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War Cry THE

Est 1879

salvationarmy.org.uk/warcry

No 7075

FIGHTING FOR HEARTS AND SOULS

28 July 2012 20p/25c

WILL

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PA photo

BOLT BE

? G N I N T H G I Back in Beijing, Bolt burst on to the world stage when he cruised to victory in the 100m, 200m and 4 x 100m relay finals. In the Turn to page 3

PA

asks NIGEL BOVEY

HE’S on his marks. He’s set. He’s going for gold. The fastest man on the planet, Usain Bolt, is raring to defend the Olympic sprint crowns he won four years ago.


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The War Cry 28 July 2012

TEAM WELCOMES CREW OF VESSEL AT FALMOUTH

Mission helps survivors of blaze ship THE Mission to Seafarers in Falmouth provided clothes, toiletries and food to survivors of a fire on board the MSC Flaminia. The blaze, which broke out as the ship travelled across the North Atlantic, took the life of one person and injured three more. A further crew member is unaccounted for. After orders to abandon ship, the survivors were recovered by a passing tanker and were taken to the port at Falmouth.

Mission to Seafarers’ emergency response team welcomed the crew on their arrival and provided them with essential items. Medical staff treated survivors at the Christian organisation’s Flying Angel centre and gave them access to telephone cards and the internet so they could contact their loved ones.

News Bishop to look at banks THE Bishop of Durham, the Right Rev Justin Welby, has been appointed to the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards. The commission is to investigate the ‘professional standards and culture of the UK banking sector, taking account of regulatory and competition investigations into the Libor rate-setting process’.

TORCH-BEARER HAS A SPORTING SUCCESS STORY

FREE SCRIPTURES FOR ATHLETES

Bible goes to Games

INSIDE

PHYSIO KEEPS TORCH TEAM ON THE ROAD p4 COMMENT

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LOFTY IDEAS

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PUZZLES

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INNER LIFE

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FOOD FOR THOUGHT

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E-BIBLE FOR HOTEL

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Race walker sparks enthusiasm A SALVATION Army member who competed at the 1980 Olympics carried the flame for the 2012 Games through Midhurst in West Sussex. Ian Richards – who represented Great Britain in the 50km race walk at the Moscow Games – said he felt very privileged to take part in the torch relay. ‘The Moscow Olympics were a boycotted Olympics and, even though I competed, I wasn’t allowed to take part in the opening and closing ceremonies. So to be part of these Olympics by carrying the torch was a very special compensation.’ Ian was nominated as a torch-bearer by one of the SODUKU ANSWERS

young people at the Worthing Salvation Army church where he worships. He says the reason he got the chance to carry the flame was less to do with his Olympic past than how he used his personal story with young people. ‘At school I was absolutely useless at sport,’ he says. ‘I found out about race walking after I left school, and 11 years later I was taking part in the Olympics. I’ve been sharing that story with youngsters ever since, through school assemblies, the Cub Scouts, the Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme and The

PRAYERLINK

BIB Society BIBLE and the Church’s Olympic mission Ol agency More Than ag Gold have teamed G up to make Bibles and Scripture an pportions available ffree to athletes iin the Olympic Village Religious V Services Centre. The two T organisations i i have h bbeen working together to provide 3,000 copies of the Scriptures in English and nearly 1,000 Bibles and New Testaments in other languages. David Willson, CEO of More Than Gold, says: ‘At past Olympics and other major sports events, I’ve seen athletes deeply grateful for the free gift of a Bible.’

Salvation Army. ‘I try to enthuse the kids who think they are rubbish at sport not to give up but to try something different, because I believe everybody is good at something.’ Days after carrying the torch, Ian took it into a school to show to the children. He also uses his story to speak to people about his faith. He says: ‘Engaging with sport is a way of connecting with God. Lots of people experience God through music and the performing arts. I feel very close to him when I’m out training and when I’m racing.’

YOUR prayers are requested for David, who is unwell; and for Brenda, who faces pressures as a full-time carer. The War Cry invites readers to send in requests for prayer, including the names of individuals and details of their circumstances. Send your requests to PRAYERLINK, The War Cry, 101 Newington Causeway, London SE1 6BN. Mark your envelope ‘Confidential’.


