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Jim McCrory

On Tenderness

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Tuesday 11 November 2025 at 14:38

 

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On Tenderness

Someone said to me recently, “You know, the people in my town speak so harshly to one another.” He waited for my response, but what could I say? His words hung in the air like a question too heavy to answer. Harshness has become the common language of our age. Forwardness and loudness are rewarded; gentleness is dismissed as weakness. Soap operas and films thrive on aggressiveness, and even writing courses teach conflict and confrontation as the lifeblood of story. And yet, some of the finest works of literature — Gilead, The Remains of the Day, and others like them — draw their power not from shouting, but from stillness. They remind us that tenderness has its own quiet strength, that the human heart still recognizes virtue in action when it hears it.

But tenderness, it seems, has become a foreign tongue. The word itself rarely passes our lips anymore. It belongs to an older vocabulary, one spoken by shepherds and prophets, by those who knew that strength and gentleness are not enemies but kin. In Scripture, tenderness is not a fragile feeling; it is the steady pulse of divine love.

C.S. Lewis once said, “To love at all is to be vulnerable.” Tenderness is that vulnerability made holy; love that risks itself for the sake of another. Jesus embodied it. He entered our world not in armour but in swaddling cloth, not as a warrior but as a child. His hands, which could command storms, chose instead to touch the sick. His words, which could summon angels, chose instead to bless. “A bruised reed He will not break” (Matthew 12:20).

In the ancient world, a reed was a fragile plant, easily bent or crushed. Once bruised, it was usually thrown away; it had little value. The verse says Jesus, the Messiah, does not break the bruised reed, meaning He doesn’t discard those who are hurt, weak, or failing. Instead, He gently restores. 

Paul wrote, “Clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience” (Colossians 3:12). In a world where harshness is fashionable, such clothing seems out of season. Yet it is the very fabric of Christ. To be tender is not to be naïve; it is to be brave enough to care in a calloused age. Henri Nouwen once said that the people who touch our lives most deeply are not those who fix our pain, but those who share it. That is tenderness, love that lingers beside suffering instead of solving it.

Our world sharpens its edges. It trains its tongue to cut, its stories to shout, its heroes to dominate. But tenderness is the rebellion of another kingdom, a quiet revolution of grace. It whispers where the world shouts, forgives where it is fashionable to condemn, and keeps reaching where others withdraw. It is the soft strength of God’s heart, burning steady beneath the noise.

Perhaps this is what we must recover; the courage to speak gently again. To answer harshness not with scorn, but with mercy. To remember that the Saviour who could have thundered chose instead to whisper: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened… for I am gentle and humble in heart” (Matthew 11:28–29).

But when tenderness fades, something greater is lost. The erosion of gentleness, compassion, and humility is not merely a symptom of modern life; it is a moral choice. Evil, in all its forms, does not erupt unbidden; it is chosen, often in small refusals to love. Each harsh word, each act of indifference, each moment we turn away from tenderness is a decision, a quiet yielding to the lesser good. The struggle between good and evil is not fought only in grand gestures, but in these hidden moments when the heart decides whether to wound or to heal.

Tenderness may be forgotten, but it is not lost. It lives wherever love still chooses to be kind. And perhaps, when the noise fades and the world grow tired of shouting, it will be tenderness that remains — steady as light, strong as grace, and forever the language of God.

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Jim McCrory

The God Who is There

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Monday 10 November 2025 at 06:22

Christianity is not just a series of truths in the plural, but Truth spelled with a capital ‘T’—truth about total reality, not just about religious things.

  — Francis Schaeffer, The God Who Is There

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The God Who is There

I was just entering my teens when the hippie movement swept into town. I began to hear strange new phrases — “Make love, not war,” “Back to the land,” “Free love.” I didn’t yet have the understanding to grasp what was really happening, but I sensed that the world was shifting, and beneath the colour and music, I felt a quiet despair. People were reaching for something, freedom, meaning, transcendence, yet finding only confusion in their search.

It was into this restless period, before and beyond that world that Francis Schaeffer spoke. When he first published The God Who Is There in 1968, the cultural ground was already trembling with revolt, doubt, and disillusionment — the aftermath of two world wars, the rise of existentialism, and the dawning of a post-Christian West. I was still in school when it appeared and I am just reading the book now, and though its language was aimed at the intellectuals of its time, its message has proven strikingly prophetic. Schaeffer’s book has not simply survived the passing decades; it has continued to interpret them. His analysis of truth, meaning, and the human condition speaks with a relevance that modern readers cannot easily ignore.

At the heart of Schaeffer’s argument lies a concern that Western civilization has crossed what he famously called the “line of despair.” By this he meant that modern thought had abandoned the idea of absolute truth; truth that exists independently of our opinions and emotions. Beginning with philosophers like Hegel and Kierkegaard, Schaeffer traces a slow but decisive shift: reason and revelation were separated, faith became detached from fact, and knowledge itself became fragmented. What was once a unified worldview rooted in the reality of a personal God had broken apart into pieces. For Schaeffer, this wasn’t a purely intellectual tragedy; it was a human one. The denial of truth leads inevitably to despair, because without a foundation, meaning and morality collapse. People may still talk about love, purpose, or beauty, but those words lose their coherence when detached from the reality of a Creator who defines them.

To make this change visible, Schaeffer introduced his memorable image of the two-story universe. In the lower story, modern people retain what can be evaluated by science — the realm of facts and reason. In the upper story, they place things like faith, morals, and meaning — matters that, they claim, cannot be known but only “believed.” This division, Schaeffer argued, results in an incoherent existence. Faith becomes a blind leap into the dark, not an encounter with reality. In such a divided world, people live paradoxical  lives: rational in one area, irrational in another. Schaeffer saw this not only in philosophy but in art, music, and literature. Picasso’s distorted figures, Beckett’s absurd plays, and Sartre’s existential novels all testify to the same loss — the abandonment of unity and purpose. Culture, for Schaeffer, is the mirror of philosophy. It reveals what a society genuinely believes about the world and about itself.

What makes The God Who Is There prophetic is not only its diagnosis but its accuracy. Schaeffer wrote before the full flowering of postmodernism, yet he foresaw its contours with remarkable precision. Today, when truth is often treated as personal preference and moral boundaries are considered oppressive, his warnings seem almost clairvoyant. He understood that the denial of truth would not produce freedom but fragmentation, not enlightenment, but loneliness. Schaeffer’s analysis anticipated a time when people would feel alienated not only from God but from themselves as they sojourned as restless wanderers in a world stripped of meaning. In this sense, The God Who Is There is not merely a book of apologetics but a work of cultural prophecy.

Despite his intellectual rigor, Schaeffer’s tone is never cold. His critique of modern thought is driven by compassion. He writes as one who has looked into the abyss of meaninglessness and found, not despair, but the steady presence of the living God. “He is there,” Schaeffer insists, “and He is not silent.” This simple affirmation grounds his entire worldview. God has spoken — in creation, in Scripture, and ultimately in Jesus Christ. Truth is not an abstract concept but a Person who entered history. Because God is both real and communicative, knowledge is possible. Meaning is possible. Love is possible. Christianity, for Schaeffer, is not a blind leap but a coherent and comprehensive explanation of reality — the only one that fits the world as it actually is.

Reading The God Who Is There today, feels like hearing an echo that has grown louder with the years. The cultural fragmentation Schaeffer described has deepened, but so too has the hunger for what he proclaimed: a truth that unites heart and mind, a faith that makes sense of both the cosmos and the soul. His invitation is as relevant now as it was then — to cross back over the line of despair and rediscover the God who is not silent. Schaeffer’s book stands, therefore, not only as a defence of Christianity but as a call to intellectual and spiritual integrity. It reminds us that reality has structure, that truth is not a relic of the past, and that hope is grounded in something more solid than shifting opinion. It is, in every sense, a prophetic voice still calling out in the wilderness of modern doubt.

“Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness.”

                                                               Isaiah 5:20 (ESV)

 

Francis A. Schaeffer, The God Who Is There (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1968).

