Sunday, 30 December 2007

Dylan discovers Durian & Jacqueline cooked Squid curry (not on the same day!)

For those of you who don't know, Durian is a fruit or better known as the 'King of fruits' in Malaysia. As the King of fruits, Durian has slowly gained global awareness as a number of documentaries have surfaced in the National Geographic, Discovery, and travel channels. Quite unfortunately (perhaps fairly as some would defend), the fruit is known internationally for its notoriously strong smell/unique odor.

Here's a little excerpt from Wikipedia on Durian --- The durian (IPA: [d̪uˈɾi.ɑn]) is the fruit of trees of the genus Durio belonging to the Malvaceae, a large family which includes hibiscus, okra, cotton, mallows and linden trees. Widely known and revered in Southeast Asia as the "King of Fruits,"[1] the fruit is distinctive for its large size, unique odour, and a formidable thorn-covered husk. The fruit can grow up to 30 centimetres (12 in) long and 15 centimetres (6 in) in diameter, and typically weighs one to three kilograms (2 to 7 lb).[2] Its shape ranges from oblong to round, the colour of its husk green to brown and its flesh pale-yellow to red, depending on species.[2] The hard outer husk is covered with sharp, prickly thorns, while the edible flesh within emits the distinctive odour, which is regarded as either fragrant or overpowering and offensive. The odour of the ripe fruit is very strong and penetrating, even when the husk of the fruit is still intact.

After hearing about the fruit for about a year (through TV documentaries, and his wife and mother-in-law), Dylan finally agreed to give this well known fruit a taste. Verdict - happy to announce that he liked it (or does not have an adverse, gagging reaction to it--he was just 'hamming it up' for the photos below). Just in case you want to take the plunge as well, Durian can easily be found these days in Chinese grocery stores all over the United States as well as Scotland (so I discovered)! It is quite often in a frozen state rather than fresh because it is a tropical fruit thus freezing is required to be transported to these non-tropical countries quite naturally. I hope you'll get a chance to try it someday for those of you who have never tried or even heard of the fruit!















Squid curry ..... right. Squid is also known as Calamari (for those of you in the States). It is one of my all-time favourite seafood dishes. To my delight, there are a number of fish mongers along the street on my way home from work. They carry a large array of fresh seafood and huge squids are quite a common sight. Dylan decided that the whole preparation process is quite blog worthy and took some pictures to document it. Hope you enjoy the photos!! ha ha ha....



Happy New Year Y'all!

It's been a while since I last wrote something, sorry! But Dylan did fill in the gaps so I hope you have enjoyed his postings. :-)

What have I been up to you ask? I have 2 weeks off from work but I am actually quite busy with many different things on my plate at the moment. My "temp" assignment at Diageo is coming to an end very shortly. Do not despair! I do have a couple of leads I am working on and fully trusting in God's provision at this point! I shall reveal this mystery to you in a few weeks, so stay tune!

We had a very quiet Christmas to ourselves this year. Christmas morning started with our normal routine of morning devotion - we are after all celebrating the remembrance of the birth of Jesus. We opened our Christmas gift from Dagan (Dylan's brother) in the morning - a webcam amongst other things, so now we can communicate with home for free through Skype (Skype paid me for this mention - j/k). We had our normal breakfast. Dylan went for a run and I just....vegged. ha! Lunch was an assortment of Indian hors d'oeuvre (samosas & pakoras) as well as Buffalo Wings (store made - open package, stick in oven & viola)! It was as delicious as it was disgustingly greasy and unhealthy! ha ha. We then went for a long walk hoping to burn off at least one of the samosas or buffalo wings we ate. We chatted on the phone with the Potter family after the walk. Dinner was a to-die-for whole wheat seafood pasta made by Dylan. YUMMY! Later, we watched a movie - The Painted Veil (quite good - cheapest movie we could find on the Scottish pay-per-view equivalent on TV). And that was it!

Here are some pictures of Edinburgh Castle. We visited the castle on St. Andrews day (Nov. 30) as it was free to all for a visit on that day....

Tuesday, 18 December 2007

Angelic Activities


Hi everybody! My wife is terribly busy with work this week, so I will contribute some thoughts to the blog...I hope this post is somewhat devotional (and accessible) and provides you with another template through which to consider the Annunciation of our Lord's birth...angels are everywhere in the account of the incarnation and for good reason! They hover around events where God is doing something new and important, then recede into the background until something else happens--I like to think of them as the EXCLAMATION POINTS of Scripture. Blessings to you all--DP

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In the Hebrew Scriptures, angels repeatedly interfere in people’s lives when an essential objective in God’s plan lies in the balance. For example, an intervening angel appears to Abraham moments before this man of faith prepares to sacrifice his son Isaac on Mt. Moriah.[1] In the book of Exodus, Moses spots an angel in the flaming bush and then hears the voice of YHWH calling to him from the centre of the previously inconspicuous shrub. Speculations abound concerning the identity of the angel in both accounts, but perhaps this is not the point the reader is to consider. Instead, the angel temporarily operates as a sort of intermediary between God and the two patriarchs, someone or something who redefines the contour between heaven and earth. If this is the case, then an angel’s responsibility is not always about bringing a message to earth out of the aether, but about reinforcing the always-present power of God to compensate for humanity’s eroded self-sufficiency. Angels are agents of revelation, evangelists whose words and actions are always consistent with Gabriel’s message to Mary in Luke 1:37, “…nothing is impossible with God.” Though they are present at Jesus' birth, temptation, resurrection and ascension, the utter absence of angels during the ministry of Jesus either suggests that the Nazarene was a fraud or that he was more than a prophet, and therefore able to handle all teething troubles without their assistance. This theory is supported by the account of Jesus’ betrayal in Matthew 26:53 when he refused to order a pre-emptive strike against his would-be captors.


