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learning by practice: meet my ibanez

Since I'm doing research on learning by  practice (a study of theological education from the perspective of the learners), I thought I should learn something myself.   Isaiah, my  (as of Saturday) 10-year-0ld, has been learning guitar for three years, so I thought about guitar, too.  But I sing tenor and bass lines on hymns and have played the baritone horn since 5th grade.  So playing the bass guitar seemed more natural.  I've been playing since last summer and I'm starting to get a feel for where to put my hands.  I might write more about it but for now, meet my  Ibanez  AEB.  It is a sweet guitar.  Here's a picture. 

Aeb10ebk_5

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writing . . . broken hallelujahs

Reading

  • Stephen J. Nichols: Getting the Blues: What Blues Music Teaches Us about Suffering and Salvation

    Stephen J. Nichols: Getting the Blues: What Blues Music Teaches Us about Suffering and Salvation
    Well, in order to get closer to the theology of the blues, and that'd be theology in a minor key, that doesn't skip past Good Friday because it knows Sunday's coming, plan on checking out Nichols compelling new book Getting the Blues. Brazos sent it to me to read so that I can offer a pre-publication endorsement. So far, I like it a lot.

  • Robert Palmer: Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta

    Robert Palmer: Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta
    A rich rewarding journey into America's gift to the music of the world, and the root of so much of what I love musically speaking: jazz, gospels, rock and roll, and more. A great starting place even if he is not that interested in the question of theology of the blues, a question I'd very much like to explore

  • David F. Ford: Christian Wisdom: Desiring God and Learning in Love (Cambridge Studies in Christian Doctrine)

    David F. Ford: Christian Wisdom: Desiring God and Learning in Love (Cambridge Studies in Christian Doctrine)
    David Ford has become one of the most important theologians writing today, and he has been mulling this one for more than a decade. I heard him speak at Yale in 2003 in response to Miroslav and Dorothy Bass' book Practicing Theology and many of these themes regarding wisdom come up. Especially powerful engagement with scripture from which he draws the idea of "wisdom cries." A practical theologian at his best. Read!

  • Mary Oliver: Why I Wake Early: New Poems

    Mary Oliver: Why I Wake Early: New Poems
    Here I find a carnal theology, so deeply enmeshed in the glory of the ordinary. finitum capax infiniti. read her and you will not look at an ordinary day as ordinary again. Try, for starters, "This World," on page 27. It begins thus: "I would like to write a poem about the world that has in it nothing fancy./ But it seems impossible./ Whatever the subject, the morning sun glimmers it./"

  • Charles Taylor: A Secular Age

    Charles Taylor: A Secular Age
    My teacher, the sociologist Robert Bellah, says: "This is one of the most important books written in my lifetime." Okay, enough. Rush out and get this book, just out, from one of the best living philosophers and certainly the most important for Christians.

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