Entries from June 2010
Mitregate: the follow up
The posts of the last few days have been a tad on the serious side. Thank you for all the comments and thoughts. For a cheering up post, here is a blog, devoted to recording the consecrations of women to the episcopate, which rejoices in the marvellous title Chicks In Pointy Hats.
And here, an More...
how to celebrate
The Eucharist has been celebrated with essential similarities for about 100,000 Sundays. But sometimes we have cluttered up the essential, graceful simplicity. We have put the emPHASis on the wrong syLLAble.
Bosco Peters on Justin Martyr, and why the very old sometimes seems very new
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Mitregate 3
We didn't make the long journey from feudalism to democracy without a war or two, but once France had her revolution we followed with two centuries of political reform, one tiny step at a time. Whether the anxiety for less bloodshed left us with more frustration is hard to say, but it seems that culturally we carved a path we still follow: change comes slowly, with every miniscule step analysed and considered. More...
Writing on the Wall: Allegri’s Miserere
In the next few posts, I’m going to post some links to the music and art that features in my new book. (If you want The Writing on the Wall: High Art, Popular Culture and the Bible
click here and it should be with you tomorrow! ) One of the loveliest stories in music history More...
Mitregate (2): “should I go or should I stay, now?”
All this week the Mitregate story has been buzzing round the press and the blogosphere.
But the story gets even stranger, for Ruth Gledhill now reveals (from behind her paywall) that other women bishops have previously ministered publicly at Southwark with their mitre. US Bishop Geralyn Wolfe preached (though did not celebrate) in November 2001, and More...
Priest
Priestly Duties: a Poem
By Stewart Henderson
What should a priest be?
All things to all
male, female and genderless
What should a priest be?
Reverent and relaxed
vibrant in youth
assured through the middle years
divine sage when ageing
What should a priest be?
Accessible and incorruptible
abstemious, yet full of celebration
informed but not threateningly so
and far above the passing soufflé of fashion
What should a More...
How to survive a Christian Bookshop
Friday calls for something lighthearted, and Tall Skinny Kiwi comes up with the goods:
How to survive a Christian Bookshop, part 2
but if you missed part one, read it first:
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The Rage Against God
“if you drive God out of the world, you create a howling wilderness” Peter Hitchens
I read Peter Hitchens Book recently. As you would expect, it’s well written, and I enjoyed his account of being at school in Cambridge. Here he talks about writing, religion, journalism and family, saying along the way
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A decision to say no is a decision
The Bishop of Durham suggested in his address to his Diocesan Synod (21 May 2010) that the Church of England should delay moving forward with the proposed legislation to allow women to be bishops, instead making time to engage in further theological debate.
It sounds so reasonable, doesn’t it? But it isn’t. Delay doesn’t mean everything More...



