Showing posts with label Osheta Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Osheta Moore. Show all posts

Monday, May 19, 2014

Shepherding in the Modern Age and the Best Things You'll Read All Week

by Ben Howard and Sebastian Faust

Reads of the Week


1) Upward Mobility by D.L. Mayfield


"When you want to tell the whole story of your life, you find few takers. We want either communists or patriots, sell-outs or self-righteous. We are seeking either blessing or lament, despair or hope, faith or faithlessness. But I have always had everything, everything in spades. Hope and doubt and fear and faith. I accept good gifts from God and I feel angry that others don’t get the same."


2) The Origins of "Privilege" by Joshua Rothman


"But what I believe is that everybody has a combination of unearned advantage and unearned disadvantage in life. Whiteness is just one of the many variables that one can look at, starting with, for example, one’s place in the birth order, or your body type, or your athletic abilities, or your relationship to written and spoken words, or your parents’ places of origin, or your parents’ relationship to education and to English, or what is projected onto your religious or ethnic background. We’re all put ahead and behind by the circumstances of our birth. We all have a combination of both. And it changes minute by minute, depending on where we are, who we’re seeing, or what we’re required to do."


3) Don't Let Jesus Trump the Bible by Nate Pyle


"Everyone picks and chooses which parts of the Bible they listen to and which parts they ignore. Everyone gives some attributes of God’s character more weight than other parts of his character. We naturally develop a Christianity that challenges us in the places we are comfortable being challenged in while dismissing, sometimes self-consciously, the words of God that challenge us in the areas we should be challenged in."


4) Finding God in Exodus International by Ben Moberg


"In the aftermath of the Exodus shut down, I wrote: 'I am dragging my feet toward forgiveness,' and as time has gone on, I have covered so much ground. In the freedom of Christ, I have learned grace, I have learned that I am enough, and part of this walk means making peace with those who implied I never was. And in my process, I made a radical decision. I decided to open my eyes and look for grace. And to my surprise, in the darkness, I found the face of God. This is the truth I am unearthing about him: He is always on the job. Even in the darkness."


5) Before You Get Off This Bathroom Floor by Osheta Moore


"Before you get off this bathroom floor, I want to send you out with one more piece of advice.  You are braver than you know, yes.  You are selflessly stunning, yes it’s true.  You will get through this—of that I’m sure.  But one more thing you need to know: even though you don’t have a husband and even though your parents may disown you, you are not alone. When you step out into the world with your round belly and ring-less left hand, remember this: there is a God who sees us and deeply, deeply loves us."


Honorable Mention


In Which I Am Learning to Obey the Sadness by Sarah Bessey


It's Not About Conforming to the World by Rachel Held Evans


Not All Pastor's Kids Are Christian. Sorry. by Jamie Wright


This Is the Sunday School Pagaent I'd Love to See: Psalm 82 by Fred Clark

Tweets of the Week

"And when you gaze long into a selfie the selfie also gazes into you." - @JohnLuce


"
I'm Johnny Knoxville and this is Jackass *proceeds to live a sincere and selfless life*" - @mattytalks


"
I agree, it's hard to explain Michael Sam's situation to a child. The nuances of ideal defensive roles and speed/size makeup are complex." - @harrypav


On Pop Theology Week in Review


Eight Shades of Crayola by Rebekah Mays


"As a child, I used to spend hours coloring paper doilies. I’d click my Lion King cassette into the tape player and line my markers up, single-file."


Tech Is Not Your Enemy by Christopher Hutton


"My phone and I have a symbiotic relationship. It feeds me information, and in return, I keep its batteries charged."


An Apology for the Post-Egyptian Ownership of Domesticated Felines by JaneAnn Kenney


"The subject of domesticated felines (for the purposes of this essay, hereafter called 'cats' with wavering regularity) is suspiciously lacking in the Jewish and Christian canons."


On TV Shows and Process by Ben Howard


"I know I’ve been good at hiding it, but I must confess that I’ve been in mourning this week. I lost something that was very close to me, something that brought me joy and laughter, something that I regarded it as a friend for the last five years."


On Abominations by Sebastian Faust


"In my last podcast interview with Professor Baruch Levine on the text of Leviticus, I lamented that the prohibition on homosexuality is perhaps the text’s best-known passage within popular Christianity."


