Standing On My Head ... With My Fly Open
When the author was in the fourth grade, a Philadelphia Inquirer photographer caught his grammar school tumbling team's premier performance at a PTA meeting. As a result, Duke Robinson claims to be the only Presbyterian minister in the history of Western civilization to have had his picture in a major metropolitan newspaper standing on his head with his fly open. The fact his fly was open, he says, reflects the innocence typical of an eight-year-old boy reared in a very religious family in the first half of the Twentieth Century. That's who he says he was. That's what he did. And he says, "I wanted never to do it again.

"Robinson's intimate memoir takes you through a life marked by weird coincidences, surprise twists and turns, and life-or-death close calls that impacted him dramatically. His curious mind kept him asking and trying to answer, with some measure of intellectual integrity, why life works the way it does. How come the smallest incident or choice, either by yourself or someone else, can turn your life in a direction you never dreamed of? The mythology on which Robinson was reared gave him an answer to this question. It emerged, however, from an ancient people who thought the flat world had recently been created for them, didn't know where the sun went at night, and believed demons caused illness. He says that he came to see that he could not be whole living in both that world and the scientific cause-and-effect world we all know today.

The author's story of his own personal change has to do with discarding a lot of superstition, sentimentality, and wishful thinking in religion, in order to be grounded in, integrated with, and liberated by relating honestly to the real world. Looking back, he says, "I never wanted to be caught standing on my theological head with my fly open."

This book gets you inside the head of a Presbyterian minister who early on found that he also could not go through the motions or play so many of the games that the Church generally asks of its clergy. He has wrestled with traditional religion for well over a half-century. Of the last congregation he served for twenty-eight years, he began by asking its members to lighten up and get real. And they did. And he tells some remarkable stories about them.

Robinson's five other books bear witness to his changed and changing worldview. Here, in more personal terms he weaves together stories about his Christian fundamentalist upbringing, the wonderful loves of his life, hilarious adventures in the pulpit (on stage), his reputation for humor, reflections on sexual repression, parenting four strong children, and some hilarious, embarrassing professional mistakes, and fascinating projects in retirement. He also talks about being a fervent fan of the Philadelphia, Kansas City, and, since 1968, Oakland A's baseball teams for eighty-five years. He asks, "How much more theological can you get than that?"
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Standing On My Head ... With My Fly Open
When the author was in the fourth grade, a Philadelphia Inquirer photographer caught his grammar school tumbling team's premier performance at a PTA meeting. As a result, Duke Robinson claims to be the only Presbyterian minister in the history of Western civilization to have had his picture in a major metropolitan newspaper standing on his head with his fly open. The fact his fly was open, he says, reflects the innocence typical of an eight-year-old boy reared in a very religious family in the first half of the Twentieth Century. That's who he says he was. That's what he did. And he says, "I wanted never to do it again.

"Robinson's intimate memoir takes you through a life marked by weird coincidences, surprise twists and turns, and life-or-death close calls that impacted him dramatically. His curious mind kept him asking and trying to answer, with some measure of intellectual integrity, why life works the way it does. How come the smallest incident or choice, either by yourself or someone else, can turn your life in a direction you never dreamed of? The mythology on which Robinson was reared gave him an answer to this question. It emerged, however, from an ancient people who thought the flat world had recently been created for them, didn't know where the sun went at night, and believed demons caused illness. He says that he came to see that he could not be whole living in both that world and the scientific cause-and-effect world we all know today.

The author's story of his own personal change has to do with discarding a lot of superstition, sentimentality, and wishful thinking in religion, in order to be grounded in, integrated with, and liberated by relating honestly to the real world. Looking back, he says, "I never wanted to be caught standing on my theological head with my fly open."

This book gets you inside the head of a Presbyterian minister who early on found that he also could not go through the motions or play so many of the games that the Church generally asks of its clergy. He has wrestled with traditional religion for well over a half-century. Of the last congregation he served for twenty-eight years, he began by asking its members to lighten up and get real. And they did. And he tells some remarkable stories about them.

