In the Name of Art…

It was great to catch up withLincoln Fenner for lunch recently, a local film maker and director of Creation Box Films.

While we actually caught up on .acom business it was interesting hearing some of his involvement in the film industry, albeit in his ‘spare’ time.

An interesting question we tossed around was what it means to be a Christian in the film making business. I guess the question was along the lines of ‘how does faith impact the way a person creates and directs a film, perhaps even writes a script?’

We discussed the of issues of nudity, sexuality, language and how it would feel to shoot a sex scene or a nudie scene, or to have strong language in a film. We didn’t discuss how it would feel to shoot a domestic abuse scene or a bank robbery, or a corporate swindle…

Its an interesting question for Christian artists. To what extent do we let our art reflect the world we live in and to what extent do we eliminate profanity, nudity, sexual activity etc. And why take these out, but not other illegal activity?

Is a film ‘true to life’ if there are none of the things we encounter in everyday life?

Of should we be trying to depict a different reality that is also possible?

I could imagine writing a novel with some of these elements present more easily than I could imagine directing a film. But is it really any different? What if the novel is successful and someone wants to make a movie out of it?…

What do you think?

Personally I would choose to err on the side of ‘keeping it real’, rather than on the side of eliminating the nasties.

Food & Friends Night

For the last two months Tuesday has been ‘food and friends’ night at our place.

It arose out of talking with Danelle and suggesting we catch up with some friends during the week for a meal, but she was feeling quite busy and the thought of cooking for a bunch of people left her tired. She has a busier life than I do in some ways, and is with people all day so she has been enjoying the evening space.

However we decided that Tuesday is now a day when she takes off and does her own thing and I look after Sam. In simply making that shift I realised my whole day had altered and I had a lot of available time. In fact there was plenty of time to make a decent meal and actually enjoy cooking – as opposed to getting home from work and rushing frantically.

And it has been great fun!

Over the last 8 weeks we have had 6 different families from our local community come and join us for dinner on Tuesdays. (I have been away on two Tuesdays) We let them know up front that they don’t need to feel like they have to stay all evening as most have kids who need to go to bed, otherwise I imagine they wouldn’t be so keen to head out. So usually they roll up at 5.30-6.00 and go home around 8.00-8.30, which means its not a late night for anyone, but it long enough to have some decent conversation and a good feed.

Last night we had the new POM (English) neighbours round for dinner and had a great time. The normal question of ‘what do you do for work?’ didn’t come up though and I was a little surprised. Around half way thru the night though Scott did ask ‘are you going to work tomorrow?’ I explained my 3 jobs and said I would be going to one of them. ‘Oh… I thought you were a baker!’ Because we distribute the left over bread on a Saturday night he had guessed I owned a bakery.

For those looking to connect with people in the local community it isn’t that hard if you really want to. Just invite people round, let them know they can go home if they need to and then enjoy a meal together. You’re going to eat anyway, so why not do it with others!

It does add a bit to the weekly food bill, but when it comes to developing community I reckon its been really valuable. It was in making the shift in how my day was configured that I was able to look at it thru a different lens and see a possibility that wasn’t there before.

Not rocket science.city by the sea download

You said WHAT?…

On Sunday we had a review of where we are at as Upstream Communities.

Kent did a great job of leading us thru a significant question of identity but in 3 hours we were only able to cover a certain amount of ground, so the conversation continued tonight.

What blew us all away was how we ‘heard’ so many different things yesterday.

“I thought we said ‘X’… ”

“No no!!… we actually said the opposite of ‘X’… ”

Hey?

How does this happen? How can a group of people sit in the same room and hear so many different messages?

It is a reminder of the complexity of communication sometimes. Just hearing stuff doesn’t mean we have understood it. Agreeing to an idea doesn’t mean we all see the idea in the same way.

We had some good fiesty conversation tonight as we thrashed some stuff around. We’re back at it again next week and I’m praying we get it sorted quickly. I am sure the enemy of action in so many churches is the people sitting on their butts debating terminology, and yet the problem of not having a shared understanding of what we are doing is that we operate on different frequencies.

I know the challenge is for us to make missional community as simple as we possibly can while retaining the rigour and integrity required to stay true to our calling.

