"A good
sermon makes a mole hill out of a mountain."
-my wife
[after I preached a particularly long sermon...]
Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Monday, July 22, 2019
Against Heterosexuality by Michael Hannon [abridged]
Over the course of several centuries, the West had progressively abandoned Christianity’s marital architecture for human sexuality. Then, about one hundred and fifty years ago, it began to replace that longstanding teleological tradition with a brand new creation: the absolutist but absurd taxonomy of sexual orientations...
Michel Foucault, an unexpected ally, details the pedigree of sexual orientation in his History of Sexuality. Whereas “sodomy” had long identified a class of actions, suddenly for the first time, in the second half of the nineteenth century, the term “homosexual” appeared alongside it...designating not actions, but people—and so also with its counterpart and foil “heterosexual.”...cementing these categories of hetero- and homosexuality in the popular imagination...Sexual orientation, then, is nothing more than a fragile social construct, and one constructed terribly recently. designating not actions, but people—and so also with its counterpart and foil “heterosexual.”
My own prediction is that we will see this binary thoroughly deconstructed within our lifetimes. But in my view, we proponents of Christian chastity should see the impending doom of the gay–straight divide not as a tragedy, but as an opportunity. More than that, I want to suggest that we should do our best to encourage the dissolution of orientation within our own subcultural spheres wherever possible...
Thursday, May 23, 2019
The Main Problem with the Media ... [might not be what you think]
"I think that the main problem with the press is not bias. The complaint of those on the left and conservatives is that it is. I think the main problem with the press, rather, is superficiality. Their inability to go beyond the narrative structure of antagonist and protagonist; who's up and who's down; their inability to understand, frame, and report on issues that are not simply political. The tendency is to force these kinds of cultural issues onto a political frame of reference; to see them only as struggles of power."
James Davison Hunter
in a Mars Hill Audio Journal interview with Ken Myers [ from 1994!]
... don't you want to keep reading???? [below]
Labels:
abortion,
culture,
politics,
postmodernity,
quotes,
US History
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