thursday October 9, 2008

Max Lucado's Lamentation

This is pretty remarkable--you'd think that Max Lucado, of all pastors, would offer an encouraging word, delivered with a smile, about the economic woes facing people today. But instead, he delivers nothing short of a lamentation. The message, essentially, is...

Sunday September 21, 2008

Categories: Culture, media

Killing the Buddha All Over Again

Killing the Buddha was one of my favorite web discoveries in the years just after college--a site packed with essays on religion that combined pained skepticism with genuine desire for human renewal. There was often a real humility to the...

Sunday September 21, 2008

Categories: Culture, money

We Forgot that Borrowers Have to Be Able to Repay

Barry Ritholtz observes that one way to look at the current economics crisis is as a five-year hiccup in our approach to lending. Over the entire history of human finance, the underlying premise of all credit transactions -- loans, mortgages, and...

Friday September 19, 2008

Categories: Church, Culture, Religion

Dick Staub - "The Islam I Know"

I admire Dick Staub a lot, and a few years ago had the pleasure of signing books in his company when we both had titles out from the same publisher and were joined in a conference booth. He's hilarious and smart....

Thursday September 18, 2008

Categories: Culture, TV

Mad Men - Joan's glass ceiling and the early days of television advertising

i should begin by writing lofty posts, but instead I'll go with what's most on my mind: "Mad Men." I watched Sunday's episode last night, and wanted to think about Rod Dreher's question--Who is your favorite Mad Men character?--with a...

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...

Tuesday September 16, 2008

Categories: Christianity, Church, Culture

So You Think Christians Can't Dance? (still testing 123)

One reason I love my church: We hardly ever do offertory hymns like this....

Monday September 15, 2008

Categories: Culture

David Foster Wallace, R.I.P. (testing 123)

The news that David Foster Wallace hung himself this weekend came as such a shock not only because it was the news of great loss for literary and academic culture--which it is--but also because it seemed like such a...

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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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