28 July 2012 The War Cry

From page 1 100m, he celebrated victory way before the line – yet still beat the world record of 9.7 seconds he’d set just 78 days earlier. In the 200m final, he smashed Michael Johnson’s 12-year-old world record by more than a tenth of a second.

He had everything going for him – youth, wealth and power

A year later, at the World Championships in Berlin, he did the double for a second time, setting the record times of 9.58 and 19.19 seconds. And second was a long way back. Until now, that is – because training partner and fellow Jamaican Yohan Blake is doing some cool running of his own. In last month’s Jamaican national championships, Blake ran the fastest time of the year to edge Bolt into second place in the 100m. Three days later, he beat the sprint king over his preferred distance of 200m. After the meet, Bolt told reporters: ‘I’m the Olympic champion. I have to show the world that I’m the best – so I expect to come back. ‘It’s back to the drawing board. I’ll the world at his feet. He had everything going for him – have to figure out what I did wrong and work on it. I’m not far off. For me, it’s youth, wealth and power. He also had a good track record in doing the right always good to lose, it wakes you up.’ Whether he’ll feel the same if he thing. He thought these were good loses in London over the next few enough to qualify him for a place in weeks remains to be seen. One thing’s Heaven. Jesus put him straight. ‘One thing you lack,’ he said. ‘Go, for sure, there’s no way he’s going to sell everything you have and give to regard it as a stroll in the park. In any event that is decided in the the poor, and you will have treasure in blink of an eye, missing the prize by Heaven. Then come, follow me’ (Mark the merest of margins is hard to take, 10:21 New International Version). Giving up the things he depended especially if, like Bolt, we have been used to things going our way. But the on – that made him feel good, that gave record shows that that’s what happened him status – was a step too far. The story continues: ‘At this the to one man who had

PA photo PA

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Yohan Blake (left) beats Usain Bolt in the 100m in Jamaica

man’s face fell. He went away sad, because he had great wealth’ (10:22). Those who think God will reward them for their achievements – their good living, donations to charity, church attendance – are likewise mistaken. The way to Heaven is to repent and turn from our wrongdoing, ask God for forgiveness and put our trust in Jesus as the one who puts us right with God. There’s no need to lose out by getting it wrong about being in a right relationship with God. If we recognise the wake-up call and step out in faith to Jesus, we are on to a winner.


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Interview

Physio stays on-massage about the torch relay

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VER the past few weeks, the Olympic flame has passed through more than 1,000 cities, towns and villages in the torch relay. All the while, the torch security team – put together from the Metropolitan Police – has been working hard to keep it on track. And physiotherapist Jon Pilkington has been helping to keep the team itself on the move.

‘A team of 30 people have been running next to the torch-bearers. Sometimes only one or two have been running at any one time, but if the route gets really busy, six to ten members of the team have been accompanying the torch,’ he says. ‘All the runners were Metropolitan Police officers who were trained specifically for the role. On the relay, they

have run anything from half a marathon to a full marathon each day. ‘My job has been to make sure the guys were fresh and could keep running. Most days I’ve been massaging between four and eleven people. I’ve been treating injuries and have been putting ice on and strapping up ankles, knees, shoulders and hips.’ Jon has been working with the Metropolitan Police for four years. While studying for his sports therapy

MARK SLEVIN

JON PILKINGTON tells Renée Davis about life on the road with the torch security team

degree, he took work experience in its rehabilitation department. After finishing university, Jon began working with the force as a rehabilitation specialist. ‘My main job was to get officers back on the streets,’ he says. ‘When

Jon does some physio during the torch relay they were injured in any way, they got sent to me and I’d try to fix them. ‘Another part of my role was fitness testing. I had to make sure new people coming to work for the police were fit enough to do so.


