Sunday, December 19, 2004

Please bear with me. I think I'll return to normal after the Christmas holiday.

In poking around my referrer links, I found a link to a blog that had a Rhapsody playlist. So I thought I'd search for other sites linking to Rhapsody playlists. And I found a blog called Rhapsody Radish that does pretty much just this. Wow.

No, really, it's good. (Unlike the playlists I've posted). Lots of playlists posted apparently daily. As a test, I'm listenting to their “Instrumental Acoustic Christmas Music”. For what it is (er, instrumental acoustic Christmas music) it's good.

They've also got this weird playlist generator thing. Makes me wonder if the guy is scraping Rhapsody data, building his own database, and serving up playlists. Having friends over for dinner? What's that, you're making enchiladas? Well, just drop down the “dinner” box, select “Mexican”, and you're off an running with your soundtrack for the night.

Update: Responding to “matt” in the comments. Actually, it wasn't rhapsody rock school (though thanks for the pointer, BTW). It was a guy who had a blog entry that contained a Rhapsody playlist, and the playlist was actually removed from the page. I couldn't quite figure out how one got from there to ricoblog, which was one of the reasons why I was searching around.

Post Author: Rico
Sunday, December 19, 2004 4:37:10 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Saturday, December 18, 2004

Righteous Pop Music - Volume 2. I'm not sure what's 'righteous' about it. Someone had the bright idea of using the tunes to popular television shows, and changing the lyrics to be more 'righteous' (I guess; that's the only explanation I have for the title).

No, it's not Christmas music, but it sure is ... er ... I'll let you be the judge. For the benefit of all mankind, the page has some samples.

I think that if there was a sample for track 12, “Mary and Joseph's Theme”, set to the tune of the Brady Bunch theme song ... well that would probably crack into my Horrible Christmas Music list. Unfortunately for me, I actually heard a snippet from that song in a story from NPR this morning, prompting me to look for more information and compose this post (too bad for you, huh?). Go to the page for Saturday's show, click on “Again with the Annoying Holiday Tunes” ... if you dare.

I do have to admit, though — there's a sad, strange part of me that really wants to hear “Elijah's Movin' on Up”, which is sung to the tune of the theme from The Jeffersons.

Post Author: Rico
Saturday, December 18, 2004 5:39:43 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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It's been awhile since I've written about the Epistle to Diognetus (notes to §3). For the unaware, I consider the Epistle to Diognetus as "blog fodder". This means when the typical fount of ricobloggian blather is running dry, I turn to Diognetus to keep the exercise of writing up. This means that tonight I'm writing on EpDiog 4.

As mentioned in the notes on §3, EpDiog 3 and EpDiog 4 are written to Diognetus (a Greek pagan) to convince him that Christianity is superior to Judaism.

Actually, to me, it sounds more like EpDiog 4 is written against Judaizers and perhaps not necessarily Jews. The same sorts of things the author chastizes the Jews over are strikingly similar to the sorts of things Paul mentions in some of his epistles regarding Judaizers:

Topic

Epistle to Diognetus

Paul

anxiety over food

EpDiog 4.1

Ro 14.20; 1Co 8.1-13; Col 2.16-17; 1Ti 4.3

Sabbath

EpDiog 4.1; EpDiog 4.3

Col 2.16-17

cirucumcision

EpDiog 4.1; EpDiog 4.4

Ro 2.25-29; 1Co 7.18-19; Gal 2; Titus 1.10

new moon

EpDiog 4.1; EpDiog 4.5

Col 2.16-17

The conclusion of the author to Diognetus is much the same as Paul's conclusion.

Author of Ep. to Diognetus

Paul

For how is it not completely unwarranted to accept some of the things created by God for human use as made well, but to reject others as useless and superfluous? (EpDiog 4.2)

To the pure, all things are pure, but to the defiled and unbelieving, nothing is pure; but both their minds and their consciences are defiled. (Titus 1.15)

Is the author confusing Judaizers with Jews? It's possible, but it is also very possible that the Judaizers were emphasizing the same things that Jews emphasized in worship in their synagogues. There is some similarity in the topics that the author emphasizes to Diognetus with what Paul highlighted in instruction to various churches dealing with similar issues.

The author's rhetoric against the Jews in the last verse (EpDiog 4.6) is a bit over the top. Considering his point made, the author bashes his target with one last flourish. Then he ends with this sentence (this is from Ehrman's translation): "But do not expect to be able to learn from any human the mystery of the Christian's own way of worship".

Huh? I lost the author here. I see four views of this sentence.

  • View 1: He's lost it. If this is literally true, why is the author even taking time to write the letter?
  • View 2: One word: Gnosticism. Think about it: Diognetus can't learn true Christian worship from "any human"?
  • View 3: Another word: Rhetoric. Hey, guess what EpDiog 5 is about? And EpDiog 6? That, and it sounds pretty deep, and we all know that the Holy Spirit plays a role in this sort of thing.
  • View 4: He's Calvinist, emphasizing the role of the Holy Spirit over the role of man in bringing people to Christ.

