So what is this new blog for? After several months of worthy blogging about ecumenism, I am finding the constraints do not allow me to write on certain topics. So here is a new blog which will:
Ask questions. So What? is one of them. We live in a world where public statements seem increasingly bizarre. If they’re not wrapped up in jargon they are redolent with unspoken assumptions. Politicians, church leaders, the media - they all do it. So what are they actually saying? Who benefits? Who loses out?
Local and global perspectives. The world of a half-employed, aging radical:
- My place is perhaps called Pitsmoor, a multi-cultural, cosmopolitan, highly contentious inner city area of Sheffield, England ...
- My faith is Methodism - a branch of Christianity specially set aside for genteel eccentrics.
- My politics are Green with a reddish tinge perhaps – sadly red is the new blue these days ...
- My profession is development work in community, in and between churches, anywhere that will put up with me ...
- A one-time scientist - doctoral thesis about activated sludge since you ask - and I'm not going to blog about it ... this background does inform my views on the great atheist / theist debate - there's something to look forward to ...
- My music is classical opera, jazz and anything that appeals to me ... there will be videos!
- My prejudices include (in no particular order) trainers, political extremists of all hues, fundamentalists, people who don’t look where they’re going – are these really prejudices? – I’ve been around long enough to know what they’re like.
We’re all in denial. The world we have lived in for the last 20-30 years, maybe my whole life (so make that 55 years), is coming to an end. (I'm not talking about the end of time but of our modern oil dependent civilisation.) Are we all suffering cognitive dissonance? Still, it goes against my instincts to be censorious. We’re all in this together and even Methodists are playing their small part to screw up the planet. Essentially we are living through absurd times and it falls to me and others to point out we're all rowing the same boat to oblivion, whatever direction we're rowing in.
So, I will point out the absurd. I don’t want to laugh at people so much as point out the sense we have all been caught with our hand in the cookie jar (or biscuit barrel in English English).
Some will think all this has been said before. They would be right, here is one example, (I love the rhyme for ICBM):
Hi Chris
Here I am on your blog. I thoroughly agree with you.
Best wishes
Kay from Stoke
Posted by: Kay Davies | Saturday, 29 August 2009 at 08:14 PM