Tuesday, 30 September 2008

The Inquisitive Snake

Much has been made within the emerging/emergent/post-evangelical debates over the importance of questions. That church should be a place where questions are welcomed and encouraged because they help us in our quest for truth.

This I agree with. Blind, and indeed bland, acceptance of perceived truths will inevitably lead to disaster. Questioning and examining can help us to be watchmen and guards, being careful with scripture and thorough in our faith.

Yet recently something has struck me from the third chapter of the Bible:
1 Now the serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the LORD God had made. He said to the woman, "Did God really say, 'You must not eat from any tree in the garden'?"
 2 The woman said to the serpent, "We may eat fruit from the trees in the garden, 3 but God did say, 'You must not eat fruit from the tree that is in the middle of the garden, and you must not touch it, or you will die.' "
 4 "You will not surely die," the serpent said to the woman. 5 "For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil."

In the first two chapters of Genesis we see God speaking and creation bursts into light. As soon as God’s will is spoken, light and life spring up. Then we are confronted with this chapter - where the snake questions God’s word.

One of the things that is beginning to trouble me most about many of the debates that are taking place in the wider church through the blogosphere and podcasts (as well as plain old books) is that they start with this question:
“Did God really say.....?”
Did Jesus really say that He is the only way?
Did God really say that homosexuality is wrong?
Did God really say that we have to tithe?
Did Jesus really say that He was the Son of God?
Did God really say that the church is His body and His bride?

It is one thing to look at scripture and to wrestle with the details, nuances and deeper meaning of what God has said. It is another thing entirely to question if God said what he clearly did say and if He meant it at all. We must not get in the habit of questioning what we have heard Him say and seen Him do - but we must continually question whether we have understood it all fully. This difference is important. It puts the emphasis not on the truth of the Word but upon our capacity to understand.

In order to engage with, and appeal to, British 21st Century culture I would find it incredibly helpful if God had not consistently insisted on sexual activity being confined to a husband and wife throughout scripture. But it does say that - which makes it harder for us to appeal to those outside of the church without offending them or putting them off. That is tough for us - but anything else is short change; it is not the truth as He would have it told.

The issue of sexuality is complex and requires difficult questions. The issue of sexual activity is not....

The issue of God’s view of money, how we manage it, how we earn it, how we spend it, is complex. The issue of tithing to the church is not....
The issue of truth that is found within other religions, faiths and world views is complex. The issue of Jesus being the Way, the Truth and the Life is not....

....And they are certainly not as complicated as many would make out in the name of “dialogue”.

There is the obvious danger in believing you have it all sewn up - that I, and I alone, fully understand all that God has said and what He means. Yet in an effort to avoid that pitfall many are left questioning whether or not they even exist? Or if God is really God? Or if He is really good? Or if everything we have in our faith is unstable, unsure and unreliable?

God has spoken.

So which do we want to be more like: a faithful child or an inquisitive snake?

dg

Monday, 22 September 2008

All the foreigners have ruined modern English football

Liverpool's 1986 Cup Winning Team

GK 1 Bruce Grobbelaar -Zim
CB 2 Mark Lawrenson -Irl
LB 3 Jim Beglin - Irl
RB 4 Steve Nicol - Sco
LM 5 Ronnie Whelan - Irl
CB 6 Alan Hansen (c) - Sco
SS 7 Kenny Dalglish - Sco
RM 8 Craig Johnston - Aus
CF 9 Ian Rush - Wal
CM 10 Jan Mølby - Den
CM 11 Kevin MacDonald - Sco

uh?

dg

Anything Goes

In olden days a glimpse of stocking
Was looked on as something shocking
Now heaven knows, anything goes

Good authors too who once knew better words
Now only use four letter words writing prose
Anything goes

The world has gone mad today
And good's bad today
And black's white today
And day's night today
When most guys today that women prize today
Are just silly gigolos

So though I'm not a great romancer
I know that you're bound to answer
When I propose, anything goes

Can't Make a Sound

I have become a silent movie
The hero killed the clown
Cant make a sound

Nobody knows what hes doing
Still hanging around
Cant make a sound

The slow motion moves me
The monologue means nothing to me

Bored in a role, but he cant stop
Standing up to sit back down
And lose the one thing found
Spinning the world like a toy top
Till theres a ghost in every town
Cant make a sound

Eyes locked and shining
Cant you tell me whats happening?

Why should you want any other, when youre a world within a world?

Sunday, 21 September 2008

Friday, 19 September 2008

Thursday, 18 September 2008

Sequences

1313, 11131113, 31133113, 1321232113, ????

Wednesday, 17 September 2008

11 Things I am Tired/Bored of...

1. George Bush/John McCain
2. Gordon Brown
3. Nick Clegg
4. David Cameron
5. Madonna
6. The 'modern worship sound'
7. Greedy banks/financial institutions/mortgage lenders/football club owners/petrol companies
8. Keane/Coldplay/Snow Patrol
9. Whining about the 'new Facebook'
10. Worship songs about troubles/valleys/deserts/hardship
11. Hearing how bad Britain is

change the record everyone

dg

The 9 Types of Drinker

Depressed drinker
De-stress drinker
Re-bonding drinker
Conformist drinker
Community drinker
Boredom drinker
Macho drinker
Hedonistic drinker
Border dependents

which are you?

dg

Credit Crunch Hits Hard


Cookies can change the World

Wednesday, 10 September 2008

Friday, 5 September 2008

Where I Stole It All From

So quite a few people have registered their mild surprise that 'Nothing to Fear' is not as "Rock" or "Indie" as they expected it to be.... which is a good thing. And so people have been eager to know what influenced my writing (ie. where did i nick it all from).... so here are some relevant tunes that are loosely connected to the songs you hear on the record... rather than a boring "this is the book i was reading when God downloaded the song into my brain" type song deconstruction - cause if you don't understand it then tough..... so please peruse at your youtube leisure...

1. Imago Dei 

2. The Way That You Father Me

3. Bones

4. Psalm 23

5. The One I Adore

6. One and Only

7. Hope of Better Days

8. ThankYou

9. One Thing

10. Everywhere I Go

11. Nothing Bigger

12. Pure Like You

and the whole thing was under the spell of this guy!

dg

Jerusalem

And will those feet in modern times
Walk upon England's urban sprawl?
And will the Holy Lamb of God
Walk on England's grey littered streets?

And will the countenance divine
Shine forth upon our shopping malls?
And will Jerusalem be built here
Among the forgotten housing estates? 

Loosen my phone of burning ear
Loosen my blackberry from my hand
Loosen my television screen
Loosen my high speed broadband

I must not cease the mental fight
And I must love my fellow man
That we may build Jerusalem
In England's grey and broken land
That we may build Jerusalem
In England's grey and broken land

The Future?

Thursday, 4 September 2008

180 Degree Opinions



huge, sweeping generalisations have a way of coming back to bite you in the backside, eh?

A Surreal Mess

Palin Power


The choice of Sarah Palin as the Republican's Vice-President nomination has been shocking, brave and incredibly shrewd. This is going to be one tight race and I can't wait for November.... She may end up winning this election for McCain, which will prove her selection as a masterstroke of political nous. Yet if we consider that they are proposing that she is someone who will lead at the highest echelons of national government and international relations - her choice is absurd and reckless.

Imagine if the Democrats had picked someone so inexperienced with the family troubles she is going through. You can bet your life there would be a spew of bile towards an identical Democrat candidate, particularly from the Christian right.  

And there is absolutely no way that the Republicans would dismiss using her family troubles against her in the same, resolute way, that Obama's team have been doing. I can't wait to see how this all pans out......

Monday, 1 September 2008