Travels

I will be away for a few days.
I leave in the morning at around 5.20am to get to YFC head office for some meetings. I hope to beat the traffic and find somewhere for breakfast!
Tomorrow night I am going to shoot across to Nottingham and stay with good friend Chris and catch up there.
On Wednesday I am back at Head Office to plan some mission stuff before heading back home sometime Wednesday afternoon I hope.

I think I’ve done too much driving of late and I’m looking forward to a Christmas break!

Meetings

I met up with Brian today for lunch and it was great to just generally catch up; we had no agenda and just talked and listened. It was a great time and I think we should meet with no agenda, and just because we are friends, far more often than we do. Too much of life is taken up with agendas and meetings – no wonder nothing gets done!

curry, sports and moot!

An incredibly exciting and busy weekend.

Friday night was a great night out with some friends to the ocal curry house. We must repeat that again sometime!

Saturday St Mark’s again hired out the sports centre for the community. Around 250 people came and had fun. I love these nights as I think we are being church by serving and blessing the community.

Sunday I spent the day at St Matthews Westminster and Moot. As part of my training I will be on placement with Moot for 30 – 40 hours. This was a great day chatting to people involved in Moot and seeing how some things happen. Being involved in Godly play, which the Moot community run every month, was a great experience. One wonderful thing that struck me was the inclusivity of Moot. People spoke of a true belonging beofre believing. Bythis,I mean people do not have to all subscribe to a statement before they belong – they belong because they chose to be on the journey. I find that quite exciting.

Throughout my placement I will write a bit more about my experiences.I couldn’t chat with Ian as he has broken hs arm and is in hospital awaiting an operation tomorrow – please remember him in your prayers.

Casino Royale

Watched the film of the moment with Sheena last night at the new Odeon Cinema in Chatham. The place itself is cleaner but not sure it is worth the extra expense of the 2 other multi-screens near-by but hey…

Casino Royale is a good movie. The film has made a brave attempt – and I’m not going to give any of the plot away – to give definition to the character of Bond. Bond is given his ’00’ status at the start of this film which then goes on to give background to the future life and practice of Bond. It’s using that theory (correct in my view) that our behaviour is determined by our experiences, actions and corresponding consequences of our past. Debbie spoke about this in the cross cultural training at CMS and used this PS2 advert as an illustration.

The film is strangely minimilist in approach – no continual background music that we have become used too in Bond movies, no mass of gadgets although this is contrasted by the use of 2 Aston Martins – I wonder if this is a sub-conscious attempt by the producers to apologise for using the BMW in previous films when we all know only the Aston Martin will do! The ad says: ‘An Aston Martin combines three important elements: power, beauty and soul. Aston Martins are truly special – they always have been and always will be’. 007 just has the power and beauty.

Great film – go watch!

more in vino veritas down the bar


I have been having a little think recently about friendships and the result, or effects, of friendships on disagreements, different ways of doing things and so on.

This conversation started last week on the SEITE weekend when we were acknowledging that it’s both good and interesting to see that we all get on so well as a year group despite our very different church backgrounds. It seems that we have developed friendships with each other as people, and our church-personship has been very secondary in this process.

Along the way we have had great and sometimes heated discussions. I remember a time at last years Easter school in the pub after a veneration of the cross service. The discussion got heated, but not once did we lose the respect of each other. More importantly, we did not lose the friendship of each other. I think the fact we were already developing strong friendships enabled open discussions to occur without offence being the result.

I have just got around to reading last weeks Church Times, and there Giles Fraser (the first article I normally go to) writes on the same subject:

If Christians, and specifically Anglicans, spent more time developing friendships with each other, we would be so much less willing to press the self destruct button at the first sign of disagreement. A bit more in vino veritas down the bar a bit less manipulation through mini sermons masquerading as intercessions.

Giles Fraser goes on to say that one of the crises of the church is that clergy have not spent time investing in friendships with each other. I think he is right. I don’t agree with all my SEITE colleagues in how they do things and in particular views, but I do value their friendship. As individuals they are important to me. If we value friends it is harder to say ‘if you don’t like the church leave it’ and gives the energy and inspiration for the drive needed to ensure that we can continue to work together in the wider church.

SEITE enables this to happen more than maybe other, more narrow church based colleges, might be able to do. At SEITE we are good, no exceptionally good, at ‘vino veritas down the bar’ – now we can continue in that custom knowing that we are protecting and promoting the long term health of the Church of England!