What do I think? Well, I think door #3 has some merit. I also know, however, that I only spent about five minutes thinking through this, so I could be wrong on all four counts.

Stay posted for when I hit EpDiog 5, which starts to get into my favorite stretch of chapters of this short epistle.

Post Author: Rico
Saturday, December 18, 2004 8:12:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Wednesday, December 15, 2004

USPS comes through. My Return of the King DVD was shipped USPS first thing Monday morning, starting the week off in fine fashion. USPS has woefully inadequate shipment tracking (compared to UPS), so I didn't really know when it would come. I figured it would be today (Dec. 15) or tomorrow (Dec. 16).

My hopes where dashed when my friend and colleague Vince rushed to show me that his copy — ordered with 2nd Day UPS shipping — had arrived. Deep doldrums ensued.

And then, the joyous IM from our receptionist staffing the front desk. “Package” was the only word. And the long-awaited DVD was here.

The bad part: I'm already scheduled to be at a friend's house for dinner and a meeting tonight, so I won't get to dig into the appendices until tomorrow (or really late tonight). Won't watch the full show until Saturday, unless I just can't hold out.

Post Author: Rico
Wednesday, December 15, 2004 8:28:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Tuesday, December 14, 2004

Just caught mention of this potential project on James Tauber's blog.

It sounds somewhat similar to a project that Logos is working on with the folks at Crossway, The ESV English-Greek Reverse Interlinear New Testament. I should note that William D. Mounce did a similar project with Zondervan, aligning the NIV with Greek behind the NIV NT.

If you were at the ETS conference in November, you might have picked up the sample copy of the ESV English-Greek Reverse Interlinear for Romans. Crossway passed out copies of this to everyone who wanted one at their Friday morning breakfast. (I was one of the guys passing out copies; you may have received your copy from me.) Logos was able to show an electronic version of the ESV English-Greek Reverse Interlinear during a demo at the same breakfast.

 

Post Author: Rico
Wednesday, December 15, 2004 2:56:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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Here's a cool page about Hebraica & Judaica Incunabula.

And here's a decent definition of the term Incunabula: The printing art was at the time of its inception as revolutionary an achievement in human history as computer technology in our own day: it is referred to in Hebrew sources as a "heavenly craft." Books published in the earliest period of printing, from the time Gutenberg introduced printing to Europe (ca. 1455) until the year 1500, are known as incunabula, or cradle-books. (taken from a page at the above exhibit)

Post Author: Rico
Tuesday, December 14, 2004 8:06:29 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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 Monday, December 13, 2004

No, it's not a proposed title for an SBL paper.

As mentioned earlier, I'm reading The Reformation: A History by Diarmaid MacCulloch. I'm still quite early in the book; the stage for the reformation is still being set. MacCulloch is in western Europe, around 1500. He has just started to talk about the printing press, so just after the stage of incunabula and at the beginnings of wider-spread availability of printed books. He's reviewed the introduction of the Bible in local languages. Then he writes:

The effect of printing was more profound than simply making more books available more quickly. It affected western Europe's assumptions about knowledge and originality of thought. Before the invention of printing, a major part of a scholar's life was spent copying existing texts by hand, simply in order to have access to them. Now that printed copies of texts were increasingly available, there was less copying to do, and so there was more time to devote to thinking for oneself. That had implications for scholarly respect for what previous generations had said. Copying had been such a significant activity that in previous centuries of Christian culture, it had been given a privileged place against original thought. (MacCulloch, 71).

I'd never before considered that the printing press had this sort of effect — changing the scholar's product from copying/preservation of previously written material to assimilating the old with the new and actually promoting original thought. (Side thought: Maybe Calvin was so infused with Augustine because he'd spent years copying his stuff before the wider availability of such works?)

In the next page or so, MacCulloch goes on to discuss how all of a sudden, reading became important because, well, folks had time to read and folks had material to read. Scholars had less need to copy material and started actually reading and thinking about things. Folks who only knew how to read but didn't know how to write (an apparently significant portion of the expanding book-buying population according to MacCulloch) had something to hold their attention.

The resulting change in knowledge acquisition is mindboggling, at least to me. Knowledge acquisition, previous to Gutenberg, it seems, invovled hoarding copies of manuscripts for one's own purposes. Now, all of a sudden, these important manuscripts were much easier to acquire. So people now start to really pay attention to what is written. They, in essence, learn how to read. They learn how to comprehend. Scholars no longer need to be obsessed with preservation of valuable resources, they can actually study them.

