If you’re homeless, pray the Tories don’t win

People who took this at face value were startled by the first act of the Conservatives on assuming power ??? a crackdown on the homeless. They immediately sold off 12 homeless shelters, handing them to large property developers. The horrified charity Crisis was offered premises by the BBC to house the abandoned in a shelter over the Christmas period at least. The council refused permission. They said the homeless were a “law and order issue”, and a shelter would attract undesirables to the area. With this in mind, they changed the rules so that the homeless had to “prove” to a sceptical bureaucracy that they had nowhere else to go ??? and if they failed, they were turned away.

David Cameron calls this council a model of compassionate Conservatism. This article in The Independent tells a different story.

What does Churchill have to do with the BNP

Guy Halsall I received my lovely BNP election leaflet today, with Griffin’s horrifying mug juxtaposed with [for any BNP supporters reading this, that means ‘placed next to’] the only-slightly-less-frightening face of Winston himself. This makes me very angry. As an old socialist I don’t have much time for Churchill, outside his ‘finest hour’ in 1940-43 (which forgives a lot of sins) but still, as a professional, academic historian it makes me furious to see his image abused and history distorted in this way.

Why? Because in 1940, after the fall of France it would have been easy to make peace with Hitler. Hitler was very keen to make peace with Britain. And most of the Conservative Party (for all that they claimed Churchill as their patriotic poster boy in the 80s) and especially Lord Halifax, Churchill???s main rival for the leadership of the party, were against continuing the war. Many of them were on what is known as the ???white list??? that the Nazis had of British politicians whom they could get to work with them. Only a month or two before the German invasions of Norway and France, many had been in favour of sending an armed force to help Finland against the Soviets, even while in the middle of the war against Nazi Germany! They???d have been overjoyed to let Hitler get on with his campaign against the Bolsheviks. There are modern right-wing historians to this day who actually say that this is what Britain should have done (and to hell with the Jews etc., presumably). So, when Churchill was making his classic speeches in the House in the darkest days of 1940 the loudest cheers were on the Labour benches ??? after all, if the Nazis won they???d be up against a wall, so it???s hardly surprising even if it is forgotten. More bizarrely still, perhaps, at this point Churchill???s strongest ally on the (coalition, remember) War Cabinet was the labour legend, Aneurin Bevan.

Basically, then, Churchill in his finest hour was not ???defending Britain against Europe??? as the BNP (and UKIP, and the Tories) like to say; he was keeping Britain in War IN Europe, FOR Europe, FOR the principle that there were larger issues at stake in confronting the Nazis than petty nationalism. What Churchill was doing in the Battle of Britain and in the years afterwards was PRECISELY the OPPOSITE of what the BNP claim he was doing. They have NO claim to the mantle of Winston Churchill.

This matters to me immensely for many reasons. Please help get this message out there. Thank you.

I hope you don’t need any encouragement to despise the BNP – but this might help you to spread doubts about their election campaign if you ever need to.

A Moment of Truth | ???????? ??????

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This document is the Christian Palestinians??? word to the world about what is happening in Palestine. It is written at this time when we wanted to see the Glory of the grace of God in this land and in the sufferings of its people. In this spirit the document requests the international community to stand by the Palestinian people who have faced oppression, displacement, suffering and clear apartheid for more than six decades. The suffering continues while the international community silently looks on at the occupying State, Israel. Our word is a cry of hope, with love, prayer and faith in God. We address it first of all to ourselves and then to all the churches and Christians in the world, asking them to stand against injustice and apartheid, urging them to work for a just peace in our region, calling on them to revisit theologies that justify crimes perpetrated against our people and the dispossession of the land.

In this historic document, we Palestinian Christians declare that the military occupation of our land is a sin against God and humanity, and that any theology that legitimizes the occupation is far from Christian teachings because true Christian theology is a theology of love and solidarity with the oppressed, a call to justice and equality among peoples.

This document did not come about spontaneously, and it is not the result of a coincidence. It is not a theoretical theological study or a policy paper, but is rather a document of faith and work. Its importance stems from the sincere expression of the concerns of the people and their view of this moment in history we are living through. It seeks to be  prophetic in addressing things as they are without equivocation and with boldness, in addition it puts forward ending the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land and all forms of discrimination as the solution that will lead to a just and lasting peace. The document also demands that all peoples, political leaders and decision-makers put pressure on Israel and take legal measures in order to oblige its government to put an end to its oppression and disregard for the international law. The document also holds a clear position that non-violent resistance to this injustice is a right and duty for all Palestinians including Christians.

The initiators of this document have been working on it for more than a year, in prayer and discussion, guided by their faith in God and their love for their people, accepting advice from many friends: Palestinians, Arabs and those from the wider international community. We are grateful to our friends for their solidarity with us.

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Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, general secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC) invited the Asian churches to respond to the Kairos document and to stand against injustice, violence and occupation.

Holy Week in Jerusalem & Israeli restrictions

Click here to read the ‘Moment of Truth’ document

Watch the Kairos Palestine Launch – 11 December 2009 (Arabic):

A plea for Churches in the west (among many others)to stand alongside our Christian family in Palestine suffering under the oppression on Israel.

