Russell E. Saltzman is a former Lutheran pastor, transitioning to the Roman Catholic Church.
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Russell E. Saltzman
The old love song asks: Tell me why the stars do shine/Tell me why the ivy twines/Tell me why the skys so blue/And then I’ll tell you just why I love you. I have always found it an affecting little bit of music. Ive gone so far as embarrassing middle school kids on youth retreats by making them sing it to each other while holding hands around the campfire. Sure, they probably still hate me, but I think it will do them less harm in the long run than singing Kum Ba Yah… . Continue Reading »
I must have been living under a rock. Here it is late June, The Voice appeared a whole month ago, and it wasnt until last week that I heard anything about it. It is a new Bible, of course, from Thomas Nelson Publishing and the Ecclesia Bible Society, the latter an outgrowth of Ecclesia Church, Houston, an emergent congregation. There was an earlier 2010 release of The Voice New Testament, but I slept through that as well… . Continue Reading »
All my clothing comes from stores with names like Community Thrift Store, Family Thrift, and Vintage Value. These are places several retail notches below Macys or Target, and even further down the retail chain from all the dollar stores. If cheap used clothing has an endearing ring for you, these are the places to shop. Here second hand, if not third hand, is an honored and expected description. And clean, clean is a nice word to run across… . Continue Reading »
Richard John Neuhaus was born seventy-six years ago last week. A friend made note of it at the time, and it sent my mind tumbling again into memories of the friendship we had. Theres little doubt in my mind that compared to all the people he knew and befriended in life, I was a bit player… . Continue Reading »
The dead are not really dead. They hang around to pester us. Not as ghosts, no; I dont believe in ghosts. Nor do I mean the dead live on in our memory and in our hearts, nor even necessarily”as Ive noted before”that they now have gone on to a better place. This isnt the time to go all metaphysical, anyway. No, I mean they all leave residue behind that commands attention and occupies mammoth periods of time and sometimes space, stretching, as far as I can see, endlessly into the future… . Continue Reading »
The percentages, based only on this mans intuition, are the proper numbers to use ascertaining what people spend on a wedding, the ninety-nine being relative to the one. Weddings for the ninety-nine percent, well, they are cheap. Inexpensive may be a better word. Frugal might work too… . Continue Reading »
I have decided to stop aging. Ive tried it now for awhile but it simply doesnt suit me, so I am giving up on it. Other people have gone through it, Im aware, but from what I can observe it almost always turns out badly for them. As lifestyles go, theres just not much to be said for it in the long run. It will be like giving up cigars, I think. I can expect some lapses from time to time but if I keep at it with grit, determination, will power and cessation pills Ill be done with it once and for all, finished, all fixed… . Continue Reading »
Preaching Death: The Transformation of Christian Funeral Sermons ? by Lucy Bregman? Baylor, 263 pages, $24.95 If thirty years ago my seminary classmates and I had any notion of how to talk about death, we learned it from Elizabeth K¸bler-Ross death awareness model, reinforced . . . . Continue Reading »
Domestic chickens inside the city limits of Lawrence, Kansas are no longer being threatened with slaughter. Any chickens elsewhere will have to fend for themselves. This, it may surprise you to know, is disappointing news to performance artists everywhere and to one performing artist, Amber Hansen, in particular. It was Ms. Hansens ambition to do just that, kill a few chickens, and call it art… . Continue Reading »
In Pauls eschatology, Christians living at the Lords return will be swept up in Christ and the dead in fact will be the first to participate in the grand trumpet-call summons to resurrection. Console one another, Paul laconically concludes, with these words. I am trying, but what I hear isnt helping. I was told again a week ago at my fathers funeral”Ive heard this now in one version or another at four funerals within the last three years and, truly, I am weary of hearing it”that we all know where X is; he is in a better place. … Continue Reading »
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