About John Baxter

John Baxter Teacher of Religious Education for 25 years and professional photographer for 16 years. Degrees from Rhodes (SA) Oxford and Bristol in Religion, Theology and the Philosophy of Education. Qualified as a Licentiate with the British Institute of Professional Photography. Interests Art, Photography, Religion and the issues it raises, Politics, Poetry, Writing.

Wednesday 15th April

A beautiful day again. Found my run and fast walk around the Sports Ground much easier, thirty minutes door to door, and was impressed to find the groundsman had mown the grass leaving a five foot wide path all around the entire perimmiter and most of the fields.  Followed by exercise, shower, sitting and reading paper by a Dr Gocke of the IRC entitled The Many Problems of Special Divine Action an which he attempts to justify a Christian belief in supernatural miracles quoting the Crossing of the Red Sea and the Resurrection.. Sent him a brief refutation.  Afternoon discussed theology  on Skype with Sarah in Durham and the paper I have just read and responded to.  I would be very surprised if the author will be prepared to respond to my criticisms.  What a pity.

TV Watched the first of the next series of Killing Eve.  Loved the first two series.  This one looks doubtful.

Tuesday 14th April

Back to a beautiful clear day.  Spent the morning phoning and and Skyping friends.  . One family are getting over what they think are mild versions of the virus, another surveying what looks like the devastation of what has been a very successful international conference business, another facing a couple seperated by serious health problems made much worse by being in lock-down. Several either directly or with family facing acollapse of income.  Really tough. Other calls simply a good chance to catch up.

Lunch in the garden.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After lunch Elizabeth had worked out a walk for us.  Driving out to Stoke Trister we walked on to Cucklington.  Up and down hill we followed a great hour and a half circuit keeping to the narrow country roads.  We passed many very attractive homes that only the prosperous could ever afford.  It was really enjoyable but again I thought of South London where so many are confined to small flats.  Money certainly makes dealing with this lock-down so very much easier for those with gardens and space around their homes. Even now under lock-down I think we should all be encouraged more to make the most of country walks and the use of parks, and stopping people driving out of towns for country walks is I think uneccessary except for the big “beauty spots ” that have attracted crowds.  Depriving those with limited space of easy access to common space does not seem sustainable and very bad for our health..

Finished watching all six episodes of Wolf Hall.  Superbly done this sad tale of politics, religion, sex, cruelty, chance and unforseen outcomes permeated by a sense of melancholy makes a depressing yet somehow fitting background to what is happening at this time of thinning.

Monday 13th April

Monday 13th April

Started the day with a walk and a jog down our deserted streets, abandoned building sites and almost deserted Recreation Ground Smartphone snapping. Ending this tour passing our Primary School which received an excellent, well deserved OFSTED report just before lockdown. It has been closed ever since. The SOS anti plastic bottle message was orchestrated with pupils by our famous local environmental artist, Zac Greening.  Weather: in marked contrast to yesterday, mainly overcast, windy and bitterly cold and it never warmed up

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BBC putting on Wolf Hall again and we watched 3hrs of it.  First time Elizabeth and I have done such a thing during the day!  Now on Iplayer Mark Ryland and the whole production is mesmerisingly just brilliant.  Also the last hour of The Nest, subtle and compelling to the end.  We both called a list of friends.  We now wait for the ghastly numbers to peak and reduce.

12th April Easter Day

Started at 7 with Sunday, R4.  Lovely spring  morning and we cannot seem to sleep late.  8.10 Archbishop Welby in his kitchen. A good address focusing on the resurrection as a symbol of hope. Expressed as if literally true.  The gospel texts are so powerfully dramatic and visualisable. He also said there should be no going back to the way we have been before the virus spread and that the economic consequences could be devastating without considerable change.  Our interdependence is now so clear.  No attempt was made to say the pandemic is the work of a punishing God or perhaps more plausibly a result of the accumulated cravings for more by mankind.  No questioning of it being within the power of a loving God to stop it either.  Still a warm appreciation of the humanity, compassion and heroism so many are showing .

Andrew Marr followed where Welby was again interviewed.  He came across very well, un-churchy, relaxed and good humoured while being very serious.

With care I cooked us a late lunch which we had with wine in the garden.  Steak pan grilled strips of breast of lamb, carefully browned onion and roast potatoes, courgettes, red pepper and sun-dried tomato with a lamb gravy.  Yes food takes on an added importance as we take it in turns to cook for each other.  Good face talks with Paul and Jo in Oxford and the whole Bond family in London.  All seem in good health and spirits with Sam cooking the Bond evening meal.  Inevitably, certainly for Elizabeth and me there is this unspoken  – is this our last week, our last meal, our last night together, the last time we will talk to friends and family members.  I remember the day in 2006 when Elizabeth and I had lunch together before I went into the BRI for my triple bypass. (see  Take Heart)  I am not being morbid. Such thoughts are simply inevitable, and we both really enjoyed the lunch, the wine and the sun.

This evening the newsreader said we reached 10,000 plus deaths today.  The population of Wincanton is 5,400.  The news also recounted the lives of doctors, nurses, bus-drivers, care home helpers and supermarket staff who continued working, knowing their lives were at risk caring for and supporting others.  Is their kindness and unselfish consideration, which Boris described tonight as their love, something which is for them and for us a true “resurrection” of the human qualities which in the face of, through, and despite suffering, the virus fails to conquer. The figures for Somerset and the SW remain very low however.  Our time, we must expect, will come. How to face it.

