Friday, May 19, 2006

10 Years and Counting






Janell and I celebrated our Tenth Anniversary
yesterday by returning to the bed and breakfast
we stayed at on our honeymoon -
the Beechmont Inn in Hanover, PA.


While in Hanover, I treated Janell to the best hotdog in South Central Pennsylvannia at the Famous Hot Weiner diner.

Hot dogs and fries - what could be better when celebrating those special occasions?

Nordmoes on the Mall

Dinosaur Bones!


We have been in Maryland visiting my in-laws this week. Yesterday we ventured down to the National Mall in Washington D.C. to take the kids to the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History. All week Addy has been torturing her older sister with two words: "Dinosaur Bones!". To our surprise, the Dinos were Taylor's favorite exhibit.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Elizabethtown the movie


We kickstarted our vacation last Thursday with the movie Elizabethtown which easily moves into my top 5 of 2005. Besides the fun story, quality acting, and great music, the movie features "Rusty's Learning to Listen Part 8" - perhaps the best fictional kid's video ever.








"Hi. Now....if I blow this house up...will you promise to behave and mind your mommy and daddy?"

"Yes!"

"Good. Let's blow it up."

Race to Mexico


This is a music video of the Lost Dogs (from Cornerstone '96), who unwittingly teamed up with that infamous filming troupe from Upstate New York, Pan-Con.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Steyn on The Da Vinci Code

I hope this is my only post on this overblown controvery, but I like both the substance and the style with which Mark Steyn roasts Da Vinci code author Dan Brown.

It's a good rule in this line of work to respect a hit. But golly, The Da Vinci Code makes it hard. At the start of the book, Dan Brown pledges, "All descriptions of artwork, architecture, documents and secret rituals in this novel are accurate." It's everything else that's hokum, beginning with the title, whose false tinkle testifies to Brown's penchant for weirdly inauthentic historicity. Referring to "Leonardo da Vinci" as "da Vinci" is like listing Lawrence of Arabia in the phone book as "Of Arabia, Mr. L," or those computer-generated letters that write to the Duke of Wellington as "Dear Mr. Duke, you may already have won!"....

You can check out the rest of his essay at Macleans.ca.
(Hat tip: filmchat)

Monday, May 08, 2006

Blessed to be an American

Those bumper stickers that say "Proud to be an American" should read, "Blessed to be an American." With that blessing comes the responsibility to make this country the best it can be to its citizens and to the world community. - Ron Erskine (www.commondreams.org)


I had this thought yesterday while sitting in church. One of our members was reading one of Abraham Lincoln's Proclamations for a National Day of Prayer. His "message" was a mix of religion and patriotism with references to our "Christian Heritage". As a historian, I often get annoyed with such references - knowing that our founding fathers were a mix of pious men of faith, enlightened deists, and agnostics. And Lincoln's faith is an enigma at best. He championed our national civil religion, but his personal beliefs are so murky that most scholars would shy away from describing him as a true Christian (and especially not an evangelical Christian).

But beyond the historical debate, there is this notion (made popular by Lee Greenwood) that I should be proud to be an American. I grew up believing in this American exceptionalism - that we as a nation are better than everyone else. And this belief was reinforced in church. American Christians were somehow better than other Christians.

I am beginning to question the propriety of such beliefs. Sure America is a great place to live and we as Americans enjoy unprecedented freedoms and prosperity. But rather than take pride in that, maybe we should be humble instead, knowing that are great achievements are temporal at best. And as a Christian, I am called to be humble before my Creator. He is the one who gives and he is certainly sovereign to take it away. I think it is time for American Evangelicals to put away the rhetoric of pride in favor of that of humble thanksgiving.

Our country's greatest danger does not come from terrorism, communism, or any other ism; It is our own pride that will be our downfall. Someone recently told me that the greatest civilizations on Earth were not conquered from without - they committed social and cultural suicide from within. I think Rome is a good example of this.

That doesn't mean we can't be patriotic - fly the flag, celebrate our freedom, support our troops, participate in our political system, vote! But also remember that we have a responsibility to a higher authority and a higher allegiance.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006



Do you suffer from Bono Fatigue? Find the help you need in "a Place for Bono Vox Detox."
(Hat tip:Lark News)