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Jim McCrory

The Man Who Walked Through Time

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 9 November 2025 at 17:46

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The Man Who Walked Through Time

History, to me, feels like a vast river; deep, restless, always moving forward. Most people are carried along by its current and vanish beneath the surface without much trace. In a century from now, if God does not bring an end to this corrupt system, who will remember you and I?  We are like the ancients who embedded their handprints on cave walls just to say, we were here.  

But now and then, someone steps into the water and changes its course entirely. Jesus of Nazareth was one of those people. And yet, when I listened to a podcast this week, I was struck to hear that in a recent poll, many people said they didn’t believe Jesus ever existed at all.

It didn’t surprise me since the West seems to be diving into a bubble where people believe in nothing and anything in a paradoxical juxtaposition. Not stopping to ask, “Why am I here?”

So, I went looking into it myself. Speaking for the UK, the most instructive survey I found was the Barna Group UK one. It’s about a decade old now, and I’ve heard that things may have improved since then, but the numbers still speak loudly.

  • 61% said they believe Jesus was real.
  • Among young adults (18–34), only 57% believed He was real.
    That means around 43% of young people either don’t believe He existed or aren’t sure.
    Even among those 35 and over, the number only rises to 63%.

https://www.barna.com/research/perceptions-of-jesus-christians-evangelism-in-the-uk/?utm_source=chatgpt.com

It’s sobering to think that nearly half of young people in this country doubt the very existence of the most influential person in history.

When people question whether Jesus ever lived, they’re often surprised to learn how strong the historical evidence actually is — even outside of religious belief. Many professional historians — whether Christian, Jewish, agnostic, or atheist — accept that Jesus lived in first-century Palestine. The real debate isn’t if He existed, but who He truly was.

Evidence for Jesus doesn’t come from one place or one type of source. It’s a web of overlapping voices — some sympathetic, some hostile — all pointing toward the same figure.

  • The Roman historian Tacitus, writing around AD 116, mentioned Christus, who suffered under Pontius Pilate during Tiberius’ reign.
  • The Jewish historian Josephus wrote about “Jesus, who was called Christ,” and the execution of His brother James.
  • Pliny the Younger, a Roman governor, described Christians singing hymns to Christ “as to a god.”

These men had no reason to invent Him — they weren’t believers. And yet, their words confirm what the Gospels tell us: a man named Jesus, executed under Rome, whose followers quickly spread across the empire.

Then there are the Christian sources themselves. Paul’s letters, written within twenty years of Jesus’ death, refer to His crucifixion and even to personal encounters with His family. The Gospels — though written with faith in mind — are full of details about geography, rulers, and Jewish customs that fit first-century Palestine with remarkable accuracy. They don’t read like legends dreamt up in ignorance, but like memories anchored in real soil.

Of all the Gospel writers, I’ve always been drawn to Luke. He wasn’t content to repeat stories — he investigated. He wrote, “I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning.” He anchors his story in time and space: “In the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar…” (Luke 3:1). Time and again, archaeology has confirmed his understanding of places, titles, and political realities. He was a historian in the truest sense, wanting to show that what he wrote was not a myth, but an event that happened in the world we still inhabit.

When you take all this together — the outside witnesses, the early letters, the historical details — the case for Jesus’ existence becomes remarkably solid. It would be extraordinary for so many independent sources, friendly and hostile alike, to converge on someone who never lived.

And yet, there’s a deeper kind of evidence that matters just as much — even more. The evidence of experience.

Why, after 2,000 years, does His message still breathe hope into broken people? Why are Christians, in general, still marked by a quiet kind of joy even in suffering? Why does His name continue to stir hearts across every generation and language?

If you strip away all the arguments, the question remains deeply personal: What if the reason this story won’t fade is because it’s true?

Think of it this way: historians don’t doubt the existence of Socrates, even though we only know him through his students. They don’t doubt Alexander the Great, though the first biographies came four hundred years after his death. They don’t doubt Julius Caesar, even though only a few old manuscripts preserve his own words. Compared to them, Jesus’ life is better documented, closer in time, and more consistently remembered — and yet, He is the one people most fiercely doubt.

Maybe that’s because believing in Him asks something more of us. Not just to acknowledge a man who lived, but to respond to a voice that still calls.

So, yes — there’s historical evidence. But there’s also that inner knowing, the whisper that stirs when you read His words or kneel to pray. It’s not a relic of childhood faith. It’s something existential, something that reaches into the core of being human. Scripture puts it beautifully:

“…that they should seek God and perhaps feel their way toward him and find him. Yet he is actually not far from each one of us.”
(Acts 17:27, ESV)

That’s the invitation. The evidence can take you to the edge of the river, but faith is the step into the water — the step where history becomes encounter, and the story of Jesus becomes your own.

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Jim McCrory

Aura Farming and the Hollow Self

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 7 November 2025 at 08:08

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Aura Farming and the Hollow Self

They mistook the applause of men for the whisper of God.

I see that an innovative word has entered the Colins dictionary. Or to be more precise, a compound phrase. We live in an age where the shimmer of image often outshines substance. “Aura farming”—the careful cultivation of a distinctive, enviable persona—has become a kind of social currency. The aura farmer curates every gesture, outfit, word, and post to project an illusion of depth or power, often detached from the truth of who they are. On the surface, such a person appears confident, admired, even magnetic. Yet beneath that polish lies a fragile tension, one that rarely leads to peace but instead to narcissism, low self-worth, and quiet isolation.

We recognize these figures across literature and life. Clarissa Dalloway arranging her day like a performance, Estella from Great Expectaions gleaming coldly behind the mask of beauty, Cleopatra turning her very existence into theatre. Even Hamlet “farms” aura when he feigns madness—controlling perception to conceal deeper wounds. We see their reflections in our own time: the man who fabricates hardship for sympathy, the person  who dresses in the language of status but not of soul. They are everywhere, and sometimes, they are us.

In the real life, the Bible offers its own piercing portrait in the story of Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:1–11). They sold a piece of land and laid part of the proceeds at the apostles’ feet, pretending it was the full sum. They sought the glow of holiness without bearing its cost. Their act was not a failure of generosity but of authenticity, they wanted the aura of sanctity, not the surrender that sanctity demands. Like actors before a divine audience, they mistook the applause of others for the approval of God. Their story stands as a solemn warning: the Spirit cannot be deceived by the glitter of the self-made halo.

At its core, aura farming is a performance; a dance before mirrors. One studies the traits that command admiration—confidence, mystery, originality—and imitates them until they appear natural. Yet in doing so, the person begins to draw their sense of worth from reflection rather than truth. They become like a candle trapped behind glass: glowing but starved of air. The illusion that once empowered them becomes their cage.

Over time, this hunger for validation deepens into a fragile form of narcissism. Every compliment becomes a sip of survival, every moment of indifference, a small death. Relationships grow brittle because the aura farmer cannot risk being truly known authenticity threatens the performance. They long for love yet fear the gaze that might pierce the mask. The more they polish their image, the more their soul fades into the background, unseen and unattended.

This condition mirrors the spiritual sickness of our age. In a world obsessed with image and branding, authenticity feels almost subversive. We live as if God Himself scrolls through our highlight reels. But while aura may dazzle, it cannot nourish. Like Ananias and Sapphira, those who live by appearance eventually find that the light they project does not save them—it exposes them.

True wholeness begins where the performance ends. It is found not in the curated glow of being admired, but in the steady light of being known. To be genuine in an age of spectacle is to lay down the mask and let the breath of truth in—to trade the mirror for the window of the soul.

 Image by Copilot

 

 

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Jim McCrory

Strings of Thought

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Wednesday 5 November 2025 at 21:15

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“I play the notes as they are written, but it is God who makes the music.”

Johann Sebastian Bach

 

 

Strings of Thought

As I work on a fingerstyle arrangement of Way Maker by Sinach, it is a beautiful piece. And I’m struck by the quiet genius of the human brain as it forms something from this carefully crafted piece of wood with twelve frets and six strings.  And from this humble framework unfolds a universe of sound. Each note, each subtle shift of the hand, is a symphony of timing, touch, and tone — a choreography of neurons and muscle memory converging to create something transcendent.

With practice, these motions sink deep into the mind, until they flow not from thought, but from something older, quieter; a knowing beyond words. I can scarcely fathom the intricate neural pathways that make this possible. And in moments like this, I’m filled with awe. Truly, we are fearfully and wonderfully made.

