Chelmsford Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans

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Saturday, 28 February 2009

Why Venus is so bright




















For those who were interested in yesterday's photo of the crescent Moon and (crescent) Venus, this snapshot from Redshift 5 software shows why the planet is currently so bright.

From this angle, above the solar system, the planets are rotating round the Sun anti-clockwise. Because Venus is so close to us, it is visually much bigger than when on the other side of its orbit, even though only part of its cloudy 'surface' is illuminated.

However, Venus is going faster than us, as is Mercury (the swift 'Messenger of the Gods'), and will soon pass us on the 'inside track'. At that point, although it is closest to us, it will become much less visible as it gets nearer the Sun from our point of view.

By mid March it will be back to being the familiar 'evening star', visible just around sunset, particularly with evenings getting lighter.

By April, it will (if I've got this right) be re-appearing at a similar brightness, but this time as the 'morning star'. And with days getting longer there won't be many opportunities to observe it, so enjoy it while it lasts.

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Friday, 27 February 2009

A great view

A great view from the back-garden tonight towards sunset of the crescent moon and planet Venus (also a crescent at the moment, but too small to resolve with a 50mm camera lens).

If you click on the image, you should see the full-size version (about 134 kb).

Engaging with the BNP: Race, Culture and National Identity

If parties were stocks and shares then it might be observed that the political world is currently going through a ‘credit crunch’ of its own as people lose confidence in the old institutions. In such turbulent times, where are they to invest their voting ‘capital’?

Just as, north of the border, voters have finally turned to Scottish Nationalism, it is now evident that in the south the British National Party has become the ‘penny share’ — the low value stock with speculative potential.

Since the beginning of this year, the BNP has gained just one seat in local council elections. But it stood in five out of nine contested wards and, most significantly of all, has taken 22.6% of the overall vote.

A truly grass roots movement
What these results also reflect is that the BNP is a ‘grass roots’ movement. Despite accusations of ‘spreading lies’, the fact is that the BNP relies for its results on hard work by local supporters. Its ‘propaganda machine’ consists of downloadable leaflets and photocopiers, and there is no indication of substantial financial backing. What money there is comes, it would seem, from members’ pockets.

And success at the polls is certainly not dependent on the appeal of a charismatic leader. Unlike the mainstream parties, the fortunes of the BNP seem unaffected by the fact that its chairman, Nick Griffin, is in appearance more ‘David Brent’ than Il Duce. People are clearly not voting BNP because they prefer Griffin to Brown, Cameron or Clegg.

A reason for worry
The mainstream parties are right, then, to be worried about the BNP, not because there is any likelihood of them ever forming a government — a penny share rarely makes it to the FTSE. But as a ‘bellwether’, rising support for the BNP is a clear indication of public feeling.

The accusation from its opponents is that the BNP is racist and even thuggish. Yet despite this, in the privacy of the ballot box people are prepared to put their X by the name of the BNP candidate. Must we then conclude that 40% of the voters in Swanley are racist thugs? However low our opinion may be of Sevenoaks, that seems an unlikely prospect.

Confrontation must give way to engagement
Those opposed to the BNP have, until now, relied largely on confrontation. Most recently, and in my view, most foolishly, the General Synod of the Church of England recently voted that clergy should be banned from BNP membership (a vote with which 59% of those polled on this blog disagreed). This was, presumably, on the grounds that the BNP is racist and since racism is a sin, clergy need to banned from sinning.

Yet the rise in BNP support cannot be addressed by moral sloganeering. What is needed is direct engagement with the issues, as raised by the BNP itself. Otherwise, we may be sure there will be many more ‘Swanleys’ to come. And the first and core issue to address must be that of national identity.

Race and identity
The issue of race is central to the BNP. According to Section 1:2,b of its Constitution,

The British National Party stands for the preservation of the national and ethnic character of the British people and is wholly opposed to any form of racial integration between British and non-European peoples. It is therefore committed to stemming and reversing the tide of non-white immigration and to restoring, by legal changes, negotiation and consent, the overwhelmingly white makeup of the British population that existed in Britain prior to 1948.

And Section 2:1 states,

Membership of the BNP is strictly defined within the terms of, and our members also self define themselves within, the legal ambit of a defined ‘racial group’ this being ‘Indigenous Caucasian’ and defined ‘ethnic groups’ emanating from that Race as specified in law in the House of Lords case of Mandla V Dowell Lee (1983) 1 ALL ER 1062, HL.

