Entries from February 2008
Blogging the Archbishops
The Archbishops of Canterbury and York were on graet form, and under grand pressure last week. I’m happy to report that despite our original interview time disappearing, they and their teams managed to create a new time for me to fire a few of your questions their way.
I’ll be posting their replies over the More...
A Broken Society?
The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, gave his public lecture last week entitled "A Broken Society?". I guess everyone would be expecting him to talk about society as a broken, alientated thing. Of all the spokespersons of the Church, he has been as much in the press as anyone speaking out for those who More...
The Ides of March
At the beginning of December i was invited to provide music for a Cultural night. It was absolutely fab – a mix of local artists and photographers exhibiting their work, an inspirational talk with pictures by another artist, really lovely food, and music and dancing (that was my bit!)
The organisers have arranged another Cultural More...
Living water?
The gospel reading for tomorrow (Sunday morning) is one of my all-time favourite stories – from John 4, where Jesus meets the Samaritan woman at the well. There are so many themes in here to explore. You can see how Jesus is both faithful to, and yet not bound by, his own religous tradition; how More...
Top-down or bottom-up? – a pastoral visit
As I noted earlier, the Archbishops of Canterbury and York are visiting Cambridge for three days, for the "Cambridge Consultations". Each of them will be giving public lectures while they are here, and as two of the best known public faces of Christianity, it’s no surprise that they are the most visible feature of the More...
A World to Believe in
The Cambridge Consultations kicked off with a service of prayer at midday today. Before anything else happened at all, organisers and participants began in silence before God. Then we said our prayers, read the scriptures, sang a hymn, and prayed this prayer:
O God who creates and calls all people:Transform our learning into wisdom,fill us with More...
Teach me, my God and King, in all things thee to see…
All this term we have been following a theme in our Chapel evening services – exploring the ideas, the writers, the dynamics behind the music that we sing in Chapel. What do we sing, why do we sing it, who wrote it? Often the most beautiful music turns out to be settings of rather obscure More...
stop snarling
It has become fashionable for science and religion to snarl at one another. They need not. Many scientists are religious. Universities sprouted in Europe to fertilise religious learning first planted in monasteries. Early scientists sought to explain God’s role in the Universe, not to deny it.
The Times, 19 Feb, commenting on a £1.9 million research More...
Ask the Archbishops your question, blog readers…
During this week I will be interviewing the Archbishops of Canterbury and York. I have many questions of my own that I would like to ask them, of course, but this is a chance for the blog-world to put their questions to the Archbishops.
So, whether you are a blogger, a lurker, or a regular commenter, More...
The Archbishop of York and Jeremiah’s underpants
The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, has developed something of a public image as a man of prophetic action. A few years back he was made Bishop of Birmingham, but during the ceremony, instead of sitting on the Bishop’s Chair himself, he invited twelve local schoolchildren to come forward, gave each of them a More...


