
Every Thought Captive Home
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Technology
Volume 5 - Issue 1 (Jan/Feb 2001)
The Vision
Here's Mud in Your Eye
Family Circle
What Hath God Wrought?
Ekklesia
Welcome to the Machine
Rightly Dividing
Saving Labor Devices
Tending Your Garden
A Well-Oiled Machine?
Culture Matters
Already Gone
Practicum
A Technological Dependence Testing Technique
Open Letter
Dogging the Wag
Leviathan
Tools of Dominion
Apologia
Changes
Hit and Run
Re:Views
Unless otherwise noted, all content is Copyright © 2008 Highlands Study Center
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George, Al and Chad... So what?
2010, The Grammys
by R.C. Sproul Jr.
I'm not real hip to what's hip anymore, and that's okay. I take a secret delight
when I peak at some top ten list for records, I mean, CD's (see how unhip I
am?) and I have no idea who any of the "singers" are. Having spent
a few afternoons in various doctors' offices lately, however; (I'm fine, just
normal stuff), therefore reading though too much pop culture drivel, I now know
that we are in some sort of musical trend. There is always something to complain
about in pop music. That never changes. And there is almost always some particularly
banal bubblegum heroes or heroines who will not be back in the headlines till
they overdose on heroin. But what is new is the scope of the invasion of the
cradle snatchers. That is, we have more bubblegum bands topping the charts now
than at any time in the history of the charts. If you count the sweet pop mixed
with the tramp clothes of Brittney and Christina, we're overrun by the stuff.
The only other contender for a genre du jour is rap. It seems Mr. Young was
wrong not only about sweet home Alabama, but that rock and roll could never
die. It's enough to make you yearn for either a return to angry Seattle bands
or the teased hair rockers of the 80's.
It seems we're getting more and more immature, and less and less able to distinguish
between music and noise. Soon instead of baseball caps we'll all be wearing
beanies. Instead of earrings in our noses we'll have binkies in our mouths.
As such, here are my thoughtful predictions for the 2010 Grammys. Best Album:
Raffi's Greatest Hits. Runner-Up: Barney the Dinosaur--I Still Love
You. Best R and B Album: some guy running a jackhammer. And on that part
of the awards that doesn't make it on TV, Best New Folk Artist: Campbell Sproul
Plays the Pipes.
Frosty the Snowmale
by Laurence Windham
"The Snowman colludes in a gendered division of social space and presents
an image, however jocular, of masculine control of public space." So says
Tricia Cusack, resident art historian at the University of Birmingham. Cusack
builds her case by pointing out that snowmen are white, invariably male, generally
adult, and since they are built outside, signify masculine dominance of the
home and office. Cusack spent (uncontrolled masculine laughter) 5 years researching
the cultural meaning of snowmen. And since she has a degree, well, she must
be listened to.
As you can imagine, this new slant on one of winter's most familiar symbols
is causing quite a stir in London, where Cusack lives. Which is fortunate since
they need something to talk about over there besides the Royal prince cheating
on the Royal princess while she is fornicating with a Royal naval officer. "Blimey,
an' we always thought snowmen were just a fun thing to build," said one
fellow from Liverpool. (If you read that last quote with your best British accent,
it's really funny.) Cusack also blames 19th century prudishness for the lack
of female equivalents, stating that in Victorian times the idea of sculpting
a woman from snow would have suggested nudity. This deduction exposes her as
the feminist that she is.
Everyone knows that snow-men are identified by the pipes in their mouths and
snow-women are recognized by the shawls that they wear. Not from anatomical
distinctions that are architecturally difficult to form with snow. Ice sculptures
are a whole different genre. "It's no coincidence," she contends,
"that the snowman is generally male and is erected in front of the home
emphasizing male stewardship in the private sphere, while the woman of the house
is inside toiling--cooking Christmas dinner." Official Highland Study Center
response:
"Cool!"
True Confessions
by R.C. Sproul Jr.
Though my campaign for the presidency did not garner a single vote, the establishment
parties are beginning to run scared. They know a potential juggernaut when they
see one. Though I haven't yet determined whether I will run in 2004 I have put
together an exploratory committee. As we have considered sundry strategies of
our opponents, we thought it wise to get some dirt out on the table now, so
that it will be old news by the time of the election. What follows then is some
secret dirt about me:
- I liked the movie Purple Rain so much that I made my father watch
it.
- I made my wife watch the sequel, Graffiti Bridge, before we were
married. The heroine is the Christ figure.
- I own a Where's Waldo book, that was not for my children.
- In graduate school I had a kitten, Ichabod, that I kept in my apartment.
Then I couldn't find it. But I didn't look that hard.
- I ate a five-gallon bucket of Y2K banana chips, all by myself.
- I liked the movie Ishtar. It made me laugh.
- I read People magazine at the doctor's office.
- When my wife is away I refuse invitations to eat with friends, so I can
have my favorite bachelor meal, peanut butter and jelly on Ritz crackers and
Cheetos.
- I lip-synced Prince's "Little Red Corvette" in a contest in college.
- The day I arrived here in Virginia, while my furniture and stuff were a
few days away, I went to K-Mart, bought a TV, brought it home to watch the
Steeler game, and took the TV back the next day. It was a preseason game.
- One time I heard Don McLean's "American Pie" on the radio, and
it made me cry.
Don't you feel so much better now?
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