I’ve just completed another SEITE weekend and the end of the course is now scarily in sight.
This weekend we were looking at issues with Canon Law and although that sounds bring it was actually a very interesting weekend and I learnt quite a lot of good practical stuff. I’ve arrived home pretty tired now though!
It was also an excellent weekend for catching up with friends – and for grabbing a great curry on Saturday afternoon.
Category Archives: seite
Friends and 50!
It’s been another SEITE weekend looking at how to manage situations, people and such like.
AS is always the case the highlights are always the chats and late night conversations over a few bottles of wine, or in my case some special malts. The conversations this weekend were special, which is probably something to do with the fact that we realise the end of the course is in sight and soon we will all be going our separate ways.
The major highlight of the weekend was surprising Jeremy with a celebration of his 50th birthday at breakfast this morning. We secretly had all planned to bring a couple of silly presents, with the idea to shower Jezza with 50 little gifts. The moment was special and it was fun to see the look of shock on his face and watch him sped the next hour unwrapping presents!
A reflection from my silence
Empty room.
Silence.
Just a solitary gentle thump
of a heart realising
that it is beating
into the presence of its creator.
The Creator.
The heartbeat of me
daring to dance with
the heartbeat of God.
Too often an impersonal pogo
but now an intimate waltz
in the space we have created.
Two becoming one
realising as they beat
they are made to dance together.
Shhhhhhhhhh
It’s another SEITE weekend, which comes a little close to the week away with YFC, and so the children are rightly complaining.
I’m off to the Emmaus Centre at West Wickham and we will be in silence for most of the time.
I like, enjoy and ‘do’ silence, but at the moment I am not really in a silent mood, so I need to focus and so will be using the 50 minute drive to attempt to focus.
It will be good to see every one else. Be quite nice to talk to them too!
Hope you have a good weekend!
Harvest
Today I caught up with Kerry Thorpe from Harvest in Margate.
Next term I am going to be on placement with Harvest rather than attend lectures. The Harvest story, which can be seen on their website, is quite an interesting and exciting story. I’m looking forward to the new experiences that being part of Harvest for a short while is going to give me. I’m particularly looking forward to meeting new people, listening to their stories and trying to understand how they think about things.
Soooo much better than attending lectures!!!
what is ‘text’
Word of Warning – this is one of those posts where I am thinking aloud for an assingment so this may not make sense to you, but if you would like to comment which could well help me in my essay writing,please do!
This morning I have been catching up on some reading for an assignment entitled:
‘How far does a liberationist reading of the biblical text clarify or confuse the meaning of that text? How far is such an academic tool useful in the mission and ministry of the church? Discuss with reference to the gospel of Mark’.
confuse or clarify … mmm that’s an interesting ask?! Essay titles are becoming ore ‘interesting’ is this final year!
My reading this morning has challenged me to re-think how I have been reading the gospels but Mark’s gospel in particular. In our western society, it would seem, we have imposed our ideals on interpretation of this text i.e. we have assumed that people could read, that books were plentiful, and so read the text as if it were written as a book.
Now we all know, when we sit down and think, that most ancient societies were pretty illiterate and some studies put the literacy level of 1st century Palestine at around 3%. We also know that most stuff was passed down orally until it was written. What I had not really focussed on was that even after being written down, the majority of people would still have passed on the ‘text’ orally. Mark is an oral derived text and so our relationship with the text, how we read it, says Horsley needs to seriously alter.
There is also a lot of evidence to suggest that Mark was not just read out in synagogues and meeting places, but that it was actually performed. In this case the text may have been written as an ‘aide memoir’ to those performing who had already memorised their interpretation. If we want to hear what the audience would have herd we need somehow to get into considering their context which was living under the oppression of the mighty, and cruel, Roman army.
