Thursday, September 17, 2015

Refuge and Belonging

Belonging and Refuge:

                Sometimes there is a feeling that the Bible is old fashioned and out of date. However, occasionally world events remind us that this is simply not the case. Last evening we grappled within our elders (leaders) meeting how as a church we might respond to the human tragedy which is the present refugee crisis, primarily from war torn Syria. One elder simply said, ‘this is the biggest Exodus of people since the Biblical exodus.’ Now he is probably wrong, over history there have been many tragic events which have displaced huge numbers, but it does remind us that present events have many parallels in the Bible. In fact if we take a who’s who of the bible… most of them were in some way refugees: Adam and Eve, Cain and Able, Abraham and Sarah, Ruth and Naomi, Daniel, Moses, in fact all of the 12 tribes of Israel, Elijah, Ezekiel and Jeremiah. That’s not a bad list to start, but it continues in the New Testament, Mary and Joseph and of course Jesus took refuge in Egypt, most of the early church was forced to flee persecution and if you take Paul’s letter to the Ephesians seriously all of us begin as refugees: ‘remember that formerly you who are Gentiles by birth…. You were separate from Christ, excluded from citizenship with God’s people and foreigners to the covenants of the promise, without hope and without God in the world.’ (Eph 2:11-13) Of course the letter goes on to remind the Ephesians and indeed us, that we are no longer ‘foreigners’ we have been welcomed in, by the costly love of Christ. We are invited and welcomed, given a place at table.  There is no doubt that the Bible with its many stories of refugees is relevant. It is also deeply challenging.
                Of course for many of us our options to help refugees are limited. We don’t all have a property which we can offer to the local council, or indeed the capacity to foster a child or young person. We can of course all pray, we can cry out for an end to this senseless human suffering. We can also petition government and most of us can give towards agencies and groups who are seeking to bring relief either here in Europe or indeed around the area of Syria. [On 27th Sept we will open a donations box at Zion… towards this relief.] Even were we able to offer a house, foster a child, pray, petition and give generously, the depth of the suffering means that this could never be enough.  Although this particular tragedy is very much ‘man-made’ we need to pray for a real sea change to bring it to an end. Tragedies like this must eventually open the eyes of leaders and assailants to search for new ways to live, pursuing peace, reconciliation, acknowledging our common humanity.  I believe this realisation is also an opportunity. We may not be ‘great leaders’ but we can in our own small ways begin this process.  It is a chastening fact that some or indeed many of those who have travelled to Syria or Iraq to wage war have done so in part because here in the UK they did not have their common humanity affirmed nor did those who were different to them seek reconciliation.  I have experienced this alienation and separation even in little Frampton Cotterell over the last few days.  We have skateboarders ‘colonising’ Zion’s car park! It is very easy to alienate them, to see them as different to us, indeed to feel threatened. We might want to affirm that they are in “OUR” car park. I have sought a gentler path. In my view Zion’s land is God’s land. I am not exactly welcoming them with open arms… there are issues, bad language, litter and indeed the matter of safety. However these young people are, like me made in God’s image. If I wish them to respect me and our property, I have to respect them.  I must also remember that they are capable of great goodness. One of them, Harry, came upon an elderly member of our congregation who had fallen at the roadside. Like a regular Good Samaritan, he helped him up and back to his car: (another example of the bible being relevant today.)  I met Harry later that afternoon in our car park whilst I was chastising another boy for making a mess. I was able to thank him and give him some fair trade chocolates.  We are able to be the beginning of the end of this refugee crisis. We begin this ending of fear, and separation and alienation when we learn to treat those around us, whether alike us or very different, as our sisters and brothers, made in the image of God.  Let’s spur one another on to do just this, to treat others as we would love to be treated.

Stephen

A video which inspired some of my thoughts this month can be found at:

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Endings and New Beginnings

                               I can’t help thinking that Sepp Blatter is probably now regretting that he didn’t ‘quit while he was ahead as such. Lots of people were telling him ‘enough’ but he didn’t listen. I see this all the time in churches, something starts really well, but we’re not so good at ending things. We get muddled up with duty, the show must go on!  The very first Christians on these Islands, the Celts had a really good way of dealing with this. Because by and large they were based on Islands and around the coast they had watched the tides, they understood the ebb and the flow: the reality that everything has a natural rhythm a starting and an ending. I’m hopeless at this; I’m a night owl and I seem to like, ‘raging against the dying of the light.’ I won’t let the day go. But this is nonsense since it goes anyway and I wake up bleary eyed each day, unprepared for a new beginning.

