God Next Door II – The Lives of Ordinary Neighbourhood People Actually Do Matter Part II

Ok so the ramble continues…

From Innaloo I got married and moved to Glendalough for a couple of years early in our marriage. We lived in a 2 bed flat and then a 3 bed townhouse. Not quite inner city, but definitely high density living! As I look back it is surprising how close we can live and never connect. Not that I had time or interest anyway…

I was too busy being a pastor and running a church to even notice that there were people living nearby. Those first 4 years of marriage saw us move 3 times, with the final one being a house we built in Karrinyup – the place we intended to live for a loong time… We stayed 11 months before we sensed it was time to head up to Lesmurdie.

As a beachlover this was a very foreign place for me, but also a place I came to love. Big blocks, lots of trees and a sense of detachment from the rest of the city was all very nice. But the big blocks meant neighbourliness was lessened as we didn’t often see each other. Many people saw the hills as their ‘retreat’, so coming home after work they weren’t actually seeking to get involved in the community.

That said, the discrete village like nature of the community meant that there was a sense of community but (I am guessing) based more on shared location than relationship. Hills people are interesting. This was a middle-upper suburb, with plenty of very competent, confident people. They were generally very ‘nice’ people, and normal neighbourhood crime and vandalism was much less in this community.

Again I was way too busy with church to really connect with my neighbours (story here), but this time did propel me to a level of dissatisfaction. I became increasingly conscious that our church was a lovely bunch of people, but that most of us who were ‘seriously committed’ to it were not well connected locally. Ironically it was probably those who we (leaders) regarded as slack and at times uncommitted who were usually better connected.

I imagine there is always a balance with these things, but I was quite frustrated by my own tendency to get consumed with the tasks of church – the jobs I did well that usually brought me kudos. No one ever thought well of me for spending time working in the community or having a neighbour for a meal… but a good sermon!… Well now you’re talking.

I imagine a different person could have stayed in that place and worked thru the issues of disconnection and made some shifts. But I wanted to take a more emphatic approach. I wasn’t convinced that I could shift the centre of gravity of my life while still living in that community and working in that church. The church actually gave me permission to get more involved in the community, but sitting alongside the permission was also the unwritten expectation that nothing I was currently doing would suffer.

I do believe God called us to leave Lesmurdie, but at a much more human level I wanted to leave and experiment with church in a different form and in a different place.

Right up until this time I still don’t think I had paid much attention at all to the neighbourhood I was living in. Maybe there were occasional demographic analyses but there wasn’t a sense of buying in deeply.

So then came the move to Brighton and this is where I started to notice the place in which I was living. My first observation when we visited here 5 1/2 years ago was of a barren soul-less place – of the starkly unimaginative look of suburbia – that despite all the efforts of the developer and the house designers to create a vibe.

The ‘vibe’ was distinctly clean, neat and stark in every way. As much as the ads told us ‘its Brighton – what a community should be!’ I think we knew that it was only the kind of community that we chose to make it.

In those early days when everyone was moving into the street there were many spontaneous connections and more than a few street parties. We were responsible for a fair swathe of them as we sought to reverse the trend we had lived with for so long our whole lives. We were operating from the understanding that we ‘live ourselves into a new way of thinking’ rather than ‘thinking our way into a new way of living’.

We did manage to develop a significant feeling of community in our street, but we also observed that after the initial year people ‘settled’ into routines and while we were friendly with each other no one was taking the time to organise the parties, or if they did happen they clashed with other social activities that each of us had on.

For the first few years we were in Brighton the suburb had that new car feel smell about it. Everything was bright and shiny and lawns and gardens hadn’t had the chance to get overgrown. However a growing number of property investors meant that rental properties increased and care of gardens decreased. The kids also grew up and started to want things to do. In the absence of something useful to do they would graffiti or fight. In the last year violence and crime have increased dramatically in this supposedly idyllic little suburb.

For those who stand at a distance I am sure the stunning lakes and parklands are still enticing and seem to speak of a place of beauty and tranquility., but for those of us who live here its just a suburb – a suburb at the end of the line with limited social services and infrastructure – and a growing number of young people who have little to do.

It has also become increasingly transient with around 10% of the houses in the suburb currently up for sale. In our street of 12 houese there have lived 24 different families. I used to know everyone in the street, but a family have lived directly across from us now for 6 months and we have not spoken other than to say a brief hello.

As the street has settled and as neighbours have come and gone there has been a decrease in the desire of all of us to get to know the new people, especially those in short term rental situations. (They are only going to bugger off again!)

