[Oe List ...] [Dialogue] New Century,Personal Gospel

Margaret Helen Aiseayew aiseayew at netins.net
Fri Nov 2 17:29:40 EDT 2007


One of my favorite RS-I short-courses was the value of using a pencil to do your charting.  If someone put up something that seemed to reflect the material better than your chart, you could always use the eraser, make a change, and still have the best chart in the room because it was yours.  I always did my life timeline in pencil as well.

As the years have passed, my attachment to my pencil has become legendary, but I felt it symbolized the greatness of being that gave us permission to be an experiment of unlimited duration, make mistakes, admit them, correct them and move into the next phase of experimentation.  Admitting something as a mistake was often an issue over which I came into conflict with my colleagues.  In the middle of the table (literally) at one of my churches is a cup with pens and pencils, and one of the pencils has an eraser on both ends.  I love it.  I often pray with that pencil in my hand before I step into the pulpit.

Margaret
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: R Williams 
  To: Order Ecumenical Community 
  Sent: Friday, November 02, 2007 12:32 PM
  Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] [Dialogue] New Century,Same Crisis--The Social Gospel 100 Years Later


  You're right, it was 1917.  My apologies for the confusion.  Senility has obviously set in, just at the moment when 10 years could make a lot of difference.  Nonetheless the article is a good accounting of the significant contribution Rauschenbusch made and its possible implications for today.

  By the way, several of us said in the tombstone conversation we were going to die in 2007 and we haven't done it yet!?! 


  ----- Original Message ----
  From: W. J. <synergi at yahoo.com>
  To: Colleague Dialogue <dialogue at wedgeblade.net>
  Cc: oe at wedgeblade.net
  Sent: Friday, November 2, 2007 11:26:04 AM
  Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] [Dialogue] New Century, Same Crisis--The Social Gospel 100 Years Later


  Randy, my memory is that we marked the beginning of the twentieth century theological revolution with the 1917 publication of Karl Barth's Epistle to the Romans, and our timeline spanned 90 years ending in 2007. The first 50 years was the theoretical, the last 50 years was the practical, and the overlapping years of transition were 1957-1967, which marked the birth of the O:E.

  Marshall

  R Williams <rcwmbw at yahoo.com> wrote:
    Colleagues,

    In the introduction to the G-O-D Lecture in RS-1 we marked the year 1907 as the beginning of the 20th century, and we grounded this with events such as Einstein's theory of relativity, the Bolshevik Revolution, World War I, etc.  One of the events we did not mention was the publication in that year of the book by Walter Rauschenbusch, Christianity and the Social Crisis, which introduced what has come to be known as the "social gospel."

    I have attached an article from Commonweal magazine in which Carey Nelson Blake states that "Rauschenbusch tore down the wall that separated faith from the public world and called on the church to address the suffering and degradation that accompanied the rapid industrialization of the United States."

    Regarding the importance of this for our roots, H. Richard Niebuhr was clearly influenced by Rauschenbusch when he stated that the church as social pioneer turns its back on the manifestations of "sin" or "evil", abolishes it within itself, and leads in the social act of repentance.  For Rauschenbusch, according to Blake, "Sin was embedded in institutional arrangements, not just in individual motivations and actions...  A faithful life demanded of sinners both personal and social repentance."

    Another note of interest, Paul Raushenbush, a great-grandson of Walter, has edited a new edition titled Christianity and the Social Crisis in the 21st Century.

    I hope you have time to read the attached article.  I would be interested in your reflections.

    Randy Williams

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    October 26, 2007 / Volume CXXXIV, Number 18   </ B_rubrique_principal1> 
    ARTICLE 



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