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November 26 What Do I Believe?I posted a document on the window to my office under the title - What Do I Believe? The document consists of two things: The Apostles' Creed and the Nicene Creed and is footnoted with the statement "Unity in the essentials, freedom in the non-essentials..."
The Apostles Creed (180 AD)
I believe in God, the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth.
I believe in Jesus Christ, God's only Son, our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried; he descended into hell. On the third day he rose again; he ascended into heaven, he is seated at the right hand of the Father, and he will come to judge the living and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic (universal) Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.
The Nicene Creed (381 AD)
We believe in one God, the Father, the Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen and unseen.
We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, eternally begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, of one Being with the Father. Through him all things were made. For us and for our salvation he came down from heaven: by the power of the Holy Spirit he became incarnate from the Virgin Mary, and was made man. For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate; he suffered death and was buried. On the third day he rose again in accordance with the Scriptures; he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead, and his kingdom will have no end.
We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son. With the Father and the Son he is worshiped and glorified. He has spoken through the Prophets. We believe in one holy catholic (universal) and apostolic Church. We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins. We look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come. Amen. November 25 Farewell to the RaptureA little article I found originally published in Bible Review - it is quite thought provoking (which is ok I think...you know, to have our thoughts provoked now and then...) Farewell to the Rapture - By N.T. Wright Little did Paul know how his colorful metaphors for Jesus’ second coming would be misunderstood two millennia later. The American obsession with the second coming of Jesus — especially with distorted interpretations of it — continues unabated. Seen from my side of the Atlantic, the phenomenal success of the Left Behind books appears puzzling, even bizarre[1]. Few in the U.K. hold the belief on which the popular series of novels is based: that there will be a literal “rapture” in which believers will be snatched up to heaven, leaving empty cars crashing on freeways and kids coming home from school only to find that their parents have been taken to be with Jesus while they have been “left behind.” This pseudo-theological version of Home Alone has reportedly frightened many children into some kind of (distorted) faith. This dramatic end-time scenario is based (wrongly, as we shall see) on Paul’s First Letter to the Thessalonians, where he writes: “For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a shout of command, with the voice of an archangel and the trumpet of God. The dead in Christ will rise first; then we, who are left alive, will be snatched up with them on clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so we shall always be with the Lord” (1 Thessalonians 4:16-17). What on earth (or in heaven) did Paul mean? It is Paul who should be credited with creating this scenario. Jesus himself, as I have argued in various books, never predicted such an event[2]. The gospel passages about “the Son of Man coming on the clouds” (Mark 13:26, 14:62, for example) are about Jesus’ vindication, his “coming” to heaven from earth. The parables about a returning king or master (for example, Luke 19:11-27) were originally about God returning to Jerusalem, not about Jesus returning to earth. This, Jesus seemed to believe, was an event within space-time history, not one that would end it forever. The Ascension of Jesus and the Second Coming are nevertheless vital Christian doctrines[3], and I don’t deny that I believe some future event will result in the personal presence of Jesus within God’s new creation. This is taught throughout the New Testament outside the Gospels. But this event won’t in any way resemble the Left Behind account. Understanding what will happen requires a far more sophisticated cosmology than the one in which “heaven” is somewhere up there in our universe, rather than in a different dimension, a different space-time, altogether. The New Testament, building on ancient biblical prophecy, envisages that the creator God will remake heaven and earth entirely, affirming the goodness of the old Creation but overcoming its mortality and corruptibility (e.g., Romans 8:18-27; Revelation 21:1; Isaiah 65:17, 66:22). When that happens, Jesus will appear within the resulting new world (e.g., Colossians 3:4; 1 John 3:2). Paul’s description of Jesus’ reappearance in 1 Thessalonians 4 is a brightly colored version of what he says in two other passages, 1 Corinthians 15:51-54 and Philippians 3:20-21: At Jesus’ “coming” or “appearing,” those who are still alive will be “changed” or “transformed” so that their mortal bodies will become incorruptible, deathless. This is all that Paul intends to say in Thessalonians, but here he borrows imagery—from biblical and political sources—to enhance his message. Little did he know how his rich metaphors would be misunderstood two millennia later. First, Paul echoes the story of Moses