This morning, my wifeĀ RebekahĀ started a breakfast conversation based on yesterday's readings, which inspired this reflection.

JBB: An Artblog!
h
Monterey Bay Aquarium

izzy's playlists!

PR's Tumblrdome

Kaledo Art
šŖ¼
almost home
Sade Olutola
i don't do bad sauce passes
taylor price

shark vs the universe
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć

⣠Chile in a Photography ā£

Product Placement

Janaina Medeiros
Mike Driver
Peter Solarz

No title available
sheepfilms
seen from South Korea

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Iraq

seen from United States

seen from Romania

seen from Germany

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Thailand
seen from United States

seen from United States
@summerofscripture14
This morning, my wifeĀ RebekahĀ started a breakfast conversation based on yesterday's readings, which inspired this reflection.
Day 3: Thinking an alternate name for the last 2 days could easily be, "The Naming of the Land." Speaking of which, this may be useful/helpful to you,
Some good links, including John Walton's can't-miss account of the 6-day creation and Ellen Davis on the question of land care in Israel's relationship with God.
āThe journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.ā ā Lao Tzu
Hey friends: I know many of you, don't know others of you, have recently met some of you. In all genuineness, it is not lost on me how remarkable this group and each one of you is. This journey is a collection of incredible journeys, and I am grateful to be in your company. Let's do this!
Jonathan+
Tumblr didn't like our prayer format, so we've posted them at the above link. Enjoy!Ā Also, if you find other pre-reading prayers to use, please share them in the comments!
Happy reading, friends!
JonathanĀ andĀ Dorota's pre-Summer of Scripture video series comes to an emotional end.Ā Ā Tune in as they discuss how the key to reading the Bible in one summer may be as simple as showing up.
So, we're a few days away from the kick-off of the Summer of Scripture, a 90 day Bible-binge of young adults in Madison and across the country. The project has taken a fair amount of organizing and explaining to get to this point. Also, help. Lots of help. I am already so grateful for the input and participation of the Episcopal Center community at St. Francis House and also for the friendship and cooperative leading of Dorota Pruski. Lots of others. Emmy, Noah, Rebekah. It takes a village, but this is fun, and we're almost to the starting line.
The week before the kick-off has been calmer than the weeks before it. With most of the preparation in place, I've taken up the Apocrypha as a week-long warm-up to the big dance. Part of this is practical: I want to have a sense for how slowly or quickly I read, and, while I think I've the whole Bible at one point or another, I have little confidence I can say the same for the Apocrypha. The thing that impressed me right off the bat was Tobit's movie-like plot line. Even better, the book doesn't assume much prior knowledge, which is just to say phrases or terms unfamiliar to me are assumed to be unfamiliar to the general reader, and so they are defined. Old Testament redactors take note! I'm convinced that most of us have avoided the Old Testament not because of all the blood and war, but because reading it leaves us feeling stupid. But not Tobit. The best part is the prayers. Not just in Tobit - in Judith, too - wonderful prayers. Prayers for death, about lust, revenge, frustration, and disgrace, prayers for victory through deceit, all that God would be known, worshiped, and adored. Maybe because I'm coming to them secondarily, the prayers of the Apocrypha seem to me a kind of real-life, ueber-messy practicum born of the Psalms. My favorite prayer, though - so far - belongs to Raguel, in the book of Tobit. Raguel has just successfully married off his daughter to Tobias, and - unlike the seven men before him - Tobias survives the wedding night and is not destroyed by the demon who has tormented his now-wife, Sarah. Raguel sends a maid into the bedroom to see, discretely, how Tobias has fared. When the maid reports all is well, Raguel begins his song of blessing. In the middle, he says, "Blessed are you because you have made me glad. It has not turned out as I expected, but you have dealt with us according to your great mercy." "It has not turned out as I expected..." Not, "You heard my cry and delivered me." Not, "I knew you would come through all along." Not even, "I had