On seeing what you want to see

by Richard on May 16, 2012

Some while ago I had a bizarre experience on a school trip. We visited the village of Port Eynon on Gower, I was there as an extra pair of adult hands, helping out the teachers. The weather wasn’t fit to start the day on the beach, so we spent the morning doing a geography project, walking round the village looking for various things. Nothing complicated, you understand. We are talking about 7 year olds here. The class was divided into teams of 4 children, each with a responsible adult in charge. All except for 1 group. I looked after that one. :)

My team were about the last to arrive at the village church, but the groups we met coming away from there were full of excitement: “There’s a broken grave! You can see a skull!” To say I was sceptical is a modest understatement, but my four girls were having none of it. Their friends had seen it. It must be true. They said so.

Sure enough, in the churchyard we found the right spot, having had it pointed out to us by about 400 ghoulishly excited 7 year old guides. “I’ve seen it! It’s over there!!” It was a 19th century grave covered by an inscribed stone slab slightly raised above the ground and, yes, the stone slab was broken in two places exposing the ground beneath. We peered in through the gap. Triumphantly, my 4 team-members declared they had seen it too. They saw the skull.

Try as I might, I couldn’t see anything remotely resembling human remains. Time, I thought, to put them right. We talked about how deep graves are dug, how much earth is put on a coffin. How, I asked, was a skull going to appear from the depths? Then I held forth at some length on the subject of looking with our own eyes and seeing for ourselves, not merely taking others’ word for it. Just because someone else says a thing is so, I expatiated, doesn’t make it so. Look with open eyes and open minds. A powerful lesson, I thought. Now it was me feeling triumphant.

But guess what?

It made no difference. They all went home full of it. They had seen a skull. It was there.

It isn’t just children who do that, is it?

More reblogging. So sue me.

{ 2 comments }

On reading the Bible [reblogged]

by Richard on May 15, 2012

One way or another, I’ve been involved in lots of conversations recently about the Bible and how we read it. When Christians disagree, very often the “nub” amounts to a diiferent way of reading the scriptures. There are many approaches to the Bible, but not all of them are helpful. What is needed is an approach that treats the Bible with the utmost seriousness but does not attempt to make it into something that it isn’t. I’m not claiming to have a “final answer”, but I thought it might be helpful if I shared a few thoughts on this important subject.

I suppose the first question we need to answer is, “What does the Bible say about itself?” The most obvious verse that ’springs to mind’ is 2 Timothy 3:16

“All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching the truth, rebuking error, correcting faults, and giving instructions for right living”

This is the ‘proof text’ that is sometimes used to justify the view of the Bible as inerrant. But if we take the Bible seriously, is that what it actually says? I say this for several reasons. Let’s look through the verse and see:
1. “Scripture” to Timothy would have meant the books of what we now call the Old Testament and maybe some others usually included in what is called the Apocrypha. The books of the New Testament (including 2 Timothy!) were only just being written and were not accepted as “scripture” for some time.
2. “… inspired by God” is a translation of 1 Greek word which is used here but nowhere else in the New Testament, the Greek version of the Old Testament, the Apocrypha or indeed classical Greek. It is a compound word literally meaning “God-breathed”, but what does that mean? It is an enormous assumption to leap from ‘inspiration’ to ‘infallibility’, and to me it is an unreasonable one.
3. “Useful” is hardly a word calculated to suggest inerrancy. This is a word which is used elsewhere in the New Testament, in 1 Timothy 4:8 and in Titus 3:8 and in both cases is translated as “useful”, “of some value” or “profitable” depending upon which version you read. In fact, in 1 Timothy 4:8 it is used twice with degrees, “useful” and “more useful”. This is a long way short of the sort of infallibility to which some Christians cling.

