Friday, 26 March 2010
friday night spotify (again): the best of the pretenders
Some bands are best remembered this way - all the joy of their singles crammed onto one disk. This collection by The Pretenders is so full of memories - ah, the early 80s - what heady days you were! We remember you well and without blame.
And who could ever resist the sublime I Go To Sleep? The autumn of 1981 was its natural home all along.
friday night spotify: london calling
Punk and post-punk was never my bag especially, so The Clash were never on my list, although I did quite like the title-track of this album. But what a treat this is! For sheer musical variety and general fun (despite some of the themes) it's a standout album. I guess it has a chance of making it onto my list of great albums...
If you're into physical product, Amazon have it on sale at £3.93.
eat that frog
(Disclaimer: this has nothing to do with people on the other side of the English Channel)
Some great advice from Gina Trapani on handling procrastination, especially in terms of 'eating your frog' (which is Mark Twain-speak for the worst thing in your day).
Get it done first thing.
So, what's your frog?
Some great advice from Gina Trapani on handling procrastination, especially in terms of 'eating your frog' (which is Mark Twain-speak for the worst thing in your day).
Get it done first thing.
So, what's your frog?
a great food blog
I don't think I've ever mentioned food on here before, but I love cooking (not that I do that much of it) and I love cookbooks (not that I have that many of them).
I just came across a great food blog that you might also like to visit - Stonesoup. It helps that it's a terrific-looking blog.
I'll feedback any results if I ever try out some of the recipes. In the meantime, here's a photo of some broccoli and chick peas with tahini sauce. Looks great!
I just came across a great food blog that you might also like to visit - Stonesoup. It helps that it's a terrific-looking blog.
I'll feedback any results if I ever try out some of the recipes. In the meantime, here's a photo of some broccoli and chick peas with tahini sauce. Looks great!
mary oliver: evidence
It was a delightful surprise to discover that Mary Oliver has written a further volume of poems and that the good folks at Amazon were willing to send it to me in exchange for some silver and gold.
Evidence duly arrived this morning and is sitting on my desk, waiting to disclose its pleasures like a bud waiting for the rays of dawn.
I can't wait for daybreak.
Thursday, 25 March 2010
ted hughes: the thought fox
I imagine this midnight moment's forest:
Something else is alive
Beside the clock's loneliness
And this blank page where my fingers move.
Through the window I see no star:
Something more near
Though deeper within darkness
Is entering the loneliness:
Cold, delicately as the dark snow
A fox's nose touches twig, leaf;
Two eyes serve a movement, that now
And again now, and now, and now
Sets neat prints into the snow
Between trees, and warily a lame
Shadow lags by stump and in hollow
Of a body that is bold to come
Across clearings, an eye,
A widening deepening greenness,
Brilliantly, concentratedly,
Coming about its own business
Till, with a sudden sharp hot stink of fox
It enters the dark hole of the head.
The window is starless still; the clock ticks,
The page is printed.
Something else is alive
Beside the clock's loneliness
And this blank page where my fingers move.
Through the window I see no star:
Something more near
Though deeper within darkness
Is entering the loneliness:
Cold, delicately as the dark snow
A fox's nose touches twig, leaf;
Two eyes serve a movement, that now
And again now, and now, and now
Sets neat prints into the snow
Between trees, and warily a lame
Shadow lags by stump and in hollow
Of a body that is bold to come
Across clearings, an eye,
A widening deepening greenness,
Brilliantly, concentratedly,
Coming about its own business
Till, with a sudden sharp hot stink of fox
It enters the dark hole of the head.
The window is starless still; the clock ticks,
The page is printed.
making the most of the free kindle app
OK, so you got the free Kindle app on your PC. Trouble is, you read something that you find helpful and want to clip it for future reference. Can you do so? No.
Except you can. If you're also using Evernote (and who wouldn't be?), you simply press the PrintScreen button on your keyboard, then highlight the Kindle text you've just fallen in love with and - voila! - you have the text sitting in Evernote (as an image).
Apparently (I haven't tried this yet), if you have the Kindle iPhone app you can highlight text natively and add your own notes, which are then saved to an Amazon page for you. Then, you'd simply clip from that page into Evernote (using the normal clipping tool, not the PrintScreen one).