28 July 2012 The War Cry

‘We recently ran a health campaign, checking officers’ blood pressure and cholesterol. If they weren’t in the healthy bracket, they were invited to spend 12 weeks with us and do one-toone sessions.’ During his time with the Met, Jon has dealt with a variety of injuries, some minor, others serious. ‘Some people have back problems from sitting in cars for too long, some suffer injuries from being in the office all day. ‘Other injuries are more extreme. We cared for one woman who was chasing someone and got her foot trapped in a rabbit hole. Her ankle was torn to shreds. She spent nearly two years in the rehabilitation department.’ When Jon’s time on the health campaign was coming to an end, he took on his role as torch security team rehab specialist. He started out on the road when the flame left Land’s End back in May. Jon has enjoyed the experience. ‘I’ve been getting up in the morning to strap up the guys for the day’s run, before having a relaxed early afternoon en route to the next location. ‘Then I’ve been working from roughly 5 pm sometimes until midnight, treating everyone as soon as they finish the relay,’ he says.

to see me and have photos taken with the torch. It is good being able to share that with my family.’ Jon was brought up in The Salvation Army and now attends Soul Survivor, a church in Watford. His faith has helped him while he is on the road. ‘My mum and dad have given me some inspirational words to keep with me and look at each day. It keeps me strong to know that they are praying for me,’ Jon says. ‘I’ve had a lot of encouragement and text messages from guys at Soul Survivor and from The Salvation Army. It is a nice thing to know people care.’ The relay over, the Olympic flame will burn on at the Games. And Jon’s time on the torch relay will live on in his memory. ‘It has been a once-in-a-lifetime experience,’ he says. ‘I never thought I would be part of the Olympics.’

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lthough he has been pleased to be part of the team, Jon has missed his home in North London. ‘My mum and dad ring me every day to see how I’m doing. My best mate rings me once a week to have a chat,’ he says. ‘My twin sister lives in Belfast so when the relay went there she was able

I’ve been treating injuries and have been putting ice on and strapping up ankles, knees, shoulders and hips

It has been a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I never thought I would be part of the Olympics

Jon with an Olympic torch

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The War Cry 28 July 2012

Media

Comment

Bible fever ‘spreading’ in Hollywood

Passing the baton

THE website of film magazine Empire responded to news that Will Smith plans to direct The Redemption of Cain by suggesting that everyone seemed ‘to be working on a biblical epic these days’. The site continued: ‘Between Steven Spielberg and Ridley Scott taking a look at Moses and Darren Aronofsky off building his giant ark for Noah, you do start to wonder if they’ve heard something we’re not privy to. Bible fever is spreading.’

IT is a question of sport. What happens next?

ART historian James Fox wrote in the Radio Times about the Christian significance of the colour gold. The presenter of BBC Four’s A History of Art in Three Colours, which airs on Wednesdays, explained that – whereas for the ancient Egyptians gold represented immortality – for Christians gold symbolised divine light. ‘Early Church artists used gold not because it was expensive,’ he wrote, ‘but simply because it looked miraculous. In the great Byzantine churches of the 6th century, before they could build really large windows, they could flood a building with light by using properties of gold mosaic.’

Sun seeks sun inspiration DECIDING that it had had enough of the dull and wet summer weather, The Sun asked a clergyman to write a prayer for the nation. Canon David Meara of St Bride’s Church in London’s Fleet Street wrote: Almighty God, in Noah’s day, A flood swept all mankind away. But listen please to this our prayer, Send us sunshine bright and fair. We’re fed up with persistent rain, We want the sun to shine again. We promise we’ll take better care, Of Earth and sea and land and air.

BBC/Neal Street Productions

When tickets went on sale, there was a stampede to bag a seat. The Olympic flame sparked public enthusiasm as thousands of people lined the streets of every town and village it visited. Over the next two weeks, millions of sport fans will gather around tellies and big screens to cheer on Britain’s Olympic hopefuls. How many times will they hear the National Anthem? That London is staging the biggest show on earth is by any standards an achievement. The £9 billion budget is colossal. While the pre-Games talk was of regenerating East London, some companies have gone out of business to make way for the new stadiums. Many of London’s railway stations have had a facelift, yet the capital’s lifeblood commuters face uncertainty as to how they are going to get to the office to keep business ticking over while the Games are on. Sponsors – especially those with Olympian-endorsed products – are looking for a return on their investment. So should the country as a whole. One of the key ingredients of the bid to host these Games was legacy. London 2012 cannot afford to become just a fortnight’s distraction from economic gloom. Britons, especially those living in poorer areas such as parts of East London, deserve more than a passing feel-good factor. Taxpayer money sunk into the Games could have been spent on new hospitals, schools and social housing. The Games have created jobs and sporting facilities. The athletes’ village will become a new settlement. It is vital that those responsible for legacy get the best deal they can for the benefit of the area’s poorest. Sport has the power to unite disparate communities and inspire individuals to greater things. Rightly used, so does politics. The Games have begun. The question is: What happens next?

