<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<rss version="2.0">
   <channel>
      <title>Agnology - a study in human ignorance</title>
      <link>http://www.agnology.com/</link>
      <description>n. (ag-nah-lo-gee)  the study of human ignorance</description>
      <language>en</language>
      <copyright>Copyright 2008</copyright>
      <lastBuildDate>Thu, 15 May 2008 15:39:12 -0800</lastBuildDate>
      <generator>http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/</generator>
      <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs> 

            <item>
         <title>Resource site for Political Theology</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<center><a href="http://www.theopolitical.com"><strong>Theopolitical.com</strong><p><img src="http://www.theopolitical.com/chiro1.jpg"></a></center>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/05/resource_site_for_political_th.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/05/resource_site_for_political_th.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 15 May 2008 15:39:12 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Tongues of Judgment, Tongues of Fire</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<em>The Judgment of Language in Postmodernity</em>

<center>Now the whole earth had one language and the same words.
And as people migrated from the east, they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there.<br>Genesis 11:1-2</center>

<strong>I.</strong>
Modernity is like a young boy with his fat fingers full of ill-gotten licorice and lollipops, standing on the kitchen counter yelling out in a shrill voice that his mother is sleeping. Before he can taste of the sweets, his mother rises grumpily from her nap and metes out parental judgment in the old fashioned way. Is this what he wanted from the start? 

<strong>II.</strong>
What has happened is this: we desired to build up, and not out. The Tower was the modern <img src="http://www.tei-c.org/Talks/2004/Wuerzburg/Whither/babel.jpg" align=right height=250>goal: to shepherd our common modern language of science into a technological marvel which would bring us to the heights of heaven. Our metanarrative ambition, as David Bentley Hart calls it, drove us upward, to “transcend the conditioned finitude and contingency of stories by discovering the meaning, limits, and motives of all stories.”  Rather than fill the earth with many stories, we ground them into mortar and bitumen and layered them up into one tall Enlightenment Tower and expected it to stand there forever. Modernity used the lingua scientifica to erect its own god to replace the One who had faded into rumor. And for some reason, modernity expected the unity of the Tower to stand. ]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/05/tongues_of_judgment_tongues_of.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/05/tongues_of_judgment_tongues_of.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Fri, 02 May 2008 10:07:09 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>A Gift Half Understood</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<blockquote>He has been manifested in a human body for this reason only, out of the love and goodness of His Father, for the salvation of us men.… The first fact that you must grasp is this: the renewal of creation has been wrought by the Self-same Word Who made it in the beginning.
--Athanasius, De Incarnatione</blockquote>

Protestantism has come to inherit a certain reputation. The story which is told, and which many children of the Reformation have come to enjoy, begins with the idea that it was modern, Protestant world which disenchanted the world, in Max Weber’s memorable phrase. It could perhaps be argued that the evidence against the Reformation is largely circumstantial—a matter of being in the wrong place at precisely the wrong time—except for the fact that so many modern Protestants want to take credit for the crime (particularly in the more historically-oriented traditions, Lutheranism and Calvinism). We are very happy to play the role of homewrecker in the early modern divorce between nature and grace. 

The political terms of this divorce are central to the story: the Reformation cemented a new dualism of civil and spiritual authority, in which the civil—or temporal—realm was disenchanted of the meddling influences of the spiritual (which was identified with the sacerdotalism of the papalists). The medieval idea of two swords within one Christendom was replaced by the modern idea of Luther’s “two kingdoms,” in which the temporal had jurisdiction over this world, and the spiritual over the next.  D.G. Hart argues along these lines that Protestantism was the capstone of Western political secularism:

<blockquote>By reducing the authority of the church in the secular or nonreligious sphere, Protestantism solidified the separation of church and state that had long characterized the West and came to dominate the modern era. Gone was the notion that revelation or churchly authorities govern the civil jurisdiction. Instead, with Protestantism… came the possibility for the study of and theorizing about politics to emerge as a separate sphere. </blockquote>