Can you imagine some of the converastions between the older scholars and the younger ones? Can you hear the older scholars imploring their students regarding the value of hand-copying Augustine or Aquinas, because that's the only way you can really achieve intimate familiarity with their work? And can you imagine the younger student's responses? How they think they can simply read the work and — without the pain and carpal-tunnel-inducing act of copying it — refer to it later, because they have a printed copy?

Talk about revolution. So here comes the obvious question: If MacCulloch is right about this shift, is it possible that we're at a similar point today?

I've said in other circles that I think we're still in an incunabula-like period when it comes to electronic resources. Publishers are still figuring out how to handle printed material in an electronic form, be it on CDRom or on the web or wherever. Publishers are getting better (we've come a long way in the past 15 years) but we've still got some issues to resolve. The same is true with scholars in their use of these resources. This act of actually reading and becoming familiar with a text, the author, and the argument is an important thing. The understanding and synthesis gained from a solid, thorough reading of a timely or important book is needed to move the general state of knowledge further along. It used to be easy. You had a book, you read it. You sucked it down, you wrote notes, you created bibliographies on topics, you read more, you went to a few conferences and debated with others about it, and you generally examined anything available in the library on the topic you could get your hands on. Then, maybe, you wrote something. Chances are it would be of value.

But here come these young upstarts, with their electronic editions of books, or their web sites, their search engines, or their (horrors!) blogs, pushing the envelope. “No need to really read something”, some might say. “You can always search to find what you're looking for; that stuff you think you remember from somewhere.” Corpora are instantly searched, and results are reviewed; hopefully in some semblence of context.

Extremes of such attitudes (both of the younger and older parties) would be wrong, of course. The only thing that is clear to me is that the one who straddles both eras — the one who is able to understand how to acquire knowledge (not simply a mass of information, but knowledge) using both sorts of systems is the one with the most to gain in times like these.

I'm guessing that in the early 1500's, at the time of the introduction of the printing press, the middle-aged scholar who'd spent most of his scholarly life poring over manuscripts, copying them diligently, and slowly building his knowledge was in the best place of all. He had already gone through the pain of learning his stuff and chances are he knew it quite well. If he'd been diligent, he had a solid base from which to build. The newer guys still had to build their base of knowledge (though they might do it more quickly); the older scholars could have very well been stuck in their older copyists' ways, unable to cope with having to assimilate some new book without needing to physically write it themselves. The middle-aged scholar, however, could take advantage of the press and start to write his own stuff, with an immediate and relatively widespread audience. He had the basis, he had the knowledge, he just needed to grasp the opportunity in order to make his mark.

I think something similar holds today. The answer isn't books. The answer isn't the web. The answer isn't databases. The answer isn't CDRom. The answer is to be a scholarly omnivore: dive into it all and use it all in the pursuit of knowledge. The one-dimensional approach is doomed to failure because that one dimension, by itself, will not survive. The one who will prosper is the one with several tools in his toolbox that he is skilled in using. The one who spends time in printed books, devouring them and working hard to retain what has been read. The one who understands basic search syntax and can find stuff either with Google or with other CDRom-based digital libraries, but knows the value and weight to give such results because he's actually somewhat familiar with the material. The one who spends time reading journals and email lists, understanding the information being passed on by very knowledgable folks. In short, the one who plows ahead, assimilating and applying what he's reading and what he knows to solve the difficult problems in front of him in the field he's chosen.

This person is in the best spot during such periods of change, no matter what sort of changes happen, because he can cope and still be productive. He won't be stuck, flustered and distraught because he'll be able to grok the next thing that comes along and stick the tool in his toolbox for later use.

Of course, all of this is futile if our eyes aren't on the One who compels us. It may be satisfying at some level, but if the ultimate basis for action isn't the glorification of our Lord and Savior, then re-evaluation is needed. At times like these, I'm reminded of an excerpt from T.S. Eliot's Choruses from the Rock:

The endless cycle of idea and action,
Endless invention, endless experiment,
Brings knowledge of motion, but not of stillness;
Knowledge of speech, but not of silence;
Knowledge of words, and ignorance of the Word.
All our knowledge brings us nearer to death,
But nearness to death no nearer to God.
Where is the Life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
The cycles of heaven in twenty centuries
Brings us farther from God and nearer to the Dust.

 

Post Author: Rico
Tuesday, December 14, 2004 7:53:44 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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At least the week is starting out good. I opened my email to find a shipping confirmation message from Amazon.com. This means that my copy of the extended edition of Lord of the Rings: Return of the King is on the way!

The better news:

The shipment was sent to: [address]
via USPS (estimated delivery date: December 16, 2004).

That means I could have it in my grubby little mitts on Thursday!

Update: Responding to John in the comments — I don't have a TV at my house; my only DVD player is on my laptop. Adequate for kickin' back in the recliner and watching solo every now and then, but not for much else. I'm planning on watching it on Vince's big-screen on Saturday.

Post Author: Rico
Monday, December 13, 2004 5:59:58 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 

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