coming down the mountain with the Torah. The trumpet sounds, a loud voice is heard, and after a long wait Moses comes to see what’s been going on in his absence. Second, he echoes Daniel 7, in which “the people of the saints of the Most High” (that is, the “one like a son of man”) are vindicated over their pagan enemy by being raised up to sit with God in glory. This metaphor, applied to Jesus in the Gospels, is now applied to Christians who are suffering persecution. Third, Paul conjures up images of an emperor visiting a colony or province. The citizens go out to meet him in open country and then escort him into the city. Paul’s image of the people “meeting the Lord in the air” should be read with the assumption that the people will immediately turn around and lead the Lord back to the newly remade world. Paul’s mixed metaphors of trumpets blowing and the living being snatched into heaven to meet the Lord are not to be understood as literal truth, as the Left Behind series suggests, but as a vivid and biblically allusive description of the great transformation of the present world of which he speaks elsewhere. Paul’s misunderstood metaphors present a challenge for us: How can we reuse biblical imagery, including Paul’s, so as to clarify the truth, not distort it? And how can we do so, as he did, in such a way as to subvert the political imagery of the dominant and dehumanizing empires of our world? We might begin by asking, What view of the world is sustained, even legitimized, by the Left Behind ideology? How might it be confronted and subverted by genuinely biblical thinking? For a start, is not the Left Behind mentality in thrall to a dualistic view of reality that allows people to pollute God’s world on the grounds that it’s all going to be destroyed soon? Wouldn’t this be overturned if we recaptured Paul’s wholistic vision of God’s whole creation? [1] Tim F. Lahaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, Left Behind (Cambridge, UK: Tyndale House Publishing, 1996). Eight other titles have followed, all runaway bestsellers. [2] See my Jesus and the Victory of God (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1996); the discussions in Jesus and the Restoration of Israel: A Critical Assessment of N.T. Wright’s Jesus and the Victory of God, ed. Carey C. Newman (Downer’s Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1999); and Marcus J. Borg and N.T. Wright, The Meaning of Jesus: Two Visions (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1999), chapters 13 and 14. [3] Douglas Farrow, Ascension and Ecclesia: On the Significance of the Doctrine of the Ascension for Ecclesiology and Christian Cosmology (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999). November 24 His Own Eternitya dead man wants to be born
out of the granite of my heart
his fists pound like bronze hammers
ringing with words of creation
crying -
"I have a story to tell -
BRING ME TO LIFE!"
take pen like chisel
carve out the body
from this dark tomb
this cold mental womb
that in stark light of day
this figure formed of
moulded mind's dust
pressed earthen clay
might give an Eden-glimpse
to the living blind
and in so doing announce
his own eternity
***NOTE*** I wrote this poem as a metaphor for a short story which is brewing in me and wants to come out... November 23 Random Observations on a DayWent to Winnipeg today and during the trip there and back listened to a couple of fantastic N.T. Wright lectures downloaded through iTunes University. They were:
- Decoding the Da Vinci Code: The Challenge of Historic Christianity to Post-Modern Fantasy
- The Christian Challenge in the Post-Modern World
Both excellent lectures. For those of you who are not aware there are some pretty amazing lectures available through iTunes. You need not own a Mac or an iPod, the software is free and the lectures are free as well. Simply download iTunes and search for your favorite author, speaker, theologian etc or browse the courses available via iTunes University.
On another note spent some time wandering St. Mary's Catholic cemetary in Winnipeg during the time between things and found it fascinating. It is old. Very full and was a grand mix of cultures - Italian, Irish, Polish, Russian, etc. It would be interesting to do a demographic survey of the cemetary and note the different cultures, birth and death dates and do all kinds of corelating (yes - sadly this is my idea of fun).
Where Is God: Finally I began to meditate on the silence of God. Lately (and for some months now) God seems quite distant and silent to me. I am variously frustrated, angry, and puzzled by this and today a new thought came to me. I was told by someone that the silence of God in the intertestamental period was a puzzle for them...some 400 years between Old and New Testaments. While no answer was forthcoming from said person their observation did trigger in me memory of another vast period of God's silence recorded in Scripture.
The son's and daughter's of Israel had been in bondage to Egypt for more than 430 years. Naturally they began to doubt whether He was there or what was happening with their prayer. So the question then was - where is God? What is He doing in the intervening silent years? The answer is found in Exodus 3:7:
These words have been something of a salve to me. I have not been waiting on God for more then 430 years and I cannot imagine what that would be like however my own wait has been dark and quiet and full of questions like "what is God doing in this bleak and silent time?" The words of Exodus 3:7 have helped me frame something of an answer -
God has been listening.
