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Monday, August 15, 2011
C.S. Lewis Retreat October 27-30 at Camp Allen in Navasota, Texas
SEE HERE Come to beautiful Camp Allen in Navasota, Texas, to hear plenary speaker Dr. Bruce L. Edwards as he joins other Lewisians in celebrating the 80th anniversary of Lewis’s conversion to Christianity in September 1931.
Sunday, August 14, 2011
September 8th Our Book Is: Are Women Human by Dorothy Sayers
Dorothy Sayers is an honorary Inkling in C.S. Lewis circles. She met Lewis when they were both working with the BBC during World War II. Lewis engaged in an active correspondence with Sayers but I don't think she ever got up to Oxford for an Inklings meeting.
Christabel will be our discussion leader on September 8th when we meet at our usual time, 7:30 P.M., at the Barnes and Noble in Harrisonburg.
REVIEW AT BN.COM This book collects two essay by Sayers that address the proper roles and men and women in society. Sayers was one of the first women to graduate from Oxford which when Lewis began teaching was exclusively male. Come and join us as we discuss Sayers and the Inklings.
Christabel will be our discussion leader on September 8th when we meet at our usual time, 7:30 P.M., at the Barnes and Noble in Harrisonburg.
REVIEW AT BN.COM This book collects two essay by Sayers that address the proper roles and men and women in society. Sayers was one of the first women to graduate from Oxford which when Lewis began teaching was exclusively male. Come and join us as we discuss Sayers and the Inklings.
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
The 30th Annual Chesterton Conference
Jessica and I and another couple from the D.C. Chesterton Society were at the Chesterton Conference in St. Louis this past Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. We drove out to St. Louis with an overnight stop in Louisville, Kentucky which helped make the journey manageable by car. It would have been a pretty long drive in one day although coming back we did a drive that would have been about as long.
Hanging out with Chestertonians is always great fun. We saw only a little of the Thursday night program because we went to dinner with friends we knew in the area, but got back to the Conference in time to hear the end of the talk about "Lepanto" by Christopher Check. I enjoyed the talk so I picked up a 3 CD set by Check to listen to. We made everything on the Friday agenda except the performance of Chesterton's play "Magic" which we had seen in Washington with the D.C. Chesterton Society which generally meets on the first Saturday of each month at Famous Dave's in Sterling, VA. SEE HERE
Some of the highlights for Friday were Robert Moore-Jumonville, a professor of Religion at Spring Arbor University and a columnist for Gilbert magazine. His talk had the somewhat bland title "Paying Attention: the Poetry of Prayer" but despite the title was one of the best talks of the session. I enjoyed all the talks but his most of all. Chuck Chalberg who does dramatizations of G. K. Chesterton despite being at least a head shorter and a hundred pounds lighter than Chesterton was also a highlight with a talk "The End of the Armistice" which addressed the rise of Nazism in Germany. Finally, the last talk we saw was by Leah Darrow, a relative of Clarence Darrow who Chesterton trounced in a debate, and who was a contestant on the reality show, "America's Next Top Model". She talked about the emptiness of modern culture and her own personal recovery of faith.
We missed Saturday because we drove North to Apple Valley, Minnesota to picnic with old friends on Sunday and see what society had done to our old stomping grounds. It was almost unrecognizable. Sic transit gloria mundi!
Hanging out with Chestertonians is always great fun. We saw only a little of the Thursday night program because we went to dinner with friends we knew in the area, but got back to the Conference in time to hear the end of the talk about "Lepanto" by Christopher Check. I enjoyed the talk so I picked up a 3 CD set by Check to listen to. We made everything on the Friday agenda except the performance of Chesterton's play "Magic" which we had seen in Washington with the D.C. Chesterton Society which generally meets on the first Saturday of each month at Famous Dave's in Sterling, VA. SEE HERE
Some of the highlights for Friday were Robert Moore-Jumonville, a professor of Religion at Spring Arbor University and a columnist for Gilbert magazine. His talk had the somewhat bland title "Paying Attention: the Poetry of Prayer" but despite the title was one of the best talks of the session. I enjoyed all the talks but his most of all. Chuck Chalberg who does dramatizations of G. K. Chesterton despite being at least a head shorter and a hundred pounds lighter than Chesterton was also a highlight with a talk "The End of the Armistice" which addressed the rise of Nazism in Germany. Finally, the last talk we saw was by Leah Darrow, a relative of Clarence Darrow who Chesterton trounced in a debate, and who was a contestant on the reality show, "America's Next Top Model". She talked about the emptiness of modern culture and her own personal recovery of faith.
We missed Saturday because we drove North to Apple Valley, Minnesota to picnic with old friends on Sunday and see what society had done to our old stomping grounds. It was almost unrecognizable. Sic transit gloria mundi!
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