 

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Jim McCrory

Truths Wrapped in Stories

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Wednesday 5 November 2025 at 06:56

 

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Truths wrapped in Stories

Who are your favourite characters in literature and film? Perhaps Bruno in The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird, Oskar Schindler in Schindler’s List, Gandalf the Grey in The Lord of the Rings, Andy Dufresne in The Shawshank Redemption, Abbé Faria in The Count of Monte Cristo, Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, or even Othello in Shakespeare’s timeless play. These are stories passed around and borrowed in classrooms around Europe and throughout the world due to their carriculum favourites over the years.

Did you notice the common thread they share? Each is kind-hearted. Each shows compassion, courage, or mercy in a world that too often rewards the opposite. Yet why are we drawn so naturally to characters like these—and not to figures such as Amon Göth from Schindler’s List, Fernand de Morcerf from The Count of Monte Cristo, or Iago from Othello?

The reason lies in a powerful, benevolent force that touches us all: the law of universal justice. As Martin Luther King Jr. so beautifully expressed,

The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

This truth helps explain our instinctive love for the noble, the selfless, and the good. If we were merely products of chance—biological beings shaped only by survival instincts in a cold and indifferent universe—concepts like love, kindness, and self-sacrifice would make no sense. Good and evil would lose all meaning. We wouldn’t be stirred by moral characters, because morality itself would not exist.

But good does exist. We know it intuitively. We feel the tug toward it in our hearts, even when it costs us something. One person gives generously and finds joy; another causes pain and suffers guilt. What makes the difference? That quiet, inner nudge—a built-in awareness of right and wrong.

The apostle Paul described it this way in Romans 2:14–15 (NIV):

“Indeed, when Gentiles, who do not have the law, do by nature things required by the law, they are a law for themselves, even though they do not have the law. They show that the requirements of the law are written on their hearts, their consciences also bearing witness, and their thoughts sometimes accusing them and at other times even defending them.”

Even modern science affirms what faith has long taught: kindness heals. Studies reveal that acts of generosity lift our spirits, steady our minds, and even strengthen our health—while cruelty and selfishness corrode the soul.

So why do we lean toward kindness? Perhaps because we were designed to do so. The same force that bends the moral arc of the universe toward justice also bends the human heart toward love.

Scripture quotations [marked NIV] taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version Anglicised Copyright © 1979, 1984, 2011 Biblica. Used by permission of Hodder & Stoughton Ltd, an Hachette UK company. All rights reserved. ‘NIV’ is a registered trademark of Biblica UK trademark number 1448790.

 

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Jim McCrory

Why Does My Conscience Torment Me?

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Why Does My Conscience Torment Me?

He had just woken up and stepped outside to breathe the afternoon air. Then, in a moment that would change everything, he saw her, a woman, naked and unaware. He knew enough to turn away. But he didn’t. And that choice, simple yet devastating, unravelled his life.

His error led to darker sins. And in the aftermath, he suffered as few ever have. Alone, he whispered, “Against you, you only, have I sinned and done what is evil in your sight…” Psalm 51:4.

Who was he speaking to, if no one was there to hear? It was God. The man was King David—the same shepherd boy who felled Goliath with a sling, the poet who wrote, “The Lord is my shepherd.” But now, he was broken. Not by physical pain, but by the torment of a conscience he could not silence.

There’s a chilling verse in Obadiah 4: “Though you soar like the eagle and make your nest among the stars, from there I will bring you down.” There is no escaping God’s judgment. And conscience is one of the ways He speaks—quietly, privately, away from the crowd.

You might find it hard to believe, but that inner voice is an act of love. When you no longer hear it, consider yourself lost.

But why does it hurt so much?

Imagine a world where no one felt guilt. No sting of shame. No uneasy tug when lying, stealing, or hurting someone. Imagine that the whisper— “This is wrong”—simply went silent.

At first, it might feel like freedom. No more sleepless nights over harsh words. No weight of regret. No need to say, “I’m sorry.” But soon, that world would turn dark.

Without conscience, the heart would grow cold. It’s conscience that slows the hand before it strikes, softens the word before it wounds. It’s the quiet reminder that others feel as deeply as we do. Without it, people would chase advantage and pleasure, and no voice would call them back.

Families would crumble first. Promises would mean nothing. Marriage vows would break the moment desire shifted. Parents might neglect their children without a flicker of guilt. Children might abandon their parents with the same cold ease.

Then the sickness would spread. Friendship would become a game of use and convenience. Business would be ruled by greed. Governments, unchecked by moral restraint, would become machines of control. Law would lose its meaning—because conscience gives law its moral weight. Without it, fear—not justice—would be the only thing keeping people in line.

Art would change too. Think of classics like Dickens novels where justice reigns, but with no restraint on conscience, there is no justice.  No one would write about forgiveness, redemption, or sacrifice—because no one would feel the ache of wrongdoing or the beauty of mercy. Music and poetry might still entertain, but they would no longer move.

And the human face—our eyes, our expressions—would slowly empty. When the inner life dies, the outer one fades with it.

We might tell ourselves this world would be efficient: quick to punish, quick to advance, free of hesitation. But it would be unspeakably lonely. Conscience may trouble us, but it also connects us. It’s the bridge that lets one human heart understand another’s pain.

C.S. Lewis once wrote, “God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains.” If that voice were gone—if God, no longer spoke in the secret places of the mind—we wouldn’t just lose morality. We would lose the very sense of being human.

So yes, conscience can hurt. But it is also mercy. It keeps the soul alive. It reminds us that right and wrong are not inventions of society, but echoes of something higher—something holy—calling us to live as we were meant to.

A world without conscience might be quiet on the outside. But inside, it would be a silence too terrible to bear.

 

David's Sin: 2 Samuel 11

Image by Copilot

 

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Jim McCrory

Learning to Walk in Another’s Shoes

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 31 October 2025 at 10:54

 

I cried because I had no shoes until I met a man who had no feet.”

 Helen Keller

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Learning to Walk in Another’s Shoes

I was driving my wife to work this morning when I saw a child and her father waiting at the traffic lights. The girl stood quietly, her small hands clasped together as if in prayer. More likely, she was cold. Yet, in that simple posture, there was something sacred; a child’s instinctive response to life’s chill.

On my way home, I saw them again, walking along the pavement. The little girl’s legs worked hard against the distance, her father walking patiently beside her, adjusting his stride to hers. She could not have been more than five. The scene touched me deeply, stirring memories of a winter long ago.

I grew up in Govan, Glasgow, where the Atlantic wind from the west could cut through any coat. I remember The Big Freeze of 1962–63, when temperatures fell to -22°C in parts of Scotland and the ground stayed iron-hard for weeks whilst the Elder Park pond became a skater's paradise. My mother would rise before dawn to light the coal fire, the smell of smoke and porridge filling our small kitchen. She would pull a balaclava over my head, wrap a scarf tight around it, and send me off to school with a kiss and hug. 

Perhaps it was those winters that kindled empathy in me, for genuine empathy is not born in comfort but in shared struggle. It is, as the Bible says, the ability to “rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn” (Romans 12:15). The Greek word used in the New Testament, sumpatheo, means to “suffer with.” It suggests more than pity; it is an entering into another’s experience with the heart.

In truth, empathy, or entering another's experience is also cultivated through stories. Reading has been one of the surest ways we learn walk in another’s shoes. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry showed me what it felt like to be a young Black girl navigating prejudice in the American South. Dostoevsky’s The Idiot revealed the quiet agony of being too tender-hearted in a harsh world and I feel the aching of the writer's soul.  Dickens taught me that justice is not a cold principle but a human pulse beating beneath the grime of industrial London. And Othello exposed the pain of being victimized by envy and deceit, the terrible loneliness of being misunderstood. Dostoevsky, in The Brothers Karamazov also taught me the challenges of being a believer and facing existential paradoxes.

Each story, like a window opened on a frosted morning, lets in warmth from another life. To read is to thaw the ice around one’s own heart. Empathy, then, is not merely an emotion but a light that burns through coldness—the kind a father carries as he slows his steps for his child on a winter’s morning.