He hears my cries and prayers. He sees my struggles. In the intervening time of silence when it seems my own voice echoes back to me I am reassured by Israel that God is listening and this is no small comfort to me as I dwell upon it. I must learn to trust that - I am heard; I am seen; I am loved....even in the dark. November 19 The Future is Backlit by the Rising Son of Godthe future is backlit
by the rising Son of God
who paints the mountain-black clouds
redemption red in sacrificial blood
and dead new cut wheat is
gold with resurrection's promise
flowing molten 'cross the prairie
stirred to nervous dancing life
under laughing Spirit's spring breath
while even the dark and craven things
glow beneath Creator's crushing love
till cutting hate is press-purified
in the endless eternal embrace November 18 Ozbright shines the days
that lie before me
like the emerald city
glowing along my
yellow brick road
through toxic fields
of numbing sleep
between here and there
crossroads that point
back to the darkening past
whether north or south
whether east or west
every step
breaks the bones
of the beloved ones
while the pale rider
seems a friend
worth fighting still
when I meet
the great and powerful
what shall I seek
be it heart
be it courage
be it wisdom
worthy trinity indeed
may satisfy this empty need
or not
Oz is empty of answers
while the last balloon left
carrying Kansas away
on the winds
November 16 David and IDavid keeps me company
on my black-tar rooftop
singing pain in a hidden key
while we look for salvation in the water
as love spies us from heights
too bright for our dark eyes
raining grace like sacred oil
a bitter healing condemnation
and he and I are men
after God's own heart...
i just wish it didn't move so fast Rumoursrumours move like wind
swirling dark
as hate at a klan rally
there is poison in the air
while wisdom is not
where it once was
gone is truth from loved one's lips
only wishes built on
their own failures
and hopes of lives lived
better than crypts underground
we are the vicarious prisoners
of fear-doomed masses
crying -
"stay in the shadowy day"
"live cold in the dampened gray"
"no light to shine upon your face"
"so long as dark lives in my place"
but I would take my heart and flee
from those who sing with grave-dirt voice
"misery loves company"
bury feeling and take dead choice
November 12 Chapter 1 - The BeginningThis is the beginning of something. I have no idea how it will end. I know how I would like it to end. I know there is a time before beginning that I am tied to but that is someone else’s story. This is mine – at least the beginning. My earliest memories are of loved ones. Grandma and Grandpa’s house. I am wearing grandpa’s necktie and it drags on the floors as I walk. There are cookies and milk…Oreos I think. I am happy and it is summer in my mind. There are always people here in their house. We are here often. I have a sister but she is a baby. I do not talk to others big or small…I listen. I observe. I exist in their presence. Sometime we walk in the big yard among plants and trees but are told – “don’t go over there because there is a sink hole and it could suck you in.” All I want to do now is “go over there” but no matter how hard I try I cannot find the sinkhole. Sometimes we go out front and look at the synagogue next store. I do not know what a synagogue is yet but it fascinates me. The star. I want to climb the wall and trace the star with my finger but I cannot. This is a place of mystery to me. No one ever goes in. No one ever goes out. I know it is sacred somehow. There is a plane on a string attached to the ceiling. It flies around and around again and again in circles. I am fascinated and could watch forever. It might be Christmas, it might be my birthday. I am two, maybe three-years-old. I have old memories. I am happy. For my whole life till this time there is no pain; no sadness; only joy and light; There is mum nearby, always near. Mum who feeds and clothes and cares…mum is always there. No memories of Dad in this time. I am always happy at grandma and grandpa’s. Iobeneath the frozen surface
under the scar and the scabbed
is the molten center of it all
a tearing shredding heat
pulled apart by the one
who keeps it all together
the empty dead hiding
caustic sulfuric hell within
what moon is this
that keeps coming back for more
NOTE: Io is the fourth largest moon in the solar system and is in orbit around Jupiter. The nature of this relationship between Io and Jupiter causes the moon to maintain a violent molten interior. November 08 Nomad: A Cool PodcastIf you are into podcasts then I say - "Good for you!" If you are not then I say "what are you waiting for?" If you are thinking "Podcast!?!? I don't need any of that crazy liberal hippy technology in my life...I am a dyed in the wool Conservative Party/Republican Calvinist Christian just like Jesus was"...well...not sure what to say to that. At any rate podcasts are available via iTunes (for purists) and are audio recordings posted to the web at regular intervals. There are many great options in the world for podcasts - you can subscribe to ivy league university courses, listen to your favorite theologian or pastor. I subscribe to pastors Rob Bell and Mark Driscoll (Driscoll is good for when I want to listen to the world's angriest pastor ranting at everything and everyone).
