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Distinctly Welcoming

  • Published by Scripture Union
    "If you live in the 19th Century, you don't need to read this. If you live in the 21st, you must" - Gerard Kelly

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emerging church

August 06, 2008

Greenbelt 2008

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That time of year is approaching fast! Late in the day, there's a music line-up that is beginning to interest me so I'll definitely be making my way over to see Seth Lakeman, Howe Gelb/Giant Sand, Jose Gonzales and One Giant Leap. Looking forward to the usual bumping into old friends, chilling over a cinnamon tea in the Tiny Tea Tent and, should I feel inclined, getting into the odd seminar and talk. I'm on duty in the CMS Main Venue talking about a fresh approach to the theology of religions on Saturday at 4pm (Distinctly Welcome - "No Limits, Just Edges") and talking about faith in the public square (Distinctly Welcome - "Christian Britain or What?") on Sunday at 1pm. Some time on the Monday (!!!) I'm meant to be leading a workshop in the new "Kitchen" venue on Christian community action and collaboration with Muslims. So come and say hello!

I have a belated confession to make that I hit the big 40 a couple of weeks ago. One prezzie was "The Poet, The Warrior, The Prophet" by Rubem Alves. If you like philosophical, poetic works of theology that bring in works of literature, then this is a gorgeous book. It's unclassifiable, mysterious and beguiling, and will be a book I can see myself repeatedly coming back to,

March 20, 2008

BLAH Brum - Romans Disarmed: Overcoming Evil with Good

Blahbirminghamheader_3Tuesday June 17th - Birmingham's Anglican Cathedral
Sylvia Keesmaat and Brian Walsh: "Romans Disarmed - Overcoming Evil with Good"

I'm delighted that we're hosting Brian and Sylvia this June. Their commentary "Colossians Remixed: Subverting the Empire" is simply the best Bible commentary you are ever likely to read. They combine real biblical, theological authority with a keen insight into contemporary culture and postmodernity. To see full details and book a place for £15 go to this website ....And then the next day you can  perhaps dip into the RUN conference in Peterborough!

February 06, 2008

Reformation - Europe's House Divided

CheDoing my usual light reading and finding myself enjoying a great history of the Reformation (Diarmaid MacCulloch's "Reformation: Europe's House Divided"), looking for traces of PhD source material. I came across this little observation of his that during the Reformation, there was a shift in people's attitudes so that the Pope came to be seen as the devil's agent and the miracle of the Mass the most evil moment in their earthly experience. He likens it to a technique of German playright Berthold Brecht who would engender alienation ("Verfremdung") in his audience by making the familiar seem unfamiliar: a device to shock the audience into taking control of their perceptions of what was happening in front of them.

It's the classic tool of the revolutionary. What it does, though, is bring division, polarise opinion, and breaks connections where they ought to exist. We see it happening in history and in the church; what do you think of these possible "alienations"?

the reading of this liturgy is lifeless and devoid of faith.....scrap liturgy

daily Bible reading is a legalistic chore.....take or leave the Bible as a reference point for Christian faith

hymns and songs are impersonal, clinical and merely creedal......personalise and consumerise all worship,

local church isn't a real community......find church where I'm comfortable in community,

worship choruses are trite and shallow.......profound worship only happens during a meditation.

I could go on...I don't know whether these "swings" are fair, but it is a human trait and, let's be honest, "gets things changed". But I'm not convinced it's the way it ought to be. Sam Wells' "God's Companions" book talks of the church being a "community of memory and imagination". Our secular liberal worldview (the seeds of which were a motor for the Reformation) endeavours to wipe us free of memory. It's all one giant leap forward into the new and the better. Untrammelled postmodernity would wipe away any sense of the future, and reduce memory to a rosy-tinted heritage product.

I believe it's one of the great challenges for the church in our culture: to embrace a future with imagination whilst having full memories of who we are and where we came from. Those memories contain both the joys and pain, successes and disappointments of who we are. So, with respect to Brecht, let's be restless for change without having to demonise the present or erase the past.

November 23, 2007

Beginnings and Endings

Beginnings_and_endingsFor this Advent, I've bought Maggi Dawn's new book of daily readings, "Beginnings and Endings", and whilst I don't want to spoil my Christmas preparation by peeking at the ending, it does look like it will be good value. Maggi is someone who does not  resort to the stock or fashionable statement. She is able to combine a huge wealth of theological knowledge, a proper appreciation of tradition and church history and a creative twist to make our faith root in today's world.

Maggi recently posted on "emerging christology" and shares some complex yet refreshing thoughts that are worth airing. Essentially, the emerging church has emphasised the incarnational roots of the Christian faith and thus advocated a missional theology. For Maggi, there is a danger that this tips the pendulum towards reducing our view of Christ  as he is always seen as within culture. This danger is especially apparent when the Trinity is expounded only as a model of sociality: of our interrelatedness and interdependence. This is all brain-ache stuff but I think I know what Maggi is getting at. Coming at this from a "theology of religions" perspective, it seems that we need a Trinitarian understanding that gives us a vision of what God looks like (the self-giving love of the cross) and how God moves (by His Spirit in the church and in the world). The very fact that God is God means that we cannot say all there is to say about God (the third part of this Trinity!), and as a consequence cannot say all there is to say about Christ. It's this tension between the universal and the particular that is enabled by a true Trinitarian understanding: ie how can you say you follow the God of the whole world if this God can only be known and accessed in this particular time and place?

This is the counter-balance that, perhaps, Maggi is touching towards. You reduce Jesus to being a relevant, contextual servant of God, and Jesus ceases to be God. You do that, and other gods rise up. You over-emphasise Trinity as a model of behaviour rather than as a life to participate in, and church becomes a dispensible extra as opposed to a sign and down-payment of what the God of covenant is doing in the world even in all (and because?) of its wearisome variety, tradition and brokenness.

There was a fab throw-away line of Bishop Graham Cray at this year's Greenbelt. He talked of holding the tension of God as present, absent and coming. God is here, active in the church and in the world; we don't need to conjure him up and signs of his goodness and his imprint are in every person, every situation and every place. God is also absent: absent because he is God and we are not, but absent because there is pain, sin, brokenness, suffering. God is also coming: there is a future, a hope, God does transform and heal. The church, broken, battered and bruised, are heralds of this new creation, this new future, where what is whole, we believe, will look something like the Christ we know. In many instances, for people that do not share our faith, the task will be what Rowan Williams describes as inviting the world to find "in the narrative and practice of Jesus and his community that which anchors and connects their human hopefulness". The challenge then remains to find the language to make sense of this hopefulness, without colonising and patronising. Here endeth the brain-ache session! Normal service will resume when we complete the Distinctly Welcoming iPod next week!!