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I LOVE Ed Reardon's Week on a Friday. As a writer, with my mates who are writers, it is a MUST. But yes, I am a Radio 4 person too, thought mostly usually mornings. Only thing that gets me mad is that only religious people are allowed to have a thought for the day. If you are not superstitious or religious they think you are not worthy of a thought for the day. British Humanists Association lobbies tham about that issue. But yeah, I used to listen to BBC London Radio till itgot to being a talk radio show with whining people, and can't STAND Robert Elms, so now I play Radio 4 in morning and my own music afternoons.
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Radio 4 is pretty much all we listen to in our house. I love The Genius game! And there was a comedy play recently about a woman trying to prove to the devil she'd been murdered rather than commiting suicide. Used to listen to things like XFM, but these days the radio only leaves Radio 4 if I want to hear football on 5 Live.
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Old Nicks Game with Andy Hamilton as the Devil is very funny.


I started to listen to Radio 4 when I was at college and the Falklands War started - it was the best way of getting the news. I sort of fell in love with the late Brian Redhead on Today and then never looked back.


Other than 5Live, Does anybody know if there is a digital 24 hour Radio news and current affairs programme?

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"never particularly religious"? Here are some quotes from recent Thoughts For The Day:


23 Nov

Paul of Tarsus describes God's strength being most evident in his own weakness. Jacob saw God in the night, and the fight, which crippled him. Christ Himself saved us when His body and soul were broken. The whole world is out of joint: God doesn't discard it, but works with it to redeem it.


In truth there is no tension, or should not be, between treatment and tolerance, acceptance and cure. Whether those with Asperger syndrome are any more disabled than the rest of us is arguable: I passionately believe not, and that we should embrace such alternative in-sights as a great privilege.


But we are all less than the best we could be - physically and emotionally, morally and spiritually. The truth is that, like any parent, God both accepts us and challenges us.



22 Nov


In another age, a busy, anxious professional asked Jesus what he needed to do to inherit eternal life. By way of answer Jesus referred to a well-known 'life list', one made up of things we shouldn't as well as should do. The man proudly replied 'check' to each one of the commandments and yet suspected there was more. So he asked what he still lacked. Jesus' answer wasn't "go memorise the Torah" or "white water raft the Jordan" - but "go sell your possessions, and follow me". It was a goal way too challenging for the man and we are told he went away sad and, presumably, unfulfilled. The man was expecting a 'things to do before you die' list; w hat he got was a 'die first then discover your life' list.


A preacher I knew used to ask people "Hey, how's life going?" After they'd given their usually glib answer he'd say, with a smile, "do yourself a favour and die", before adding quietly - "to yourself, that is!" It was a serious jest, another way of saying if you really want to live a fulfilling, abundant life then you must lose it first in order to find it.


21 Nov

In the Bible's poetic picture of beginnings, God creates not a race or a tribe, still less a mass of humanity, but two individuals. They get their identities because they bear something of his likeness; in their capacity to make choices they reflect him, share his dignity. They make a mess of it, of course, make their unilater al declarations of independence, but that divine image, however obscured, is never obliterated, and it insists on bursting through in some of the unlikeliest of their children.


Well that's the old story: and I believe that our uniqueness rests in the fact that we're each made for relationship with God.


20 Nov

there's been one further element to Christian marriage upon which the Queen and Prince Philip have been able to draw over the years, it's the love of God, ever forgiving and ever renewing - and it's that love which is at the heart of a good marriage and a good life. May they and we continue to know that love.

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