Friday, July 29, 2005

2005 Irish Ploughshares in showrooms today

We don't get much good news these days, so we should celebrate when we can. The decision of the IRA to put its arms beyond use is a great one. It doesn't wipe clean the misery caused by the decades of terrorism nor does it ensure justice for people of Ulster, but it's a start. More than 3000 people have been killed in the name of Jesus. It was brave of the IRA to make a step toward peace.

There is some interesting research news out of Harvard Medical School, supporting earlier work that indicated that the prefrontal cortex is one of the areas of the brain most affected by depression. This may lead to treatments that are faster-acting and more specific for each patient.

Twenty or so years ago, the computers we used (VAX/VMS) had a program called Phone. With Phone, you could send a brief message to another who was logged in. Almost no one used it. It was intrusive when you were logged in and useless when you weren't. We preferred email. Roll the calendar ahead a couple of decades. We still prefer email, we of a certain age, at least that's what the polls tell us. Young people like instant messaging, which is basically Phone with baggy shorts, a hat on sideways, and a skateboard.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good thoughs, Karl. The change is stance for the IRA is sure a welcome one.
I would question one comment:
"More than 3000 people have been killed in the name of Jesus."
I think the majority of this bloodshed has had little to do with the name of Jesus. The debate and acrimony has been over long-standing political and cultural differences between Protestants/Catholics (Irish/English); there has been very little theological content to the debate (from what I've read). None of the antagonists seem very interested in the person of Jesus, His sacrifice and His commands for us, or even Catholic vs. Prostestant theology. It appears to be primarily about bare-knuckle politics and cultural hatred. Fortunately, there are some among them who have chosen to take a higher road.
Thanks for the stimulating daily commentary.
Cheers! - Doug

Anonymous said...

Excuse the typo's that should be "thoughts" and "Protestants".
- D.

Anonymous said...

Karl, About 1976 I went to the North of Ireland to Colymeera (Hill of Harmony.) We went to a retreat house where Catholics and Protestants gathered. Most Catholics and Protestants never spoke to one another and each side thought the other has horns. Corymeela was the spot where Edison sent an early telegraph message to his Irish colleague on an island off of Scotland, also where the Druids worshipped, a center of communication. In the 1970's the Protestants and Catholics prayed together and discussed their needs for better housing, health care, education and realized how much they had in common. They went back home to Dublin to try to work together. I think this is where it all began, that people communicated and stopped fighting one another. It would be good to have more of this all over the earth. Let's give a cheer and say a prayer. Connie

Blog Archive