The return
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I started this blog as an unofficial vehicle for interesting statistical
information. When I retired, I let it lie fallow. I'm going to post here
period...
Gender Wage Gap By State - Census Bureau
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If you need a reason to start a business, the gender wage gap may be a
factor. The Census has created a new visualization of the disparity between
male ...
It takes a lot of practice
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A friend asked: “If you had the chance to ask three different people
(living or dead, famous or not) ONE question… who and what would you ask?”
The one req...
Faded road markings cause concern
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Q: Can someone at New York state tell me why the DOT doesn’t use a better
reflective paint when the lines are painted? It appears the paint used has
no ref...
Goodbye but NOT farewell
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Using the words which Roger used in his intro for the last post of round
20--- Z
*With joy, we'll dream away each sorrow, With love we'll live for each...
Alan Moore's Twilight Proposal
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Introduction by Alan David Doane:
Honestly I didn't intend the irony, but this week's FMF, looking at Alan
Moore's never-published Twilight proposal, also ...
The Best Films of 2023
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Martin Scorsese, left, Lily Gladstone, and Robert DeNiro all received Oscar
nods for *Killers of the Flower Moon*. Some say Leo DiCaprio, right, was
snubbe...
Getting Ready To Die
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Getting Ready To DieNo, as far as I know, it’s not imminent, but you never
know. An awful lot of people are checking out in the seventh decade that I
just ...
Petitioning season cut short
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Political "petitioning season" for U.S. Congress, NYS Assembly, NYS Senate,
and a host of other positions, was cut short. Like all the other things
that...
Eagle Scout Project
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Rutherford neighbor Krish Soni is getting started on his Eagle Scout
project on Saturday, October 26. He will be labeling storm drains in the
neighborhood ...
We’re Off On An Adventure!
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Just now, Marge and I are doing a bit of adventuring. The next adventure
will include a whole new online reality and presence for me and my work…
See you i...
It Changes
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Living with Lupus and Fibro and Asthma is often not so much 'one day at a
time.' It is much more like one fifteen minute segment of time - at at time.
This...
Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye…
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Well, kids, this is it. I’m leaving first thing tomorrow morning. My visits
home will be few and far between, and when they happen, they’ll be
exclusive...
Spring is here?
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As far as the pro peloton goes, it’s on! I watched the Tour of Flanders
today, and it was one of the best races I’ve ever seen. “Looking back, you
get a b...
Modern Types-Ronald Searle,Geoffrey Gorer
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With the recent attention given to Ronald Searle's 90th birthday and new
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The book is titled Modern Ty...
Weekend Diversion: 1984, Part 17
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On November 17, 1984, a new song went to Number One, and it was one of my
favourites of the year. This week 40 years ago, *”Wake Me Up Before You
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Well, this is a first!
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I’ve survived my entire life (so far) without a significant broken bone
that had to be casted. I did have a broken bone in my foot that required a
wooden s...
in (one's) stride, at (a) pace
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This post is inspired by a poll that Ellen Jovin, aka the Grammar Table,
ran in September. Before I get into that, let me point out that there is a
Kicks...
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Saturday November 2nd.
The viewings on the Saturday went well. Monday morning the Estate Agents
rang to say there had been 2 offers. We went for the one...
Another podcast guest spot
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This past Saturday (my time), I was a guest host with Daniel Brewer on the
podcast he does with Adam Burns, The Gay Mix (aka “The Mix”) podcast. That
episo...
Our Blood – Not Theirs
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With the caveat that I’m intentionally being a bit provocative, I’d like to
say that… Regarding the well being of this country, violence might be
necessary...
1, 2, 3, 4: You Can Count On It
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Up the stairs, count the steps1, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3…Crap, it didn’t
come out even, it’s eleven But 1-2-3-4-1/ 2 /3-4-1-2-3 will have to do; the
middl...