As I write there are 4 of left from the originals who bought into the street, but one of those 4 had a real estate agent around yesterday to get a valuation as they have bought closer to the city.

While there is little to get inspired about here, I do feel a strong sense of connection and ownership of this community. I’m sure part of it flows out of my sense of calling, but I’m sure part of it is that I have finally stopped being so busy leading a church and taken the time to really get connected with those we live amongst.

So here I am now in this strange suburb… a disproportionately high number of ‘fly in fly out’ workers, over 50% of the community born outside Oz (mostly UK and SA) and many people working themselves to the bone to make the payments on the enormous mortgage they now have.

Making connections in suburbia is certainly not easy – and its harder for blokes.

The pace of life and the ‘privatopia’ mentality means people may want to connect, but they either lack the time or the desire to get beyond their front door. And then just as you do get to know people they move…

You can understand why many just can’t be bothered.

Anyway, thats a little of my experience of neighbourhood. I could write much more on the current experience, as it the only one I have actually taken the time to reflect on, but if you are interested to know more then you can trawl my archives!

In the next few posts I will return to the book and chew thru some of what Simon has to say…

God Puzzles Me

I guess he has puzzled me for a while.

Maybe that’s an understatement. As I mentioned previously I have started again reading thru the Bible and thankfully Leviticus is over… but now I’m into the book of Numbers.

If I have noticed one thing repeatedly this time thru it is the harsh way God seems to deal with his people. I understand the ‘holiness of God’ (or maybe I don’t…) but he does seem to punish disproportionate to the offense on several occasions.

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Today I was reading about Moses hitting the rock to bring out water rather than just talking to it. For that offense he and Aaron were denied entry to the promised land. I guess if I were offering God some advice I’d be saying ‘Chill out a bit mate. Give him a wedgie or something, but this bloke has consistently done the right thing in the face of some pretty tough opposition at times and because he stuffs up here you are going take away what he has been working towards for so long?!’

It makes me reflect on why I believe in this God and live as he calls me to. And as I do that I realise my faith goes well beyond reason. I used to think I was a Christian because it made sense – the ‘numbers added up’ – but increasingly I can see that the numbers add up in some ways but not others.

Pure reason (as if there is such a thing) is not sufficient to either accept or reject faith.

These incidents do not lead me to a place of dumping faith – there has been too much experience of God to consider that – but they do perplex me and disturb me.

In my younger years I would have found a reason to explain why God did some of these bizarre things. There was always a reason if you read the right books. Increasingly I find those answers dissatisfying – often simplistic and offensive – and I think I would rather just live with the fact that there is much about God that I just don’t get. Maybe I will never get. Oddly enough as I get older I am also more comfortable with this also.

Just some morning thoughts from Numbers 20 as I ponder again ‘what was that all about?’

So how do others deal with God’s at times bizarre personality?

Is it simply that I really don’t ‘get’ holiness or is he more odd than we choose to admit sometimes?

And if he is why do you still follow?…

God Next Door II – The Lives of Ordinary Neighbourhood People Actually Do Matter

This is one of the primary and most inspiring themes of the book.

That God does not value missionaries or pastors any higher than those who work in non-clergy jobs and live ‘normal’ lives. No really… The myth we have lived with for so long, has served to greatly devalue the lives of so many people who love God and neighbour, but feel like they have always lingered a distance from where the main game was being played.

While we say we don’t believe this, our rhetoric often betrays us. I have done it myself – encouraged people to pursue Christian ministry as if it were a ‘higher’ calling – as if other jobs were for those who God had passed over because they were rather ordinary. I know I have hoped that ‘Dave’ would go into ministry because he’d be ‘wasted’ as a teacher…

Where did that come from?…

Simon begins his book with the stories of 3 very ordinary people, living lives that are way short of spectacular. You could even say they are somewhat boring… but as he points out, they are lives that are real & believable and probably very similar to those of most of the people in our churches.

He does this intentionally, because as he says “They embody what this book is about. Its about neighbours and neighbourhoods. More importantly, its a book about you and your neighbourhood. The street where you live and its immediate surrounds is one of the most routine venues of your life. in fact its so everyday that once you’ve moved in, chances are you don’t notice it much…”

Ah, how true…

I know I lived in suburbia for most of my life without giving any thought to how it impacted on my life and my spirituality. Its only been in the last 5 years that I have begun to consider what it means to live and follow Jesus in a specific neighbourhood and how that impacts on my life and the lives of those around me.

Simon observes that as much as our neighbourhoods may seem bland, predictable or unremarkable, they do actually have their own character and qualities. And as we observe these distinctives we can understand better what it means to be the people of God in that place – as ordinary as that may be.