Image by Copilot

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Haiku: The Perfect Mental Exercise

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Tuesday 28 October 2025 at 12:56

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Winter Haiku Season

I was leafing through a beautifully illustrated book I borrowed from the shelf — Haiku Illustrated: Japanese Short Poems. It’s a lovely volume, and if my wife happens to read this, she might just tuck it away as an idea for our anniversary in 2026.

Now that winter is settling in here at 55°30′ N, I shivered my way into town today while the “Braveheart brigade” were still wandering about in shorts and T-shirts. This isn’t normal, I thought.

The haiku that caught my attention early in the book was by Matsuo Bashō:

On a withered branch
A crow has alighted—
Nightfall in autumn.

There’s something deeply human in the way Bashō juxtaposes nightfall with the coming of winter — the stillness before the dark. It leaves me feeling a quiet melancholy, the kind that stirs reflection rather than despair. How does it make you feel? There are no wrong answers.

Why not join in? Write your own haiku inspired by the season around you — a falling leaf, a first frost, a single bird. It is a perfect mental exercise to create new neural pathways.

Here are the simple rules of haiku:

  1. Three lines only.
  2. Traditionally 5 – 7 – 5 syllables.
  3. A reference to nature or the seasons (known as kigo).
  4. A pause or contrast — two images that meet and spark reflection.

Go on — share your haiku or a piece of writing that moved you. These small exchanges have a way of outlasting the moment.

Note: The haiku is not exactly the one in the book; the one quoted here is the public domain haiku

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Books That Teach Us Human Values

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“Now it happened that Mr. Cherry, the carpenter, found a piece of wood that laughed and cried like a child.”

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Books That Teach Us Human Values

Before my father died, he left me something more enduring than possessions; an awareness that life itself rests on moral ground. He often said, “Every story has a moral heartbeat, even if it’s faint.” It was one of those sayings that lingered. Years later, I’ve come to see how right he was.

Every good story, he believed, reaches a moral reckoning: the wicked fall, the just prevail, or at least, we sense what should have happened if justice had its way. When stories fail to do that, we feel cheated, as though the universe has bent out of shape. But why? If, as Richard Dawkins insists, we are merely “dancing to our DNA” in a purposeless cosmos, why do we care about fairness at all? Yet we do — instinctively, universally.

Martin Luther King once said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” My father, though not a philosopher, lived as if that were true. He saw in every narrative, every act of conscience, the reflection of a moral order that runs deeper than human opinion.

I grew up in Govan, a shipyard town on the edge of Glasgow. A place of stories. The air was thick with shipyard noise, but also with imagination. You could hear stories being told in pubs, at bus stops, or around the kitchen table. My father loved that world of words. He’d bring home books — sometimes borrowed, sometimes rescued from the dust of second-hand shops and leave them lying about.

When I was ten, I wandered into The Modern Book Shop, a cramped little cave of used books that smelled of paper, dust, and rain. Among the shelves, I found a small volume whose cover showed a wooden puppet with wild eyes. I opened it and read the first line:

“Now it happened that Mr. Cherry, the carpenter, found a piece of wood that laughed and cried like a child.”

That was my first encounter with The Adventures of Pinocchio.

Pinocchio fascinated me. He was mischievous, stubborn, and foolish, yet achingly human. Beneath the fantasy lay a truth I somehow recognised: to become “real,” he had to learn honesty, courage, and love. These weren’t arbitrary virtues. They were the warp and weft of what it means to live meaningfully. Even as a child, I sensed that Collodi’s tale was more than a fable; it was a mirror.

As I grew older, I began to see how that story echoed our own. We are all, in one way or another, wooden creatures longing for life. We stumble through temptation, wrestle with conscience, and yearn for transformation. The journey toward becoming “real” — authentic, upright, whole — is the human story itself.

That’s why I’ve never believed morality to be a mere social invention. If it were, why would the same moral chords resonate across cultures and centuries? Why do we root for justice, even in fiction? It’s because something within us — perhaps the image of God — knows that goodness, beauty, and truth are not imagined; they are discovered.

My father never spoke of theology. He didn’t need to. He simply pointed to stories. Sydney Carton’s self-sacrifice in A Tale of Two Cities, Aslan’s resurrection in Narnia — to him, these weren’t just plots; they were echoes of a greater narrative, the one written before time began: light overcoming darkness, love outlasting death.

Now that he’s gone, I see how profoundly his quiet faith shaped mine. His books still line my shelves, their pages bearing traces of his thumbprints. When I open them, I hear his voice, steady and sure, reminding me that life has meaning, and that our choices matter.

Like Pinocchio, I am still learning to become “real” — still stumbling, still finding my way toward courage and integrity. But the moral compass he gave me keeps its bearing.

In the end, the stories we cherish are never just about heroes and villains. They’re about us — about the moral universe we inhabit and the justice we intuit. My father believed that light, no matter how faint, will always find a way to shine. And I believe him still.

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The Architecture of Wonder

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Monday 27 October 2025 at 11:59

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The Architecture of Wonder

When my children were young, I would read the story of Chicken Little to them; the little bird who, when struck by a falling acorn, panicked and ran shouting, “The sky is falling!” Soon the entire barnyard was in chaos, everyone believing the end had come. None of them paused to look up. None thought to ask whether what they’d heard was true. It’s a story that reflects the irrationality of humans at times as the join they stampede of opinion at times.

We are told the sky is falling, that life is a random chemical flicker, that morality is an illusion, which meaning is a trick of the brain. And like the frightened hens, many run with the story without looking at the evidence.

Yet when one does stop, when one lifts their eyes to the heavens, something altogether different is revealed. Not chaos. Not collapse. But a universe so delicately balanced, so incomprehensibly ordered, that the idea of accident begins to look absurd.

Physicists call it fine-tuning: the discovery that the very laws which make life possible are calibrated with astonishing precision. Gravity, the speed of light, the ratio of proton to electron mass; all must be exactly what they are, or nothing would exist. Sir Fred Hoyle, though not a believer, admitted that “a superintellect has monkeyed with physics.” He could not escape the sense of design hidden within the numbers.

Consider just one example. If gravity were stronger by even one part in ten thousand billion billion, the stars would burn too hot and fast, collapsing in a brief fury. We would have no long-lived suns, no stable worlds, no time for life to begin. If gravity were weaker by the same measure, the cosmos would drift apart. There would be no galaxies, no warmth, no light. A universe either frozen or aflame. In both cases, silent. Lifeless. Empty.

The universe, then, is like a vast instrument; a harp tuned so finely that one loosened string would undo the entire composition. And yet here we are, part of that music, conscious and questioning, capable of awe.

The physicist John Polkinghorne once said, “Science does not explain the world; it describes a world already intelligible.” To him, this intelligibility was no accident, it was a sign of Mind, a whisper of the Divine rationality that holds creation in place. Einstein himself spoke of “the incomprehensible comprehensibility of the universe” as a miracle.

But even beyond reason lies a deeper response: wonder. Søren Kierkegaard described faith as “a passion for the possible.” It is that movement of the heart that steps past abstraction into communion — that looks through the telescope not only to see stars, but to glimpse intention. The fine-tuned order of the cosmos does not so much prove God as it unveils the poetry of His thought.

The silence between the stars is not empty but resonant, palpable, purposeful. The same hand that set the constants of nature also formed the constants of conscience, the moral law that stirs within us when we know joy, or guilt, or love.

Perhaps the universe and the human heart are written in the same handwriting, one in the language of matter, the other in the language of spirit. Together, they tell us we are not the children of accident, but of intention.

So, when the world shouts that the sky is falling, I choose instead to look up — to the heavens finely poised, to the stars that still sing the music of their Maker.

 

Further reading: A Fine-Tuned Universe: The Quest for God in Science and Theology - The Gifford Lectures

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The Moral Architecture of Happiness

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 24 October 2025 at 08:17

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The Moral Architecture of Happiness

Many years ago, I picked up a dusty old book and beneath the subject of Justice, found a passage that stopped me in my tracks. It was written by the 18th-century English jurist William Blackstone, whose words still gleam like gold in the dust of forgotten shelves:

“[God] has so inseparably interwoven the laws of eternal justice with the happiness of each individual that the latter cannot be attained but by observing the former; and, if the former be punctually obeyed, it cannot but induce the latter.”

