If there is humour to be found in religion, I find it in the matter of fact way biblical authors speak of extraordinary, supernatural and miraculous events without any hint of needing to clarify how strange the whole situation is. It leaves one most sympathetic to the characters of the drama, however much they appear to be rebuked by the text.
God, Man and Madness
Sunday 18 December 2022
Sunday 11 December 2022
Advent Reflection: Post-Christian Britain now needs a Christian minority fuelled by the audacious hope of the gospel
The recent revelation that the 2021 census revealed Christians to be a minority for the first time really should not have been met with the flurry of news headlines that it was.
Friday 9 December 2022
Matt Hancock is either a proposition to be believed or blatantly psychopathic – you must choose
The month was April 2020. No story appeared to be more heart-breaking
in a sea of pandemic headlines than the tragic death of 13-year-old Covid
patient Ismail Mohamed Abdulwahab, forced to die alone in a London hospital due
to the cruel and thoroughly inhumane pandemic measures.
It was on one of those tedious press briefings to which we all became hooked that, promising something would be done to ensure no such horror would be visited upon another family, then-Health Secretary Matthew Hancock (who signed the rules off incidentally) burst into tears.
Wednesday 12 January 2022
Why Jordan Peterson is not about to become a Christian
I was made aware over the weekend of a video that has been made, chronicling
the faith journey from 2017 to 2021 of Jordan Peterson, the Canadian psychologist
and unlikely intellectual phenomenon. The video is 22 minutes in length and so
is a serious commitment – a highly able occupational psychologist told me once
that people can’t passively listen for more than 15 minutes at a time and I
have always stuck to this advice even when it’s proved a nuisance to my plans.
The video features a selection of clips, culminating in a now-viral clip in which, at a time of great personal crisis, Peterson breaks down discussing the resurrection of Christ.
Friday 17 December 2021
Advent Reflection: grief and the Christmas story
Last Sunday was the third Sunday
in Advent, known within the church as Gaudete Sunday (rejoice Sunday).
In the chosen reading from Philippians chapter 4 (4-7), Paul writes, “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, rejoice. Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near. Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
Tuesday 7 December 2021
Advent Reflection: saying yes to God
When we read through the Christmas story, what is striking throughout the narrative, pulled together from the gospel accounts of Luke and Matthew, is the constant theme of men and women chosen to play an integral part in the story, saying yes to God, affirming their trust in him.
Monday 29 November 2021
Advent Reflection: hope in fearful times
This reflection for the first week of Advent will invite you to consider 3 important questions: In what do I hope? On what do I depend? What do I love most?
Monday 22 November 2021
It’s those who seek to defer gratification, not the cheery November Noel brigade, who really understand this season’s meaning and significance
“Have you put your Christmas decs up yet?” The question shouldn’t be a serious one in the middle of November. Sure, we’re used to shops shoving Christmas in our faces from about the start of September onwards, the commercial rationale for which is well understood. But large numbers of people this year, seem to have decided that Christmas started as soon as Halloween was over, and if you’re one of those who think Christmas decorations are the preserve of December, you’re a misery.