Search
-
Recent Posts
- End times postponed – or not? 20/01/2025
- Confusion over temples produces confusion over worship 13/01/2025
- RIP Günter Bechly 09/01/2025
- What the Bible should have said #28 04/01/2025
- Religion without a covenant 02/01/2025
Recent Comments
- Jon Garvey on Confusion over temples produces confusion over worship
- Ben on Confusion over temples produces confusion over worship
- Jon Garvey on Confusion over temples produces confusion over worship
- Peter Hickman on Confusion over temples produces confusion over worship
- Robert Byers on RIP Günter Bechly
Post Archive
Monthly Archives: December 2024
Ox and ass before him bow…
Happy Boxing Day, all you labourers going from house to house for your Christmas boxes! Yes, very nice, thank you, driving over to Sussex to our daughter’s family. Missing our turning off the A30 in thick fog was a bit of a bummer, though.
Posted in History, Theology
Leave a comment
The DNA of the babe in the stable
I’ve just read David Mitchell’s book Jesus – the Incarnation of the Word. I bought it after seeing the author interviewed by Seth Postell, an Israeli Christian academic whose work I reference in my own Generations of Heaven and Earth, but it turns out to be pretty seasonally appropriate for a Christmas blog.
Posted in Science, Theology
Leave a comment
Revisiting Genesis cosmology
More seasoned readers of The Hump will remember its emphasis on “origins” before it started to document how the world has finally gone completely mad. One recurring theme was to refute the claim that the Bible, and Genesis 1 in particular, teaches an erroneous “Middle East obsolete science cosmology.” The matter broadly boils down to the proper consideration of genre.
Total insanity is no fun
Tom Lehrer claimed to have given up songwriting because the US political situation had become too ridiculous for satire. Things are so much worse now that satire itself has virtually died (apart from woke virtue signalling posing as satire, and distinguished by provoking vomiting rather than laughter). Likewise, a blog like this, which currently majors on pointing out societal evils, is in danger of having simply to say, “Everything around you is insane – there’s nothing else to say.” But I’ll try for now to keep on at least making some sense of things.
Posted in Medicine, Politics and sociology, Science
5 Comments
A longer, even more authoritative COVID report
Last month I cited Martin Sewell’s Edinburgh-based review of COVID and the calamitous measures taken against it, recommending it as a reference. Now there’s an even more authoritative paper – the final report of the US Congress’s Select Subcommittee on the Coronovirus Pandemic, 520 delicious pages of scathing critique.
Posted in Medicine, Politics and sociology, Science
2 Comments
Public noninformation inquiry…
…at the expense of a disposable murder victim Since 2022 I’ve been on a journey – or less dramatically, exploring another byway – about the case of the 2018 poisoning of the Skripals, which you can look up if you don’t remember. From searching the blog, I see I’ve hinted at it rather than explaining it extensively. But perhaps my best summary is here, where I compare it to the equally dubious story about the poisoning and subsequent death this year of Alexei Navalny, an unsavory man set up by the West to simulate a serious “democratic” (in its current, weasel-word, sense) rival to Vladimir Putin.
Posted in History, Politics and sociology
2 Comments