Neat!
(HT: Tony Steward et al)
Except you can. If you're also using Evernote (and who wouldn't be?), you simply press the PrintScreen button on your keyboard, then highlight the Kindle text you've just fallen in love with and - voila! - you have the text sitting in Evernote (as an image).
Apparently (I haven't tried this yet), if you have the Kindle iPhone app you can highlight text natively and add your own notes, which are then saved to an Amazon page for you. Then, you'd simply clip from that page into Evernote (using the normal clipping tool, not the PrintScreen one).
Neat!
(HT: Tony Steward et al)
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
the great albums (4) - the rising
This list could (and might yet) have more than one album by Bruce Springsteen on it. In many ways, The Rising might be a fairly surprising choice from his canon but, in other ways, it is definitive.
The album is a reflection on the events of 9/11 but not in an overtly political sense. Rather, this is 9/11 from the perspective of loved ones, lost ones, left ones. And it works for Bruce in ways it never could for most other artists.
There are spiritual depths on this album as Springsteen looks to find some possibility of healing and redemption in the face of desperate loss. Maybe the high point is the fabulous gospel-chorus on My City Of Ruins.
It's an album that has moved me to tears more than once. Not an easy listen, in some ways, but the E Street band are on top form and, despite the subject matter, it ends up being deeply satisfying.
(nb: the review on spotify is mostly spot-on)
herbert: easter wings
Lord, who createdst man in wealth and store,
Though foolishly he lost the same,
Decaying more and more,
Till he became
Most poore:
With thee
Oh let me rise
As larks, harmoniously,
And sing this day thy victories:
Then shall the fall further the flight in me.
My tender age in sorrow did beginne:
And still with sicknesses and shame
Thou didst so punish sinne,
That I became
Most thinne.
With thee
Let me combine
And feel this day thy victorie:
For, if I imp my wing on thine
Affliction shall advance the flight in me.
(HT: Englewood Review of Books)
Though foolishly he lost the same,
Decaying more and more,
Till he became
Most poore:
With thee
Oh let me rise
As larks, harmoniously,
And sing this day thy victories:
Then shall the fall further the flight in me.
My tender age in sorrow did beginne:
And still with sicknesses and shame
Thou didst so punish sinne,
That I became
Most thinne.
With thee
Let me combine
And feel this day thy victorie:
For, if I imp my wing on thine
Affliction shall advance the flight in me.
(HT: Englewood Review of Books)
Tuesday, 23 March 2010
sara groves: fireflies and songs
It's a great album; well-written, well-sung, well-played. Beautiful.
You can check-out the lyrics here.
it's a sweet, sweet thing
standing here with you and nothing to hide
light shining down to our very insides
sharing our secrets, bearing our souls,
helping each other come clean
secrets and cyphers
there's no good way to hide
there's redemption in confession
and freedom in the light
I'm not afraid, I'm not afraid
Marilynne Robinson, God and Calvin
Just re-read an article from The Guardian, published last year, on the above subject. If you've read any of her novels, or have an interest in Calvinism, you might want to read it too.
Sunday, 21 March 2010
books on finding God's will
are probably legion - but here are 3 that seem to offer real help (judging by sample chapters via kindle)
Kevin DeYoung - Just Do Something (surely deserving of an award for best sub-title...)
Jerry Sittser - The Will of God as a Way of Life
Bruce Waltke - Finding the Will of God: A Pagan Notion?
Kevin DeYoung - Just Do Something (surely deserving of an award for best sub-title...)
Jerry Sittser - The Will of God as a Way of Life
Bruce Waltke - Finding the Will of God: A Pagan Notion?
Saturday, 20 March 2010
your children will be what you eat (and do)
This piece in the Guardian caught my eye - makes for interesting reading.
Whilst pondering the issues it raises, I couldn't but think that epigenetics sounds akin to 'the sins of the fathers being visited on their children for generations'. It also speaks to the corporate nature of humanity and the solidarity of the human race.
(nb: the piece isn't sympathetic to creationist views)
Whilst pondering the issues it raises, I couldn't but think that epigenetics sounds akin to 'the sins of the fathers being visited on their children for generations'. It also speaks to the corporate nature of humanity and the solidarity of the human race.
