Friday, June 30, 2006

The Boiler Room In Kansas City


It’s pretty ridiculously exciting for me that I finally discovered the Boiler Room in Kansas City. You know how you can search and search for something on the internet and not find it. It should be easy, you’re thinking, but this site is lost to you with no avail. I am currently planning a move to Kansas City, one of the main motivations of my sojourn is the Kansas City Boiler Room by 24-7 Prayer (the only Boiler Room in the nation I might add). It was distressing to me that the place I was headed appeared to have no web presence.
“What kind of place doesn’t have a website?” I think to myself.
“Could it be that I am heading to a land where no one will be able to discover the wonder of the Boiler Room though the lenses of the world wide web?”
Nay! I am please to announce that I have stumbled upon it quite stupidly. I figured out how to edit my links on this little “Grace to Upend” (great news) and upon finding some links to put in there I discovered it. The Boiler Room in Kansas City where I am headed.
Check it out

Thursday, June 29, 2006

D*C Band


I was reading an interview with David Crowder and had to share part of it.

". . . we thought about how Jesus celebrated Passover with his disciples before being crucified. They would have traditionally sung the Hallel as part of that—the Psalm with "His love endures forever"—before heading to [Gethsemane] and Jesus praying in agony.

"When that song was formed over years of Jewish tradition, part of me wonders whether God was orchestrating that to give his people something that he himself would need later on for comfort. Knowing that he would one day take human form, did he use this song to help gain confidence in God's love? Who knows, but I think it's really interesting how art and grief coexist and feed off each other like that."

If read this and said "I just can't get enough." here's the
Link
to get there.

Speaking of the David Crowder Band, I just got their new CD B Collision the other day and have been greatly enjoying it. Is it bluegrass? Maybe not as we know it but it is to Crowder and if you can see where he is coming from what might be perceived as idiosyncratic turns into something beautiful. It has something to do with worshiping to the tune of “Everybody wants to go to Heaven but nobody wants to die.”

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Starbucks quotes


Part of me can’t stand the little quotes on the sides of the Starbucks to go cups that say things like; “A person must equip themselves with these three things to get through life: courage, hope, and family. With those they can achieve anything.” – a tennis player who I have never heard of. A quaint little Starbucks Bible verse to smile about.

No, I am being cynical on purpose. It’s true that I rarely enjoy the quote (I just can’t picture anyone being that cheesy out of context. They must all come from graduation speeches.) but I love that the quote is there. Something to look for when I get my coffee. Almost like looking to see if I got the guy shooting a bow-n-arrow at a star on the tootsie-pop wrapper . . .

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

K'ang-hsi

I really didn't expect to find Emperor of China: Self-portrait of K'ang-hsi all that intriguing. Really I am shocked this same way quite often. Books that I have to read for school are really not supposed to be interesting. They are for the most part though and I can't figure out why. It's like I am dreading reading and I start reading and I am dreading reading more then all of a sudden it is interesting. I think if I read it in any other context, say I bought the book in a one of those mini Borders that they have in airport and I read it on my flight to Anchorage I would find it quite dull. hm.

OK, I had to read it for the intro to Asian studies class I am taking (bad that I have to take two more gen-ed classes to graduate after summer session, good that I can take classes I am actually interested in). I knew that this would be the kind of class in which there is more reading assigned than there are hours in the day. If professors really wanted students to read then they would not assign so much reading. The way I see it is that profs assign more reading then there are hours in a day. That's problematic for two reasons 1) It is impossible to read it all and 2) sense it is impossible to read it all I feel that if I attempt to read then I am bound to fail because it’s impossible right? Being that I don't want to fail then I won't ever start, thus avoiding failure. I seriously think this way without even noticing it. I would read if there was a manageable amount to read but sense the amount is impossible then I won't read at all.

Before summer session even began I was well aware of the fact that there would be a significant amount of reading to be done. In order get ahead start I went a head and started to read one of the books entitled First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers by Loung Ung. I guess I chose the wrong book to start. The prof told me to have this other book, Emperor of China, read by Friday. At first I was disappointed, being that I was enthralled by Ung’s book and being that the first bit of Emperor of China starts fairly bland. But as I read the book I found K’ang-hsi to be the King Solomon I always wanted, or somewhat that way. Being that it is K’ang-hsi words and that is has been translated it has that Proverbs/Song of Solomon feel but better. It’s not like I am going to be able to describe it very well here but let me share my favorite part.

So Kang-hsi gets a visit from de Tournon, a kind of ambassador sent by the Pope. I really start to like the conversation that’s going on between them when K’ang-hsi gets flustered with de Tournon’s ramblings and presumably his avoidance of the heart of the matter, what K’ang-hsi is getting at so K’ang-hsi says to him out right, “Exactly why have you come here?” Just out of no where and then he goes on, “I have asked you several times already through intermediaries, and have not forgotten your replies. But now that you are here in person, you may have something in your heart to say that goes beyond these replies. Don’t worry about your eloquence – speak and act freely, keep nothing back.” I love that “Don’t worry about eloquence.” He is an emperor for crying out loud and this poor guy, from western civilization is thinking, “Hmmm, I don’t know that I am quite able to do that.”

De Tournon does end up telling the emperor that the pope would like to have contacts with China set up in form of someone who is in the popes confidence, someone who has the proper “inside” knowledge of the Papal Court, while K’ang-hsi tells him that there are plenty of Westerners who have been involved in the courts of china for forty years. He says, “and they are still lacking in knowledge of imperial affairs, how could someone just transplanted from the West do better?” The way I see it, they both have the same problem. Later K’ang-hsi dismisses de Tournon and the matter but there is a very humorous, underlying banter going on all the while. I guess I admire K’ang-hsi in that he was able to recreate that banter in his documentation of the manner. Even if it didn’t happen exactly like that it is an amusing and also thought provoking interchange. More on the thought provoking part in a later blog.