Showing posts with label coffee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coffee. Show all posts

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Summit Day 10

Jason started off the morning in the classroom hearing sessions by Dr Gary Phillips who spoke on the reliability of the Bible and Pluralism, followed by Sam Youngs who spoke on questions and history of Christology. Both sessions were excellent. 





It was Laurie's last day with us so we headed out to see some sights! The first stop was the Dayton TN courthouse where the Scope's trial took place. It was great to see some southern history that had a massive affect on our nation. 




We then headed to Chattanooga TN and randomly stepped into one of the most eccentric book stores I have ever seen. It was completely disorganized and the woman that owned it had two dogs that looked to be on death's door. We totally enjoyed perusing the books and finding some that were really old. 





















We then headed to Jason's favorite coffee shop in Chattanooga that he spent many hours studying at. It smelled amazing because they were roasting the beans in house. It was wonderful to sip iced lattes, read and chat about life.

Laurie leaves early in the morning. Jason and I only have two days left at Summit Tennessee  Prayers appreciated that we would finish well and travel back home would be safe and happy!

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Coffee Shops

I am a coffee snob, or so I’ve been told. My wife is as well. She’s from Portland. Bipartisan right by her house. We had our first coffee date there. Good memories. Dunn Bros is a cool chain around the Twin Cities. They have good food and sweet buildings. The best coffee shop I’ve been in is Agia Sophia in Old Colorado Springs, CO. The best coffee I’ve had is Harmony House coffee in Dayton, TN. Thankfully, in a month, I’ll be able to bask in the glory of drinking Harmony House coffee. My wife and I will be going back to Bryan College to help host the Summit TN conference.

Agia Sophia’s is an Orthodox coffee shop, photography studio, and bookstore just down the road from Pike’s Peak. I can’t remember if it’s Greek or Eastern. If you’re ever in the area, you should go. It’s two stories, leather seating on the second. My favorite chair sits in the left corner, with a gold-infused wood table next to it. Classy. Maroon walls with icons make for a great study or chat. Carpet makes sounds quieter and homier. Get a French-press and take Athanasius for a spin.

I’m sitting in Quixotic, at the moment, in St. Paul, MN. My wife is next to me. The main thing about MN coffee shops is the cement floors. Given a year-round winter here, most places have cold, hard cement floors to help the continual salt and snow tracks. Unfortunately, this makes for a horrible experience. It modern, not hospitable, and very unkind. I feel like ripping my legs off in the winter because it’s so cold. There is a glass room for reservations, though, which is quite cool. The coffee is Portlandish. I’ll give you a definition of Portlandish another time. A snapshot would be the going zeitgeist of coffee at the moment.

Harmony House was named for community. I like that. Pubs used to be a place for community. I’m not sure where you find community anymore, maybe Facebook? Minnesota lakes tend to be that for 2 months out of the year. The founder of Harmony House has his M.Div. He roasts his own coffee. You don’t want to put anything in your coffee, because it’s so good. He’s a local. Many Bryan students attend. Meetings are held there. It has good intentions.

Starbucks. Ever since starving my way through grad school, I’ve only drunk house coffee-no money for espresso drinks. I’m now content with a “tall Pike with room.” It generally costs a little under two bucks, and I get free refills with my Gold card. I don’t care about the Starbucks stigma. They have good go-to coffee anywhere in the world. It’s not the incomparable, Harmony House Yirgacheffe, but it’ll do much better than that gas-station Folgers. I only resort to Folgers when I’m having Southern-style breakfasts in the South from 6-11am with friends over a Bible study, or I’m making a road-trip that extends to midnight and Starbucks is closed.


All this to say, coffee shops must be determined for a variety of reasons: music, atmosphere, feel, tenor, taste, temp, and cost. I’m sure there are more. Actually, at the moment, staying at home and drinking French-press or tea with my wonderful wife is probably the best.