(nb: the piece isn't sympathetic to creationist views)
elemental preaching
There's a very rewarding, challenging piece over at LeadershipJournal.net by Mark Labberton.
In his search for stability in his Christian life, visiting a variety of churches, he says he was looking for a preacher "with theological gravity at the core." What would that look like? "No escapism, no denial of suffering, no spiritual pretense."
It's an article to ponder slowly.
Try these paragraphs:
His comments on the light and air of preaching are truly weighty.
In his search for stability in his Christian life, visiting a variety of churches, he says he was looking for a preacher "with theological gravity at the core." What would that look like? "No escapism, no denial of suffering, no spiritual pretense."
It's an article to ponder slowly.
Try these paragraphs:
In part, the power of the gospel's gravitational pull lies in its totality, the sheer scale, the utter range and depth of God's creation and re-creation. It's all this in joy and in pain, in beauty and in tragedy, in assurance and in struggle. The attraction of personality, humor, intelligence, form, and style of some preachers can no doubt be attractive, even controlling. But there is no true north in these qualities. Our complex and needy lives, individually and collectively, cannot find hope in the preacher. Hope is only found in the grip of God, whose love and power are sufficient for our story and the whole story.
In my travels to different churches, I did find preachers and congregations among whom I sensed the great pull of the gospel defining and clarifying, healing and renewing the core of their lives. It was not evident because of any particular communication skill. These pastors were varied in age and tradition, but there were some things they had in common: they exuded a life that primarily bore witness to Jesus Christ in character and in attitude even more than in word. They simultaneously conveyed both an honest discipleship and an honest humanity; they seemed to know suffering, their own or others. They were not glib about their role; they had discovered in weakness that Christ was the Center who could and did hold them together.
His comments on the light and air of preaching are truly weighty.
Friday, 19 March 2010
an all-round ministry
I was thinking the other day about preaching - about the need to preach full-orbed sermons that don't moralise, even whilst they instruct and call for faith and obedience etc. That seems, at times, like quite a hard call.
But then it struck me (sometimes I'm pretty blind to the obvious) that when we then sit around the Lord's Table (as we do) after the sermon, whatever I may have failed to say well enough, or fully enough, is now being portrayed for all to see. They're tasting - and seeing - that the Lord is good.
And then, yesterday, it also occurred to me that, in fact, the praying and the singing and the reading and the fellowship of God's people are all a part of that same witness to God's grace too. And so I don't need - am not called - to do everything in the preaching. Yes, to preach Christ as well as I can - not moralising but preaching grace. Yet such preaching is not being done in a vacuum; God has many ways of displaying truth.
Those thoughts don't make me feel that sloppy preaching is okay, but they do give me a sense of liberty and security in seeking to minister faithfully.
But then it struck me (sometimes I'm pretty blind to the obvious) that when we then sit around the Lord's Table (as we do) after the sermon, whatever I may have failed to say well enough, or fully enough, is now being portrayed for all to see. They're tasting - and seeing - that the Lord is good.
And then, yesterday, it also occurred to me that, in fact, the praying and the singing and the reading and the fellowship of God's people are all a part of that same witness to God's grace too. And so I don't need - am not called - to do everything in the preaching. Yes, to preach Christ as well as I can - not moralising but preaching grace. Yet such preaching is not being done in a vacuum; God has many ways of displaying truth.
Those thoughts don't make me feel that sloppy preaching is okay, but they do give me a sense of liberty and security in seeking to minister faithfully.
friday night spotify: walk under ladders
Been waiting for this for a while and now they've got it up on spotify - Joan Armatrading's 1981 album, Walk Under Ladders.
I remember my good pal Garry Fenley having the cassette of it and it's a real treat to hear it again. Very poppy and possessed of one of the best tracks of all time, The Weakness In Me.
Sweet memories.
wired for words
When the iPad was announced, I posted some thoughts and linked to an article that postulated some possibilities. Here's a video of what things might look like in the future...
(HT: Matt Perman)
(HT: Matt Perman)
the excellence of ridderbos
You'll already know, avid reader (I don't presume that you are plural), that I've found Herman Ridderbos on John's Gospel to be extremely helpful. I want to just flesh-out why that is, with reference to his treatment of the woman at the well in John 4.