Today I found a new podcast (new to me) called Nomad and I really like the concept behind it. Here is what they write about themselves:
"Nomad is an opportunity to explore Christian community, mission and the future of the church. Join a missional community in Nottingham, UK, as they are guided on this journey by leading Christian thinkers and practitioners from around the world."
They have had some pretty cool podcasts with Gregory Boyd, N.T. Wright, Rob Bell, Tony Campolo and others. At any rate I think it is quite the ingenious idea although it will be interesting to see how the Nomad community can apply the content of leaders who exist outside of their own context...still I guess we are all trying to do the same thing in terms of applying the teachings of Jesus, Paul, the prophets etc. to our own context.
I would recommend you download iTunes even if you don't own an iPod and subscribe to some university, seminary and church podcasts if for no other reason then to stay sharp. November 07 Tombstone in November Lightthe surface is cold bleak
rain-streaked stone
this rock
this tombstone
washed clean of every name
scrubbed clear of every date
dead to every eye
sharp in crisp November light
empty testimony
to a life once lived
signpost to one asleep
in the presence of the Lord
OneIt is one
now
one that has been long
one that has been
as lightning 'cross
from sky to earth
this one is everything
one love and light
one harvest night
one breath of life
there is only
one
a broken one
made whole by
one
a tortured one
a healed one
an empty one
a filled one
a sinful one
made beautiful
by one forgiveness
by one sacred heart
one
it is one
wondrous one Small Mousethere upon the cottonpatch
small mouse crawls grey
little pupil wanders midst
white eye
looking this way and that
to the sky
to the sky
a lidless homage
star-watchful
empty but for wonder
at small pale world
at endless everything else November 04 Lectio Divina: Tentatio ad InfinitumLectio
-------
there is Word
like flashing diamonds
on the endless sea
hinting at souring sun
fragments of light
for fragmented soul
Meditatio
-----------
there is dark
closed eyes
while breeze drifts through
the empty mind
and i can't tell
eternal spirit from bound(less) soul
Oratio
--------
there is voice
confused crying
out and up
a babel of sound
built to heaven's height
with prayers
that it won't be torn down
Contemplatio
----------------
there is quiet
a lying motionless
an object come to rest
while momentum comes
not from within
but from without
October 29 Mothermother looks beyond the glass
toward the million miles away
she seeks young fading child
lost in shadow and end of day
mother sings for saving life
that love would fly 'cross the gap
she sends heart-heavy hopes away
pulls reflection from black old trap
mother wants light and laughter
ringing along the sunlit plain
fears cold and the broken gold
cries 'GOD!' at baby's cutting pain
mother is fierce and fire
she is iron will for beauty's grace
this one is her sweet charge
this one's from within her space
mother holds forever
blood ties never sever
mother is forever
forever.... The Crushing Emptinessi have heard that nothing
is without mass
that light is wave and particle both
and souls were weighed once
by their absence and departure
there must be truth here
for of all the weightless weightless ways
the crushing emptiness falls heaviest
who would have known
that absence could be so present
that a vacuum could be so full October 28 Shameless Request for Patronage :-)In the old days poets who were not wealthy would often seek the resources of a rich patron to support their poetic work. In return for such patronage the poet would write poems on behalf of the patron for various occassions like birthdays and other celebrations. Many nations continue the tradition of poetic patronage in the form of appointing a poet laureate to perform this function on behalf of the nation. Canada's current poet laureate is Pierre DesRuisseaux, a Quebec poet.
Now on to my shameless request for patronage: as a poet, pastor and self-described armchair theologian I have come to desire a particular series of books...that is the recently retranslated study edition of theologian Karl Barth's Church Dogmatics. You may view the series in all of its glory here -
Sadly due to the strenuous amount of work translating theology from German to English and adding copious study notes the cost of the 31-volume softcover series is $738 US (through Amazon.com - http://www.amazon.com/Church-Dogmatics-vols-Karl-Barth/dp/056702279X/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1256750677&sr=1-2 ). Now as financially lucrative as the roles of poet, pastor and armchair theologian are, the combined remuneration of all still falls sadly short of attaining to the goal of purchasing such a series.
