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Showing posts with label Inverness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inverness. Show all posts

Wednesday 3 August 2022

Chatty Chappies!

 Chatty Chappies! has taken off and Andrew and I are pleased with the production of the last 12 programmes. as we move on to the next batch we hope to expand our listening numbers our content and of course introduce the new theme tune.

 In the future we hope to have live chats through either facebook or u tube.

Links are found in the last post.
 

 

 

Thursday 12 May 2022

Todays update

 Coming into the Writers hub recently I was on the number 2 bus to Inverness centre.

There is a wonderful feeling when you see the traffic building up and the bus has a separate route and sometimes lane, to move through the early morning to its destination. That sense of skipping the queue or getting, even  taking an advantage point is worthy of a smile.

It is a light dream I had that morning as we travelled north down a road I barely know. My sense of being was still in Perth and I am now in Inverness and have been for some time. The hub , as in Writers Hub has been functioning for some months and is a good base for budding writers. I quickly say it is not a critique forum but simply a place that other writers meet to work independently in the same environment. This helps in discipline.

I have taken time to reflect on some things now that we are in our house and getting established. We had made links with people as soon as we arrived in Inverness. The 8 months in rented accommodation seems quick and a memory, now as we move into a new chapter of life.


 

Opportunities to play bass in Worship circles grows and with gardening and routine tasks the weeks are flying in.

Family history has had a back shelf for almost 12 months, and I have a lot of catching up to do with many in that circle...

Chatty Chappies! on facebook is growing and its fun to chat with Andy about the various topics we dig up. The run on the Butteries was interesting especially when my grandfather was a baker in Aberdeen.

I can imagine the seafarer who went to his baker complaining about the lack of bread on sea trips and the poor biscuits that were a substitute for stale bread. What creativeness to ask the baker to come up with something appropriate for long journeys that would last longer than bread. Then we have the teamwork as the baker goes next door to chat with the butcher on how to have longevity in baking. So back in 1880 the baker tries to make a new product with the addition of lard as a preservative.

Having experimented with dough he comes up with what locals called a Rowy.( because there is a lot of turning in the process) Our seafarer is delighted with the new product and the rest is history they say!

Then in 1917 fresh bread was banned as it was seen as unfair that some could get fresh bread and others could not.  During the war the buttery was a staple breakfast with porridge and tea. A good way to gain energy for the day ahead. With its ban ( it was seen as a bread) the people revolted. Unions were involved food control was in place and there was such a fuss that “Home rule for Scotland “ was muted over the banning of the buttery. 22 September 1917 saw the last buttery baking.

The fresh bread ban was rescinded in 1919 not before two bakers were fined for selling butteries.

Today the buttery is on shelves far from the Aberdeen and Buchan coast in bakeries and supermarkets. There are varying qualities of buttery around, but it would seem from small research the independent Bakers are the best.

Contact

Writers Hub  writershubinverness@gmail.com

Chatty Chappies! .www.facebook.com/groups/495660008588250/

Family history   www.familyhistory.blogspot.com

Reason People do not join in worship singing

Friday 3 December 2021

Saturday 20 November 2021

Bogallan accident and observations

Sounds like there was a major accident between Kessock and Tore roundabout last night. My trip to Alness was cancelled. 

Big headache for the police. I could see impatient drivers … not such a sleepy Highlands as I remembered.
The large roundabout at Inches is up for a revamp.
Now that is good but I can see in the last few months those driving in the Inverness area are  not keen to stop on roundabouts and many just push  on regardless. The south by pass is particularly hazardous and I fear for more accidents or bumps. Now the holidaymakers are away it’s clear it’s locals. 

Come on folks slow down 10 seconds pause will not make any difference to your day and might help your blood pressure.
 
Speed limits of 20 30 40 are the maximums and probably not the rate for going round roundabouts.
Drive with concern for others.

Thursday 11 November 2021

WritersHub - Inverness

 Writers Hub Inverness

 


 Had a great meeting this morning regarding a Writers group for mutual encouragement but certainly not for critiquing based in Inverness.

If you are local and are interested e mail Writershubinverness@gmail.com. Thanks.

Grerat opportunity to move forward that writing project that you never started or never finished. 

 

Sunday 13 May 2018

New Church in the Highlands ...Take stock Part One



A brief look at the Baptist Witness and increase in particular for the Highlands and Islands of Scotland by Brian Robertson





Background



With some years working in the Highlands, then away and back again several times, I have had the opportunity to be in church circle and observe the changing state over a 25 year gap.



During that time I have been in leadership in Alness, Thurso, Perth, Dingwall, Pitlochry and now back in Perth. In two of these situations I was privileged to see a fresh growth in maturity and numbers in the Church. I have also spent time South of the border and seen other church situations. I draw on this experience with also my Baptist origins in Stirling to comment on the Highlands and Islands work.

But before that, it is important to consider the current situation in the Western world.



Why must the Western Church study Culture today?



  • Because of the incarnation. Jesus did it.
  • Cultural understanding is essential as good mission practise
  • Christendom and Modernity are in rapid decline
  • The West is in the midst of a huge cultural shift
  • The Church is in decline (numerically)
  • Current church practises are cultural accommodations to a society that no longer exists
  • Primary modes of communications in the Western world and culture have changed.
  • New culture means new organisational structures are required.
  • The “Boomers”(over 46's) are the last generation happy with “modern Church”
  • Increase appeal of Spirituality derived from other religions
  • Many Christians no longer follow the religion of their parents' 2nd generation not coming through!



