Jim's singing tonight in Redmond
Dec. 15th, 2003 12:27 pm...9pm at Palmer's East. This is his last gig before he moves to Tampa Bay.
You can hear samples of his music here.
You can hear samples of his music here.
A Methodist pastor told me that she was recently approached by a young parishioner who told her that he could no longer read the Bible, as he had discovered that it included stories of animal sacrifice. The young man was thoroughly nonplussed when she informed him that there were ancient tales of human sacrifice as well. Welcome to human history, and the history of religion. Even those who would approach the Bible with a more open mind are sometimes handicapped by what Huston Smith has chracterized as "fact fundamentalism." As the theologian Marcus Borg stated in a recent essay in The Christian Century, while "conservatives insist that everything in the Bible must be factual in order to be true," their more liberal scholarly counterparts "seek to rescue a few facts from the fire. Both camps seem largely unaware," he adds, "that we live in the only culture in human history that has equated truth with factuality." Borg finds that "this has had a pernicious effect on our ability to appreciate the Bible, with its interweaving of history and metaphor and symbolic narrative." [Emphasis added]
It is evident that the grip of "The Return of the King" on Mr. Jackson is not unlike the grasp the One Ring exerts over Frodo: it's tough for him to let go, which is why the picture feels as if it has an excess of endings. But he can be forgiven. Why not allow him one last extra bow?
"The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" is rated PG-13 for a stunning mastery of violence and intense scenes of bloodletting.