The Father Christmas Costume

My first visit to the Parent and Toddler group was its Christmas party yesterday. Arriving a few minues after it had begun, my Anglican colleague Jane was relieved to see me. “Good, you can be Father Christmas rather than me,” she said. And so I took on a rôle I have never performed before, yet another part of the minister’s duty that theological college never prepares you for.
 
The trousers were made for someone with the girth of Bernard Manning, not me. But I pulled them up and then tightened the elastic string that substituted for a belt. I had put the trousers on the wrong way round, but I was blowed if I was going to take them off and mess around again. I put on the jacket, which had not buttons, nor any Velcro to fix it. I then juggled the combined hat and beard, and put my glasses back on, which began to steam up.
 
I awaited my call and went into the hall dutifully telling all the children they had been good. I don’t have the deep voice to do the ‘Ho, ho, ho’ routine too convincingly, but it all seemed to go well enough, and I made my cheery exit.
 
It was then that Jane told me that as I left the trousers had fallen around my ankles. I hasten to add I was fully clothed beneath the costume: otherwise perhaps I would have been alerted to the calamity earlier.
 
I think you have two choices with this story: either you can use it as an illustration of some profound thought (perhaps about the way we cover up our real selves).
 
Or you can just laugh.
 
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Fact And Fantasy

Margaret Killingray on the Christian value of fact and fantasy here – timely reading in the light of Narnia, Harry Potter, Phillip Pullman, Lord Of The Rings, etc.
 
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Church As Organic Community

The regular Abductive Columns emails by Fred Peatross are always a thoughtful read. Today’s column, Organic Community (you need to log in at InJesus to read it so I can’t provide a direct link) is one of his best. Just take this final paragraph:
 

Metaphors are powerful. Think of the church as a building, and it becomes building-centric and architecture dependent. Think of the church as an organization, and it becomes preoccupied with programs/ministries. Think of the church organically, and it focuses on what makes for healthy life.

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Stumble Upon

I’ve just come across the grooviest web tool since – oh, Google or eBay or Technorati. It’s called Stumble Upon. First, stop using Internet Explorer as your web browser and install the far superior Firefox. Then download the Stumble Upon extension for Firefox. Close Firefox and reopen it.
 
You now have a Stumble Upon bar near the top. Click on the button to go to SU’s home page to set up a free account and choose your categories.
 
From now on, whenever you click the SU button in Firefox you will get random websites in the categories you have selected that other SU users have recommended. (You can recommend, too, obviously.)
 
Two of my first three random sites were excellent: try Politics Explained for a simple and facetious explanation of different political philosophies. Or for something sublime rather than ridiculous try the photograph of Kenneth Parker.
 
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