Games Shows and Catch Phase Bingo!
The Rector’s Blog - September 2020

Dear Friends,
I’m giving you a warning: I’m about to say something very irritating. Here is comes, ‘So, now look, basically, at the end of the day, we need to do some blue sky thinking and run it up the flagpole.’ Apparently those are some of the most irritating phrases we hear people use. The one that gets me is, ‘There are lessons to be learnt’. When I hear it I wonder why they didn’t already know what the now need to learn. And how can I check that they have learnt their lesson? But let’s not be too harsh on our politicians. After all, have you learnt any lessons recently? Have there been moments when you have thought, ‘I should have known that’?
Do you have a favourite quiz show? The Chase, Tipping Point, Tenable, Rolling in it? University Challenge? Mastermind? I often think, ‘I should have known that’ once I’ve heard the answer. But all these game shows are about knowledge – knowing facts. There don’t seem to be any game shows where people’s wisdom is tested, contestants faced with real life scenarios and they have to make the right choices. But hang on, maybe that is what the soap operas are about. We watch people being buffeted from one dramatic situation to another and we shout at the telly, ‘They should have known better’ or ‘They should have seen that coming’.
It’s September and it’s time for children to go back to school. No doubt there are lessons to be learnt! Our schools are places where our children get educated. They acquire information, but more importantly we hope they will be made ready for adult life so that they avoid crises where they might end up saying, ‘I should have known that’, and ‘There are lessons to be learnt’.
If you had a chance to go into a school and take a lesson, what age range would you choose and what would you want to teach? What are the lessons we’ve learnt which we would want to pass on? Would it be ‘Choose your friends carefully’ or ‘Build a reputation as a good person’? Here are some of the things Jesus would want to teach: ‘Forgive, and you will be forgiven’, ‘Be courageous’, ‘Being generous is very rewarding’. And the one I like most, ‘Remember that the angels sang when you were born’.
John Ganjavi








