Wednesday, June 24, 2026
TEEM Work in Indianapolis
Sunday, June 21, 2026
Father's Day and the Summer Solstice
In fact, my father seemed more like the fathers we see these days. He could pack our lunches and brush our hair into acceptable ponytails and teach us how to be long-distance runners. He helped us with science fair projects and took the family on camping trips and in general, he was very involved in our lives. I haven't met many other people of my generation who were as lucky.
I'm glad that we've become a society of people, at least some of us have, who can be our best parents to children, whether we're fathers, mothers, or part of the village raising the children. We still have a long way to go before our culture is where I'd like us to be in terms of work/family balance. But that's a topic for a different blog post.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
TEEM Work and Other Anxieties
It has been a strange week in terms of home renovations. We're at a point where it makes sense to wait until the work of next week is done. Hopefully by this time next week, we'll have an HVAC system installed and the house rewired. Then we'll do the painting and the hardwood floor restoration.
It feels weird knowing how much work needs to be done, but not doing it. Of course, I have plenty of other work to be doing, primarily grading and encouraging students.
In a way, it has been a good week to be pulling back on fixer-upper tasks. I've gotten information about the next part of my path to ordination. I will take three classes through the TEEM program, and the first class is next week.
The TEEM program has 3 onground intensives a year where participants gather in Indianapolis and take 2 classes, one on Monday-Tuesday and one on Thursday-Friday, along with a workshop on Wednesday. I will be taking the Thursday-Friday class on Paul's letters next week. I'm happy to be able to patch up some holes in my knowledge; I had wanted to take a seminary class on Paul, but it never worked out.
I needed this week to order books and get started on the reading. I had missed the deadline to get the discounted hotel price, but happily, when I called, I was able to get that price.
It's been an up and down week in terms of anxiety. When I'm at the house in Spartanburg, I feel that we made a good decision. When I'm not there, there's a bit more self-doubt rattling in my brain. I've never driven to Indianapolis from here, so I feel a bit of anxiety in terms of a car trip, while reminding myself that I have relatives along the way who could help me if need be. I'm headed there by myself, because my spouse needs to be here to oversee the HVAC installation and rewiring. I'm looking forward to being away, but also a bit anxious at the thought of all the new people I'll meet. I feel a bit of anxiety at the thought of all the money we're spending on home repair--if it goes well, I'll be glad we spent the money.
I have some course work to do besides showing up for class next week. There's reading to do, and a movie about Paul to watch, which I've done, and a review of the movie to write, which I haven't, but will soon.
But it's nice to feel I have time to do that work. The last time I was getting ready to go to an onground intensive, it was October of 2024, and we were still dealing with Hurricane Helene aftermaths. I'm sure there's some residual anxiety that my body is dredging up.
Hopefully, in a week or two, I'll be able to look back on this anxiety and smile because all the moving parts came together so well.
Friday, June 19, 2026
Liberation Holidays: Juneteenth
Today we celebrate our newest federal holiday: Juneteenth. Of course, many populations have been celebrating Juneteenth since the news of freedom first came to the last enslaved people in Texas in 1865. This is the first year that I've been in a workplace that recognized the holiday. In 2021, I was working for a small school that was very stingy with holidays, so we didn't have that holiday or MLK day or Presidents Day.
Wat are the forces enslaving so many of us? We think of iron shackles, but there are other societal constructs that hold so many back: debt, geopolitical forces, violence, educational systems. And let's not forget that literal slavery hasn't disappeared.
So on this Juneteenth, let us think about the captives who need our help to be set free. Let us also think about all the captivity narratives that hold us enslaved. Let us embrace liberation narratives. Let us envision what life would look like if all were truly free.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
The Rethinking of Mary Magdalene Gets Wider Acceptance
I have been listening to a fascinating interview between Diana Butler Bass and Elizabeth Schrader-Polczer. Several years ago, Bass preached a sermon using Schrader-Polczer's work, which Bass points out is one of 3 of the most watched sermons of all time; the other two were Bishop Budde's sermon at the interfaith worship service after the second inauguration of Donald Trump and the sermon preached at the wedding of Prince Harry and Mary Markle.
