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Name: John
Country: United States
State: Kentucky
Metro: Louisville


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Member Since: 2/25/2004

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Friday, December 14, 2007

Best Books of 2007

Best Books of 2007

It's almost the end of the year and time for best of lists. Most of the books I read this year came out before 2007, including these 4.

1) Jesus and the Holocaust by Joel Marcus
One of the most moving reflections on evil that I've read.

2) Walk on: Life, Loss, Trust, and Other Realities by John Goldingay

3) Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller

4) Gilead by Marilynne Robinson

The last 3 books are more autobiographical(the last is fictional). I think I needed autobiographical reflection this year, so that I could see that I'm not crazy, or at least I'm not the only one who is.

BTW all these books are available at the Louisville Free Public Library.


Thursday, December 13, 2007

Thing I would Want to Take With Me If I Left Louisville

1) Def. Meijer's as mentioned in the last comments

2) The In-State Sports Rivalry. The UofL Cardinals and the UofK Wildcats(although I wish sports talk radio would talk about the national scene more often)

3) Used book stores that don't smell like Cat Urine(Half Price Books, Christian Book Nook---although the odor here is not all that pleasant.

4) Traffic----The fact that you can get anywhere in Louisville in a half hour or less(although I've never tried to get anywhere on 65 in rush hour or anywhere past 265). St. Louis is the only other large city I've lived in. I hate St. Louis traffic. Even when they spend years redesigning a highway, traffic flow doesn't improve.

5) Louisville Cops---maybe it's just me, but they don't seem like they are out to get people or trap normal everyday people. There were places in St. Louis where you had to be paranoid about getting pulled over. Again maybe I just don't go to those places in Louisville. Now that I think of it, I've heard that 264 might be a place to be paranoid. But I'm not on 264 that much.

6) My Church...After seminary I didn't know if I would ever enjoy church again. Thankfully I there is a theologically serious, non-Calvinist, worshipful, welcoming, not-take-yourself-too-seriously church, and I go to it.

7)As far as restaurants, I can't think of any that I would take from Louisville that aren't in other cities. I do like the non food court Chick-Fil-A's, but I'm sure other cities have those as well. I don't remember these in St. Louis. I'm sure they are there by now. They might have been there when I was, but I don't remember one.


Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Things I would Transport From Missouri

I lived in MO for 19 years. I lived in St. Louis for 4. If it were up to me the following things would be in Louisville.

1)Lion's Choice

2) Chevy's

3) Imo's

4) Levee Landing(SE Missouri)

I'm sure there are things other than restaurants that I wish were in Louisville, but can't think of one at the moment.


Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Place vs. City

Got the latest Covenant Theological Seminary magazine in the mail today. There was an interesting Alumni Profile called "When Grace Comes to Town". It's about a pastor in Washington D.C. I really appreciated two paragraphs in the article.

"Glenn prefers emphasizing place instead of city because sometimes the call to love the city is wrongly elevated as a more righteous thing than to love a small town. "Cities pump me up, " Glenn explains. "They are strategic and important, but Jesus used a bunch of fisherman from a small town. He was from a small town. Anytime we try to pin God down with our view of strategic, He tends to blow away our expectations.

"I think the deeper issue is taking space and place more seriously. We are all prone to make our own idols. For city pastors, it can be idolatry of city ministry. As believers, we need to step back any time we start finding a form of righteousness in anything other than Christ. And we need to develop a more consistent view of place. The late Francis Schaeffer, a theologian and pastor, talked about no little people and no little places--and that's the greater value that people need to learn."

On a related note Eugune Peterson says in his book The Jesus Way, "what I want to insist upon in this is that Jesus did not work out his way of life in the intensely personal and God-oriented small towns of Capernaum, Chorazin, and Bethsaida simply because he didn't know any better, because that was the only world he knew. No, he chose them. He had equal access to Sepphoris and Tiberias and, over the coast, Caesarea, where the Herod way set the tone for how the people intended to live." page 206

And this small town boy (populations 3,000 growing up) said "Amen" and another "Amen" just in case the first one came out like a whisper.

Speaking of speaking up. I saw a bumper sticker a month or so ago that really helped me (that's saying a lot for a bumper sticker). Somewhere in the last few years I gained a fear of public speaking. I never was real comfortable with it, but the fear and nervousness grew. Anyway, the bumper sticker said "Speak your mind, even if your voice shakes". I have no idea what the background of the saying is, but it was encouraging to me.


Monday, August 13, 2007

posterconcord

 

This next one is just humor. I can be 3 times more of a jerk than most Calvinists I know (emphasis mine :) :) )

 

postercage

 



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