Ebooks and HTML5 should revolutionize go teaching
Submitted by Simon on 2011-08-17- Comments
- 956 reads
So I play go, and I publish books. Because of the book thing, I keep thinking about new publishing technologies: e-readers, ebooks, HTML5 and so on. I’ve come to the conclusion that go books are an area where e-publishing can bring a real transformative change. Read more about Ebooks and HTML5 should revolutionize go teaching
Are we God's co-workers?
Submitted by Simon on 2011-08-12- Comments
- 1171 reads
OK, so on Monday I’m about to preach a sermon for a bunch of doctors. The theme of their conference is “reconciliation”, and I’ve managed to add in a bunch of a fairly standard (for me) missio dei references as mission motivation. But now I’m having second thoughts about an element of it. Read more about Are we God's co-workers?
Free Bibles which aren't, again
Submitted by Simon on 2011-08-07- Comments
- 578 reads
Is there some rule that whenever someone comes along with free Biblical material, they have to add batshit crazy clauses to the license agreement? Here’s yet another diglot anomaly, courtesy of the SBL Greek New Testament. A free compilation of the GNT with critical apparatus is an astonishingly great idea, and yet they have to add this howler to the end:
History will slaughter us (that's my opening line)
Submitted by Simon on 2011-08-05- Comments
- 680 reads
Verkuyl (1978a:168-75; cf Durr 1951:2-10) identified the following “impure motives” … the motive of ecclesiastical colonialism (the urge to export one’s own confession and church order to other territories).
What missions and missionaries had often exported, was their idea of the gospel that they had mistakenly associated with the gospel itself. The result of Presbyterian mission work among Syrian students had been “on the whole … to make them foreign in their manners, foreign in their habits, foreign in their sympathies”. The explicit policy of the mission should therefore not be to control the course of the gospel but to trust the gospel and “let go”. The West has no edge on the type of Christianity that should be spread throughout the world (cf Hutchison 1987:80-82).
- Bosch, Transforming Mission
It’s probably too soon to be asking this but I wonder how history will view John Stott. Read more about History will slaughter us (that's my opening line)
For where your heart is, there your treasure will be also
Submitted by Simon on 2011-08-03- Comments
- 647 reads
If you tell me that something is vital and important, but you don’t fund it, that’s not a “paradox” - it just means that you don’t actually think it is vital and important, no matter how much you like to talk about it.
You can measure what a church considers vital and important by its budget. Or, as Jonathan Ingleby put it, “principles are costly, and if they cost us nothing then they are probably not our principles.” Read more about For where your heart is, there your treasure will be also
A contextual reading of the concept of sin in Japanese culture
Submitted by Simon on 2011-07-22- Comments
- 879 reads
So that title sounds like an essay - and maybe it will become one - but I’m just thinking through some thoughts at the moment. The other day I was at a meeting where someone was talking about how their friend didn’t have a sense of sin, thought they were a good person, didn’t do much wrong, and so on. That’s a typical Japanese approach to sin. Read more about A contextual reading of the concept of sin in Japanese culture
Notes from the tsunami zone
Submitted by Simon on 2011-07-13- Comments
- 968 reads
I was not intending to blog about what I’ve been doing the past week. I just wanted to go quietly.
Restricted by the law: Yasuo Furuya and the wartime Japanese church
Submitted by Simon on 2011-07-01- Comments
- 938 reads
Here is another chapter from Furuya’s new book and I should really try to sort out translation rights pretty soon. Anyway, this one’s about the Japanese church in the Second World War, something I have written about myself.
Quick commentary: Wait for the punchline at the end. It’s brilliant.
Neither a teaching-meeting nor a common-meeting
Submitted by Simon on 2011-06-23- Comments
- 541 reads
So I’ve given a translation of Yasuo Furuya’s thoughts on the word “教会”. Here’s my commentary on it. Read more about Neither a teaching-meeting nor a common-meeting
The church: a teaching-meeting or a common-meeting?
Submitted by Simon on 2011-06-22- Comments
- 1003 reads
Recently, I heard about Yasuo Furuya’s new book, “Is Japanese Christianity Real?” and decided to buy it with some birthday money. It’s a collection of fairly short, simple essays, examining the history of Japanese Christianity and asking some pertinent questions about it. Here’s my translation of a portion of the chapter “Why do we use the words Christianity (基督教) and Church (教会)?”






