The Story

The story

 

This morning I finished ‘The Story’: Luke’s ‘epic journey with Jesus, the Son of God, and his first followers’.  A great new presentation of the gospel of Luke and the Acts of the apostles.  Engaging, inspiring, thought-provoking, puzzling. Some of my thoughts: I hadn’t previously noticed the strong connection in Luke’s gospel between Jesus and his cousin John.  The links and contrast appear right from the opening chapter, then keep cropping up all the way through.  John: repentance, austerity, preparation; Jesus: celebration, healing, a new way of living, God’s kingdom starting.

 

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Ein Brief an meine Tochter

Liebe Esther,

Letztes Jahr schrieb ich ein Buch für und mit Deinem Bruder. Die Initialzündung kam, wie Du weisst, durch seinen Entschluss, auf dem Einrad von Coventry nach Bristol zu fahren und dass ich ihn begleiten sollte. Etliche Tage und einige hundert Meilen später habe ich einiges über Joe erfahren und über mich selber. Es machte mich nachdenklich. Ich hatte bereits fünfzehn Jahre mit ihm verbracht, aber es brauchte etwas Ausserordentliches um mich zum Schreiben zu inspirieren.

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Werdet Kinder: Vorwort

A good Swiss friend of mine, André Burgunder, has kindly taken it upon himself to translate Growing up to be a child into German. Here is the foreword, with more to follow in due course. I hope my German-speaking friends will enjoy the book and find it inspiring reading it in their own language.

 

Vorwort

Im August 2011 wurde meine Tochter Esther neunzehn Jahre alt und verliess unser Zuhause, um ein Jahr in der Industrie zu arbeiten, bevor sie ihr Ingenieurstudium an der Universität begann. Das war nur eines von vielen Ereignissen, die in schneller Abfolge auf mich zukamen und einen tiefen Einschnitt in mein Leben bedeuteten.book

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Learning To Listen: To Young People, Parents, Perpetrators

I dont matildawant to talk about it Its too horrible. But in the end I became so frightened of her I used to start shaking when she came into the room.
So said Matildas teacher, Miss Honey, in Roald Dahls classic childrens book (Dahl and Blake, 1989, p. 198). In a simple childrens story, Dahl poignantly captures just how difcult young people (and adults) nd it to talk about the abuse they experience:
I have found it impossible to talk to anyone about my problems. I couldnt face the embarrassment, and anyway I lack the courage. Any courage I had was knocked out of me when I was young (p. 195).
The reality of that is captured in the rst paper in the latest issue of Child Abuse Review. In a review of research on disclosure of child sexual abuse, Rosaleen McElvaney (2015) highlights both quantitative data on the prevalence of non-disclosure and delays in disclosure, and qualitative data exploring the complexity and individuality of issues around disclosure. McElvaney concludes that signicant numbers of children do not disclose experiences of sexual abuse until adulthood and adult survey results suggest that signicant proportions of adults have never disclosed such abuse (p. 161)

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Dear Pope Francis

I may not, strictly speaking, count myself laudato-si-enone of your ‘flock’. Nevertheless, I thought I would write a response to your recent Encyclical Letter, Laudato Si’[1]. I do this for three reasons: first, because you have addressed this Encyclical not just to members of the Roman Catholic Church, but to ‘every living person on the planet’; second, because the issues you touch on in your Encyclical are so crucial to the wellbeing, hope and survival of our planet – as you put it, we need to ‘acknowledge the appeal, immensity and urgency of the challenge we face’; and finally, because I see, in the clear links you make between care for creation, social justice, and personal spirituality and lifestyle, a strong resonance with my own journey of discovery.

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Child Abuse Review Impact Factor

cover 24_1 I am delighted to report that we have just received news of the 2014 Thomson Reuters journal citation report, and the Impact Factor for Child Abuse Review has risen from 0.787 to 0.841. This represents the fourth successive rise and an increase of 51% from our 2011 Impact Factor. We are ranked 18 out of 40 journals in both the social work and family studies fields.

While the Impact Factor has its limitations, it does affirm that Child Abuse Review is increasingly being recognised as a high quality scientific journal publishing good papers which are being cited elsewhere.

Perhaps of more importance, though not reflected in the Impact Factor, the feedback we get from both researchers and practitioners is that Child Abuse Review is perceived as an accessible journal which is of relevance to front-line workers as well as academics, and the material we publish does impact on evidence-informed practice to protect children.

Grey

This morning, in our reflections, Lois and I were using a practice called Terra Divina which we came across in Ian Adams’ helpful book, Running over rocks. Adams encourages us to pause and contemplate the natural world around us, to ‘read the text of the landscape. [This is] like reading a book, except now it’s another language that you are reading – of clouds and birds and trees and sunlight.’ We seek whatever catches our attention and accept that as a gift.

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As I looked out of our window on the damp summer morning, I was drawn to the flat, grey sky beyond the trees. All was dull, shallow, grey. There were none of the usual dawn colours of the sky; none of the depth of blues and golds and pinks. The trees were lacking their usual green vibrancy. Even the birds were muted in their morning symphony of praise.

As I lingered with the greyness, I thought of the young couple I visited yesterday evening. For them this morning will bring no leaping green trees, no blue dream of sky[1]. Just the dull reality of life without their little baby; the steady trickle of rain and tears; grey.

I trust that, one day, hints of colour might start to creep back into their lives. But for now, all I can do is hold them in my thoughts in the grey of this day.

 

Kyrie Eleison

 

 

[1] From ‘I thank you God for this most amazing day’, Chapel of Tarore Songbook, Ngatiawa River Monsatery

In the footsteps of a carpenter

We Hikinghave just returned from a weekend celebrating my father’s 80th birthday.  A truly wonderful occasion for an amazing man.  Those 80 years have taken him from the rural idyll of a childhood in Sussex, to 18 exciting years in Hong Kong, urban ministry in Gravesend, and the stillness of the Acorn Healing Trust in Hampshire before further spells in Hong Kong and eventual retirement in the equally idyllic Buckinghamshire countryside.

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