As alluded Boris also came home tonight (to Chequers!) loudly proclaiming that the NHS had saved his life and mentioning two nurses, one from New Zealand, one from Portugal who had been on duty right through the night when his condition was at its most critical.

For TV Escapism the BBC series THE NEST kept us completely gripped for an hour.  The human brain it seems, desperately needs such things.

11th April Saturday

Beautiful weather, lovely run/walk around Sports Ground, (As in picture) wrote article on it for Wincanton Window, had long and frank discussion with Robin Price about the Word magazine, was depressed as the numbers dying was reported is increasing . Watched an hour of Messiah Netflix with Elizabeth.  Below the article.

Also had a VERY DEPRESSING time trying to get to terms with the new update for this siteWord Press.  At last got access to the “classic” previous set up.  Hooray for computer updates.

COVID-19 AND WINCANTON SPORTS GROUND

Sports Ground Peter’s Walk

At this tough time how lucky we are in Wincanton with the number of fine open spaces we have to walk or run and get that vital exercise so important for us all as we face covid-19.  I think of the Recreation Ground and Wincanton Sports Ground.  The current official advice is clear. Once a day it is permissible to leave our homes to walk, run or cycle on our own or with other household members, our dog or our horse.  We should keep moving and not join up with friends on these occasions, and we should be very careful to practice social distancing.   At least six feet (two metres) between us and those we meet (and remember that a cough or sneeze carries much further than six feet and if we touch a metal gate, handwashing on getting home is a must.)

Exercise is vital if we are to keep healthy, whatever our age.  It is also so enjoyable to be able to take in and experience our beautiful countryside and our open green spaces.  A walk following the clearly marked perimeter path around our Sports Ground takes about forty minutes, less for runners or cyclists and of course there are so many alternative paths you can take.

Since the Sports Centre by King Arthur’s School has had to close its gymn, swimming pool and exercise classes, I have taken to having a fast walk and a jog around the Sports Ground.  It is really great and made more so by the friendly way people are practicing social distancing, stopping and getting right off the path, facing the other way, but also giving a friendly greeting.  It is good also that almost all dog owners keep leads handy, aware that contact via dog fur could be risky.

We are so lucky to be here in the country unlike those in crowded urban areas with high-rise flats and limited park spaces.  Here there is plenty of room for us to exercise without putting ourselves or others at risk – if we keep our distance!

 

 

 

 

 

 

10th April. Good Friday

Another beautiful, sunny, dry day. Spring is bursting and the churches are empty as the words of Jesus, My God, My God, Why have you forsaken me?” are remembered by Christian and post Christian alike and pondered by Tom Holland in Dominion p69 “Without the crucifixion he (Paul) would have had no gospel to proclaim. To see what I think about the resurrection and Paul, see Is Wright Wrong under the Religion page.http://www.johnbaxter.org/rs/is-wright-wrong-the-case-against-his-view-of-the-resurrection/

Thursday 9th April

Went for another great walk-run-sprint and felt very good, if stiff after it. Also find my 30 min daily meditation sitting really satisfying.

Spent much of the afternoon battling with my computer with the on-line help of Dave Smith and am now working on this updated Word Press website.

Watched The Two Popes with Elizabeth. Anthony Hopkins and Jonathan Pryce as Benedict and Francis. Excellent acting but also real insight into the history of two remarkable men. A must see on NETFLIX.
Another must see on NETFLIX is the 10 hr series Messiah which has a young man coming out of Syria today leading a group of refugees from the war and asking Israel for asylum. Very well acted with an unknown as the most convincing Jeshua figure I have ever seen and raising all the right questions about supernaturalism and charisma.  Forgot to go out and clap and felt bad about that.

WEDNESDAY 8th April

WEDNESDAY 8-4-20
First day of new PE regime.  
2klm run and walk and sprint around the Sports Ground followed by pilates.  Felt great. 

Spent afternoon watching videos of the work of economist Kate Raworth of the Environmental Change Institute, Oxford, who argues for a complete rethink away from GDP and GROWTH to Sustainable Development in her book Doughnut Economics.  See Wkipedia. You MUST look this up.  As  governments prepare to face the future another way of approaching economic problems is urgently needed.  Greg Atkins alerted me to this .  Here is her doughnut.

TUESDAY 7th April

TUESDAY 7-4-20
Concern grows over Boris after a night in St Thomas’ on oxygen.  E mail sent to all ANVIL Associates and family about blog.  A beautiful day. We breakfast in the garden and Elizabeth works there as Spring bursts out and Prince Charles reads Wordsworth on Tintern Abbey.
We learn that the deaths and infected figures are under-reporting for at least a week because of the way the figures are collected.

MONDAY 6th April

MONDAY 6th April.
Rewrote paper as PCES. Pandemic and Climate Emergency Service after hearing from a senior LD friend who liked the earlier version passed around at the LD conference last year.  Do read it and send comments. Discussed Science Fiction films with Eleanor and watched The Matrix on Amazon Prime.
Radio 4 reported higher pandemic mortality for men probably because women have an extra x chromosome giving them a more effective immune system. So there!