"I'm not a bad person" (Newspaper article)

“I’m not a bad person”. So said Peru drugs mule Michaella McCollum in her first media interview since leaving prison, almost 3 years after being caught trying to smuggle 11kg of cocaine into Spain. In a prime-time TV interview the 22 year-old former model said: “I want to demonstrate that I’m a good person”. The jury is still out on that though, especially given speculation that the Northern Irishwoman is rebranding herself in order to launch a media career.

There’s one way we’re all similar to McCollum however – we like to think we’re basically good. At the heart of it we’re good people, we just happen to do bad things sometimes. Even her family priest has bought into this myth. After visiting her in Lima, he said: “She is a very good person; she made a very bad decision”.

We’re told that the reason people do bad things is because they had abusive parents, grew up in a deprived area, weren’t educated properly or, like McCollum, just made poor decisions.
And so when we read reports of serial killers, rapists or child abusers they’re described as ‘monsters’ or ‘inhuman’. They don’t fit the narrative that humans are basically good, so they’re portrayed as something other than human.
Jesus had a very different take on humanity however. He put it blunty: ‘No one is good except God alone’. The Bible consistently teaches: ‘There is none who does good … none is righteous, no, not one’. That includes religious people just as much as anyone else.

We might claim, like McCollum, ‘I have never intentionally set out to hurt somebody’. But deep down, we know that we’ve all said if not done things deliberately aimed at hurting someone else.
Our problem is that we compare ourselves to the wrong standard. It’s easy enough to find people worse than us to compare ourselves to. But compared to God’s standard of perfection, none of us come close. The only truly good person who ever lived was Jesus Christ – and only by trusting in him can we hope to stand before God.

Published in Stranraer & Wigtownshire Free Press, 7 April 2016.

An Odd Thing (Newspaper Article)

Comedian Lee Mack was interviewed on Desert Island Discs recently. He was asked which book he would take with him—you’re allowed the Bible, the works of Shakespeare and one other. He chose Stephen Hawking’s ‘A Brief History of Time’, but it was his comments about the Bible that intrigued me.

He said, ‘I'm glad you get the Bible, because I would read the Bible. I think it's quite odd that people like myself, in their forties, are quite happy to dismiss the Bible, but I've never read it. I always think that if an alien came down and you were the only person they met, and they said, “What’s life about? What’s earth about? Tell us everything,” and you said, “Well, there's a book here that purports to tell you everything. Some people believe it to be true; some people do not believe it to be true.” “Wow, what’s it like?” and you go, “I don’t know, I’ve never read it.” It would be an odd thing wouldn't it? So, at the very least, read it.’

Many feel that it’s a book for specialists and they should just take the words of the opinion formers - whether it be clergy or authors like Dan Brown. Others feel let down by church, but are reluctant to read the Bible for themselves, preferring just to muddle on in the hope that everything will be ok. Some are struggling with life and trying to get through by their own strength, unaware that the Bible has help to give. Even many churches have in practice abandoned the Bible - and it’s no surprise they’re declining and closing.

When the Bible was translated into the language of the common people, it scandalised many of the church leaders, but transformed this nation. I’d love to get a group of people together to read through a book of the Bible with opportunities to discuss and discover what it’s about. Or sit down for a coffee with anyone that’s interested in doing something similar one-on-one.

But, ‘at the very least, read it’. You might be surprised.

Based on an article by Mark Loughridge in 4you magazine. Published in Stranraer & Wigtownshire Free Press, 4 February 2016.

Is atheism a religion after all? (Newspaper article)

Hot on the heels of last week’s news that a cinema advert featuring the Lord’s Prayer was to be banned (despite the opposition of the Muslim Council of Britain, Richard Dawkins and Stephen Fry), humanists have now taken offence that the current Religious Studies GCSE doesn’t include non-religious worldviews. The High Court ruled that although it was lawful in itself for Religious Studies just to cover religion, the education secretary had a duty to ensure the curriculum reflected the pluralistic nature of the UK.

It’s staggering that a ‘Religious Studies’ curriculum has been found unlawful because it does exactly what it says on the tin. Whatever next? A legal challenge to the English curriculum because it doesn’t include French? Or to a history curriculum which only includes the past?

While some Christians have protested that humanist ideas already dominate the curriculum, what I find most surprising is that atheistic worldviews weren’t included on the Religious Studies curriculum to begin with. After all, while it might take faith to believe that we and the world around us were created by God, surely it takes even more faith to believe that life can evolve from non-life? That we’re all the result of some cosmic accident?

Like religion, atheism has its evangelists. Dawkins explicitly states his aim that religious readers opening ‘The God Delusion’ would be atheists when they put it down.

Atheists also believe in a higher authority. One of their creeds, the ‘Humanist Manifesto’, acknowledges a responsibility to aspire to the ‘greater good of humanity’. But who defines what that is? Is the opinion of the majority always right? The Manifesto calls its adherents to live with ‘a deep sense of purpose’ - surely just a meaningless platitude if there is no God?

Neither can atheism side-step some of the problems that other religions face. Take the problem of evil. If we believe in a good, all-powerful God, why is there so much evil in the world? Why did God allow the attacks in Paris? Yet the atheist must answer the question: What does it matter? Why is human life any more valuable than that of a rat, an insect or a tree? Even to use the terms ‘good’ and ‘evil’ is to borrow from a religious worldview.

To include ‘non-religious’ worldviews on the ‘Religious Studies’ curriculum is just to acknowledge what they really are. They too are based on faith.

Published in Stranraer & Wigtownshire Free Press, 3 December 2015.

Ordination of Rev. Stephen Steele - report & video

Around 200 people gathered at the Stranraer Reformed Presbyterian Church building on Saturday 12th September for the ordination and induction of Stephen Steele as pastor. Rev. Steele (29) previously worked in property management in Airdrie, where he met his wife Carla. Speaking after the ordination, he said: ‘It is a great privilege to have been called to a church which has served in the community here since 1778. I firmly believe that the Bible’s message is as relevant and life-giving as it ever has been, and only through it can we make sense of our lives. I’m excited about getting involved in both the church and the local community. To find out more please join us on Sundays (11:30am and 6:30pm) and through the week.’ Video from the ordination service and weekly audio sermons will be available shortly on the church website (stranraerrpcs.org).

Published in Stranraer & Wigtownshire Free Press, 17 September 2015

Another report of the ordination was published in the Galloway Gazette.