Gold digging

Jennifer as portrayed in ‘Call the Midwife’

Nuns-inspired drama ‘snapped up’ by States THE hit BBC drama Call the Midwife, about a young midwife attached to an order of nursing nuns, has been ‘snapped up’ by the American Public Broadcasting Service, reported The Independent. The paper said that TV executives hope it can become a hit like another British drama, Downton Abbey. Earlier in the year, the daughters of Jennifer Worth – whose memoirs form the basis for the series – told the Radio Times that working alongside an order of nuns influenced their mother’s Christian faith.


28 July 2012 The War Cry

Lifestyle

Lofty ideas save homeowners money MILLIONS of people are allowing money to leak out of their homes because they don’t take energy efficiency seriously. Heat is lost through loft spaces and walls. If your home has cavity walls, which most post1930 properties do, you could be losing up to a third of your heat if they are not insulated. Loft insulation is one of the easiest and cheapest Under-floor insulation ways of boosting the energy and filling the gaps between efficiency of your house. Installing insulation to a the skirting boards and the depth of 270mm can help floor should also reduce you cut your heating bills heat loss. (If you have gas appliances, be aware that by £175 a year. If you start think- they need some draught to ing about making such operate safely.) If your boiler is old, improvements now, your it could be worthwhile home will be cosier and cheaper to run by the time replacing it with a modern condensing or fan-assisted winter sets in. Installing insulation is boiler. Investing in new heating normally quite straightforward and should not controls can also help you take a professional com- save money. pany more than a day or two. For those wanting to do the installation themselves, DIY stores can advise on how to do it and what sort of protective clothing to wear. Ill-fitting doors and windows are also common causes of heat loss. Draught-proofing materials are relatively inexpensive. If you are prepared to make a long-term investment, double-glazing is worth considering.

Saving energy: top tips

Heating: Turn your thermostat down by 1C. It could save you £55 a year. If you’re going away for winter, leave the thermostat on low to provide protection from frost damage. Hot water: It should be hot, but not scalding. Setting the cylinder thermostat at 60C/140F is fine for bathing and washing. Appliances: To cut down on wasted energy, avoid leaving appliances on standby and remember not to leave them on charge unnecessarily.

Set the right temperatures for heating and bathing

Library picture posed by model

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Interview

It feels as though Pyramids being built Were you the only workforce chaplain? At first I was, but as more companies came in it became clear that more chaplains were needed, so I ended up heading a team of seven. When a new contractor arrived and set up their fences, we’d talk to them about becoming their chaplains. How did the workers take to the idea that people of God were walking around while they were hard at work? Obviously, not everyone wants to speak to a chaplain and not everyone even wants to acknowledge that you exist, but the workers appreciated us. There were a couple of companies whose management told us we weren’t wanted but whose workers said they must have us. We discovered that workers from other companies, many of whom had never had a workforce chaplain before, liked having a chaplain around and told the new workers about us. That spoke volumes to me. It was testimony to the role we’d

NIGEL BOVEY

Kelvin, how and when did you become chaplain for the construction phase of the Olympic Park? In October 2006, I had just taken on responsibility for nearby St Paul’s, Stratford. Someone came up with the idea of having a workplace chaplain and that I was the man for the job. At first, I didn’t want it but the idea grew on me. Back then, the whole area was a complete brownfield site. It feels as though I’ve watched the Pyramids being built.

