Generation gap
Milton writes on his Lent blog:
Age is a funny thing. I’m about thirty years older than (my nephew) and yet that distance wasn’t part of the mix… I didn’t have to try and be twenty, neither did I feel compelled to take the I-remember-what-it-was-like-to-be-your-age approach. We laughed and talked and listened as ourselves talking to one another. There are things he knows about I want to learn and, I suppose, the reverse is also true. I knew him when he was a kid. It’s much more fun to let him grow up.
I was talking to someone the other day who is about eighty and preparing for surgery. She likes her doctor and she said, “You know how old he is? He’s forty-two,” in a tone that made it sound as if he was going to have to wash the sand from the sandbox off of his hands before he started operating. I wanted to say, “When you were forty-two, you didn’t think of yourself as a kid or as inexperienced. Why not think of him that way as well?” That doctor has probably spent half of his four decades honing his craft. He’s not a novice. She’s missing the chance to see him by keeping him a kid.
I think that’s part of the reason Jesus didn’t hang around Nazareth much. When he went back they kept saying things like, “Isn’t that the carpenter’s kid?” and “Hasn’t he turned into a handsome lad?” and “What are you going to do with your life?” He took his disciples and his miracles and went elsewhere.
from Don’t Eat Alone




Maggi
Thanks for the link.
Matt W
Maggie
One comment: I’m suggesting cockup not conspiracy.
Matt
To Matt,
Thanks for all the work put into this. My first reaction to the “news” was to support the underdog (Rowan). I read his lecture and the text of the interview and found absolutely nothing to cause such a ruckus. It did make me think.
Fiona
Cheers, Fiona