In short, the Bible is inspired by God, of the utmost value to anyone who wants to live according to the will of God but it should not be read as an infallible “guide to everything”. Taking the Bible seriously means reading what it says, not what we want it to say and it is clear that the scriptures themselves do not claim infallibility. This is my first rule in the use of the Bible - it should teach us, not the other way around! It is very easy to come to the Bible knowing what it says, and finding ourselves confirmed by it. It is much more challenging to read it and allow the scriptures to speak for themselves.

My second rule is related to the first, and is simply stated: Read the Bible! Nothing controversial there, but it is surprising how few Christians do read the Bible for themselves. You will want to listen to what others have said about the Bible in sermons, devotional books and commentaries, but there is no substitute for turning the pages for yourself. How and when you do, for how long and how often - these are not matters for rules. Just read it!

My third rule is read in fellowship with others. Remember that the Bible arises from the Church, the gathered people of God. It is in the Church that the meaning of the Bible is authentically discovered and, barring extreme circumstances, you will need to be in fellowship with a Church community to really grow in understanding of the scriptures.

Lastly, don’t jump to conclusions. Sometimes it is tempting to take just one verse, or perhaps even a few, and make a hasty decision about what they mean. People have been known to build great edifices of doctrine on just one or two verses, and it is always a mistake.

{ 4 comments }

Cabinet reshuffle leaked!

by Richard on May 15, 2012

The Opinionated Vicar has got a sneak insight in to David Cameron’s first reshuffle. I won’t give anything away here. I’ll just say that David Keen appears to have some excellent sources.

{ 1 comment }

St. Paul’s Bottom

by Kim on May 15, 2012

I have had a most rare vision. I have had a dream — past the wit of man to say what dream it was.– Man is but an ass as if he go about to expound this dream. Methought I was — there is no man that can tell what. Methought I was, and methought I had, — But man is but a patched fool, if he will offer to say what methought I had. The eye of man hath not heard, the ear of man hath not seen; man’s hand is not able to taste, his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to report what my dream was. I will get Peter Quince to write a ballad of this dream; it shall be called Bottom’s Dream, because it hath no bottom …

A Midsummer Night’s Dream, IV.i. 204-19

{ 18 comments }

Having the last laugh

by Richard on May 14, 2012

It’s Dying Matters Awareness Week. I found this short film touching. One of the interviewees got to the nub: life is best when it is lived for others.

{ 0 comments }

Blessing Gay Partnerships?

by Kim on May 13, 2012

I begin with a confession. It’s Angie’s birthday, so the timing’s not great, but I’ve got to get it off my chest: I have committed adultery. Indeed I’ve been at it for almost 30 years now — in fact, ever since our wedding in July 1982. For to remarry after divorce is to commit adultery. This is the traditional teaching of the church. And for good reason — it is the teaching of Jesus. It’s crystal clear in Mark and Luke. It’s true that in Matthew there is an exception: if the divorce is due to your partner’s adultery you may remarry, but only the husband, not the wife. It’s also true that for Paul there is yet another exception to the rule: a marriage may end if there are irreconcilable religious differences — Christian and pagan — but Paul is not very keen on remarriage. So the Bible itself does not speak with one voice. But Jesus is clear: as Angie and I were divorcees, our wedding wasn’t blessed and our marriage is a sin (and thus Angie, a Roman Catholic, cannot receive Communion in her own Church).

We are living in sin — or are we? Most of you, I assume, are not of that mind. But why? Is it because you have surrendered to the lax, permissive spirit of the age? Or is it not because you realise that the gospel cannot be reduced to commandments, righteousness to rules? Isn’t it because you understand — and these points are absolutely crucial for responsible Christian ethics — because you understand that for any word in scripture to be God’s word for us today, there must be a resemblance between the ancient social situation and practice and our modern social situation and practice, because only then can we say that what the biblical text was talking about then is the same thing that we are talking about now? Isn’t it because you understand that whatever the Bible affirms or condemns, its reasons must make sense to us now, they must be reasons that we can own, reasons that aren’t contradicted by what we actually see, know, and experience? And isn’t it because you understand that to hear God speaking to us in the Bible, we must listen, not to isolated notes, but to the overarching melody — which is, of course, a love-song — and that we must, like hip jazz musicians, improvise the music in our own contemporary context?

