Ordinary sacredness


I know this has been a bit of a theme for me over the last year or so. I love this written by Cheryl (who I first found via Jonny’s blog) who writes a lot of rich and beautiful words. This made me stall and wonder this morning.

It takes little faith to see the sacred in the extraordinary.

to have faith the sacred is in the ordinary, though,
takes courage to believe the mundane can be enough;
that grace can emerge
even through the dull,
the slightly disappointing,
the not quite right,
not quite as we intended,
not really what we hoped…
the clumsy,
the awkward,
and the imperfect.

let your act of faith be to let what you do be enough.

let what you do be enough…

right wing


Jon over at ASBOJesus seems to capture the mood well yet again.

Just another day ….

So today is Friday 13th – lot of things will happen today that people will put down to superstition and yet if they happened yesterday or tomorrow people would not even bat an eyelid.

What amazes me, actually, is the number of Christian that subscribe to this stuff.

It’s just another day people – it’s the weekend nearly … have fun and enjoy!

Did you know the fear of Friday 13th is called paraskavedekatriaphobia – I can tell you are impressed!

Shades of God

I visited Wycombe YFC today, had a great chat with Erica and a good coffee before making some phonecalls and retuning home.

I don ‘t know if you have noticed the trees around you recently, but today as I drove along the M40 and the M25 the trees seemed to jump out and grab me. Let me explain … they are so green! Maybe it has something to do with the amount of rain we have had around the country which has caused me to notice this more than normal. I did not just particularly notice how green the trees look, I was also amazingly struck by the variety of green.

The picture does little justice to the reality, but if you are near a lot of trees, trust me – go and have a look. The variety of green is quite staggering. When I stopped in an M25 queue I lost count of the different shaded of green that I could see from my car.

So many shades of green and yet we have one word … ‘green’. If we don’t have the language to describe one colour, how can we ever hope to describe and understand God!?

The Last Piece!

Today I feel quite elated … the final essay has been written, 5 days ahead of the deadline, and now I am rediscovering what life is like again without some assignment deadline hanging over me. It’s like the last piece of a challenging puzzle finally dropping into place! I look back and wonder how it has all been fitted in, as well as where the last 3 yers have gone as they seem to have flown by.

A particular thing I am looking forward to now (apart from ordination of course) is being able to tread books that I want to read again, and books that are not on a SEITE reading list.

I’m going to start with Ian’s ‘The Becoming of G-d’ which has been sitting on my desk attempting to allire me away from essay writing. Next on the list is NT Wright’s ‘Surprised by Hope‘ before I tackle some of Richard Hookers stuff on ‘Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity

shock and disgust

I’m not sure if I feel more shocked or disgusted over the commons vote this evening.

For those of you not in the UK, our government this evening voted in favour of extending the time a suspect can be held in detention without being charged from 28 to 42 days. 42 days loss of freedom before any charges have to be brought is a gross abuse of human rights. Yes, I know terrorism is a serious threat, and yes I know we have to use new techniques to limit it. My concern is that we are against terrorism due to its abuse to humanity – my country decided tonight to vote to abuse human rights to combat terrorism.

I am not sure whether my disgust is more towards the MP’s or to church and Christian agencies that have kept largely very quiet on this. Recently we have seen campaigns outside Westminster from Christians protesting against abortion, saviour siblings, homosexual parent adoptions, the removal of a requirement for a father in IVF treatment, experiments on embryos and the need to show equal rights regardless of sexuality. People campaigned against these from a point of respect of life or a protection of belief.

Where were the campaigners for this abuse? Why weren’t the large evangelical organisations calling people out to campaign for this?

It worries me that the church has remained largely silent on this clearcut abuse of humanity.

42 days


On Wednesday (tomorrow!) MPs will make a crucial decision that could undermine the basic human rights of everyone in the UK. I believe Christians should speak out against this.

I cannot believe that our country is even contemplating such a law.

“42 Days“ who likes it and who doesn’t is the talk of the media right now. They’re referring, of course, to the government’s plans to give police the power to lock people up for 42 days, six weeks, without even charging them with anything. Last week John Major waded in; then the Guardian has found that senior police figures have reservations; the Times says the public like it but that Brown’s going to lose Wednesday’s Commons vote (on the Counter-Terrorism Bill, which contains the 42-day proposal); while the Mirror (and a reluctant Home Secretary) notes that even the UK’s intelligence community isn’t calling for it.

Time for Amnesty to pitch in then and we really don’t like it.

Amnesty’s UK Director Kate Allen has written to every potential rebel backbench MP, urging them to oppose any extension to pre-charge detention. Human rights in the UK are under serious threat and it’s time for MPs to defend them. Here’s what she had to say:

This week, you will have a chance to debate and vote on the Counter Terrorism Bill. The vote will be a watershed moment for human rights in the UK.