For some, this is sufficient evidence of guilt: a racially defined national identity and party membership is ‘racist’, and no more need to be said.

A denial of racism
Yet the BNP denies that it is racist. “Each and every community,” it states, “has the inalienable right to look after its own interests,” adding, “This includes the indigenous British folk” — folk being also used as a technical term for ‘racial grouping’ within the Constitution (2:1,2).

In other words, the BNP says, we are only identifying with White British people in the same way that a multitude of other groups identify with Blacks, Asians, Irish, Poles, etc. To suggest, over against this, that White groups are of necessity racist itself smacks of racism and, moreover, plays directly into the hands of the BNP.

Race and the issue of nationhood
In any case, the issue raised by the BNP is itself too serious to be resolved by simply attacking the party over racism.

How is a nation to be defined? Do nations have a place in the modern world? Do nations have a place in Christian theology? All these are questions which the policies of the BNP rightly identify as needing to be addressed.

The nation is being redefined
Go to the website for the Institute for Public Policy Research
, a think-tank with links to the Labour Party, and you will find numerous articles on social issues, including one titled The Power of Belonging: Identity, citizenship and community cohesion, a summary of which can be downloaded here. In the section on ‘National Identity’, this statement stands out:

... the act of removing historical anachronisms such as the place of bishops in the House of Lords could place multiculturalism at the heart of our constitutional arrangements, and by doing so help pluralise our understanding of Britishness.

What is important here is not, of course, the mention of bishops in the House of Lords, but their instancing as but one example of ‘historical anachronisms’ to be removed, over against which our understanding of ‘Britishness’ is to be ‘pluralised’ around a number of new constitutional arrangements with “multiculturalism at the heart”.

The sheer existence of this report, irregardless of its content, proves there is a conscious process underway to redefine the concept of the British nation. If the churches are to engage with both sides of this debate, they must do some serious work on what this involves.

Is nation culture, race or what?
The answer being given by mainstream political parties to questions of nationhood is that it is a matter of culture, and above all of ‘values’. Yet the problem with values, as the IPPR report itself shows, is that they are constantly changing, and indeed may need to be challenged. One of the supposed ‘values’ of British culture is now the inclusion of homosexual behaviours and relationships within our social and legal fabric. Yet this is a value which I, and many Christians, reject. On the other hand, a ‘value’ which some would wish to include is a recognition of Shariah law. Many will disagree with this, yet are Muslim Britons not to be allowed to champion a change of
‘our’ values to embrace theirs?

It is no wonder that the IPPR report concludes that values “on their own lack the motivational power to bind a community together.” National identity, if it has any meaning, cannot simply be ‘the sharing of values’, especially if those values are, for the most part, shared by other nations. Nor does this address the issue of how there can be such an identity when values within that nation differ widely.

Over against this, the BNP argument that national identity must include racial identity needs to be taken seriously. For at least racial identity provides a ‘community cohesion’ which cannot be rewritten overnight and yet can be easily recognized and demonstrated.

Yet there are nations, such as the United States, Australia and South Africa, where a genuine sense of national identity transcends race. There are others, however, such as our own, where the establishment of such an identity is much less clearly successful. The suggestion that the answer lies in ‘multiculturalism’ is one that many now find hard to accept, and its rejection undoubtedly explains some of the support the BNP now receives.

What is the Christian position?
And then, thirdly, there is the Christian position — or rather, non-position, since it is not at all clear where we stand on this issue.

The Bible recognizes both the reality of racial identity, and its irrelevance to human unity. Yet the Bible is equally clear that the ‘dividing walls’ of humanity are only broken down in the gospel community. We are, as the old Keswick Convention slogan put it, all one in Christ Jesus. Here, there is neither Jew nor Greek (Gal 3:28).

But what about beyond ‘here’? What about in London, or Liverpool, in England or Scotland, in the UK or Europe, and in the wider world? There, there are clearly ‘Jew and Greek’ and many other ‘folk’ besides.

Does the church simply deny ‘nationhood’? The Apostle Paul once said that God, “made every nation of men, that they should inhabit the whole earth; and he determined the times set for them and the exact places where they should live.” Is this simply a matter for ‘the world’ and of no interest to us? Or do we have something to say?

