Épisodes

  • S2 E4 "The Consummated Amendment.", Matthew 5:1-12
    Feb 3 2023

    Besides reading the NYT, I've been known to consume a lot of cable news. Regarding that news consumption, there are channels I watch (like MSNBC), channels I don't watch (like FOX News), and channels I should watch (like CSPAN). Why should I be watching CSPAN you ask? Well because it features pure, boring, unfiltered documentation of Congress. That setting is also the backdrop to a New York Times opinion piece from Dec. 20, 1865 entitled, "The Consummated Amendment." In it the author describes the history and ratification of the 13th amendment (that ended America slavery). It was also the beginning of the three Reconstruction Amendments and the Reconstruction Era. They were new rules centered on the least, the oppressed, the "outsiders." They aimed to reconstruct how we Americans both think and act. A strong parallel intention can be found in the Gospel reading of Matthew 5:1-12. In his Beatitudes, Jesus aimed to reconstruct how we think and act. His central focus is centered around the least, the oppressed and the outsiders.  

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    34 min
  • S2 E3 "THE WAR IMMINENT.", Matthew 4:12-17
    Jan 25 2023

    On April 12, 1861 The New York Times published, "THE WAR IMMINENT." It was a telegraphed, live reporting from Charleston, SC of the final hours before the first shots of the Civil War. Those shots did not signify the separation of the Southern States into the Confederacy, because that had already occurred earlier. Rather it symbolized a violent national break-up, a damnable divorce and a dissolution of a Union that was under the illusion that both sides somehow stood for Freedom. And yet, in the beginning of those dark times, there is a comparison to the light of Scripture found in the Gospel of Matthew 4:12-17. In it we find Jesus dealing with his own national history (both distant and immediate). In the middle of it all he finds meaning in the words of an ancient prophet who spoke to the woes of war, civil divisions, military melees and political strife of his own time. Inspired by it, Jesus proclaimed a peaceful invasion following the inundating militaristic ones.

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    28 min
  • S2 E2 "Great Flood In Florida.", John 1:29-34
    Jan 18 2023

    In an August 4, 1856 article about a Florida flood, the New York Times deferred to printing the local expertise of The Tampa Peninsular. In that article we learn that there are different kinds of journalist covering events in different ways, and sometimes one journalist can cover several approaches. Today’s lectionary reading (in a year devoted to the Gospel of Matthew) defers to relaying the expertise of The Gospel of John. In these account in John 1:29-34 we learn that even in the Bible there is something akin to a journalist covering events in different ways. Just like The Tampa Peninsular, this story referencing another story, swirls around the imagery of water.

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    26 min
  • S2 E1 "A Word About Ourselves", Matthew 1:1-17
    Jan 9 2023

    The New York Times was born in the 1850's: a time of radicalism versus conservatism within society. The backstory is integral to understanding the whole story of the newspaper. And so it is with the Good News, according to the Gospel of Matthew 1:1-17. Because outside of what we imagine conservative and liberal to mean, Jesus was a radical: dealing with the context of a very conservative thing: religious tradition. 

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    37 min
  • The Ordinary Times: Season 2 Trailer
    Jan 6 2023

    The Good News: The Ordinary Times podcast will be returning for Season 2 on January 8, 2023.

    The Bad News: So will my awkward Dad jokes.

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    3 min
  • Episode 20, "BANKERS HOURS ON THE WAY OUT", Luke 12:32-48
    Aug 9 2022

    By 1961 Orvil Eugene Dryfoos had become the publisher of the New York times, succeeding his father-in-law Arthur Hays Sulzberger, who in turn had succeeded his father-in-law Adolph Ochs. He proved to be a caretaker for the New York Times. So, Dryfoos wasn’t working the metaphorical “banker’s hours” of 9-5 but what bank hours were becoming. Automation was leading to a banking overnight and weekends shift on what was formerly a 9-5 weekdays job. It would soon disrupt publishing as well. By 1963 Orvil Dryfoos had ended his time as the publisher. This caretaker for NYT was now taken to the undertaker. He had worked dutifully on his way up, and due to a strike during his short tenure, worked himself to death. No matter what kind of power we have in this life… our lives soon give way to the afterlife. The boss isn’t the boss, if he has answer to a higher power. That truth brings us to the lectionary reading from the Gospel of Luke 12:32-48. In it Jesus warns us about the assumptions of automation and accounting for our lack of action.  

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    38 min
  • Episode 12: "GAVE ROOSEVELT 7,060,017 PLURALITY", Luke 9 51-62
    Jun 30 2022

    An October 23, 1933 presidential election article from the times entitled, “GAVE ROOSEVELT 7,060,017 PLURALITY.” It was more than a story of what was won, it was a story of what was lost… and who lost it. If you listen to this podcast often, then you know where I am going with this. There is a parallel between this news story and the Good News narrative found in Luke 9 51-62. The part that may be surprising about our Bible story today is that it will conflict with how much of our storytelling is presented in Christianity. We often frame things in terms of “winning.” We speak of victory in Jesus, winning souls for Christ, conquering the flesh… the list goes on and on. But in today’s Scripture we will see Jesus encountering the politics of nationalistic and ethnic division, rethinking the relevance of biblicism and rejecting undisciplined discipleship… and he loses something in every case. In all of his success and wins, there was nothing that Jesus was afraid to lose.     

     

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    39 min
  • Episode 11: "CHINATOWN MOURNS FOR ENG FOOI SHUE", Luke 9 10-17
    Jun 21 2022

    Contrary to my mother’s advice, I’ve found that you can learn a lot from following a crowd. At least that’s what one author found in a New York Times article from July 15, 1929 about the death of Eng Fooi Shue (one of the leading merchants of Chinatown) and the crowds that gathered to mourn him. The newspaper's publisher learned to use that crowd to make one individual successful: himself. Yet in those unbelievable numbers that made up that crowd there are individual deaths like Eng Fooi Shue’s, and group suffering like his family back home in China. But every now and then there are individual lives like Dr. Huey Kin, the Presbyterian pastor who oversaw the funeral... Individuals that desire to be used for the success of the crowd. In fact I don’t just see it in the New York Times story but also in our Scripture reading of Luke 9:10-17. One of Jesus’ greatest gifts was his care for the crowd. He was a Messiah with mercy for the multitudes. 

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    30 min