Part I The Magic Kingdom I–The Varieties of Magic
Part II The Magic Worlds of Art and Nature.
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Anita Mathias: Dreaming Beneath the Spires
Anita Mathias's Blog on Faith and Art
Part I The Magic Kingdom I–The Varieties of Magic
Part II The Magic Worlds of Art and Nature.
Share on site of your choice … Wikio
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| March 2011 bed in front of our dining room, weeded, and planted. |
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| Overgrown rock garden. Needs colour. March 2011. |
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| A bed we’ve inherited with hellebores |
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| A bed we haven’t tackled yet. Yeah, lots of work! |
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| Roy’s so proud of this little bed he’s established. |
The Righteous will Live by Faith, Romans 1 1-17
How do we deal with our hopes and ambitions for our children’s future? Do we prayerfully take them to God?
How do we do these things?
Fears.
Hopes.
Dreams
Ambitions
Plans
Do we discuss them with God, ask him for his wisdom and perspective on them, follow his directives, and leave the outcome in his hands?
What else does it mean to live by faith?
Part I The Magic Kingdom I–The Varieties of Magic
Part II The Magic Worlds of Art and Nature.
Share on site of your choice … Wikio

Share on site of your choice … Wikio


Tepco Officials formally apologize for the nuclear accident at Fukushima Daichi.
Japan must be the most fascinating country in the world. It has these formal stylized rituals which are almost medieval. See the formal, ritualized apology of the Tepco officials for the nuclear disaster.
Of course, they were not responsible for a 9.0 earthquake and tsunami, though it is surprising that their nuclear contingency plans did not account for it.
* * *
My father, a Chartered Accountant, who worked at Tatas, India’s largest steel company, was responsible for bringing in the first computers to Tatas. His official designation was “Controller of Accounts, and Manager of Data Processing.” He frequently travelled to Japan and Pittsburg, as well as Europe.
Japan’s mixture of refined aesthetics, practical ingenuity, discipline, and a society totally opaque to the foreigner fascinated him, and my chess-loving husband too, who bravely did his final year of school in Japan, in a Japanese medium school to improve his Go. (That’s another story!).
I was fascinated by Japan, the politeness and decency of the people, and its sheer impenetrability and opacity to the foreigner. I felt I would never really understand these people, and what makes them tick.
But it is a wonderful honourable culture, isn’t it?
* * *
Interestingly, if honour and saving face weren’t so important, I wonder if they would have been more forthcoming about the disaster.
I am troubled about their kamikaze exposure of their workers to what is potentially “lethal” doses of radiation according to Jazko’s testimony to Congress. They have officially reported 20 to the IAEA as having radiation contamination.
I wonder what the US would have done? Would she have sent workers in knowing that they would be very likely to die. Or ? Evacuate the environs and declare it a wasteland? However, evacuating Tokyo, where a quarter of the country’s population live , 150 miles away from Fukushima is probably unthinkable for the economy.
Every so often, in the lives of nations as in individual lives, we come to the limits of what human intelligence, ingenuity and discipline can accomplish. I wonder if we are seeing that in Fukushima.
This is a question!!
I am wondering if I am in the right church for me and our family. Sigh, probably not, or no longer.
What is the most important thing to look for in a church?
I would be grateful for your answers and perspective.

Things happen, that would not have happened if we had not prayed. This is my firm conviction.
Would Jesus have stopped and healed the two blind man seated by the side of the roadside if they had not asked him to?
There are very few records of him spontaneously healing people who have not asked him to
* * *
Each life has a story, a plot. Blindness was part of the plot of these men’s lives.
However, their persistent faith changed the plot and ushered them into a new destiny.
They asked Jesus for a new story. And he said,
“Yes.”
* * *
What is the plot of your life? Its trajectory? Its givens?
Are you happy with it? Would you like it to change?
Jesus can change it, if you ask him to.
He asks today, “What would you like me to do for you?”
What is your answer?
.
29 As Jesus and his disciples were leaving Jericho, a large crowd followed him. 30 Two blind men were sitting by the roadside, and when they heard that Jesus was going by, they shouted, “Lord, Son of David, have mercy on us!”