The Olympic Park is ready. The East End landscape changed for ever. At the height of the construction, some 20,000 workers were on site, many of them living a long way from home. Keeping a caring eye on them was chaplain the Rev KELVIN WOOLMER. He tells Nigel Bovey about his part in the preparations


28 July 2012 The War Cry

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I’ve watched the

taken on in supporting their men. They valued having someone to talk to about personal matters who was outside the workforce and the management. Where did the workers come from? Every part of the world. The initial security force was made up of retired Gurkhas. They understood the role of chaplain very well. In fact, they named me their ‘padre’. Did you have to deal with any fatalities on site? No, the health and safety aspect of

the build was very successful. There’s a statistic within the UK construction industry which says that for every million hours one worker dies. But there were no work-related deaths in the park.

They valued having someone to talk to who was outside the workforce

What was your role as chaplain? I saw the job as being a critical friend, or lurking with intent, or being in the right place at the right time and certainly not condemning anyone.

In an early management meeting, for example, I pointed out that when it rained, the workforce had to stand out in the rain. Consequently, the management put up some shelters. People approach a chaplain because they are independent of the management and they will keep what they hear in confidence. The workers tell you things they wouldn’t tell their mates. They tell you things that are affecting them emotionally. The dog collar or the faith tag didn’t

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Interview

I like legacy people

From page 9 put people off. In fact, many found it reassuring. I’d often tell folks that I’d be praying for them, and they’d always be grateful to know that someone was prepared to do that. One day, a scaffolder slid down the scaffold and leapt at me. I thought he was going to hit me. Instead, he garbled how his wife had gone into hospital that morning for a minor biopsy check and he got a phone call to say that there was a chance she was going to lose a breast. He was in a real state. He didn’t know who to talk to or what to do. I was there, right time, right place. With his say-so, I approached the management and suggested that he should be allowed to go home. Another time, I was chatting to a fella who’d lost two fingers and a thumb in an accident some years previously. He was clutching his hand. I asked him if it was still giving him pain. ‘In more ways than you’d think,’ he said. He went on to tell me how the loss of those fingers had affected him emotionally, led to loss of wages and put his family life under strain. He said he’d never told that to anyone before and thanked me for listening. I’m not a psychologist but I do believe God sometimes puts me in a position to help someone by listening to them. I like to think that trustworthiness is the legacy that chaplaincy leaves with people. Did people talk to you about faith? Yes, I’ve had some blinding conversations with people seeking faith. One fella is now going through ordination training. It was great to be able to mentor him through that decision. A guy walked into my office one day and announced: ‘I am a pagan, you will never make me a Christian.’ I made a wisecrack, which broke the ice. Some time later, he asked me if I had a minute. We talked. He told me about some problems he was having. Then, of course, there have been the usual questions about getting children baptised, having a register office wedding blessed in church because the couple don’t feel properly married, and how to get children into church schools.

Olympics in this area was fantastic. Now the apathy is incredible. We have new buildings but there has been no spin-off or distribution of wealth into the community. The new Westfield shopping centre in Stratford supposedly had 15,000 new jobs. But not every one of the 15,000 unemployed local people was given a job there. Spin-off wealth is going to take a long time, if at all, to seep through and benefit residents.

I relished the idea of a fight

Running a church in Stratford, you also have an interest in the community surrounding the Olympic Park. To what extent is the area being regenerated? The initial enthusiasm for the

Could the money spent on the development have been better used? The £9 billion for the Olympic Park could, of course, have bought more hospitals or schools, changing the social structure in many areas. But during an economic downturn, the building of these facilities has provided wages for people who would have otherwise been bereft of any income. Many of the workers have been living in the area, spending their wages locally. So even if the local economy hasn’t been regenerated, I think it would have been far worse without the Games. A vital aspect of the UK bid to host this year’s Games was the idea of legacy – that there would be


