The similar phrase 'Worldly Christianity' is one used by Bonhoeffer. It's J Gresham Machen that I want to line up most closely with. See his Christianity and culture here. Having done commentaries on Proverbs (Heavenly Wisdom) and Song of Songs (Heavenly Love), a matching title for Ecclesiastes would be Heavenly Worldliness. For my stance on worldliness, see 3 posts here.
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts

10 Land Purchases that expanded the USA

https://www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comments/
mxojxn/purchased_territories_of_the_united_states/#lightbox


  1. (Allegedly) Manhattan Island from Native Americans 1626 $24
  2. The Louisiana purchase 9Louisiana and 14 other states) from France 1803 $15M
  3. Florida purchased from Spain 1819 $5M
  4. Mexican Cession from Mexico 1848 $15M
  5. The Gadsden purchase from Mexico 1854 $10M
  6. The Alaska purchase from Russia 1867 $7M200k
  7. The Philippines purchased from Spain 1898 $20M
  8. The Panama Canal zone from Panama 1903 $10k plus $250k annually
  9. The Danish Virgin Islands purchased from Denmark 1917 $25M
  10. Water Island, purchase from the East Asiatic Company (a private shipping company based in Denmark, at the time under German occupation) 1944 $19k

10 Leaders with their country in their name

1. Jomo Kenyatta, first president of Kenya. He took the surname (“Light of Kenya”) when in London in the 1930s.
2. Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, king of Saudi Arabia, or any of his predecessors back to Muhammad bin Saud, who ruled 1726–1765.
3. ‏Pierre Mendès France, prime minister of France, June 1954 to February 1955.
4. Solomon Mamaloni, prime minister of the Solomon Islands three times between 1981 and 1997. 
5. Alexander Dubček. First Secretary of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, 1968-69. Although he was actually a Slovak.
6. Ulysses S Grant, President of the United States, 1869-77.
7. Indira Gandhi, prime minister of India, 1980-84.
8. ‏Giorgi Margvelashvili, president of Georgia.
9. Salvador Sanchez Ceren, president of El Salvador.
10. King Mswati III, and his predescessors, King of eswatini (Swaziland).

10 Nuclear Powers


1. United States
2. Russia (formerly part of the Soviet Union)
3. United Kingdom
4. France
5. China
6. India
7. Pakistan
8. North Korea
9. Israel (so they say)
10. We don't know who else - Iran?

Day off week 27 2019


I made the mistake last Tuesday of not having much of a plan for the day. As I think I've mentioned before, even free time needs to be organised for it to work. I had planned to read a book but it was not quite what I thought it was so that did not work out. I did go out fora coffee and back here I did some blogging on the various blogs and some tidying and one or two jobs that needed doing. In the afternoon my friend Chris phoned and we had a good chat. I was able to put his mind to rest regarding two songs going round his head (There is a mountain by Donovan and Joy to the world by Three dog night so I'm useful for something). He also had bad news,which coupled with other recent bad news regarding Christian ministers was rather depressing to hear. In the evening I watched England USA  in the women's world cup.It was disappointing to see England lose, especially with a missed penalty (their disallowed goal was clearly offside).

Three Good Weeks


It's been quite busy here and there are three weeks f activity I wanted to write something about that have just gone by.
In the first week (May 12-18) we had people staying with us from New Zealand. I think I mentioned how Georgina from Wellington was here in London 26 years ago when she was given a tract by us on the street (she still has it). She came to church and within a very short time was converted. After five weeks she moved down to Crawley where she met her now husband, Graham. Things were not straightforward but their son Calvin was born about six years before they headed to New Zealand to live. They have been in Christchurch these last 14 years and as you will be aware these have not been easy years for that city. Further, Georgina now has stage 4 cancer and so it was a bitter sweet reunion. She is very positive about it while  being realistic and it was lovely to have them with us. On the Friday I had to leave for Cwmbran where there was a funeral for a man who had been a deacon in the church where I grew up, Derek Morgan. Derek's brother started the service. I thought it was just right when he began the service by saying that he had discussed what should be said with Derek and they were agreed to begin by saying Derek was a sinner and so are well but Christ saves sinners. I have not heard such a good beginning to a funeral. Pontrhydyrun minister Jonny Raine did well too and spoke very clearly to a very mixed company. It was good to see old friends, some of whom I have not seen in ages. We did not realise it at the time but that was a very special period in the seventies when many, many young people were saved. We are now scattered but some remain in the area.
The second week (May 19-25) was my birthday week and that was a lot of fun. That was on Wednesday. I had an phone and various other things. The best present came the next day, however, when we went to Heathrow to collect our on Gwion fresh home from his stint in America. True to form he arrived without luggage, prompting a wild goose change to Gatwick, where he should have come in originally. We were shattered by the end of the day. His suitcases have now been located and should arrive by the end of the week. On the Friday evening we all (Eleri, Gwion, Owain and I) headed out to Pizza Express for a celebratory meal. Great time.
I have spoken of how this third week (May 26-June 01) began with celebrations in church. On the Monday we headed off to Derbyshire, to Tibshelf (yes, it does have an M1 services but we are on the other side). We are staying in a lovely old farmhouse in the town for a family holiday. We have been up to 23 here plus Alffi the dog all told but one son and wife have headed back to Wales and a niece has flown off to Uganda where she is for the next five weeks with UFM. Meanwhile we have been enjoying the house and one another and one or to sites, including Hardwick Hall. There was also a further celebration as some of the boys had still to give me a gift. I was given a lovely book and a voucher for a night in a hotel. These are very easy and enjoyable days.

