Clay Lane

Posts in The Copybook credited to ‘Clay Lane’

151
Gideon’s Fleece Clay Lane

Gideon is chosen by God to save Israel from the Midianites, but doubts his fitness for the task.

Gideon is numbered among Israel’s ‘Judges’, charismatic leaders of the ancient tribes of Israel after they escaped from slavery in Egypt and settled in the land of Canaan, sometime before the 11th century BC. Their task was to free Israel from the ever-present temptation to adopt the religions of the indigenous peoples.

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152
Say ‘Shibboleth!’ Clay Lane

Jephthah’s sentries at the crossings of Jordan devise a fool-proof way to tell friend from foe.

The Judges were rulers of Israel in the years after the twelve tribes first settled in Canaan – impossible to date securely, but the 13th century BC is conventional. They fought to hold off invasion by neighbouring kingdoms, such as Midian, Moab and Ammon, but their task was not made any easier by rivalries and suspicions within their own nation.

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153
Gideon Recruits an Army Clay Lane

Gideon prepares to drive the Midianites out of Israel, but first he has to make it a fair fight.

Gideon has been visited by an angel of God, who has commissioned him to liberate Israel from seven years of cruel oppression by the Kingdom of Midian. Gideon has sparked a revolt, but with a decisive battle before him, he remains far from convinced that he is the right man for the task.

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154
Gideon’s Snare Clay Lane

While spying out the enemy’s camp, Gideon hears something which fills him with renewed confidence.

Gideon has been chosen by God to rid Israel of the invading Midianites, and has successfully fulfilled his commission. All that remains is for his unlikely army of just three hundred hand-picked men to capture the Midianites’ top generals, but he does not get much co-operation from his fellow Israelites.

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155
Edith Cavell Clay Lane

The experienced nurse could not stop saving lives, even at the cost of her own.

The execution of nurse Edith Cavell (1865-1915), an Englishwoman working in a Red Cross hospital in Brussels during the Great War, was one of a number of scandals that did nothing to help the German Empire justify their claim to be the superior civilisation of Europe.

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156
The Day of ‘No’ Clay Lane

On October 28th, 1940, the Kingdom of Greece surprised everyone by refusing to become part of the German war machine.

By the Autumn of 1940, British forces fighting the Second World War were dangerously overstretched: Paris had fallen, Benito Mussolini had pledged Italy’s support to Germany, and Greece was under a state of emergency, with fascist sympathies.

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