Taking some advice from Dr. Leo Marvin, I have just returned from a little vacation.
Well, not really. I didn't go anywhere. And, I had to work-- but Kate had taken some time off months ago thinking that we were going to Florida this week to visit some friends. That couldn't happen for a few reasons, and given some other circumstances in our lives, we just kind of decided to lay low for a few days. I read a ton, Kate fixed our espresso machine (which is nice for lots of reasons, not the least of which being I don't have to go to work to get a drink anymore!) and we watched a couple of good movies:
- Dark Days | Without question the most moving documentary I have ever seen. The film, by Marc Singer, chronicles the lives of a homeless community living in shanties in a train tunnel underneath Manhattan. Everything about the film is superb! From the black and white 16mm format (I think), to the fact that the film crew was comprised entirely of members from within this community, to the reality that the film was borne for Singer not out of a desire for accolades (though he racked in a ton of them), but by his life within this community. I have never thought of an "incarnational" documentary before, but this film was not the result of Singer's desire to make a documentary. Instead, the documentary materialized out of Singer's relationship with this community. In fact, what is perhaps most moving about the film is that Singer paid for it completely himself. And it wound up costing him everything-- Singer himself joined the community, by necessity, for a period of 15 months. The passion behind this is overwhelming to me. Here is a man who is willing to go live among a people to hear their story; and then becomes so impassioned by their story, that he will loose everything for the sake of telling it. Though you can rent this film from Netflix, I recommend you try to find a copy for yourself. Amazon currently lists 6 used copies for sale. (I'm on the hunt for a copy myself, after I return Joe's copy to him). I don't know why i feel like I could get obsessed with this thing like I did with Into Thin Air, but there is something about it that awakens some deep things inside of me.
- The Incredibles (this one is not link worthy in my opinion. Sorry if you loved it. It may well have been my mood...)
- Sideways | Katie did not see this one with me (and I'm sure we're both glad about that). It was one of the best films I have seen in a long time (again, could have been my mood...). Paul Giamatti is absolutely brilliant, and i enjoyed experiencing the world through his eyes. Not personally being a wine drinker, it was engaging to see Giamatti virtually process the whole of his dysfunction laden life through his own passion for wine. I thought that this metaphor was used well, and rarely if ever was the imagery overplayed (though that is ironic, given that the entire film takes place in Napa Valley!). Emotionally, the film engaged some of the same feelings that Sofia Coppola's Lost in Translation did, though the films are cut from two very different cloths. Though Thomas Haden Church's character (Jack) provided an excellent foil for Giamatti (Miles), I still haven't decided if I thought his acting was brilliant, or borderline annoying.
I also took some time to pick up and read some new books:
- I'm almost finished with Blink.
- I don't care if you're a Simpsons fan or not, I think anyone who cares about the Gospel as it speaks to Western culture (The United States especially) should familiarize themselves with Planet Simpson. I'm not saying you have to buy it or read it in its entirety, but Ch 6 "Marge Knows Best", provides some of the most insightful analysis of the "religion" of pop culture that I have ever read.
- Am anxious to dig in to some of the chapters in The Paradoxes of Paul
- Just picked up Bauckham's Bible and Mission: Christian Witness in a Postmodern World and I look forward to spending some time on Saturday working through it. The book is a compilation of lectures that Bauckham delivered at two different universities (one near London, and one in Ethiopia). Bauckham contends that the lectures grew out of his reflections on "Mission as a Hermeneutic for Scriptural Interpretation" (a lecture he delivered at Cambridge in 1999). The chapters deal with issues sweeping from the changing cultural and philosophical climate after 9/11 to Abraham ("From the One to the Many)-- climaxing with the final chapter, "Witness to the Truth in a Postmodern and Globalized World". As I'm trying to gain a solid footing inside mission and hermeneutics (I'm about two steps away from abandoning the word 'missional' by the way-- more on that later), I'm hoping that this book will prove more helpful than Brownson's, which I read over Christmas.
Alright, enough rambling. I have also had a ton of thoughts swirling in my head (many as a result from what I share above, and many as a result from other issues I'm experiencing) dealing with ecclesiology, some issues of church polity that I'm being forced to re-think, and "IT"-- that I hope to think on a bit further and post over the next few days. But, who knows.
[NOW PLAYING]
Am I Wrong from the album "Martin Scorsese Presents" by
Keb Mo