Should you, dear reader, wish to patronize me (in the good way) by contributing to the purchase of Church Dogmatics all I can provide in return is a commitment to write or speak on your behalf (as well as maintaining a generally cheery disposition for a good while to come). I would be pleased to write poetry for personal occassions or commit to studying and writing and/or speaking about areas of theology that are of interest to you.
Thanks for your consideration - for the first time in my life I look forward to being patronized. Karl BarthI recently finished reading (this morning) the book Karl Barth for Armchair Theologians by John R. Franke and was very impressed. Karl Barth was the pre-eminent protestant theologian of the early 20th century (and potentially the early 21st century). Franke's book offers an impressive and very thorough introduction to Barth and his theology in a way that one would think impossible across a mere 170 pages.
Barth is notable for the complexity of his thought which arises in part from a dilectical approach to theology. Franke very clearly and lucidly navigates the reader through many of the complexities and past some of the simplistic and one-sided interpretations of Barth (Neo-Orthodox versus Post-Modern) to a holistic/comprehensive view.
I highly recommend this book for anyone seeking to develop a more nuanced theology, most especially as a primer for those who are considering reading Barth (or have already done so). An excellent read! October 27 AbortionI just read an article that disturbed me and in true Pete Cantelon fashion I thought I would pass on some thoughts and disturb you too.
CNN.com has a very informative and interesting article about the state of the Pro-Life versus Abortion cultures in the United States (and by extention elsewhere). The article can be found here: http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/27/abortion.war/index.html
I must start out by stating that for various reasons I am unequivocally against abortion under any circumstance. I consider it morally and ethically repugnant. I should also state that I recognize my limited ability to enforce that persepctive as a man (which might sound ironic to some). My perspective is not one born out of simplistic moralistic thinking or breeding (I was against abortion long before I was a Christian). My perspective (and I suspect many other's) is one made up of a complex interweaving of experience, knowledge, wisdom (I hope) and faith. That being said there are those whose perspectives are simplistic in nature and perhaps stem primarily from emotion or upbringing or a mixture of those and other factors. I believe that those who support abortion are not always simplistic or amoral/immoral in their thinking but rather have arrived at their place after a long and arduous journey through experience and their own version of faith.
My position stems out of a deep seated belief that human life begins at conception and I have not the time nor inclination to fully expand on that except to say that it has to do with God and the potentiality of humanity as much as imago dei etc.
A few things I am not:
A few things I am/believe:
I find the above article compelling because it tells the story of two created children of God and think you should read it. You should be informed. Dialogue should occur between all sides and I encourge you to express your own doubts and critique of my position. October 21 Gracei sent a weight
to the deep
to the deep
a little tear of lead
i dropped a stone
alone and away
alone and away
cracked rock granite-shed
not a sound
not a crash
not an echo
nothing returned to me
i have plumbed the depths of grace
and thought to fill the well
every day
every hour
every minute
i have plumbed the depths of grace
and have found it without end
all that i have let go
has gone that i might mend
October 20 Out my windowout my window
there is grey sky
and the partial view
of a dying tree
out my window
I look with misty eye
at asphalt and brick
but it's not really what I see
I see a light through glass
across the way
curtains closed against the day
shut to the ones who pass
out my window
there is the world
such as it is
filthy and dark
broken and beautiful
a howling cry
a ragged sigh
like you and I
out my window
October 19 Horror Movies & Western CultureWell I must confess something.
I am a lover of horror movies. I have always been a fan for as long as I remember. Back in the not-so-supervised days of childhood (when I would seek to gt away with as much as possible) I was able to see quite a number of them (sorry mum). Films like The Amityville Horror and The Exorcist were the foundation for the interest.
While I was in seminary I wrote a paper for a mission course on the difference between the North American horror move and Japanese Horror movies (J-Horror) and how that difference gives us insight into Japanese culture that can help in evangelistic efforts in Japan. I think more then any other genre of movies horror taps into the base essense of the culture it comes from. If one were to analyze western horror (particularly American) between 1950-2000 one can see many smaller trends and a fairly major theme. One of the primary themes in american horror has been the overcoming or escaping of evil in the end of the film. No matter what the subject matter or sub-genre the protagonists in American horror between 1950-2000 all find a way of overcoming evil. A lot of this has to do with the cultural foundation of Judeo-Christian values of western culture.
