This weeks Beauty for Ashes looks at the Iran/USA peace deal; John Healy resigns; The Global Justice Report; Elon Musk the worlds first Trillionaire; the World Cup – Scotland, Australia and Curaco; Killer Ideology of the week – Paganism; Dark Mofo in Tasmania; Dr Who – Goes Woke and Broke; Peter Hitchens – Remembering Poetry; AI – Model Collapse?; the state of Coal in the world; Argentina and AI companies; Feedback; ‘Sophie from Dundee’; AI writing sermons; Simon Guilleband and Tim Hughes; the Final Word – 1 Timothy 4:8 including music from Dave Alvin; Tim Hughes; Izaline Calister; Jethro Tull; Glenn Campbell; The Proclaimers;
Here is the music used in this months podcast on Spotify….
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Catch up on last weeks episode here – Beauty for Ashes 35 – The Killer Ideologies Special
Curacao team worshipping – https://www.facebook.com/reel/1549296183247356


Dear David,
Thank for your weekly podcast.
I note your mistaken pronunciation of Al Carns as Cairns.
I point this out not to criticise but to acknowledge how few people know about him. This is about to change and already indeed is changing.
I would recommend watching his resignation speech on youtube.
I might even be so bold as to suggest he could be the UK Prime Minister before the end of the year. Check him out. He is a remarkable man and different from any other MP in recent times.
May God continue to bless you in your online ministry.
It is not just AI models that are collapsing, but your top ten “rock” guitarists list has morphed into simply a list of guitarists. However, in so doing you have stumbled on to The Way, and all your prior transgressions can be forgiven. If you had made it clear at the start that the criteria was simply guitarist, then the inclusion of Glen Campbell would have been a self evident truth. By the way, he is number 1 not number 4.
I would argue that Dr Who still has a lot of millage left in it. The whole concept took a bit of a battering during the reign of the censorious Michael Grade and has never really recovered from this within the BBC. A real shame as the team were not scared to explore some wide ranging spiritual concepts during the past few years.
Also – as far as I am aware there is still a large volume of material and ideas for future series floating around – some written by budding theologians – which could be usefully utilised.