Mettle

This is an excellent resource to be using for 14-18’s from YFC.

Ok, I may be biased as a YFC guy, but you need to grab hold of Mettle if you work with this age group because it really is very very good, right from the content and down to the presentation.

Mettle works through 3 key activity areas:

1. Core Sessions – these teach the basics of Christianity and address the gaps in Christian knowledge and experience of many young people. Selection of at least two of the Core Sessions are mandatory and should form the central part of the programme giving plenty of time and space for discussion and developing biblical understanding.

2.Hot Potato Sessions – these offer a choice of challenging and stimulating sessions to get your young people talking openly and responding positively to the peer pressures and hard-hitting issues they face today.

3.Wildcard Sessions – these suggest ways to vary the programme by either socialising as a group or organising a practical activity that could impact the local church and community.

There is also a supporting website.

A sample pack costs £12, but for a limited time you can get them for £6 by contacting YFC head office on 0121 550 8055, the online catalogue, or if I’m near to you I have a few copies to sell too. Go have a look as I am sure you will not be disappointed as this is the best youth resource I have seen in a very long time.

Debt write off

This is excellent news.

Move over Tony and let Gordon in to do it properly!

When God’s not there.

That was my subject to speak on tonight at St Mark’s.

The service was informal, planned and led by the youth group who asked me to speak. Tonight they decided to set the church up as a cafe at the front and people were sat around tables drinking and eating as the service began.

As I looked around I thought that this was more of what church should look like. The seating arrangement said ‘we are here to interact, to contribute, to learn from each other’. I feel it looked healthier that rows looking to the front at the ‘above reproach specialist’.

I also thought how very fortunate we are as a church with a vicar who encourages experimentation like this for the young people and others. He has his own set preferences, and yet he allows others to play and find theirs. I think that is such a great example of encouraging and enabling leadership. It certainly contrast with a situation I heard the other day of a Pathfinder leader waiting for over 2 weeks to hear if the group could contribute to a service as they had requested.

Tonight I am glad I am in a church like St Marks.

On to the subject? Well of course, it is a non-sensical title. God is always there. He also promises never to leave or forsake us. He left Jesus (Father, Father why have you forsaken me?)so that he would never have to leave us.

I shared basically that in circumstances it does feel like God has left and is ignoring us. I think n these situations, and looking at Psalm 13, we need to remember that God is there and we need to ‘hang in there’ by being honest with God, others and ourselves. BY this I mean if we are angry we shout at God and tell him, not pretend we are all right when we are struggling.

This is not amazingly comforting, Jesus never said it would be easy but he did promise to stay with us, and when it comes to this it can be useful to remember that it say ‘and it came to pass’ 396 times in the Bible.

WE all have dark valley experiences, and they will ‘come to pass’.

What am I

I always wanted to know this answer to my question
regarding where I fit in the church so I did the
theological world view test. mmm interesting ….

You scored as Emergent/Postmodern. You are
Emergent/Postmodern in your theology. You feel
alienated from older forms of church, you don’t think
they connect to modern culture very well. No one
knows the whole truth about God, and we have much
to learn from each other, and so learning takes place
in dialogue. Evangelism should take place in relationships
rather than through crusades and altar-calls. People are
interested in spirituality and want to ask questions, so
the church should help them to do this.

Emergent/Postmodern

100%

Evangelical Holiness/Wesleyan

82%

Neo orthodox

71%

Classical Liberal

61%

Roman Catholic

54%

Charismatic/Pentecostal

54%

Modern Liberal

46%

Reformed Evangelical

29%

Fundamentalist

4%

What’s your theological worldview?
created with QuizFarm.com

They’re back …

… and I’m afraid.

All my childhood memories flooded back again tonight but I could not hide behind the sofa because all the kids were there and I had to be a responsible father.

Dr Who was fantastic tonight, but we all thought the daleks were destroyed, but they are back, they are going to invade the earth, and, even worse, they have Rose.

C’mon Doctor, you can do it!

Meetings

Friday was a day of meetings.

