Month: October 2011

Lectionary Sunday: Matthew 22:34-46

Lectionary Sunday: Matthew 22:34-46

Photo Credit: Ashley Holmes When the Pharisees heard that he had silenced the Sadducees, they gathered together, and one of them, a lawyer, asked him a question to test him. “Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?” He said to him, “’You shall love the Lord 

Book Recommendation: Take This Bread

Book Recommendation: Take This Bread

One of the books that got me thinking about the theology of food this year is Take This Bread by Sara Miles. Miles has a background as a journalist and a restaurant cook.  She wandered into church one Sunday, participated in communion, tasted Jesus in her mouth 

Development Saturday: Community Development and Food

Development Saturday: Community Development and Food

 

 

 

 

I have developed an obsession with the theology of food and healthy eating over the past twelve months.   My thoughts haven’t quite crystalized around this issue yet.  But I am hungry (pun intended) to learn more about how we honor or dishonor the image of God in us with our bodies as we eat and as we feed others.

I was excited to find out that Park Avenue UMC will be the host to the South Minneapolis Food Day event this year.

The principles of food day are to:

The event at Park Avenue will include coverage by KMOJ radio and will be discussing the following topics:

VOICE Food Day event: An African American Community Event

•Re-education on food and culture

•Connecting with source and self empowerment

•Organizing Grocery Store out-reach, re-educate about food choices and healthy options

•Organizing more intergenerational cooking classes

•Promoting local- Church Based Community Gardens and Farmers Markets for the Black Community

A food demonstration will be conducted. Organic Produce will be donated by Sisters of Camelot, so participants can try the Food Demonstration recipes at home. KMOJ radio will be present via the Community Health Dialogue which airs Mondays from 6:30pm – 7:00pm Hosted by Clarence Jones. Contact Maria Sarabia at 612-673-3863 for more information.

You can RSVP to the event here and can read more about the event here.

I’m looking forward to being able to write more about food theology in the coming months.

 

 

Weekly Photo Challenge: Opportunity

Weekly Photo Challenge: Opportunity

The Post A Week Photo Challenge continues, this week our theme is “opportunity.” I loved Halloween as a kid.  My mom was a supervisor at a fabric store when we were growing up and would sew our costumes at the end of the summer in 

Development: Youth Development Girls 3.0 – Miley Cyrus

Development: Youth Development Girls 3.0 – Miley Cyrus

    I’ve been home sick today, so I didn’t write and so I’m posting the third part of my youth development series today instead of waiting for Saturday. *Note* This series comes from an integrative theology paper that I wrote on the intersection of 

Development Saturday: Youth Development Girls 4.0 – Theology

Development Saturday: Youth Development Girls 4.0 – Theology

Still feeling crummy – so here’s part 4, ahead of schedule.

*Note* This series comes from an integrative theology paper that I wrote on the intersection of the doctrine of sin and identity development in young adolescent girls.  You can read part one here and part two here and part three here

Hamartiology: Theology of Sin

Theories:

Theologians have tried to answer the question of the root of sin for millennia and have thus far been able to reach consensus.   Augustine argued that pride (hubris) was to blame.  Thomas Aquinas said that flesh-y desire (concupiscence), Luther and Calvin declared that unfaith is the root.  For Stanley Grenz and others sin is essentially a disruption of community, while for Millard Erickson, sin is simply a failure to let God be God.

Hamartiology Women and Girls

Like the field of adolescent development, theology is a field that until recently was exclusively male.  The perspective of female theologians has been a great gift to expanding our understanding  of theology.  Phyllis Trible in particular offers a helpful look at the creation/fall narrative in Genesis 2 and 3 to assist in our understanding of sin.

According to Trible, our traditional interpretations of the Genesis narrative are flawed.  Particularly in regards to the doctrine of sin, these are the mistakes that theologians often make:  1-God created woman second, therefore she is inferior to man; 2-it was the temptation of the woman that caused the man to sin, therefore, she is responsible for the sin of the entire world; 3-women therefore are “untrustworthy, gullible, and simpleminded;” and finally 4- God has given the right to men to rule over and control women.

Trible challenges these ideas by looking at the narrative as if it were a fresh work of art.  First off, she points out that the word “helper,” used to describe the purpose of woman does not denote inferiority or assistant, but rather is the same word used to describe Yahweh as the help of Israel.[1]  In fact, the man’s declaration, when seeing woman, “This is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh,” signifies equality and mutuality, not inferiority.  Next, she looks at the dialogue between the woman and the serpent.  Trible notes that the serpent uses a plural verb form to address the woman, this signifies that by addressing the woman, the serpent is viewing her as the spokesperson for the couple.[2]  The woman takes the fruit, eats it and gives it to the man, there is no hint of seduction or temptation in the narrative.[3]  Therefore, both the man and the woman are responsible for disobeying God.  In Genesis 3:12, the man turns against the woman and betrays her to God, what was once “one flesh” is now split.  But God says that the woman will always yearn for the original unity of male and female.  However the man will not reciprocate this desire, but will instead desire to rule over her.[4]  Therefore, in sin the nature of woman is damaged by her becoming a slave, the nature of man is damaged by his becoming a master.  What once was harmonious equality is now the dissonance of hierarchy.  The man now, just as he had done to the animals, calls her name Eve, and signifies his assertion of power and sinful authority over her[5].

Young women’s longing for “her man,” as mistaken salvation is reflected in another one of Selena Goméz song’s “A Year With Out Rain.”

Can you feel me / When I think about you / With every breath I take  / Every minute / No matter what I do / My world is an empty place…I’m missing you so much  /Can’t help it, I’m in love / A day without you is like a year without rain /  I need you by my side / Don’t know how I’ll survive / It’s like the ground is crumbling underneath my feet / Won’t you save me / There’s gonna be a monsoon /When you get back to me /

Another feminist theologian, Rosemary Reuther, argues that sin is the result of alienation and broken community.  When we are reborn, we return to our authentic selves, and discover that we have personhood and a unique God-given identity.[6]   Too often, Reuther says, Christians have viewed anger and pride as the root of sin.  In order to become Christ like women accept cruelty and exploitation.[7]  The early Jesus movement, Reuther says was notable in that it held women were, “equal with men in the divine mandate of creation, restored to this equality in Christ; the gifts of the Spirit poured out on men and women alike; the Church as the messianic society, not over against creation but over against the systems of domination.”[8]


[1] Trible 1846

[2] Trible 2183

[3] Trible 2258

[4] Trible 2509

[5] Trible 2609

[6] Reuther 186

[7] Reuther 185

[8] Reuther 196

Creativity Tuesday – Macaroni and Kale

Creativity Tuesday – Macaroni and Kale

Food, is one of my favorite ways to be creative.  Especially when I have a chance to feed people.  Cooking for myself is ok, but having people over to sit at the table, to catch up on life, to eat and to laugh is one 

Something (Fun) For Your Monday 100 years of fashion and dance

Something (Fun) For Your Monday 100 years of fashion and dance

Music Monday – Mumford and Sons – I Gave You All

Music Monday – Mumford and Sons – I Gave You All

I don’t have a long post today for Music Monday, just one line from the song by Mumford and Sons. “If I had an enemy bigger than my apathy I would have won.” It’s powerful, what do you think it means?