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something of lasting benefit after the closing ceremony. Will the people of this area get the legacy they deserve? Not totally. Councils don’t want to pick up the bills for maintenance, and we can’t blame them. The athletes’ village is in my parish. In time, it will become a housing estate, half of which will be housing association-run social housing and half privately owned. There will also be a school for 1,800 pupils aged from 3 to 18. What kind of community there will be is anybody’s guess. You can build a house or a block of flats, but that doesn’t make a community. No consideration has been given to a faith aspect of bonding a community. There are no plans for a church, a traditional focal point of our communities. How and when did you become a Christian? It started when my wife said she wanted to get the kids into the local church school. She said that I’d have to start going to church. That was never going to happen. I was in the police riot squad. I relished the idea of a fight. I was a bodybuilder. I was a macho man. I thought: ‘I don’t need anyone to pray to, I am a big powerful nasty piece of work.’ But as a good husband, I did as I was told. Once we’d got the kids signed up for school, I stopped going to church. Then our eldest daughter, who was

four years old, got leukaemia. Back in the 1980s the survival rate of childhood leukaemia was only one in five. We were devastated. People from the church rallied round. They cooked us meals, did our washing, helped look after our other two daughters, drove us up to Great Ormond Street Hospital and so on. When our daughter went into remission, I thought I’d better go to church to say thank you. I was amazed to find ex-paratroopers and policemen there. I started going occasionally. Some time later, my wife and I went to a church gathering. After the sermon, I found myself wanting to pray. I didn’t know what to say. I just told Jesus that I was knocking on his door. As I said this, I felt a hand upon my shoulder. I looked up and looked into the face of Christ. He said: ‘You’ll be all right now.’ I felt as though someone had taken a huge weight off my back. I made my way along the aisle and walked to the speaker at the front. In front of the congregation of 300 I burst into tears. In that moment, I gave my life to Christ. I don’t just believe Christ exists; I know he does. Mine was a Damascus road-type conversion.

Mine was a Damascus road conversion

What differences in your lifestyle did meeting Jesus make? Jesus changed my life completely. I had always enjoyed a punch-up at work. In fact, I’d been known to fight other policemen to be the first into the pub fight. I was into weightlifting, weight training and boxing. I used to relish the opportunity to show someone I was stronger than them. I’d let anyone have the first punch, then I’d put them in hospital. Then I realised I wasn’t the strongest person in the world. Jesus was. He did something that I could never do – get up on a cross and die for the rest of humanity. I wasn’t even sure that I’d get out of bed to help a mate. Meeting Jesus made me a much calmer person. It made me realise that if my daughter didn’t survive, that whatever happened and however painful it would be, Jesus would be looking after her. I discovered the power of prayer and how much God loves us. He loved me when I was at my most unloveable. To see him standing next to me was more than I deserved. I certainly didn’t deserve his love. I know that God is real. I know it’s true that God sent his Son Jesus to save us, because Jesus definitely saved me.

PADMAYOGINI/Shutterstock

to think that trustworthiness is the that chaplaincy leaves with


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The War Cry 28 July 2012

Puzzlebreak WORDSEARCH

SUDOKU

Look up, down, forwards, backwards and diagonally on the grid to find these Olympic sports

Fill the grid so that every column, every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9 Solution on page 2

QUICK CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Dictatorial (5) 4. Tendon (5) 8. Perform (3) 9. Merchandise (5) 10. Bequeath (5) 11. Pig (3) 12. Despondency (5) 13. Stonework (7) 16. Hit (6) 19. Scold (6) 23. Blow up (7) 26. Bring upon oneself (5) 28. Rodent (3) 29. Emblem of peace (5) 30. Over (5) 31. Douse (3) 32. Swill (5) 33. Rash (5)

