Saturday, December 26, 2009

Three Semesters Down, Three to Go!

Wednesday, December 23rd marked the end of semester number three at Trinity School for Ministry. Which is awesome, by the way: you should all go. Well, just kidding. Maybe you shouldn't all go, at least not at the moment. But I was thinking that if I were not already going to be a priest and do theology for hopefully the rest of my life, I would look on retirement as a ripe time to go to seminary just for kicks. As it is, I shall probably have to go back and study physics when I retire . . . although that begs the question of whether I will still be capable of higher mathematics at that point in time. Hmm . . . I do hope so.
Semester number three was somewhere between good and okay. Had a couple of fun classes--one called Bible and Mission which was really a great big Bible-study session looking at things from a missiological perseptive. For all you missionary types--and my, my, my there are a number of them on this blog--we read Christopher Wright's The Mission Of God which was quite good if you haven't read it. Its only flaw, I believe, was that it was 540 pages long and altogether too thorough. Other than that, it was wonderful, the point of the book was to construct a hermeneutic of mission and I thought he did quite a nice job. The other class I found very helpful was Anglican Way of Theology--basically a lot of different readings in systematic theology in major Anglican thinkers from Thomas Cranmer to Michael Ramsey. In the process, I discovered a few new theologians to feast on. Ramsey's good--makes me wish he was still alive and kicking in the See of Canterbury. Although he may be best on what it actually means to be Anglican. Richard Hooker is good--an Anglican doing apologetics against the Puritans (if I remember correctly), Thomas Aquinas style. You can imagine how happy that made me and how unhappy it made most other people in the class. (I do admit, he had a disturbing inclination to form grammatical constructs in much the same way Yoda does . . . .)
Finally, there's an English chap by the name of Austin Farrer who is my new favorite. I just discovered him last week by accident. I wanted to do a paper contrasting the way another English author by the name of Joseph Butler (author of the Analogy of Religion, Natural and Revealed, etc) does apologetics/theology in the Enlightenment period verses another Enlightenment figure, Leibniz who is rather famous for a best possible world theodicy that Voltaire mocks in Candide. (By the way, if you haven't read Candide, you really should. It's online at Project Gutenberg if you don't feel like going to the library. Although some of us have read Candide in the original French if I recall correctly.) So anyway, I found Leibniz's Theodicy online, also at Project Gutenberg, and found that, lo and behold, he wasn't just another religious capitulator to the spirit of the age like Immanuel Kant, he actually sounds like a Christian most of the time. (Which just goes to show that reason doesn't have to be the devil's whore, now does it?) A little too moralistic, but beyond that, his theodicy is actually based on his metaphysics, which sounds nuts, but actually works fairly well. (Leibniz, you may or may not recall, is the monad man.) He does as good as job as any as account for the then "new" physics with a corresponding non-Aristotelian metaphysics. Farrer is the editor of the version of the Theodicy found on Project Gutenberg, and was actually good enough in his introduction of the work, to explain a few things, like why Aristotelian metaphysics had become a pain in the bum to the biological sciences, especially, and why "pre-established harmony" is not actually a God of the gaps hypothesis and is much better than the Cartesian solution to the body/soul dilemma. (Leibniz also wrote the Theodicy in French, obnoxiously brilliant linguist that he was--and hence Dr. Pangloss in Candide if you have read or do decide to read it.) Farrer is otherwise a priest and philosopher of religion who lived and taught at Oxford the same time Lewis did. I think he wrote a sermon on Lewis' death as well. But all around, a good fellow to read. Not too technical, either.
Other than that, I am in St. Louis for the next three weeks because people decide to get married all over the USA and I do like weddings quite a lot . . . . Rebecca and Jared are supposed to be here tonight for the Urbana conference, and perchance I shall get to see Megan while I am here . . . ? I miss her laughter. We shall see. It snowed on Christmas yesterday when I got here . . . and my family did Christmas as we normally do, with Christmas carols and a potluck feast and wonderful punch made by my aunt. We also played Balderdash, which was a new thing, but very humorous. Got to record some of it on my camera, which was nice. Now I have proof how goofy the Curry Clan is. Anyway, I hope you all had a good Christmas celebration and hope to see you within the next couple of months.

Peace and Goodwill!

Friday, December 11, 2009

a quickie =)

Wow! Amy, thank you! This is so fun, having our own blog =)

I hope you all are doing well! I spent last weekend with Kara up in NYC and it was awesome/crazy/exhausting/exhilarating. I got to see the dance that she choreographed not once but twice, saw the Rockefeller (sp?) tree, the gift shop of the Met, and the year's first snowfall!!!

Please pray for me - this is finals week! I am finishing up a research paper on embryology and ethics, and have two 5-page essays to write on the Meaning of Everything (our professor is quite ambitious) and an exam on Trinity & the Church.

Love and miss you all!

Bethany

p.s. Amy or anyone - is there a way to establish a 'quick link' to this blog so I don't forget that it exists =)

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

better late than never :-)

Hello friends! I'm not quite sure what took me so long, to be honest; but anyway, despite the delay, here we are! I wish I could write a really inspiring first post for you to read... but I've never 'blogged' before, actually, and am feeling rather intimidated! Not to mention the fact that I am at work, and have probably used up 9.5 minutes of my 10 minute break by now. So, without further ado, let me simply say that I can't wait to read all about you. :-)