So here’s the plan: Meet The Neighbours, Part Deux… Continue reading
What I did on my holidays, by Christopher Bennett (aged 35)
Last week, on our hols, Susan and I spent a day in London. Since we were too lazy to have got up in time to actually do anything touristy, we just ambled along the banks of the Thames, stopping off for many coffees in cosy cafes along the way. Continue reading
We’re back baby!
Well as many of you may have heard by email (maybe 20 or 30 times over…), the Bennetts had a wee break last week (although a lot of it was spent looking at nice boats that would look very well in the TQ. You can take the boy out of The Dock, but…) Continue reading
Whoops!
So, what was supposed to be a quiet few days off has now turned into the most famous holiday of all time – thanks to a little administrative error… apologies if you are one of the people who have been bombarded with Autoreply emails from me – turns out that if you’re not careful with your autoreply settings, the computer tries to reply to every single email you’ve ever been sent. Oops! (coughs with embarrassment and shuffles off to pack his suitcase)
Wider seas
It’s going to be quiet on this blog for a few days, as Susan and I catch a wee break together (and leave the phone and laptop switched off – the only way to have a proper holiday in the new media age!)
So I thought I’d leave this video up on the website, and hopefully you’ll get a chance to look at it – and pray the prayer – over the course of the week. Initially filmed for The Dock’s first birthday party last November, it feels even more relevant now.
When we get back from holiday, The Dock will be entering another new era. The next few months will see us constituted as a Limited Company, seeking support from a wide range of politicians, trusts,and other bodies with lots of initials in their names, fundraising our little hearts out for the boat, and continuing to call and hope and pray for a true Shared Medley of involvement from people of all sorts of backgrounds.
Big, scary days – but not faced alone. We aren’t a bunch of businesspeople embarking on a new profit-making venture – we’re a group of people with faith, seeking to walk our talk, convinced that God matters in the Titanic Quarter and that a group of people living his way can bless and strengthen and add value to the emerging community. Some days, the process of living that out looks a little businesslike. Other days, it looks breathtakingly exciting. Other days, it just looks terrifying.
But as Drake’s prayer reminds us (watch it now!), we believe in a God who “pushes back the horizons of our hopes”. In these unprecedented days, we want to keep dreaming bigger.