John Bloom's picture
05.20.2008 | Comments(6)

If I Find a Coffee Ring on that Scroll, You're in Trouble

No sooner had I sung the praises of the Jewish Miami Boys Choir singing “Hinei Ma Tov” than the Israeli government put a portion of the Dead Sea Scrolls on display, with special emphasis on the fragment displaying Psalm 133, from which “Hinei Ma Tov” is taken: “Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.” Dead Sea ScrollsThe Dead Sea Scrolls are normally kept in a dark temperature-controlled room because the calfskin parchment has been deteriorating, but the government decided to bring out the Book of Isaiah for the first time in 41 years, putting it in a glass case in Jerusalem’s Israel Museum as part of the nation’s 60th anniversary celebration. My question: how come the calfskin parchment was just fine for 2,060 years in a cave jar, but Chosen People scientists can’t keep it from wasting away?

Icons to Make You Feel at Home in East Dallas

Bless Your Meat

Of course you can buy a Bobble Head Jesus, who said you can’t? But my favorite religious icon from the Archie McPhee catalogue is actually the vinyl desktop-sized “Bless Your Meat” model of St. Adrian, patron saint of butchers, arms dealers and prison guards (knife not included).

Graven Images Out the Wazoo

Soupy as Moses

All those super-Christians who are constantly trying to get Ten Commandments statues put up on courthouse squares should just pony up the $60,000 for the actual tablets carried down from Sinai by Charlton Heston when they’re auctioned off this summer in New York. That seems a little steep for props from a 52-year-old movie that, let’s face it, wasn’t that great. I would pay that, however, for the Fifteen Commandments tablets that Mel Brooks carried down from Sinai in The History of the World, Part 1, and I would probably pay half that for the tablets carried by the greatest movie Moses of them all. I speak, of course, of Soupy Sales, in the 1993 mockumentary The Making of ‘. . . and God Spoke’.

The Vatican Should Publish Its Own Version of People

Vatican  Observatory at Castel Gandolfo

There must be somebody at the wire services who combs through L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, every day, looking for Something Wacky, Weird or Wonderful to write about. The latest interview to make the Internet rounds is with the Rev. Jose Gabriel Funes, the director of the Vatican Observatory at Castel Gandolfo (the pope’s country house), who says that we can’t rule out the possibility of life on other planets. Funes also answers the inevitable questions about Galileo, who was prosecuted as a heretic for believing in the theories of the Polish Catholic cleric Copernicus, whose books on the heavens were banned by the church. But the most interesting part of the story was nowhere commented on: the Vatican also operates an observatory (and no doubt one that can see much further into the heavens) at the University of Arizona in Tucson. I wonder how many of the priests have Wildcats t-shirts under those cassocks, or, given the new openness to alien life, Star Trek hairshirts.

Comments(6)

SRebbe | 03:04 pm on 5/21/2008

oooo, gotta get one of them meat-saint-thingies before the weekend... thanks for the reminder.

everything's so greeeeeeeen!

that calvinist doug | 03:30 pm on 5/21/2008

John, this is now, I think, at least a couple times I've read your snarky, hyphenated, capitalized "Chosen People" phrase regarding the Jews. I'm not Jewish, and I don't play one on TV, but seriously man, what's the justification for that? If some Chinese scientists were working to preserve some ancient national treasure of their own, would you refer to them with some apparently anti-Chinese remark? Just a question.

budda | 07:57 pm on 5/21/2008

I think he is being sarcastic, poking the John Hagee people, the "Christian Zionists" (which have nothing to do with the classic, mostly secular jewish zionist). John Hagee believes in supporting the jewish people and making state policy decisions for them whether they like it or not. He thinks the bible says "no land for peace" so any jewish leader who wants to do that is less pro-jewish than He is.

Also, I like that Mr. Bloom pokes everyone's religion pretty much equally, even though he pokes my sacred cows too. It's good, not fun, but good 'cause I like to be cool and believe that I don't have any sacred cows, that I am rational and not very emotional, but then I read a comment or an article and there goes my blood pressure. Then I have to ask myself why and deal with the yuck. Good times.

BlueBerry Pick'n | 03:41 pm on 5/22/2008

LOL

“Behold, how good & how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.”

yeah... & Hagee...

well spotted.

JoshH | 05:32 pm on 5/22/2008

So...if I get a "Bless Your Meat" bobble, does that mean I have a chance at getting laid?

*Beavis and Butthead style laughter*

Process Deist | 05:38 pm on 5/22/2008

NO !
It just means that your meat won't go bad, before it's expiration date.

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