This is The End (a follow-up)
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I wrote yesterday about my possibly retiring this space in favor of
migrating all of my blogging to ForgottenStars.net, because of Reasons. I
am now pul...
18 and life, you got it
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It's the 18th of April, and that means it's the anniversary of Mia's
accident - 18 (!!!!) years ago today, we were in the crash that damaged her
brain ir...
Sunday Round-up
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Wash your mouth out
In these ultra-hygienic days, Russian artist Yulia Popova has come into her
own by making models of foodstuffs out of soap. What makes y...
I believe ..Religion
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Written by the Rev.Jeannette van der Veen-Bosgra
I believe in a world where all people can live in happiness,
and that I too have a duty to create such a wo...
Tough Day
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A few weeks ago, I turned 38, and I am still under the scrutiny of
strangers in public. One would think that once you're out of grade school,
middle school...
Change
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Group Reading “The only thing we have in this world that is utterly and
intrinsically ours is our integrity.” ~ Mira Grant One- to find the
universal eleme...
Retro Y'all!
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Still jumping. In place, mostly. Someone should do one of these rap battle
style brags about being a junker. Seriously. Big sale at the Peddlers Mall
today.
X is for XMAS
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*MERRY CHRISTMAS (XMAS) EVERYONE!*
I thought I'd put a link to the top 100 Xmas songs for 2017 so you could
click on it and play anything your heart d...
The Myth Memers
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One of those little questionnaires just to dip a toe back into blogging.
Took this from Chris Hull's Facebook.
1. Do you make your bed? No.
2. The first c...
Now available in paperback!
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*Sharp: A Memoir*. William Morrow & Co, 2012. Print.
We lost 4 members of the Guilford High School Class of 84: David Ciardello,
Richard Eaton, Ronnie Burn...
No parallel
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Get a good look at these: Whence they came: After seeing that incredible
glow-in-the-dark Zac Posen dress that Claire Danes wore at the 2016 Met
Gala, Lori...
ABC Wednesday: The Importance of Being Bored
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When I was growing up, you being bored was your problem that you were
responsible to rectify. As children we learned never to be bored- or at
least not t...
Monday PSA: The Pioneer of the Pole
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Click on the image for the full ad As promised, the second of two
Antarctica themed PSAs. Today: “Pioneer of the Pole.” Just like last week,
this is from D...
Final Act
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Dear Followers of Berowne's "Savage Reflections." I'm very sorry to have to
inform you that my father, John Savage, passed away on December 26, just a
week...
Friday Post - Your services are no longer needed
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Heads will roll
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Age is a State of Mind, Somewhere Near Nebraska
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What a year it has been! After surviving the odometer rolling over to 40, I
had a year of sabbatical. That gave me plenty of time to think about my mid-lif...
The End of a Long Day
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You know those days where all you really want to do is change into your
pajamas and curl up on the couch while you decide which comfort food would
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#Freaking Out -AND!
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Calmly completely freaking out about my move. AND! I quit smoking. I feel
this qualifies me to have an opinion on how to do it.
So I am calmly completel...
Gaze Upon My Works and Snicker, Part 53.
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[image: DP700-F365028]
Another quickie sketch at work, because I wanted to draw Pandora A in a
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Superheroes I Love #10: Deathlok
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Every red-blooded boy loves cyborgs. Half-man, half-robot, what’s not to
love? The Marvel Comics character Deathlok is a bit on the obscure side,
but debut...
The Scream
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“My son’s preschool picture. And he still hates them.” (submitted by Denise)
The post The Scream appeared first on AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com.
