
Sectarian Symptoms: Jumpers, Shakers, Quakers, and Millenarians.
No date. Via the Viz blog and before that the Haverford College Quaker & Special Collections.

Sectarian Symptoms: Jumpers, Shakers, Quakers, and Millenarians.
No date. Via the Viz blog and before that the Haverford College Quaker & Special Collections.
Post-Evangelical Blogging for Dummies: Harnessing the Zeitgeist for Fun and Prophet :
The Hipster Conservative writes the definitive guide. This is a bit close for comfort but we’re supposed to be able to laugh at ourselves, right?
Explain the personal conflict you experience between your evangelical roots and what you now truly believe is a devastating challenge to those formerly-held beliefs. Suggest that instead of being so quick to oppose the issue, Christians should extend “grace” (don’t define) and a “generous response.” Above all, they should “re-evaluate” their views in light of this challenge. Remember: “Questioning” is a one-way street.
Via my wife Julie (of course)
“When I came here to learn more about the wider Christian world, I realized that people are interested in learning more about Quakers and what we have to offer other denominations.”
— Greg Woods: The Uniqueness of Quakerism http://bit.ly/14Gd5zK
The End of the Web, Search, and Computer as We Know It:
I think about what constantly-flowing information means for blogging. In some ways this is Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, etc. But what if someone started a stand-alone blog that wasn’t a series of posts, but rather a continuous stream of blurbs, almost like chat. For example: “I just heard…” or “Microsoft launching this is stupid, here’s why…” — things like that. More like an always-on live blog, I guess.
It’s sort of strange to me that blogs are still based around the idea of fully-formed articles of old. This works well for some content, but I don’t see why it has to be that way for all content. The real-time communication aspect of the web should be utilized more, especially in a mobile world.
People aren’t going to want to sit on one page all day, especially if there’s nothing new coming in for a bit. But push notifications could alleviate this as could Twitter as a notification layer. And with multiple people on “shift” doing updates, there could always be fresh content, coming in real time.
Just thinking out loud here.
Good out loud thinking from MG about where blogging’s going. I’ve realized for while now that I’m much more likely to use Twitter and Tumblr to share small snippets that aren’t worth a fully-formed post. What I’ve also realized is that I’m more likely to add commentary to that link share (as I’m doing now) so that it effectively becomes a blog post.
Because of this I’m seriously considering archiving my almost ten year old blog (carefully preserving comment threads if at a possible) and installing my Tumblr on the QuakerRanter.org domain.

Timeline Photos | Facebook
facebook.comAn Indian woman, a Japanese woman, and a Syrian woman, all training to be doctors at Women’s Medical College of Philadelphia, 1880s.
Cool vintage picture of doctors in train from Philadelphia’s woman’s medical college.
“I Am Not my Test Score,” a remix of a One Direction (!) song by @WoolmanSemester, via @friendsjournal.
“Mainline denominations can seem to “enforce” a scripted liturgy that “must be finished” and surely the stripped down way in which Quakers — even programmed ones — worship might seem like a breath of fresh air to introverts who love to reflect and refocus on God’s Presence.”
— James Tower: Is Quakerism “Worship for Introverts?” http://bit.ly/YajMEU
And it’s going viral so who am I to judge: Sleeping Baby Gangnum Style