
Death could not hold him: Easter, Hockney, and why Californians don’t really get the Spring
There’s really no need to fret about the timing of Easter being the result of the co-option of a pagan Spring festival (as some think
There’s really no need to fret about the timing of Easter being the result of the co-option of a pagan Spring festival (as some think
Love is never abrasive, destructive or cruel. But it can sometimes be straight and difficult. It may even be unpalatable. But that is the nature
Last Sunday, I was doing the next bit in our current little series on 2 Corinthians, and had the wonderful, and yet far too familiar
We actually took Epiphany quite seriously at All Souls this year – by which I mean we spent the first 2 Sunday mornings in January
It’s a given. Christians disagree. Like pretty much everyone else, in fact. They always have. They always will. This side of the eschaton, that is.
Last week saw the final instalment of the little 1 Cor 1 series in the undercroft chapel in Westminster. Unfortunately, we had the slight inconvenience
One or two have asked for this, so here it is: the first of 3 talks given in the gaudy riot of Pugin-inspired colour that
It just so happened that on the 10th Anniversary of 9/11, we had come to the second instalment off our romp through Revelation. And it
This is not hero-worship. Not only did Uncle John loathe the very idea of it, it is never constructive or edifying to indulge in it.
As Q regulars will know, Eugene Peterson’s Eat This Book – The Art of Spiritual Reading is a favourite. As part of BibleFresh (the 400th Anniversarycelebrations
It’s a word that gets used very lightly these days. It might besaid that Djokovic triumphed over Nadal on Sunday at Wimbledon. Or that Obama
This post’s title is of course the strapline that Christianity Explored, the course devised by my colleague Rico Tice at All Souls, has been using