![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() Fleming Rutledge is a preacher and teacher known throughout the US, Canada, and parts of the UK. She is the author of eight books, all from Eerdmans Publishing. Her most recent book, The Crucifixion: Understanding the Death of Jesus Christ, is the product of the work of a lifetime and is being described as a new classic on the subject. One of the first women to be ordained to the priesthood of the Episcopal Church, she served for fourteen years on the clergy staff at Grace Church on Lower Broadway at Tenth Street, New York City. Fleming and her husband celebrated their 50th anniversary in 2009 and have two daughters and two grandchildren. She is a native of Franklin, Virginia.
|
Discerning God's Work In The World: Tips From The Times For Preachers: December 2007Wednesday, December 19, 2007David Brooks supports a biblical anthropologyRepublicans and other political conservatives generally tend to divide up the human race into categories-- good and evil, deserving and undeserving. There are exceptions to that, of course. The most notable one in a while showed up in David Brooks' column yesterday (Brooks is often described as "the liberals' favorite conservative"). His column has been widely emailed, probably because of the nice things Brooks says about Barack Obama. But that is not the reason for its appearance in "Tips" today.First Brooks says that Hillary has been a much better Senator than Obama. But, he goes on, they are running for president, and the presidency requires a different set of qualities. Presidents are buffeted by sycophancy, criticism and betrayal. They must improvise amid a thousand fluid crises. They’re isolated and also exposed, puffed up on the outside and hollowed out within. With the presidency, character and self-knowledge matter more than even experience. There are reasons to think that, among Democrats, Obama is better prepared for this madness. Brooks goes on at some length to explain why. Obama is an inner-directed man in a profession filled with insecure outer-directed ones....I’ve been poring over press clippings from Obama’s past, looking for inconsistencies and flip-flops. There are virtually none....He has a core, and was able to maintain his equipoise, for example, even as his campaign stagnated through the summer and fall. Moreover, he has a worldview that precedes political positions. Some Americans (Republican or Democrat) believe that the country’s future can only be shaped through a remorseless civil war between the children of light and the children of darkness.... But Obama does not ratchet up hostilities; he restrains them. He does not lash out at perceived enemies, but is aloof from them. In the course of this struggle to discover who he is, Obama clearly learned from the strain of pessimistic optimism that stretches back from Martin Luther King Jr. to Abraham Lincoln. This is a worldview that detests anger as a motivating force, that distrusts easy dichotomies between the parties of good and evil, believing instead that the crucial dichotomy runs between the good and bad within each individual. This is an amazing insight coming from a political columnist. This perception lies at the heart of the Christian view of humanity. We are all equally undeserving before God; "there but for the grace of God go I." Those who seek to know the mind of Christ will work at understanding those who seem alien to us. The Christian view of man requires humility and a capacity to observe others as God sees them in Christ, not as we would like to see them--neither as saints nor as sinners, but a "mingled yarn" of both (Shakespeare). Brooks concludes: ...In her outstanding New Yorker [magazine] profile, Larissa MacFarquhar notes that Obama does not perceive politics as a series of battles but as a series of systemic problems to be addressed. He pursues liberal ends in gradualist, temperamentally conservative ways. ...The presidency is a bacterium. It finds the open wounds in the people who hold it. It infects them, and the resulting scandals infect the presidency and the country. The person with the fewest wounds usually does best in the White House, and is best for the country. Isn't that remarkable?
Permanent Link for this Post: http://tips.generousorthodoxy.org/2007/12/david-brooks-supports-biblical.htm Saturday, December 15, 2007Rich sermon material for ChristmasThe Spectator from England asked a wide range of leading figures if they believed in the Virgin Birth. Their answers are most absorbing! (Note that the name comes first, then the quote, so you won't get mixed up.) For us weary Anglicans, the response (presumably tongue-in-cheek, but maybe not!) of James Delingpole is both hilarious and telling. There'll always be an England (Church of). But will there always be lively faith?http://www.spectator.co.uk/print/the-magazine/features/400066/do-you-believe-in-the-virgin-birth.thtml
Permanent Link for this Post: http://tips.generousorthodoxy.org/2007/12/rich-sermon-material-for-christmas.htm Friday, December 14, 2007Violent NightHas everybody seen the cover of the December 3 New Yorker magazine? Great sermon illustration for Advent and even for Christmas. At first glance the illustration by Christoph Niemann looks a bit like a Christmas card, a picture perhaps of the Wise Men coming across the yellow desert with a sky of night-blue, a lot of stars and one big star...and then you see what it really is, a helicopter in the night, illuminated from below as if by fires or some sort of explosion. Two gunners hold their positions on each side of the copter, looking grim. The pilot looks even more grim. And inside the copter, a cowering passenger--Santa Claus, looking more like a prisoner being carried off for "rendition" than a messenger of cheer being protected."Into such a world as this," the carol ["See, amid the winter snow"] says, our infant King and Saviour came. Into just such a world as this. And what might our Lord and God be doing in this world right now? One thing, surely, is NRCAT, the National Religious Campaign Against Torture. You can go to www.tortureisamoralissue.org
Permanent Link for this Post: http://tips.generousorthodoxy.org/2007/12/violent-night.htm Sunday, December 02, 2007His light shines onIn my Rumination today I referred to the "little night lights" of Advent. Here is a notable one:http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/02/nyregion/02towns.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
Permanent Link for this Post: http://tips.generousorthodoxy.org/2007/12/his-light-shines-on.htm Saturday, December 01, 2007A tip on buying books--not from the TimesIf any clergy out there are thinking of buying books from Eerdmans Publishing, take heed of what a friend wrote me about ordering my latest one:Just a quick note, here, to let you know that I received my copy of Not Ashamed of the Gospel today. (I ended up ordering directly from Eerdmans. You were not kidding about the fine quality of their customer service. With my clergy discount and no charge for shipping, it was notably less than Amazon -- and they shipped by FedEx.)
Permanent Link for this Post: http://tips.generousorthodoxy.org/2007/12/tip-on-buying-books-not-from-times.htm |
|
![]() |