Friday Night Gospel | April 12th

Happy Friday! Here’s some good news, gospel implications, and random reflections to cap off your week. Enjoy!


Why Are We In A Rush?

Here’s a New York Times article that considers some of the reasoning behind why we can’t stop rushing all the time…


No Twerking on the Dance Floor…

A Christian pop-up nightclub in Nashville provides a unique approach to sanctified entertainment…


No Strings Attached

Here’s a powerful story surrounding the issue of reparations from a grace-centered perspective…

For another example of grace-in-practice as it concerns the issue of reparations, be sure to also catch the documentary, The Cost of Inheritance, which examines a concerted effort on the part of the church to acknowledge and redress the sins of the past.


PBS Newshour Highlights

My favorite evening ritual entails surrounding myself with world news via the PBS Newshour for a full hour. Admittedly, sometimes it’s just background noise I absorb while I actively scroll through my social media feed, but there are definitely times in which I am fully engrossed in the programming. This story is must-view about a journalist who found what he described as a ‘second life’ in the midst of a harrowing cancer diagnosis. The PBS Newshour’s Nick Schifrin interviewed Rod Nordland about his latest memoir and about “facing death and his discovery of a grace and love that he had never felt before.” The entire 8 minute segment is worth your time…

Additional PBS Newshour stories I would recommend include this review of Prophet Song, this review of Exvangelicals, and this story about the Church on 8 Wheels…This synopsis says it all, ‘David Miles Jr., known as “The Godfather of Skate,” has been the driving force behind the roller skating scene in the Bay Area of California for the past four decades. He’s known for making skating accessible through the Church of 8 Wheels, a funky roller rink in an old church. ‘


Is Love Really Blind?

A recent review of the popular Netflix show Love Is Blind considers its unfortunate blind spots (sorry, I couldn’t help it, lol). Consider this quote from the article which you can read here.


The Beatles Song Prince Hated…

I got a kick out of this headline indicating there was a Beatles song the legendary musician Prince called ‘demonic’. According to American Songwriter, had this to say about the song, ‘Free as a Bird‘…


Low Anthropology in Music…

Aliah Sheffield has officially become my new favorite artist. If low anthropology had a theme song, it would be her track, Anti Hero. Noteworthy is the line, ‘Every now and then, the villains sound like preachers‘. The title of her latest album on which you can find this track, These Songs are for Anyone Sick of Earth pretty much says it all…(cf. John 12:25).


Rituals for Reducing Screentime

Have you heard of Emodiversity? Harvard Business School professor Michael Norton is the author of The Ritual Effect: From Habit to Ritual, Harness the Surprising Power of Everyday Actions. In a recent post from Mashable, Norton discusses the concept of emodiversity which refers to rituals we can implement to help guard against overindulging in our smart devices…


Addicted to Having Babies…

Here’s an interesting piece from The Telegraph documenting the women who are addicted to having babies…who knew? According to the article,


Stephen King

What? Say it ain’t so…the master of horror himself has identified the one film he finds too terrifying to watch. According to an Indy100 article, Mr. King found 1999’s The Blair Witch Project too intense to view in its entirety…


Jesus Take the Wheel’…Really?

When you have a synergistic view of sanctification…


Extra! Extra!

And here’s a list of articles that didn’t make the cut this week. They are yet worth your time perusing though. Have a good weekend…

  • A substack known as The Honest Broker considers the recent SXSW event at which the audience booed AI…
  • An HBCU graduate struggles with the challenges of being broke while trying to recover the level of community that had sustained her during her college years. That community mattered more to her than money says a lot…that she has resolved to cling to whatever semblance of community she can find says even more…
  • The Guardian considers why Millennials are giving up on the proverbial ‘rat race’.
  • The New York Times profiles a story about a Brooklyn Sex Club in which the boundaries of ‘freedom’, ‘consent’, ‘license’, and rape unfortunately became confused.
  • Another New York Times piece challenges you to consider whether you are using right toothpaste.
  • A GQ Interview with productivity expert Cal Newport considers ‘How to Do More by Doing Less (and Doing It Better).
  • The Telegraph reports on a Church of England Archdeacon who recently called for ‘Anti Whiteness’.
  • A NPR article covers a new trend replacing dystopian fiction. Somewhere between the ideal of the ‘utopia’ and the macabre realm of dystopia, Kathryn Murdoch challenges us to consider the newly minted genre of ‘protopia’ fiction.
  • An Esquire article asks us to consider, Is “Doomslang” Making Us All Numb?

Published by Jason

I live in the Midwest with my lovely wife, Angela and our amazing 3 children. I enjoy writing about the way law/gospel tension expresses itself in daily life, art, and culture. I love cinema, jazz, historical stuff, coffee, and sparkling juice. I am also a contributing writer at Mockingbird Ministry and Cinema Faith.

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