I have lived in several neighbourhoods in my lifetime, the first being suburban Belfast in the late 60’s, early 70’s at the height of the troubles. I don’t find it easy to reflect on that experience of neighbourhood because I was so young and only remember it through the eyes of a child. I do remember thinking I was extremely adventurous in those early years. I felt like I was often exploring and playing in new places. Then I went back to Belfast as an adult at 34 years old and realised how tiny my little world was. I doubt I ever ventured more than a kilometre from home, but I really felt like I explored half the city as a kid.

As I look back on that semi detached two storey house in Orangefield Crescent, I remember a street where we knew the neighbours and the folks across the street, where my grandparents lived within walking distance and where (despite what was going on around us) there was always safe fun to be had. I had some good mates back then so I guess many of my memories are shaped by them.

When we came to Oz we spent 3 months in a rented house in Balga. It was the bad old days in Balga and that was one of my least favourite memories of neighbourhood. I was glad when we moved to Innaloo (yes – a suburb that was the butt of many jokes… no pun intended…) and settled there. I lived there on and off for 16 years until I got married. There was a year in the country town of Wagin and a year at Bible college, but if I had to choose a formative place in my own life it would be that neighbourhood.

In those days it was just another suburb and we certainly didn’t feel anything more than knockabout working-middle type of kids. There was a fair smattering of old fibro state housing commission places around the suburb as well as the standard fare blonde brick that was typical of the era. You really have to wonder what ever caused someone to think blonde brick would be attractive…

We seemed to have pretty decent relationships with the neighbours but because lived on a corner we didn’t seem to get to know too many people beyond that. (Quick observation – Typically corner blocks seem less conducive to knowing people in your street as no-one really knows which street you are on – and you also miss being sandwiched between other sets of neighbours)

In the 70’s and 80’s Innaloo and the areas around it were the suburbs where people worked hard to get ahead and the neighbouring suburb of Scarborough had the reputation of being rather drug ridden – all those ‘surfies’ – as people called them. They were suburbs with big blocks and backyard incinerators. I seem to remember at the height of summer, burning leaves in the old cinder brick incinerator… where were fire restrictions in those days?… or environmental concerns?!…

These days they are expensive suburbs and there is a heap of development happening. Those old blocks are worth a fortune and backyards have been sold off, as well whole houses bulldozed to make way for the new crowd who are moving in. From being a fairly family oriented suburb Innaloo has become very diverse, with young couples buying the units, some 3rd homebuyer families moving backing in, plenty of retirees still sitting on their 1/4 acres and a bunch of lower socio-economic folks still renting the older fibros or red brick dunnies until someone decides to bulldoze them.

I guess if any place where home for me it’d be this area, because it is the neighbourhood where my most formative experiences were had. As much as Innaloo was 4 kms from the beach I still felt like I grew up ‘by the beach’. The ocean views from the soccer oval at Scarborough High School led to many a day of school being skipped in favour of the surf.

Of course back then I wasn’t paying conscious attention to the neighbourhood. I knew we weren’t rich like those people in City Beach, whose houses we would drive enviously past, but neither were on the bones of our bum. Somehow it didn’t matter that much either.

Anyway… its late and as I write I realise I am rambling more than reflecting so I will finish this tomorrow when my brain is re-engaged!…

Inverting the Way We Live

As I mentioned a few posts back I have been re-reading God Next Door by Simon Holt and I have to say that for those of us in neighbourhood mission this is one of the best books I have come across. Simply brilliant and brilliantly simple!

I intend to offer a series of reflections from the book partly because I need to in order to process it, but also because I know many of you won’t read it – even though you should!

Here’s a first thought that began percolating in my head…

Simon mentioned how we now live in privatopia where everyone occupies their own little piece of suburbia and hides behind the rollerdoor on the garage. Neighbours are much like rare animals – sighting are infrequent and when they do occur people aren’t sure what to do.

Simon writes of the days when the front porch was common – when houses had large front porches so people could hang out the front and connect with each other. When the pace of life was slower and people seemed to value the neighbourhood. I’m too young to know if this romanticised, but I like the concept…

Of course, this has now been replaced with the ‘alfresco’ area in the rear for private entertaining. We live in the back yard rather than the front. Privacy has overtaken any kind of engagement.

I started to wonder…

How would it be if houses began to be designed with huge front verandahs? What if building companies and developers started to re-invent the front porch? Or even more amusing… what if a group of us ‘invaded a suburb’ – the same street even – and built houses with big front verandahs and lived ‘out the front’ quite intentionally.

