Entries from September 2010
toxic church, Pope visit, and #Apple7
the discussion last night at #Apple7 opened many cans of worms, many of which there wasn’t time to pursue. One was was what to you do when belonging to a local church becomes a toxic experience. Another was protestant responses to the Pope’s visit – something I would have liked to devote a whole discussion More...
Validation
Validation - a film to make you smile More...
read the Qur’an, don’t burn it
The threatened Qur’an burning was staved off. Well done Obama: when all other voices fell on deaf ears, his appeal to Mr Jones did the trick – though not soon enough, alas, to eliminate all the potential backlash from such a dangerously pot-stirring stunt.
But in addition to all the protests against Mr Jones’ threat, More...
no mosque at ground zero
"Nobody in their right mind would seek to build a mosque at ground zero." But Charles Strohmer writes: "it's not a mosque, and it's not at ground zero." More...
Brian McLaren – a heretic? or something more interesting?
Brian McLaren has a lot of fans, but also a lot of critics. Having met him myself, I like him a lot. Those who think him a heretic are, I think, misreading the fact that he has deliberately chosen to take a sideways look at theology – to try to sidestep the too-speedy assumption that More...
Jen Lemen on fear
Long time blog friend Jen Lemen writes with disarming honesty. No stone unturned. She has the ability to put her finger on common moments in human experience and shine a light on them in such a way that the reader registers that they take on far bigger proportions than they should because (in the West More...
is the institutional Church an out-moded organisational technology?
Come and join me, Kester Brewin, Jonny Baker and Ian Mobsby for a discussion on the future shape of church.
Date: 15th September
Venue: The Betsey Trotwood, 56 Farringdon Road
Time: 7:30pm
Cost: free!
Kester writes: “In the light of the scandals surrounding the Catholic church, and the decline in church attendance over the past decades, has the classic model More...
A Sweet Obscurity – Patrick Gale
Regular readers will know that I am a big fan of Gale. He has an amazing capacity to bring his characters to life in such a way that you even want to know what happens to the unattractive, unpleasant and dull ones.
A Sweet Obscurity gives us a tangle of relationships around a broken marriage, More...
Before I Fall
I took two books on holiday with me a couple of weeks ago. Son had a couple of movies which he watched several times over, so we managed to survive longish journeys OK.
Realising that I had accidentally packed the novel I meant to read en route, I picked up Lauren Oliver’s Before I Fall at More...
misconceptions
In any journey of faith we always start out with misconceptions and, in order to grow into God, we gradually have to unlearn ideas that may be deeply ingrained in us but are at odds with the truth. Our idea of God is drawn quite unconsciously from a mixture of sources: from experiences that go More...



