Thursday, 17 April 2008

Sunday Life









This Sunday at 10am a new weekly religious programme begins on BBC1. "Sunday Life" is presented by Louise Minchin and former Olympic athlete Colin Jackson.

It aims to profile inspiring personal stories and provide thought-provoking discussion. On this first show Gill Hicks, who lost both legs in the 7/7 bombings, launches a walk for peace. Plus, actress Georgia Slowe, whose mother had a miraculous escape from the Nazis, visits Auschwitz with British schoolchildren.

Future programmes will feature Arthur White from Tough Talk and St Pixels virtual church.

My PVR is set to record the whole series. No idea whether it will be worth watching, but I do want to know what is being broadcast and how it might impact public perceptions of religion. I'm not religious myself, as they say, but still.

If you have any inspiring or perhaps quirky stories let me know. I'll suggest them to the programme makers.

Tuesday, 8 April 2008

Fanning the flames

In a few weeks’ time it will be Pentecost and a new way to celebrate starts this year: Pentecost Festival - www.pentecostfestival.co.uk - organized by Share Jesus International. Over the weekend 9th-11th May 2008 this high energy missional festival will be hitting the streets of Central London – a fitting place for this particular celebration given the wonderfully cosmopolitan make-up of 21st century London.

This weekend-long party is a visible celebration by the people of the Christian faith, but is open to all faiths and cultures. Two years in the making, Pentecost Festival will celebrate cohesion, collaboration and service to society, and deliver 100+ free events from urban-dance performances, theatre productions and graffiti artists through to speed-dating and more! The idea is to break misconceptions about Church as boring, cold and with no life or creativity, by bringing the Church body out of the building and into the streets to celebrate.

This fits nicely with the ethos of Hope 2008 to which the festival is linked. Hope ‘08 aims to celebrate at Pentecost too, by getting Christians all over the country joining together to give one million hours of practical help to their communities.

This theme of ‘living the Gospel’ will also be picked up by www.hopeinfo.co.uk – the online public face of Hope ‘08. The website will feature a new film highlighting Christians making a difference in the lives of others, based around the parable of the sheep and the goats from Matthew 25: 'Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?'

Sunday, 16 March 2008

Over half of Britons believe Jesus rose from the dead

New research from Theos indicates that more than half of us here in the UK believe that Jesus rose from the dead. But only half of those (~30% of the total sample) accept the traditional Christian belief in the bodily resurrection of Christ and the rest (27%) believe that Jesus rose in spirit form.

If the research is accurate - and there is no reason to think it not - I wonder how these millions of people will react to The Passion, the BBC's new production about the last week in Jesus' life.

Well, we'll start finding out from this Palm Sunday evening, when the first episode of four airs. The final episode is on Easter Sunday, with the two and a half hours of the preceeding episodes repeated beforehand.

With a number of resurrection appearances, the final episode is sure to drive many a conversation across the country about the possibility of life after death.

At the same time, the HopeInfo.co.uk website - the online public face of Hope 2008 - releases a new film of its own dealing with the question of life after death. It includes vox pops filmed recently in which people give their reactions to questions about death.

Monday, 3 March 2008

Poverty and Justice Bible

Bible Society have launched The Poverty and Justice Bible, a new resource that (literally) highlights verses in the Bible that show what it has to say about poverty and justice.

Find out more about this new version of the Bible at www.povertyandjusticebible.org/

This Contemporary English Version translation could well be a helpful resource for people who care deeply about the extreme suffering in the world and can't reconcile that with the existence of a loving God.