You should know I write this as introvert – but also as one concerned for the diminished quality of community that seems to be rife in suburbia. I’m not sure how I would cope with ‘living out the front’, but I reckon it has some merit.

Last year we built this house

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We have since sold it on, but I wonder what it would be like if we built this house?… I have just moved a few bits of the design around so it is far from being workable – more just a concept.

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What would it be like we intentionally started inverting the way we live so that most of life was out the front?

Family meals on the front verandah?

A pool in the front yard?

Sandpit out the front?…

Veggie patch?…

I wonder what it would do to communities if this became the norm?

Dante’s definition of hell is ‘proximity without intimacy’. I would say that is a pretty good image of suburbia, but I reckon many people would prefer not to live in ‘hell’.

Just a thought!

An old surboard anyone?

Has anyone got an old short board they aren’t using that I could turn into a skurfboard for behind the boat?

We had some great fun in Busso with the 8′ 8″ mal behind the boat, but I reckon if we could bore some holes and attach a couple of foot-straps to a short board and then we’d really be firing.

So if you have an old shortie – the shorter the better – that you’d be happy to part with then drop me a line. (Obviously it will help if you live in WA.)

Temptation…

Ok – no judgement intended on anyone as I write this.

I tend to think that the consumer icon of our time is the plasma TV.

It seems to be the one item everyone ‘must have’. Sooner or later we will all laugh at those old boxes that used to take up so much space in our lounge rooms.

However at this stage we still have 68cm TEAC that is now 7 years old and up until yesterday was travelling along nicely. I have often thought of getting a bloody huge plasma, but have refrained as a bit of personal discipline – I don’t actually need a bloody huge plasma – I can see the 68cm TEAC just fine and it does the job very well.

Gowever when we arrived home today it started doing wacky things – ‘busted-tube-like’ things which had me in two minds.

a) Cool… now I can join the ranks of the plasma-ites and toss it in the bin. I have an excuse to succumb… I have always said I will never buy a new TV while the old one is still working (we have one in the bedroom we bought the year after we got married… 1991…)

b) For $150.00 I can probably get it fixed – or for $199.00 I can probably get a brand new 68cm clunker.

What would you do?…

Should I just say ‘what the heck’ and spend a couple of thousand on a brand new plasma/lcd? Or should I just spend $200.00 max to get a new version of the old one?…

Is this an issue of discipleship or am I just a bit fixated?

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Busso

We’re in Busselton at the moment thru to Tuesday.

Its our annual camp for local families down at the SUWA campsite. We have the 3 families from our team there as well as 7 or 8 families from the local community.

Lots of relaxing, fishing, diving, drinking and conversing…

We set off to dive on the Swan Wreck today but the wind and swell conspired against us. After the first wave broke over the bow of the boat we decided it was time to call it off!

Very very wet…

God Next Door

This book by Simon Holt was one of my top reads of 2007, but the commentary on it has sat in my draft tray until now.

Actually I just this minute picked it up and was about to re-read it, when I thought I ought to give it a mention here.

Mid last year I went into hospital for a sleep study and took it with me, knowing I wouldn’t be able to move for several hours. I read the whole thing in about 2 or 3 hours and found it inspiring and encouraging in its approach to living as the people of God in the local neighbourhood.

Much of what Simon writes about relates to the suburban context and asks what it means for us to fulfil the two commands to love God and neighbour within that setting.

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I am looking forward to re-reading it as it was one of those books I felt a deep sense of resonance with.

I honestly can’t remember much of its specific content but that’s not unusual for me! Most books leave me with a feeling of either being glad to move on or wishing to return – much like a holiday destination. You know the best holiday destinations are the ones you cherish and would like to return to frequently, with friends if possible!

Here are some thoughts from the Allelon review that give you a feel of where the book heads:

Simon raises a lot of questions about churches and their preoccupations … This book doesn’t bash existing churches. It respects the challenges they face. At the same time it is a quiet plea for churches to rediscover neighborhood not as objects of outreach programs or social service good deeds but as the real, flesh and bone place were God takes up residence and meets us all. This is a plea for the rediscovery of the local, the next-doorness of Christian life in a culture that spins us apart in a thousand different directions so that we come home we want to close the gate, move the backyard and escape whatever might be happening on the street.

I had passed this one on to Danelle as I thought it would be just her thing, but it hasn’t made it to the top of her pile yet, so I have pinched it back for some holiday reading!

If you live in the suburbs, and haven’t read it then I’d be making it a top pick for this year.