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Back from Holiday

Monday, 24 August 2009

I've had two weeks off on our family holiday which was good and helped me relax a little and help to forget the troubles at the BBC.

I've been back to work today on the biography of Hugh Stowell Brown. I've finished the chapter on his home life which is now the longest chapter of the book. I've now completed seven chapters and nearly competed the eighth of the thirteen chapters of the book. That would be find except that today is the last proper day of my sabbatical. I've still got to write a sabbatical report and I'm back to church work tomorrow!

Clearly I'll be carrying on with writing and with the sabbatical work for a while to come yet.

If you've been travelling with me through this sabbatical, thank you. But don't leave yet, there's still more to come.

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Just church this morning

Sunday, 9 August 2009

I went to Mossley Hill parish church this morning and into an all-age meeting led by Maggie Swinson.
No more sabbatical work for a while now, I'm spending time with the family.

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Writing all day

Tuesday, 4 August 2009

I've had a busy day writing about Hugh Stowell Brown's home life. Some fascinating excursions into Liberal politics and even one of HSB's grandchildren who became a Lady, and her descendents are all hereditary peers!

Frustratingly the chapter is not finished and I'm running out of good writing time. Perhaps I should start to get in touch with publishers? Any ideas, anyone?

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Back to writing

Monday, 3 August 2009

It's been a while since I updated this blog - sorry to anyone who's reading it.

Yesterday I went to Ramilies Road Chapel for their morning worship. Lovely people there.

Today I've progressed the Hugh Stowell Brown biography. I've abandoned the chapter on the lectures for the moment as going into detail on one lecture might conflict with a later chapter on Hugh's most important beliefs and teachings.

So I launched headlong into the chapter on Hugh's personal and family life, which he writes virtually nothing about, at least virtually nothing made it into the edited published version of his memoirs and commonplace book. My sources material is the census returns, some public records and some contemporary accounts. I think I'll have just about enough to make it sound like a good story and not just a list of dates.

I also spent some time today writing a piece of time management for the new website of theMedianet . I left it to the deadline, having not been able to find the time to do it sooner.

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Back to Dovedale - for a visit

Sunday, 26 July 2009

This morning I went back to my own church, Dovedale Baptist, as a visitor, which was strange.
I went because my son Josh was leading worship and preaching, which he did very well and made his Dad very proud.

Tomorrow I'm getting back to studying and writing.

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Lectures and more lectures

Tuesday, 21 July 2009

It's like being a student again, except that when I was a student I didn't go to as many lectures as I've been reading today.

It's been fascinating to see how Hugh Stowell Brown drew up to 8,000 people on a Sunday afternoon to hear a lecture. Just a talk. No Powerpoint, no dancing girls, not even a worship band. Times were different in 1854, but still he must have had something special.

I've written over half of the chapter on Hugh's public lectures, but I had hoped to finish it today.

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More lectures to be digested

Monday, 20 July 2009

I've spent today doing some reading and research, and not a lot of writing about Hugh Stowell Brown's lectures in the Concert Hall in Liverpool.

I've been discovering about the hall, about the background to his talks and the Caine family. Nathaniel Caine started the lecture series and his son was William Caine, who married Hugh's daughter, and his sister was Hugh's second wife. It's getting rather complicated!

I'm also trying to keep in touch with the other part of my sabbatical, the workplace ministry, but I'm not getting so far on that at the moment.

Anyway, I hope to be more productive tomorrow.

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Lectures to working men

Tuesday, 14 July 2009

As well as some other reading, I've been reading Hugh Stowell Brown's lectures that he gave on Sunday afternoons to thousands of people in the long-gone Concert Room on Lord Nelson Street. He spoke on all sorts of topics with snappy titles, but all of them were applying a Christian world-view to current events and practical living.

More than 60 of his lectures survive in published form, and the titles of a few more. I'm writing a chapter in the biography on the lectures, but to say anything much about the content of all those lectures is a daunting task.

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Sunday at Grace Family Church

Monday, 13 July 2009

Yesterday I went to Grace Family Church on Aigburth Road. It was a lively service led by Pastor Diana Stacey. Their worship band were impressive, with a older man on electric guitar who was excellent, and a very good young woman playing a rhythmic bass line.

I was recognised and welcomed to go to the front. I shared greetings from Dovedale and talked briefly about my work.

I felt God speak to me about four things:

1) John 10 - "the thief comes to steal and destroy, but I have come that you might have life". I was led to think about all that steals our time and our energies.

2) The line in the Psalms "Open up you gates, that the King of Glory may come in" (I'll have to look up the reference). It struck me that it's about the gates of a city, and made me pray for Liverpool, that its "gates" may be open to the King of Glory. And it is happening - there are so mnay people in significant places in this city who follow Jesus or are at least "men of peace" open to God.

3)I was challenged about working among men - and encouraging the working men in Dovedale. Maybe a series of men's breakfasts?

4) Pastor Di shared something Billy Graham said recently, "God has given us an open door, and He has given us the tools and the technology to touch the whole world if you and I mean business." This impressed me. We need to be touching the world, and we can do that through technology and through our determination. But do we, do I, really mean business?

This last point also underlined what God said to me at the CMC conference about being people using the tools at our fingertips - using the web, using video and podcasts to reach people.

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Hugh's big break

Tuesday, 7 July 2009

Another writng day.

Today I have been writing about Hugh Stowell Brown's break with his Anglican upbringing and how he became a Baptist. As usual, there was a girl involved. Even then the most popular church youth groups for the boys were the ones with the best looking girls. Okay, maybe not, but Hugh did meet his future wife at Stony Stratford Baptist Church and then he decided it was the church for him!

I've realised how Hugh's early life had so mnay twists ansd turns. Three false starts in education and training, a painful time of unemployment, and then two of his brothers and his father die in the same couple of weeks. You'll have to read the book to find out how it all ends.