Saturday, June 27, 2026
Kristin in Indianapolis, Paul in Spain
Friday, June 26, 2026
Rethinking Paul
Yesterday was our first TEEM class on Paul. It was riveting. I'm still not much interested in preaching using Paul's letters, but because Paul has been so influential and so misused, it's good to find out what's really there.
The most interesting way of thinking about Paul that was new to me is to see him as a Jew framed by apocalyptic thinking, the apocalypse being when God comes to earth to judge the living and the dead, an event which will begin with the dead rising up from their graves as they come back to life to be judged.
So when Paul meets Jesus on the Damascus Road, a man who has been dead brought back to life and speaking to him, he assumes that judgment day is under way. Being a good Pharisee, he would assume that Jews will be O.K. on Judgment Day--as people of the Covenant, God has chosen them. But Gentiles are in danger. Thus, off he goes to tell them how to be saved.
I asked the question that some of you might be asking. Did Paul see a human Jesus on the Damascus Road? I have always thought of that event as the heavens splitting open and the voice of Jesus speaking to him, not as an encounter with Jesus in his human body. My professor talked about the different depictions of that event, including recountings of that event that we find in Acts and the letters of Paul. In some of them, the encounter does sound disembodied, the voice from the heavens. In others, we could interpret it as an encounter between Paul and a human-appearing Jesus.
I still maintain my long-standing approach to Paul. He wrote letters to specific churches/communities with specific problems. Taking those letters and applying them to twenty-first century life makes very little sense--unless we're experiencing similar problems. We had an interesting session looking at 1 Corinthians, the passage where Paul excoriates the Church for eating the good food before the whole community arrives and connecting this behavior with Communion. How do our own Communion practices exclude or include in similar ways?
I still can't see myself preaching on Paul or even having the kind of Bible study that would interest most people. But I'm very glad to have had this educational opportunity.
Thursday, June 25, 2026
A Short TEEM Report
This morning has less blogging time, but I have finished my movie review, the first assignment for my TEEM class on Pauline letters. I have done the practice quizzes one more time--I've been doing them over and over in the hopes that I'll do well on the quiz that will begin today's class.
We have another quiz tomorrow, and I haven't done any practice for that one. So tomorrow may be a light blogging day too, as I practice and practice. I have not taken a quiz for course credit since undergraduate school. Of course, I've taken quiz after quiz as part of HR training--those quizzes that you can take over and over again so that you can continue to be employed.
Each quiz counts for 10% of the course grade. My inner good girl wants to make an A. My pragmatic older self knows that whatever grade I make will be fine. I'm not even sure if TEEM classes show up on a transcript.
And then, part of me wonders why I care about my official record. Am I going to do more graduate work? Maybe--and that's why I care.
Yesterday's TEEM training was a workshop on stewardship. When I first heard about the workshop, I felt a bit of despair. I've already had so much stewardship training. But it was a great workshop. We talked about a much broader vision of stewardship: what do we value? How do we protect what we value? It's far more than money, budgets, and a finance team.
I've been part of small churches, with attendance below 50 members, so these are not concepts that are new to me. In a very small church, one can't assume that others will pick up the slack, unlike in a church that has over 100 members in the pews on Sunday.
Our workshop leader, Tim Brown, was both compelling and entertaining. We had worship in the middle of the day, followed by Indian food. It was good to have that long break.
Let me bring this writing to a close so that I can get some breakfast before the day begins. Onward!
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.