10 Fried chicken joints

Alabama, Arizona, California, Georgia, Indiana,
Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Tennessee
(no Kentucky for some reason)

Two more



Route 66



One delight of the recent trip to America was to find ourselves on the historic Route 66 at one point. The route took you all the way from Los Angeles to Chicago. It was made famous ina  ong recorded by Nat King Cole, Chuck Berry, The Rolling Stones, etc.

10 American Restaurants Recently Visited


Our best meals on our recent trip to America were eaten in people's homes. No restaurant can match that. However, we did enjoy several places - burger joints, ethnic places, an ice cream parlour and a breakfast place.

1. In 'n' Out
2. Five Guys
3. Chik-Fil-A
4. Panda Express
5. Meraki
6. Chipotle
7. Cold Stone
8. Donut Daze
9. Waffle me up
10. Cheesecake Factory
(Also MacDonald's and Wendy's)

Doing what Americans do

This picture taken today has me doing what Americans do
(courtesy of Jobyand Hannah)

Lord's Day April 7 2019


We have been staying with relatives and so it was our joy and privilege to attend with them Spring Meadows Presbyterian Church, a PCA church in Las Vegas. The church currently meets in Sierra Vista High School but hopes soon to move into its own building. We began with Sunday School. The adult school was on tongue speaking. The main service was quite liturgical in the Presbyterian style with modern hymns in the main. The sermon was on Matthew 12:38-41. Both were led by Dan Phillips, one of the five elders, in the absence of the pastor Tim Posey. The sermon can currently be found here on the church website. About 170 were there and were friendly. What a joy when one is the other side of the world and yet can find good fellowship.

10 Shakespearean American Cities


Several places in America have names used by Shakespeare in his plays. Here are ten

1. Alexander Troilus & Cressida North Dakota
2. Cicero Julius Caesar Illinois
3. Desdemona Othello Texas
4. Mountjoy Henry V Illinois
5. Oberon Midsummer nights dream North Dakota
6. Orlando As you like it Florida (see pic of Shakespeare theatre there)
7. Paris Romeo & Juliet, Troilus & Cressida Texas
8. Tamora Titus Andronicus Nebraska
9. Helena Midsummer Night's Dream, All's Well that Ends Well Montana
10. Montague Romeo & Juliet Massachusetts

