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Posts tagged with "culture"

Secular Inquisition at the Royal Society

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Melanie Phillips reports on dastardly doings at the bastion of scientific rigour, the Royal Society.

Secular Inquisition at the Royal Society
Wednesday, 17th September 2008


Totalitarian atheism has taken another scalp. Michael Reiss, the Royal Society’s embattled director of education, has been forced out – for daring to suggest that children should be taught to discuss alternative views and subject them to the scrutiny of empirical reasoning. As the Times reports, Professor Reiss told the British Association for the Advancement of Science last week that teachers should accept that they were unlikely to change the minds of pupils with creationist beliefs – ie, that the world was created literally in six days. Instead of dismissing creationism as a misconception, teachers should try to explain why it had no scientific basis.

‘My experience after having tried to teach biology for 20 years is if one simply gives the impression that such children are wrong, then they are not likely to learn much about the science,’ he said. ‘I realised that simply banging on about evolution and natural selection didn’t lead some pupils to change their minds at all. Just because something lacks scientific support doesn’t seem to me a sufficient reason to omit it from the science lesson . . . There is much to be said for allowing students to raise any doubts they have — hardly a revolutionary idea in science teaching — and doing one’s best to have a genuine discussion.’

What is wrong with that? Nothing. It is merely a statement of impeccably liberal educational beliefs. And as the Royal Society implicitly admits, there was nothing there which contradicted anything it stands for. But Rev Reiss was grievously misrepresented by people who seized upon the fact that, although he is a scientist he is also – gulp – a Christian. They accused him of suggesting that creationism should be taught in school as having equal value to evolution. In vain did Reiss protest that he had said nothing of the kind. The Royal Society has got rid of him because his views were

"open to misinterpretation"



and thus

While it was not his intention, this has led to damage to the society’s reputation.



So he has been pushed out not because of what he actually said but because other people misrepresented what he had said. Instead of standing up to the bullying Phil Willis, the chairman of the Commons Innovation, Universities, Science and Skills Committee, who said

I was horrified to hear these views and I reject them totally. They are a step too far and they fly in the face of what science is about. I think if his [Professor Reiss's] views are as mentioned they may be incompatible with his position,



(how dare an MP seek to dictate what a scientist may or may not say!) the Royal Society itself pushed its heretic into the flames.

Far from Reiss damaging the reputation of the Royal Society, it has now done this to itself. Appalling.



Article

Harry Potter Movie

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Last night I tagged along with my offspring and their friends to watch the new Harry Potter movie- Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.

It was a very good movie, very enjoyable. It had a good balance of action and humour.

I've never been a big believer in the "Harry Potter is evil" school of thought. If people seriously think that Harry Potter will encourage witchcraft then they don't understand what fiction is about.

On the contrary, I see the Harry Potter series as being about ordinary people being caught up in the big drama of good and evil, and wrestling with issues like what it means to be "good" and "human" in a fallen world.

The wizard society is largely like the church- unseen by the wider community, yet possessing unbelievable powers to influence the destiny of the world.

So what are the issues that come out in Order of the Phoenix?

* The power of community- there are two communities which come together to fight the evil Voldemort. The Order of the Phoenix consisting of adult wizards, and Harry's ad hoc group "Dumbledore's Army". Both groups understand that the fight against evil is bigger than just any single gifted individual- we need each other. The church needs to listen to this message!

* Evil is the absence of love. Harrry at one stage says to Voldemort "You will never have any friends, you will never know love." It's the power of love which marks the essential nature of God in humans.

* Even good people can be easily deceived by the nature of evil. Cornelius Fudge, the Minister of Magic, does not want to believe that Voldemort is on the loose and clamps down on the activities at Hogwarts to contain Dumbledore and Harry Potter. Eventually, when confronted by the evidence he relents.

* Nobody is perfect- not even Dumbledore or Harry Potter. None of us should claim to have it all together.

* Powerful depiction of the insidious nature of demonic possession. It's the mind that is the "stronghold" which gives satan the power to control us. Harry is warned that Voldemort can twist his memory and use it as a weapon against him. We see Harry almost possessed by Voldemort. The imagery of a snake at this point is very interesting.


So it's a great story, and the movie tells the story well.

It's also a good parable for Christians to see and to take lessons from. It's not a Christian story as such, but all stories are ultimately about The Story.

Blessings

Keith

Spirit of the Age

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An important role for all christians, but especailly those called to intercession, prophecy and evangelism (which, I guess, is all of us) is to understand the prevailing principalities and rulers, the dark forces which rule over our culture.

In the modern age this was clearly the spirit of arrogance tied to the false doctrine of consumerism.

The spirit of modernity is rapidly givng way to the spirit of post-modernism, and new principalities are starting to be manifest.

We are now moving into an age dominated by the spirit of fear. The media have always thrived on and fed this spirit, after all bad news sells.

Starting with the change in the millennium there was a new emphasis on fear. Remember the panic casued by the Y2K bug? Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, fear of terrorism has driven much of the agenda of governments and the media. As the terrorist threat is being more or less brought under control, fear of global climatic annihilation has taken its place.

The Greens have really leapt onto this- this is THE issue that they have been looking for. And what can be bigger than human beings destroying the planet through our own carelessness? Australians have bought into this lie more than any other western culture, probably influenced by the drought and the resultant water restrictions in the big cities.

Associated with this now is the poverty spirit of the environmental movement which wnats to tell us that the planet doesn't have the resources to support our current population. We have to lessen our impact on the planet, reduce our footprint and generally make do with much less than we now have.

People have been saying things like this for over 100 years (possibly since Adam and Eve left the Garden!). Mankind was supposedly on the brink of catastrophe in the early 1900s because the agricultural system could barely support what was there back then. London was about to be overwhelmed by an over flow of horse manure. Well, the global population is about three times what it was then, and the average wealth acrosss the world has mulitplied also. Heart disease, diabetes and obesity are not just problems of Western cultures but are now making inroads into the formerly poor nations of China and India. And of course, the internal combustion engine displaced the horse as the main cause of urban pollution.

But still there are people who want to tell us that the world can't support the population.

All christians need to rebuke these spirits in the name of Jesus. We need to declare that God is our provider and that He is our shield and protection.

These spirits have no part in our culture.

We also need to redeem popular culture. The Greens come from a philosophy that says humans are just a feral biological element running unrestrained in the world. God says that human beings are infinitely precious.

Don't buy the lies being propagated by these people.

Stand against the spirits of poverty and fear.

Blessings

Keith