Lessons for Running, Lessons for Life (#RunnersWorld)

I love “Runner’s World.”  Even though I’m not as serious as many of the runners they talk about and write for, it always inspires me and reminds me that any running–any distance, any pace–is good running; and there always are ways to improve and things to learn, whether you are a beginner or an elite…… Continue reading Lessons for Running, Lessons for Life (#RunnersWorld)

Seeing the "Strangeness" of Others, and taking off the Binoculars

Like most of us, my thoughts have been consumed this past week by racism, violence, grief and frustration.  It has been a terrible week of tragedy–Sterling, Castile, and the police officers in Dallas–terrible not because fatal shootings are so rare in this country (they most certainly are not), but terrible because of the shocking nature and scale of them. As…… Continue reading Seeing the "Strangeness" of Others, and taking off the Binoculars

Insights from an ATS Panel on "Theological Education after Ferguson"

I am here at the Association of Theological School Biennial, and we are in the middle of a great panel on “Theological Education after Ferguson.”  (Did you know Ferguson is basically a suburb of St. Louis?  I didn’t.)  The moderator is NPR host Michel Martin, and the panelists are: Leah Gunning Francis, dean at Christian…… Continue reading Insights from an ATS Panel on "Theological Education after Ferguson"

Wasting Time for God

H. L. Mencken once defined Puritanism as “the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.”  In her book, “Walking a Literary Labyrinth,” Nancy Malone uses this quote to remind us how so many Christians associate religion and spirituality with “asceticism, duty, hard work, suffering, earnestness of purpose, solemnity, and only occasionally with gladness, delight.”Malone…… Continue reading Wasting Time for God

Two Spirits of Liberty: Balancing Courage and Tolerance

The May 13th issue of The Chronicle Review had a very interesting piece titled “Two Spirits of Liberty.”  The article discussed two very, very different personalities:  firebrand author and social critic Christopher Hitchens, and the liberal philosopher Isaiah Berlin.  It begins with the excoriation Hitchens made of Berlin after his death, arguing that Berlin was “simultaneously pompous…… Continue reading Two Spirits of Liberty: Balancing Courage and Tolerance