Our society is actually looking for answers on this one. And there are other voices out there providing them. Some want to abolish all our “historical anachronisms”. Others want to reassert “the national and ethnic character of the British people”.

Is there a word from the Lord?

Revd John P Richardson
27 February 2009

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Wednesday, 25 February 2009

Looking for a move?

Are you an evangelical minister looking for a move? You will probably need to be someone with experience of running a parish, and of a traditionalist outlook.

I know of three positions which either are vacant or will soon be vacant. One is overseas, and two are in this country. They are all quite different, ranging from very large urban to modest rural.

I would be very happy to steer the right person towards these situations. If you think it might be you, please e-mail me, by clicking this link.

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A new journal of 'British Reformed Theology'

I have been asked, and am happy, to provide, a link to a new theological journal, Ecclesia Reformanda, which introduces itself as below:

Ecclesia reformata semper reformanda est: ‘the reformed Church is always being reformed’.

Ecclesia Reformanda is a new print journal for pastors, theological students, and scholars, that seeks to serve the Church in its ongoing reformation according to God’s Word. The editorial board believes that historic Reformed theology offers the best expression of the theology of Scripture, and so the journal is confessionally Reformed. However, a genuinely Reformed theology is always looking for God to shed new light on his Church from his Word. It is therefore always reforming.

Ecclesia Reformanda is distinctively Reformed, with a contemporary cutting edge. It presents some of the best in British Reformed thinking and writing to serve the Church, her teachers, and her Lord.

The journal covers all of the theological subdisciplines, and early issues will include articles on intertextuality in Romans 2, poetry in James, the place of children in the new covenant according to Jeremiah 32, Jim Jordan’s hermeneutics, Herman Bavinck’s theological method, and John Owen’s doctrine of justification. Future editions will contain articles on ethics, public theology, and pastoral counselling.

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Sunday, 22 February 2009

Discouraging Barnabas? A most odd tale

A very odd story seems to be developing in the blogosphere (or Devil’s Playground, as I am increasingly viewing it).

A couple of days ago, I received a circular e-mail (this link appears to be the same) from the Barnabas Fund, of which I am a supporter, alleging a concerted campaign against its director, Patrick Sookhdeo, and members of its staff.

The e-mail referred to “an article by an anonymous Western missionary, which ... has appeared on various websites” and which described “what appears to be an orchestrated, multi-pronged attack on Patrick Sookhdeo (and therefore on Barnabas Fund) and other evangelical Christians.”

The e-mail went on, “The most shocking element is the deliberate passing of negative criticism about Patrick from an evangelical Christian to a radical Muslim,” and claimed that, “We have checked several of the allegations in the article and found all of them to be correct.”

One of these allegations, borne out on his website, is that a Muslim blogger, Indigo Jo, had indeed had his attention drawn to a negative review of Patrick Sookhdeo’s book “Global Jihad” on the Fulcrum website by the author of the piece, Ben White. In fact, White has posted a further comment on this site to say, jokingly, that he would not “describe [himself] as a conservative Christian ;)”.

Indigo Jo, meanwhile, whose real name is Matthew Smith, describes himself as a convert to Islam, and thus also takes the name Yusuf. Jo’s name for Sookhdeo, rather less charmingly, is Sookhdevil, a name which he seems to have coined as early as 2005.

Jo’s hostility to Sookhdeo is thus clear, and one does indeed wonder at the appropriateness of Ben White’s eagerness to point Jo in the direction of his own criticisms of Sookhdeo, if White is a Christian at all (a denial that he is a conservative Christian obviously being not the same as a denial of any Christian faith).

Meanwhile, there was enormous excitement on the Fulcrum discussion forums about two different versions of a response to White’s review by David Zeidan, who is associated with the Barnabas fund, and Tawfik Hamid, who I understand is not.

A version sent round by Barnabas e-mail was considerably less temperate in some of its language than that which appeared on the Fulcrum website as a reply to White’s critique. This is perhaps to be regretted, but it led to speculation by Graham Kings, the Theological Secretary of Fulcrum, as to who might be responsible for the intemperate sections (see his message 10104, here).

All this put me in mind of St Paul’s warning to the Galatians, “If you keep on biting and devouring each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each other.” And indeed, in the spirit of this warning I had a telephone conversation several days ago with David Zeidan to try to answer some of Graham King’s questions. I was also telephoned by Graham Kings, though unfortunately just as I was leaving on holiday so that I was unable to talk for long.

