Don’t forget Burma

Burma is now well and truly out of the news, but nothing in the country has changed. The brutal military regime is still in place, Aung San Suu Kyi is still under house arrest, monks are still imprisoned and being mistreated, and the general population suffers under a harsh regime which thrives on keeping them in poverty and fear.

Don’t forget Burma is a website set up with a self explanatory name. It’s a creative site asking you to post a photo with the words ‘Don’t forget Burma’. The reason for this website is to show that we have not forgotten.

As my friends know I am half Burmese, my dad being Burmese, and so it is true that I have a particular passion and interest to see justice in this country. But you do not need to have a connection with Burma to realise that the brutally of what is happening here is wrong and needs to be changed.

Please keep campaigning, Post a picture, join the facebook group but more importantly keep writing to your MP and, if you can, visit a surgery – words were spoken by politicians when the protests and violent clampdowns were on our TV screens, now that the images have vanished we need to encourage our government to act on those words.

Bringing and receiving hope

Today I led the prayer meeting for the Waltham Forest YFC team. I always enjoy meeting up with this team and it is a privilege to join them each term to pray. Over the last year I have been conscious how the team has changed and been under pressure as well as experiencing the agony of seeing young people involved in gun and knife crime. It’s been a tough year, but in places like Waltham, every year is a tough year.

I felt strongly that I wanted to encourage this team and remind them of the hope that they have in God, and the hope that we can breathe into the lives of those that we work with ‘who do not know where to go and are like sheep without a shepherd’ (Matthew 9: 35-38).

I used an idea from Ben Edson at the OPM day recently who told the story of Pandora’s Box. After opening and shutting the box (which let out all the evils into the world) the only thing left in the box was hope. In the box that hope was symbolised by bread and wine which I brought out for us to share. We also joined in this liturgy which I wrote for the occasion:

In their reality of broken and hurting families
Lord; help us bring your hope.

In their fear of being an individual
Lord; help us bring your hope.

In their experience of violence and gang culture
Lord; help us bring your hope.

In their feelings of hopelessness
Lord; help us bring your hope.

In our conflicting pressures at home and work
Lord; give us your hope.

In our frustrations of being misunderstood
Lord; give us your hope.

In our tears over lack of care and resources
Lord; give us your hope.

In our fear of stepping out and being rejected
Lord; give us your hope.

This week
May we be agents of hope
Breathing in your hope for our lives
And breathing out your hope for the lives of others

Amen.

Remembrance

Today was Remembrance Sunday and it was amazing to see the church packed out with people standing at the sides and back of church.

Remembrance is always a Sunday that I feel challenged by. It’s a time to remember what sacrifice has been made by others but also a time to remember how horrible war always is – even though I believe it is sometimes necessary as a ‘lesser evil’ to help justice and bring relief to the oppressed.

I was asked to produce a video along the themes of remembering the Falklands Conflict in particular for todays service. I have uploaded it here for others to use if it’s useful – and I understand that using anything as far as copyright is concerned in a worship event where no admission charge is made is ok.

The Ice Pack Cometh

I have been back to the oesteopath today and am hoping that things have now been clicked and manipulated enough to allow muscles and things to work properly.

After all the manipulation the oesteopath advised going straight home and putting an ice pack on the area that she had been working on to calm it down. I’m sitting here with an ice pack now, but the concept does seem strange. She spent 30 mins moving everything around and the my response to allow the manipulations to work properly is to soon afterwards cool things down to releive the pain.

I wonder if there is a metaphor here for change within the church. If it’s not working (and we know that in some areas it it not) we are good at trying to stoke things up a bit with some manipulation here, a little massage there, cracking here and rotating there. This process understandbly generates a lot of heat and pain and I wonder whether allowing the heat to continue with the aim ‘to get through it’ is the correct response or whether we should think about applying an ice pack for a while to allow the true effects of the massage and manipulation to shw themselves.

Maybe the process, idea, I am looking for is to wake things up, apply an ice pack and then quietly observe what true change occurs?

Norwich


I paid my first visit to Norwich YFC today to meet up with Mark Tuma, the director.

It was a great journey and it was a privilege to sit in the centre of Norwich and listen to Mark as he shared his vision fir the centre. It was just great to sit and experience some of the excitement he feels for the place in which God has called him. There was passion, desire and a strong commitment to take the centre where God is leading.

Another great example of YFC supporting a young person with a dream and seeing it become an exciting reality.

Faith and Identity

Yesterday I was at the NCVYS annual conference and AGM to launch Factor in Faith.
Factor in Faith is a document that aims to assist organisations in responding to the needs of young people of all faiths and culture, and also those of no faith. Factor in faith provides principles and recommendations to help make organisations that work with young people more faith and culturally sensitive.

It’s also about getting organisations to agree to support the following principles:
• build bridges between young people who have different faiths and cultures, including those who have no religious faith.
• make links with other organisations which are based on different faiths or cultures.
• create spaces where young people can talk freely about their faith, culture and beliefs.
• help young people to oppose prejudice and oppression based on a person’s faith or culture.
• do all it can to be sensitive to young people’s faiths and cultures.

I think these are great principles which should undergird all youth work and hope that organisations will support this.

