The Original Mud Puppy

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Let It Go

I was reminded again this week how great the new Linkin Park album, A Thousand Suns, is. Top to bottom greatness. Then I read the following little note from the band and had to share.

We were not making an album.

For months, we’d been destroying and rebuilding our band. The experiments that resulted filled the studio hard drive with diverse, abstract sounds. Amorphous echoes, cacophonous samples, and handmade staccato merged into wandering, elusive melody. Each track felt like a hallucination.

We didn’t know if any of those unorthodox ideas could be incorporated into a traditional album, but we knew we didn’t want our next album to be predictable. Sitting together in the same studio where we made our first album, all six of us voiced a commitment to going out on a limb, to making something truly daring. We asked ourselves: were we all earnestly willing, more than ever before, to abandon the precepts of commercial ambition in pursuit of what we believe to be honest art?

The inclination to begin writing conventional songs for a conventional album came and went. The temptation to adjust our creative vision to fulfill expectations beyond our studio walls yielded to the audacious ambition of what we hoped to achieve as a band. The two years of making ‘A Thousand Suns’ marked our exhilarating, surrealistic, and often challenging journey into the creative unknown.

On the eve of its completion, this body of work, assembled through unconscious inspiration and unmitigated exertion, has revealed to us notions both stirring and surprising. The album’s personified imagery is neither dogma nor political premeditation. The emergent themes and metaphors illuminate a uniquely human story.

‘A Thousand Suns’ grapples with the personal cycle of pride, destruction, and regret. In life, like in dreams, this sequence is not always linear. And, sometimes, true remorse penetrates the devastating cycle. The hope, of course, springs from the notion that the possibility of change is born in our most harrowing moments.

Enjoy the music.

Linkin Park

Iridescent – Linkin Park

When you were standing in the wake of devastation
And you were waiting on the edge of the unknown
And with the cataclysm raining down,
Insides crying, “Save me now”
You were there, impossibly alone

Do you feel cold and lost in desperation?
You build up hope, but failure’s all you’ve known
Remember all the sadness and frustration
And let it go
Let it go

And in the burst of light that blinded every angel
As if the sky had blown the heavens into stars
You felt the gravity of tempered grace
Falling into empty space
No one there to catch you in their arms

Do you feel cold and lost in desperation?
You build up hope, but failure’s all you’ve known
Remember all the sadness and frustration
And let it go
Let it go

Filed under: Lyrics, Music

Review: Why God Won’t Go Away

I love contemplating religion/spirituality. I recently mentioned to a friend that I think it’s the most important thing we can consider during our lifetime. The ramifications are simply too big to ignore. Questioning my faith was not really something I grew up doing. But these days challenging my early assumptions, such as a literal seven day creation, is something I love to do.

Why God Won’t Go Away: Is the New Atheism Running on Empty? by Alister Mcgrath is just the kind of book to scratch my itch. Alister Mcgrath is a theology professor and Christian apologist who has debated Richard Dawkins in Oxford, Christopher Hitchens in Washington, and Daniel Dennett in London.

The first few chapters had me thinking it was simply going to be the same as Ravi Zacharias’ book, The End of Reason: A Response to the New Atheists, but happily I was wrong. It begins by defining New Atheism, which is a new term to describe a strain of atheism that resulted from four authors and their recent books: Sam Harris, The End of Faith (2004), Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion (2006), Daniel Dennett, Breaking the Spell (2006), and Christopher Hitchens, God Is Not Great (2007). I think Christopher Hitchens sums up New Atheism nicely:

“I am not even an atheist so much as I am an antitheist.”

Along the way he does make some rebuttals, but Mcgrath’s main thesis is not to rebut every point each author makes, but rather to rebut the method they use in which faith has no seat at the table. His approach of allowing credible critiques of the Christian faith to have merit, struck a cord with me. Too often we get so focused in shooting down an opponent of our paradigm that we neglect to acknowledge that they also have a point of view worth exploring.

Mcgrath also does not set out to win anyone over to the Christian faith. His main agenda is simply to argue that there is room for both reason and faith. Both science and religion.

“It’s not my intention to argue the case for the Christian faith in this short volume, yet I can hardly fail to point out that the common Christian understanding of human nature over the last two thousand years is that we posses, and are meant to posses, a homing instinct for God.”

I highly recommend this book to those interested in a primer on the subject of New Atheism. It is an easy and quick read, yet you come away feeling smarter as a result. Having an open mind on subjects such as these makes it much easier to study (Mcgrath’s point all along). As such, this book has me wanting to read the four books in question all the more.

4 out of 5 stars


Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their BookSneeze.com book review bloggers program.

Filed under: Books, Religion, Reviews

Kenya Dig It?

Hey Mr. H.R. Shovin Stuff, you should know that 7-year old you just muscled out for position only finished four minutes behind your sub-20 time. Jerk.





I ran a PR of 22:09 in this 5K, which was tough because the temps were in the 80′s and rising every minute. As soon as I finished I walked over to the entrance of the track to catch Tanner coming in. After a couple minutes I was confused and looked over towards the finish line and he had already finished! 23:46. 7 years old.

Later he told me, “Dad, you know how during our training runs we would sprint at the end? Well I did that the whole time!”

That would explain the dry heaves after he finished. Dude is a stud!


Filed under: Running, Tanner

GROO

Recently I’ve rediscovered another love of mine from the 80′s.

Groo: The Wanderer, a fantasy/comedy comic book series written and drawn by Sergio Aragonés, rewritten, coplotted and edited by Mark Evanier, lettered by Stan Sakai, and colored by Tom Luth.

I collect them now.

Filed under: 80's, Comics, Groo

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About

The Original Mud Puppy is a 36 year old Christ follower. Father of an amazing son. Husband of a woman that makes me a better person every single day. Book, music, and movie junkie. Avid runner. Part-time cook.
Two creeds that I try to live by are: Stop Existing and Start LivingLove Wins. (more...)

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