However it would be worth the Baptist community considering the future “state of play” so that we can be effective where we are in the changing world. This, with the Spirit of God blessing the plans, and activity could turn the community around and increase the Kingdom. This is particularly relevant to the Highlands who, as a new generation, are looking for spirituality but all they know is Presbyterianism.





The days of Sankey we know are over but, so too, the days of Hillsong and other Modern large praise events are probably on the decline.

Some churches are doing a “new” old church, when maybe the answer is a “new” new church!



I sense with others that the new generation of believers are looking for reality in Christian practise, no religiousness, more reflectiveness, less clutter and a strong “missional” discipleship under the code name in America of “Spiritual Formation”. (“Google” Spiritual formation!)



It is not a simple matter of the Church re branding. The changes in culture have been too great for church to change in “window display”. Recall in the past the printing press and the education of the community linked to the church. The corresponding requirement for an engaging church in the community, that is not a sub-culture, but is, or changes, the culture is clear. This has not to be a liberal or compromising stance but rather relevance, rediscovery,and, in fact more biblically based mission. The “Hillsongs” mega churches might not survive even if they don't ever make an impact in Highland Scotland.


The church needs to be looking at ways to deal with those who want to be submerged in the culture and not seen to be different from others and to the individualists who make a stand on their pet conviction. A tough task. Yet I think there are those being groomed by God for the job, some closer than you think.



What is happening



Pockets of interest have been formed who want to move towards a commitment together. In November 2007 15 were baptised as believers in Brora- did the Union know? Were they invited?



There are “Baptistic” gatherings in Castletown, Dornoch, Lairg, Brora, Tain.....



Thirty years ago it was impossible to think of a Baptist Church in Dingwall , yet it has been constituted for more than 10 years. In fact there is another “baptistic” Church in the town.



Stornoway, New Elgin, Argyll, and Fort William have glimmers of hope. Kinlochbervie has like-minded folk.





Possible future



So how does the Church invest in the future in a new church framework that caters for the Highlands and Islands? How does the Baptist Union look at the Highlands?



Is it a duty we better do something or is there a burden to help those who want to press their heads above the Presbyterian plateau? How do Scottish Baptists facilitate the “promotion” of “baptistic” gatherings in areas where Scottish Baptists are simply not known? Especially when these groups have not considered all the Baptist principles that Baptists adhere to. How does a Union accommodate Baptistic groups still on a road of discovery, without it looking like the Union is shoving the group through a Baptist programme, like a mincing machine with groups coming out with the same inclination at the end. North of Inverness Baptists are placed in the group of “strange” people like Mormons and JWs.

How does the Baptist Union promote to non-baptists that there may be similarities in thought?

There are many in the Highlands who watch God TV and want to participate in modern worship. Many have moved to settle in the Highlands with a wider church life experience.






 



I carried out a small survey with a group in Brora who were considering setting up a fellowship. They marked high, Worship, and regular Communion - Baptism was an agreed assumption - their conviction was “believers baptism” .



Reasons for a Baptist Church - Brora feedback Oct 2006










  

Missional

In an age after the post-modernist the structure and effective communication of the Church to the unchurch, requires a total re-think. This is particularly hard for the Highland Presbyterian churches who work from a dated template that in some quarters has lost its relevance. Activities to the unchurch that worked say 20 years ago will not work these days. While the message must stay the same, and there was a danger in the 1970's that the method change messed up the message (not a problem now), the presentation must be appropriate to the audience and age. In a culture of switches, electronic media, i-pods and downloads, there is a clear need for a professional presentation to the masses that engages them before they even enter a church building.

When the large PLC market a new brand or product there are hours and hours of getting the message across and the need for the product goes before the product launch. The hype for X-box 360 started before a box had been created.

I would suggest that today the norm should be power point presentations to support the preaching and words for all praise on visual screens.

One cannot consider the "neglecting the saints .." as a constructive way forward but new ways of communicating new ways of fellowship are inevitable for future generations. 
 

Electronic communications

Role of Internet-Hyperspace is not as relational as face to face.

There are many Internet Churches throughout the world and, although this form of fellowship is good, it does lack the personal relationship with the face to face. Scottish Christian website is a solid communication assisting the church. Interestingly the logs linked to the website have a large number of Scottish Episcopalian contributors. I wonder if this is a denominational preference or an aspect to the age of the ministerial staff. It might also be that one individual had an influence on other clergy colleagues. Nevertheless the use of logs is widening the communication among themselves, their sheep and the wider bloggers. One American church leader said “I engage with the community. If they want to hear me preach, I preach on my blog!”


Monday 17 April 2006

Two Churches open doors in Inverness on Easter Sunday

Inverness is a fast growing city. On Easter Sunday two churches had their first services in their new church Building, namely Holm Evangelical (Culduthel Christian Centre) pictured below and Inverness Pentecostal Church of God.


To view the article in the paper, please click on the following link
article

To see what has been happening at Holm Evangelical Church click on the following link
Holm Evangelical