Blackstone is saying that divine justice and human happiness are not merely connected, they are woven together by the very hand of God, like warp and weft in the fabric of creation. Pull at one thread, and the whole garment trembles.

This reflects his conviction in what he called Natural Law — the belief that God’s moral laws are stitched into the structure of the universe and written on the human heart. The Apostle Paul said as much when he wrote, “The work of the law is written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness” (Romans 2:15). To live justly, then, is to live in tune with the music of the Maker and to move in rhythm with the moral gravity that holds all things together.

True happiness, Blackstone argues, cannot exist apart from righteousness. The psalmist knew this: “Blessed is the one who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked… but whose delight is in the law of the Lord” (Psalm 1:1–2). Happiness here is not a fleeting pleasure or a passing thrill. It is a deep stillness of the soul.

When one violates justice, through deceit, cruelty, or selfishness, one violates one’s own design. The conscience, like a compass knocked off its axis, spins without direction. We lose our bearings in the moral fog. But when one walks uprightly — with integrity, compassion, and justice — happiness follows not as a reward, but as a result, as naturally as morning follows night.

In that sense, God’s universe is morally self-regulating. Justice brings joy; injustice brings misery. The sinner’s misery is not arbitrary punishment; it is dissonance. The righteous man’s peace is not indulgence; it is harmony.

Blackstone’s insight could be paraphrased like this:
God has made the moral order and human happiness one and the same thing. You cannot break one without breaking the other.

This is a profoundly theological view of law. If civil justice loses its anchor in divine law, society begins to fray. C. S.. I truely believe Europe has experienced this loss. C.S. Lewis warned of this unravelling when he wrote in The Abolition of Man that modern society “has discarded in practice what he retains in theory.” In denying objective morality, we saw away the very branch upon which we sit.

Does it surprise us, then, that the key to happiness is bound to God’s law? Would you rather live in a community shaped by the Ten Commandments, or in a world where everyone “does what is right in his own eyes”? (Judges 21:25). To choose the former is to accept that we are bound, not by chains, but by chords of love. As Jesus said, “If you love me, keep my commandments” (John 14:15).

Many have chosen the latter and as a result, have stood back and watched society broken to the core and have sought refuge and happiness in the teachings of Christ and sparking a religious revival.

That is why Christians preach: to call home the wanderers, those who, like the prodigal, have squandered their inheritance of peace for the illusion of freedom. Repentance is the return to harmony, the realignment of one’s life with the moral order of God’s kingdom.

Happiness is not a by-product of obedience; it is interwoven with it. As Blackstone saw, and as Scripture affirms, “Great peace has those who love Your law, and nothing can make them stumble” (Psalm 119:165).

To obey God is not to bow under a burden, but to stand upright in joy. The law of eternal justice and the happiness of the soul — they are threads of the same divine tapestry, shimmering in the light of the One who wove them.

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Compassion in the Chicken Coop

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“God could not be everywhere, so He made mothers”

Robert Louis Stevenson

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Compassion in the Chicken Coop

 

My wife and I had a strange discussion on Sunday evening whilst travelling home from being with friends.

She was raised on a farm in the Philippines, where compassion found its way even into the chicken coop. When they collected the hens’ eggs each morning, they always left one behind. It was a small act of empathy, a quiet gesture of respect toward the bird’s maternal instinct, as though to say, we understand what these eggs mean to you.

A hen’s response when her eggs are taken can vary depending on her breed, her instincts, and how often it happens. Most commercial laying hens today have had their brooding instincts bred out of them. They lay, move on, and lay again, their cycle reduced to production rather than nurture. But the old, broody breeds; the ones still allowed to follow the rhythm of nature show something deeper. They cluck anxiously when the nest is empty, search the straw for their missing clutch, or even puff up and peck when someone reaches too close.

In such cases, it’s fair to say the hen feels a form of loss. Not quite grief as we know it, but an interruption of purpose. In nature, she would gather her clutch, settle down, and wait patiently for life to stir beneath her. To take the eggs away is to sever that maternal rhythm, to break a small circle of creation.

There’s something quietly sad about that, isn’t there? The thwarted instinct, the empty nest, the silence that follows. Yet there’s also something enduring in the way she carries on — scratching at the ground, foraging, laying again. Life persists, even when the pattern is disturbed.

Perhaps that’s what my wife’s family understood: that kindness isn’t only for people. Sometimes it’s found in the smallest gestures in leaving one egg behind as a token of empathy for a creature that feels more than we often imagine.

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Smultronställe: The Wild Strawberry Place

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Wednesday 22 October 2025 at 08:21

 

“I have made this letter longer than usual because
I have not had time to make it shorter.”

Blaise Pascal

 

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 Why Are You a Christian?

Someone asked me last night if I could explain why I am a Christian in 100 words.
For you students on Creative Writing modules, you’ll know how challenging concise writing can be — but here goes:

As a boy on the island of Bute, far from Glasgow’s dark slums, I would sit in my secret place — my smultronställe, as the Swedes would say — and gaze at the night sky, wondering who made the moon and stars. In time, I learned it was the Lord: The Maker of galaxies and of man, crafted in His own image.

Then came Jesus, walking among us, showing what it truly means to be human — to mirror the Father’s light, to forgive, to serve, to love one’s neighbour even unto death.
In Him, I found grace, purpose, and peace. I found my way

When I behold Your heavens,
the work of Your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
which You have set in place —
what is man that You are mindful of him,
or the son of man that You care for him?

Psalm 8:3–4 (BSB)


Note

The Swedish phrase “smultronställe” literally means “wild strawberry place,” but it carries a much deeper, emotional meaning in Swedish culture. A smultronställe is a personal, often hidden spot that holds special significance, peace, or nostalgia. It might be a place from childhood, a quiet lakeside, or simply somewhere that makes you feel wholly yourself.

 

 

 

 

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They Tell Me This is the Age of Enlightenment

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 25 October 2025 at 10:05

 

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They Tell Me This is the Age of Enlightenment. 

“Woe to those who call evil good and good evil”

 They tell me this is the age of enlightenment. We are wise now, liberated, informed. Yet every morning as I walk to my local  graveyard for some solitude  in the stillness of early morning, I see a giant skeleton waving from a garden. At my dentist’s surgery, bats hang from the ceiling. In the supermarket, entire aisles are devoted to gruesome masks, witches’ faces, sinister pumpkins, and plastic wands. Children’s books are filled with demons and darkness, and before long, local children—dressed as everything evil—will come knocking at my door, expecting a few coins for their imitation of hell.

We congratulate ourselves on our sophistication, our modernity, our progress. But there’s something more sinister happening, something spiritual, that most are unaware of. Politicians, civil servants, and pressure groups are steadily eroding Christianity from public life. The rights of believers—to speak, to teach, even to pray—are being diluted or dismissed. Christians are mocked, beaten, and silenced for preaching a gospel that once shaped the very laws we now use to prosecute them.

This UK and Europe in the age of  enlightenment.

I recall a scene from The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Judge Claude Frollo, that self-righteous villain, stands in the cathedral, gazing into the fire as he sings of sin and desire. The animation is stunning, the music haunting—but what lingers is its surrender to darkness. It is not that it lacked truth, but that it mistook torment for depth. Evil is presented as complexity, while goodness is dismissed as naivety.

Why, I wonder, do we glorify the grotesque? What strange thrill do we find in the demonic, the deranged, the depraved? As a teenager, I saw a film about the occult before I became a Christian. When I left the cinema, I felt something unclean, as though the images had left a residue on the soul. Half a century later, they remain vivid. That’s the power of darkness—it imprints, it infects.

Even travel documentaries do it. A village is introduced not through its music or laughter or harvest, but through its masks and rituals of fear. The macabre becomes the measure of authenticity, while goodness is treated as shallow or sentimental. Who decided that the grotesque was more “real” than the gentle, the spiritual, the good?

Perhaps evil shocks us, and shock, in a numb culture, feels like truth. Or maybe we’ve lost our belief in goodness altogether. We treat it like a fairy tale for children, while evil is seen as sophisticated, intellectual, and brave.

But there is nothing enlightened about darkness.

C.S. Lewis observed that evil is always parasitic. It has no life of its own. It feeds on what is good, twisting and deforming it. That’s why evil is so theatrical; it must draw attention to itself because it has no substance apart from what it corrupts. The Devil is in the details, indeed.