Song of the Week


"The Truth is a Cave" by The Oh Hello's




Peace,
Ben

You can follow On Pop Theology on Twitter @OnPopTheology or like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/OnPopTheology. If you'd like to help us pay the bills, you can donate via the button on the right of the screen.

Contact us at onpoptheology [at] gmail.com.  


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Sunday, March 23, 2014

Irony American Style and the Best Things You'll Read All Week

by Ben Howard and Sebastian Faust

Reads of the Week

1) Speaking Fear, Praying Shalom by Osheta Moore

"I don’t want to tell the truth that his mama is afraid. This Black Mama is afraid when I roll deep with my three kiddos in the affluent parts of Cambridge. I’m afraid of sideways glances and watchful eyes. I don’t want to tell my kids that they must been seen and not heard, not because their little voices don’t matter, but because the sound of our invasion invokes fear or annoyance. I don’t want to tell them that today, I read another story of racial profiling resulting in another black boy’s life cut short, and I keep seeing my oldest son’s face replace the victim’s face."

2) Urban Church Planting Plantations by Christena Cleveland

"This is happening all over the U.S. In Seattle, Minneapolis, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Boston , Charlotte and many other cities, I’ve seen predominantly white, wealthy suburban churches take an imperialistic glance at the urban center, decide that they are called to “take back the city” and then proceed with all of the honor and finesse of a military invasion."

3) Sermon on Earthly Things, Wombs and the Resurrection of the Dead by Nadia Bolz-Weber

"And understanding the heavenly within the earthly, the transcendent within the mundane, is not an intellectual logical, reason-based experience. You can’t make the gospel make sense by using your head.  You have to use your hands.  And eyes, and mouth, and ears and nose. Because the kingdom of heaven, as Jesus says, is At HAND, reach out and touch it, see it, eat it, feel it. In other words, take in the glory of God in the common, unexpected and totally crazy ways in which our Lord Jesus Christ still seems to be redeeming us."

4) Cheese Ball Rosary by Tamara Lunardo

"I explained my anti-death stance to my 11-year-old last night while I boiled pasta for our dinner: 'The problem with death is it takes away all hope for life.' I talked about the possibility for redemption and healing while a person was still living; I talked about God being God and us, definitely not. I talked, impassioned and impotent, and the spaghetti turned limp from the boil."

5) A Voice in the Desert by Jamie Wright

"Into the desert, I carried my own. A dry spirit. An empty cup. An impressive expanse of cracked and broken foundation. Unknown and unlovely. The tiniest signs of life, waiting for rain. Waiting for water. Thirsty and wanting. No one could have known how lost I'd been when we arrived. No one could have known how small I felt. No one knew, as I climbed down the wobbly ladder, that doubt was shaking my soul. And then a steady hand reached up and took mine."

Honorable Mention

When the Abused Becomes the Abuser by Elizabeth Esther

When Christian Feminism is Anti-Judaic by Krista Dalton

In Which I Grow Wings by Amanda Williams

Tweets of the Week

"Oh, your bracket is still perfect? What about your parents' marriage, tough guy?" - @celebrityhottub

"Frantically not writing a blog post about Mark Driscoll. It's going to be a good one, y'all. And by good I mean nonexistent." - @TheAlanNoble

"The horrifying realization that if everything goes according to plan, you spend most of your life old." - @laureneoneal

On Pop Theology Week in Review

On Pop Theology Podcast: Episode 53 - Christ and Pop Culture w/ Alan Noble


"This week I talk with Alan Noble, the managing editor of the website and online magazine Christ and Pop Culture."


Fat Thursday by Lyndsey Graves


"'Cute joke,' I thought. 'Weird that someone happened to bring donuts on the same day the boss bought us lunch.'"


Pastors on Pedestals by Carly Gelsinger



"The children of an evangelical megachurch are given pictures of their pastor to color with crayons, a picture demanding their loyalty to him as their fearless, visionary leader."


What A Preacher Looks Like by JaneAnn Kenney



"On the last night of February, I stood before my classmates. I shivered as I reminded myself once again, 'A preacher looks exactly how I look tonight, because tonight I am a preacher.'"


Song of the Week

"Coming of Age" by Foster the People



Peace,
Ben

You can follow On Pop Theology on Twitter @OnPopTheology or like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/OnPopTheology. If you'd like to help us pay the bills, you can donate via the button on the right of the screen.

Contact us at onpoptheology [at] gmail.com.  


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