Emerging into adolescence?
Phyllis Tickle turns the calendar on the next phase of the Emergent conversation.
Phyllis Tickle turns the calendar on the next phase of the Emergent conversation.
October brings a new work from the prominent artist. It hews closely to the text in some ways, while in others it casts a light on unseen corners of the Genesis story.
Yes, Gene Robinson was there, but so was the Jesus Arms, and it offered genuine pub ministry: a pint and a song.
“My music has started to flow through me from a secret place only God knows. It feels like I have come “home” to a place all of us look for. I do much of my work in prisons, churches and other places I can talk/sing about spiritual concerns. It’s dangerous if God is only in our heads; He starts to sound an awful lot like us.”
The ordinary workmen will come to the son of Joseph singing:
“Blessed be your coming,
O master of workers everywhere.
The imprint of your labor is seen in the ark,
And in the fashioning of the tabernacle