Boys’ Bible
Pages: 2,752
Words: 2,000,000
Notes: 20,000
Cross-references: 80,000
Full colour maps: 200+
Illustrations: 40
Articles: 50 +
Charts: 200+
Female contributors? – None.
You do the maths.
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author musician theologian
Maggi has kept a blog since September 2003, writing about theology and faith, the arts and literature, and a little about life and random nonsense...
In an increasingly secularised society few people have a good working knowledge of the Bible. Yet a great deal of our culture is built on stories or ideas that come from the Bible. Literature, art, music, language and even the fabric of our society - such as our justice system - are built on Christian concepts and biblical references. The Writing on the Wall provides a fascinating introduction to the Bible's best-known, and most influential, stories. Each chapter gives some background to the text of the Bible, and shows how the stories have become enmeshed in Western culture. Adam and Eve, the ten plagues of Egypt, The Prodigal Son and Mary Magdalene all feature - along with how the Bible has influenced everyone from Shakespeare to Monty Python, and Caravaggio to Banksy.
Giving It Up explores the Lenten idea of 'giving up', taking it beyond the traditional idea of simply abstaining from something, and suggesting instead that what we need to give up is our existing ideas about God. With a daily readings for each day of Lent, from Ash Wednesday to Easter Sunday, it follows the heroes of the Bible who had to give up their own too-small ideas about God.
This is Maggi’s bestselling book of daily readings for each day of Advent, Christmas and Epiphany. Advent is the beginning of the Church year, and marks the anticipation of the coming Messiah. These readings explore how beginnings and endings in our own lives are illuminated by the different Gospel narratives of Christ's coming.
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No diea but the very best place to ask is here:
My fault entirely.
http://www.nicecupofteaandasitdown.com/
Which is a Wheeliebinland based blog (hurrah).
PS:
Sorry we missed you on Saturday at Barr Hill
Sacred Heart Jammie Dodgers! I love them.
I asked Burton’s Foods, who make Jammie Dodgers.
They said “In the 1960’s, Jammie dodgers were first made at our Factory in Llantarnam, South Wales and had different centre shapes, including a heart, diamond, cross, circle and star. In the 1970’s, the base of the biscuit was ‘flipped over’ so that the ‘well’ formed by the shape could hold the jam more efficiently, and the heart shape has been used ever since.”
Not as precise as you might have hoped, but I hadn’t remembered different shapes, so maybe the extra information makes up for the imprecision.
Fantastic! Thank you Richard