Saturday, November 22, 2008

Musical at Iowa college acts out scary Bible tales


By Melanie S. Welte, Associated Press Writer
Sat Nov 22, 10:15 am ET

DES MOINES, Iowa – Don't expect to hear these Bible stories at church.

Cannibalism, rape, a bear that mauls children — this is the Bible?

They're among six stories from the Old Testament acted out in "Terror Texts," a musical at Northwestern College in Orange City.

Adding to the shocking nature of the stories are the theatrics, with actors decked out in Goth attire, a rock band and a mosh pit.

Theater professor Jeff Barker said the obscurity of the stories belies their value.

"We believe we have discovered something that has been lying dormant for many, many centuries," said Barker, who created and directs "Terror Texts."

The musical was first performed at the 1,200 student Christian college in northwest Iowa in February and came back for an encore this fall, with a last performance slated for this weekend.

Barker uses the King James version of the Bible, and actors speak each verse word-by-word. It is not an interpretation or adaptation, like "Godspell" or "Jesus Christ Superstar."

"There's tremendous power waiting when you simply speak and act these stories aloud with faithfulness to the text, not trying to adapt them or add a lot of bits, but just simply play what's written there," Barker said.

Barker views the Bible as a "repository of ancient plays," and when performed they can be seen in a whole new light — even the dark stories.

"I was looking for terror text, stories I can say are thematically tied together because they are frightening and mysterious and terrifying," Barker said. "That's part of what we're saying with this whole project that life and God himself are mysteries."

William Dyrness, a professor of theology and culture at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Calif., specializes in visual arts in relation to religious tradition.

He said biblical scholars have proposed that much of the Old Testament is poetry and was designed to be sung, especially in the temple as part of worship.

"It's not far from that to think of it as a play," he said. "Theologians have argued the best way to understand the Bible is in terms of it being a great dramatic performance."

He called "Terror Text" a creative variation of that idea.

"This is obviously a very Protestant approach where you're attempting to understand this story so that you can see the way the Bible applies to your life," he said. "You carry it on in your life. You become part of the story."

Student Hannah McBride has several roles in the performance, including as a virgin who gets kidnapped at the end of a story of rape, murder and war. McBride said it has shown her something about herself.

"This particular project has affected the way I view negative emotions — grief, anger, bitterness and spite and hate. We are meant to be emotional people. The Bible in a lot of ways shows us that that's OK," she said. "We need to embrace that we're going to be very, very sad and we won't know what to do with that."

In her role as a virgin, McBride wears a wedding dress that has been destroyed. She describes her look as a "corpse bride."

"It has that image of what could have been great, I ruined," she said.

In a world in which religion often is practiced privately or individually, Barker said he hopes people will understand the Bible better through his performance.

"These mysterious, dark stories of the Old Testament, they bring us face-to-face with the suffering of the world," Barker said. "It says we are capable of great evil and we must not forget these stories and we have some serious things to be accountable for in our own lives as a group and individually."

Nonfiction Analysis Essay



This assignment is CANCELED.

Please use the extra time to put into your research paper.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Pope Had `Prophecy' of Market Collapse in 1985, Tremonti Says


By Flavia Krause-Jackson and Lorenzo Totaro

``The prediction that an undisciplined economy would collapse by its own rules can be found'' in an article written by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who became pope in April 2005, Tremonti said yesterday at Milan's Cattolica University.

German-born Ratzinger in 1985 presented a paper entitled ``Market Economy and Ethics'' at a Rome event dedicated to the Church and the economy. The future pope said a decline in ethics ``can actually cause the laws of the market to collapse.''

Pope Benedict in an Oct. 7 speech reflected on crashing markets and concluded that ``money vanishes, it is nothing'' and warned that ``the only solid reality is the word of God.''

The Vatican's official newspaper, l'Osservatore Romano, on the same day criticized the free-market model for having ``grown too much and badly in the past two decades.''

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Annotated Bibliography



For this assignment, you will create an annotated bibliography in which you briefly:
1. Summarize the cited source
2. Explain how you intend to use the source in your paper

Be sure to strictly follow MLA works cited formatting style (MLA examples can be found here). Find a sample annotated bibliography here.

Requirements:
  • MLA format
  • Six sources minimum (at least two [2] must be scholarly journals from SJSU's academic databases; do not count Wikipedia as a source)
Due: Tuesday, November 25th

REPOST: Research Paper Assignment


This paper requires you to synthesize, contextualize, and analysis an issue from the worlds of spirituality and faith. Specifically, you are asked to consider one of ten [10] topics: Homosexuality in Christianity, Evolution vs. Creationism, The Power of Prayer, The Search for New Faiths, Death in America, Fundamentalism, The End of Days, Women in the Church, Religion vs. Art, or a topic of your choice.

See the full prompts for specific directions for each topic.

Requirements:
  • Minimum six pages in length
  • MLA format, including parenthetical citation and works cited page (papers without citations are automatically failed)
  • Six sources minimum (at least two [2] must be scholarly journals from SJSU's academic databases; do not count Wikipedia as a source)
Due: Tuesday, December 9th