my doubts, but praised your name through the darkness of the night." No sign of prior belief and so no hiding the amazement. Simply, "It has not turned out as I expected." And I think of Peter and the Marys. The empty tomb. I think of Moses and Thomas and, God help him, Judas. I think of all the saints before us with the honesty to despair and the good sense, when he found them, to be wrong. Overcoming the laughter and tears, crying out as anti-prophets, "It has not turned out as I expected." How wonderfully understated. I wonder if I will say the same thing in ninety-plus days, turning the last page over, Revelation vanquished, having finished the book. Of the reading, of the experience, I wonder what it will have been about the summer that will cause me to say with a wry smile and bewildered joy, "It has not turned out as I expected." How strange and wonderful to imagine - to anticipate - the joy God derives from putting these words of delight born of doubt and the deliverance of God on the lips of God's People. For even at the grave we make our song, "Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia!" For truly, my sisters and brothers, it has not turned out as we expected. Praise God, and amen. Peace. Jonathan+
Summer of Scripture sits down with UW grad studentĀ Noah Van DamĀ to discuss effective learning strategies for things like reading the Bible. Check it out!
I LOVE Russian literature (Dostoyevsky, etc.) AND reading out loud. Sadly, it is not easy for me to read Dostoyevsky out loud because most of the characters have this annoying habit of having names. Russian names. Unpronounceable-to-me names. So I read in my head and learn to gloss over the names (which requires a kind of detachment from the text only achievable with considerable effort) OR I read out loud, resenting Dostoyevsky and Russians generally for every mispronunciation he forces from my lips.Ā
The same is probably true in my relationship with the Bible, that the unfamiliarity of names forces me to choose between detachment and resentment. And I say this as a priest very familiar with the words. But I'm reading the Apocrypha as a warm-up to our June 1 Summer of Scripture kick-off and coming across strange words again and all those resentful feelings are coming back.
So, here's my gift to you - a link to an audio pronunciation guide. It comes with the caveat that I'm only commending the audio guide and not the other resources on the website. They're not bad resources, but I have other ideas if you're looking for good places to start. The audio, though, could be helpful.Ā
I think the audio could be helpful not because there aren't other (even better!) ways to say some of the words, but because I know for myself that being able to say a word allows it to get inside me - and that not being able to say the words keeps me at a distance. I want this summer to make me like Ezekiel, eating the scroll, sweet like honey. If you want that for you, too, and being able to say what you read will help, and if this guide can make that happen, this will make me glad.
Happy reading, friends!
Jonathan+
New vid! "How to pick a Bible" for #SummerOfScripture14 w/ @JonathanMelton and @DorotaPruski http://wwwCheck it, share it!
Vlog 1, extended edition! Ā I'm off to get started on the Apocrypha... :)
Hey friends! Here's the Summer of Scripture reading schedule (borrowed from here), which we'll kick off June 1. Look for coming videos this week on how to pick a Bible and finding a time to read.
Also, if you're really itching to get started, you can use this week to read the Apocrypha, which the astute reader will note is not on the schedule. :-)
"How to Use Summer of Scripture: a tutorial (kind of)"
"Why am I choosing to read the entire Bible this summer?"
The Rev. Jonathan Melton shares his motivation for reading the entire Bible in 90 days this summer. Jonathan is part of a Madison-based group of young adults taking on the challenge together, beginning June 1.Ā You canĀ learn more -or join them! - here.
Do you ever get tired of trying - unsuccessfully - to fit more of God into your very busy life?
I do.Ā
For me, the trouble is notĀ justĀ that 'fitting God in' is hard to do; itās the realization that, even if I succeeded, the cumulative result of cramming crumpled bits of a made-convenient-faith into a few unclaimed corners of my life is not a vision especially compelling or beautiful to me.
"Better than nothing."