Isn’t that why we are not legalistic about divorce and remarriage? Isn’t that why though slavery is uniformly accepted in the Bible, we cannot accept it today? Isn’t that why though the Bible is a patriarchal world, a world of male dominance and female submission, we can no longer condone the marginalisation of women in the workplace or their abuse in the home? Isn’t it because we believe the biblical themes of divine grace and human flourishing are trumps, and because we follow the trajectory of pioneering but unrealised (if you like) biblical “breakouts” — like Paul’s radical declaration that there is now neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, neither male nor female, for we are all one in Christ?

So I have committed adultery — or have I? But what if I had said, “I am gay”? And that I am in a committed and exclusive relationship that my partner and I intend to be life-long, and that we would like to have it blessed? That is the issue that is now before the church. Let’s think about it.

Let’s start with a fundamental principle of all followers of Jesus — Paul’s neither/nor: the principle of radical inclusiveness. So important was this principle for Jesus that he not only broke with tradition for it, he made enemies and, finally, got lynched for it. The scribes and Pharisees, the gatekeepers of the faith —

They drew a circle that shut “them” out –
Heretics, rebels, things to flout;
But love and I had wit to win –
We drew a circle that took them in.

The circle included Samaritans and Gentiles, the chronically ill and disabled, women and children, tax collectors and other collaborators, and, of course, “sinners”. All of these people were objects of religious exclusion, and some of outright fear and loathing. But Jesus welcomed them, treated them with courtesy and dignity, and gave them a sense of self-worth. And he did these things publicly, not privately, on town streets, at village meals, in witness to the kingdom of shalom he proclaimed, in the teeth of moral opposition. And homosexuals? Nothing explicitly is said. But Roman centurions — they were notorious for liaisons with their orderlies, and of one in particular, whose servant Jesus healed, Jesus says that in this pagan officer he found more faith than in all Israel.

Still, “love the sinner, hate the sin”, right? Jesus didn’t expect the prostitutes he forgave and befriended to go on plying their trade, did he? So isn’t the big question: “Is homosexuality a sin?” Absolutely. And in the Bible, it absolutely is. In Leviticus it is called an “abomination”, and Paul called it a “shameful” perversion. That much is clear. But remember our principles of sound biblical interpretation. We cannot, like fundamentalists, simply say, “The Bible says”, end of. That would be irresponsible. What the Bible says — that is only the beginning of interpretation; we must go on to ask what the Bible is saying it about, and why it is saying it. Is the way the Bible understands same-sex relationships the way we understand them? Can we agree with the reasons the Bible gives for their condemnation?

In Leviticus, the condemnation of homosexual relationships comes in the context of several chapters dealing with the violation of a range of so-called “purity regulations”, rules on not mixing fabrics or eating shellfish or touching blood, rules also on fixed roles for men and women. That is, rules framed around concerns of ritual cleanliness and gender hierarchy, with a view to drawing strict boundaries to secure the identity of Israel in opposition to surrounding nations. But none of these concerns are our concerns. Indeed, they were not the concerns of Jesus either — except to oppose them. For Jesus purity ceases to be a moral category, gender hierarchies are levelled, and human boundaries are crossed by love.

For Paul, however, there is an additional factor in the condemnation of same-sex relationships: namely, a particular understanding of the “order of creation”. In the world view of Paul’s culture, there was no idea that homosexuality might be a natural disposition rather than a “lifestyle choice”. If it is believed, as it was believed, that all people are created heterosexual, then of course homosexuality can only be seen as deliberate depravity. And, for sure, there was plenty of sordid behaviour on view in the first century Greco-Roman world: temple prostitution, sexual exploitation, promiscuous relationships. But as Rowan Williams observes: “Is it not a fair question to ask whether conscious rebellion and indiscriminate rapacity could be presented as a plausible account of the essence of ‘homosexual behaviour’, let alone homosexual desire, as it may be observed around us now” — and specifically in the behaviour of gay Christians?

