Life as a Spectator Sport

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Sunday, November 21, 2004

Religion blogs added

More link-addition-and-pruning today, and—appropriate for Sunday, I suppose—a new section of religion blogs. I don't agree with everything posted in these blogs, any more than I always agree with everything posted in the political blogs. Part of life is working with people for a better future whether you all agree on every point or not.
  • Doxos, the blog of Orthodox Christian Huw Gabriel, with whom I disagree frequently, but to whom I keep returning for his amazingly wide range of interesting bits and pieces.

  • Parablemania —the author doesn't identify himself, but from what I could glean from his archives, he is evidently a professor of religion somewhere in New York. I wish he would change his color scheme; I'm too old to read fuzzy white text on a black background without getting very tired eyes. But he has the ability to discuss religion in a common-sense way that smacks neither too much of the classroom nor of the pulpit.

    [UPDATE] - Parableman is Jeremy Pierce, who teaches philosophy at the University of Syracuse, one of my old stomping grounds. Among other things, I have fond memories of attending a recital of organ music there by the blind French organist, Jean Langlais. Thanks, Jeremy, for setting me straight.

  • Michael Spencer, the Internet Monk, is a nice contradiction: a graduate of Kentucky Wesleyan College and the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, the campus minister for Oneida Baptist Institute (a Christian boarding school in eastern Kentucky), and the supply pastor for a Presbyterian church. We may disagree on details, but he's got the framework right.

  • The Revealer is a project of Jay Rosen of Press Think and of the Department of Journalism and the Center for Religion and Media at New York University. It calls itself "A Daily Review of Religion and the Press," and it covers news from all varieties of religion, not just Christianity.

  • Truthbook Religious News—another today's-religious-news site, not as comprehensive or wide-ranging as The Revealer, but with more commentary. Warning for purists: This site is produced by the folk who brought you The Urantia Book, a "new revelation" channeled by "supramortal" beings. But with that in mind, their commentary on contemporary religious news is quiet, non-shrill and non-intrusive.
I would have liked to include Telford Work, Assistant Professor of Theology at Westmont College in California, and a Pentecostal, but his blog Clutter seems to have disappeared from the net.

I'll be adding more blogs as I find them.
posted by Liz @ 10:47 AM     |


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