Posts from 2021 (Page 4)

Ascension and the Pertinent Negative

In the short story “Silver Blaze” by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the world’s most famous detective, Sherlock Holmes, notices something that didn’t happen. In the story, a Scotland Yard inspector is asking for what Holmes noticed about the evidence in a given case. Holmes replies, “the curious incident of the dog.” The inspector, probably rummaging…

Spirituality in Stages

There’s a great book out there called “I Once  Was Lost” by Don Everts and Doug Schaupp. In this book, the two authors describe different thresholds or stages of spirituality. The book itself is concerned with the movement that a non-Christian experiences as they move closer to becoming a Christian, but I wonder if it…

Mayday!

In just a couple of days, it will be May 1st. Throughout Europe, this day is known as “May Day” and is celebrated as a holiday with traditions like dancing around a maypole (a pole with ribbons attached to it), leaving anonymous baskets of flowers on neighbors’ doorsteps, and lighting “lucky fires” in the evening…

Body and Soul

I read an article recently that outlined what the world’s 5 major religions believed about the concept of a soul. It went through Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism and explained how they differed in their concepts of what could be called a “soul” (although even this term is native to Judaism and doesn’t exactly…

University Lutheran Awards

When the Apostle Paul wrote to the Romans, he wrote this in Chapter 12: “I say to everyone among you not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think.” But he also writes, just a few verses later, “Love one another with brotherly affection. Outdo one another in showing honor.” This year…

A Holey God

This coming Sunday is the 2nd Sunday of Easter, which means that we engage in the usual “2nd Sunday of Easter” Gospel reading, the story of Thomas needing to see Jesus and put his finger into Jesus’ wounds. It illustrates an important point, even a theological point. No, not that one about doubt vs disbelief…

Nicodemus – The Art of Lent

Henry Ossawa Tanner had something in common with Nicodemus: failure. While it doesn’t specifically say so, we get the sense that Nicodemus leaves Jesus’ presence feeling beaten, feeling unsure of himself, feeling like he’s a failure. I mean after all, Jesus just said to him incredulously, “Are you the teacher of Israel and still you…

The Brazen Serpent – The Art of Lent

A few years ago there was a movie entitled “Snakes on a Plane.” That plane must have been flying over Moses and the children of Israel in Anthony van Dyck’s painting “The Brazen Serpent,” based on Numbers 21, because if you look up into the skies, you can see that the snakes are falling from…

Cleansing the Temple – The Art of Lent

Jesus’ clearing of the temple, upsetting the money changers’ tables and driving out the livestock, was a minor theme in religious art up until the time just after the Reformation. After the Reformation, the scene was painted and requested to be painted more than at any other time. The reason for this was that the…