Bedtime Ecclesiology

A very weary Ellie was lying in bed while I stroked her back and chatted with her.

“Tomorrow all the kids from church will be at our place honey.”

“Dad – we don’t go to a church where there is a man down the front who does a preach and all that.”

“No honey, we don’t. Would you like to? Would you rather go to church like that or be part of our church.”

“Well… you see its just that you don’t know if there’s going to be toys at the big church.”

“Yeah. But when you’re at a home there’s always toys hey?”

“Uh huh. I like that. But at the big church you get snacks and drinks.”

“Oh really? You mean after the service?”

“No. You know how they send round the little tray of drinks and the plate of bread?”

“Oh yeah…”

All very cute, but also a great time to chat with Ellie about what church is and again about the significance of communion.

Snacks, drinks and toys… a great little 21st C consumer Christian in the making!

alfie dvdrip

Losing the ability to bullshit

I think Jerry Maguire is still my all time favourite movie.

I realise its never destined to be a classic, and some of you will find me unbelievably shallow about now because of this choice! But I find myself identifying strongly with the character of Jerry, who comes to a point in life where he finds himself asking ‘Who had I become?… Just another shark in a suit?…’

This jaded but successful sports agent with more clients than he can manage, suddenly does a stocktake on the shape of his life and in a night of frightening revelation writes what he calls his ‘mission statement’, appropriately entitled ‘The things we think and do not say’.

Impulsively he races down to the local print shop in the early hours of the morning and has them run off enough copies for everyone in his office. As he places a copy of his dream in the mail-boxes of his co-workers hoping to share his vision with them he says ‘I didn’t care. I had lost the ability to bullshit. It was the me I had always wanted to be.’

His ‘mission statement’ becomes the catalyst and the vision for where his life heads from there on.

In his night of realisation he came face to face with the startling fact that he hated who he had become – that he had lost contact with his true identity.

‘With so many clients we had forgotten what was important.’

In his quest to acquire more clients and make more money he had moved away from the core ethic of his business – caring for the athletes. The words of his father and mentor Dicky Fox echoed in his ears ‘The key to this business is personal relationships,’ and somewhere along the line he had forgotten that.

The answer was going to be fewer clients, less

money and more personal attention.

It was a beautiful dream – a moment of calling back to what a sports agent really ought to be – one who looks after the best interests of the player, rather than a schmooozer who sees people as just another dollar sign destined for exploitation.

Do I need to point the parallels for those of us who have served in local church ministry?

And its especially true for those of us who have led larger churches, where people become faces in the crowd and we learn how to live with and manage that situation.

It was about 4 years ago that I had my own ‘Jerry Maguire moment’, the culmination of several years of living a conflicted existence as a pastor who questioned the shape things were taking in his church and who he was becoming in the midst of it.

There is no question that it wasn’t all bad. In fact much of it was good. We were good people attempting to do good things, but somehow I had lost touch with the core reality of who I was called to be and what we were supposed to do. I had started to become concerned for things that really shouldn’t have mattered as much as they did. I was starting to lose touch with the things that really needed to matter and along the way I was increasingly cognizant of the dissonance of my life.

The journey that has resulted in us living here in Brighton was sparked because of that need to come back to living with integrity and being who I was called and created to be.

If you remember the Jerry Maguire story you’d know it was almost the complete undoing of Jerry as he sought to stay true to his sense of calling. At times the dream faded to a distant memory and he was simply in survival mode, while he sought to look after his one remaining client and clung by his fingernails to his disintegrating life.

Our experience has been nowhere near the dramatic downward spiral that Jerry experienced, but neither has it been a fairy tale. Dreams are wonderful things and I doubt many of us would even consider getting off our backsides and trying anything at all were it not for the power of the imagination and the hope of a better future. But to leave the comfort and security of what we know to try and live in a counter-cultural way (both in society and in church culture) is both difficult and lonely.

There are many times when I am tempted to give the dream away and go back to the conflicted but secure life that I used to have. It is what I know best and it is what I did well for many years. But I am also aware that in doing so I will not be satisfied. I don’t think I have completely lost the ability to bullshit, (do we ever?) but I am hoping that the longer I try to live out of a sense of congruence with my calling and identity the less I sound like a sales rep for ‘church inc’ and the more I sound like someone who genuinely loves God and loves people.

