Friday, November 11, 2011

The Tay - Perth

A walk in to town to buy some food for the family meal, earlier this week. Rather than walk along by the main road, I took the riverside path. The low-light made the whole Tay look like an oil-painting, while close up, the water powered over the causeway to the island. Click on the images to see them properly.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Boom & Flash!

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Berries

Woah, Phil - I see what you mean about that depth of field thing....

Watersilk

Down by the riverside..

4 Ways to help The Persecuted Church


This week along with thousands of others, our church has marked the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church. However, we are called to accompany our prayers with action. In fact, successful action is always built on prayer. Prayerful action on behalf of the persecuted church can be highly effective. Here are 4 suggestions of ways in which you can get involved. These can be used by individuals, families, housegroups, or amongst friends.


1) Pray for a persecuted church leader and then send them a Christmas card to assure them that they haven’t been forgotten. Details of how to do this, and a downloadable directory of addresses are here: http://goo.gl/lmpQy


2) Sign a petition to pressure Western governments to raise human rights issues in their dealings with countries where abuses occur. The “No Way Out” petition for religious freedom in Egypt is online here: http://goo.gl/L9EOU


3) Write a campaigning letter to someone responsible for mistreatment of Christians. In many cases, officials lack the courage to enforce the freedoms which their country’s law provides for freedom of worship. Letters can embolden them to act justly. Follow this link for details of how to write to the Mayor of Bogor, Indonesia, urging him to allow the re-opening of church-premises there. http://goo.gl/eopRn


4) Send a gift to support to Christians suffering for their faith. Specific gifts are available for purchase online and include: (i) a day of provision for refugee children in Burma for £5, (ii) a day of training in documenting human rights abuses for the churches in Columbia, for £5, (iii) pay for a phone call to be made to an illegally imprisoned Cuban pastor for £15, (iv) pay for Christmas cards to be sent to 40 widows of murdered pastors in Columbia for £10. Follow the link http://goo.gl/Cf15p


Dr Garcia Paneque was held in Cuban jails for many years, during which he was featured in Christian Solidarity Worldwide’s letter-writing campaigns. Now in exile in Spain he writes: "You cannot imagine the value of a postcard sent to someone in my situation, and thanks to God, it’s like a message from a Father who never abandons his children, not even in the worst of moments. This is how the postcards, sent from the UK, made me feel." This is valuable work.

Wednesday, November 09, 2011

Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Tree in the Park


Edinburgh Road

A street in Perth

Book Notes: Raven's Gate by Anthony Horowitz

Our family have been big fans of Anthony Horowitz for a long time. I remember reading all the brilliant Alex Rider series (If you don't know - think a reluctant schoolboy James Bond) with my boys before they were old enough to read them themselves. We loved the way in which the main protagonist bravely fought evil, but was also slightly cynical and questioning towards the government and secret agents who controlled him. The action scenes are fast and gripping, the characters nicely drawn and the villains worthy of great Bond-films.

Having finished the last Alex Rider we moved on and bought this, the first in a new series of five books. The hero in the "Power of Five", Matt Freeman shares a lot in common with Alex Rider, an orphan, who didn't chose his role as super-hero, but is vulnerable despite his amazing abilities. In the characters and relationships, and vivid action scenes, Horowitz has clearly re-worked the winning Ryder formula for this series.

The differences between the two series though are enormous. Alex Ryder inhabits a world of villains, organised criminals, corrupt politicians and double-crossing assassins. Matt Freeman's battles take place in the context of demons, devils, evil-rituals, ancient curses and dark forces. Much of this is good suspense-filled storytelling, with secret societies and bizarre inexplicable events taking place. However, the end of this book becomes very dark and sinister indeed. While Horowitz never deliberately seeks to blur the lines between good and evil, and we always left with the hope that good will triumph - the details of Black Sabbaths, Satanic Masses, and human sacrifices were actually quite disturbing. I would imagine that many a sensitive child could be terrified by the mental images found in this book - I certainly won't be reading it next to my kids. I don't know what Horowitz own spiritual beliefs are; my guess is that doesn't believe in supernatural or personal evil - but knows how to write well and evoke moods powerfully. However, I do believe in such things, which would make me even more reticent to let my kids start this new series.

Overall - I was disappointed. I was really looking forward to another rip-roaring adventure, rather than such a disturbing display of the sinister.

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Ceiling...

I'm sure it didn't used to look like this.....

The "Parenting Children Course" (week 2)

Last night we completed the second week of Alpha's new "Parenting Children Course." While week-one had a lot of introductory material, in week 2 the course really felt as if it got going. We learnt a lot last night, and were really made to think, but came away encouraged to try and continue to improve what we do for our three.

