From my diary

It is Saturday night; in fact the twelfth night after Christmas day, and so – according to Google – the time to take down Christmas decorations.  It is slightly surprising that the Church of England press office does not issue a formal letter to the press, reminding everyone.  Sadly the ecclesiastics of today tend to have other things on their mind.  In its place, a google search reveals confusion.

My own Christmas tree has disappeared into the loft for another year.  How quickly the Christmas season is over!  On Monday I must go back to work on a client site.  It’s a total mess over there – worse than I have ever seen – so how long I will last there remains to be seen.  It will take all my energies just to remain.  If this is what God wants me to do at this time, however, I am willing.  I must bring it to the Lord in prayer, as we must all.  I must make sure to leave, however, before it becomes too much.

My paper trimmer, that I use to cut off the gluey edge next to the spine of a book, has given up the ghost.  The thousand pages of Tissington Tatlow’s Story of the Student Christian Movement were too much for it, it seems; and it died.  I must get another.

I had intended to chop up and scan Douglas Johnson’s Contending for the faith, the history of the Intervarsity Fellowship (now UCCF), but found myself reading it instead and growing interested.  One episode took place at Edinburgh University, where the EUCU (Edinburgh University Christian Union) faced a takeover bid from the SCM in 1951.  On searching the web about this, I was surprised to find a detailed account from someone involved whom I have actually met at the Oxford Patristics Conference and corresponded with about Tertullian!   He was, of course, on the side of the resistance.  I’ve written to ask for more details.  It’s a long time ago, but Christian Unions in universities still face malicious opposition from time to time.  It’s useful to recognise some of the standard ploys.

A few of the books on my “out” shelf have proven more interesting a second time around.  Maybe I should have another go at the Mystery of Mar Saba.

Over Christmas a friend lent me (by post) the autobiography of Emerson Lake and Palmer keyboardist, Keith Emerson, entitled Picture of an Exhibitionist.  I’ve read the corresponding rather sober book by Greg Lake.  Emerson’s book was intended, I think, to show what a wild man he was in the 60’s with The Nice and in the 70s with ELP.  To my surprise it was a sad story, of a lost soul who lived a rather wretched life. Thus he tells us how his creative ability ended when he started using cocaine.  All the “groupies” that the music press journalists loved were in reality just prostitutes.  Many of them were diseased, and so were the “roadies” and musicians.  Indeed ELP actually went on tour with bags of condoms and packs of anti-biotics!  And so on.  There was little glamorous about the life described.  It was a vision of hell, as perhaps so much of the showbiz world really is, if we but knew.

Onward!

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From my diary

The Christmas-New Year holidays continue here, which is just as well as it allows me to get something worthwhile done.  It also allows me to plan things for the year to come.  After several dull days this morning was bright, sunny and full of light; and so, therefore, was I.

When household papers arrive on my desk, I tend to pile those which might be useful later into a pile at one corner.  Naturally this grows.  I last pruned it well over a year ago. I spent this morning doing so.  I was rewarded by finding a shopping voucher that a previous client had given me, due to expire in a few weeks time.  Sometimes virtue is its own reward.

This afternoon I have been dealing with three books in my “out” tray, scanning whatever I wanted from them.  I’ll probably post some excerpts in another post soon.

The first was the autobiography of liberal theologian-turned-evangelical Thomas Oden.  I found it rather thin, full of events that a better writer would have done more with.  But it contains a slightly more interesting section that might concern us directly.  He refers to the IVP “Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture” series, which he created and edited.  He mentions that his minions scanned the text of the 37 volume Ante-Nicene, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers collection of translations.  Now my own interest in the fathers as a class was facilitated in the mid-1990s by finding online text files containing these volumes.  They came from Wheaton college in the US, itself associated in some way with IVP.  Were these text files the output from that process?

The second was an “anecdotal history” of IVP – Intervarsity Press – in the USA.  This was frankly very dull.  I do not need to know that in 1958 Mr Suit became head of carpets.  Why do I, the reader, care about Mr Suit?

But I did learn from it why “IVP Academic” came into existence.  While I value what they have done in making translations available, it has always seemed to me like a distraction from the college Christian ministry, to serve which IVP was founded.  But all is revealed.  IVP, like many Christian enterprises, is run on a shoe-string.  Reference volumes are steady sellers, that help give financial stability to a firm.  This, it seems, is why they grabbed the opportunity to do the series.

The third volume is also related to student ministry, although distantly.  It is Tissington Tatlow’s official history of the Student Christian Movement, published in 1933, and more than a thousand pages long.  It’s self-published, and unreadable.  It is, in truth, the annual report of a dull bureaucrat, extended to the point of madness.  Like all such reports any hint of irregularity is suppressed.  So it is both long and meaningless.  It does contain some interesting early photographs.

Unfortunately I have been obliged to break the volume and scan the pages using a sheet-feeder.  I hate the idea of destroying books.  But I am quite certain that, if I had opened every page and scanned it in turn, I would have been the first person to do so since the typesetter.  Nobody can ever have read this torrent of sludge.  It needs to be online, where it can be consulted.  So in order to preserve the work, I have been obliged to kill a copy.  I hesitated long.  But I could not bring myself to spend a couple of days of my life on it.  I apologise, but plead for mercy!

The thing is still going through the sheet-feeder as I write.  This has been a productive day.

UPDATE: The Tatlow book is now on Archive.org here.

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From my diary

Happy New Year to everyone who reads this blog!  May it be a prosperous and successful year for us all!

We stand on the first step of the year.  There are 364 more steps until we get to this place again!  So… it’s the time to decide just what we want to do with the year.

Last year I was busy working, so I didn’t really make any plans, and certainly didn’t put them into execution.  So my year passed mainly in working, looking for work, and sleeping!  Ouch!  That’s what happens to us, unless we make plans.

Long ago my family lived in Cyprus for two years.  I’d like to go back.  If I’m not working in February, as may well be the case, then I might go out and spend a week there.  I owe my interest in antiquity to that stay.  I was only a boy, but I remember Roman cities and crusader castles in the hills.  I remember camping in the ruins of the city of Salamis.  Nothing gives a sense of the reality of the ancient world like swimming in the blue water over huge blocks of worked stone lying on the sandy sea-bed, a few feet below.  Doubtless the coast is more built-up, but it would be interesting to see it again!

It’s always a good motto to “grab a chance, and you won’t be sorry for a might-have-been”.  I’m glad that I visited Libya in 2006 and 2007.  We can’t do that now!  I’m glad that I saved my pennies and booked a flight on Concorde, just for the experience of flying at Mach 2.2.  Again, we can’t do that now.  I regret the injury that prevented me going to Syria in 2010 and looking at the then intact temples and colonnades of Palmyra.  Carpe diem: seize the day.

I’d like to go to Sudan.  But it looks as if a civil war is in progress at the moment. Oh well…

I think I will go to Bath, this year, and see the remains of Aqua Sulis there.  Apparently the hot spring-fed Roman baths are unsafe to bathe in, however – a recent bather caught meningitis!  This is a pity.

So there’s much to think about!

Happy New Year again!

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