Archive for January, 2010

26
Jan

A Word of Grace - January 25, 2010

   Posted by: cslewisfoundation    in A Word of Grace, Devotional

Please note that the content and viewpoints of Mr. Hansen are his own and are not necessarily those of the C.S. Lewis Foundation. We have not edited his writing in any substantial way and have permission from him to post his content.

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Dear Friends:

It was a sunny morning in my eighth grade year when I first heard the song, “Fill My Cup, Lord.” A visiting soloist sang it for special music for the worship service in the little church that my family attended in Soquel, California. He was a friend of my parents and had a nice tenor voice, but I must confess that I didn’t like the song very much.

There is no arguing with the direct and simple message of the song which is an appeal for the Lord to quench spiritual hunger and thirst with the life of Christ ministered by the Holy Spirit. Here is a link to the words: http://www.gospelsonglyrics.org/songs/fill_my_cup_lord.html.

Part of my dislike is that the song was overused, but it was rarely sung well in my hearing. The melody has a dramatic flair that turns sappy and maudlin in the overwrought treatment of singers who believe that the higher the volume and the bigger the vibrato, the closer they and their listeners are to God. “Fill My Cup, Lord” can end up sounding like something out of a bad amateur production of the musical, “Carousel.” A notable exception is the fine version sung by CeCe Winans.

The song was successful in getting me to think about Jesus’ encounter with the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s Well in the City of Sychar. The story is described in detail by the Apostle John in the fourth chapter of his Gospel. Read the rest of this entry »

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19
Jan

A Word of Grace - January 19, 2010

   Posted by: cslewisfoundation    in A Word of Grace, Devotional

Please note that the content and viewpoints of Mr. Hansen are his own and are not necessarily those of the C.S. Lewis Foundation. We have not edited his writing in any substantial way and have permission from him to post his content.

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Dear Friends:

A fly’s buzz cuts through the hot silence of noonday like the rasp of an iron file on rough stone. The rugged cliffs on both sides of the road magnify the irritating sound.

The man lies across the ruts, crumpled and twisted, with his arm flung across his face. The fly lands on his bloody arm and feasts.

A torn tunic is bunched around his waist. His bare back and legs are mottled purple and black, streaked with rivulets of scarlet that soak, dark as tar, into the sand around his head.

The man does not move. He may be dead. There is nothing on or around his body to identify him.

His habits proved his undoing. He comes up the steep road from Jericho each month with an assistant and two donkeys loaded with spices and balms for sale in Jerusalem. When his sales are made and his inventory exhausted, he sends the assistant riding one donkey and leading the other back down to Jericho. Read the rest of this entry »

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The following post is from Cole Matson, one of our Scholars-in-Residence at The Kilns.  Taken with permission from his blog The Unicorn Triumphant, Cole’s post gives his reaction about the recent C.S. Lewis College announcement and his ideas on the relationship of the arts, Great Books, and Christianity at the future college. Thank you Cole for the very thoughtful post!

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Note: Cole Matson’s ideas, including those about the future curriculum of C.S. Lewis College, are his own and do not necessarily represent those of the C.S. Lewis Foundation or C.S. Lewis College.

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I have just returned from a week-and-a-half’s vacation with my family in India. We went from Delhi to Jaipur to Corbett National Park to Nainital in the foothills of the Himalayas. (Let me just say that the sunsets up there are absolutely gorgeous, and I could happily live as a hermit for a summer in sight of those snowy peaks.) I returned to Oxford with family in tow on Sunday to the sight of snow covering the ground. It looks like we’ll be having a white Christmas here at the Kilns!

(Picture snapped yesterday morning) Photograph by Cole Matson.

I also arrived home to some news so good I’ve been sharing it with folks left and right:

Announcing the founding of C.S. LEWIS COLLEGE!

You heard that right, folks. After years of work, one of the C.S. Lewis Foundation’s two major physical projects – the other being the running of the Kilns and its programs – finally has a home, and a proposed start date. And I – and the other friends of the Foundation with whom I’ve spoken – couldn’t be happier.

On the website linked to above, you’ll find information on the Dec. 16th announcement, including videos from the press conference with the participating organizations, and an information video on the plan for the College. There are also press documents and FAQs, as well as links to the venture’s partners.

(Picture from new C.S. Lewis College campus. Photography by Sharon LaBella-Lindale. More pictures available here.)

C.S. Lewis College is exactly the kind of college I was looking for as a high school senior interested in both professional-level theatre training and a solid foundation in the liberal arts within a Christian academy. I didn’t find such an environment at the time (though I have since been informed of smaller Christian colleges that I have been told have excellent theatre programs, such as Benedictine College in Kansas), so I was split between my two top choices. One was Wheaton College, which my father, grandfather, and several other family members had attended and loved, and which impressed me with its commitment to a solidly intellectual Christian environment and the warmth and fellowship of its students and faculty. The other was New York University, which had an academic culture that was the polar opposite of Wheaton’s (just how much so I was to find out later), but which had one of the top undergraduate professional theatre training programs in the country. Wheaton did not even have a theatre major. So, on the advice of my father, I chose NYU. My father knew that I wanted top-level training, and I think he also knew that he did not have to worry about me losing my faith in NYU’s strongly secular environment.

I’ve often wondered if I made the right choice. I was greatly challenged by my teachers, made good friends, Read the rest of this entry »

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