Oliver O’Donovan suggests that this sort of story-telling can be dismissed, in part, as self-congratulatory (and perhaps misguidedly so).  A further question might arise as to why this particular telling of the story neglects a certain strand of early Reformation thought, one which did not seek to divorce nature from grace, and yet stands out as strikingly Protestant. For in between the theoretical worlds of monadic nature and monadic grace there lies a hypostasis —it is here that an alternate narrative of Protestant political authority resides. The parallelism between the metaphysical realms of nature and grace, and the political realms of the civil and the ecclesiastical, suggest that our view of the nature of political authority cannot be divorced from our view of the paradigmatic significance of the act of Incarnation. For it is at this hypostatic juncture that the realms of nature and of grace most pointedly intersect, and must therefore inform our view of political authority.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/a_gift_half_understood.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/a_gift_half_understood.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 29 Apr 2008 08:59:04 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>The Wrestling Match: Derrida and the Meaning of Life</title>
         <description><![CDATA[In<em> Solomon Among the Postmoderns</em>, Dr. Leithart wrote:

<blockquote>We can no more bring the world under our complete control than we can guide the wind into a paddock for the night. We can no more give permanent form to the world than we can sculpt the evening breeze into solid shapes. Our projects are not sandcastles on the beach. That image, for Solomon, would suggest something far too solid and permanent. Our projects are cloud castles on a windy day.</blockquote>

<img src="http://www.pyke-eye.com/a/phil/1988/JacquesDerrida.jpg" align=right height=250>Solomon asks, “Who knows the interpretation of a word?” and the modern believes the question not to be rhetorical. A word can be known. A word can be analyzed, parsed, spread out like a patient etherized on the grammarian’s table. The word, the basic building block in language, can be used to build to truth if—in its foundation—it is “perfectly known and incapable of being doubted,” as Descartes put it. Peace and unity can only be won if humankind can begin from these objective foundations of truthful language and build up an entire structure of Truth. Modernity lacked the advantage of those at Shinar; moderns live post-Babel, with many tongues. So modernity had to construct a new story of the language of Reason, the tongue which all men possess. This is something common to modern philosophers from Descartes to Locke to Kant.

This is what Derrida is attacking (although, as we’ll see in a minute, his line of attack is a complicated one). Plato’s Pharmacy is a long, winding, playful piece—one which took me to the very end before I decided it was worthwhile. But it in spite of its wanderings, in the end it provides a very sharp critique, first, of the way we view words, and second, the way we view truth.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/the_wrestling_match_derrida_an.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/the_wrestling_match_derrida_an.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Literature</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 23 Apr 2008 08:33:47 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>The Rumor of God</title>
         <description><![CDATA[The rumor of God seems an unwieldy thing. It’s like some childhood game of telephone which delivers truth over to falsehood and ends in a complete unraveling of language by the end of the line. Such is the way that men speak of God, say the postmoderns. One age delivers their myth to another age, which in turn shapes and distorts according to its whim. In the end, you have a god for urbanites and a god for trailer parks, a god for the rich and a god for the underprivileged, a god for any economic or political culture in which you find yourself. When God is only a rumor, when He has been presumed dead, you find not one, but many, to take His place. In short, postmodernism is polytheistic.

This is the problem in an age of self-proclaimed doubt, where the wisdom of modernity’s elders is distrusted. Truth, according to popular belief, has been cast out on the wind, and who can shepherd it home? This seems to be what Eliot had in mind when he wrote:

<blockquote>Leaving one still with the intolerable wrestle<br>
With words and meanings. The poetry does not matter.<br>
It was not (to start again) what one had expected.<br>
What was to be the value of the long looked forward to,<br>
Long hoped for calm, the autumnal serenity<br>
And the wisdom of age? Had they deceived us<br>
Or deceived themselves, the quiet-voiced elders,<br>
Bequeathing us merely a receipt for deceit? </blockquote>

The deceit of the elders: a promise that our wrestling with words and meaning would not end in futility—that it would matter. They were wrong and they were liars, says Eliot. Their search for knowledge was “useless in the darkness into which they peered.” The moderns sought “knowledge derived from experience,” but time gave the lie to that sort of knowledge. We have learned that time imposes new patterns and experiences which dizzy us, disorient us. “Every moment is a new and shocking / Valuation.” 

