Monday, 30 November 2009

Crossing the border!

On the road to Scotland Rachel reports more enjoyable times on the Origins tour. Great hospitality and audiences have helped to make it a great tour although the cast are looking forward to shortly returning to see everyone in York!!!

Thursday, 12 November 2009

The Ten Commandments remake is finally here!

Paul, Kelvin, Ian, Desmond and Snowy undertake the challenge to remake the epic movie The Ten Commandments on top of England's highest peak. This is the result - a 220 minute movie condensed into just under 20.

Their adventure has so far raised over £2,700 in aid of The Sky's the Limit!


Friday, 6 November 2009

Origins and Lemons on the road.....

A week of good audiences and generous hosts. Illness has once again hit the camp with Rachel and Alan feeling a bit ropey!

Monday, 2 November 2009

THE SKY'S THE LIMIT - SCAFELL PIKE UPDATE!

Desmond the Camel, Snowy the Black Sheep, Paul, Kelvin, Ian and a couple of goats have all safely returned from their sponsored Lake District remake of the 1956 epic movie The Ten Commandments. Thanks to all who sponsored so generously in aid of The Sky's the Limit.

The final movie is still being edited, but early footage shows some rather diva-like behaviour and a few questionable budget cutting special effects. Here's a taster...



Thursday, 29 October 2009

Another good week......

Rachel reports another good week. The Leatherhead Theatre was a great venue and had a great audience. In Southampton the team stayed in a guest house which made them appreciate the host families even more! Went to above bar church in Southampton which was ace! Had an amazing 3 course dinner before the show last night in Windsor so being looked after very well!

Thursday, 22 October 2009

Another week on the road!

Rachel reports another great week playing to auidences from 30 to 300! The team have eaten lots including an abundance of fruit salad! Oli's foot is better so the team enjoyed a beauitful walk on the moors near Tavistock. The show is continuing to bring joy to people and causing them to think!

Tuesday, 20 October 2009

Review of Origins & Lemons from The Baptist Times, 15 October 2009

Origins for all
Why are we here, say the bells of Grasmere?
And where are we bound, say the bells all around?
Mark Woods hears some answers

HAVING spent most of the millennia since their composition as a fount of wise sermons and personal devotion, the first few chapters of Genesis have over the last hundred years or so become a source of often bitter theological strife.

Denominations have been split, friendships broken and accusations of naive fundamentalism and grave heresy have been slung about with abandon.

But can Genesis 1-11 also be fun?

Yes, according to the Riding Lights Theatre Company. Its new production, Origins and Lemons, is a wryly comic take on the opening chapters of the Bible, with a serious point to it.

And it really is fun. The four cast members manage to fill two hours with a virtuoso set of sketches and monologues which are thought provoking without being preachy. The prevailing note is cheerfulness, and it's sustained throughout, even when serious issues are being addressed.

The Riding Lights thesis is that there are appropriate ways of talking about different kinds of truth, and it's important not to get them mixed up.

Dawkinsites do, in what they say about religion, and young-earth creationists do, in what they say about the Bible. One tries to use the language of science to talk about faith, and fails; the other tries to use the language of faith to talk about science, and fails too.

The point's made both explicitly and implicitly. The players - Alan Christopher, Fred Denno, Jamie Higgins and Rachel Wilcock - take to the stage at intervals to address the audience directly.

The question why and the question how, they say, require completely different answers. You can identify the chemical composition of a human being, and work out how much the ingredients are worth - about 87 pence. But 'that's not what you are, it's just what you're made of’.

Understanding the right use of metaphor is vital: 'Once you start speaking of the really vital things, imagery is the only way.'

It shouldn't be thought, though, that this is just an attack, however polite, on creationism. It does not fall into the trap of implying that because the stories in Genesis are not true in a literal and scientific sense, they are not true in a deeper way, and it unpacks some of those meanings too.

And just as clearly, Riding Lights has the sort of atheistic scientists so beloved of the media in its sights (how on earth these people manage to generate so much publicity is beyond understanding).

'If religion is useless and harmful, as Darwinians believe, why hasn't evolution got rid of it?' ask the players - a telling point, it seems to me. There's a scene set in a school which is a quick-fire disposal of some of the common objections to religion.

And they take on the big questions of pain and suffering, and why the world is as it is. We create, and we're made in the image of God; why not assume that God enjoys creating too, and that he's bringing his world to an as yet unseen perfection?

The staging is minimalist, appropriate for a production which is touring churches and can't rely on the usual stage machinery. The characters include Noah as a salty sea-dog, Adam and Eve - their nudity tastefully indicated by appropriately designed kitchen aprons - Cain, represented by a ventriloquist's doll and voicing a moving poem; and a peculiar giant, one of the Nephilim, who appears in order to be ordered off because the writers can't think of what to do with him. Indeed, the story of the sons of God taking wives from among the daughters of men is almost invariably airbrushed out of our preaching schedules...

This is popular apologetics at its best; think C S Lewis on a skateboard. If you go and take a non-Christian friend with you, you won't be embarrassed by it and there'll be lots to talk about afterwards.