
Life doesn’t come with a pretty bow
Long term suffering is rarely spoken about in church yet is a constant narrative for Bible characters. Katharine Welby-Roberts lives with long term mental health problems and thinks we should talk...
Speaker(s): Katharine Welby-Roberts
Primania: Who’s paying for your clothes?
Fast fashion. The age of Primark. When you buy a T-shirt for £2 who is really paying the price? The Rana Plaza garment factory collapse in Bangladesh showed it's time for a fashion revolution....
Speaker(s): Katherine Maxwell-Rose
A Vocabulary for Pain
Reclaiming the unique Jewish-Christian tradition of lament as an antidote to upset, anger, depression and bewilderment, both at an individual and a corporate level. Once described in his...
Speaker(s): John Bell
A Thistle in a Field of Roses
Some perspectives on England from a frequent Scottish visitor, taking in issues like regionalisation and ‘Londonisation'. Once described in his denomination's magazine as looking like a...
Speaker(s): John Bell
Sadaqa Day: putting faith into action
With a young and growing Muslim population alongside an established Christian community in Britain, is there scope for more social action work to be done together? Sadaqa Day is a day of social...
Speaker(s): Julie Siddiqi
Syria – who are the good guys?
Is there an end in sight for the Syrian crisis, now in its fifth year? We are becoming numbed by the scale of the suffering. Are there any good guys? How can we as Christians make sense of it all? A...
Speaker(s): Jeremy Moodey
A Lot Like Eve
Pioneering chaplain to the world of fashion, Rev Joanna Jepson peels back the layers and explores how it is that fashion has the power to both enslave and liberate, and why it matters. Joanna Jepson...
Speaker(s): Joanna Jepson
Pursuing the Common Good
Christians need to leave behind tired debates about women and sexuality and deal with avoided issues like mental health, criminal justice and responsibly rearing children. Once described in his...
Speaker(s): John Bell
On Helplessness
Looking at a range of thinkers from Augustine to Freud, Giles Fraser will argue that admitting our own fundamental helplessness is the first move of all morality. Giles Fraser is priest in charge of...
Speaker(s): Giles Fraser
Where Are We Headed in Israel/Palestine? ‘Judaization’ and the Rise of the One-State Solution
Israel now effectively rules all of Israel/ Palestine, with the Palestinians of the Occupied Territories left permanently stateless. There seems to be only one option left – but what would a...
Speaker(s): Jeff Halper
War Against the People: Israel, the Palestinians and Global Pacification
Palestine is being globalised. Do we see in Israel's occupation and ‘war on terrorism' in Palestine a microcosm of wider relations between the archipelago of the world's richest countries and...
Speaker(s): Jeff Halper
Thomas Merton today
Contemplative, poet-prophet, social critic, radical disciple. What is it about Thomas Merton, born 100 years ago, that captivates readers seeking to live deeprooted faith in a complex world? Gary...
Speaker(s): Gary Hall
Close Your Youth Group to Save Your Church
Despite lots of youth work, the church is still haemorrhaging young people. What if we took a different approach? Why not close your youth group and open an intergenerational group instead. Gemma...
Speaker(s): Gemma Dunning
Who are we to Judge?
Self-confessed finger-pointer Fraser Dyer considers how the followers of the one who taught, ‘Judge not, lest ye be judged' got so judgmental. Has social media made us worse? And can we do...
Speaker(s): Fraser Dyer
No Enclosed Garden: Thomas Traherne’s Boundless Innocence
In this session we will linger awhile with Traherne – poet of the Welsh Borders, lover of nature and people – to be enraptured together by his visions of boundless innocence, and wonder at how...
Speaker(s): Elizabeth S. Dodd