So it is with language. Logos birthed in chaos will engender uncertainty in culture (in a weird hybrid of Derrida and Orwell). Do we raise a cry of alarm, like Orwell? Or, with Derrida, do we slyly poke fun at the doddering old moderns as they try to summon Truth with the word “truth.”]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/the_rumor_of_god.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/the_rumor_of_god.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 22 Apr 2008 13:31:58 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Toward an Incarnational View of Political Authority</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<blockquote>He has been manifested in a human body for this reason only, out of the love and goodness of His Father, for the salvation of us men.… The first fact that you must grasp is this: the renewal of creation has been wrought by the Self-same Word Who made it in the beginning.
--Athanasius, De Incarnatione</blockquote>

Protestantism has come to inherit a certain reputation. The story which is told, and which many children of the Reformation have come to enjoy, begins with the idea that it was modern, Protestant world which disenchanted the world, in Max Weber’s memorable phrase. It could perhaps be argued that the evidence against the Reformation is largely circumstantial—a matter of being in the wrong place at precisely the wrong time—except for the fact that so many modern Protestants want to take credit for the crime (particularly in the more historically-oriented traditions, Lutheranism and Calvinism). We are very happy to play the role of homewrecker in the early modern divorce between nature and grace. 

The political terms of this divorce are central to the story: the Reformation cemented a new dualism of civil and spiritual authority, in which the civil—or temporal—realm was disenchanted of the meddling influences of the spiritual (which was identified with the sacerdotalism of the papalists). The medieval idea of two swords within one Christendom was replaced by the modern idea of Luther’s “two kingdoms,” in which the temporal had jurisdiction over this world, and the spiritual over the next.  D.G. Hart argues along these lines that Protestantism was the capstone of Western political secularism:

<blockquote>By reducing the authority of the church in the secular or nonreligious sphere, Protestantism solidified the separation of church and state that had long characterized the West and came to dominate the modern era. Gone was the notion that revelation or churchly authorities govern the civil jurisdiction. Instead, with Protestantism… came the possibility for the study of and theorizing about politics to emerge as a separate sphere. </blockquote>

But the question could arise as to why this particular telling of the story neglects a certain strand of early Reformation thought, one which did not seek to divorce nature from grace, and yet stands out as strikingly Protestant. For in between the world of monadic nature and the world of monadic grace there lies a hypostasis —it is here that an alternate narrative of Protestant political authority resides. The parallelism between the metaphysical realms of nature and grace, and the political realms of the civil and the ecclesiastical, suggest that our view of the nature of political authority cannot be divorced from our views of the historical significance of the act of Incarnation. For it is at this hypostatic juncture that the realms of nature and of grace most pointedly intersect, and must therefore inform our view of political authority.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/toward_an_incarnational_view_o.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/04/toward_an_incarnational_view_o.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 22 Apr 2008 13:30:45 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Zosima: A Presentation</title>
         <description>So we were all damned to hell last week. It falls to Zosima to bring us out. Of course—the question is—does Dostoevsky’s account of Zosima provide the answer to Ivan and the Inquisitor’s devastating critique of faith in the previous section. Apparently, Dostoevsky worried about the adequacy of his response, too. Robin Feuer Miller points out that right before the serial portion of his section “The Russian Monk” was due to be released, he wrote to a friend doubting whether his Grand Inquisitor blasphemy would be answered well enough by the holy monk. What I think we need to realize here at the very beginning is that the answer Zosima is supposed to give is not Euclidean. The kiss of Christ and Alyosha which we talked about last week should clue us in—Dostoevsky is not going to provide a logical mock-trial-like rebuttal to the atheist’s charges. Dostoevsky rather recognizes that both the argument for and the argument against faith are ultimately stories. Ivan’s arguments culminate in “prose poem.” And Zosima life story acts in the same way. In fact, Dostoevsky seems to go out of his way to highlight the narrative aspect of his argument: commenting again and again that his account was told to him, and he cannot be sure the words he recounts are true to what was originally said. 
</description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/02/zosima_a_presentation.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/02/zosima_a_presentation.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Literature</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Fri, 29 Feb 2008 11:56:42 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Sacrifice, Gift, and Dickens</title>
         <description><![CDATA[The grandfather of modernity, Rene Descartes, began his modern project with the idea that all men should be able to agree with one another. Abstract reason—available to every man—was supposed to provide the means to attain this universal agreement. <img src="http://owlcreek.files.wordpress.com/2007/08/guillotine.jpg" align=right height=250>Men no longer needed the Church, or some external authority, to tell them to behave. And yet, several generations and bloody revolutions later, some authors began to point out how miserably Reason had failed as a peacekeeper. Two such authors were Charles Dickens (1812-1870) and Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881). Modernity, as they told the story, had transferred man’s moral responsibility from his neighbor and directed it toward the individual himself or—worse—to a Cause. Both Dickens and Dostoevsky suggest in their respective novels, A Tale of Two Cities and The Brothers Karamazov, that the only way to reestablish moral community in this broken world is to restore an ethic of mutual and personal self-sacrifice against the impersonal ethic of the Enlightenment. Ultimately, one must choose between “Reason” and sacrifice.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/02/the_grandfather_of_modernity_r.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/02/the_grandfather_of_modernity_r.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Literature</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 12 Feb 2008 14:49:39 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>One Moment</title>
         <description>I stood on the edge, my outsized five-year-old head staring down at a pair of skinny white legs. My toes were wrinkled, shriveled up like used sponges sopping-wet, clinging to the floor. They wouldn’t move. No matter how much I willed them to. They were stuck to the ceramic floor. Like peanut butter to the roof of your mouth or superglue between your fingers after the art experiment you did when your mom wasn’t looking. My feet wouldn’t move, so I glared at them. Fiercely. Angrily. Move, just move, I thought. If I hadn’t been five years old and a Baptist I would have sworn. But I was both, so I only stared. 

