culture watch
Experiencing loss
James Paul
I recently listened to a wonderful talk by the poet Malcolm Guite in which he explores these lines from A Midsummer Night’s Dream: ‘The poet’s eye, in fine frenzy rolling / doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven / as imagination bodies forth the form of things unknown.’
Shakespeare is calling our attention to the way the artistic imagination can give shape and form to things ‘unknown’, so that earth and heaven, the temporal and eternal, matter and meaning, are connected. These words were rolling around my mind as I watched two films which explore the experience of loss from the inside out.
Living with Alzheimer’s – a love story
By Robin Thomson
What is the most important thing we can do for the person living with Alzheimer’s, or other kinds of dementia? It’s easy to feel powerless or uncomfortable. ‘I don’t go to visit my grandmother in her care home,’ a young friend told me. ‘I don’t know how I can relate to her or help her.’
Seven days: seven deaths in my church
Iain Taylor
22million cases. Almost 250,000 deaths. Funeral pyres burning in car parks. And, most recently, the partially-burned bodies of 40 people or more washed up on the banks of the ‘sacred’ River Ganges. These are the terrifying numbers and distressing scenes we have seen on our TV screens as the Covid disaster in India has unfolded.
But how are churches in India responding to this epic disaster? Pastor Devender Verma is senior pastor of Delhi Bible Fellowship Church and director of the School of Biblical Teaching which trains pastors all over North India, in both rural and urban areas.
The most turbulent times since the Cold War?
We are living in troubling, turbulent times. Social unrest in the UK, the prolonged conflict in Ukraine, serious concerns over Chinese interference in the Far East and escalating violence associated with the war in Gaza are all reminders that we live in a volatile and dangerous world.
We shouldn’t forget the upcoming election in the United States either. I’ve read dire predictions of what could happen if Mr Trump is elected, and I’ve read equally grim warnings of what might ensue if he isn’t!