My friend Derrick Jackson - ace columnist for the Boston Globe, talented amateur photographer, and dedicated naturalist took these photo's from the B.U. Bridge between Cambridge and Boston last Monday, 17th June 2013
Povey Prattle is taking a rset. I am doing this because when I transfer Povey Prattle stuff to Facebook (which is how most of you see it) a photo' of the poet MickyScottBeyJones often attaches itself to my posting. I've not been able to find a way to delete the story I wrote about Micky very many years ago. It's one of life's minor annoyances. So I will no longer post on Povey Prattle. If you are one of the five or six readers or followers of that blog you'll be able to read my nonsense and good sense on a new blog "More Prattle from Povey" If you follow me on Facebook there is nothing you need to do. The only difference is that you'll no longer see the confusing photo' of Micky Scott Bey Jones. But do look her up via a web search. She is a terrific poet.
The background I have known the Keller/Bonsey family since 2000 when I became the Rector at St. James's, Cambridge, MA. They (Elisabeth Keller and the Revd. Steven Bonsey with their four children Noah, Sam, Josiah and Annie) had come back to Cambridge from Hawaii where Steve had been the Rector of an Episcopal parish. Steve had just been appointed as a Chaplain at Tufts University (no Sunday morning duties) so the entire family was able to enrich our common life at St. James's - which they did with great love and joy. I count them as friends and have stayed in touch with them since my retirement. Noah, the oldest son is eloquent in Arabic (he spent a year in Damascus when Syria was a safe place). He has developed a super career as an analyst of social media in the near East. Noah worked in Tampa for a while a few years ago, so he and I were a...
This poster has gone viral on the internet today. I find it to be utterly appalling. It makes me feel embarrassed to be an Episcopalian. It is of course historically inaccurate on two counts. First : We have not resisted fundamentalism since 1784. Fundamentalism as a major factor in American Protestantism did not emerge until the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries. Second: The assertion that Jesus ”resisted the Pharisees” is a rather simplistic interpretation of scripture. What we see in the gospels is that Jesus had disagreements with some of the Pharisees. In fact his only encounter with a named Pharisee – Nicodemus – shows a Jesus who is gracious and thoughtful. Never did he resist the Pharisee Nicodemus. It is plain wrong to suggest that Jesus resisted the Pharisees - what all of them! What I find to be most objectionable about the poster is that it seeks to define the Episcopal Church on the basis of what we are against....
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