Boycott Bali for Schapelle?

Its been an interesting day on in the streets of Brighton.

This morning some stickers appeared in the local cafe saying ‘Boycott Indonesia Support Schapelle‘. The conversations in our street have been interesting this afternoon as people have marked their positions on this one and been very willing to engage in debate.

A sunny winter’s day has seen us hanging around, chatting, drinking and sharing our points of view. Its been engaging conversation and has been great for chewing thru some of our big questions.

Falling Apart

Over the last few years its been a bugger to try and stay in some kind of decent physical shape.

As an ex Phys Ed teacher and sports junkie I have always placed a high emphasis on staying fit. (I’d like to say on ‘being healthy’ but my diet would betray me on that one!) However over the last few years I have struggled with back injuries, knee injuries, and other assorted ailments that have made a regular exercise schedule next to impossible.

Recently we got a treadmill so that we could do stuff at home. I used it for 3 weeks began to attain some level of fitness and then my tendonitis in the ilio-tibial tract which I developed at 21 began to flare up again. This has been the pattern for years now. Start out, develop fitness, get injured.

Now all I’m good for is walking – and even then it hurts.

What to do?…

Swimming is one option, but its so expensive and time consuming… I want a way of being able to exercise either at home or as I walk out my front door. Non weight bearing is probably the way to go at the moment until next week when I get this knee looked at.

I am hoping the specialist will be able to give me some guidance on how to fix it so I can start running again. Right now the future looks bleak and I can feel my own lack of fitness.

Anyway, that’s just get me getting a gripe out. No need to comment 🙂

Just a mess… see if you can make sense of it…

Sometimes I let my mind wander onto questions of ‘what really constitutes a church, or maybe its just ‘church’ with no ‘a’?’

Is what we are doing in our churches, whatever flavour they take, part of God’s plan, or are these just our own ideas on organisation and practice that we are baptising?

Is ‘structuring’ a church our idea or God’s idea? Do we need to organise it at all?… Can we validly be the church (and be effective in our mission) with no formal structures, no regular gatherings and no designated leaders? I know churches in the NT had structures (elders, deacons etc) but was that because God intended it that way or because we wanted to organise them?

If the church is (in its most basic form) where 2 or 3 come together in Jesus name then do we have to develop a letterhead, logo and vision statement to actually make it ‘a church’? Is it enough to simply ‘be the church’ when we meet with another person or group?

Can two families simply be a church? Obviously the biblical and practical answer is ‘yes’. Can one family be a church? Danelle, Ellie, Sam and I?… Are we a church? Or are we ‘church’ (There are four of us!)

What was Jesus on about with building his ‘church’?

One of the great insights from Roland Allan’s ‘The Spontaneous Expansion of the Gospel and the Causes Which Hinder it’ was that our own need to control the process is often critical in inhibiting the spread of the gospel and the growth of the kingdom. Of course this isn’t new. When the Gentiles started getting in on it the Jersualem council made sure there were four rules for them to obey!

Was that God’s will, or just them making sure the Gentiles didn’t get carried away with this ‘freedom thing’?

I have been thinking about the ‘new age movement’ or whatever you prefer to call it and the way it has spread so rapidly and pervasively across the globe with no central leader, no regular organised meetings and no formal structure. It just went ‘kaboom’. Is that more like what God intends for the church?

While some would say the new agers have no common creed and no textbook there are some definite commonalities all round the place. They seem to have hung together in a network or loose alliance and have infected all of our society. The dominant way of thinking about spirituality in the west today is from an alt spirituality framework ie pick and mix, no absolutes, tolerance etc. (yes I am generalising)

But as I look at the new agers I wonder what we can learn from them. Yes they have festivals and some common practice meetings/events, but few (none that i am aware of) have the same degree of structure / formality as most of our Christian churches. And yet their ideas and ethos has permeated all of our culture.

I’m sure Phil or Matt will fill in where I am ignorant here.

I am feeling toey about some things at the moment and trying to articulate them here for discussion.

I am concerned about creating a structure that we then need to serve and maintain. I wonder if in our selfishness we would be able to be church and do ‘church stuff’ without some level of committment to one another. Could we stay focused on growing as disciples and leading others to Christ without a bigger community of people to meet with regularly?

behind locked doors dvd download If I understand alt spiritualities right there seems to be more of a ‘personal benefit’ that comes from whatever spirituality the person taps into, hence it can appeal to our selfishness. Whereas when the call we make is ‘deny yourself, take up your cross and follow Jesus’ . I’m guessing that ideology has less appeal for today’s religious consumer!

Am I making any sense here?

