Tuesday, July 21, 2009

A Windy Inheritance



On July 21, 1925, Tennessee schoolteacher John Scopes was found guilty of teaching evolution and fined $100, perhaps the lowest price ever paid by any martyr for any cause.

Historically, the "Monkey Trial" of 1925 has been often used to pit science and religion against one another. Less understood is how much this trial represented the divisions in American society between rural and urban cultures, academia and the working classes, populists and elitists, conservatives and progressives, and North and South. And perhaps the biggest question at all posed by the trial is whether or not majority opinion is sufficent to define truth. None of these intricacies, by the way, are adequately or fairly explored in that lousy piece of big-city elitist propaganda known as Inherit the Wind.

(Longtime readers of this blog will recall that a couple of years back, I posted a six-part series on the historiography of this infamous event. Fun stuff.)

Upon The Feast Of St. Lawrence Of Brindisi



In addition to the Italian he was raised speaking, and the Latin he used in Church, he studied French, German, Greek, Spanish, Syriac, and Hebrew.

St. Lawrence, if you're reading this:

prega per noi!

ora pro nobis!

priez pour nous!

bitte für uns!

προσεύχονται για μας!

ora para nosotros!

להתפלל עבור לנו!


(and my apologies, Fra Lorenzo- I don't know how to ask for your prayers in Syriac.)

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Reason I'm Glad That I Am On The Mailing List For Christian Country Music Trade Publications...



...is because I get to see what happens when The Power Team meets Cletus T. Judd.

Public Service Announcement

Again, apologies for my absence. I have a book due to the publisher one month from today.

In the meantime, do yourselves a favor and watch the following- more people might be affected by the condition in the below video than you realize.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Quote Of The Day

From Ross Douthat on all the Caritas in Veritate aftershocks:
Papal encyclicals are supposed to be written with one eye on two millenniums of Catholic teaching, and the other on eternity. But Americans, as a rule, have rather narrower horizons. As soon as the media have finished scanning a Vatican document for references to sex, the debate begins in earnest: Is it good for the left, or for the right? For Democrats, or for Republicans?"

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Here's What You're Doing Tonight:

Walking, driving or flying to Covington, KY, to watch me open for Cool Hand Luke, one of the all-time greatest and most underappreciated bands ever to strike a string with a pick. Details for tonight's show are available here.

And by the way, sorry for the recent lack of blogging; I have a book due to the publisher August 15. Actual writing duty calleth.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009