It would be inappropriate to go into detail, but what both these conversations confirmed to me was that there was considerable heat being generated for reasons which were not immediately clear.

I was therefore further concerned that the article quoted in the later Barnabas e-mail spoke of an “invitation-only meeting ... at All Nations Christian College 21-22 July 2008” at which, it is alleged, “a document was drafted called Gracious Christian Responses to Muslims in Britain Today” which aims (it is further alleged) “to discredit two British Christian leaders who are converts from Islam (one being Patrick Sookhdeo)”.

The Barnabas e-mail states specifically,

We have confirmed by a telephone call to the principal of All Nations Christian College that the secret meeting described in the article was held on their premises in July 2008 and that a representative of the college was in attendance. He emphasised that in no way did the college sponsor the meeting, but simply that the group used their premises and the college felt it important that a member of their staff should be present.

It stated further that the specific targets of Gracious Responses are Patrick Sookhdeo and Sam Soloman (another Muslim convert, and also, as it happens, known to me personally). The e-mail then goes on to request prayer, especially for Sookhdeo, Soloman and the work of the Barnabas fund.

Now my own point in posting all this is along the lines of Matthew 10:26, “There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will not be made known.” Most Christians in this country will be blissfully unaware of these actions and allegations. And many others, like me, will be very unclear as to what is actually going on.

If the anxieties at the Barnabas Fund are groundless, then at very least they should be reassured and should pass that reassurance on to their supporters. If, on the other hand, there is substance to them, then that needs to be made public and responded to accordingly by the wider Christian community. And above all, if there are untruths being spread, either accidentally or deliberately, then these must be corrected.

So I invite comment and clarification, absolutely none of which will be published without a name and address.

Revd John Richardson
22 February 2009

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Friday, 20 February 2009

Apologies for Absence

My apologies to those who tried without success to post comments on this blog in the last few days. I've been on holiday and, contrary to hopes, the place where we were staying didn't have a broadband connection. A jocular suggestion to my wife that I might drop into an internet cafe to keep up with things was met with a response which suggested a distinct lack of a sense of humour on her part.

Anyway, I'm back now and hope to catch up with things over the weekend.

John

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Friday, 13 February 2009

The Trouble with Freedom

(For our parish magazines. Meanwhile, if you want to read something really scarey, go to the government's ID cards website and read the press release, Benefits of Identity Cards will be delivered soon, Home Secretary tells Manchester. When you get to the piece which says that issuing prototype identity cards to workers at Manchester airport will “help ... kick start joint work to explore opportunities for streamlining airside pass regimes,” you realize that the truly frightening thing is not that these people have a cunning plan but that they really havent got a clue what they are talking about. They are committed to supporting the course of action irregardless of the possible consequences. Then look at this piece in the New Statesman: John Pilger sees freedom die quietly. What was so brilliant about the TV series In the Thick of It was the way that it showed our leaders as one suspects they truly are: people driven more by fear of office politics than by any truly grand designs. See this clip here on YouTube. The considerable swearing may offend some, but the fact that it is now clearly part of institutional life at the top is also itself telling.)

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The Trouble with Freedom

Given that the Church of England has just decided to ban vicars from joining the British National Party, I feel now might be a good time to consider the question of freedom.

Not that I particularly wanted to join the BNP, but I can’t get over the nasty feeling that I am somehow less free today than I was a week ago.

Throughout human history, freedom has been a fundamental issue. The biblical story of the Exodus, for example, has inspired many other enslaved peoples. Long before Martin Luther-King’s cry of, “Free at last!”, Black American slaves were singing, “Go down, Moses,” to express their own hopes: “We need not always weep and mourn, Let my people go, And wear these slavery chains forlorn, Let my people go.”

But — and this is not as stupid a question as it might appear — why do we want to be free?

The most obvious reason might seem that people want to do what they want without interference from others. This is the ‘freedom’ which expresses itself in the language of ‘rights’: “I’ve got a right to — you can’t stop me.”

Yet this is really little more than selfishness, and it is not the ‘freedom to do what I want’ which motivates people to risk beatings, imprisonment and even death in order to gain it not just for themselves but for others.

Then there is another way of looking at freedom, which sees it primarily in terms of equality of treatment and opportunity. That seems to be the social model prevailing in our own society at the present.

