End of Summer Reflection

Back from vacation. Well, actually, I’ve been back about a week, but things

have been busy as I gear up for back-to-school. It is, after all, late August

and that means preparations for a new academic gear are in high gear. That,

also, means that I have to figure out what is sustainable and what is not over

the next eight months. So, I’ve been thinking about that over the last couple of

weeks and this is what I’ve come up with.

1. TWP is not sustainable for me right now. That will, of course, cause

some disappointment among many of my readers, but I found this summer,

with the new addition to my family, it was only just sustainable to do the

weekly updates. That is, without a lesson prep, in-class time and marking, it

was just possible to crank out a TWP each week. This would suggest that,

when I add those other things that it is completely impossible to keep up

with a TWP or even a TFP. So, I’m just going to pull the plug on that now and avoid the frustration of wanting to do the updates and not being able to do it.

2. I probably have to scale down my expectations about what I can

accomplish on this blog and just post when I have time and creativity. I’m still

not quite willing to drop the blog (well, certainly not its name!), but I will

be posting more irregularly.

3. I think I may have an interim solution to my soul-searching over what to

spend my study time on. For those of you who have followed the non-TWP

posts, I’ve been trying to discern where I should use my time and energies-

what kind of project should I embark on with my acres and acres of free

time. Just before departing on my vacation, however, I had an important

moment of claritywhile talking with a friend. In commenting about my

patristic readings, I noted thatI had embarked on reading patristic texts

in the original (Greek or Latin- Syriac and Coptic is beyond me), largely

because I couldn’t take myself seriously if I didn’t. One of the things that

I absorbed in my academic Classics career was that nothing can replace

reading an author in the original- too many nuances are lost if you don’t.

So, that is what I propose to do over the foreseeable future-read as many

patristic texts as it takes and not worry about projects or booksor anything

for now. Now, my job, in the precious moments of study I have, is practicing

patristic Greek and Latin. And learning from the wisdom of the Greek and

Latin Fathers, in the original. Period.

4. In keeping with this resolution, what I expect to see in this blog is

that, as I complete a work or a section of a work which gives me ideas

about howto connect it to today, I’ll write up my reflection. Then, I’ll

move on to the next text and do the same. I don’t want to do book review

(or even treatise reviews), since I’m more interested in trying to apply

what I’m reading from theFathers to my life. In many ways, this is similar

to what I’ve been trying to do with my patristic entries when I shifted

to a patristic focus. So, we’ll see how this works. I will continue to discern

if God wants me to do a big project anytime soon and what it would be,

if I did, but, right now, I’m content with learning how to read and

translate the Fathers better.

5. I’m excited about a program being offered at my church over the next

twelve weeks which focuses on Life with God (offered through the

but not a conventional, sit and receive one. It tries to take a contemplative

approach to reading (or, rather, listening!) to Scripture through prayer and

meditation as much as knowing. It is an appealing idea, both pedagogically

and spiritually, so I’ll be interested to see how it work. I’m still trying to

make sure it fits in my life, but the signs are good: offered Sunday morning,

so my wife and I canattend without worries about child care and daily, but

not onerous work as we lead up to it. I like it because it links in where I’ve

been going the last ten years spiritually, towards contemplative prayer.

I admit that this does not come naturally for me, but it is something that

I think is good for me and that I think has already made good changes

in the way I deal with the world and myself.

That is worth the effort, I think.

We’ll see, of course, if even this modest programs works for me.

Peace,

Phil

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End of Summer Reflection