Category Archives: Uncategorized

The Great Emergence

      Comments Off on The Great Emergence

Churches are famous for rummage sales.  “Rummage” is a word that gets very little play in contemporary conversation.  It might be defined as “a confused miscellaneous collection.”  A rummage is a mishmash, a jumble, a stew, a hodgepodge, a clutter, or an agglomeration of a great many items that at first glance appear to have little in common.  We speak more… Read more »

His Grace is Enough

      Comments Off on His Grace is Enough

In the ancient world, successful people were expected to boast. Highly regarded teachers, politicians, and public officials were encouraged to polish their resumes and roll them out before the watching world as often as they could.  Caesar Augustus ordered that his achievements literally be carved in stone all over the empire.  Soldiers competed for high honors that could only be won in… Read more »

The Real Spice of Life

      Comments Off on The Real Spice of Life

“Hey, we’re running low on cinnamon.  Could you pick some up the next time you swing by the market?” For more than a thousand years in Western history, such a request would have been incomprehensible.  Spices were exotic and rare – among the most valuable commodities on earth.  Today we take for granted that for a few dollars we can replenish… Read more »

The Skunk Effect

      Comments Off on The Skunk Effect

Two months ago we had to let go of one of our dearest “family members.” Joker, an Australian Shepherd so named because he came into the world on April Fool’s Day, brightened our lives for 15 years.  Well, except for that one memorable night a few years ago when I escorted him to the front door of our house.  It was… Read more »

Rocks in the Mountains

      Comments Off on Rocks in the Mountains

Owners of restaurants, bars, salons, and retail stores live in the hope of receiving five-star reviews from Yelp, a popular online customer review service.  One-star reviews, on the other hand (“we had to endure the worst waiter ever”) can have immediate impact on public perception – even if the reviewer had simply gotten up on the wrong side of the bed… Read more »

The Greatest Show on Earth

      Comments Off on The Greatest Show on Earth

There was a time, not so long ago, that parks were the exclusive playgrounds of the rich and famous. During most of European history, green spaces were cultivated by wealthy landowners for private use.  Trespassers – including impoverished poachers trying to catch wild game for their family’s next meal – could be subject to imprisonment or even death.  No one did more… Read more »

Grace Wins

      Comments Off on Grace Wins

In 1849 a young Russian named Fyodor Dostoevsky was arrested and imprisoned. He was charged with being part of a group that read books that appeared to be critical of Czar Nicholas I. After awaiting trial for eight months in a festering jail, Dostoevsky and his fellow “criminals” were led outside three days before Christmas into the frigid air.  They were horrified to… Read more »

A Ticket to Ride

      Comments Off on A Ticket to Ride

Preachers and teachers usually keep a signature story in their back pocket – something they can always count on to drive home a key point. One of Billy Graham’s signature stories concerned Albert Einstein.  Like a lot of the oft-repeated anecdotes concerning the brilliant physicist, it’s hard to differentiate between truth and fiction.  But the story works nonetheless.  According to Graham, Einstein… Read more »

Mammoth Ideas

      Comments Off on Mammoth Ideas

Thomas Jefferson was obsessed with mammoths.  The third president of the United States may be renowned for authoring the Declaration of Independence, founding the University of Virginia, and endlessly tinkering with his dream house at Monticello, but his mind never strayed too far from the possibility that giant prehistoric elephants were still alive and rampaging through North America.  When Jefferson dispatched Meriwether… Read more »

A Few Good Books

      Comments Off on A Few Good Books

In our wildest fantasies, we might dare to dream that one day something we have written will win a major literary prize. Then again, we wouldn’t necessarily call all of our friends if word came down that we had won the annual Bookseller / Diagram Prize.  Since 1978 the BDP has been awarded to the oddest book title of the year…. Read more »