Evil is not just cruelty. hatred or violence; it is the rejection of love. Sometimes it is loud and brutal. Sometimes it is quiet and respectable—the slow erosion of compassion, the polite muting of conscience. Something eroding from within.

And yet, in every age, there are those who quietly defy this darkness—not with slogans, but with service. Christians who visit prisons, feed the hungry, clothe the poor, and walk through city streets at night to find the forgotten. Those who build medical missions, pay their taxes honestly, keep their vows, and raise their families in truth. Those who forgive. Who show mercy. Who do not make a spectacle of their virtue but live it faithfully, like candlelight in a world of neon.

These are the truly enlightened.

They are mocked by those who claim to be progressive, dismissed by intellectuals who call faith superstition. But tell me—what is rational about tearing down the very foundations that once held society upright? What wisdom is there in teaching children to laugh at evil and scoff at holiness?

A culture that cannot tell the difference between light and darkness is not enlightened; it is blind.

As a writer, I try to write about what is good and has human value. Not because I am naïve or blind to suffering—on the contrary, I see it too clearly. But goodness needs a louder voice. Evil already has a press team with global reach. The grotesque has a marketing department; goodness must rely on word of mouth.

Why write about what is good? Because the world is starving for it. Beauty restores the soul. Kindness is radical. Joy is courageous. When I write about forgiveness, or a gentle act, or grace breaking through despair, I am not ignoring the shadows—I am defying them.

 

“Woe to those who call evil good and good evil,
who put darkness for light and light for darkness,
who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!”

Isaiah 5:20

 

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The Two Cosmic Dancers

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Tuesday 21 October 2025 at 08:23

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God and the Two Cosmic Dancers

I first learned about quantum entanglement while speaking with a physicist on the island of Kerrera, on Scotland’s Inner Hebrides. It was one of those quiet afternoons when the sea and sky seemed to merge into one, and our conversation turned to the unseen forces that bind the universe together.

Imagine two dancers—one from Glasgow, the other from Beijing. They bump into each other one busy afternoon on Buchanan Street. That’s all. They’ve never met before and will never meet again. Yet somehow, when one lifts her arm, the other does too—at the same instant. No delay. No signal sent through the air. Just an invisible knowing.

That, in an illustrative way, is what what happens when two particles—say, protons—become entangled.

It begins when they’re born together in the same quantum “dance,” perhaps in a high-energy collision in a laboratory, or deep within a star, far from any human eye. In that moment, their properties—spin, charge, magnetic orientation—become linked in a mysterious partnership. Once entangled, their fates are no longer independent; they share a single story.

Even if one proton ends up in a lab in Glasgow and the other in Beijing—or separated by light-years—the bond remains it is theorised. Measure one, and the other responds instantly. Einstein disliked this idea. He called it “spooky action at a distance.” Yet experiment after experiment has confirmed it.

What fascinates me most is what this says about reality itself. Entanglement suggests that the universe isn’t made of isolated pieces, but of relationships. Particles that once touched never entirely let go. Space isn’t an empty void, but a living fabric of invisible connections—threads of meaning woven through creation.

Some physicists even suggest that these invisible ties are what hold the universe together—that space, time, and reality itself might arise from this web of entanglement. But I see something deeper. As the writer of Hebrews reminds us: “By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible.” — Hebrews 11:3 (NIV).

So, when I hear about entangled protons, I hear more than a scientific marvel. I hear a whisper from the deep structure of existence—a reminder that everything which has ever met is still somehow connected. And as we look into that mystery, we find ourselves echoing David’s ancient question beneath the same starlit sky: “What is mankind that you are mindful of them, human beings that you care for them?” — Psalm 8:4 (NIV).

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Living Evidence There is a Creator

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Thursday 16 October 2025 at 11:06

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Living Evidence There is a Creator

Freeman Dyson once wrote, “The more I examine the universe and study the details of its architecture, the more evidence I find that the universe in some sense knew we were coming.”

It’s a powerful thought as I watch an Asian child play the piano in a hall. She presses a key and hears a pure note ring out — an A minor.
She presses another, and another, until she discovers that every key, no matter how far apart, follows a perfect pattern.
Soon she manages to play Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.

She has discovered something: How come these notes should sound so beautifully together?

Years pass, and the child becomes a composer. The more she understands harmony and rhythm, the more she realises that music wasn’t something she had invented; it had been waiting for her to discover it. The laws of sound were not made by her; she had only learned their language. Like objective morality, it was there all the time.

As she grows, her curiosity widens, from the scales on the piano to the elements in nature. She gazes at the periodic table and sees another kind of music: the ordered dance of protons, electrons, and neutrons. Each element, like a note, has its place in a grand composition.

Just as music depends on harmony, so creation depends on mathematical order — the rhythm of planets, the symmetry of petals, the ratio that shapes a shell or a galaxy.

Mathematics works because it describes a universe already composed with intention.

We are like the child at the piano: discovering, not designing — playing, not creating — the music that was there long before us.

“His eternal power and divinity, have been plainly discernible through things which he has made and which are commonly seen and known…  They knew all the time that there is a God, yet they refused to acknowledge him as such, or to thank him for what he is or does. “

Romans 1:20 J.B. Phillips Translation

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“I was seven Last Night”

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 12 October 2025 at 18:23

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“I was seven Last Night”

I was seven years old last night. I wanted to be a vet. I didn’t want to be a soldier or a president — just someone who could touch the quiet and visit the animals in the forests near my home. 
Mama said I should sleep, but the stars were still awake, scattered like precious gems on the dark sky above my town. I pressed my face to the cold windowpane, trying to count them, but they kept trembling, as if frightened too be counted.

Papa had promised me we’d go to the park again when the weather turned warm and this is all over. I’d ride my old chopper that belonged to dad when he was seven; the one with the bent handles like a Harley. Dad would chase me till we both fell laughing into the grass before all this happened. I liked the way the world smelled after rain. It always felt like God had washed it clean, ready for another try.

When the sirens started, I thought they were part of a dream.
Mama’s arms wrapped around me, I could hear her heart beating fast; dum-dum! dum-dum!
The world outside howled; a wind, a growl, a noise from the deep.
I wanted to ask, why do they hate us? But the words got lost in the thunder.

There was light then. A light too bright for night. The kind that doesn’t belong to our world.
And then, quiet again. Not the kind that means safety, but the kind that holds everything, every prayer, every tear, every unspoken why.

I’m not cold now. I’m not afraid.
The stars are closer than ever, and I wonder if they know my name.
Mama is sleeping somewhere below, her heart aching in that endless human way. Tell her I’m sleeping now, to keep my chopper until I wake. Tell her when we meet again; we will laugh with a gentle heartbeat.

The town is erased from my memory now with the guns, bombs, planes, drones and tanks.

But stories don’t die that easily. They echo, even in ruins.
I was going to grow tall, learn English, study biology. I had a notebook with drawings of foxes, mushrooms, birds, moons, comets trailing their long silver hair. Maybe someone will find it in the rubble. Perhaps they’ll know I was there.

And I ask the same question every soul asks when the world forgets itself: What is the meaning of all this?
Men build guns and drones and tanks and planes, but none of it follows them here. No one has power here. Only the things we gave without return. The love the affection the kindness.
People are clutching photographs. They are still looking for purpose in the ruins. Mama and Papa hold my photo, my first day at school, they are kneeling beside the broken room where I will always be seven.

I was seven years old last night.
Now I am part of something older than time —
the silence between stars,
the heartbeat of the world when no one is listening,
the small, unending hope that someone will finally learn
what it means to be human.

“If someone dies, will they live again?
All the days of my hard service
I will wait for my renewal to come.”
Job 14:14 (NIV)

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Finding Providence Amid Life’s Storm

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 11 October 2025 at 09:38

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Finding Providence Amid Life’s Storm

It is 3:30am on Saturday October 4 and I cannot sleep. Scotland is being battered by gales and heavy rain. Storm Amy has taken a tantrum. A few hours ago, a tree fell into my garden; a sudden, violent reminder of nature’s force. Now, taller and mightier trees sway ominously above my roof, their branches thrashing in the wind, threatening to come down and wreck my home.