Then I looked out and saw the water. It was so deep I knew that it didn’t have a bottom. My dad was the tallest man I knew apart from Michael Jordan and he couldn’t touch the bottom. He just floated there waving his arms and quietly telling me to jump. But I knew I wouldn’t float. I’d sink straight down through his arms to the very bottom and stare up angrily at the world and die prematurely. At five years old. What a horrible way to go. </description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/01/one_moment.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/01/one_moment.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Personal</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 23 Jan 2008 08:59:23 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>A Reformed Consideration of Political Theology</title>
         <description>Most of the postmodern voices within the political theology movement seem to be running together at full speed away from the liberalized Gomorrah. But even while they share the same fear of getting caught in a downpour of brimstone, it also appears that some are headed in slightly different directions. I’d like to briefly contrast two sub-movements within the broader group of post-liberal refugees. For no reason other than personal caprice, I’ll call them the Reformed and the Missional movements. The former label is a bit unfairly associated with the work of Oliver O’Donovan, formerly of Oxford University, now of Edinburgh. O’Donovan is actually an Anglican, but shares enough in common with the Reformed tradition that I’m going to ignore that minor moral failing. The Missional movement I’ve associated with the work of Stanley Hauerwas (of Duke) and William Cavanaugh, who studied under Hauerwas and now teaches at St. Thomas in the barren tundra of Minnesota. Since our group has already been introduced to the work of Cavanaugh (and Hauerwas, by extension), I’m going to look at two Reformed critiques leveled by O’Donovan at the Missional view: the eschatological critique and the incarnational critique.</description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2008/01/a_reformed_consideration_of_po.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2008/01/a_reformed_consideration_of_po.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 03 Jan 2008 11:49:23 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>An Exile of Love</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<b>Kant’s Kingdom of Ends and the Kingdom of God</b>

The modern impulse is a matronly one. From the first spark of the Enlightenment project, the modernist had the aim of cleaning up the mess which had been created by the untidy medievals. <img src="http://www2.hawaii.edu/~stroble/KANT2.JPG" align=right height=225>Descartes in his Discourse on Method begins by posing the question: if all men possess reason, why do we end up in disagreement on so many issues—often to the point of bloodshed? The ethical application of the modern quest for universal agreement is centered on the principle that “reason,” rather than external authority, provides mankind with the means to achieve order. And, further, it is possible to establish a internal “law” which would have all men treat all men with equity. The medievals had imposed the threat of ecclesial judgment on men in order to force them into line with divine law. For the moderns, however, this external threat reeked of arbitrary violence; surely there must be a more rational way to establish a universal law than to fall back on ecclesial powers which allegedly derived their authority from a Being not bound by law. For the modern, any law of ethics must be based in human autonomy, centered in the self. Immanuel Kant, following in this stream of thought, proposed his own modern Golden Rule—one which is ultimately impersonal, autonomous, and lacking in the self-sacrificial virtue of the biblical alternative.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2007/12/an_exile_of_love_1.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2007/12/an_exile_of_love_1.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 17 Dec 2007 08:22:28 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Sleep: In 15 minutes</title>
         <description><![CDATA[My question consists of just three words: What is sleep? I admit I did a double-take when I first found out what my topic was. Even an infant knows, right? Nothing is more natural to the human body (even the sexual drive takes a back seat to physical exhaustion). And no one has to be reminded that they should be tired. <img src="http://www.lakesidepress.com/pulmonary/Sleep/Dali1937-sleep-mid.jpg" align=right>Some people long for “meaningful” sleep so desperately that the NYT reported last year that 42 million sleep prescriptions were written by doctors.  And hasn’t science removed all doubt about what it does and why we need it? Well, no. It turns out that even though every person on earth spends about one-third of his or her life in a state of sleep, science is still trying to figure it out. As one medical journal says bluntly: “No one knows what sleep really is.” It’s a bit of an embarrassment, really. I even asked the NSA’s resident expert about the nature of sleep. And, no, not even Brian Schlect had an answer. Although he offered to test any hypotheses I might have.

