Easter traditions

Easter traditions DM 30th March 2026 Sometimes I wonder where I’ve been all my life. Today I stumbled on the recipe for an Easter lamb cake. I’d never heard of that before, but the blurb went: “Easter is a time for celebration, and what better way to mark the occasion than with a charming lamb […]

Playing with fire

Playing with fire DM 19th March 2026 Sometimes a news story seems too good to be true, not regarding the veracity of what happened, but regarding the breath-taking stupidity of the action reported. Like the story of the man who recently tried to steal a length of copper cable by attempting to sever it with […]

How far for love

How far for love DM 12th March 2026 A blurb on the radio invited listeners to ring in and report the song that annoyed them most. To some suggestions, I readily agreed. But then someone mentioned that classic and much-loved Scottish ballad, by those talented troubadour twins, the Proclaimers – ‘I’m Gonna Be (500 miles)’. […]

Total eclipse

Total eclipse DM 7th March 2026 It was the last blood-red moon to be seen from earth for three years, so I thought I’d better see it. Apparently the red-moon phenomenon can only occur when an eclipse is total, not partial, and so the sun, earth, and moon need to be perfectly aligned. The result, […]

Yes Sir, Yes Sir

Yes Sir, Yes Sir DM 28th February 2026 The picture on our home-calendar for February has been of shearers at Rokeby in Tasmania. Three rugged men in blue singlets, shears in hand, stand astride their wooly projects, skillfully going about their sweaty work. Just where they are up to in the day is not revealed, […]

Eye candy

Eye candy DM 21st February 2026 Those Brothers Grimm were well-named. I grew up on their fables, and recently purchased the full canon. But my eyeballs nearly popped at some of the tales I’d never read. Like ‘Clever Hans’. The story is about a boy, who, I think, likes a girl called Gretel. But after […]

Star talk

Star talk DM 14th February 2026 For all its stellar beauty, the North Star (Polaris) has its limits. It can point close enough to true north, and therefore to all points of the compass, but it cannot point to heaven. Englishman George Herbert, in his famous anthology of poems called The Temple, expressed it well […]

Two turtle doves

Two turtle doves DM 7th February 2026 Whenever members of my congregation let me know that they will be bringing guests to church, I always threaten to preach on the Levitical skin diseases. They smile and know I won’t. And I don’t. But maybe I should, for there is plenty of gospel in those exotic […]

The stunning downgrade

The stunning downgrade DM 31st January 2026 In those travel-logs that sometimes pop up in magazines, there’s always one lucky person spruiking the joys of an upgrade, whether to a better hotel room, or seat on a plane, or type of car. In all my travels, the closest I’ve ever come is to score one […]

The Father’s care

The Father’s care DM 24th January 2026 When Wycliffe missionaries Alan and Faye Canavan took up their ministry posting on a small island off PNG, they were issued with a special two-way radio. Among other things, they were instructed to ring in, once a week, to report that they were safe. Should HQ not hear […]