A reflection on the Church of England’s quiet transformation — from spiritual authority to institutional survivor — and why Catholicism may endure as faith while Anglicanism persists as structure. Exploring assets, doctrine, conscience, and the possibility of a Church without dogma: shared meals, inward clarity, and compassion without hierarchy.
Jesus feels modern not because of theology, but because of his fearless moral clarity. Once we strip away the metaphysical layers, the radical teacher of the Synoptics emerges: a compassionate social philosopher who confronted wealth, hierarchy, exclusion, and fear. This article explores how the historical Jesus differs from the later “metaphysical Christ,” and why his vision still exposes the moral fault-lines of our own age.
A reflection on parenting, morality, and the teaching of Jesus — showing how the true measure of life lies not in worldly success but in moral fruitfulness. Wealth and compassion need not be opposed, but reconciled through the law written in the heart.

