Entries from July 2010
Writing on the Wall: “an ideal present for a sixth former or a busy preacher”
It’s a trip through the Bible for the biblically ignorant but otherwise educated reader, giving some basic info and background on the stories that have shaped our literature and history. She doesn’t just tell the story, but gives enough background to it to help you understand its meaning, and why it may have been used as it has been. So she turns on a light bulb to illuminate a range of cultural basics — Shakespeare, Rembrandt, Milton, Spenser, Jacob Epstein, Wilfred Owen, William Blake, Tennyson, Oscar Wilde, yea even Monty Python... and hundreds of others.
So, here is an ideal present for the sixth former in your life who seeks some background to our culture. Its clarity and sense of perspective may also help the busy preacher...
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missing missy
it’s Saturday, so here’s some humour that’s doing the rounds at the moment from the extraordinary David Thorne – what happens when clueless secretary asks snooty designer to make a “Missing” poster for her missing cat. You have to start at the top and read all the way through to get the amusement factor
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synod, jeffrey john and women bishops
"the Archbishop... is sponsoring an amendment to the measure allowing women to be nominated for the Episcopate which would make them second-class bishops forever.
I hope the English Synod says no to this and does so clearly and decisively."
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Rev: what a vicar thinks of a TV show
lots of tweeting about last night’s Rev (second episode) and I must say I liked it a lot: it nailed a lot of the tendencies of Church, both good and bad – the slimey, money-grabbing types who would rather chase a scruffy, problematic parishioner out the door than allow him to spoil the image of More...
News is for the public, not a private conversation
Clay Shirky in the Guardian:
Rupert Murdoch has just begun charging for online access to the Times – and Shirky is confident the experiment will fail.
“Everyone’s waiting to see what will happen with the paywall – it’s the big question. But I think it will underperform. On a purely financial calculation, I don’t think the numbers More...
gay bishops, women bishops? is the sky falling in, Chicken Licken?
Some believe it to be no more than a rumour that Jeffrey John (Dean of St Albans) has been nominated as the next BIshop of Southwark. Thinking Anglicans quotes Ruth Gledhill:
It is of course possible that the Archbishop of Canterbury has had a dramatic Pauline conversion to the justice argument of gay rights campaigners in More...
Writing on the Wall – another review
Lovely review of Writing on the Wall…
There are many so-called “introductions” to the Bible, but Maggi’s book is a creative attempt to help readers engage the Bible from a different range of perspectives, those derived from art (a “catch all” term that includes paintings, music, and literature) and popular culture.
In re-imagining and re-engaging the bible More...
Friday round-up: trousers, liturgy, heathens and prayers.
I’ve had a ferociously hard-working week with no time to blog, so here’s a round up of thoughts, tweets and random odds and ends from the week.
Yesterday morning I tweeted a story about everyone’s worst nightmare: the Lord Mayor of Leicester was speaking to a large crowd, including loads of schoolchildren, when his trousers fell More...
Becky Garrison…
…has a new book coming out shortly. Becky is one of those people who can make people laugh at themselves, something sorely needed in the sometimes too-serious world of Church. It has a very good write up at Publishers Weekly:
Jesus Died for This? A Satirist’s Search for the Risen Christ
Becky Garrison. Zondervan, $14.99 paper (240p) More...



