Showing posts with label Calvin College. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calvin College. Show all posts

Monday, 19 March 2018

210--Abraham Kuyper Conference


Two hits in one day!  This is to atone partially for the many times I've failed to show up. But it's even more because of the importance I am attaching to the event I am about to advertise today.

There is this conference about Abraham Kuyper I want you to know about.  If you have liked the perspective of this blog so far, then you will be interested in this Kuyper guy. If I have been successful in luring you towards my website < www.SocialTheology.com >, then you will have felt something of the wholistic perspective that this Kuyper guy blessed us with. He is not the only one who upheld a wholistic perspective on religion in general and on Christianity in particular, but few there are whose work has developed into a global, international, school of thought and community of scholars and social activists like Kuyper did--without having any idea, let alone plan, that this would be the case post mortem. 

Anyhow, there's been a series of twenty annual conferences called Kuyper Conference. They have generally been held at Princeton University, one of the Ivy League schools in the eastern USA. The one this year will be held at Calvin College and Seminary, both of them my Alma Maters. If you're anywhere near Grand Rapids, MI, I strongly urge you to try to make it. Even if you're far away, if you want a life-changing experience in your religious and spiritual life, you should try to attend. I live in Vancouver BC, some 4,000 clicks away, but, the Lord willing, I will be there.

Here follows the info you need:

DESCRIPTION

The annual Kuyper Conference, which began in 1998 at Princeton Theological Seminary, was founded to acknowledge the stream of Calvinist thought represented by Abraham Kuyper, Dutch theologian and statesman (1837-1920), and to explore the tradition he helped to form, commonly known as neocalvinism.
The Kuyperian movement, originally primarily associated with Dutch Calvinists in the Netherlands and North America, is now growing globally. The 21st annual Kuyper Conference will focus on this international expansion as we examine The Future of African Public Theology on April 30-May 1, 2018 at Calvin College & Seminary in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The event will pursue a conversation between African public theologians from a variety of perspectives and Reformed Christian scholars from several continents about the state of African public theology, the need for it, and the promise it holds for informing Christian thinking and practice on the African continent and beyond.
The Conference is intended to advance scholarship, as well as to foster personal and professional networks of scholars, pastors, ministry professionals, civic leaders, and practitioners with interests in Kuyper and the neocalvinist tradition. Conference participation is open to anyone who is interested in the topics considered at this event.
Proposals for concurrent sessions on a variety of topics are welcome (see the Call for Papers). The two-day event will also include plenary sessions featuring prominent African theologians, as well as roundtable discussions on various topics related to Kuyperian thought. The conference registration fee of $75 ($45 for students) includes all of the event sessions, as well as lunch and a reception on Monday and coffee breaks throughout the event.
For more information about the Conference, including overnight accommodations and the event schedule, go to https://calvin.edu/events/kuyper-conference/

Monday, 13 November 2017

Post 192--"Crazy" Roget




This is the story about a man and his book that has been very helpful to me ever since my college years back in the late 1950s. It is about Peter Mark Roget and his book Roget's Thesaurus. I was in Calvin College, Grand Rapids Michigan. The person who gave the book to me was Ben Wisselink, a student in forestry at the University of BC in Vancouver. Unfortunately, Ben contacted a mysterious kind of illness that did him in. He never graduated. 

As to that book being very useful to me over the years, being a writer, I consulted it frequently, whether I studied and wrote in Canada, the USA, Nigeria or The Netherlands. It was always within reach on shelves just above my desk until 2016, when I noticed a used copy of Webster's Thesaurus published in 1988 sitting on the shelf of a thrift store in Vancouver.  Since my faithful Roget's had fallen apart and had frequently been taped up, I decided to buy the Webster and have been using it since, while poor old Roget's was trashed.  

Webster's boasts about itself on its cover, "It is so simple and easy to use that for many it will largely supersede Roget...." That, according to the Wall Street Journal, a newspaper respected by everyone and, therefore, believed. Well, they were right: It is simple to use, but it took me a long time, over a year of frequent use, that I began to appreciate it almost as much as my Roget's. I sort of felt I betrayed two trusted friends when I discarded it. The first to be betrayed was my friend Ben. After all, this was my last remaining memory of him. The second to be betrayed was the Roget's itself. It had served me so well and effectively that trashing it seemed like trashing another old friend. I did not find Webster's easier to use, but that was probably more due to sentiment than practicality. I've gotten used to it and am okay with it now, though the sense of double betrayal still lingers.

I am sharing the article below with you as my final farewell to both friends and with deep gratitude to both. As a writer, I could not have done without either. Thank you Ben. Thank you Roget, even though you put your unusual book together under suffering circumstances.   

