Entries from May 2010
the inside view
The Church Times reported this week on the controversial ordination of a gay bishop, The Rt Revd Mary Glasspool, in Los Angeles:
…the event drew swift condemnation from traditionalist groups and from the Archbishop of Canterbury. In a brief statement, Dr Williams described the ceremony as “regrettable”, and said that it placed a question More...
missionary
What’s the secret to sticking with one of the world’s most poorly paid and most despised professions?
joy, energy and challenge come into it… TSK reflects after 25 years on the road.
More...
bishops in hotel with naked woman
So the Bishops are meeting to discuss, once again, the ramifications of letting women into their House.
Turns out that a hen party is staying in the same hotel as the Bishops, and around midnight a naked and very inebriated woman locks herself out of her room and sets off the fire alarm. One very flustered More...
Good Theology
I think there should be a “Bad Theology” column, along the lines of Ben Goldacre’s “Bad Science” column in the Guardian. There would be no shortage of candidates and, while some atheists would qualify, so would many theologians. But to refer to bad theology implies that there’s also good theology – More...
blessed
Alan Wilson quotes John Pritchard’s take on the beatitudes. It’s excellent, and with this I wish you a daring, generous, confident, liberated week.
Blessed are the poor in spirit,
for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven —
Letting go of our need to be somebody
Blessed are those who mourn,
for they will be comforted —
Letting go of our More...
Congratulations! your child has Aspergers…
Gavin Bollard’s blog is one I always keep up with. He writes movingly and helpfully about coping with ASD/Aspergers in the “real world”, and also stands as a testimony to hope that it really is possible for a kid with ASD to grow up to independence and a happy, fulfilled life.
Gavin’s last two posts More...
Rivers of Babylon
Yesterday I gave a paper at a remarkable inter-disciplinary conference that brought people together from various disciplines to talk about the relationship between pain and performance.
My paper traced Psalm 137. For some of what I said, you need to get the new book (see below) but I’m embedding here the 1978 Boney M song I More...
Pentecost novena 7
Yesterday I posted some words by Paul Tillich, about the fundamental need for a sense of hope – without it, the human spirit begins to collapse.
But there’s also a case for saying that hope shouldn’t be too specific. Hope, in a primal sense, is a psychological necessity, but we may also need to discipline More...
walking with Jesus
Hat Tip to Simon Jenkins for finding Zazzle’s marvellous deck shoes, adorned with images of Jesus, stained glass, the Blessed Virgin and more, much more. I’ve just begun a little project on pilgrimage, which makes this seem very apt for my Thursday morning. Will you be wearing these next time you visit Walsingham, Canterbury, or More...
Pentecost Novena 6
We wait, but not without hope. Paul Tillich once preached a sermon on the importance of hope. His text was “In hope he believed against hope” (referring to Abraham’s belief, against all the odds, that he was moving towards promise and that it would be fulfilled).
Tillich said:
We must agree when we look both into ourselves More...



