{"id":630,"date":"2010-10-12T09:30:28","date_gmt":"2010-10-12T09:30:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/richardlittledale.wordpress.com\/?p=630"},"modified":"2010-10-12T09:30:28","modified_gmt":"2010-10-12T09:30:28","slug":"what-is-the-nature-of-your-business","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/176.32.230.12\/richardlittledale.co.uk\/2010\/10\/12\/what-is-the-nature-of-your-business\/","title":{"rendered":"What is the nature of your business?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Is the question I was asked…<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n …at the end of a telephone survey. Presumably the person on the phone either forgot they had rung me at the church, or simply had a box which had to be ticked. What should I\u00a0answer?<\/p>\n So in the end I resorted to the bland description of officialdom, and described myself as a “minister of religion”. \u00a0How boring, though, in comparison to the person who\u00a0introduces herself on her Twitter profile as a “happiness expert”. Now that <\/em>is a job\u00a0description\u00a0I would love to read. What do you suppose she does on a daily basis?<\/p>\n As a new Christian I was taught to frown upon happiness as such and to see it as a poor and rather insipid relation of its spiritual cousin, joy. \u00a0The passage of the years, and time spent with people in poverty and wealth, penury and luxury has taught me to think differently, though.<\/p>\n This week a report commissioned by CAFOD, Tearfund<\/a> and the \u00a0Theos think tank will make some interesting revelations about what makes people happy. Even in a time of economic hardship more than half of the Britons surveyed believed that helping others at home and abroad is the key to happiness. (I wonder if this will come out in the answer to Jeeves’ unanswerable question<\/a> #8?) An enormous 91% also ranked living in a world of equal opportunities for everyone as important. The report <\/a>makes fascinating reading, and gives a warm glow about the fundamental goodness of human nature. We are not a selfish as we might have thought.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Whenever a report like this comes out, preachers need to read it. There are many reasons why they should do this, but one is so that they don’t end up directing their homiletical ire at a straw man who no longer exists. In other words, if preachers talk about the fundamental selfishness of human nature and how it really needs to be changed, they might be missing the very point this report makes. Tell good people that they should be compassionate when they already are – and you will isolate them. Show them how they can direct their goodness – and you might just start a revolution.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Is the question I was asked… …at the end of a telephone survey. Presumably the person on the phone either forgot they had rung me at the church, or simply had a box which had to be ticked. What should … Continue reading \n
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