Launching Chinese Lanterns

Launchpad at the rear of Claremont Terrace, York. The gentle breeze carried them over the school playing fields toward the cricket pitch at Bootham Park Hospital.
I was invited to name the last one. So Alice lifted gently onto the air just like the rest and disappeared from sight a few minutes later. The occassion? None apparently. Just for fun.

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What God looks like

Hamish Fyfe: ???I remember being in a classroom in Northern Ireland where the children were drawing. I noticed one little girl of about seven and asked her what she was drawing. ???I???m doing a drawing of God??? she said. I said I thought that was interesting since a lot of people didn???t really know what God looked like. ???Oh???, she said, ???that???s alright, they will in a minute???.???

A little child shall lead them.

Snowblog – A story of unbroken Britain

I had volcanic ash on my mind and electoral issues in my brain as I cycled into work.

Went to the cleaners next to my office, collecting my best suit and four shirts, picking up my tub of porridge in the same stop. Parked my bike on one of the hoops outside our studios and, with the phone in one ear and the porridge and brief case in the other hand, went in to work.

It was a full-on day, trying to crack the ???air traffic??? story and trying to work out where the themes were in the electoral tussle. After a more than usually ???live??? Channel 4 News, I went into my little office to pick up my cycle gear and one of the shirts for the morrow.

No shirts. No suit. My God! I???d left the cleaning ??? that best suit, dangling from the handlebars in a plastic laundry bag, on the street outside eleven hours earlier.

Dashed upstairs and out onto the darkened street. I was already late for the cinema – I Am Love (stunning Tilda Swinton Italian film). No cleaning. But a little green ???post-it??? stuck to my crossbar with added Selotape. ???I have put your cleaning in reception???. Went back in. Sure enough, it was safely in amongst the lost property.

The suit had cost me ??800 ??? hand made to fit my elongated frame. The shirts weren???t cheap either. One, a fabulous Ted Baker horizontally thin blue striped on whet ??? absolute favourite, never found another to match it. All present and correct.

Broken Britain? Sure, collectively, we lose a bicycle every fortnight or so from those hoops. Sure, it???s an urban maelstrom of commuting and lingering. But this was volunteer Britain, caring, decent Britain ??? self denying Britain in which no clue was left as to who the generous hearted passer-by was.

I am in email dialogue with a ???concerned??? viewer who winges at me about the decaying use of English, and broken Britain. He???s wrong. There???s a country out there we ignore. A country of decent people who already pull together more than  any elected politician knows.

Is there slack? Is there more we could do? Of course. But every day, many, many thousands of people do many thousands of deeds of which few know, and for which few ever thank.

Well, thank YOU small green post-it writer. Would that I could do the same for you.

 

It’s good to read that there’s still honest goodwill in the hearts of British people – I never doubted but there’s a guy called David who still needs convincing. The ballot box would be a good place to demonstrate to him your goodwill towards others – by voting in someone who believes it’s already being mended.

John Sentamu I know but who is Ken?

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The lectionary readings for last Sunday included the account of Saul???s calling in Acts chapter 9. It???s a dramatic story that most of us know well and features one of the most important characters in the New Testament, a man that changed the face of Christianity and was utterly vital in God???s plan for the world ??? that???s right Ananias! It???s easy to overlook some of those characters that occupy the bit parts and supporting roles in the Bible but they really are so important. If Ananias had not been faithful, if he had not been listening to God and brave enough to believe then who knows what would have happened to Paul???s ministry. No doubt God would have still worked out his great plan but it???s important to remember that it???s not about a few people who do great things and grab all the headlines (as important as those people are). It is part of God???s amazing grace that he chooses to use a myriad of ordinary people to help achieve extraordinary things. Just before Easter I went to the funeral of a lovely man named Ken. Ken and his wife were faithful members of a small Cheshire chapel that I preach at occasionally. They were always so encouraging to me as a young preacher, so kind and so interesting to talk to but I confess I only had a few brief conversations after services and did not know them that well.

Ken???s funeral took place on an ordinary Friday in a small church not far from the chapel but the address was given by The Most Reverend and Right Honourable Dr John Sentamu, Archbishop of York, a man who for many represents the best thing to have happened to the Church of England for a good while. Ken had been chief engineer in Uganda for 11 years during which he opened his house to many young people who needed support or lodgings. One of those young men was John Sentamu who lodged with Ken for 6 years. At his funeral on that spring Friday in Cheshire the Archbishop got into the pulpit and said if it had not been for Ken he would have dropped out of school and probably would not even be a Christian! As their friendship grew John and Ken began leading a youth group for Ugandan young people that welcomed 300 every night! On the face of it, Ken may not have seemed very spectacular; his obituary will not be in any national Newspaper. He simply lived a good life shaped by a passionate belief in the transforming love of God and he allowed God to use all his gifts for His Glory. And how God used him. We do not know what God has in store for us. God may want some of us to be a Paul or a John but I know he wants all of us to be Ananias and Ken. David Waters

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