Tuesday 21 October 2008

A moment of silence


I feel compelled to suggest that anyone who reads this blog takes a moment to acknowledge the safety they have been granted today and to pray or offer thoughts for the extended family of David & Michelle and their four children Reece, Jay, Mason & Elouise who tragically died on the M6 on Monday night. The pain must be unbearable.

Colour: Why church should be green

During modernity some people viewed God as Transcendent: we'll assign them the colour YELLOW. These people were soaked in the creator God.

During modernity some people viewed God as Immanent: we'll assign them the colour BLUE. These people were soaked in creation.

In post modernity and Rachel's gloop church there is a recognition that Jesus draws together the creator and creation and in so doing mixes the colours equally.

(Taken from ReIMAGINE community of artists in San Francisco and from Emerging Churches by Eddie Gibbs & Ryan K Bolger)

Gloop Church

My emerging church would be called 'Gloop Church', a multisensory experience of fun, colour, and experiment. Different styles of church doesn't change the message or impact. God spreads out like cornflour in water, allowing for experiences of solid and liquid forms. Goop can be any colour but its often GREEN, my emerging church would certainly aim to be the ethical shade of green.

What would your emerging church be?

Sunday 19 October 2008

Fabulous Cornflour

Once upon a time cornflour was used only for making sauces like gravy thicker but I have discovered it as a fabulous ingredient for making craft activity things; so i take time out to share with parents and childcare workers (though i accept i may actual be behind on this discovery!)

You've probably all made goop before: 2 cups cornflour, 1 cup water, few drops food colouring, mix together and play. It goes solid when you touch it and runny when you don't.

But i've discovered if you add salt you get a dough that dries hard in a few days but is different from salt dough.

However if you add sugar instead you get a mixture that remains gooey like paint.

Cornflour is made up of lots of long, stringy particles that don't dissolve in water. However, they do spread themselves out, which allows the goo to act as both a solid and a liquid.

FABULOUS CORNFLOUR!