Evil in the American horror always had some sort of supernatural source and generally speaking, no matter how destructive the evil is it is overcome. The American horror does not like to leave the audience without some sort of closure.
It was around 2002 with the introduction The Ring that some of the rules of the game began to change for the American horror movie. The Ring is a remake of a Japanese horror movie called Ringu. While American horror was already well on its way to a less supernatural more slasher approach The Ring was completely supernatural in nature. One of the key defining characteristics of The Ring was the way it ended - SPOILER ALERT - with The Ring and other J-Horror remakes (like The Grudge) and J-Horror in general evil is not defeated. In J-Horror when a person involves themselves with the supernatural that is it - you know how it will end - there is no escape. Evil will hunt you down and you cannot defeat it. The key defining characteristic of the Japanese horror that sets it apart from the American horror (aside from a distinct lack of intense gore and blood) is that there is no hope in it...not a stitch.
I believe part of the reason for this is that Japanese culture is distinctly more animistic (spirit oriented) then American culture. In Japanese culture the spirit world in general is to be avoided and if connection needs to occur that connection should be careful reverence. The supernatural world (God(s) included) are neither good nor evil - they are capricious at best and are quick to anger. From a ministry perspective one begins to understand how approaching such a culture with a message of eschatological warfare is distinctly not a good idea.
Back to American horror - take a look at the Zombie sub-genre. It has always had a healthy life to it but recently it has become very popular. I saw Zombieland tonight and feel as though it will likely be considered the peak of this current cycle of Zombie films. Historically Zombies have always been the reanimated dead. The source for this was Haitian voodoo mythology. How te dead were reanimated depended upon the current psychosis of western culture. In the 50's-80's they were generally reanimated via mysterious outerspace dust or atomic/nuclear radiation. In 2002 a fantastic British movie came out called 28 Days Later which completely reworked the Zombie movie by presenting us with a population that had been transformed by a mysterious virus. Since then virtually every Zombie movie (save Fido which to be fair was a homage to the 50's zombie films) has followed the same basic premise...zombies are no longer reanimated dead but infected living. The new focus on the infectious virus speaks to our cultures fear of things like H1N1, Bird Flu, AIDS, etc.
ASIDE - Video games track fairly closely with movie culture and have been ahead of the curve when it comes to these cultural reflections...especially as regards Japanese influence on American culture. Part of the reason for this is likely that Japan has generally been seen as the video game leader of the world in terms of creativity and development.
If one were to apply some of these insights to today's horror movies that are less and less supernatural and more and more slasher/violent in nature one might come to believe the current psychosis of American culture is a fear of one-another. A fear of humanity. Given the state of things this makes lots of sense.
In terms of the future I would not be surprised to see more horror films exploring themes reflective of terrorism, fear of Islam etc. I also expect the western horror film to become less and less hopeful with the collapse of Judea-Christian values. The series of horror moves called Final Destination (which launched in 200)) bear this out I think.
Anyhow - those are some thoughts on horror movies. Much more could be said about sub-genres like vampires but I am too tired to go into it all right now. October 18 Froggies: A Poem Written Upon Hearing of the Mowing of Frog Laden Yardfive little froggies and the blade blade blade run little froggies to the shade shade shade four little froggies needing aid aid aid mourn little froggies in the glade glade glade three little froggies should have stayed stayed stayed in there home little froggies in grass to braid braid braid two little froggies in shelter made made made of sticks little froggies where they prayed prayed prayed one little froggie wants to fade fade fade to the shadows little froggie where once you laid laid laid no little froggies in grass that swayed swayed swayed just a group of little ghosties to pond to wade wade wade forever little froggie wade wade wade JackJack saw blue sky
as window on black night
Jack saw silver moon
shine 'midst the shivering daylight
while underground
where the bones lay waiting
Jack saw life and love and loss
world's gray-hate abating
would that I could
walk as nimble Jack
with cross upon the thin places
no riding nightmare's saddle
through mind's moor
grave brow above grave faces
just Jack and light
just Jack and sight
just Jack and God
just Jack and I
without facade |
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