Current UM Church policies rely on complicated rhetoric
Current UM Church policies rely on complicated rhetoric
In an excerpt from his book, Denison, Iowa: Searching for the Soul of America Through the Secrets of a Midwest Town (2005), Dale Maharidge utilizes numerous rhetorical appeals including ethos, pathos, mythos, and kairos to persuade the reader that the survival of small towns in Iowa depend on their capacity to accept immigrants. This book covers the history of a small town in western Iowa, Denison, and its unflattering historic past of hostility towards immigrants. He begins the book by…
Although Barbara Ehrenreich does not directly state her purpose, she wrote the excerpt “Serving in Florida” to share an experience she had and explain how it is relevant to her readers. The author writes to raise awareness about the economic issues that many American families face as part of the “working poor” socioeconomic class. This article was intended for an audience of educated, financially stable readers with the time and money to buy and read books. Ehrenreich’s story is about how she quickly adjusted from her comfortable life as a writer for a famous magazines to a member of the working poor class at a diner named Jerry’s. This is a very unique experience and not many have the opportunity to see how the “other half” live, whether it be the wealthy living like the poor or vice versa.…
I hope this email finds you well. This is Patrick Riley, assistant for Pastor Brooks this year for the Sociology and the bible class. First off, I want to thank all of you for your participation and bright minds this week. I'm checking with each of you to see if you had any questions about anything that we have learned thus far you'd like to ask Pastor Brooks. Or anything you would like further explanation about…
This book calls Christians to open their minds to create building relationships with this community rather than criticize one another for different beliefs. This book incorporates the gospel as well as genetics to help each community learn to understand each other and respect each other. In chapters one and two, the quality of trust is examined and used to help people create friendships that are built from loving one another for how they treat each other rather than one another’s sexual orientation. In our class review of chapters three through five, we discussed ways that as Christians, even if we do not agree with the LGBTQ community, we can still respect and love one another.…
Martin Luther King Jr. uses many rhetorical strategies in his letter to Birmingham. While reading the letter I noticed he enjoys to show his knowledge of historical features and names mentioned in the Bible. King starts off the letter (paragraph 2) with who he is and why he is in Birmingham. He then gives the comment that he is apart of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, showing he is a christian and later on finding out he is a minister.…
In Koppelman’s (2014) book Understanding Human Differences: Multicultural Education for a Diverse America, one chapter specifically deals with the controversial issue of sexuality and its role in this society. Koppelman explains how the idea of homosexuality was typically regarded as immoral and unacceptable. There was a build up of personal discrimination and homophobia based on homosexuality misunderstandings. In recent times however, there has been more acceptance, tolerance, and knowledge of it. Moreover, there has been information on the intricacies concerning sexual orientations—even enforcing policies to encourage equal rights.…
This week Dawn has learned that institutionalized heterosexism is a term used to indicate the often-unintentional obliviousness to the needs and concerns and even the very existence of non-heterosexual members of society. (Reading Packet pg. 149). Examples of heterosexism at the macro level would include the continuing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell “policy involving military personnel; widespread lack of legal protection and discrimination in employment, housing, and services; including hostility to same sex partnerships. She also discovered that institutionalized heterosexism was very apparent in the film “For the Bible Tells Me So”?…
It is her hope that lessons gleaned from queer experience “will provide trajectories for Christian inquiry that could bring new energy and urgency to the progressive church and its proclamation of the gospel” (13). In Queer Virtue, Edman explores the essential teachings of Christian traditions in the light of queer experience, and then draws upon the virtues of queer identity to lay out a path for revitalizing Christian practice. Issues like identity, community, pride, risk, family, authenticity, hospitality, love, and intimacy are crucial to the future of Christianity, and the queer perspective speaks to each of them. By drawing attention to these shared ethical foundation of the Christian and queer communities, Edman encourages to renew a conscious commitment to love and…
Question: Should a married gay couple be allowed to hold a position in the Seventh-Day-Adventist church (SDA) church? If a person continues to practice a sinful behavior, but expects others to embrace their lifestyle that concept is ludicrous. No, a gay married couple should not be allowed to hold any kind of position in a SDA church for three of the following reasons. When you hold a position in the SDA church you need to be someone who is living a Godly life.…
An extremely rare occurrence is on my calendar for this week. I get to have lunch with my dear friend, Lindsay. Our friendship extends over a decade, but due to the hustle and bustle of life, we have not connected in a while. I want to make the most of our time together, because I know this moment will be gone before I know it. As ridiculous as it may appear, I am deeply considering making conversation cards to assure our conversation if filled with as much intention as possible.…
From Serving in Florida As a cellular immunology student, Barbara Ehrenreich would rather try hard to fit in a blue-collar’s live in Florida. Why did her made this job decision? And how she fell about these kind of lives? In her articles “From Serving in Florida”, as an undercover journalist, Ehrenreich records past personal experience working in a restaurant named Jerry’s, to reveals the difficult lives, the harsh, sub-human living and working conditions for low-paid workers in America.…
“The Black church has been an important institution in the Black community and a potent source in liberation theology, it has been less supportive to its lesbian members.” (Greene, p. 245) The Black churches are pushing a sense of heterosexuality to Queer African American woman that they will never be able to live to. Queer African American woman are constantly reminded when they come to Church, where they are supposed to find a sense of community, that they must engage in sex with other males to find a place within their own community. There is also a prevalence of male dominance in the Black church that has created the homophobia within the church.…
“Serving in Florida” by Barbara Ehrenreich is a story about Ehrenreich’s experience as a low-wage waitress in a restaurant. Ehrenreich discusses her experiences as a low-wage worker and the everyday difficulties she encounters in her position. Ehrenreich publicizes the plight of low-wage workers by using analogies, which highlight the challenges low-wage workers face, emotionally charged words, to allow the reader to connect with the story, and extreme language to arouse sympathy from the audience. Ehrenreich uses the analogies of food and battlefields in order to emphasize the difficulties of her situation. Ehrenreich describes her workplace as a “a fat person’s hell” (Ehrenreich 179), which creates a picture in the mind of the reader.…
In 1996 a national poll was taken because of the growing number of gay and lesbian couples in the United States. Did the general populace accept this rising form of sexuality? Those polls showed that only seventeen years ago 68% of American adults opposed gay and same sex marriage stating that marriage should be “between man and woman” and that only 27% agreed that same sex unions should be made legal for “any two people” (Wikipedia.com). This year they took another poll and the results were shocking: a record high of 55% of American adults are for same sex marriage and family dynamics! Only 40% continue to oppose such unions!…
Each author has their own strategies and method to persuade the audience in believing in their point of view. There are variety of rhetorical strategies that can be used depending on the author’s goal of what they are trying to convey. For example, pathos are used to manipulate a reader’s emotion by creating an emotional response. Another example are logos, which is persuading the audience through and appeal of logic, and hypophora which is asking a question and answering it immediately. Even though the strategies have different effects and are used differently, their one common goal is to persuade the reader.…