Monday, January 29, 2007

A reminder of what we're missing

This is a great article - one of a series that asks "How can followers of Christ be counter-cultural for the common good?"

This is a really challenging article which has stayed with me - particularly the following section.


"It seems that for Daniel and his comrades, being a counterculture consisted of surprisingly small decisions—small acts of reorientation to remind them daily that in spite of their privileged status in the capital city of the world's most powerful empire, they belonged to another King and another kingdom."

and this section

Frederica and her family fast twice a week, a practice that goes back to the earliest Christian centuries and an ancient discipleship manual called the Didache. ....they observe this fast every Wednesday and Friday. It's not total abstinence from all food, but rather avoidance of foods that come from animals, whether meat, eggs, or dairy products... the "Daniel fast"—because it essentially replicates the diet Daniel and his friends adopted upon arrival in Babylon.

.... it is a twice-weekly reminder that we are in exile and that our use of animals for food is itself tainted with echoes of the Fall. The Daniel fast is not just a discipline to develop self-control and dependence on God; it is a reminder that the abundance we enjoy cannot, in this life, be entirely separated from the alienation we endure from God and from God's creatures. It is a small act of reorientation, a small act of exilic consciousness in the middle of every week.


I love that concept - small acts of reorientation.....

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Biggest popcorn EVER

Have you ever ordered popcorn in Gold Class?
Ridiculously biggest bowl ever!
There is no way anyone could eat it all!

Thursday, January 18, 2007

What's your story?

Ivan Illich was asked: What is the most radical way to change society? He said, "If you want to change society you have to tell an alternate story. Society runs upon a dominant story, what is plausible, credible, believable becomes that which we just accept as normal."

What story are you running upon?

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

A little less lost for words

Well, I'm still trying to process the situation below so don't have lots to share yet.

I have been trying to work out why I feel uncomfortable about this...

The Enlightenment decided "Man is the measure of all things" and I think this decision was made from such a perspective.

While we need to have compassion for the parents , "their poverty does not dictate the righteousness of their cause".

A course of action is not necessarily right just because it helps avoid or alleviate suffering.

hmmm, still thinking........

Friday, January 05, 2007

Currently lost for words....

Just read this article.... it'sabout a young disabled girl who has been 'frozen in time' by her parents.

What do you think?

Thursday, January 04, 2007

Are you ready for a relationship?

I just found this checklist which helps you work out if you are ready for a relationship....
Very handy indeed!

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

A well-articulated perspective

Ok - so some will agree and some won't, but I thought this quote, from a longer article here, was a very well-articulated argument, when reviewing the former President Carter's new book.

"Carter wants to do what's just. His heart's in the right place. He just can't figure out what the right is. He is, and always has been, a man of good intentions bereft of good judgment. He invariably finds himself defending tyrants and dictators at the expense of their oppressed peoples. Not because he is a bad man, but because he is a confused man.

"Carter subscribes to what I call the Always Root for the Underdog school of morality. Rather than develop any real understanding of a conflict, immediately he sides with the weaker party, however wicked or immoral.

"Israel has tanks and F-16's. The Palestinians don't. Therefore the Palestinians are being oppressed. Never mind that the Palestinians have rejected every offer to live side by side with Israel in peace and elected a government pledged to Israel's annihilation. Their poverty dictates the righteousness of their cause even if their actions speak otherwise."

That last sentence really struck me. I think it underscores so much of the way a large segment of the West makes decisions about everything. Having lost framework for determining right and wrong, it's all about a misguided 'compassion'. This applies to euthanasia, abortion etc etc etc