During the day I had 2 opposing experiences that both excited and frustrated me. In the morning two people on the panel challeneged me positively ‘n my thinking. Aviva Dautch, of the Board of Deputies of Britsh Jews (amongst many other things) challenged whether we are a tolerant or a pluralistic society as, she felt, we interchange the terms in society.

Aviva suggested that a tolerant society is one that ‘tolerates’ faith differences withb the expectation that these faith differences will be restrained and be kept to a minimum. A pluralistic society on the other hand acknowledges that who you are makes a difference to society as your faith affects your identity and so cannot really be kept to a minimum, but rather needs to be embraced.

I sat and wondered what would Jesus wish to encourage. Of course, it is an impossible question to answer, but ‘to tolerate’ or ‘to embrace’ that is the question. Ethically, and on reading of scripture, tolerate is not a word that seems to fit.

Joy Madeiros of Oasis and Faithworks suggested that although society gets ‘religion’ it does not get ‘faith’. Madeiros stated that our identity influences inclusion; if we do not know what makes us distinctive and accept that how are we able to accept others? ‘Knowing our own identity is the root of inclusion’

Again, it was great to hear this because it means we should not dumb down who we are, but be distinctive in a loving and respectful way. Being who you are with integrity is the only way to achieve community of mutual love and respect.

During the afternoon I was in a group with a youth worker with a different way of working. That is great and fine and adds to diversity but I struggled with this, tradtional ‘professional’ view of youth work which was saying that we should not share anything of ourselves with young people so that we did not place any value, and so pressurem on a particular behaviour. I find this view simply ridiculous.

I am so tired of the view that we can influence young people to copy us. The belief that because I have a certain faith or belong to a certain political party will cause a young personto adopt that for themselves is just not real. This value-less style of youth work is all take from the youth worker with the young person expected to offer information but receive nothing in return. That is not building relationship or earning trust, that is clinical, cold information gathering and moving on.

If we believe we need to develop relationship and trust, that means we need to invest more than a program done to our young people; we need to invest our lives, not in an abuisve way that says ‘I am right and you should do the same’ but in a way that shows we do not live in a vlaue-less vacuum but that things do matter. Surely our role is to develop young people, which means we are to discuss, to encourage and YES to challenge!

I’m on a rant … I’ll stop and listen for any comments!

Create space

Today I have been able to catch up with Hugh and Lyndsay, the directors of Greenwich YFC and Chislehurst YFC. Amazing to think they are only a few miles apart and yet their respective areas, the the young people they work with, are vastly different in so many ways. This is reflected in the differences in their respective ministries which are unique to them and has come from reflection with God.

The many places I go and speak with church and youth leaders always seems to lead to the same question which is shrouded in many different ways but is the same nonetheless – ‘what is the secret?’ or ‘what one thing do I need to do?’

I have long thought there no such thing as youth culture. Over 3 years ago we used to have this discussion as a Gillingham YFC team. Rather than one ‘youth culture’ there are many sub-cultures within cultures. This gives us the challenge of not being able to use a tried and tested system that has worked elsewhere. This means there is no blueprint.

Not strictly true I guess – there is a blueprint of principles, such as respect, love, time … and it is from these that what we do needs to be developed.

The secret must have something to do with observing our young people and creating space to listen and reflect with God. As we watch, notice, reflect and listen maybe we can then we can start to think about how we may join with God in reaching his young people.

What do you think?

generosity

I have experienced a weekend of friendship of generosity.

On Saturday day time I met with people at the Blah day who were generous in their time and giving of not only themselves but their creativity.
Saturday night it was great to experience the generosity of good friends who invited us to a firework party.
In church yesterday I experienced the generosity again of more friends who gave me a hefty cheque which will help me masses in my quest for an applemac.

Experiencing generosity is wonderful and humbling all at the same time.

Through my experiences this weekend I have been challenged as to my personal generosity but I have seen and experienced the blessing of God. I have seen God move and work in the lives of others. I saw God at our lunch table in the eyes of our children as we shared what had happened over the weekend.

The generosity of God and his followers can sometimes be overwhelming.

Excellent day

The Blah day on fresh expressions within the catholic and contemplative traditions was an excellent day.

It was great to hear peoples stories and experience something of the diversity of this part of Fresh Expressions.

Some great little gems that I picked up throughout the day:

Simon Rundell:
‘our primary encounter with God is emotional and not intellectual – God needs to be experienced not proved for people to start the journey’
‘music, liturgy and ritual are like the trinity of worship and should be seamless’

Michael Volland:
‘we need to create space where God can do what he wants to do’
‘we search fir authentic community where people are honest with each other’

Ian Mobsby:
‘a rhythm of life was developed so that we can be both fluid and have depth; it helps to answer the question ‘how do we live?”

Philip Roderick

‘when tradition becomes static it ceases to be tradition’
‘travelling light, dwelling deep’

The day was superb and has given me a lot to mull over and think on. I did some of this on the train but need more time to reflect further – these are just little gems that I made not of and don’t wish to lose. These gems now need to be observed, turned around over and over again in the light so that I may grasp more of their beauty’

more later …

Blah Learning day

Looking forward to going to the Blah Learning Day on Emerging & Fresh Expressions of the Catholic and Contemplative traditions. Should be a good and thought provoking day.