The Bill would increase pre-charge detention for terrorism suspects to 42 days. If this proposal goes ahead, people could be held for six weeks without knowing anything about the reason for their detention. This flies in the face of justice.

Prolonged detention without charge or trial undermines fair trial rights protected by international human rights law. Everybody who is arrested is entitled to be charged promptly and tried within a reasonable time, or to be released.

I am not reassured by the Government’s recent ˜concessions”.

– The Home Secretary will now have to be satisfied that there is a ‘grave and exceptional terrorist threat’ before authorising an extension. This definition is sweepingly broad.
– Parliament will debate and vote on the extension earlier than previously. However, this debate would be meaningless because of the risk of prejudicing future trials.
– Finally, the Bill makes no provision for proper judicial safeguards.

I understand the complexity of counter-terrorism operations and the threat that we face from international terrorism. The horrific terrorist attacks of recent years, including in our own capital, were barbaric acts and gross human rights violations. All states have an obligation to act to protect people from terrorism. The perpetrators of terrorist attacks must be brought to justice.

However, unless governments respond to the threat of international terrorism with measures that are fully grounded in respect for human rights, they risk undermining the values they seek to protect and defend.

You have an opportunity this week to defend the values that underpin civil liberties in this country. I urge you to stand in support of principles that lie at the heart of our society, principles such as justice and liberty. The alternative is to succumb to the climate of fear that terrorists seek to breed among us.

I urge you to oppose any further extension of pre-charge detention.
[ends]

Amnesty International members have been campaigning against extending pre-charge detention limits since the idea was first proposed. Over 7,000 people have signed our ˜Not a Day Longer” petition at the Number Ten website

It’s crunch time right now. Please spread the word on your blogs and sites or, even better, contact your MP and ask them to stand up for our civil liberties by opposing 42 days. You can find our press release here and a handy list of ˜ten good reasons why extending pre-charge detention is a bad” here .

Until next time,
Steve
From Amnesty’s Project Blog Team

The tension of the ordinary


I while ago I was able to visit the Peter Doig exhibition and have been meaning to blog about it for ages.

I love Doig’s work for a number of reasons. The sheer size of most of what he produces is stunning and iot can be quite easy to become immersed into the art work. While looking at Jetty, for example, it was easy to feel drawn, almost sucked, into the piece and having a conversation with the lonely figure.

I found this exhibition amazingly spiritual. I found myself asking who the solitary figure was. I wondered why I was interested. I was intrigued that I found the figure inviting, as if he was waiting for me to join him. The atmosphere generated by the painting is hard to describe, but the air seemed charged with expectation and tension as I quietly watched.

The subject of the lone figure appears a lot in Doig’s work – as does the image of of a person alone in a canoe which was inspired by watching Friday 13th.

It’s interesting to see how profound the simple everyday experiences can be as this experience alone influenced Doig for over a decade.

I love it when people like Doig drag me back to reality. Not the normal reality of my everyday – but the reality that tells me that life all around us is charged with energy, with tension with expectation.

If we believe that God sits within creation then what can that mean. How can it be that we can wander around seemingly blind to the over-presence, or hyper-presence, of Creator God in our midst? Is humanity really that blind?

I don’t think humanity is. Instead, I wonder whether experiences like my Doig experience in the Tate Britain a few weeks ago are quiet, but special and profound, encounters with Creator God hides and passively hopes; but a God that speaks through experiences by saying ‘you feel something special; a fundamental, unique but familiar tension here … wake up … that tension which you can feel and experience is flowing from the one who created you.’

As I walk with God today I am going to be reminding myself to look for God in the tension of the ordinary.

variety

My YFC role has a mass of variety which I love. I think it suits the mild ADHD symptoms that I have.

In my capacity as chair of governors of a school today I was involved in the interviewing for a chaplain. The day has been exciting and a pleasure to be part of.

I hope the church will be able to announce some news really soon.

Apostolic JD

Hirsch blogs here under the title Apostolic Job Description.

I like Hirsch and the Shaping of things to come co-written with Frost was one of the books at the time that got me and a number of other people asking key questions around mission and ecclesiology.

Hirsch suggests in this post that there are 3 primary functions of apostolic ministry:

1. To embed mDNA through pioneering new ground for the gospel and church
2. To guard mDNA through the application and integration of apostolic theology
3. To create the environment in which the other ministries emerge

This implies that other ministries emerge from the apostolic, that it initiates other ministries. Without the release and encouragement of this, other parts of the body will suffer.

I had not really thought of this but as I think it seems to make a lot of sense, not in a hierarchal ‘this ministry is better than yours’ sense but in a practical sense that all ministries are equal with and appointed by God … but simply that somehow something has to happen first.

It’s grabbed my attention … any comments out there?