Session two is based on Gary Chapman's ideas about "Love Languages"; which feature so usefully on The Marriage Course. The essence of his book is that love is communicated in five ways, (words, time, touch, presents, and kind actions) but that each person responds to these in differently. So, while one person may respond deeply to verbal affirmation, the same words may leave another person unmoved. In marriage it is often noted that people usually marry someone quite different to themselves, which means that to communicate love to them effectively requires them to discover, learn, and practice their spouse's 'language'. The obvious example is a person who grew up in a very austere "stiff-upper-lip" family, but finds themselves married to a person who needs verbal affirmation. They will have an awkward embarrassment to overcome in order to communicate love effectively to their spouse - but it is a skill that can be learnt. Incidentally the converse also applies, someone bombarding their spouse with verbal affirmation when they are married to someone whose primary language is time or touch, won't communicate love, merely irritate.

While the concept of "Love Languages" was something we had previously thought about in terms of marriage - we had never previously taken those ideas and related them to parenting. Chapman himself teamed up with noted child development expert Ross Campbell, to write a follow-up to his "Love Languages" book, entitled, "The 5 Love Languages for Children". Last night's DVD gave a really useful summary of what it means to children to experience love in all five of these ways.

The following discussion time was interesting too. The questions asked us to think about what we valued most about the parenting we had received when we were young, (it was amazing how high a % of the parents present said, "time"). Then we were asked to consider our own children and think about what really makes them happy. It was interesting to note that our three children (while they need all five things), are quite different when it comes to what they need most. We realised that we have been far too reactive in this area and not pro-active enough at all, which means that we have got some practical things to implement immediately. One example is that we identified that one of our children has a particular need to have some one-on-one parent-child time every week. I think this will be important for us.

Week one of the Parenting Course was met with a mixed response from our kids. They liked the idea of a family night, but were not so enamoured with the organised limits on TV/PC time that were introduced. It will be interesting to see what they make of week 2, as while (I hope) they will grow in their sense of being loved and valued by us, there was also a section on sharing household chores and getting the children to take on age-appropriate responsibilities!

Next week we go to look at discipline/setting boundaries...

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

The Parenting Children Course (week 1)

Having previously gained a huge amount by doing Alpha's "Marriage Course", we we intrigued when the same folks published some parenting materials. We had a brief taster of the course at a conference at our church last month - and were impressed by what we saw, so impressed in fact that we bought the DVDs that day and resolved to try out the course. It's taken a few weeks longer than we had anticipated, but we have managed to assemble a small group of other parents - and we met for the first time last week and ran through week one of the five-session course.

The evening began with a DVD, on which authors/presenters Nicky and Sila Lee introduced the course, and prompted us to think about some of the key issues involved in parenting 0-11 year olds. Their presentation was a mixture of their own experiences and research into child development, but was regularly interspersed with filmed clips from various experts - as well as interviews with both parents and children.


On the first week we were challenged about several aspects of the way in which we do parenting. These included time priorities in terms of our interaction with each of the children; the benefits of 'family time' and positive routines, as well as the recommended limits on the amount of TV/PC/Wii (etc) time that are appropriate for different age-groups. Research about minimum sleep requirements at different stages was also mentioned. Along with this there was some good stuff about the priority of modelling good relationships, especially between parents; coupled with the need to keep a united front and consistent line in keeping boundaries for behaviour. The thing which really grabbed our attention though was the suggestion that we consider keeping the long view in mind at all times, in terms of the kind of person we hope our child will be when he/she is an adult, and how they will remember our home in 20 years time. This was welded to the very searching assertion that the most powerful factor in shaping our children's values, is not our words, but their long-term observation of our characters and behaviour!

The Parenting Course DVD's are much more directive in their tone than the Marriage Course DVDs (despite being written and presented by the same people). The Marriage DVDs are pitched more in the language of 'which solution here will work for your marriage' (etc), while on the Parenting stuff the tone is more, 'all the research shows that exceeding these limits for TV consumption is bad for your child', for example.

Like the Marriage Course, there is also the opportunity to discuss the issues raised in the DVDs, using questions found in the course manual. Unlike the Marriage Course in which discussion is strictly private and takes place only between spouses - there is some group discussion on the parenting course. This was great, as it was fascinating to listen to other parents who are facing similar challenges - as well as to contrast experiences too.

Next week we go on to think about 'meeting our children's needs', followed by some stuff of boundaries and discipline the following week. We're looking forward to it - but first we have some "homework" to do - implementing some of the lessons from week one!

Monday, October 31, 2011

Book Notes: The Language of God by Francis S. Collins

Francis S. Collins will be remembered as a significant figure in late 20thC/early 21stC science, and his name will forever be associated with the sequencing of the human genome - a project he took over in its infancy and saw through to completion.

Virtually all Collins' publications have been in scientific, medical and genetic research - except this one which is quite different. In the works of contemporary writers there is often an assumption that science and faith are inherently opposed to one another; this perceived tension comes both from atheistic scientists as well as creationists. Dawkins, of course, describes these categories as 'smarts' versus 'faith-heads' arguing that scientific understanding and intelligence is directly associated with an absence of faith. In short, atheists like him are clever and scientific while 'faith-heads' are unscientific simpletons. Collins has written this short and very straightforward book to directly refute such claims - not least by saying that all his scientific achievements have not eroded his faith in God; but rather led to his renunciation of atheism! Indeed he goes as far as describing his research as an act of worship!

