Entries from May 2010
United in doubt
I’ve often written here about the relationship between faith and doubt: I believe that you can’t have one without the other. But Graham Greene puts his finger on another detail: that while faith (or, better, certainty) may put people at war with one another, the admission of doubt has the capacity to draw people together. More...
Pentecost novena 5
The experience of waiting is completely affected by whether or not we have hope. To wait in hope is to live in the present with a belief that tomorrow will come; to wait in despair is to be already half-dead. The disciples, waiting in Jerusalem, went to worship every day, and waited to see what More...
Pain in Performance
I’m giving a paper at this conference on Friday.
Pain. Is it good for you? Does it inspire creativity or good art?
I think there are still a few places open. Some seriously interesting speakers.
More...
Are you comfortable in church (is it too ‘feminine’)?
The Church Mouse covered the Sorted survey the other day, which suggested that men are ‘less comfortable in Church than in a lingerie department’. Today, Mouse has unearthed some more detail from Christian Research, who organised the survey, and the even more interesting piece of information is that less than half of people who say More...
Pentecost Novena 4: the fear of what might happen
The disciples had been heartbroken at the death of Jesus, then astonished and overjoyed by the resurrection, only to have Jesus disappear again with his parting words “Go and wait in the city until you are clothed with power…”.
We celebrate Ascension knowing that ten days later it will be Pentecost. We know the end More...
Fresh Expressions: rewriting history?
There was an article in the Times on Saturday about “Fresh Expressions” churches, including a highly entrepreneurial venture in Polzeath. Nice to see some good news about church in the media – that’s something that doesn’t happen too often. I’m left scratching my head about its historical accuracy, though… the article makes it sound like More...
Pentecost Novena 3
It’s hard enough waiting for something when you know what’s going to happen. Remember the feeling of waiting for your birthday, or Christmas, when you were a kid? But it’s even harder waiting for something when you don’t know WHAT is going to happen, and you don’t know WHEN it’s going More...
Pentecost Novena 2: the absence of Christ
The Pentecost Novena is the last 9 days of the season of Easter in the Church calendar. If you’re bothered about liturgical colours, it stays white (top colour for theo-celebration) all the way from Easter to Pentecost. Of course, being Easter, and being White, this is a period of time in which we celebrate in More...
The Pentecost Novena
OK. I’ll blog through the Pentecost novena. For the uninitiated, a Novena (from novem, nine) is a nine-day period of private or public devotion in the Christian tradition. Whereas an octave has a festal feel to it, the novena carries more of a spirit of hopeful yearning, or waiting for the grace of God. There More...



