I was Sick and You [and Your Dog] Visited Me

Slate has an excerpt from a new book about a dog who is a hospice volunteer.

Was it smart, I found myself wondering, to bring along this dog, who’d spent most of the first four years of his life alone outdoors? But he looked all right, his ears and tail up, no signs of stress or anxiety. In fact, he seemed to be studying the room, looking carefully at me, at Jamie and Carol, seeking cues.

He cocked his head at me. “It’s OK, Iz,” I said. “Say hello.”

I’m somewhat familiar with dog therapy, and from what little I know, I believe it can be helpful in some cases. Some dogs seem to have a real sense of human sickness and suffering, and a unique way of keeping company. We had a cocker spaniel who seemed to have a bit of that ability.

If I were sick or dying, I think I would appreciate having a dog visit. But I’m a dog guy.

If you have a few minutes, take the time to read the entire excerpt. I’m looking forward to reading the book.

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Looking Forward To

Here’s one of the classes listed for this Fall at church:

The Office, Lost, The Sopranos and the Old Testament: An ardent introduction to the Old Testament with an exploration of how society’s images and culture shape our understanding of the characters, stories and books of the Old Testament. This won’t be boring. Taught by Jeff Tabares. Class meets Sundays in the Music Room of the Education Building at 10:45 am.

Anyone in the Chicago area interested in attending, it’s Covenant Presbyterian (in Bucktown).

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A Window to the Past

While I’m pretty tired of the current political season, these old ads fascinate me.

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Prayer of Invocation

God of grace, you have given us minds to know you, hearts to live you, and voices to sing your praise. Fill us with your Spirit, that we may celebrate your glory and worship you in spirit and in truth through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.

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Book Review: My Sister’s Keeper (Novel)

The story of My Sister’s Keeper centers on Anna, a 13-year-old girl who was selected via preimplantation genetic diagnosis to be a tissue donor for her older sister, Kate, who suffers from leukemia. The novel opens as Anna begins to challenge the idea that she is a virtually limitless source of spare tissue for Kate, and follows the family struggle that ensues.

The paperback edition I was reading contains a reader’s club guide, which consists of an author interview and a several pages of questions and topics for discussion. In the interview the author states:

sometimes researchers and political candidates get so bogged down in the ethics behind it and the details of the science that they forget completely we’re talking about humans with feelings and emotions and hopes and fears . . . like Anna and her family. I believe we’re all going to be forced to think about these issues within a few years, so why not first in fiction?

Indeed, My Sister’s Keeper raises a number of bioethical issues – designer babies, parental decision making, children as tissue donors – in a way that, to my eye, reads genuinely. Picoult has done us a great service in writing this novel. I recommend it highly.

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William Wilberforce Movie

Coinciding with the 200th anniversary of the British Parliament’s passage of a bill banning the transportation of slaves (February 23, 2007), the movie Amazing Grace brought to the big screen the life of William Wilberforce, a key figure in the British abolition movement. Wilberforce’s life and work have lessons for us as we engage culture and work to uphold human dignity amidst the bioethical challenges of our day.

Official Movie Site
CT Special Section on Amazing Grace

BBC History on William Wilberforce

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The Point

God could have poured out judgment on mankind in the Garden, therefore the only reason there is any history is because God has purposed to send his Son into the world, to pour out judgment on him and thereby bring salvation. Jesus is the only reason there is human history, and therefore he is the goal of human history. Thus everything God says and does in history explains and prepares for the salvation of his Son.

~ Tim Keller

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New Members

Ginger and I are, as of today, officially members of Covenant Presbyterian Church in the Bucktown neighborhood of Chicago. We’ve been attending there since the Fall of last year, and we went through the new members’ class this spring.

The membership vows are:

  1. Do you acknowledge yourselves to be sinners in the sight of God, justly deserving His displeasure, and without hope save in His sovereign mercy?
  2. Do you believe in the Lord Jesus Christ as the Son of God, and Savior of sinners, and do you receive and rest upon Him alone for salvation as He is offered in the Gospel?
  3. Do you now resolve and promise, in humble reliance upon the grace of the Holy Spirit, that you will endeavor to live as becomes the followers of Christ?
  4. Do you promise to support the Church in its worship and work to the best of your ability?
  5. Do you submit yourselves to the government and discipline of the Church, and promise to study its purity and peace?

We’re very thankful to have found a place to worship and serve.

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It’s Not My Birthday, But . . .

My birthday is in September, and when I was a kid I disliked it. I would spend the whole summer wanting some item only to receive it days after I went back to school. Also, it’s no good trying to throw a party and invite kids you’ve just met.

Anyway, I can remember one summer when I was in the fourth or fifth grade. I really wanted a pitch-back net (similar to this, but probably from K-Mart so not nearly that expensive), and I dreaded the idea that I would miss out on a whole summer of using it if I didn’t get it until September.

So my parents moved my birthday to June 4 so that I could get my presents and have them all summer to play with.

Happy not quite my birthday to me.

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Satire

So this has nothing to do with film, fiction, bioethics, or any of the other stuff I usually talk about here. But it’s funny: Second Memoir in a Week Rocks White House

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