TTF Staff
Chief Rabbi Dr Jonathan Sacks, BBC Online, March 16, 2007
“There is something spiritual about humour. I think it's the fact that if we can laugh at something, we can't be intimidated by it. It's our refusal to be defined by others. That's why the best humour always comes from persecuted peoples, and why the ability to laugh so often keeps the spirit of freedom alive in totalitarian societies. Humour is the opening of freedom in the prison wall of fate. It's a close relative of hope.”
Faiths and Worldviews, Wed 21 Mar 2007
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Affliction is the school in which great virtues are acquired, in which great characters are formed.
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The Real Digital Revolution: Social networking is changing the marketing landscape: “Brand advertising can’t stretch the truth anymore or try and gild the lily. Because if it does, we’re going to find out about it, find out that you’ve been lying to us all along about extras that don’t work and specials that aren’t special. And our reaction is not going to be pretty.” (Alan Wolk, AdWeek; h/t: Ryan Moede • 2008 08 27)
Après Lewis: ‘As it turns out, Tim Keller’s “The Reason for God” (2008), the book recommended by my friend, is the best of the “Mere Christianity” wannabes. Mr. Keller argues that the usual objections to Christianity—that it is a straitjacket, that there cannot be just one true religion—are themselves the product of a particular (secular Western) point of view. He then builds an affirmative case for Christianity, suggesting that the Big Bang and our appreciation of beauty are clues pointing to God and that Christ’s resurrection was so unlikely both to Greeks and Romans (who viewed the material world as weak and corrupt) and to Jews (who expected any resurrection to come at the end of time) that it cannot be dismissed as the clever marketing strategy of a new religion. If this sounds a little like N.T. Wright, it isn’t accidental: Mr. Keller draws liberally from him, as well as Lewis, Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga (a professor at Notre Dame) and others. “The Reason for God” is as sensible and winsome as one would expect from the pastor of a latticework of churches that draw more than 5,000 attendees in New York City every Sunday, most of them young, single, urban professionals. But it too is no “Mere Christianity.” It does not have the original arguments or the magical prose of Lewis’s classic.’ (David Skeel, Wall Street Journal • 2008 08 15)
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A response to critics of democracy, ancient and modern, that aims to open up a dialogue and move us beyond sterile sectarian disputes.