Here, I think, is the nub of the matter. What the Bible condemns is not homosexuality as we know it, and the Bible condemns it for reasons that cannot possibly be ours. In the Bible there is no concept of sexual orientation, nor is there any idea of loving relationships between two same-sex people who want to covenant together as partners for life. These things are just not on the biblical radar. They are, however, surely on ours — unless, that is, you disregard the accumulating evidence about sexual orientation, and judge gay relationships by the worst you see rather than the best. And don’t all of us, as a society, as a church, have a shared interest in encouraging and supporting — and, yes, blessing all loving and enduring human relationships?

Finally this. It’s not only what you know, it’s who you know. We must not only think, we must also look. I have seen — haven’t you? — the caricatures, fears, and revulsions of some people melt away through the warmth of contact and friendship with gay people, and through the undeniable goodness and loveliness of their partnerships. Above all – who you know — there is knowing Jesus. As the American Presbyterian minister William Sloane Coffin wrote: “For Christians, the problem is not how to reconcile homosexuality with scriptural passages that condemn it, but how to reconcile the rejection … of homosexuals with the love of Christ.”

May God be with us in Church Meeting — and may we be with God. I pray that we may accept one another as Christ has accepted each and every one of us (Romans 15:7), and that we may maintain the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace (Ephesians 4:3).

At a Church Meeting on May 29th, my church, Bethel United Reformed Church, will seek the mind of Christ and come to a decision regarding the blessing of civil partnerships in our sanctuary. Please keep us in your prayers.

{ 30 comments }

Hymn of the day

by Richard on May 13, 2012

Immortal, invisible, God only wise,
In light inaccessible hid from our eyes,
Most blessèd, most glorious, the Ancient of Days,
Almighty, victorious, thy great Name we praise.

Unresting, unhasting, and silent as light,
Nor wanting, nor wasting, thou rulest in might;
Thy justice like mountains high soaring above
Thy clouds which are fountains of goodness and love.

To all life thou givest—to both great and small;
In all life thou livest, the true life of all;
We blossom and flourish as leaves on the tree,
And wither and perish—but naught changeth thee.

Great Father of glory, pure Father of light,
Thine angels adore Thee, all veiling their sight;
But of all Thy rich graces this grace, Lord, impart
Take the veil from our faces, the vile from our heart.

All laud we would render; O help us to see
’Tis only the splendour of light hideth Thee,
And so let Thy glory, Almighty, impart,
Through Christ in His story, Thy Christ to the heart.

Walter Chalmers Smith

{ 0 comments }

Walking again

by Richard on May 13, 2012

I’ve been out with my scout group today, taking part in the international Jamboree on the Trail (Jott). We walked the Clywedog Trail in unexpectedly fine weather. A grand day out.

{ 0 comments }

An evening ramble

by Richard on May 10, 2012


View River & Railway Walk in a larger map

Spent a very pleasant evening out for a stroll with the Clwydian Ramblers tonight. The walk wasn’t demanding, but the company was good. Looking forward to joining them again.

{ 2 comments }

The calling of Peter

by Richard on May 10, 2012

The apostle Peter shares his story…

“I haven’t always been a preacher. There was a time when I could never have imagined standing in front of a crowd. My name wasn’t Peter back then either. I was Simon the fisherman. It was a nice little business really. We weren’t rich, but there was enough and I was very content. I did my duty, but I wouldn’t say I was very religious - I certainly wasn’t looking for a rabbi to follow.

