
Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category
Thursday, April 26th, 2012
I am happy to announce that N.D. Wilson will be visiting Veritas Academy and talking with our 9th through 12th graders about classical education and New St. Andrews College (where he is a fellow). His books have really caught fire. If you would like to know more about New St. Andrews, let me know and I will make a place for you!
Here is Nate’s recent interview on the Today Show: Today Interview
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Thursday, April 26th, 2012
The stories and lauds are pouring out concerning Berry. I am going to post a few. I read his Jefferson Lecture last night. It is classic Berry. The fact that they did not know what he is going to say is classic government bureaucracy. Here is one cheer from Wendell from Mark Bittman of the New York Times:
American Hero
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Wednesday, April 25th, 2012
Here are a few paragraphs of fall out after the Jefferson Lecture last night in DC. Berry (now patted on the back by right and left as a sage and thinker) kept on pointing out that the economy (which of course is now somewhat synonymous with the government and the corporations) is horribly broken and that we are all guilty for not having the guts to stand up to these interests that should be serving us. Note the reaction of the National Endowment of the Humanities representative who stood up after Berry…bet these folks had no idea who they had invited. The people that kill the prophets are the ones that put the biggest wreaths at their wondrous tombs. This “prophet”, however, is not dead yet. They should have waited to honor him…
“That we live now in an economy that is not sustainable is not the fault only of a few mongers of power and heavy equipment. We all are implicated. We all, in the course of daily economic life, consent to it.”
With such a stern rebuke of the U-S culture, it’s no wonder that after Berry’s remarks the Chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities, Jim Leach put some distance between the lecture and the government.
“As an official of the United States Government I’m obligated to note that the views are those of the speaker and do not reflect that of the United States government or any agency thereof.”
Here is the whole article:
Berry Honored?
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Wednesday, April 25th, 2012
I am still reading this, but Berry is so good that I wanted to post it now. He gave the lecture last night. Take an 45 minutes and soak in this tonight.
Berry’s Jefferson Lecture
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Tuesday, April 24th, 2012
Here is an excellent post by Douglas Wilson on Protestantism’s liberation of the arts. I think that he is right, but I might want more to be said. Recent Protestant forays into the arts been worse than mixed, but I do not think that this has much to do with Protestantism in any historic. Rather, it has to do with cultural capitulation to worldly standards of beauty in the arts, a deep and abiding desire to make money, and to be respected by unbelieving artists (see the phrase “crossover”). The post is, all in all, excellent and well worth reading:
Protestantism and the Arts
Posted in Culture, Faith, Movies | 2 Comments »
Saturday, April 21st, 2012
Here is an interesting article by David Brooks. Interesting, because he sees the problem clearly but does not advocate the right solution. The problem is this: Colleges are overpriced and there is increasing evidence that they are not really educating. (In other posts–or maybe just in conversation–I have made a point of noting that college has two parts an educational element and an experiential element. Both are worth something. Neither are worth a life of debt slavery which many college graduates are now facing.) He sees this an his answer is: Bring “No Child Left Behind” (NCLB) to college (i.e., bring accountability to the system by showing parents and students which colleges are teaching least).
This is a bad idea in the same way that NCLB is bad in elementary and secondary schools. It leads to lowest common denominator teaching which would be called gaming the system were it applied to casinos. It distracts the good people and while it might whip some of the worst colleges into doing a better job, it is a cumbersome and overall negative fix.
So what should happen? I advocate freedom. I think that many of the restrictions faced by people trying to start colleges should be lifted. From recent conversations with friends involved in what could be termed the Underground Higher Education Movement, many of these restrictions have been started recently. They are written for (and no doubt by) gigantic institutions and they are crushing small, start up colleges. If we simply lifted the restrictions, money and students would follow (not perfectly or immediately but surely and eventually) achievement. This type of accountability would also avoid the NCLB lowest common denominator problem. Why do people want to avoid these competitive fixes? Because many folks think that control or accountability is crucial to getting goods and services (education is a service) to people. The locus of control in this system is going to break! It is breaking even now. Judgment Day is coming for colleges…heck, I think it might already be here.
Here is the article:
Are Colleges Making the Grade?
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Saturday, April 21st, 2012
Here is an interesting article by Peter Levine wondering what the future of the study of the classics will look like. I agree with most of what he has said. I am worried that so little of what has been produced in the last 50 years will be read in 2050. I am not as worried about Dante.
Classics in the Future?
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Wednesday, April 18th, 2012
I love Wendell Berry. Here is a great quotation from the The Long-Legged House demonstrating why all of us should love his work. He looks at the world and sees the instruction that it is giving…that really is priceless:
We have lived our lives by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption, that what is good for the world will be good for us. And that requires that we make the effort to know the world and learn what is good for it.”
― Wendell Berry, The Long-Legged House
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Saturday, April 14th, 2012
I have been doing some thinking about why the broader community should support the work of Veritas Academy. I am still working on this, but here is my present best answer (I would love to hear what you think on this):
Every other day I take a little time to ponder problem and solution (the preparation of a case as we have been discussing recently). Here is where I am now. It is not done, but it is getting closer. Read this and tell me what you think and what you would remove or add:
“How has it come to this?” one might ask.
The problem is that Christians abandoned the intellectual life and the places of power and cultural influence to persuasive, intelligent, well-spoken unbelievers. We are confronted with this fact when we listen to the news, when we venture onto a University campus, or when we watch the deliberations of our government officials. Too often we blame these unbelieving intellectuals. They, however, are not to blame! They are simply saying (as best they can) what they believe. We, Christian believers, are to blame for the weakness of the Christian faith in our land and its impotence. We have failed to engage our culture winsomely with the truth. Instead of standing to fight, we have abandoned the field of battle.
Even those believers who speak in the public square are often not equipped to argue persuasively and to stand faithfully against the tide of unbelief. All too often Christians in our culture fight without wisdom or fly from the fight without cause. We have become a people content to curse the darkness with shouts. Too often we do this because we are not able to provide and answer that is persuasive and well-reasoned. Shouting is the last refuge of the person who cannot persuade. Our other failed tactic is running away from the debate. We have become people who look after our own interests imagining that we can live faithfully caring only about Christ’s work in our hearts. This piety fails to see that while Christ’s claims begin in our hearts they do not end there. Christ calls for faithfulness in our families; He calls for justice for the poor and oppressed; He calls us to take the gospel to the lost; He commands us to bring every thought captive and to pull down any strong hold erected against the knowledge of God. We cannot be faithful to Him and avoid the battle for the heart and mind of our culture. We must be able to stand faithfully and answer the arguments of unbelief in our culture calling people to the truth—calling people to Christ.
It is for this reason Veritas Academy exists. We train students to stand against the tide of unbelief in our culture. We teach them to be ready to answer. We prepare them to join in this glorious effort to restore truth, beauty and goodness in our culture. We do this by giving them a classical Christian education. This education prepares them by helping them to learn the basic facts of all subjects, but it does not stop there. It teaches them to think clearly and critically showing them how to expose the flaws in illogical and false thinking. Finally, it prepares them by teaching them to argue winsomely, respectfully, and courageously for truth in our culture.
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