In the midst of the storm, I reach for my Bible, seeking calm in the chaos. It randomly  opens at Psalm 121 and my eyes fall upon these words:

“The Eternal will keep you safe
from all of life’s evils,
from your first breath to the last breath you breathe,
from this day and forever.”

What are the chances? God whispers through a line of Scripture, finding us in the dark, reminding us that He is near. Sometimes His communication is so personal, so precise, that it feels as though the words were written for this that night—for that very hour.

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.

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Dances with Wolves – Dancing in My Head

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Thursday 16 October 2025 at 11:07

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Dances with Wolves – Dancing in My Head

 

When I listen to John Barry’s theme from Dances with Wolves, something stirs deep inside me; it's what the Swedes call längtan or a  “longing,” but that translation feels too shallow. The word means a profound yearning for something distant, lost, or not yet known. It is not quite sorrow, not quite hope, but a tender ache that points beyond itself.

The music carries me into wide, open spaces, endless sky, wind over grass, a horizon without end. Then, suddenly, I reach a wall, an invisible edge beyond which I cannot go. The music continues, but I stop, left with that ache suspended between presence and absence. Am I sharing a piece of Barry’s mind as he composed the piece? Who knows.

I have known this feeling since boyhood when I see endless stars, a sundown or extracts from the classics and even in Runrig, Na h-Oganaich , Pink Floyd and Horslips music.

Perhaps längtan is the soul’s memory of wholeness, its reaching for the eternity God has placed in our hearts (Ecclesiastes 3:11)

I no longer see this longing as a wound but as a gift. It keeps me searching beyond the visible and reminds me that I am meant for something more. Even the ache itself is beautiful, because it whispers of a love, a home, and a life still waiting beyond the horizon.

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Where Are the Other Nine?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 17 October 2025 at 04:33

"Didn’t all ten receive the same healing this fellow did? 

Where are the other nine? "

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Where Are the Other Nine?

It’s not much to report, I suppose. But this morning, as I drove out of my street, I paused and flashed my lights to let a father and his little girl cross before I went further. They stepped out hand in hand, and when they reached the other side, the girl turned and waved, a small, bright flutter of her hand encouraged by her father’s smile.

It was such a simple thing, yet it stayed with me as I drove on. That wave was more than a polite thank you. It felt like a shared recognition that we need each other, that life is not just about getting where we’re going but noticing those around us. Gratitude has that power. It lifts the moment and lightens the heart. And yet, I can’t help but notice how rare it seems to be these days with a world with spiraling ingrates.

The smallest act of gratitude costs nothing. It is an acknowledgment that we are not self-sufficient, that we depend on the kindness and patience of others. But we live in a time that celebrates independence and self-made lives. To say “thank you” is to admit we have received something, and many people now seem uncomfortable with that. We rush through our days distracted, often too busy to notice what has been done for us, let alone to express appreciation.

It reminds me of one of Jesus’ most striking questions: “Were not all ten cleansed? Where are the other nine?” Ten men with leprosy cried out to Him for mercy. All ten were healed. Yet only one, a Samaritan, turned back, threw himself at Jesus’ feet, and thanked Him. The others rushed ahead with their new lives and never looked back.

That story still speaks loudly today. We know people like that. Gratitude is not just a social grace. It is a spiritual posture. It recognises that life itself is a gift, that every breath and every kindness received is not owed but given. Without gratitude, we grow entitled and indifferent. We stop seeing the good around us. We even stop seeing God’s hand in our lives. Like the nine lepers, we hurry on, healed but unchanged.

And there are consequences when gratitude fades. Communities weaken when kindness goes unacknowledged. Relationships become colder when generosity is expected rather than appreciated. Even our care for the natural world diminishes when we no longer feel thankful for its beauty and abundance. Gratitude nurtures reverence. Without it, the heart hardens, and the world grows smaller.

The little girl’s wave was a small thing, but it reminded me that gratitude is not gone. It still exists in these fleeting, everyday moments. And perhaps that is where its renewal must begin — not in grand gestures or speeches, but in a child’s wave, a sincere thank you, a quiet prayer of thanks.

Jesus noticed the one who returned. He still does. And maybe His question still lingers over our own hurried, distracted age: Where are the other nine?

And remember dear reader, I am deeply grateful for reading these thoughts as it is encouraging to know that others are on the same page in the metaphorical sense.

Luke 17:11-19 "Where are the nine?

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Jim McCrory

The Test of Hiddenness

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Monday 6 October 2025 at 08:21

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The Test of Hiddenness

“It is the glory of God to conceal a matter; to search out a matter is the glory of kings” Proverbs 25:2 tells us. The world is arranged in such a way that we are never given certainty, only possibility. God is present enough to be found but hidden enough to be ignored.

As Blaise Pascal noted, there is light enough for those who wish to see and darkness enough for those who prefer to turn away. This is no accident; it is the wisdom of a God who does not coerce belief but invites it. We live our lives as if unobserved, like children playing in the street, unaware that eyes are upon them. It is in this unguarded state that our real selves are revealed, not the selves we perform under scrutiny, but what we are when we believe no one is watching.

 In that space, our choices speak for us. Do we search for what is hidden, or do we walk past it, uninterested? God’s concealment, then, is not a withdrawal but a test of love and longing. It is a way of discovering who we truly are, not by what we know, but by what we seek.

“God intended that they would seek Him and perhaps reach out for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us.”  Acts 17:27 (BSB).

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Jim McCrory

The Day I Almost closed my Eyes

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 5 October 2025 at 19:34

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The Day I Almost closed my Eyes

I must have been twelve years old, I’m sure I was. It was that age when everything begins to shift—when the world starts to look a little brighter, and far more confusing. My friends had just packed up their two-week holiday on the island, leaving me with an odd sense of emptiness. For the first time, I realized I wasn’t just missing the boys; I was missing the girls too—particularly a girl whose name I can’t recall. There was no real romance, of course; who’s ever heard of a twelve-year-old romantic? She was only a pal. Just like the boys.

That Saturday, with the holiday cabin feeling unusually quiet, I wandered through the fields and down to Ascog beach. Nature has always drawn me when I’m confused or lonely. I wasn’t looking for anything in particular—just a way to occupy the strange loneliness I couldn’t quite name. The beach was rocky and wild, the waves crashing in their endless rhythm. I ventured out, picking my way across the jagged rocks with the overconfidence only a boy on the cusp of adolescence can have.

Then I slipped.

The fall was sudden and brutal. The sharp edge of a rock grazed my arm as the waves seized me, pulling me into their chaotic embrace. For a terrifying moment, I couldn’t tell which way was up. My arms flailed, desperate to find purchase, until finally, I managed to grab the top of a rock and pull myself free.

I sat there on the sharp, wet stone, shivering and catching my breath. My heart pounded like a bodhrán in my chest. All the “what ifs" began to flood my mind. What if I hadn’t caught that rock? What if the waves had dragged me further out? What if I had drowned right there, on that ordinary Saturday, with no one around to see or save me?

For the first time, I felt the weight of my own fragility, the startling realization that life could be taken from me as easily as a wave dragging a pebble back to sea. I had always assumed I was invincible; children often do. But sitting there, dripping wet and utterly shaken, I began to wonder about things far bigger than myself.

Selma Lagerlöf, I think it was, who wrote something about imploring God to let her reach her full potential before her life was gleaned from this earth.

And when I reflect on that day, Lagerlöf’s words come back to me.

I began to wrestle with questions far beyond my years. How would God judge a life so young? I had many sins to confess.

What happens to a child who closes their eyes on life before they've had the chance to really open them? Would there be understanding, or only silence?

That day marked the first time I truly felt the weight of my own mortality—not as a distant, abstract concept, but as something immediate and deeply personal. It didn’t stop me from climbing rocks again. Life went on, as it does. But the memory of that day stayed with me, a quiet reminder of how thin the line is between being and not being, and how quickly everything can change.

Even now, decades later, I visit that boy sitting on the rocks, trembling and thoughtful, his childhood beginning to slip away with the tide. I wonder if, in those moments of quiet panic and reflection, I began to grow up just a little. Without realizing it, I was starting to understand the preciousness of life—not in a grand or dramatic way, but in the simple, shivering recognition that it is fragile and fleeting.