“I’m a bit hazy about how it all began - it’s hard to keep the events straight after all these years, and there were so many amazing things happening, one after the other. It was like we never knew what was coming next. I know that I’d seen Jesus a few times, and I’d heard him preaching and teaching. I remember once walking past a biggish crowd on my way to the boat. I was too far away to see or hear anything properly. But though I couldn’t hear the words, I remember like yesterday being drawn to the sound of his voice. It wasn’t what he said, it was the way he said it. It was always like that - I understood so little for so long. I could hear the truth in what Jesus said, I just couldn’t grasp it. Most of the time he didn’t seem to mind.

“He healed my mother-in-law you know. Lovely woman she was, long dead now of course. It was just about the same time he told me I was going to go with him. One minute she was on her death bed, the next thing I knew she was up and about getting the dinner ready. Fish, of course. She joked about it for a long time afterwards - always said that she wished that Jesus had waited until after someone else had got the meal ready. I don’t think she meant it.

“I was by the lake when he called me. I still tremble when I think about it - he used to scare the loincloth off me. All I could think was ‘What does he want with me?’ When he said, ‘Follow me!’ he said it so quietly - not like the ranters you still see around. But there was such authority in his voice, that when he said I was going to be doing a different kind of fishing I knew I had to go with him. Do you know what I mean? I can’t even explain it to myself, so I’m sure this sounds like nonsense. Unless you’ve heard him calling to you too. Then I know you’ll understand what I’m saying.”

{ 1 comment }

Potpourri

by Richard on May 9, 2012

5 Conversation Starters Every Pastor Dreads via Dave Faulkner.

Unmammoth mammoths sound like fun.

On the other hand, the rising quantity of plastic in the ocean sounds disgusting.

Headteachers warned about letter opposing gay marriage via Archbishop Cranmer. Cue more cries of “Persecution!” sigh*

{ 2 comments }

Yankee doodle doo

by Richard on May 6, 2012

More theological doodlings from Kim Fabricius

A “personal relationship with Jesus” – what’s that all about? If it’s equivalent to “faith in Jesus Christ”, fine. But it’s not, is it? It’s a shibboleth that inflates to an unmediated experience of walking and talking with an invisible person, of spending quality time together, and if it doesn’t work out, well, “Down, dooby do, down down”. In fact, with Luther and Barth, having a “personal relationship with Jesus” could be said to be the opposite of faith, a theologia gloriae, faith being unanchorable in psychology, not a feeling but a self-negation, sub specie crucis. The phrase itself is hardly biblical; indeed it is quite zeitgeisty, religious coinage in our being-in-a-relationship economy. Indeed, talking with people about their “personal relationship with Jesus”, I invariably conclude that they are in the realm of projection and fantasy. There. I guess that makes me a sad, if not bad, Christian.

{ 15 comments }

Hymn of the day

by Richard on May 6, 2012

Ye servants of God, your Master proclaim,
And publish abroad His wonderful Name;
The Name all victorious of Jesus extol,
His kingdom is glorious and rules over all.

God ruleth on high, almighty to save,
And still He is nigh, His presence we have;
The great congregation His triumph shall sing,
Ascribing salvation to Jesus, our King.

‘Salvation to God, who sits on the throne’
Let all cry aloud and honour the Son;
The praises of Jesus the angels proclaim,
Fall down on their faces and worship the Lamb.

Then let us adore and give Him His right,
All glory and power, all wisdom and might;
All honour and blessing with angels above,
And thanks never ceasing and infinite love.

Charles Wesley

{ 0 comments }


That’s according to those nice people at the Heartland Institute, who have launched a new billboard campaign.

The billboard series features Ted Kaczynski, the infamous Unabomber; Charles Manson, a mass murderer; and Fidel Castro, a tyrant. Other global warming alarmists who may appear on future billboards include Osama bin Laden and James J. Lee (who took hostages inside the headquarters of the Discovery Channel in 2010).

These rogues and villains were chosen because they made public statements about how man-made global warming is a crisis and how mankind must take immediate and drastic actions to stop it.

That’s rational.