Some gems I am mulling over at the moment cause me to think that this is more than just a religious text – take the scene from Mark 5 with the possessed man whom Jesus heals, with he spirits going into the pigs and them all running into the sea and drowning. If we consider the context of being oppressed by Romans and hear of an evil spirit called Legion (clear Roman military link) entering pigs (mmm) and running into the Mediterranean Sea (which is how the Romans arrived) what would those people have actually heard? I believe we can make a good guess that their minds were taken to their state of oppression and that sometime they would be forced to leave by the way they came.
The people listening would have been hearing more than Jesus stories, they were hearing a reminder to their covenantal promise of liberation. I think its important that we bear this in mind when we look to understand what is happening in this text. If this was performed to a crowd then we need to get our minds into thinking that way otherwise trying to interpret it as a mere book, even scripture, means we will lose most of the beauty and depth that is there: a bit like reading something of Mozarts without ever listening.
Good today to meet up with some friends and colleagues in London. It was my first visit to the William Booth College at Denmark Hill to catch up with Gordon. Gordon and I have been chatting for a couple of years through blogging and the odd meet up and meeting new friends like Gordon is one of the great things about blogging. It was great to share stories of transformation and consider where we are seeing God work in our worlds.
After meetings I caught up with a couple of hours reading in the members room at the Tate Modern before meeting another good friend, Nichola, for a coffee and then wandering to SEITE lectures, via the Mudlark of course!.
A conversation on the train on the way home from London Bridge and again I feel that a great, if somewhat long, day has been had.
Labyrinth
At the SEITE weekend we were able to use the labyrinth kindly loaned by CMS / Jonny. People’s feedback was that it was a great experience and a powerful way to connect with God.
For me, it was exciting to see so many people from different backgrounds walking the labyrinth and finding it to be a deep, and sometimes, profound experience and to experience the atmosphere of prayer in the room while others were walking; I find it difficult to express the experience in words.
You can ‘walk’ the same labyrinth online here.
The photos can be seen here.
work and rest weekend!
Another SEITE training weekend looms. The subject is ‘work and rest’. I’ve been away most of this week (as I am most weeks in fairness) so the best way for me to rest would be to stay home!
I really love the people I am going away with. We are coming to the end of our training. We are being told where we are going to be deployed to as curates or whatever and it is an exciting time – but (and that is a big but) I am tired of having to be away at weekend, sharing rooms, attending compulsory sessions, being given more work and then having to return to another full week of my real job. I know when I am there that I will enjoy the company of my friends – but as I write I could really do without this weekend and just stay home. This weekend we are at Herne Bay Court, and will be one of the last groups before it closes.
A plus of the weekend is that I get to work with a group of friends as we set up The Labyrinth as a worship experience for all these trainee priests to walk through. I personally love the concept of labyrinths and am looking forward to seeing how others respond to a different experience where others have skillfully taken an ancient concept and reformed it in a post modern setting. You can get a feel for this at the online labyrinth which is a great use of an hour or so if you are looking for some space to reflect in the presence of God.
Transsexualism
Tonight was the hardest task so far for SEITE training. The first assignment for this module asked for a presentation of an argument for how eschatology or pneumatology contribte significantly toforming Christian understanding on an issue of sexual ethics. For a number of reasons I chose transsexualism and eschatology.
I say this was the hardest as this was quite challenging. The traditional Christian view, supported by O’Donovan seems to be that this is wrong based on physical characteristics, and in this case sexual organs, being God given. The majority argue against acceptance of a transsexual lifestyle as it seperates physical and mental identity in a kind of gnostic way, arguing the God-givenness of sexuality should not be tampered with. The difficulty I have found with this is the question of what is God given, and I have come to the conclusion, at this point in time, that to deny the orientation of the brain as also God given seems to cut off the mind in some way that it is also created by God. In light of this I am led to the conclusion that to accept and allow sexual realignment surgery (SRS), as a means to remove suffering as we look to the coming Kingdom of God, is the ‘Christian’ thing to do.
I ended my presntation with a quote from a Claire Weiner article:’Maybe not God given by birth, but God given by the ability of medical science developed through the God given talents of compassionate human beings’.
I’d appreciate your comments, and if you’d like to read and critique the 1500 word presentation that would be welcome to.