ANSWERS

ARCHERY ATHLETICS BADMINTON BASKETBALL BEACH VOLLEYBALL BOXING CANOE SLALOM CANOE SPRINT CYCLING DIVING EQUESTRIAN

V B N O E T L C B I G O S B H O C K E Y

N O L H T A T N E P N R E D O M B R E H

C O L O P R E T A W I I T E I X C H T H

F Y B L M D L I C O M B N L F E I A I H

O B C C E O C E H I M A F E N C I N G H

T N R L A Y L C V L I D R O G N L D G M

T A T Y I G B A O L W M A D Y T G B S T

B E G N C N O A L T S I E N M T A A O R

FENCING FOOTBALL GYMNASTICS HANDBALL HOCKEY JUDO MODERN PENTATHLON

O N N N O I G A L S D N C O N G B L Y T

T I L N I L B Y E L E T C W A A M L L D

F L A N I T H L Y I S O A K S E G E L O

S O D N E S F T B S I N N E T E L B A T

O P D K A E H I A O N A O A I O L T B N

L M S I O R B A L I O N E T C L H O T A

ROWING SAILING SHOOTING SWIMMING SYNCHRONISED SWIMMING TABLE TENNIS TAEKWONDO

T A T S V W C E L T R T S E S L N O O T

B R A M L I O H E T H T P S E N D S O T

L T R O W I N G E G C G R T C E J L F I

S W I M M I N G Y R N A I R T S E U Q E

I S A I L I N G T S Y C N E E T N B D S

N T O G N I T O O H S O T L W D M I M O

TENNIS TRAMPOLINE TRIATHLON VOLLEYBALL WATER POLO WEIGHTLIFTING WRESTLING

HONEYCOMB Each solution starts on the coloured cell and reads clockwise round the number

DOWN 2. Braking system (5) 3. Woman’s veil (7) 4. Mark of disgrace (6) 5. Requirements (5) 6. Broaden (5) 7. Noisy and disorderly (5) 9. Remuneration (5) 14. Paddle (3) 15. Groove (3) 17. Tariff (3) 18. Unwell (3) 1. Make of car 20. Monumental 2. Layer at the back of the eyeball inscription (7) 21. Eagle’s nest (5) 3. Four-sided shape 22. Ridicule (6) 4. Long-tailed bird of the crow family 23. Black wood (5) 24. Before (5) 5. The Earth 25. Sea (5) 6. Relating to sight 27. Angry (5)

QUICK QUIZ 1. How many times, before 2012, has the UK hosted the Olympics? 2. How many countries participated in the 2008 Olympics? 3. What does the Olympic motto ‘Citius, altius, fortius’ mean? 4. Where and when did the first torch relay take place? 5. How many cycling gold medals did Chris Hoy win at the 2008 Games? 6. Which country is hosting the 2016 Olympic Games?

QUICK CROSSWORD ACROSS: 1 Bossy. 4 Sinew. 8 Act. 9 Wares. 10 Endow. 11 Hog. 12 Gloom. 13 Masonry. 16 Strike. 19 Berate. 23 Explode. 26 Incur. 28 Rat. 29 Olive. 30 Above. 31 Dip. 32 Rinse. 33 Hasty. DOWN: 2 Servo. 3 Yashmak. 4 Stigma. 5 Needs. 6 Widen. 7 Rowdy. 9 Wages. 14 Oar. 15 Rut. 17 Tax. 18 Ill. 20 Epitaph. 21 Eyrie. 22 Deride. 23 Ebony. 24 Prior. 25 Ocean. 27 Cross. QUICK QUIZ 1 Two. 2 204. 3 Faster, higher, stronger. 4 Germany in 1936. 5 Three. 6 Brazil. HONEYCOMB 1 Nissan. 2 Retina. 3 Square. 4 Magpie. 5 Planet. 6 Visual.


Inner life HAVE you noticed that some celebrities are so well known that they are often referred to by only their first name? In the world of cooking you will find Delia, Nigella and Jamie. In music there’s Beyoncé, Kylie and Adele. And not many people need to be told that John, Paul, George and Ringo made up the Beatles. In their particular field of expertise, those people are so successful that their first name is all that is needed for us to know who they are. Their names also carry a level of authority. If we want to know how to boil an egg, we are more likely to follow the instructions if we are told: ‘This is the way Delia says to do it.’ In the Lord’s Prayer we are e that told that there is a name carries ultimate authority. ty. The prayer says that God’s name is to be

28 July 2012 The War Cry

Hallowed be thy name Our Fath Hallowe er, which art in d Heaven, Thy Kin be thy name, gdom co Thy will me, Give us be done, in earth th And forg is day our daily as it is in Heave n. As we fo ive us our trespa bread; rgive the s s e s , And lead m that tr But deliv us not into temp espass against u s; er tation, For thin us from evil. e is the K ingdom, the glory the powe , r, and For ever and ever. Amen.

