Entries categorized as religion and philosophy
Reading the Everyday
John Davies on top form in Third Way this month. Challenging the seductive idea that we need to rebel against ordinariness and seek the extraordinary – in life and in faith – he looks at how, if we take the time to read the ordinary, the local, the unremarkable, there are riches of life to More...
St Paul – a postmodernist in a black poloneck?
This account of AKMA and Margaret’s conversation on Bultmann and Barth is well worth a read this morning: AKMA’s Random Thoughts.
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Who is Jesus?
Full Term is almost upon us. This doesn’t, alas, mean we are all on holiday still. Research Period is coming to an end (alas alas, the writing is just flowing along nicely!), and in Cambridge-speak, Term is a long-ish period of time (which starts before Full Term and runs up to a few days before More...
Love is of God
Without the love of our parents, sisters, brothers, spouses, lovers, and friends, we cannot live. Without love we die. Still, for many people this love comes in a very broken and limited way. It can be tainted by power plays, jealousy, resentment, vindictiveness, and even abuse. No human love is the perfect love our hearts More...
“spirit-led worship”
"It usually takes more than three weeks to prepare a good impromptu speech."– Mark Twain
Sermon-givers, worship leaders and spontaneous pray-ers, take note.
Update: Simon Marsh writes a good counter-balancing reply here
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Riding monsters
Alan has been writing about Parker Palmer, and blogging some great insights about a different way of conceiving of leadership. Here’s a clip:
Quoting Vaclav Havel, Parker Palmer suggests “The power for authentic leadership, is found not in external arrangements but in the human heart. Authentic leaders in every setting – from families to nation-states More...
Don’t go anywhere without a woman
I just read over again some of Rachelle’s post from earlier this year, where she tried to envision how women might realistically be made equals in the church. Not just ideologically, but in practice. Nine ideas that could transform the leadership structures of the Emerging/Emergent Church (yes, I know the Emergent rhetoric about not believing More...
mennochick
Mennochick reports that of 179 blogs listed at emergingchurchblogs.info, only 11 are written by women. Better still, she gives links to a few of them. (blush blush, including mine!) Mennochick’s own blog, and her links to a few others, are really worth a look. Lynne, Dan and Rachelle I already knew about; The Hard Soap More...
lindisfarne
Our journey past the Angel of the North on Friday was en route to Lindisfarne, the Holy Island, discovering among other interesting facts that you can drive all the way from Cambridge to Lindisfarne on one tank of petrol. It’s years since I’d been there, and it was fun to explore it anew with my More...
ecclesiastes
Ecclesiastes is a rather wonderful, and very ancient book of Wisdom. I preached on it a few months back at a wedding, and was at pains to deflect the idea that it’s a depressing book. "Vanity, vanity, all is vanity" is the writer’s strap-line. And he does tend to over-egg the pudding a bit on More...