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A life of madness, pain and words
Roget: New book looks at the man who created the first thesaurus
The Province, March 30, 2008


His mother suffered dark depressions and tried to dominate his life. His sister and daughter had severe mental problems, his father and wife died young and a beloved uncle committed suicide in his arms.
So what did Peter Mark Roget, the creator of Roget’s Thesaurus, do to handle all the pain, grief, sorrow, affliction, woe, bitterness, unhappiness and misery in a life that lasted more than 90 years?
He made lists.
The 19th century British scientist made lists of words, creating synonyms for all occasions that ultimately helped make life easier for term paper writers, crossword puzzle lovers and anyone looking for the answer to the age-old question: “What’s another word for …”
And according to a new biography, making his lists saved Roget’s life and by keeping him from succumbing to the depression and misery of those around him.
“As a boy he stumbled upon a remarkable discovery – that compiling lists of words could provide solace, no matter what misfortunes may befall him,” says Joshua Kendall, author of the just-published The Man Who Made Lists, a study of Roget’s life (1779-1869) based on diaries, letters and even an autobiography composed of lists.
Kendall, in a recent interview, said Roget cared more for words than people and that making lists on the scale that he did was obsessive-compulsive behavior that helped him fend off the demons that terrorized his distinguished British family.
Madness was a regular guest in Roget’s home, Kendall said. One of his grandmothers either had schizophrenia or severe depression, and Roget’s mother lapsed into paranoia, often accusing the servants of plotting against her. Both his sister and his daughter suffered depression and mental problems.
Then there was the case of Roget’s uncle, British member of Parliament Sir Samuel Romilly, known for his opposition to the slave trade and for his support of civil liberties. He slit his own throat while Roget tried to get the razor out of his hands.
Unlike a thesaurus, no one understood Uncle Sam’s last words: “My dear … I wish …”
Indeed, to quote most of the Thesaurus listing for pain, Roget’s was a life filled with grief, pain, suffering, distress, affliction, woe, bitterness, heartache, unhappiness, infelicity and misery.
Kendall said, “The lists gave him an alternative world to which to repair.” Many writers have declared their debt to Roget, including Peter Pan’s creator, J.M. Barrie. In homage, he put a copy of the Thesaurus in Captain Hook’s cabin so he could declare: “The man is not wholly evil – he has a Thesaurus in his cabin.”
The 20th century poet Sylvia Plath called herself “Roget’s Strumpet” to pay respects for all the word choices he gave her.
But the British journalist Simon Winchester holds Roget responsible for helping to dumb down Western culture because his work allows a writer to look it up rather than think it out.
Roget made his first attempt at a thesaurus at age 26 but put aside the effort and did not publish his book until 1852, when he was in his 70s and retired. He then kept busy with it for the rest of his life.
It became an instant hit in Britain but did not sell that well when an American edition was published two years later. But when Americans went crazy for crossword puzzles in the 1920s, the Thesaurus assumed its place on reference shelves.
Kendall’s book is written in a style that he calls “narrative non-fiction,” which contains a lot of dialogue and descriptions of how Roget and his friends feel and think, all, he says, based on source material.

“I did a lot of work to stitch together a narrative,” he said, adding that all the scenes in the book are based on actual events.

Sunday, 8 October 2017

Post 187--Media SOS


Yes, I'm back.  This time I was off to Grand Rapids, Michigan, for two weeks,  where the core of my in-law family lives. Not only did I meet Fran, my wife, there at Calvin College, but so did our three kids meet their spouses there.  Educational incest, you say?  Perhaps, but it put us all on a good course, at least, economically and, to a certain degree,  worldviewishly as well. Well, whatever....  It's the place where I would like to see my cremains strewn over its pond, since that place is the navel of our small clan.  Not sure it will happen. 

Okay, back to the blog business.  A short one today. A cry for help from Religion News Service under the caption "Sunday Morning Editor's Note."  Again, it's American but affects us Canadians as much as it does them.  Here's the editor's plea to all of us:
This week I’d like to ask for your help, and I promise it doesn’t involve money. I was at the Online News Association annual conference last week and one thing that was patently clear was the monopolistic power Facebook and Google now wield in the news business. They get to distribute news for free, while they have decimated ad revenues for the creators of news content. As digital media strategist Heidi N. Moore recently lamented in the Columbia Journalism Review, "Facebook and Google collect 99 percent of all digital-advertising revenue growth in the U.S., leaving only crumbs for media companies." 

So here’s my ask. Don’t let Facebook and Google decide what news you get — which they do based on data you’ve most likely given them unwittingly, through your browsing history and other information they can track.

Instead, be an active news reader. Put a little extra effort into getting your daily fix. Go directly to your favorite publications’ home pages. Bookmark a few of them, and when you want to know what’s happening in the world, make it a habit of checking them first. And I hope, of course, that RNS will be one of them. I promised it wouldn't cost anything, and it might just help ensure the viability of the news industry that is so essential to democracy. 

I suggest you read Moore's lament mentioned above. 

Tomorrow is Canadian Thanksgiving Day. I wish you all a time brimming with gratitude for all the things God has given us here in Canada--or, at least, most of us, though perhaps a declining number?  The thing I appreciate the most is our orderly way of living. Compared to an absolute ideal, we probably have a long way to go, but in contrast to where our new neighbours, the refugees, come from, we live in heaven. Just ask them!  Have a thankful one!