The point is that believing in global warming is not “mainstream,” smart, or sophisticated. In fact, it is just the opposite of those things. Still believing in man-made global warming – after all the scientific discoveries and revelations that point against this theory – is more than a little nutty. In fact, some really crazy people use it to justify immoral and frightening behavior.

Of course an organisation like Heartland, with an explicitly political agenda, is much better placed to judge the science of climate change than, say, the Royal Society, NASA or New Scientist. That makes perfect sense. And the next time I need heart surgery, I’ll go to an economist.

…nobody should believe politicians who say they want to raise taxes, give subsidies to their buddies, or regulate growing industries in the name of “global warming.” Politicians aren’t scientists, and they aren’t motivated by the search for scientific truth.

Fine. Let’s discount all the political voices. But that has to include yours. Please.

{ 4 comments }

How Star Wars should have ended

by Richard on May 4, 2012

Couldn’t let May the Fourth pass unnoticed.

Old, but it still makes me smile.

{ 2 comments }

Large parts of Britain went to the polls yesterday in elections for local government. Labour did very well, the Tories and their Liberal allies got a beating. As always on these occasions, the winners are claiming too much and the losers are claiming they didn’t do that badly. Ho hum.

I was glad to vote Labour, but it was Hobson’s choice really. There were only 2 names on my ballot: the Labour candidate, and an ‘independent’ whose election leaflet suggested he had little real idea about how much he’d be able to achieve. Several other wards in the county had uncontested elections. Clearly, the state of political parties locally means that they’re unable or unwilling to offer the electorate a choice. Either way, democracy loses.

Little wonder that once again the election turn out was pitiful.

{ 0 comments }

Nonviolent Resurrected Jesus

by Richard on May 3, 2012

From Bishop Will Willimon

This consistent, right to-the-end, to-the-point of-death nonviolence of Jesus has been that which Jesus’ followers have most attempted to modify. When it comes to violence in service of a good cause, we deeply wish Jesus had said otherwise. There are many rationales for the “just war,” or for self-defense, capital punishment, abortion, national security, or military strength. None of them, you will note, is able to make reference to Jesus or to the words or deeds of any of his first followers. You can argue that violence is sometimes effective, or justified by the circumstances, or a possible means to some better end, or practiced by every nation on the face of the earth—but you can’t drag Jesus into the argument with you. This has always been a source of annoyance and has provoked some fancy intellectual footwork on the part of those who desire to justify violence. Sorry, Jesus just won’t cooperate.

{ 2 comments }

Music Break

by Richard on May 3, 2012

Another favourite from the 70s. More prog than punk, this one.

{ 0 comments }

Living with strangers

by Richard on May 3, 2012

The alien living with you must be treated as one of your native-born. Love him as yourself, for you were aliens in Egypt. I am the Lord your God.
- Leviticus 19: 34

That seems pretty clear. Maybe Israel’s interior minister should re-read his scriptures.

{ 0 comments }

Beyond multiculturism

by Richard on May 3, 2012

Chris Shannahan is dis-satisfied with multiculturalism and pleads for a larger vision

… the question for people of faith in the 21st century city is perhaps this – ‘How can our difference be liberative?’ As members of the one body, as Paul puts it in 1 Corinthians 12, our diversity is our strength but only when it is focused on the conviction that we are all made in the image of God – as we are – In the Gospels Jesus enters into the ‘in between’ zone of the ‘third space’ as he is challenged as a result of his xenophobia and then opens himself to learn about love and faith from the Canaanite woman whose faith was so different from his own. Such a Gospel of hospitality and mutuality challenges us to move beyond the binary language of ‘host’ and ‘guest’, ‘stranger’ and ‘neighbour’, ‘us’ and ‘them’ on the one hand and attempts to smooth our diversity away on the other. An intercultural politics of liberative difference that sees our diversity as the in-breaking of the always dynamic and surprising Kingdom of God and offer us the tools to begin to build the ‘good society’ of which Martin Luther King dreamed so long ago…

{ 0 comments }