Henry Box Brown

I was not familiar with the story of Henry Box Brown until I came across it recently. Henry "Box" Brown (c.1816–June 15, 1897) was a 19th-century Virginia slave who escaped to freedom at the age of 33 by arranging to have himself mailed in a wooden crate in 1849 to abolitionists in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. For a short time he became a noted abolitionist speaker in the northeast US. As a public figure and fugitive slave, he felt endangered by passage of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, which increased pressure to capture escaped slaves. He moved to England and lived there for 25 years, touring with an anti-slavery panorama, becoming a magician and showman. He married and started a family with an English woman, Jane Floyd. She was his second wife; his first wife, Nancy, had been sold by their master. Brown returned to the US with his English family in 1875, where he continued to earn a living as an entertainer. He toured and performed as a magician, speaker, and mesmerist until at least 1889. The last decade of his life (1886–1897) was spent in Toronto, where he died in 1897.
Wikipedia describes how he was born into slavery in 1815 or 1816 on a plantation called Hermitage in Louisa County, Virginia. Aged 15 he was sent to work in a tobacco factory in Richmond.
In his autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Henry Box Brown, Written by Himself, he describes his owner: "Our master was uncommonly kind, (for even a slaveholder may be kind) and as he moved about in his dignity he seemed like a god to us, but notwithstanding his kindness although he knew very well what superstitious notions we formed him, he never made the least attempt to correct our erroneous impression, but rather seemed pleased with the reverential feelings which we entertained towards him."
Brown was married to another slave named Nancy, but their marriage was not recognised legally. They had three children born into slavery under the partus sequitur ventrem principle. Brown was hired out by his master in Richmond, Virginia, and worked in a tobacco factory, renting a house where he and his wife lived with their children. Brown had also been paying his wife's master not to sell his family, but the man betrayed Brown, selling pregnant Nancy and their three children to a different slave owner.
With the help of James C. A. Smith, a free black man and a sympathetic white shoemaker (and likely gambler) named Samuel A. Smith (no relation), Brown devised a plan to have himself shipped in a box to a free state by the Adams Express Company, known for its confidentiality and efficiency. Brown paid $86 (out of his savings of $166) to Samuel Smith. Smith went to Philadelphia to consult with members of Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society on how to accomplish the escape, meeting with minister James Miller McKim, William Still, and Cyrus Burleigh. He corresponded with them to work out the details after returning to Richmond. They advised him to mail the box to the office of Quaker merchant Passmore Williamson, who was active with the Vigilance Committee.
To get out of work the day he was to escape, Brown burned his hand to the bone with oil of vitriol (sulphuric acid). The box that Brown was shipped in was 3 feet long by 2 feet 8 inches deep by 2 feet wide and displayed the words "dry goods" on it. It was lined with baize, a coarse woollen cloth, and he carried only a small portion of water and a few biscuits. There was a single hole cut for air and it was nailed and tied with straps.
Brown later wrote that his uncertain method of travel was worth the risk: "if you have never been deprived of your liberty, as I was, you cannot realise the power of that hope of freedom, which was to me indeed, an anchor to the soul both sure and steadfast."
During the trip, which began on March 29, 1849, Brown's box was transported by wagon, railroad, steamboat, wagon again, railroad, ferry, railroad, and finally delivery wagon, being completed in 27 hours. Despite the instructions on the box of "handle with care" and "this side up," several times carriers placed the box upside-down or handled it roughly. Brown remained still and avoided detection. 
The box was received by Williamson, McKim, William Still, and other members of the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee on March 30, 1849, attesting to the improvements in express delivery services.. When Brown was released, one of the men remembered his first words as "How do you do, gentlemen?" He sang a psalm from the Bible, which he had earlier chosen to celebrate his release into freedom. In addition to celebrating Brown's inventiveness, as noted by Hollis Robbins, "the role of government and private express mail delivery is central to the story and the contemporary record suggests that Brown’s audience celebrated his delivery as a modern postal miracle." The government postal service had dramatically increased communication and, despite southern efforts to control abolitionist literature, mailed pamphlets, letters and other materials reached the South.
"Cheap postage," Frederick Douglass observed in The North Star, had an "immense moral bearing". As long as federal and state governments respected the privacy of the mails, everyone and anyone could mail letters and packages; almost anything could be inside. In short, the power of prepaid postage delighted the increasingly middle-class and commercial-minded North and increasingly worried the slave-holding South."
Brown's escape highlighted the power of the mail system, which used a variety of modes of transportation to connect the East Coast. The Adams Express Company, a private mail service founded in 1840, marketed its confidentiality and efficiency. It was favoured by abolitionist organisations and "promised never to look inside the boxes it carried."

10 Eponymous US Cities

(There are heaps of these)
1. Houston, Texas
(General Sam Houston, who was president of the Republic of Texas and had commanded and won at the Battle of San Jacinto 25 miles east of where the city was established)
2. Montgomery, Alabama
(General Richard Montgomery, a Revolutionary War officer killed in the attack on Quebec. Extra free trivia - Montgomery is in the county of Montgomery but that is named for Major Lemuel Montgomery, who died in 1814 while fighting the Creek Indians under Andrew Jackson. In a final twist, historians now believe the two Montgomerys may have been distantly related.)
3. Austin, Texas
(Stephen Austin American impresario born in Virginia and raised in southeastern Missouri, known as the "Father of Texas", and the founder of Texas)
4. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
(William Pitt British prime minister and later 1st Earl of Chatham)
5. Columbus, Ohio (Christopher Columbus)
6. Seattle, Washington (Chief Si'ahl of the local Duwamish and Suquamish tribes)
7. Juneau, Alaska (Joseph Juneau, a gold prospector who reportedly bribed his fellow miners with alcohol or money to vote to name the settlement for him. About a year after the vote was taken, Joe Juneau split town, leaving behind nothing but his name)
8. Fargo, North Dakotaa (William George Fargo, a pioneer American expressman who helped found the modern day financial firms of American Express Company and Wells Fargo with his business partner, Henry Wells)
9. Rochester, New York (Nathaniel Rochester, an American Revolutionary War soldier and land speculator, most noted for founding the settlement)
10. Gary, Indiana (Elbert Henry Gary, an American lawyer, county judge and corporate officer and a key founder of US Steel in 1901, bringing together partners J P Morgan, Andrew Carnegie and Charles M Schwab)

