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Sunday, May 11, 2008

Tripoli

Cnv00028 The BBC and other new outlets are carrying reports that the violence in Lebanon has now spread north to Lebanon's second city Tripoli.

When I visited Tripoli a few years back it seemed a far more radical place than Beirut. Indeed the couple who took us there had lived in Tripoli until someone put a bomb outside their house and tried to blow them up.

When in Tripoli we overlooked the city from the walls of the citadel of Raymond de Saint-Gillies. We prayed and as we did so a flock of white doves took off from some rooftops and circled in the sky - a sign of peace? We prayed that it would be a sign of peace, of a lasting peace - still we pray for what else can we do?

Cnv00022

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

thinking and praying

Sitting in the relative comfort and safety of my office thoughts and prayers can't help but wander to the people of Nicaragua and Honduras who are as I write being battered by hurricane Felix which has made land as a category 5 storm. Having seen first hand what Katrina did to New Orleans and the surrounding area, and how difficult it has been for that city to rebuild one wonders what chances those in the much poorer poor nations of Nicaragua and Honduras have against such a powerful storm.

So we pray, for that is all  we can at this time do.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Still Small Voices

There are a couple of new posts up at Still Small Voices, please go and have a read.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Christian Aid Workers Killed

Twenty three South Korean Christian aid workers are being held hostage in Afganistan, two of them have been executed more details here. Don't really know what else to say at the moment apart from pray that they would be set free, and yes pray for other hostages that don't make the news.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

100 days

Alan_johnston_100days_r_1 Alan Johnston, BBC reporter in Gaza has now been held captive for 100 days. Our thoughts and prayers are with him, his family, the people in Gaza and yes his captors.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Forgotten

A_johnston Life does not stand still and like voyeuristic flies we buzz from one hot new topic to another and in our flying suffer some sort of amnesia.

The friends and family of Madeleine McCann have done very well to keep her story and profile in the news for so long. The story of her family, the fear that this could happen to our kids, grips us all and weighs heavy in our minds and on her hearts. We cry "God have mercy" and pray that she is alive and will be returned to her family soon.

But what of Alan Johnston? Do we pray for him? Do we remember him or is he forgotten?

On Tuesday I was doing some teaching on the wisdom literature of the Old Testament. One of the issues I raise about Ecclesiastes is that some of it's theology sits ill with the rest of scripture. As an example of this I used 2:16 where it talks about being forgotten in death. I explained that to be forgotten in Jewish thought of that period was to not exist.

In some respects we still think like this - "out of sight out of mind" is a phrase we still use. Yet we need to remember and remember rightly. We need to remember Alan Johnston, for to forget his plight it to forget the plight of the many who do not pull at out heart strings, to forget his plight is to forget the un-known kidnapped around the globe and of whom we never hear.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Getting Drunk

_39655341_flintoff_pa300x245 Freddie Flintoff probably Englands most naturally talented cricketer for a generation has got himself into all sorts of problems from his widely reported drinking escapades at the cricket world cup.

This in turn has sparked off a debate about whither his losing the vice-captaincy and missing one game was an over reaction to this incident. There were the obligatory phone ins on Radio 5, with many callers saying that the authorities had overreacted.

I beg to differ with this view, for it bolsters the view that getting drunk is a socially acceptable thing to do. Yet the UK and Scotland in particular has a growing problem with alcohol. In 2004 there were 8,221 alcohol-related deaths in the UK, almost double the 1991 total of 4,144. That is a staggering rise in just 13 years! If the UK picture is bleak then the Scottish context is even worse. The area I live in, Glasgow, had the highest alcohol-related death rate among both men and women in 1998 - 2004. Fifteen of the 20 UK local areas with the highest male alcohol-related death rates were in Scotland, 14 of the top 20 for women. Two out of three 16 - 24 year old males in Scotland drank more than twice the recommended daily benchmarks [Scottish health survey 1998].

Getting drunk is no laughing matter, especially as for most people this is not an unforeseen consequence of a "good night out", but is the object of the night out as for many the attitude exists that unless you get drunk you cannot have a good time.

I hope Freddie is truly sorry, I hope he gets help as his over drinking seems to be a feature of his lifestyle. I hope he does not become crickets George Best. More than this I hope that as a nation we can change our relationship to alcohol.

REport on Alcohol Related Deaths    Health Stats Spring 2007   Stats on alcohol in Scotland     Binge Drinking Costing Billions

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Child Poverty

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Trident (again)

MP's will today participate in a vote on wither the UK should re-new it's Trident nuclear missle system.

It seems that there is a reasonable number of MP's who will vote against it's re-newal. I pray they will not loose their nerve, that God would add to their number that they would have a vision for a more just, less dangerous world.

update - the Government won the vote to replace Trident.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

IPod = insecure, Pressured, Overtaxed and Debt-ridden

Hat tip to Brad who highlights a Newweek article called, Europe's New Young Generation of Losers. The article outlines the growing rift and tension between those of the boomer generation and their kids. One paragraph in particular jumped out at me;

"Lacking well-paid jobs, the young have been thrown back on the generosity of their parents. That's fine for the middle class, but much worse for the poor. "Progress was once produced by the state; now it comes from family solidarity,"

The growing gap between the "haves" and "have not's" is something that greatly concerns me, but what to do? A while back I went to hear Tom Sine speak. He touched on many of the issues the Newsweek article does. His challenge to those of us there that day was to find Kingdom solutions to these problems. Yet so often the church undergirds the status quo rather than challenging it.