Entries from July 2007
church
I blogged yesterday that authentic christianity almost always means being involved in Christian community. here’s a great reminder of what that’s all about: 41 The Ongoing Adventures of ASBO Jesus.
hat tip to jonny baker
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priestessy thoughts
Rachelle writes movingly about the dilemma that many people of faith find ourselves in. If faith matters to us, but the Church has been a mixed blessing, we end up wishing that we could hand on to our children the wonder of faith without all the negative rubbish that so often comes with the Church More...
blind light
a few days back i went to see antony gormley’s stunning exhibition at the hayward gallery.
The figures standing around outside could be seen, I suppose, as rather sinister – being watched over is either creepy or comforting, depending on context and point of view. But for me it seemed utterly comforting, somewhat reminiscent More...
Acceptable Sacrifice
The TLS has a review, by John Habgood, of the last book I contributed to.
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Me and Mr Jones…
I’m going to talk to Aled Jones on the Radio again this Sunday. (Tune in to Radio 2 around 7.30 am (BST) or go to the listen-again page.) Aled is fab, and I’m looking forward to it. Last time he "outed" me to the (half asleep) nation for doing air-guitar when we were off-air…
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bible study is boring…
andygoodliff says: "The great tragedy of the bible study is it has made the bible dull and boring."
I went to plenty of Bible Studies as a teenager, some of which were indeed staggeringly boring. But not because Bible Study is inherently boring – the reason these were boring was because they were a pooling of More...
saying what you mean
I enjoyed the comments after yesterday’s post. I caught a glimpse of something in Jason’s sermon, but couldn’t quite articulate it. He, it turns out, is also still trying to make sense of the idea. There is a well-documented relationship between understanding something and being able to articulate it. You could say, with the Romantic More...
love your neighbour as yourself
I just read a lovely sermon on the Good Samaritan, by Jason Fout. Lots of little threads that usually get left out, and some threads I hadn’t thought of before.
Familiar interpretations of the Good Samaritan dissolve themselves into little mottoes. A long-held one is "do as you would be done by" – to offer More...
St Swithun’s day
I hope it doesn’t rain today…
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poems, prayers…
“I don’t know what prayer is, but I do know how to pay attention.”
(Mary Oliver, poet)
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