Lady of Burma

We watched Lady of Burma at the Hazlitt theatre last night – a gift from wonderful brother and sister in law, Andrew and Sarah.

Although I know the story of Aung San Suu Kyi fairly way I was moved to tears tonight as the sheer level of her pain and sacrifice were evident in a raw sense: the seperation from her husband and her boys in England, the pain of not being able to see her husband on his death bed, the mothers agony of seperation from her sons and grandchildren that she has never held, the anger at how her people are treated, the fear of the generals over this frail, vulnerable woman.

The bravery and commitment of Aung San Suu Kyi was conveyed in a powerful way which moved the audience to tears.

Today the Burma Campaign has added new companies to its dirty list – a list of comapanies that through their business fund the military junta of Burma that has held Aung sang under arrest for 12 years, the same junta that has murdered thousands of innocent people, the same junta that we saw only months ago beat and kill thousands of unarmed monks.

Please look at the list and avoid these companies that support this brutal regime.

Giant Propellors


On my way home from the chirpracter on Monday I got caught up in this.

Giant propellors for windmills are arriving at Chatham Docks and then travelling to Ronmey Marsh by road.

The sight was comical as I watched these giant blades slowly negotiating roundabouts. the photo is not that great as I took it with my phone – but it gives some idea of the size.

You can watch a news report here.

Greenwich Pilgrim

Good to see my good friend Jeremy blogging over at Greenwich Pilgrim.

Jeremy has been a great friend throughout SEITE and I think he is going to be sharing some exciting stuff as he develops new things on the Greenwich Peninsula.

Keep an eye on his blog!

Women bishops


We, lay members of the Church of England, call upon the House of Bishops wholeheartedly to support legislation for women bishops that is free from discrimination.

We are confident that acceptable non-statutory arrangements can be made for those who remain opposed to women’s ordained ministries.

We urge the bishops at General Synod strongly to support having women as bishops without further delay.

You can sign the petition (and in my opinion put right a massive injustice)here.

double yellow!


I’ve seen this in a few places and on a couple of emails recently.
It brought a smile to my face.

exploRE is the latest resource from YFC’s schools department – a 12-week programme of study to be used with students aged 11 to 14 within their RE lessons. It has been produced collaboratively with Youth Alpha to give young people a chance to explore some of the big questions of life within the classroom: questions such as does God exist? What does faith mean? Why is there suffering?

Its easy-to-use lesson plans make this an ideal resource for teachers, youth workers and church workers looking to engage with their local school … find out more here

Frustrated by Love

As a ‘good Anglican’ I try to follow Common Worship Daily Prayer in the morning. I say ‘try’ not out of weakness but out of a desire not to be tied to unnecessary guilt trips which Jesus actually freed us from.

I struggle with a particular prayer called ‘the collect’ which is a special prayer for the day. I guess I don’t fully understand the point but today’s hit me in a clearer way than normal:

Lord, you have taught us
that all our doings without love are nothing worth:
send your Holy Spirit
and pour into our hearts that most excellent gift of love,
the true bond of peace and of all virtues,
without which whoever lives is counted dead before you.
Grant this for your only Son Jesus Christ’s sake,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

Love over arches all we do as Christians. There seems to be a lot around ‘church’ at the moment of ‘love’ being sidelined and ‘possessing truth’ being the over arching attribute. I do not mean only the Anglican Communion here with the current sexuality discussion, but also the Roman Catholic church of which some priests will tell me that the catholic way is the only way, some free church who call the Roman Catholics a sect (which as the majority Christian denomination is difficult to see!).

Everyone wants to be right. More than that – actually it seems that some do not only wish to be right, but want to take delight in attempting to prove that others are wrong. Of course, while these discussions continue, those that need to be introduced to the loving, missional, trinitarian God miss out on the opportunity to do so, or steer clear because they see that those who already have a relationship with Christ can’t get on.

One of the reasons the church grew rapidly in Acts is that people liked what they saw and so the number grew daily. What they saw was radical acts of love and community. Even before that if we look at the disciples we see their people who would have initially hated each other able to exist in community (tax collector and zealot)

Lets stop trying to prove ourselves right, others wrong and get back to following Jesus …. let’s get back to love!

slow down and notice

Back from a relaxing holiday which was a bit wet on occasions but we don’t let a little thing like rain spoil time away.

We visited a few places … vineyards, Leeds Castle (thanks Jen and Paul!), travelled on a steam railway and generally laughed and marvelled at how the children are growing up.

It was a great experience traveling on the steam railway. The character of the coaches, the clunking of the doors, the springy seats, the slow ramble through the countryside all made the experience so much better. It caused us to think that not all that is new is necessarily better. Sometimes, slowing down and having the time to not only notice but enjoy the environment around you is a great experience.

If we never do that we miss out on so much.