A New Perspective
Aug. 15th, 2020 12:27 pmThis month's challenge for
story_works is to find a new perspective on something. Since I've been trying this in various ways, I decided it merited its own post.
First of all, I believe all lives matter and therefore this means BlackLivesMatter, which is why, as I wrote in yesterday's book review, I've just read Why I'm No Longer Talking To White People About Race.
Secondly, as we come to an end of the initial reaction to Covid-19 and realise that we're facing a much longer term problem, which will mean making amendments to the way we've always done things, for me this specifically applies to the church. There is a tendency to look back and want to simply tweak what we were doing, but I believe it's time to look for new approaches. Which means, when I was speaking about the Good Shepherd the other week, I was emphasising being led into new pastures rather than going back to the ones which had been fully grazed already.
Another way of finding a new perspective is one I used when asked to write a short reflection on Jesus walking on the water. Instead of looking from the outside and condemning the disciples' lack of faith, try to imagine yourself as actually there and see how it feels and discover there's rather more to the story.
My third way of finding a new perspective has been on writing. One of my current FutureLearn courses is on fairy tales, and last week we were encouraged to look at an alternative to Red Riding Hood. My Tigger Holmes series tends to do just that, so I wrote Tigger Holmes and the Case of the Missing Grandmother. In addition, there's an interesting story in the book of Joshua in the Old Testament about Caleb's daughter, so for
fan_flashworks 'Safe' challenge I decided to expand it a little: Caleb's Daughter
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First of all, I believe all lives matter and therefore this means BlackLivesMatter, which is why, as I wrote in yesterday's book review, I've just read Why I'm No Longer Talking To White People About Race.
Secondly, as we come to an end of the initial reaction to Covid-19 and realise that we're facing a much longer term problem, which will mean making amendments to the way we've always done things, for me this specifically applies to the church. There is a tendency to look back and want to simply tweak what we were doing, but I believe it's time to look for new approaches. Which means, when I was speaking about the Good Shepherd the other week, I was emphasising being led into new pastures rather than going back to the ones which had been fully grazed already.
Another way of finding a new perspective is one I used when asked to write a short reflection on Jesus walking on the water. Instead of looking from the outside and condemning the disciples' lack of faith, try to imagine yourself as actually there and see how it feels and discover there's rather more to the story.
My third way of finding a new perspective has been on writing. One of my current FutureLearn courses is on fairy tales, and last week we were encouraged to look at an alternative to Red Riding Hood. My Tigger Holmes series tends to do just that, so I wrote Tigger Holmes and the Case of the Missing Grandmother. In addition, there's an interesting story in the book of Joshua in the Old Testament about Caleb's daughter, so for
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