As an engineer, I admit that I am a rare bird in that I also greatly enjoy literature, and when teaching Sunday School last weekend, I used the picture of Sinbad the Sailor and his seven voyages as a picture of James 4:13-17, where the merchants in the church were cautioned against presuming upon the future and planning for great wealth. I thought there were great parallels between the voyages of Sinbad and the risks noted by James.
While eventually I was able to explain what I was getting at, I was rather shocked that few, if any, in attendance were really familiar with the story of Sinbad--despite numerous movie and even cartoon adaptations of the story. Somehow it seems that despite the great literature being available on "Gutenberg Project" and the great movies of the past being available on streaming video, our culture is becoming more and more insulated from the greater cultural and literary conversation.
I guess I should have expected it, though, as I got a rebuke about 20 years ago because many of the literary comments I made on conference calls with colleagues in Asia were not understood by....my American colleagues. The Asians had been educated in English-inspired schools and got the references and jokes.
Perhaps Gaza, Ashkelon, Ekron, Adhdod, and Gath are actually in the United States. Just sayin'.