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HANDS TOGETHER, EYES CLOSED ANDREW STONE looks at the Lord’s Prayer ‘hallowed’, which means it should be honoured and respected. It also means we should take notice when we are told: ‘This is the way God says to do it.’ However, there are times when God’s name is used in a way that is not hallowed. It is used as an expression of shock, as in ‘Oh my God!’ (aka ‘OMG’) or in frustration, when, people say ‘For God’s sake!’ If we misuse God’s name, it devalues our understanding of him. We begin to see God as no more than a figure of speech or an insult. But he is so much more than that. God is our creator, who longs to be involved in our lives. Through the Bible, he teaches us the best way to handle any situation and, through his offer of forgiveness, he gives us the chance to put past mistakes behind us. You name it – and God can make a difference in any part of our lives.

Their names carry a level of authority

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The War Cry 28 July 2012

Food for thought

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Waiting for a doctor requires patience BEEPS came from the corner of the room where a boy played with his handheld games console. His thumbs were moving rapidly. On the other side of the room a pale girl clung to her mum and looked sad. I had hobbled into the out-of-hours medical centre to get help for what turned out to be a sprained ankle. As I looked around I saw others with their various ailments. A young man had a nasty gash on his arm. An elderly woman was coughing uncontrollably. As we waited, sitting on our plastic chairs, I pondered the word ‘patient’. It is by JENNIFER HEATON not surprising that a person visiting a clinic All of a sudden, everything is called a patient, for was different. patience is definitely what Just as the man received we needed that day. I tried life-changing help from not to watch the clock, Jesus, so can we. which seemed to be ticking Sometimes, when we very slowly. turn to him and tell him our My experience of waiting problems, we instantly feel reminded me of a story in better. But we may also face the Bible about a man with long-term difficulties that great patience. He had been last for years. an invalid for 38 years. But Some problems don’t then he met Jesus. disappear in minutes, ‘Jesus said to him, “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk.” At once the man was cured; he picked up his mat and walked’ (John 5:8, 9 New International Version).

such as illness, loneliness, bereavement and unemployment. In those instances, we require patience. We need to trust that Jesus still cares about us – and is still with us, during the period of waiting. Whatever our need, we don’t need to delay in talking to Jesus about it. He wants to hear from us today. He is only a prayer away.

All of a sudden, everything was different

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A hotel guest accesses the Bible on a Kindle e-reader

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E-BOOKED

IT’S not unusual for guests to put their feet up and enjoy a good book while staying in a hotel. But a hotel that provides its Good Book via an e-reader is less common. Newcastle upon Tyne’s Hotel Indigo has made headlines after replacing its bedside Gideons Bibles with Amazon Kindles that have been preloaded with the Scriptures. rooms with an e-reader containing writes The Daily Telegraph and the the Bible began as a trial. A posiDaily Mail noted that the initiative tive response from the public means CLAIRE to provide all of the hotel’s 148 bed- the project is set to continue for the BRINE

Hotel makes room for new format of Bible

YOUR LOCAL SALVATION ARMY CENTRE

time being.

General manager of the Newcastle branch of the Hotel Indigo chain told The Daily Telegraph that the idea was inspired by Newcastle’s literary heritage. Adam Munday said: ‘We wanted to reflect this literary history in a very contemporary way, so we are offering guests the use of cutting-edge Kindles pre-loaded with the Bible, instead of the more traditional hard-copy Gideons Bible that they would expect to find in a hotel.’ The book remains a familiar feature in many hotel rooms, regardless of its format. But how well acquainted are people with its content?

Maybe a trip away is as good a time as any to discover it. When flicking through its pages, we can find stories about a man called Jesus who revealed the love of God. We can see examples of people making mistakes and Jesus forgiving them, offering them another chance to get things right. We can discover that – because of Jesus – death is not the end of life, but that our ultimate destination can be a heavenly one with God. Millions of readers have been gripped by the story that ‘God loved the people of this world so much that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who has faith in him will have eternal life and never really die’ (John 3:16 Contemporary English Version). At home or away, what kind of a reception will we give it?

The Salvation Army (United Kingdom Territory with the Republic of Ireland) on behalf of the General of The Salvation Army. Printed by Benham Goodhead Print Ltd, Bicester, Oxon. © Linda Bond, General of The Salvation Army, 2012


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