Episode 326: The WGA Strike
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One by one, Ken goes over the many issues the WGA is fighting for and why
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Rex Smith: Free speech, pulpit speech and tax laws
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Each school day when I was a little boy began with the Pledge of
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Mixed Results for The Rules
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Well that was an “interesting” Emmy Awards. There were enough surprises to
make the alteration of the voting rules to a single round plurality rather
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Mom Has Stacked Dinner Party Roster
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GOLDEN, CO—Their eyes widening in amazement as the 43-year-old rattled off
the names of heavy hitter after heavy hitter, impressed members of the
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Last week’s 10 wins leaves me with 153 wins. Weak season. Sorry. Week 17
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Obama’s speech coverage on NPR
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What were the people at NPR thinking? The coverage of President Obama’s
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RFK Jr. once said Trump is too stupid to be Hitler
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In 2016, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. crapped all over Donald Trump and his
supporters, agreeing that they were racist idiots too stupid to succeed,
according t...
Ellsberg’s “Desperate Proposal Pattern”
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by Thomas Reifer At the height of global demonstrations against Israel’s
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2PP132 – 16 May 2020
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This episode was delayed, yet again, because Arthur didn’t have enough
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This article originally appeared in the 10.29.15 issue of Metroland.
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Sunday, July 19, 2009
Theology QUESTION
I've only been a Presbyterian for about seven years. So I know far less about John Calvin than I do about John Wesley, a founder of Methodism. Calvin, who founded a reformed movement that is represented in the United States by, among other denominations, the Presbyterian church, was born 500 years ago on July 10. One of the most difficult concepts for me is this:
John Calvin: On Double Predestination
In conformity, therefore, to the clear doctrine of the Scripture, we assert, that by an eternal and immutable counsel, God has once for all determined, both whom he would admit to salvation, and whom he would condemn to destruction. We affirm that this counsel, as far as concerns the elect, is founded on his gratuitous mercy, totally irrespective of human merit; but that to those whom he devotes to condemnation, the gate of life is closed by a just and irreprehensible, but incomprehensible, judgment. In the elect, we consider calling as an evidence of election, and justification as another token of its manifestation, till they arrive in glory, which constitutes its completion. As God seals his elect by vocation and justification, so by excluding the reprobate from the knowledge of his name and the sanctification of his Spirit, he affords an indication of the judgement that awaits them.
In other words, if I understand it correctly, some are born to be saints going to heaven, and others sinners going to hell. As one theologian friend of mine opined, "And you may THINK you have free will, but it was predestined that you think that."
Am I a bad Presbyterian because I'm a "free will guy? Where do you stand on this?
*** BTW, I went to the Pearls Before Swine website, having seen the strip in the newspaper, and the SITE provided the specific URL for the graphic. Cool.
This sort of silliness is why, although I certainly value a spiritual component in life, I despise "organized" religion. Convoluted excuases to trying to determine who is "elect" and who is condemned, and how one can have "free-will" without actually having free-will. I suppose that if you're an All-Powerful Deity you can do whatever you want without my say-so, but it seems to me a ridiculous way to manage the human species.
Sounds a bit elitist to me, but I don't really know much about it. I love being a Roman Catholic, but I usually disagree with the church's position on political issues. I thought about converting to Judaism, but then I'd have to give up my rosary beads.
Somehow the shadow of Calvin has longed loomed over my life. I am sure being raised Presbyterian has something to do with it, but I don't think it fully accounts for this matter.
Anyways, the doctrine of Predestination is a hard one that is disturbing on some instinctual level. However, I don't for that reason think it should be just dismissed, as I think that even our instincts have succumbed to the effects of the fall and are not, therefore, a sure guide in discerning the truth. This is not to say that I just accept this doctrine as Calvin articulates it.
One point of clarification that I would like to make is that predestination does not completely undermine freewill, rather it limits its possibilities. From what I have read of Calvin, he wouldn't have a problem saying that people are free to chose among a myriad of options and courses of action, but within all the possibilities they have, the path of genuine righteousness is not open to them. This path, according to Calvin, is beyond all the options available to humanity in its fallen state, and can only be opened by God, and made available to any particular person through direct intervention by God in that person's life.