First I met with Alan le Grys, the principal of SEITE. This was an interesting conversation and now I need to decide whether I feel able to take on the demands of the course. To be honest, I am not sure I have too many options to go with. The course is interesting, and will be demanding with weekly evening lectures, 7 residential weekends and an 8 day residential school at Easter – and all that for 3 years! Maybe I should be seeking therapy for even considering such a course!

Next I traveled to Bluewater for a much less scary experience to meet up with Gordon. We had a coffee and shared stuff that is currently happening in our worlds. It’s events like this that make me really glad I started to blog. Having a new friend to share and talk with can only be good thing. I hope we will be able to do this again soon.

Sharing and bouncing ideas can, I think, only result in more rounded and holistic people. Interestingly both Gordon and myself have been toying with a film club idea. I have a great love of film but for the last few years I have not been able to watch a film without thinking two things: ‘What is God saying in this?’ and ‘How can I use this to illustrate something of God?’

What I would love to do now is move this on a bit. To meet with a group of people, watch a film and then have a chat afterwards along the lines of what can we hear about God/society/etc in this film. I fear such an idea in Gillingham just would not take off. Maybe that’s just an excuse for my laziness!

My final meet of the day was with Mark Thirkell, the local Salem minister. I am in great need of an accountability person/mentor/spiritual director. We are meeting to see if this works. Mark knows me, but is far enough removed as to speak what he says. He is also one of the few people that I will take a telling off from if I need one. I hope this works and I hope Mark’s eye will pull me up short where I need to be pulled up.

A great day in all – but now I need to finish my talk for Sunday night … ‘When God’s not there’ – why do I get all the difficult titles?

He Believes in ME!!!

It full team meeting for YFC today. This means all national staff gather to pray, worship, share what is happening, be involved in training etc etc. It’s nearly the summer so this one ended with a BBQ at Roy Crowne’s house where we said goodbye to a few people.

I was struck and challenged in our worship time today as we looked at what a disciple was. I won’t go into massive detail but just give you an idea.

I learned that Rabbi’s only chose the best of the best to be their disciples. Disciples are more than followers, they are imitators. They do not want to just follow their rabbi, they actually want to be like him.

When a rabbi was selecting his disciples, he would have one consideration: ‘Has this kid got what it takes to do what I do?’ If so, he would ask him to ‘Come and follow me’
The rabbi was saying, I think you have what it takes to be like me, to continue what I do. In other words … I believe in you.

Jesus chose his disciples because he thought they could do what he did. His simple ‘Come follow me’ to them was saying ‘I believe in you’.

His simple ‘come follow me’ to me says

‘I believe in you’.

Today I have been massively challenged and humbled.

Thanks for a little

Bush has agreed to more aid after chats with Tony Blair. Apparently they are good friends and Bush thinks the world of Tony. Surely, many are saying, he owes a favour to Tony after all his unflinching support over Iraq which has resulted in great MP’s like Stephen Twigg and many councillor losing their jobs.

Obviously Bush does not value Tony’s ideas as much as he, or the rest of us, would have liked. This offer from Bush is better than nothing, but surely that is all it is.

This great new deal amounts to £5 per head in a couple of countries and it still means the greatolel US of A gives less than 0.2% of its GNP as AID. The average American spends over $20 per year inMcDonald’ss – this literally makes me feel sick.

The richest country in the world, or rather the leader of the richest country in the world says they cannot afford more. How lamely ridiculous is that!!!

This site draws interesting thoughts from the US public:

Public perceptions reflect support for higher levels of aid. When asked what percentage of the federal budget they think goes to foreign aid, Americans’ median estimate is 25% of the budget, more than 25 times the actual level. Only 2% of Americans give a correct estimate of 1%off the budget or less. When asked how much of the budget should go to foreign aid, the median response is 10%. Only 13% of Americans believe that the percentage should be 1% or less. Over 60% of Americans believe that contributing 0.7% of national income to meet the Millennium Development Goals is the right thing to do.

Maybe Bush should listen to his people! But then he does not need to be re-eleceted anymore!

Blah London 13 July

Jonny tells us about the next Blah. Looks good and will have to decide whether I can manage to get there and leave early the next morning for a YFC retreat.