Big, big pants.

This is totally off the topic of scandals, bishops, crises, and Catholics. I have lost 35 pounds since the beginning of April. No one pray to St. Anthony that I find them again. I’m not telling the world in order to get a pat on the back. I’m writing about this to convince all of you that the Gap is run by a bunch of skinny fascists. For a while there I crept up to the tippy-top of their sizes, this is when their clothes were conservative rather than grungy and hippified. I bought at the Gap because they sold baggy jeans and the “Big Oxford.” I need roomy clothes to be comfortable. I also like a casual but polished look. Actually I just want clothes that fit and don’t make me look like a hooligan or a woman. I’ve never been one to wear tight jeans like cowboys and Callista Flockhart. That seems now to be all they sell. Even when I was thin (before my decadent college years) I couldn’t stand tight clothes. I’m not sure if anyone who is not Drew Carey-sized and up would notice, but the selection gets pretty slim as you get into the large-and-in-charge sizes. As the sizes get larger the selection gets smaller. It got so that I couldn’t find what I wanted without going to the website, and even there plain old blue jeans in my size were almost always out of stock. There seems to be plenty of denim for you little bric-a-brac people but for brick outhouse people like me they can’t make pants. I was hoping that the Gap would open a store that would have only big and tall sizes and call it “the Gorge.” If they want to stay in business they should do just that. Those skinny fascists who market towards slackers who have no cash and relegate shlubby sizes to cyberspace where people who have money can’t try clothes on.

You’ll be glad to know I’m back in the realm of normal-sized pants. Women whom I have never met ask me to go dancing. Subway is begging me to eat their sandwiches as part of my diet so I can replace that melvin who is presently in their commercials. Unfortunately the Gap is floating belly-up in the pond of capitalism. I can’t shop there anymore – they have nothing on the shelves. It’s not unlike grocery shopping in the old Soviet Union. The people who work there are a little peppier though. That’s strange considering they have tumble-weeds rolling down the aisles. Old Navy, on the other hand, is a fabulous place to shop. The selection is great and the clothes don’t look like someone else has been wearing them for the past five years. Old Navy even has enormous sizes. You could wear the pants or you could cover your car with them. Jabba the Hut is a satisfied customer. Omar the Tent Maker couldn’t make bigger pants.

What’s going to solve the Gap’s problems? Here’s my modest proposal. All the execs should eat exclusively and rapaciously from these food groups: beer, cheese, things wrapped in bacon, and anything you can pick up with a chip. After six months of that they should try to buy Gap pants. When they can’t find pants big enough for their fascist fannies then they will turn it around. Then they can call me to help them get the weight off.

Larry Miller

skewers the French and the media. A tasty dish if you like salty things! For those of you who aren’t familiar with Larry’s work he’s a fine comedian, actor and writer. You’ve probably seen him on the television if you happen to turn that devil box on during weekday evenings.

Looking at the Weekly Standard’s website, I think we all need flattering caricatures of ourselves on our blogs. Or we could just steal the ones from their site and pretend they look like us!

Mike Hardy

has given up his blog. We didn’t agree with him very much but we wish him well. We’ll miss how he got into it all the time with Mark Shea.

Debate redux!

Recall my post from Saturday morning regarding an ongoing discussion I’m having with a mere Christian friend of mine. We had lunch in the middle of a very hectic day but managed to squeeze in some great conversation.

I expressed the Catholic belief in the assurance of salvation in this manner. We are sure that Jesus will keep His promises but our fallible intellects can’t be sure of our state of Grace at all times. It is not a failure of faith but rather a sincerity – a striving for sanctity and a trust in the boundless mercy of God.

On the nature of Christ’s sacrifice. Rather than a “once for all” over and done event, it is a state. I compared it to marriage in that she got married and has subsequently been in a marriage. Maybe that anaology doesn’t work on all levels but it’s pretty good nonetheless. Redemption can be called a state of God’s relationship with His people. I have to think about that more – any thoughts you have would be appreciated!

My friend said the Catholic description of Christ’s sacrifice seems to fly in the face of the curtain of the temple being torn in two, allowing all of us to approach God where we were not permitted before. I said the Eucharist is just that – Communion with our Lord.

We discussed the notion of sola scriptura and I mentioned the importance of tradition to the earliest Christians who had no New Testament to read as well as how crucial Apostolic Succession has been with regard to the purity of teaching. She found those arguments compelling and wanted to do some research. She cited the passage in Timothy, “Scripture is useful for….” but here’s the clincher – there was no New Testament when Paul wrote that. Even if there was you can’t stretch the word “useful” to mean the sole source of Divine Revelation and Truth.

Lastly I spoke to her about looking at what the Church Fathers have to say. There is a pile o’ stuff on newadvent.org including writings of the Church Fathers.

One last thing. This friend of mine works for Young Life and wants me to help out with the kids. I think I can help them if they suffer from insomnia but that’s about it!

ME: The temporal aspect of Christ’s sacrifice can not be expressed in terms of finality, rather it is a state, an accomplished event that is ongoing. It has a beginning in time but no end….
THE KIDS: …..zzzzzz……zzzzzzz……*SNORT*…….zzzzzzzz………