But, as we are increasingly seeing, that may not be the same thing as freedom at all. In fact it may be, and I fear has become, a massive exercise in social conditioning, where what matters is not the freedom of the individual but the outcome desired by the Conditioners.

Of course, from the viewpoint of the Conditioners, these outcomes are ‘good’ for us. But the society geared to produce ‘desirable outcomes’ is quite different from one which aims at maximising freedom for its citizens.

Pigeons who have been taught to play ping-pong (it has been done), may seem cleverer to those who have taught them, but they are hardly more ‘pigeon-y’ as a result.

What may seem surprising to some, though, is the importance of freedom in the Christian understanding of humanity. Not that you’d guess this from looking at the historical record of the churches, which very often have been at the forefront of social control.

We must not forget, however, that Jesus was born into a society as tightly regulated in many ways as Islamic culture. Anyone familiar with Orthodox Judaism will know that, although people are glad to accept them, there are a multitude of rules and regulations covering many aspects of day-to-day life.

Jesus, however, not only deliberately overturned such rules, he questioned the very adequacy of God’s Law: “You have heard that is was said [in the seventh Commandment], ‘You shall not commit adultery,’ but I say to you, ‘Anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart.”

And here is the paradox. We are made to be free — that is why people will die for freedom. But freedom is so much more difficult than living under the law. That is why freedom is so hard to preserve.

Rev John P Richardson


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Thursday, 12 February 2009

The End of Creation: re-reading Genesis 1

In recent weeks I’ve been wrestling with Genesis 1-3, fascinated by what it has to say, but also aware that it involves numerous crux interpeta, around which people become either sensitive or triumphalistic. (The sensitive worry about orthodoxy, the triumphalistic claim, ‘Aha, so you also disbelieve what I disbelieve after all!’)

Part of the problem, I am sure, is that we approach the text through our framework, rather than that of the original audience. (I can hear the triumphalistic already ruffling through Thiselton on the two horizons in hermeneutics.)

But hear me out. The question is not whether we have to understand the Bible differently today — ‘today’ of course being, in this context, a constantly changing reference point — but whether, in neglecting to consider the original context, we have missed what always was and always will be the message of Genesis within the revelation of God in Jesus Christ.

When we consider the perspective of the Ancient Near Eastern author(s?) and audience, the most striking thing about Genesis 1 is not that God made the world (our point of contention) but that no other gods were involved (a radical idea, from their perspective).

In the surrounding cultures, gods were everywhere. More than that, what we think of as ‘natural phenomena’, such as the sun and moon, and even day-to-day events such as fertility, were active manifestations of these gods. By contrast, in Genesis 1 there is simply God and the world God has made. Moreover Genesis 1, if I have understood this correctly, allows us to think of ‘natural phenomena’ as properties of the world, not (directly) ‘acts of God’. Thus in v 11, we read,

And God said, “Let the earth put forth grass, herbs yielding seed, and fruit-trees bearing fruit after their kind, wherein is the seed thereof ...”

God commands, but it is the earth that ‘puts forth’ plants, and it is the plants that produce other plants.

Yet even here, we are in danger of missing the message of Genesis 1 if we read it solely to work out ‘how’ the world came to be — whether we focus on the ‘how’ of God’s word, or the ‘how’ of the time period it took. For those things are surely secondary to the ‘why’.

And the answer to the ‘why’ lies in the one thing which is so often ignored in controversies over Genesis 1, namely Genesis 2, and the institution of the Sabbath.

So often, Genesis 2:1-3 is treated as a kind of appendix to Genesis 1. It even gets put in a new chapter! Yet clearly it belongs in the narrative with the previous events on the preceding six days.

In fact, far from being a ‘PS’ to creation, I am suggesting that the Sabbath of the seventh day must be understood as the goal and purpose of creation, to which the events of chapter 1 are actually the preliminaries.

