Latest Blog Posts

Posted 3 hours 8 min ago

Shepherd with sheep

I have been reading "The Lord our Shepherd" by J. Douglas MacMillan which contains a series of sermons based on Psalm 23 which he preached at the Annual Conference of the Evangelical Movement of Wales in 1979. There were many parts of these 4 sermons that struck me but this was the most remarkable for me.

Posted 13 hours 7 min ago

The Cockpit in central London is named after the cockfights which took place here until outlawed in 1849. My Dictionary of Pub Names states that the viewing gallery for such entertainments is still erect, but my inner nonconformist (and the time of day) did not attempt to execute corroboration. By its main entrance, under a Victorian admonishment for courage, was a sign:

Posted 13 hours 7 min ago

St Andrew’s Old Church is found a little way from the Cleveland village of Upleatham. It is the second smallest church building in England, but certainly one of the most interesting. It is no longer used for services and its tiny interior is locked to the public, but a grill allows for some modest viewing.

Posted 1 day 13 hours ago

Posted 1 day 13 hours ago

Posted 2 days 13 hours ago

Posted 2 days 13 hours ago

Posted 3 days 13 hours ago

Let us pray for England, which once held aloft gospel light for others, but has now become dark; pray for her who once blessed the world, but has now become godless and spiritually feeble:

Posted 3 days 13 hours ago

I called at the Evangelical Library this month. This is a large collection of evangelical Protestant books located in a surprisingly modern trading estate in north London, and it is open to the public. I will not go into its origins, for this is well documented elsewhere, but I enjoyed a happy hour or so poring over tomes and reading about Lollardy in the north of England.

Posted 4 days 13 hours ago

London’s Central Criminal Courts are popularly known as the Old Bailey. It was built in 1902 but stands on the site of many older courthouses. It was opened by King Edward VII 1907 to much fanfare. Above the main entrance is inscribed the maxim:

Defend the Children of the Poor & Punish the Wrongdoer