ARTS & MISCELLANEOUS

Carry Me
by Tim Lowly

Brian Volck in the on-line blog “Image: Art, Faith, Mystery” writes: “Lately, I’ve been reading some works at the intersection of theology and the impaired body. As a physician trying to live as a Christian, that’s where I spend much of my professional time. While I treasure idealized portrayals of the human figure in classical and Italian Renaissance art, I, like you, perhaps, am an imperfect body in a suffering world. In my life and work, I experience pain and suffering less as a brutal shattering of perfection than a familiar, often ironic companion - Here’s where I find the work of (21st century) visual artist Tim Lowly so compelling. His daughter, Temma, who appears frequently in his paintings, has a constellation of impairments Lowly never disguises. - Lowly lovingly places his daughter in contexts which neither idealize nor demean her.
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Faith-Related Links & Blogs

(Blogs are like on-line journals kept by individuals with the addition that they are often interactive.

Often visitors may comment on entries and create discussion. These sites are not related in any way to First Congregational Church and are provided only as a way to provoke thought on faith and faith issues.)

Philocrates (commentary on liberal religion and politics)
Image:Art, Faith, Mystery
BuildingBridges
Faith Stories

thecampbell chronicles
Killing the Buddha
Emerging Church Blog
Soul Gardeners
Ragamuffin Minister
Blog.Culture and Faith.com

UCCTruths
(critiques of UCC policies and actions, particularly those of
Natl. Office)

Dr. Jacobsen to speak on the Pentecostal Movement

The father
of our own Anna Jacobsen will be speaking in the Albertson Room of the
DorÈ Theater at Cal State University on Monday evening, February 26, at
7 p.m.

Douglas Jacobsen is Distinguished Professor of Church
History and Theology at Messiah College, Grantham, PA, and one of the
country’s foremost scholars of the Pentecostal movement. His topic
will be “Pentecostalism: Past, Present and Future.”  An estimated 25%
of Christians worldwide are part of this growing movement.

He is
author of Thinking in the Spirit:  Theologies of the Early Pentecostal
Movement
(2003), Gracious Christianity (2006), and editor of A Reader
in Pentecostal Theology:  Voices from the First Generation
(2006).
Books will be available for sale and autographing after his
presentation.

Admission is free, and parking is free in lots B and C only.

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