I would say this not least because in the rest of Scripture the Sabbath becomes a symbol of God’s purposes in redemption. The writer of Hebrews explains this in terms of the rest promised in Psalm 95, referring back to the original Sabbath of creation:

Therefore, since the promise of entering his rest still stands, let us be careful that none of you be found to have fallen short of it. 2 For us also have had the gospel preached to us, just as they did; but the message they heard was of no value to them, because those who heard did not combine it with faith. 3 Now we who have believed enter that rest, just as God has said, “So I declared on oath in my anger, ‘They shall never enter my rest.’ ” And yet his work has been finished since the creation of the world. 4 For somewhere he has spoken about the seventh day in these words: “And on the seventh day God rested from all his work.” (Heb 4:1-4, NIV)

The same point is reflected in the fact that we have two justifications for the Sabbath in the different versions of the Ten Commandments. In Exodus 20:11, the Sabbath is to be kept because “in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day.” In Deuteronomy 5:15, however, it is to be kept because, “you were slaves in Egypt and that the Lord your God brought you out of there with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm. Therefore the Lord your God has commanded you to observe the Sabbath day.”

At first the two accounts seem contradictory, but in fact they are complementary: the purpose and goal of creation is the Sabbath, and the purpose and goal of redemption is, likewise, the Sabbath. Genesis 1-2, then, is not about six days of creating the world, after which God took a rest. Rather, it is about creating God’s resting place. It is this which is, properly speaking, the ‘End’ of creation.

The details of Genesis 1, then, should be read in terms of constructing the ‘resting place’. Of course, this resting place is ‘the world as we know it’, but it was also the world as ancient Israel knew it — significant not for the mechanics of how it works but the purpose for which it is made to work.

In this respect, what matters most of all about the shape of the account is that there is progress as well as process. The ‘days’ do not just presume a passage of time but present a development towards a goal.

Moreover, the starting point of creation (which is almost as neglected as the Sabbath at the other end) gives us a clear indication of the direction of this progress, for we begin not with light and perfection but darkness and chaos. The Hebrew is marvellously alliterative: ‘tohu wa’vohu’, or as we might say, “unformed and unfilled”.

And although the Spirit of God was present, hovering over the waters, there is a clear (though often missed) contrast between this and the ‘rest’ of the seventh day — a day, moreover, which has no evening and morning to bring it to an end.

Between the beginning and the end of creation, then, lies a process of differentiation, forming, filling and, above all preparation: the realm of time (light and darkness separated to form a ‘day’) is prepared for the lights in the heavens, the land is prepared for the plants, the sky and sea are prepared for the birds and the fish, and the realm of land and plants is prepared for the land animals.

But above all else, everything is prepared for Man, (the singular is essential to capture the essence of the Hebrew adam, the singular reference in Genesis 1:27, and the theological rationale of the ‘new man’ of Ephesians 2:15-16.)

We have said that the surprising thing about Genesis 1 is not the creative work of God but the absence of other gods. And in the ancient world those gods were, of course, represented by idols. But now we read God saying that he should make an idol of himself. The word tselem, translated ‘image’ in Genesis 1:26, means exactly the kind of image people were not allowed to make in order to worship. And again, the word ‘likeness’ is the thing that the manufacturer of an idol can’t capture in Isaiah 40:18.

Thus God is imaged in his creation, and, through his image he will exercise his kingly rule. But the blessing of Genesis 1:28, and the command specifically to subdue the earth, speak of further process and progress.

Thus we may suggest that the ‘resting place’ of Genesis 2 is not absolute — a suggestion surely borne out by subsequent developments. What we have here is not a ‘perfect’ (ie finished or complete) world, but a world of potential — a world, and a project, which has started but has not yet finished, even though its final shape is foreshadowed in the seventh day Sabbath.

John P Richardson
12 February 2009

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Tuesday, 10 February 2009

The CofE and the BNP

Moral fibre seems to be everywhere at the moment, evidenced by some people telling other people what they may or may not do. Traditionally, this has been part of the role of religion, but was never, of course, not confined to the religious.

Anyway, the General Synod of the Church of England has now decided that membership of the British National Party is to be forbidden (one is tempted to say verboten) to its clergy.

If you would like to express your opinion on whether you feel this is a right or wrong move, please vote in the poll at the top of this blog.

Meanwhile you might like to nip across to the BNP website and read what its supporters (generally) are saying about the Church of England and the Synod's decision. (Treat it as an exercise in listening to those with whom you disagree - something the CofE prides itself on.)

NB Comments on this post without a full name and location will not be published.

Thursday, 5 February 2009

Golly! The BBC shows its moral fibre

Hearing Jay Hunt on Radio 4’s Today programme this morning defending the BBC’s treatment of Carol Thatcher left me fuming with anger, but also with a nasty feeling that I wouldn’t want to be on the wrong side of Ms Hunt’s own righteous indignation.