It's a favourite account with preachers and has so much to go at, in psychological terms - married five times, living with a bloke, trying to divert Jesus' attention from her sin and onto extraneous religious issues. Thing is, John's account doesn't support that interpretation. As Ridderbos demonstrates, it's far more about the salvation-historical significance of Jesus and his ministry.
For instance, the repeated emphasis upon Jacob - it's his well, a gift to his people. Is Jesus greater than he? Then there's the focus on water and living water - terms that are pregnant with OT symbolism of God's coming kingdom and reign.
And when Jesus displays his prescience regarding her marital state, she responds to his prophetic status by asking about how God can be truly known. Instead of saying, 'Whoah, I haven't finished with your sin yet, lady', Jesus answers her in explicitly salvation-historical terms: an hour is coming...and has now come. And his answer is not only to her but is a message for all the Samaritans (verses 21 & 22 speak in plural terms - this is not so much about her as an individual as about them as a group).
All this (and more), Ridderbos sees here and expresses its meaning with clarity and richness.
It's a favourite account with preachers and has so much to go at, in psychological terms - married five times, living with a bloke, trying to divert Jesus' attention from her sin and onto extraneous religious issues. Thing is, John's account doesn't support that interpretation. As Ridderbos demonstrates, it's far more about the salvation-historical significance of Jesus and his ministry.
For instance, the repeated emphasis upon Jacob - it's his well, a gift to his people. Is Jesus greater than he? Then there's the focus on water and living water - terms that are pregnant with OT symbolism of God's coming kingdom and reign.
And when Jesus displays his prescience regarding her marital state, she responds to his prophetic status by asking about how God can be truly known. Instead of saying, 'Whoah, I haven't finished with your sin yet, lady', Jesus answers her in explicitly salvation-historical terms: an hour is coming...and has now come. And his answer is not only to her but is a message for all the Samaritans (verses 21 & 22 speak in plural terms - this is not so much about her as an individual as about them as a group).
All this (and more), Ridderbos sees here and expresses its meaning with clarity and richness.
Thursday, 18 March 2010
evernote: sheer class
I may have mentioned Evernote before but I want to highlight a feature I've never used but which works amazingly well.
I took a photo on my phone (a Nokia N79 for those who'd like to know the details) of my whiteboard with notes on it (essentially, the same photo that's on this blog but with a few extra scribbles). I emailed the photo from the phone into my Evernote account. It duly showed up on my PC.
Now, here's the really clever thing: when you do a search in Evernote, it scans photos, too, and if it finds the word in the image, it includes it in the results. To test it out, I searched for the word 'Spirit', since it was written fairly plainly in the whiteboard photo (albeit written as 'Spirit/Truth'). Evernote found it.
I was impressed but assumed Evernote would be hampered by my untidy writing (using a whiteboard is new to me, you understand). So I did a search on the word 'Prescience' (in the photo, it looks more like the word 'Prescence', apart from the dot which hints at an 'i' in the word). Again, Evernote found it.
Now THAT'S impressive.
I took a photo on my phone (a Nokia N79 for those who'd like to know the details) of my whiteboard with notes on it (essentially, the same photo that's on this blog but with a few extra scribbles). I emailed the photo from the phone into my Evernote account. It duly showed up on my PC.
Now, here's the really clever thing: when you do a search in Evernote, it scans photos, too, and if it finds the word in the image, it includes it in the results. To test it out, I searched for the word 'Spirit', since it was written fairly plainly in the whiteboard photo (albeit written as 'Spirit/Truth'). Evernote found it.
I was impressed but assumed Evernote would be hampered by my untidy writing (using a whiteboard is new to me, you understand). So I did a search on the word 'Prescience' (in the photo, it looks more like the word 'Prescence', apart from the dot which hints at an 'i' in the word). Again, Evernote found it.
Now THAT'S impressive.
the return from atheism of peter hitchens
There's a fascinating piece by Peter Hitchens here - not simply in terms of the debate between theism and atheism but also in terms of family histories and issues that are deeper and more important than the mechanics of debate.
Well worth a read.
Well worth a read.
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