10 US Cities with aboriginal based names

1. Tuscaloosa, Alabama
(derived from Muskogean words tashka (warrior) and lusa (black). Chief Tuskaloosa is remembered for leading a battle against Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto in southern Alabama in 1540)
2. Tucson, Arizona
(from Pima O'odham cuk ṣon, "black base")
3. Tallahassee, Florida
(from the name of a Creek town, talahá:ssi, perhaps from (i)tálwa, "tribal town" + ahá:ssi, "old, rancid")
4. Chicago, Illinois
(derived from the French rendering of a Miami-Illinois word for a type of wild onion)
5. Topeka, Kansas
(from Kansa dóppikʔe, "a good place to dig wild potatoes")
6. Milwaukee, Wisconsin
(from an Algonquian word Millioke, meaning "Good", "Beautiful" and "Pleasant Land" or "Gathering place [by the water]")
6. Saginaw, Michigan (and Missouri)
(from an Ojibwa (Chippewa) word meaning “land of the Sauks”)
7. Yazoo City, Mississipi
(from the name of the river and a local tribe on it)
8.Tuxedo, Maryland
(may derive from the Lenape epithet Tùkwsit 'the Wolf Clans' or from Munsee Delaware p'tuck-sepo 'crooked river')
9. Montauk, New York
(from the Montaukett tribe, an Algonquian-speaking tribe who lived in the area)
10. Wyoming, Nebraska
(Derived from a corrupted Delaware word meaning "large plains" or "extensive meadows.")

10 US Presidents who died before their predecessor (s)

George W. Bush Presidential Center, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

1. 3rd President Thomas Jefferson (died 12:45 PM on July 4, 1826)
Five hours and fifteen minutes before 2nd President John Adams (died 6:00 PM on July 4, 1826)
2. 5th President James Monroe (died July 4, 1831)
4 years, 360 days before 4th President James Madison (died June 28, 1836)
3. 7th President Andrew Jackson (died June 8, 1845)
2 years, 260 days before 6th President John Quincy Adams (died February 23, 1848)
4. 9th President William Henry Harrison (died April 4, 1841)
4 years, 65 days before 7th President Andrew Jackson (died June 8, 1845)
6 years, 325 days before 6th President John Quincy Adams (died February 23, 1848)
21 years, 111 days before 8th President Martin Van Buren (died July 24, 1862)
5. 10th President John Tyler (died January 18, 1862)
187 days before 8th President Martin Van Buren (died July 24, 1862)
6. 11th President James K. Polk (died June 15, 1849)
12 years, 217 days before 10th President John Tyler (died January 18, 1862)
13 years, 39 days before 8th President Martin Van Buren (died July 24, 1862)
7. 12th President Zachary Taylor (died July 9, 1850)
11 years, 193 days before 10th President John Tyler (died January 18, 1862)
12 years, 15 days before 8th President Martin Van Buren (died July 24, 1862)
8. 14th President Franklin Pierce (died October 8, 1869)
4 years, 151 days before 13th President Millard Fillmore (died March 8, 1874)
9. 15th President James Buchanan (died June 1, 1868)
1 year, 129 days before 14th President Franklin Pierce (died October 8, 1869)
5 years, 280 days before 13th President Millard Fillmore (died March 8, 1874)
10. 16th President Abraham Lincoln (died April 15, 1865)
3 years, 17 days before 15th President James Buchanan (died June 1, 1868)
4 years, 146 days before 14th President Franklin Pierce (died October 8, 1869)
8 years, 297 days before 13th President Millard Fillmore (died March 8, 1874)
(Also 40th President Ronald Reagan (died June 5, 2004)
2 years, 204 days before 38th President Gerald Ford (died December 26, 2006)
12 years, 229 days before 39th President Jimmy Carter (still living))

Robins British and American


 
When preparing my Christmas icons series the other week I googled the robin and found that Americans have a different robin bird to us. More recently I was able to check this out when we had some Americans visiting the house. I showed them one of several cards we had up showing a robin redbreast in the snow. Blank faces. Is it some sort of finch? they asked. I explained.
Then more recently still I took in a good slice of the 1964 film Mary Poppins that people were watching. In the spoonful of sugar scene nesting robins are shown, as  above. They are clearly mechanical birds of some sort but I remember thinking down the years what poor examples they were not resembling any bird I'd ever seen. I now see that they are representations of American robins and not bad. Of course, the very idea that such birds would be seen in London is a gaff and duly noted at the appropriate place on IMDb here.