Anyway… All I am doing here is tumbling out some random thoughts that have been percolating over the last few weeks as I have considered how far we need to go with structure and how far we can push the boundaries of ‘unstructuredness’ and still do what we are called to do and grow into who we are called to be.

Any thoughts out of that mess?

Too messy to touch?

Good or Evil? Lawful or Neutral?

Yesterday I took a class at Harvest West Bible College, our local pentecostal college. The guy who takes the class – Mike Bullard – wrote this piece on the whole emerging/trad issue.

Have a read.

Some very good thoughts…

Hi, my name’s Mike and I played fantasy role playing games a few years ago.

Now I’ve got that off my chest, I think there’s a very important insight that the church can pick up from fantasy role playing games.  Whenever we played the games, we constructed a fantasy character.  Depending on the game, the character could be a warrior, a magician, a dwarf, there were even clerics in most games.  The character would have various ratings for areas such as strength, intelligence, wisdom, endurance etc.  And the aim was to play out that character in the context of the game, win battles against enemies and pick up treasure etc.

Alongside these ratings was the concept of alignment.  Your alignment basically described your moral compass in life.  So a character could be good, neutral or evil.  But a character could also be lawful or chaotic, which describes the degree of randomness or spontaneity.  So, a character that was lawful good was one that had good positive moral values and did everything by the book – the upstanding citizen.  A character that was lawful evil was one that believed in law and order, but twisted that to dominate and enslave others – Hitler would come under this category.

A neutral character was one that sat in the middle, committed neither to law or chaos, good nor evil.

This concept gets interesting when we think about the chaotic alignment.  A chaotic good person would be one that is aligned towards good but would go about this in chaotic or random ways – Robin Hood is a classic example.  A chaotic evil person is one that is evil in intent but random in execution – a crime gang might be an example of this.

Where is this all leading?  Well, in discussions about the “emerging church” there has been a degree of polarisation between the “traditional” or “attractional” church and the “emerging” or “missional” church.  Can I suggest that the concept of alignment is helpful here.  I believe we are all aligned towards good – our moral compass is set on good, in fact it’s set on God, let’s go even further and say it’s set on Jesus Christ.  We have this in common. 

Where we differ is on the degree of law or chaos that we see is necessary to get the job done.  Those aligned with the more traditional end see process, order, authority and clear direction as more important.  They’re lawful good.  Those aligned with the more emergent end see flexibility, empowerment and open direction as more important.  They’re chaotic good.  And of course there are all sorts of positions in between.

My plea to all those involved in the discussions – Start from the fact that we’re all on the “good” side.  We’re all seeking Jesus.  There’s more that unites us than divides us.  Yeah, yeah, we’ve heard it before.  But, each generation is faced with crucial and emotional issues that threaten the unity of the church.  It happened over the charismatic issue, it happened over women in ministry.  It has the potential to happen over traditional / emerging church.  We look back at the division that happened over charismatic issues and women in ministry issues and many people say – “Whew, glad that’s over” (except of course if you’re now dealing with it).

Our commitment to unity is not challenged by the issues we’ve dealt with.  The heat has gone out of them for many.  Our commitment to unity is challenged by the issues we’re dealing with now.  When the heat’s on, what are we going to write about each other, say about each other, pray about each other.  That is the test of our character.  If we allow ourselves to be unrestrained in anger or bitterness towards one another we run the risk of changing alignment, not from chaotic to lawful or vice versa, but from good to something else.  And I don’t think any of us want to go there!

Now that’s how to start an essay!

Its not often you get an essay submitted that makes you want to read on after the first paragraph, but this one sure did! Penny, one of our .acom students from the first Forge intensive has given me her permission to post it on here.

If you are or have been a youth pastor then you will know this scene only too well…

“the last straw??

The guy with the smoke machine rang and he’s not coming anymore, it’s gonna be crap without it,” says the intern.  It’s 3 hours before a rag-tag bunch of youth arrive at our church. The boys will ogle at the underdressed ‘potentials’ from other churches as they squeal and cavort around. There will be a few blokes smoking pot ’round the back and girls crying in the dunnies.  The dodgy strains of an electric guitar will play too loudly over the sound system. Pizza will be thrown, dozens of sms’s sent…as the hormones rage on.  Close to the end of the night someone will get up and share the gospel.  Emotive music will play and kids will tick on bits of paper that they want to follow Jesus.  The leaders will get excited at the ‘great harvest’, but in two months from now, caught up in the whirlwind of organising the next big thing, we won’t even be able to remember the names of the kids- the kids who we prayed for and hugged as they cried their eyes out.

Lord, there must be a better way. Surely?

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Ouch… I’ve been there done that… Penny goes on to look at a better way to ‘do youth ministry’ and does a great job of it.