Category Archive for 'thoughts'

Burma’s Big Brother

Jono gives us a glimpse into a book he’s reading at the moment, which is about the influence of Burma’s police state politics on George Orwell.

I’ve read Burmese Days by Orwell, which is a fictional novel based on his experiences as a colonial policeman in Burma. I loved it, but I don’t remember seeing [...]

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A Sobering View of Feminism

This article by the daughter of Alice Walker, who wrote The Color Purple, is a refreshing secular attack on the destructive anti-family, anti-responsibility ideology of some forms of feminism.

H/t Craig.

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If you’ve read anything much on this site, you will know how much we love our girl and what a blessing she is to us.

That being said, I’ve been wondering why two days paid work a week seems easy and rewarding and the days as “all mum” seem much more exhausting and leave me feeling [...]

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Self-Control

I’ve often wondered about the relationship between the secular study of behaviour and conditioning on the one hand, and the work of the Spirit in shaping us on the other. Self-control is an example of something that it seems you can train yourself into, using certain techniques. We know that God uses all kinds of [...]

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Dealing with Lust

I’m talking about Tech Lust. It’s insidious. Phillip Jensen spoke this week at KYLC on various -isms, one of which was materialism (I’m missing tomorrow’s talk on consumerism, which is a real shame). He pointed out how thoroughly materialist (in both the philosophical and economic senses) our society is. It’s so much a part of [...]

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Hell is…

… going to a shopping centre, around this time of year, and striking out on everything you were hoping to get. Borders doesn’t have this, Myer doesn’t have that, Howard’s Storage World is still a royal rip. I wonder whether a good part of one’s day, in hell, consists of long, fruitless pacing of a [...]

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Mark Baddeley on Creationism

Okay, I realise I’m a week late on this, but it’s good stuff, and many may have missed Mark’s thinking. Mark is a former student and lecturer of Moore College, currently studying for his Ph D. at Oxford. He’s a smart cookie and he learned me some good doctrine and church history before he [...]

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Dreaming

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Hans Rosling and World Health

TED is an annual conference in California for leading industry people in tech and design (mainly).* It’s a fascinating look into the lives of people who are using their skills (sometimes very esoteric ones) to contribute to humanity.Sometimes the contribution is profound and global. One of the contributors this year was Hans Rosling (blog), who [...]

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Alistair McGrath on Richard Dawkins

Dawkins’ documentary The Root of All Evil is screening in Australia at the moment, and this short article from Alistair McGrath popped up the other day.

McGrath is evangelical Christianity’s point man in dealing with Dawkins and I’m glad he’s on it, because he can see through Dawkin’s dogma in a way that many of [...]

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“Meaningless! Meaningless!” says the Teacher. “Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless”. So writes the author of Ecclesiastes. It’s a sombre book, and pretty sobering - to put it mildly. If this was the only revelation of God’s I’d be most depressed. Maybe that’s because I live in a time where there’s so much effort made to [...]

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Around the Web

Some interesting things I’ve stumbled upon in the last few days…

Eins: Apparently Evel Knievel has become a follower of Jesus Christ. After he told everyone at Crystal Cathedral, Orange Country, California, that he’d turned to the Lord, there were mass baptisms - five pastors were baptising as fast as they could and it took them [...]

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