In that sermon, Bass presented the work of Elizabeth Schrader-Polczer, who was then a PhD student at Duke. She did research on the Lazarus text and noticed that the word Mary had been changed to Martha. Why would someone do this? And how can we be sure?
Bass published her sermon here. It's worth the read, and it's got a link to hear the sermon. Bass makes the case that it was likely a 4th century change, a change to disempower Mary Magdalene.
In the interview I'm listening to today, Bass and Schrader-Polzer review those ideas. It's an interesting window into how research on ancient texts is done, and how this work was done. It's got great information about issues of gender, along with church history.
Here are some highlights:
--At minute 28, they talk about the canon--which books made it into the Bible, which did not, and why. Schrader-Polzer posits that the approach to Mary Magdalene, the changes made in the Gospel of John, might have happened in the 2nd century so that the book would be seen as more acceptable, so that it would survive.
--In the oldest artwork, whenever there's a Lazarus, there's only one sister.
--Throughout the interview, there's lots of great information about translations of the Bible and how we come to have the Bible that we do.
--It is fascinating to me that there are changes to Bible commentaries and forthcoming changes to translations, including the master text, the "Novum Testamentum Graece (Nestle-Aland). The 'Nestle-Aland,' or 'NA,' is the source from which almost all versions of the New Testament are translated into every language around the world" (quoted material from Bass' newsletter). These changes happened because of Schrader-Polzer's work and Bass' promotion of this work. I'm inspired that academic work can have this effect.
--Bass points out that this kind of revision to Bible scholarship, a major revision like Schrader-Polzer's, doesn't happen often and usually about once a generation.
--In the first century, the town of Magdala didn't exist (roughly minute 1:08). So using Mary of Magdala would be a wrong translation.
--"Reframing ancient questions" vs. "opening new questions"--Bass uses this language about the way that the Catholic church might approach these developments. She posits that this research is the reframing of ancient questions kind of development.
--Just after 1:18, Bass and Schrader-Polzer talk about the Gospel as a piece of story telling, a cohesive narrative, that is not the way that most people think about a Gospel: approaching it the way a creative writer/teacher would see it.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
More Thoughts on Tiredness and Home Repairs
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Happy Bloomsday!
I only care about Bloomsday as a sort of cosmic accident. When I got to grad school and pored over the list of classes I could take, I discovered that most of them were full. As a new grad student, I was last to register. And so I found myself in Tom Rice's class on James Joyce. What a life-changing experience that was.
Bloomsday celebrates the day, June 16, on which all the action in Ulysses takes place. The book covers almost every kind of action that can take place in a human day: we see Leopold Bloom in the bathroom, we see Stephen Dedalus pick his nose, we see Leopold Bloom masturbate . . . and we finally get to the masterful final chapter, where Molly Bloom muses on the physicality of being a woman.
As with many books, whose scandalous reputations preceded them, I read and read and waited for the scandalous stuff. As a post-modern reader, I was most scandalized by how difficult it was. It's hard to imagine that such a book would be published today.
But what a glorious book it is. What fun Joyce has, as he writes in different styles and plays with words. What a treat for English majors like me, who delighted in chasing down all the allusions.
I went on to write my M.A. thesis on Joyce, trying to prove that he wasn't as anti-woman as his reputation painted him to be. Since then, other scholars have done a more thorough job than I did. But I'm still proud of that thesis. I learned a lot by writing it. At the time, it was the longest thing I had ever written--in the neighborhood of 50 pages. A few years later, I'd be writing 150 pages as I tackled my dissertation--on domestic violence in the Gothic. By the time I'd written my thesis, I had said all I had to say on Joyce.
So, happy Bloomsday. Those of us who were born later than Joyce, who haven't read much of the work that came before Joyce, probably aren't aware of what a radical experiment he presented. A work that takes place in just one day? Revolutionary! I could argue that Virginia Woolf did it more artistically with Mrs. Dalloway, but before the Modernists, most people would have thought of just one day as not worthy of documenting. And Joyce's interior monologues capture like no other work what it's like to be inside a brain, to listen to thoughts without the scaffolding of traditional narrative.
I have read Ulysses several times, and I confess, I likely will never read it again. But I'm grateful to have done it, grateful that it exists, grateful that I had guides to show me of its mastery.