Saturday
22Nov

Aristotle In Our TIme

Just a quick note on this year's series of the BBC Radio 4 show In Our Time with Melvin Bragg. A few weeks ago they discussed Aristotle's Politics which provided a brilliant little summary of the issues and influence of this work. As well, just this week they discuss the Baroque. In any case, they offer a podcast available here to download the shows as Mp3s.


Friday
21Nov

The Living among the Dead

I was reading through Luke and John's account of the resurrection of Christ the other day. A few things really struck me. I am going to leave behind the critical questions about the differences between the accounts, or their historicity. Rather, I want to approach the story in terms of the question it itself asks about human encounters with the divine.

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Wednesday
05Nov

The End of the Beginning

This morning a man ran through the parking lot of my block of flats screaming, "Obama!!!"

You have to understand, this is Manchester, England, a city with one of the most rebel ridden attitudes in Europe. For the past five years while living here anti-American sentiment has grown, year on year, such that it was increasingly obvious to "everyone" that America has become a totalitarian empire and its president a war criminal (a statement painted onto the wall of one of the University buildings for the first few years we were here).

Last night, however, I could have been in any number of US cities where their own President elect was being applauded and embraced. For the first time in my foreign expatriate life, people all over the world were celebrating this election event. In my parking lot it seemed as though a spontaneous exclamation point exploded into the night sky. The world celebrated America again.

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Sunday
02Nov

Quantum of Solace

A couple of years ago, James Bond received a make over in Casino Royale. One of the chief aspects of his revision was the manner in which his previously promiscuous and misogynist attitudes towards women were killed off and tortured out of him (for a brief reflection on the new gender representation of Bond in this film click here). I went to see the latest installment of Bond to see just how his new masculinity would continue in Quantum of Solace.

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Thursday
30Oct

Thank God for Reading Week

This semester has been crazy for me. I am teaching three courses: one on the sources and norms of Christian theology; one on 19th century Christology; and another tutorial seminar on approaches to the study of religion more generally. In any case, I've gotten around to posting short blurbs about what I am teaching as well as the mp3 files of the lectures themselves which can be found in the teaching pages on this site. They are a bit rough in places, but nonetheless will hopefully give students a place to catch up a bit before their final exams in January after the Christmas break.

This week we have a reading week which is a chance for me to grade some essays and try and get ahead a little bit for the rest of the semester. Before then though, I must have a sip of Lagavulin, an Islay scotch, which I've had hidden away in the cupboard for some time now.


Thursday
21Aug

One University Under God?

Came across this article from a few years ago in the The Chronicle of Higher Education, a news source which hosts contributions from around the academe. Here, Stanley Fish gives his take on the return and rise of religion in the public sphere. It's an interesting comment if not lament on the importance and popularity of religious studies in universities today as the old boundaries between church and state, secular and sacred are eroded. In some ways 911 marked a crucial stage in this change, but I think it fair to say that it was just that, a mark. Fish argues that the role and perception of religion in western liberal democracies began to change decades earlier. After noting the work of Charles Taylor, Stanley Hauerwas and Alasdair MacIntyre Fish offers this closing comment:

To the extent that liberalism's structures have been undermined or at least shaken by these analyses, the perspicuousness and usefulness of distinctions long assumed -- reason as opposed to faith, evidence as opposed to revelation, inquiry as opposed to obedience, truth as opposed to belief -- have been called into question. And finally (and to return to where we began), the geopolitical events of the past decade and of the past three years especially have re-alerted us to the fact (we always knew it, but as academics we were able to cabin it) that hundreds of millions of people in the world do not observe the distinction between the private and the public or between belief and knowledge, and that it is no longer possible for us to regard such persons as quaintly pre-modern or as the needy recipients of our saving (an ironic word) wisdom...

... When Jacques Derrida died I was called by a reporter who wanted know what would succeed high theory and the triumvirate of race, gender, and class as the center of intellectual energy in the academy. I answered like a shot: religion.

Monday
18Aug

Volf vs. Bell

A friend brought a debate between Miroslav Volf and Daniel Bell to my attention this week. Having read through the respective comments they both put forward in volume 19 of Modern Theology, I thought I would post my comment here as well. This is not a detailed point by point account, but more a meta comment about what I perceive to be the nature of the debate.

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