But it is not only materialists who Collins confronts in his book. He is as scathing of so-called 'creation-science' as it is perhaps possible to be; and he calls on believers to encounter science on its own terms, rather than manipulate the data to fit their theological pre-conceptions. As he does so, he is sensitive to the charge that he is 'watering down' faith, that is retreating from solid Biblical theology in the wake of Darwin. In response to this obvious accusation he refers the reader to the hermeneutical debates about the Genesis narratives which date back at least as far as St Augustine (who didn't hold to literal young-earth creationism), who can hardly be accused of post-Darwin compromise! Science, for Collins, has helped believers see which ancient hermeneutical approach to those ancient texts is most appropriate. In Collins' view then, it is so-called creationism which has allowed scientific discoveries to shape their agenda, in that the burgeoning 'creationist' movement is a regrettable anti-reaction to Darwin, which has lead too many people of faith into an anti-scientific mindset.

'The Language of God' is Collins' attempt to call scientists to drop the idea that science can provide answers to the philosophical and theological questions of existence, for which its tools are totally useless. Likewise he calls on believers to retreat from the 'intellectual suicide' (sic) of expecting to derive scientific data from pre-scientific texts by using the poor tools of literalistic hermeneutics. He pauses for a few moments to consider Intelligent Design (ID) in his discussion, and is at least willing to consider it on its scientific attributes - only to rather witheringly dismiss it as bad-science, carrying all the flaws of earlier "God-of-the-gaps" theories, albeit with more sophistication. His preferred option, in his theistic-evolutionary perspective, is for a God-guided "fine-tuned" universe - designed specifically to facilitate the development of life. His basic description of this process is fascinating, and even exciting reading - accessible to a non-scientist like me.

Into this mix Collins also describes his own journey from atheism to faith, which took place in the company of his burgeoning scientific career and the writings of C.S. Lewis. Alongside some personal subjective spiritual experiences which he is happy to describe and hold up for the derision of atheists, he also refers to the arguments which for him were conclusive in his questions about theism. He hangs great weight on the persistence of altruism in the face of an inherently 'selfish' evolutionary system and his perception of a virtually-universal moral law. The story of the decoding of the genome, and some reflections on the possibilities for medical science, as well as some discussion on the ethical dilemmas it has produced conclude the book.

One of the remarkable things about this book is how straightforward it is. Collins has not waded deeply into philosophy, or Christian apologetics; neither has he written a book of such scientific technical density that it is out of the grasp of the lay-reader. Rather he has laid out his way of synthesising the mind and the spirit (to use that clumsy terminology) giving a helpful overview of both sides of the equation. Music, argues Collins, is something profoundly moving which can connect human beings in a deep, almost spiritual way, with its beauty, melancholy or joy. To measure music as being merely quantifiable vibrations in the air - is absolutely accurate, but misses their greater significance. Collins - from the viewpoint of the very pinnacle of contemporary scientific endeavour, argues that to forward a purely scientific and atheist account of the universe and the origins of life does exactly that; not merely to a tune, but to absolutely everything. Ultimately, in this I think he is persuasive.

Monday, October 24, 2011

The view from Merlet

When the ladies in our group decided to make a concerted foray into the world of gender stereotyping, and waste a whole day of their lives in the shopping centre..... the boys mirrored their approach and fled in the opposite direction.
The Merlet road climbs in a series of zig-zag bends, high up the side of the valley above Chamonix, on the opposite side to the Aiguille Du Midi and Mont Blanc. The road terminates at a zoo (which was shut), but car-parks en route provide spectacular walks, airy viewpoints and countless photo opportunities.
Most importantly of course, they weren't at the shops. This is important because shops are evil and must be avoided.
All of these pictures are best viewed in their full-size - click on an image to enlarge it.

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Aigulle Du Midi

It's been over two decades since I first took the cable car up from Chamonix to the stunning viewpoint in the Mont Blanc range, known as the Aiguille Du Midi. At over twelve and half thousand feet above sea-level, the air is noticeably thin - and climbing the steps up to the cafe oddly exhausting. Last time I was there, it was part of a Geography trip, on which we got to poke around with real live glaciers for our A-level coursework. I remember some of my friends trying in vain to get their cigarettes to stay lit in the low-Oxygen environment - and geomorphology lectures at the summit.

The Aiguille Du Midi is one of those places that presses itself in upon the senses with delicious pressure, leaving a deep impression on the memory. It is a place about which I have spoken to my family before - but only very recently have visited with them. While some memories from childhood expand in the mind to the point where re-living couldn't fail to disappoint - The Aiguille Du Midi managed to surpass even the rose-tinted memories of youth.
The first day or so of our holiday had been cloudy, but as we sailed skywards on the cables, the sun lit up the whole mountain range from a brilliant blue sky. Absolutely stunning - in every direction.
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