[1] Gen 22:11

Saturday, 15 December 2007

Your Turn!


Hey family and friends! We're happy that many of you visit our blog regularly, and as a gesture of our appreciation, we'd like to hear what is going on in your lives rather than just talk about ours.
After all, as Brian Regan (my favorite comedian) points out in this clip, people like that are obnoxious: Click--> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ogZo9YreQ4
So with that in mind, please take a minute to post a couple sentences about new developments, Christmas plans, or a good movie or book you've seen/read lately. For those who are new to the blogging format, just click on the "comments" link (beside the pencil-looking thing) at the bottom right corner of this post and help us to catch us up on your lives.

All our love,
Dylan & Jacqueline

Tuesday, 11 December 2007

Arabic Christmas Carol


When was the last time that you thought of Christianity as a Middle Eastern faith? Yah, me too. I wonder if we have been missing something here, because comparatively speaking, we westerners are the new kids on the block when it comes to worshiping the Triune God.

Click me: http://youtube.com/watch?v=MvjiVam2HO4
Video Description:
A voice from the unheard voices of the Christians of the Middle East who have been witnessing to faith in the Saviour since His incarnation in their midst. Chanted by Reader Nader Hajjar, Ottawa. Video by kalamation and Fr. Francois Beyrouti.

Tuesday, 4 December 2007

Power and Weakness: A brief comment on angels.



I'm trying to pick up the blogging slack this week...so if this is not particularly interesting (or understandable) please forgive me for the copy & paste from the intro section of my dissertation on the doctrine of angels. --DP

Clear evidence exists throughout Christian history that one branch of the faith tends to be preoccupied with developing a theology of power while another remains equally committed to a theology of weakness. Both expressions are justifiable interpretations of the faith and are often predicated upon the assumption that they have either inherited or duplicated the quintessence of early Christian practice. Power theology is what figures like Luther referred to as a “theology of glory” due to the disproportionate amount of attention given to issues that reside beyond the cross. Those who resonate with power Christianity imply that a faith without strength is a faith not worth having. This dichotomy between power and weakness intermittently rears its head throughout the history of the Church: from monasticism to inquisition, iconography to iconoclasm, pietism to quietism. The disputes between the Antiochene and Alexandrian schools during the Patristic Age were effectively in relation to the difference between a theology of power and that of weakness. The Alexandrians emphasized the power of Jesus’ divinity, whereas the Antiochenes stressed a theology of limitation found in the humanity of Jesus. Both were correct according to Chalcedon’s viewpoint, but not to the exclusion of hypostasis. A theology of weakness, on the other hand, could also be understood as a theology of the cross. Weakness, or cruciform theology insists that the spotlight ought to be thrown upon the landmarks of low anthropology and high Christology.

It is not unfair to suggest that much of today’s Pentecostal and Evangelical witness tends to focus upon power Christianity. Their language is rife with the subject of miracles, salvation, the life to come, and victory over everything from singleness to Satan. It is a very hopeful expression of the faith, but tends to minimize the already in anticipation of the not yet. Mainline liberal Christianity, in contrast, tends to identify more closely with a theology of weakness by caring for the downtrodden and sympathizing with the ostracized, but often expresses this activity in a theologically fuzzy rehashing of social justice issues. Fuzziness aside, their kindness in response to the face of human need reveals that natural theology is not something that can only be understood from the inanimate sectors of creation, but that it may be comprehended by merely looking at our own species. The reformed churches also tend to lean to the side of weakness theology due to their focus upon human depravity but they are not known for their ability to translate that focus into a theology of liberation. Their interest in progressive sanctification also reveals the remnants of power Christianity residing in their dogmatics. No one is safe because rarely, if ever, does any Christian movement succeed in discovering the sweet spot between orthodoxy and orthopraxy. It is the ever longed-for, but seldom realized homeostasis of theological utopia.

Accordingly, angels tend to be the darling of power Christianity, but in situ, they are revealed as agents of both expressions of the faith. This leads to the possibility of discovering a sort of angelic Christianity that reflects the testimony of Hebrew and Christian Scriptures where angels act as powerful, yet ever-dependent agents of God, whose insatiable appetite for goodness is as frightening as their helpless captivity to a higher nature is mystifying. Angelology has generally been considered a minor doctrine of tangential importance when compared with the central canons of theology proper: Christology, salvation, worship and ecclesiology. Due to the enormous pressure that theologians face to contribute original, creative ideas to the discipline, not a few have overstated the significance of their contributions for the sake of humanity’s insatiable desire to hear something new (Cf. Acts 17:21).

Creativity is a communicable attribute that we share with God himself but its role as servant to the interests of the individual is only a handmaiden to its role as servant to God and truth. This is to say that a stentorian defense of adiaphora only serves to obscure rather than disclose the centrality of decidedly Trinitarian scholarship. Therefore it would be reckless to suggest that angelology represents the Gründung (foundation) of what it means to be a theologian; at best angelology is an overlooked complement to the essence of the Christian faith as revealed in the challenging simplicity found in the message of Jesus.