Robinson's five other books bear witness to his changed and changing worldview. Here, in more personal terms he weaves together stories about his Christian fundamentalist upbringing, the wonderful loves of his life, hilarious adventures in the pulpit (on stage), his reputation for humor, reflections on sexual repression, parenting four strong children, and some hilarious, embarrassing professional mistakes, and fascinating projects in retirement. He also talks about being a fervent fan of the Philadelphia, Kansas City, and, since 1968, Oakland A's baseball teams for eighty-five years. He asks, "How much more theological can you get than that?"
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Standing On My Head ... With My Fly Open

Standing On My Head ... With My Fly Open

by Duke Robinson
Standing On My Head ... With My Fly Open

Standing On My Head ... With My Fly Open

by Duke Robinson

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Overview

When the author was in the fourth grade, a Philadelphia Inquirer photographer caught his grammar school tumbling team's premier performance at a PTA meeting. As a result, Duke Robinson claims to be the only Presbyterian minister in the history of Western civilization to have had his picture in a major metropolitan newspaper standing on his head with his fly open. The fact his fly was open, he says, reflects the innocence typical of an eight-year-old boy reared in a very religious family in the first half of the Twentieth Century. That's who he says he was. That's what he did. And he says, "I wanted never to do it again.

"Robinson's intimate memoir takes you through a life marked by weird coincidences, surprise twists and turns, and life-or-death close calls that impacted him dramatically. His curious mind kept him asking and trying to answer, with some measure of intellectual integrity, why life works the way it does. How come the smallest incident or choice, either by yourself or someone else, can turn your life in a direction you never dreamed of? The mythology on which Robinson was reared gave him an answer to this question. It emerged, however, from an ancient people who thought the flat world had recently been created for them, didn't know where the sun went at night, and believed demons caused illness. He says that he came to see that he could not be whole living in both that world and the scientific cause-and-effect world we all know today.

The author's story of his own personal change has to do with discarding a lot of superstition, sentimentality, and wishful thinking in religion, in order to be grounded in, integrated with, and liberated by relating honestly to the real world. Looking back, he says, "I never wanted to be caught standing on my theological head with my fly open."

This book gets you inside the head of a Presbyterian minister who early on found that he also could not go through the motions or play so many of the games that the Church generally asks of its clergy. He has wrestled with traditional religion for well over a half-century. Of the last congregation he served for twenty-eight years, he began by asking its members to lighten up and get real. And they did. And he tells some remarkable stories about them.

Robinson's five other books bear witness to his changed and changing worldview. Here, in more personal terms he weaves together stories about his Christian fundamentalist upbringing, the wonderful loves of his life, hilarious adventures in the pulpit (on stage), his reputation for humor, reflections on sexual repression, parenting four strong children, and some hilarious, embarrassing professional mistakes, and fascinating projects in retirement. He also talks about being a fervent fan of the Philadelphia, Kansas City, and, since 1968, Oakland A's baseball teams for eighty-five years. He asks, "How much more theological can you get than that?"

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781519238306
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 11/17/2015
Pages: 312
Sales rank: 930,503
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.65(d)

About the Author

In 2000, Time Warner published the paperback version of Duke Robinson's award-winning hardcover book GOOD INTENTIONS, under the title TOO NICE FOR YOUR OWN GOOD: How to Stop Making 9 Self-Sabotaging Mistakes. It appeared in thirteen languages and as an early Kindle book. It continues to sell briskly.

His second non-fiction book, CREATE YOUR BEST LIFE: How to Live Fully Knowing One Day You Will Die, appeared in December 2011, published through CreateSpace. In September 2012, he published his first novel, SAVIOR: An Old Notion in a New Novel of Unthinkable Absurdity, also through CreateSpace.

Robinson was reared in the Philadelphia area, graduating in 1950 from Haverford High School. He holds a BA degree in philosophy (1954) from the Wheaton College near Chicago, and a Masters of Divinity degree (1958), from Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary. He has lived since 1960, in the East Bay of Northern California.

For 28 years before retiring to writing, Robinson led the dynamic, progressive Montclair Presbyterian Church in Oakland. For several years during that ministry he also served part-time as an adjunct professor at San Francisco Theological Seminary, from which he holds an earned doctorate (1979). Prior to retiring from the pastorate in 1996, he also was known widely as a speaker and appeared frequently on Northern California television.

Since 2000, he has lived in Rossmoor, an active adult community in Walnut Creek, CA, thirty miles east of San Francisco. Barbara, his beloved wife of 54 years died in 2008 (He writes of her dying, and of his almost dying in 2009, in CREATE YOUR BEST LIFE). He has four mature children, nine wonderful grandchildren and two super-great, great-grandsons.

In April 2014, Robinson published this award-winning A MIDDLE WAY: The Secular/Spiritual Road to Wholeness, his third nonfiction work.

Robinson hit 82 in January 2015. This memoir, STANDING ON MY HEAD ... WITH MY FLY OPEN, became available in November 2015.
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