Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Robert Alter on the Story of David

From 92Y

The story of David, which runs from the middle of 1 Samuel to the end of the second chapter of 1 Kings, is one of the most complex and subtle narratives in all of ancient literature and also one of the most searching representations in the Western tradition of man as a political animal.




First Session: Thu, Mar 29, 2012, 6 pm - 9 pm
Venue: Classroom
Location: Lexington Avenue at 92nd St
Class Code: CW12T71026
Sessions: 1


Instructor: Robert AlterIn the class, we do close readings of a series of crucial passages in this story, focusing on how the formal resources of narrative art (deployment of dialogue, shifts in narrative point of view, the representation of thought and feeling) are used to delineate character, motive and political circumstance. Students are asked to bring to class The David Story: A Translation with Commentary by Robert Alter (W. W. Norton, paperback).


Saturday, November 19, 2011

Cornel West to Take a Job in New York


Cornel West Large
Cornel West, the peripatetic public intellectual and political activist, plans to finish out a teaching career that has taken him from Yale to Harvard to Princeton by moving back this coming summer to Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York, where he began as an assistant professor in 1977. 

Click here for the rest of the article by Laurie Goodstein, published on November 16, 2011

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Kevin Roose

The Unlikely Disciple: A Sinner's Semester at America's Holiest University
"It's midnight at Liberty University, and I'm kneeling on the floor of my dorm room, praying..."
From Booklist
Brown University student Roose didn’t think of himself as being particularly religious, yet he conceived the novel idea of enrolling at Liberty University, the school Jerry Falwell built, thereby transferring from a school “a notch or two above Sodom and Gomorrah” to the evangelical equivalent of Notre Dame or Brigham Young. His reasons were logical, though curious. To him, a semester at Liberty was like studying abroad. “Here, right in my time zone, was a culture more foreign to me than any European capital.” He tells his story entertainingly, as a matter of trying to blend in and not draw too much attention to himself. One hardened habit he had to break was cursing; he even bought a Christian self-help book to tame his tongue. Throughout his time at Liberty, he stayed level-headed, nuanced, keenly observant. He meant to find some gray in the black-and-white world of evangelicalism, and he learned a few things. His stint at Liberty hardly changed the world but did alter his way at looking at it. That’s a start. --June Sawyers

"Kevin Roose has produced a textured, intelligent, even sympathetic, account of his semester at Liberty University. He eschews caricature and the cheap shot in favor of keen observation and trenchant analysis. THE UNLIKELY DISCIPLE is a book of uncommon wisdom and insight. I recommend it with enthusiasm."--The Rev. Dr. Randall Balmer, Episcopal Priest and Professor of American Religious History at Barnard College, Columbia University

"Kevin Roose is a delightful writer, and this is a humane book. Read it and I predict you'll have less paranoia, more exposure to 'the other,' and a larger dose of Roose's generous and hopeful faith."--Brian McLaren, author of A New Kind of Christian, A Generous Orthodoxy, and Everything Must Change

"Keenly observed, funny, and compassionate. Kevin Roose parachutes us into a seldom-glimpsed and little understood pocket of America, then guides us through a story of religion and country more resonant than any of us could have imagined."--Robert Kurson, New York Times bestselling author of Shadow Divers and Crashing Through

"This is a brilliant book. Absolutely brilliant. Roose's wisdom, humanity, and love kept me going. And I laughed. A lot."-- Rob Bell, founding pastor of Mars Hill Bible Church and bestselling author of Velvet Elvis and Sex God

"What happens when a Brown undergrad goes undercover at Liberty University? If he's a writer as insightful and open-minded as Kevin Roose, he ends up learning as much about himself as he does about the evangelical Christians he lives with. The Unlikely Disciple provides a funny, compassionate, and revealing look at Jerry Falwell's 'Bible Boot Camp,' and the surprisingly diverse band of true believers who make it their home."--Tom Perrotta, New York Times bestselling author of Little Children and The Abstinence Teacher

"Hallelujah for Kevin Roose. This is a remarkable book. He takes us on a fascinating, funny, nuanced journey that doesn't condescend or make glib judgments. It's just what the culture wars need. If I didn't already have kids, I'd adopt Kevin."--A.J. Jacobs, New York Times bestselling author of The Year Of Living Biblically

Friday, May 30, 2008

James Martin

Insights on the True Self from Thomas Merton And Other Saints
by James Martin


Review:
This is a great little book with a big message. I loved the honest exposure of Thomas Merton and Henri Nouwen's personal lives. Although labelled a spirituality/prayer aid, it reads more like a self help book. Religious or not, it forces one to explore the meaning of life and profound insight that "God is calling us to be who we truly are."


For Further Reading:
Books by THOMAS MERTON
www.henrinouwen.org/


Tuesday, October 2, 2007

3:16 The Numbers of Hope
by Max Lucado

If 9/11 are the numbers of terror and despair, then 3:16 are the numbers of hope. Best selling author Max Lucado leads readers through a word-by-word study of John 3:16, the passage that he calls the "Hope Diamond" of scripture.



*Although, I never was a big fan of Lucado, his book has been receiving a lot of attention lately, so I checked out the website and thought it was worth sharing. http://www.maxlucado.com/