Andover Townsman, Andover, MA

Arts/Entertainment

January 3, 2013

Professor, minister turns Bible psalms into tweets

If King David and the other psalmists were social media lovers, what would they have tweeted?

That is a question asked and answered by Jim Gustafson, retired minister and philosophy and religion professor at Northern Essex Community College.

His answers can be found in his spiral-bound, 175-page book titled “psalms/tweets: Psalms in Contemporary Style,” which he published recently with the help of friends in the publishing business, according to the school. He has sold more than 200 books with another 400 on the way. He asks only for a donation to the Benevolent Fund of the West Congregational Church in Haverhill where he served as minister during the 1960s and associate pastor until 2000. He continues to preach when needed and remains the church organist.

Gustafson also has authored a textbook and a history of the West Congregational Church, and he blogs regularly about his travels. His wife, Eleanor, is also an author having just completed her sixth novel.

Gustafson, says he has been reading, studying, and preaching the Bible for decades. The psalms, he notes, were originally written in Hebrew and meant to be sung.

“They don’t really grip you today as they did then,” he says in a release from the college. “I began to think, what if they lived today? What would they do? Maybe they would tweet.”

Using his imagination and poetic license he has rewritten all 150 psalms as Tweets, though many do not adhere strictly to the 140 characters. Using slang and modern day expressions, Gustafson condensed the psalms to 50, 20, or in some cases 10 percent of the original text.

“I started with a psalm or two,” he says. “I looked at the various translations of the psalm and reduced it, in my own words, looking for that emotional impact…that raw emotion. I began posting them on my Facebook page and received positive feedback from several hundred of my friends. I started thinking then that the idea maybe had some life to it.”

The 78-year-old opted for a spiral-bound format so the reader can lay the book flat and write his or her own thoughts on the lines beneath the tweeted psalm.

One sample tweet is psalm 70 which reads “Quick, Lord! Rescue me! Enemies are out to destroy and humiliate me, saying, “Aha! We’ve pinned him down!” Let them know humiliation and shame. But, hurry Lord, I am weak and need You to save me!”

People can purchase a copy of the book through Gustafson by contacting him at jgustafson@necc.mass.edu

Gustafson, although retired, continues to teach at NECC as an adjunct faculty member. He also travels regularly on missionary trips. Since 2002 he has visited India yearly and Kenya biennially.

A longtime Haverhill resident, he moved to the Merrimack Valley during the fall of 1959 while pursuing a doctorate at Boston University. He was looking for a church where he could minister on a part-time basis. He found it at the West Congregational Church on Route 97 in Haverhill.

Northern Essex offers an associate degree in liberal arts with a philosophy option. For more information, contact NECC’s enrollment services at 978-556-3700.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Arts/Entertainment
  • Events Calendar Posted 8 hours ago
  • 130511_at_hand_booksbloom_03

    Courtesy Photo Belva Hopkins went for a literal depiction of Charles Dickens' "Oliver Twist" title for one of her earlier Books in Bloom arrangements.

    Floral footnotes Posted 7 days ago 4 Photos
  • 130509_AT_HAND_SECRET_2

    Courtesy photo Katherine Hall, 14, of Andover, left, who is sharing the role of Mary Lennox with her 12-year-old sister, Caroline, hugs Allyn Gamble as Martha in a scene from "The Secret Garden" at the Firehouse Center for the Arts in Newburyport.

    Out & About Posted 7 days ago 5 Photos
  • Events Calendar Posted 7 days ago
  • 130504_AT_HAND_DININGROOM2

    Kevin Doyle/Courtesy Photos Chris, played by Jeremy Partyka, is stunned as he comes home from prep school unexpectedly and finds his Mom, Rachel Harris, and her lover Gordon, played by Evan Pantely, trying in vain to appear innocent in a scene from "The Dining Room."

    Heart of the home Posted 14 days ago 6 Photos
  • 130502_AT_ASW_VOILA_2

    One of the pieces for sale at Voilà! in downtown Andover. AMY SWEENEY/Staff photo

    Voilà! Arrives for crafts in park Posted 14 days ago 4 Photos
  • tenors

    Courtesy photo The New England Tenors, clockwise from top left, Damien Corcoran, Jeffrey Hartman and John Middleton-Cox are reuniting Saturday night for a concert at the Rogers Center in North Andover.

    Out & About Posted 14 days ago 2 Photos
  • Events Calendar Posted 14 days ago
  • Thursday, May 2, 2013
  • hairofdog

    File Photo Michael and Sheri Helman, owners of Shawsheen Village Liquors in Andover, with their rescue dog, Jake, are ready to host their ninth annual ''Hair of The Dog'' fundraiser Friday, May 3, to benefit Nevins Farm in Methuen and the MSPCA.

    A toast to the animals Posted 21 days ago 1 Photo
  • 130429_AT_FLE_FLING_4

    Photo by Frank J. Leone Jr./ pecial to The Andover Townsman Sylvia and Don Bly of Andover show off their moves with a waltz.

    A two-step for spring Posted 21 days ago 4 Photos

Pictures of the Week
Stocks