Entries from August 2009
Greenbelt 2009 update
Greenbelt 2009. See my comments after-the-event here and here and here
This was my programme:
Saturday, 6pm in Hebron. "Feasting and Fasting" . My latest two books were written for Advent and Lent, so I'm full of ideas about what "fasting" means – not just giving up chocolate or going a day without food, but More...
live before you die
I added Heresy Corner to my blogreader when I read this article on euthanasia by a woman of great spirit and clear thinking.
HT: Paul
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the end of religion
"…Jesus came to announce the end of religion (humanity's attempt to find God) and the arrival of love (God's attempt to find us). And loves means reserving judgment, walking in humility and being very long on compassion, which is in stark contrast to what rule-making can do to us. In what ways do we put More...
a festival prayer
There's quite a few big festivals this weekend, and enthusiasts usually forget until they actually get on site that they can bring a few frustrations along with all the excitement. I'd forgotten until Paul posted it the other day that Pip Wilson wrote this great prayer for the unique atmosphere of Greenbelt:
Help us remember More...
Theology for beginners (6)
At the request of a couple of blog readers, I've already posted previously about some introductory reading to get started on theology. It's hard work learning theology by yourself, not on a course with someone to answer your questions. I did it for a couple of years before I went to University – taught myself More...
students, A-levels, and more theology-for-beginners
congratulations, all A-level passers.
As from this morning Universities up and down the land are in a fever of processing stuff now the results are out. As you would hope from someone involved in University life, I like students. I enjoy walking with them from starting raw to developing into seriously good thinkers. I like More...
swine flu and communion
I've talked a number of times recently with colleagues about how to handle the actual, and the perceived risks of swine flu as they affect sharing bread and wine at communion. Nowhere was this more complicated to consider than in a conversation about communion at Greenbelt – sharing bread and wine with twenty thousand or More...
Mega churches – a conversation
Ben Myers re-posted his piece on mega churches, together with a response from Shane Clifton. It's not a for-and-against defensive argument, but an illuminating conversation about the different aspects of mega church pentecostalism. No church is perfect, and every church-goer decides at some point what elements of church really matter to them, and which bits More...
Theology for beginners (5)
I just came across this good book – an introduction to theology that delicately holds together some of the complexities of theology – for instance, how do you do theology with a rational and objective methodology and at the same time look at it from a religious and devotional point of view? There are touches More...
Theology for beginners (4)
For Lisa and others: two more recommendations. Both of these give an introduction and overview; they come from different viewpoints which would offer a helpful insight into the fact that theology is complicated and doesn't readily offer up "right answers". The problem with writing primers and introductions is how to give the reader enough information More...



