Ave Maria this, padre.

Today, I have a sore stomach for no reason at all so if the last three days of jet-lag have been boring then this one totally takes the cake. I am actually sad that I do not own any exciting multimedia type video games whatchamacallits, and that I don't have a dvd or even a speak and spell.

Lucky I do have solitaire on my phone, and Deadline on the Facebook.

Speaking of which, here is a great story clipped verbatim:

Priests come to blows inside Church of the Nativity

Damn! Jews and Latinos represent only 1 of the twelve tribes each.

Wow, this week-end is turning out even less productive than I thought.

So I just literally fell down the research rabbit-hole. You know you ask one question; "Well if I am going to understand the role religious media has played in forming American public opinion I best do some research on religion, politics 'n American history". No sooner can you say Google Scholar, than *whammooo* two hours gone and no reading done, just more research. crap.

Anyways, So I found this article called; "The twelve Tribes of American Politics" which claims to be a comprehensive (in three pages no less) breakdown of the various spiritual and secular positions that make 12 political demographics, the tribes.

Possibly a moment of extreme symbolism

I am working on a book review and as I work on the book review doing research on a final paper for history of media.

The paper is a contrast and compare thing. I'm going to look at Bible and tract societies in the antebellum United States and compare their work and the work of their colporteurs, peddlars who distributed religious tracts, with present -day online communities of faith in the USA.

The basic idea of the Bible societies was to have something called a general supply: a bible supplied "without note or comment" to every household in America. The key here is without note or comment. This distribution scheme was non-denominational Christianity, the Bible was supposed to speak for itself, in order to hasten the arrival of millenial kingdom of god in America, but not for any sectarian conflicts, political concerns, or individualist theological ideas.

Syndicate content

homelink

Navigation

Flickr

www.flickr.com