And that’s enough. After all, we are never truly ready; there are always ifs.

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Jim McCrory

Lovers of Self

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Thursday 16 October 2025 at 19:23

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Lovers of Self

"And know this: in the last days, times will be hard.  You see, the world will be filled with narcissistic, money-grubbing, pretentious, arrogant, and abusive people. "

2 Timothy 3: 1,2.

The Voice Bible

We’ve all heard the story; it captures something about the negative part of human nature. In Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Narcissus kneels by a still pool and becomes entranced by his reflection. The youth who once spurned all others now burns with love; not for another human being, but for the image shimmering back at him. He cannot eat, cannot sleep, cannot leave. His passion becomes his prison, and he withers beside the water’s edge. It is a story two thousand years old, yet it feels written for our century. We are surrounded by people gazing into their own reflections, not in forest pools, but in screens and curated feeds. And like Narcissus, mistaking the image for the self.

In recent conversations, I have heard concern from parents about the world their children are growing up in, a world where the commandment “love your neighbour as yourself” has been reimagined into “love yourself above all.” It is not only the young who are caught in this tide; people of all ages are being shaped by a culture that prizes the performance of the self over the substance of the soul. The question is no longer “Who am I becoming?” but “How am I appearing?” And the difference between those two questions is the difference between becoming a person and becoming a brand.

This is what I meant by a “brittle love of the image rather than the person.” When love is directed at the image, the version of us that is polished, public, and approved, it becomes fragile, easily shattered by criticism, age, or failure. It depends on applause. It isolates us from others and from our own depths. But when love embraces the person, despite being flawed, fearful, and unfinished, it roots itself. It allows grace, growth, and genuine connection.

The Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky understood the consequences of self-love untethered from moral reality. In Notes from Underground, his nameless narrator exposes the rot beneath rational egoism; the belief that humans will act in their self-interest and that this is enough to build a just society. Left unchecked, self-interest turns inward and festers. The Underground Man becomes spiteful, paralysed, and deeply alone, sneering at the very freedom he cannot bear to use. His tragedy is not merely that he loves himself too much, but that he loves himself wrongly. Cut off from others, from goodness, from any truth larger than his own wounded pride, people eventually see through him.

Jean-Paul Sartre took the analysis further. He called it bad faith: the self-deception of playing a role to escape the weight of freedom and responsibility. We construct identities, the dutiful employee, the clever contrarian who fabricates stories to gain attention, the glamorous influencer, and then hide inside them. We mistake the mask for the face.

In our time, the phenomenon is everywhere. Online, especially, performativity reigns. The curated persona stands in for a soul. We “build” ourselves in pixels, carefully selecting what the world sees, while the deeper self, the one capable of repentance, compassion, and transformation, remains unexamined and often unknown.

This turn inward is not limited to the narcissistic individual. It is cultural and systemic. Modern societies have elevated the individual to the status of ultimate authority. Authenticity is prized above all, yet too often it is confused with mere self-expression. Without a higher standard, truth, goodness, God, authenticity becomes another word for self-assertion. And when the self is treated as the final reference point, love loses its proper order. It turns inward and devours itself.

The Christian tradition has long warned against this inversion. Paul’s description of the “last days” speaks of people being “lovers of self” (2 Timothy 3:2), a phrase that names not healthy self-respect but disordered love. Love, to be whole, must be rightly ordered: God first, neighbour second, self-third. When that order is reversed, when self-rises above God and neighbour, the results are isolation, fragility, and spiritual emptiness — all the things we see multiplying in our anxious, image-saturated age.

There is a way back. Psychology hints at it in the concept of self-compassion — a humble, honest care for oneself that acknowledges weakness and seeks growth. Faith names it more fully: loving ourselves not as idols but as creatures made in God’s image, fallen yet redeemable. Such love is neither brittle nor boastful. It does not depend on applause. It does not shrink from truth. It anchors us in reality and frees us to turn outward — toward God, toward others, toward a life larger than ourselves.

The mirror still beckons. The temptation to fall in love with our reflection remains. But beyond the pool’s surface lies a deeper calling: to love not the image, but the person; not the mask, but the soul; not the fleeting projection, but the enduring child of God. Only then does self-love cease to be a prison and become instead the beginning of wisdom.

*****

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.

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Some Thoughts About Themes and Worldview

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 3 October 2025 at 08:37

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Some Thoughts About Themes and Worldview

I was at the movies last night and an ad for the upcoming Bruce Springsteen movie was featured. The theme, Deliver Me from Nowhere. Now I wonder if we watched that movie without knowing the theme if we would conclude that was the theme. It’s not as easy as you may think. Worldview comes into play. Let’s illustrate.

Take a moment to read Luke 15:11–32 for yourself. You can find it here on BibleGateway. It's one of the most familiar stories in Scripture. A younger son demands his inheritance, leaves home, wastes it all on reckless living, and completely screws up his life. He ends up in misery. He finally returns to a father who is working in the field and sees his son afar off and runs to welcome him home.

We usually call it the parable of the prodigal son. But what if the real theme is bigger than we think?

In the 1980s, New Testament scholar Mark Allan Powell asked students from three different countries, the States, Russia, and Tanzania, to read the parable, set the Bible aside, and then retell the story from memory. What they remembered, and what they forgot, revealed something powerful.

Most of the American students completely left out a key detail. They forgot the line that says, “There was a severe famine in that country, and he began to be in need.” This wasn’t intentional. Many didn’t even realize they had skipped it. For them, the young man’s downfall was entirely due to his own bad choices. He blew his money. He ended up in the mud. It was a story of personal failure. That perspective reflects a culture that strongly values individual responsibility and self-reliance.

The Russian students almost always remembered the famine. In fact, many of them pointed to it as the turning point in the story. Coming from a country with painful memories of hunger under Soviet rule, they knew what famine meant. The son's suffering wasn’t just about reckless living. He was also caught in something bigger than himself — a disaster no one could control. In their telling, the story became a reminder that hardship is not always self-inflicted.

The Tanzanian students noticed something else. What stood out to them was the sentence, “No one gave him anything.” In their cultural context, where community support and mutual responsibility are deeply rooted, this was a shocking failure. The son was starving, and the people around him chose to do nothing. For them, the heart of the story was not just personal or political — it was social. The problem wasn’t just sin or famine. It was neglect. No one helped.

Three cultures. Three different emphases. One story.

Powell’s experiment reveals something important. The way we read a story often depends on where we come from. Our culture shapes what we see, what we remember, and what we believe matters most. That’s not always wrong, but it’s not the whole picture either.

The Americans emphasized personal responsibility. The Russians saw the weight of history and external crisis. The Tanzanians focused on the breakdown of community. Each view offers a truth, but none of them capture the full story by themselves.

So, what is the theme? Is it about a son who wasted his life? A famine that made everything worse? A society that failed to show compassion?

Yes. It is about all of that. The parable only makes sense when all the pieces are in place. The son made foolish choices. The famine struck. The people around him did nothing. His life unravelled through a mix of personal mistakes, unfortunate events, and social indifference. And at the end of all that mess, grace met him in the form of a father who ran toward him because this lossed son realised he had amends to make with God and his father. "I have sinned against heaven and against you, Father."

That’s the deeper message here. We often want a single, clean answer. But human stories, like this one, are more tangled than that. And God’s grace meets us in the middle of the tangle, not after we figure everything out.

This parable also reminds us to stay humble in how we read Scripture. We often assume we’re reading it “as it is,” when in fact we’re reading it through our own lens or the lens of the religion we were raised in. When I left my religion of thirty-three years, I read the scriptures afresh and was surprised how wrong my concept was. We highlight the parts that match our experience and quietly skip past what doesn’t. Like the students who forgot the famine, we may not even realize what we’ve left behind.

That’s why we need each other. We need to read with people who see things differently. Not just to broaden our understanding, but to correct it. When others point out what we missed, they’re not challenging the truth. They’re helping us see more of it.

So, what’s the theme? Maybe it’s that no single theme is enough. The power of this story is that it holds space for human failure, historical hardship, communal breakdown, and still ends with grace. The story is about ypu and I who need reconcilliation with God and those we have hurt.

And that’s exactly the kind of story we need.

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