Programme Index

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Relayed from
Bethania Welsh Baptist Chapel,
Cardigan
Order of Service
Hymn 613, Arglwydd melys ydyw cerdded (Tune, Islwyn)
Reading, Matthew vii, 21-29; Johnxiv,
12-25
Hymn 755, 0! fy lesu Bendigedig
(Tune, Henryd)
Prayer
Hymn 736, Pwy sydd gennyf yn y nefoedd (Tune, Tanycastell)
Address by the Rev. ESAIA WILLIAMS Hymn 770, Anghrediniaeth gad fi'n llonydd (Tune, Bryngogarth)
Prayer
Precentor, PICTON DAVIES
Organist, GWYNETH JONES
Hymns from Llawlyfr Moliant y Bedyddwyr (The Baptist Hymnbook)

Contributors

Unknown:
Llawlyfr Moliant

A study of the relations between psychology and religion by a medical psychologist
I - 'The Scope of Psychology'
'Religion and Science' is a headline to which, from the days of the Darwinian controversy, we have become well used. Today the words 'Religion and the Sciences' would better represent the issue, into so many sub-divisions has 'Science' been split.
One of the youngest of the sciences is psychology, and - from the point of view of religion - it is perhaps the most important of all.
Many nineteenth-century scientists assumed that 'Science' contradicted religion; some of their successors, who represent one school of psychologists, claim that psychology does not so much contradict religion as explain it away. This is obviously a more dangerous form of attack.
The medical psychologist who is to give a series of five lectures with the title 'We have reason to believe' is not of this school. He has studied both psychology and religion, and after carefully defining the two terms, he will explain the relations that, in his judgment, should rule between them.

By KENNETH INGRAM
This afternoon, in the first of a new series of five talks, Mr. Kenneth Ingram proposes to examine the philosophy of materialism, and the possible results of its impact on civilisation. He will inquire whether, and how, our Christian civilisation can be strengthened and adapted, so as to withstand the attacks of a materialist philosophy of life. Mr. Ingram is the author of ' Modern Thought on Trial ' and other books on the social philosophy of religion.

Contributors

Unknown:
Kenneth Ingram
Unknown:
Mr. Kenneth Ingram

This listing contains language that some may find offensive.

From The Studio
Conducted by the Rev. Canon C. E. RAVEN , D.D., Regius Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge, and Chaplain to
H.M. the King
Hymn, Immortal, invisible, God only wise (S.P. 535)
Lesson, St. John xiv, 1-11 ; Prayer
Hymn, Lord of our Life, and God of our Salvation (A. and M. 214; S.P. 349)
Blessing

Contributors

Unknown:
Rev. Canon C. E. Raven

Leader, REGINALD BOOTHROYD
Conductor, HERBERT LODGE
FRANK TITTERTON (tenor)
Relayed from
The Winter Gardens, Margate
Herbert Lodge began his musical carter as a double-bass player. Having won a scholarship at the Royal Academy of Music at an early age, he studied under Charles Winterbbttom. Before long he was playing in the Covent Garden Opera Orchestra and in 1919 he joined the London Symphony and Royal Philharmonic Orchestras. He has given double-bass recitals in London and the provinces and over the air. But, like Koussevitzky, Lodge was not content to remain a double-bassist ; he aspired to the baton. Even at eighteen he was conducting an amateur operatic society, and during the War he ran a symphony orchestra of his own. In 1929 he succeeded Bainbridge Robinson as musical director of the Margate Municipal Orchestra.

Contributors

Leader:
Reginald Boothroyd
Tenor:
Frank Titterton
Unknown:
Herbert Lodge
Unknown:
Charles Winterbbttom.
Unknown:
Bainbridge Robinson

National Programme Daventry

About National Programme

National Programme is a radio channel that started transmitting on the 9th March 1930 and ended on the 9th September 1939. It was replaced by BBC Home Service.

Appears in

About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More