Clearly she felt that the BBC had acted from the highest moral principles in dismissing Carol Thatcher from the One Show because, during the relaxation time after the show, the latter had described a black tennis player as looking like a golliwog.

This is how Ms Hunt justified that response:

What Carol decides to say in the privacy of her own home or in a private conversation with friends is one thing. What she says in a greenroom space, when there are 12 people [there], in her capacity as a roving reporter for the One Show is a rather different thing.

On this occasion, her using this phrase and it being overheard and having caused offence to a number of people was totally inappropriate. It was deemed inappropriate in the circumstances for her to continue to work on a show that prides itself not just on the diversity of its production team but on the range of its coverage across the country. I think everybody will be able to see that that is not an appropriate place for her to work.

Now, as I recall, this is the same BBC — is it not? — that a couple of years ago broadcast Jerry Springer: The Opera. Before the broadcast they were asked not to go ahead, on the grounds that the show would be offensive to a large number of people. After the broadcast, OFCOM received an unprecedented number of complaints. Yet the BBC remained not merely unapologetic, but adamant that it had done the right thing.

This is also the same BBC which allows Jonathan Ross a public forum for a constant stream of innuendo and suggestive comments. Ross is someone with a proven track-record of unpleasantness, but the BBC pays him literally millions to retain his services.

The BBC’s response, of course, is that viewers can always turn off. But then people who overhear a private conversation can always move away.

Clearly it is not the number of people you offend that counts at the BBC, but how you offend them. If the offense is caused by something the BBC management consider offensive, then it is actionable, if the offense is caused by something the management deem inoffensive, then it is acceptable.

The real issue here is not whether it is OK to liken a black man to a golliwog, or to broadcast a song which says that the Virgin Mary was raped by an angel, but how the guardians of morality at the BBC perceive themselves.

And a clue to that can be seen in Ms Hunt’s use of the word ‘diversity’. This is, of course, code for the social application of a particular view of morality — a view which is, if necessary, to be inculcated by force and by social re-education, as in the case of Christian nurse Caroline Petrie who, because she had shown insensitivity to her patients was recommended to attend an ‘equality and diversity’ course.

In the old days of the Maoist Cultural Revolution, the same approach was used with the bourgeoisie, who needed not only to be made aware of their crimes, but made to accuse themselves of being criminals in the first place. Though this was deliberately punitive, it was similarly designed to achieve moral reform according the lights of its administrators.

Meanwhile, from the tone in Ms Hunt’s voice she clearly views herself in the role of one striking down “with great vengeance and furious anger” on the unrighteous. But it is the narrowness of her moral viewpoint, not the vehemence of her desire to purify the BBC, which is most the serious cause for concern — that, and the blindness to the fault. Mote and beam surely springs to mind.

Revd John Richardson
5 February 2009

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Monday, 2 February 2009

Create your own atheist bus

... if 'create' isn't an unfortunate word to use.

Thanks to Bishop Alan's Blogspot for this link to a site where you can create your own atheist bus advert - or a variation on the theme, like mine below:


And while we're about it, snow that keeps every London bus in its garage ...? Who's laughing now, eh?

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5 mysteries of the universe

For your amusement, from The Guardian. You'll have to follow the link to read the actual items.
Even today, there are scientific phenomena that defy explanation. If history is anything to go by, resolving these anomalies could lead to a great leap forward, so what are the greatest mysteries, and what scientific revolutions might they bring?

1 The missing universe

2 Life

3 Death

4 Sex

5 Free will

• Michael Brooks is a consultant for New Scientist and the author of 13 Things That Don't Make Sense, published by Profile on Thursday
No. 3 has certainly intrigued me for some time. If evolution is essentially driven by survivability, how come things don't survive terribly long? The reply may be, "They survive long enough to reproduce." But that doesn't seem much of an answer, because surely the longer you survive to reproduce, the more offspring you will have and the more those selfish little genes will be around to replicate. Ipso facto, evolution ought to be favouring the 'survivors' in the longevity stakes and things should be living longer and longer, compared with a few millennia ago.

Yet Psalm 90:10 still applies now as it did then: "The length of our days is seventy years — or eighty, if we have the strength."

I await the book titled, Better off Dead: the evolutionary advantages of death. Meanwhile, answers, as they used to say, on a postcard.

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mail: j.p.richardson@btinternet.com