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Showing posts from September 12, 2010

Martha Stewart Saturday

Well, today I did my laundry, made bread, cooked gumbo with the okra from our CSA (what else the heck is one supposed to do with okra?), baked oatmeal cookies, and brewed some beer. All but the last are decidedly of the fairer gender, guess I am just a girly man . I like cooking because it is tangible. I cook, we eat. Simple. My occupation by day is decidedly more open-ended. I'm a little worried about the beer...the first time out into the land of Homebrewing. If nothing else, brewing beer today keeps me from being called a total fairy. No, I did not sew curtains, though. God makes even the pragmatic (we have to cook, we have to eat) beautiful in that the aesthetics of creation such as color, taste and aroma are so much more than necessity.

Hard Drive Demolition

A little while back my old computer, that I did most of my doctoral degree on, went from life support to brain dead. More recently, Matrix-like, it had been operating as the host for my printer...its sole job, connected to my laptop via Windows XP networking. I knew it was time. Time to put it down. I took it out back and smashed the hard drive to fragments. People talk of bittersweet. This was not that. It was pure joy. Soon followed by a trip to the city dump. The reality was that I should have destroyed and thrown out the old ragged computer years ago. Instead, I made do. When Jesus came, he spoke of putting new wine in new wineskins. He offered life but many preferred the old dying ways. Like me...with my computer.

Walk Right This Way

Well, I was meeting my buddy for coffee at Higher Grounds coffee shop in Mt. Joy on Saturday. I was in one of those scenarios where I was coming back from another place further along the same route and to go home and back to Mt. Joy would have just burned gas and an additional 40 minutes spent driving when I instead could of been walking around on a beautiful Saturday. Mt. Joy is not exactly NYC, so I decided to walk up and down the main drag. On the walk, I encountered about the lamest two table Farmer's Market ever, and one of the dudes was selling candy. It is so easy when we drive to miss things because all is a blur. Walking is so much more informative and interesting. Further down, I came across this used book store which carries books about art, architecture, food, and wine. I bought Lina, the Foodie, a History of Food book by some French lady (translated into our base English). I bargained with the proprietor from $ 25 down to $ 20. Although I knew Lina would like the gif...

Keep On the Grass

Yesterday, I was out for my four mile run to Lake Grubb and back. On a narrow and busy (for semi-rural Lancaster County) stretch of road, an old dude sitting in a chair smoking a cigarette on his front porch shouted out to me as I huffed and puffed my way by: "Hey, this road is kind of dangerous. If you ever need to run on my grass to get out the way of a car, please do so." How refreshing. It reminded me that charity is usually small acts done consistently. Most people would tell me to get the hell off of their yard. He is telling me to get the hell on it.

Communion and 9-11

Today in church it was Communion Sunday. As Presbyterians, it is a monthly observance. It probably should be weekly. Not sure why it isn't besides the people maybe in pews getting antsy. Anyway, the Communion unleavened bread piece, more like a cracker, that I picked out of the Communion tray was elongated and jagged and it reminded me of one of those pieces of the World Trade Center sticking out of the rubble. Forgiveness itself is elongated (takes time) and jagged (a difficult process). People can be flippant about forgiveness. Until, they get hurt badly. It is appropriate to have the Communion bread be roughly hewn. For Christ's body was broken for us. I have had Communion bread before that was liked cubed Wonder Bread. Could be a metaphor for non-substantive teaching. All air and platitudes. No, the bread should be hard, rough, and looked like it was broken by force. How the bread has become a symbol of forgiveness rather than wrath is something Christians are called to em...