But somewhere behind this weary ambivalence lies a hidden hope. Occasionally, I glimpse it. In solitude and times of introspection, in the boisterous company of the Sunday Assembly gathered for praise, in song and in silence, in bread broken and shared, in love lived toward another, the Gospel sparks this flame of hope in me that cries in love, uncertainty, and with joy, āMore is possible!āĀ
The truth is, I don't tire of my attempts to fit God into my very busy, culturally determined, and consumer-oriented life so much as I tire of living a very busy, culturally determined, and consumer-oriented life. I long for the possibility Christ has offered as promise: to live life determined by God's ocean-depth love. "Abundant life," he calls it.
I am reading the Bible this summer, I suppose, as mutiny to life less-than-abundant.
Toward this end, I donāt want the Bible to become a part of my story; I want to grow in friendship with the God who invites me to live and move and be in Godās story.Ā I want to read the Bible this summer as practice in surrendering my story to Godās. I want to learn to love Godās story more.Ā
I want God to challenge my boredom come the pages of unending genealogies, to challenge my presumptions that some names aren't worth remembering. Show me, Lord, the roots of the impatience that has taught me there are more important things than your hand at work in the generations of your children. Fill me, Lord, with a new imagination for what is beautiful, redemptive, and life-giving. Give me, Jesus, the ears to hear and eyes to see that you longed for your disciples to more fully possess; even the ears that have picked up your whisper:Ā "More is possible."
Yes, I am reading the Bible this summer - as mutiny to life less-than-abundant!
Are you up for a good mutiny, too?
The Rev. Jonathan Melton
"Why am I choosing to read the entire Bible this summer?"
The Rev. Dorota Pruski shares her motivation for reading the entire Bible in 90 days this summer. Dorota is part of a Madison-based group of young adults taking on the challenge together, beginning June 1.
You can learn more -or join them! - here.
Why am I choosing to read the entire Bible this summer? Honestly, Iām doing it because Iāve never read the Bible. Sure, Iāve read parts of it, most of it even, but Iāve never read through the entire Bible in a systematic way. In seminary, I am sure I was assigned every book of the Bible at some point in my Old and New Testament classes. But did I read every chapter of every book? Well⦠When seminarians get frenetically busy, we behave like grad students in just about every field, meaning that we triage. We had a motto that was only kind of a joke: āItās only a lot of reading if you do it.ā So when school got crazy, it was easy to skip a few sections of Scripture, like some of the Minor Prophets, parts of Chronicles, and most of the deuterocanonical writings. After all, I knew most of those stories already, right?
As it turns out, I did know a lot of those stories. Many of us who grew up in the Church have heard a great many stories from our sacred texts. But hereās the thing: I still havenāt read the whole Bible. I know there are colorful stories in Scripture about Balaam riding a talking donkey; Elisha sicāing a pair of she-bears on a group of boys who call him āBaldyā (seriously, look it up: 2 Kings 2:23-24); and the heroic midwives Shiphrah and Puah who were the first Hebrews to defy Pharaoh in Egypt before the Exodus. Not only do I want to read these stories again, but I also want to see what Iāve missedāeither because I read it too quickly last time or because I didnāt read it at all. Scripture is a bottomless treasure trove of stories, poems, letters, testimonies, and accounts of how our ancestors experienced their relationship with God. I want to hear their stories. I want to know more about how they saw the world. And I want to know more about the God who loved themāand loves usāfiercely.
I imagine I will be no less busy this summer than I was at various times in seminary. Iāll be training for a marathon, spending a week in residency back at my seminary, traveling to Kentucky with a group of youth, and preparing for St. Andrewās Centennial celebrations. The difference for me now is that motto has changed slightly: the Bible is a lot of reading, and Iāll do it.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Will you join me?
The Rev. Dorota Pruski
Summer of Scripture Kicks Off!
The Summer of Scripture kicks off June 1! Have you signed up? Do it here! Then look for more info on this tumblr page - it *will* be awesome!