But I had to find an answer, of course. It’s possible to take a number of different perspectives. What happens during sleep? Why do we sleep? And, What does sleep mean to us?]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2007/12/sleep_in_15_minutes.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2007/12/sleep_in_15_minutes.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Theology</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2007 08:27:48 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>After Gov. Romney&apos;s Religious Apologetic</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.agnology.com/graphics/romney.jpg">

Of course, it was unstaged.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2007/12/after_gov_romneys_religious_ap.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2007/12/after_gov_romneys_religious_ap.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Politics</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 06 Dec 2007 13:20:03 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>All manner of thing shall be well (thesis notes)</title>
         <description>The particular geniuses of Waugh, Greene, and Percy can sometimes be lost on some readers for the simple reason that their worlds often seem devoid of hope. Of course, very few Old Testament prophets were honored with ticker tape parades. But each novelist, in some ironic way, does offer some cause for hope. 

Modernism would have us distrust all authority not contained in the individual conscience or the State magisterium. But all three novelists would have us turn instinctively to the Church [for authority]. For them, the rituals, the transcendent morality, and the sacraments which the Church offers are the means by which the West can escape the floodwaters rising on all sides. The material “things” and blessings which the Church has the authority to dispense are Christ to the world. The service of its ministers, the food and drink of its table, the waters of its baptismal fonts—all these things are the Son of God made flesh. Even Graham Greene during his darkest years of apostasy retained an instinctual trust in the elements of the Eucharist.  

This trust in the incarnate, bodily nature of faith is not something reserved only for Roman Catholics, however.  Evelyn Waugh, as traditional a Catholic as he was, allowed that the nature of modernism had realigned the battle-lines so that the fight was no longer between Protestant and Catholic, but between Christianity and chaos.  The total breakdown of historic morality and aesthetics is all that can be expected when “the supernatural basis” upon which they rest have been denied for so long. The Protestant and the Catholic both have a moral imperative to proclaim the incarnate Word to a world which has become blind to the divine glory which surrounds it.</description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2007/11/all_manner_of_thing_shall_be_w.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2007/11/all_manner_of_thing_shall_be_w.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Thesis</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 21 Nov 2007 07:51:35 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>The Rumor of Angels</title>
         <description>In 1969—what some consider the high-watermark of modernism --sociologist Peter Berger wrote, “we have come a long way from the gods and from the angels. The breaches of this-worldly reality which these mighty figures embodied have increasingly vanished from our consciousness as serious possibilities.”  But not yet entirely, Berger allowed. He went on to tell of a priest working in the slums of a European city who was asked why he continued to work in such a place. The priest gave the answer: “So that the rumor of God may not disappear completely.” 	Of course, one might argue this rumor of the supernatural was one of the worst-kept secrets of the modern age. In fact, the observations of supernaturalists like Waugh, Greene, and Percy amount ultimately to a very simple conclusion: God is there, and He is not silent.  

This simple statement of dogma carries with it a malicious whisper, though: if God is there, if He is not silent, what will He say concerning our modern project? He has cast down towers before. He has babbled tongues and afflicted kings with plagues, madness, and worms of the stomach. Apparently, He is a God who works His judgment in life as well as death. Is there cause to fear? Will we be judged?</description>
         <link>http://www.agnology.com/2007/11/the_rumor_of_angels.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.agnology.com/2007/11/the_rumor_of_angels.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Thesis</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 13 Nov 2007 10:09:02 -0800</pubDate>
      </item>
      
   </channel>
</rss>