Jerry’s is a story with a happy ending as ultimately those who laughed at him see the pleasure and the fruit of a life that is lived with integrity and seek to emulate it.

Of course life is not the movies and the chances my story will end like Jerry’s is somewhat unlikely, but I continue to be inspired by someone who didn’t just dream of a better way. He ‘hung his balls out there’ and gave it his best shot.

Then again, shallow as I am, I’d do it all just to get the chance to be that close to Renee Zelwigger!”

Humble Contextualisation

“Everybody’s Christianity is syncretistic. I am not going to back away from this”

Thank God some people acknowledge this! To those who would suggest there is a ‘pure gospel’, tune in here. This is a conservative (presbyterian) church leader speaking on the importance of taking seriously how we do our missiology.

I am listening to Tim Keller speak about contextualisation and he is saying some good stuff. .

While he doesn’t for a moment deny the fact that we can know some things with certainty, he also affirms that our take on the gospel is inevitably culturally biased.

It makes for a much more humble missiology.

HT

Want to visit Oz?

The questions below about Australia are from potential visitors. They were posted on an Australian Tourism Website and the answers are the actual responses by the website officials, who obviously have a raw sense of humor.

If you ask a dumb question then get ready for a fun response!

Q: Does it ever get windy in Australia? I have never seen it rain on TV, how do the plants grow? (UK).

A: We import all plants fully grown and then just sit around watching them die.

Q: Will I be able to see kangaroos in the street? (USA)

A: Depends how much you’ve been drinking.

Q: I want to walk from Perth to Sydney – can I follow the railroad tracks? (Sweden)

A: Sure, it’s only three thousand miles. Take lots of water.

Q: Can you give me some information about hippo racing in Australia? (USA)

A: A-fri-ca is the big triangle shaped continent south of Europe. Aus-tra-lia is that big island in the middle of the Pacific which does not… oh forget it. Sure, the hippo racing is every Tuesday night in Kings Cross. Come naked.

Q: Which direction is north in Australia? (USA)

A: Face south and then turn 180 degrees. Contact us when you get here and we’ll send the rest of the directions.

Q: Can you send me the Vienna Boys’ Choir schedule? (USA)

A: Aus-tri-a is that quaint little country bordering Ger-man-y, which is…oh forget it. Sure, the Vienna Boys Choir plays every Tuesday night in Kings Cross, straight after the hippo races. Come naked.

Q: Are there supermarkets in Sydney and is milk available all year round? (Germany)

A: No, we are a peaceful civilization of vegan hunter/gatherers. Milk is illegal.

Q: Please send a list of all doctors in Australia who can dispense rattlesnake serum. (USA)

A: Rattlesnakes live in A-meri-ca, which is where YOU come from. All Australian snakes are perfectly harmless, can be safely handled and make good pets.

Q: I have a question about a famous animal in Australia, but I forget its name. It’s a kind of a bear and lives in trees. (USA)

A: It’s called a Gum Drop Bear. They are so called because they drop out of Gum trees and eat the brains of anyone walking underneath them. You can scare them off by spraying yourself with human urine before you go out walking.

Q: I have developed a new product that is the fountain of youth. Can you tell me where I can sell it in Australia? (USA)

A: Anywhere significant numbers of Americans gather.

Q: Do you celebrate Christmas in Australia? (France)

A: Only at Christmas.

Q: Will I be able to speak English most places I go? (USA)

A: Yes, but you’ll have to learn it first.download the chimes at midnight

Depressed?

From Richard Rohr’s daily reflection via Chris

“Americans (and Australians) come at life expecting everything to work. It always has. I was born with seven silver spoons in my mouth. I had a strong family and was loved from the beginning. My parents paved a path for me. Do you realize what a head start that is? It’s wonderful. But there’s a dark side: People from privileged backgrounds expect that path always to be paved; they expect everything to work out. When it doesn’t, they’re not only disappointed, they feel wronged. They think, How dare reality not work out for me! Why should I have to suffer? How dare the air conditioner not work! That explains the morose, quasi-depressed state of so many affluent countries and peoples.”