literary living
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The Hands that Feed: A Blessing for Pastors’ Wives

Lord, bless these hands that feed the hands that feedthe hungry masses coming forth for breadand growing full on the sermon I have readand prayed for long before it came to be—the work of the hands I feed that now feed me. Continue reading
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Wedding Advice for Non-Musicians

I’m playing organ for a wedding this week and it made me remember the tiny details that often go overlooked by non-musicians. To help out my fellow wedding musicians and non-musician brides and grooms, here are a few tips: 1. If you are getting married in a church, ask when the piano was last tuned. Continue reading
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To Walk Upon Snow

Plowing the streets was necessary,But it leaves me, though safer, sad.In that unblemished blanket from heaven’s stores,I saw for the first time, at last,The gleaming, blinding sparkling oresOf streets made from pure, white gold. I am too heavy to walk this new roadAnd so I dig out the cheap, sturdy, dirty oldPavement that is suited Continue reading
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Preaching as the Choir

*The following is a paper written as part of my master’s coursework. The research and thought that generated this paper have had a profound impact on my thinking in regards to worship, and I return to these sources and ideas frequently. In the post-Christian age, sacred choral music remains “a significant part of many people’s Continue reading
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Choral Dissonance: Separating Musical and Biblical Literacy

“Who’s Goliath?” The past week, I’ve been entrenched in Christmas concerts and rehearsals with a community college, a public high school, and a community choir. It is the first Christmas in a long time when I have not been busy accompanying a church choir, where the question “Who’s Goliath?” would never need to be asked. Continue reading
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Spaketh the Fool

“Be true to yourself” or, to quote Shakespeare’s Hamlet, “To thine own self be true” is perhaps today’s most popular self-help advice. People who offer and adhere to this maxim, however, fail to recall that it was advice given by a babbling fool. This above all, — to thine own self be true;And it must Continue reading
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November

In Little Women, Meg March complains about November, declaring it “the most disagreeable month in the whole year.” As a November baby, this passage stuck with me. I first read it as a child living in sunny suburban Arizona, so could not understand why Meg hated November for the simple reason that I had never Continue reading
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