Calvin is obviously giving priority to God's sovereignty in his interpretation of Scripture. (By the way, I don't think Scripture is quite as "clear" as he makes it out to be). And so, he has worked out a concept of grace that prevents anykind boasting since all grounds for such boasting is removed. What I wonder, however, but am not equipped to fully respond to, is why must sovereignty and responsibility be approached as two opposing realities, that must be somehow mediated. I certainly get the points of tension regarding how these ideas are commonly understood, but what I wonder is if these concepts can be reconceptualized such that the tensions are not diametric, and yet remain faithful to biblical witness.
Actually, when I do periodically get around to reading Calvin, I am always surprised by how pastoral he is. I mean, in my stereotype of him, I imagine a mechanical logician working out an air tight systematic theology, where an articulation on one point requires a particular conclusion on another, which is not an overall appealing perspective for me.
Alright, though I certainly can say more, I have certainly said enough for a comment on a blog. In the end, Predestination is a hard doctrine, because it offends our sense of fairplay and goodness, and yet I know that Calvin was deeply concerned to preserve the idea of God's goodness and glory. For him, however, it was a goodness and glory that was dimly perceived on this side of the veil.
Truth be told...I always had this feeling that if Calvin was right... I am in the "going to hell camp". So, I found it to be a rather depressing theology.
4 comments:
This sort of silliness is why, although I certainly value a spiritual component in life, I despise "organized" religion. Convoluted excuases to trying to determine who is "elect" and who is condemned, and how one can have "free-will" without actually having free-will. I suppose that if you're an All-Powerful Deity you can do whatever you want without my say-so, but it seems to me a ridiculous way to manage the human species.
Sounds a bit elitist to me, but I don't really know much about it. I love being a Roman Catholic, but I usually disagree with the church's position on political issues. I thought about converting to Judaism, but then I'd have to give up my rosary beads.
Somehow the shadow of Calvin has longed loomed over my life. I am sure being raised Presbyterian has something to do with it, but I don't think it fully accounts for this matter.
Anyways, the doctrine of Predestination is a hard one that is disturbing on some instinctual level. However, I don't for that reason think it should be just dismissed, as I think that even our instincts have succumbed to the effects of the fall and are not, therefore, a sure guide in discerning the truth. This is not to say that I just accept this doctrine as Calvin articulates it.
One point of clarification that I would like to make is that predestination does not completely undermine freewill, rather it limits its possibilities. From what I have read of Calvin, he wouldn't have a problem saying that people are free to chose among a myriad of options and courses of action, but within all the possibilities they have, the path of genuine righteousness is not open to them. This path, according to Calvin, is beyond all the options available to humanity in its fallen state, and can only be opened by God, and made available to any particular person through direct intervention by God in that person's life.
Calvin is obviously giving priority to God's sovereignty in his interpretation of Scripture. (By the way, I don't think Scripture is quite as "clear" as he makes it out to be). And so, he has worked out a concept of grace that prevents anykind boasting since all grounds for such boasting is removed. What I wonder, however, but am not equipped to fully respond to, is why must sovereignty and responsibility be approached as two opposing realities, that must be somehow mediated. I certainly get the points of tension regarding how these ideas are commonly understood, but what I wonder is if these concepts can be reconceptualized such that the tensions are not diametric, and yet remain faithful to biblical witness.
Actually, when I do periodically get around to reading Calvin, I am always surprised by how pastoral he is. I mean, in my stereotype of him, I imagine a mechanical logician working out an air tight systematic theology, where an articulation on one point requires a particular conclusion on another, which is not an overall appealing perspective for me.
Alright, though I certainly can say more, I have certainly said enough for a comment on a blog. In the end, Predestination is a hard doctrine, because it offends our sense of fairplay and goodness, and yet I know that Calvin was deeply concerned to preserve the idea of God's goodness and glory. For him, however, it was a goodness and glory that was dimly perceived on this side of the veil.
Truth be told...I always had this feeling that if Calvin was right... I am in the "going to hell camp". So, I found it to be a rather depressing theology.
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