                So there’s my thought for the day, let it go. If you are facing an ending, embrace it, accept it. Nothing new will come until we learn to daily let go of the old. For me personally there is a bit of an ending here, I need to give up on thought for the day for a while at least, there are new adventures that I need to embrace.  May God bless you and yours until we meet again. Or as the ancient Celts used to say, God be wi ye. (For those reading the blog... I guess I will continue blogging, just not my thoughts for the day!)

Thursday, May 7, 2015

POST ELECTION HOPE? or Hard work!

Victory in Europe Day!

Below is a copy of my thought for the day, for the day after the election... VE day! 

                Surprising as it may seem I am too young to remember victory in Europe day. My parents though have often spoken about it, the euphoria and the celebration following on of course from years of suffering. In terms of elections I am of the age when one day sticks in my memory: Tony Blair’s landslide election: euphoria again, for some at least! I can even remember the song: Things can only get better!
                This morning I doubt the country awakes to any real sense of euphoria, I imagine rather a dull relief that it’s all over, at one level at least.  Politics may not be our hope today, nor even memories of a major war in Europe, so what can stir us?
                As a church minister I regularly remember another historic day. I celebrate communion, I am in effect remembering ‘Good’ Friday: a day when a remarkable carpenter was murdered by nailing him to a cross! I realise just as with politics so our taste for religion and faith differ. Nevertheless, when an unjust execution is remembered 2000 years later as ‘good’, clearly something has been transformed. A sign of hope offered, that neither politics or death, nor even war has extinguished. The day after VE day there was still a hell of a lot of work to do. Today it’s the same; politics rarely offers a magic bullet for all our needs.  Hope for today and tomorrow has to begin in our hearts, in our attitudes, in our willingness to work together for a society where bad things get transformed into good. So that’s my thought for today. Yesterday was the day to vote, today is a day to get on with it, and sow some hope into the world by the way we smile and deal with whatever issues that we face.


Thursday, April 16, 2015

AGM state of the Union report!


             I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want.13 I can do all this through him who gives me strength. Phil 4: 12-13
             Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervour, serving the Lord Rom 12:11

            In one sense this last year has been a consolidation of the changes that made it possible for us at Zion United Church to build and now utilize the Beacon. On the other hand although I believe contentment, especially with godliness (1 Tim 6:6), is great gain I would be disappointed if we feel that the right thing for us as church is to sit on our laurels, happy with what we’ve achieved. There is no question that the work of building the beacon has been good. People seem to love the building; certainly I suspect that our finances for rentals will show that people have been using the building. I am delighted to see the many ways that people are creatively using the spaces we have available: Crash, Knit and Knatter, Ladies Fellowship, Girls Allowed, Forgetmenot sing along, to name but a few. However the church in this country has long since had some wonderful buildings, but as we are aware the decline in the life of faith has continued unabated. Building a building, even using a building will not change that.
I remember well the moment that an elder shared the thought that we must become beacons in order to build the beacon. This is the aspect of our life that truly excites me: the dimension of faith and spiritual zeal for the kingdom of God. I know I bang on about it all the time, but I really want to be involved as a Pastor in a church where the many blessings we receive are as water off a duck’s back… ie they are being poured out and lived out in the world. Jesus himself was a radical and beautiful announcement of good news. I want to be part of that. My role is to help cajole and coax you into co-operating with God’s Holy Spirit so that you too are a living announcement that God is good and God’s love is present and alive.
            The trouble is I can’t do it. Much as I love you and pray for you, and indeed pray for my own witness, we are as the Psalmist said ‘a stubborn and rebellious generation’ (Ps 78) and we think we can work out how to live our lives on our own: we can’t. I can’t make you slow down and give time to God in prayer and quietness; I can’t make you open your eyes to see what God is doing around you, in your family and workplace. I can’t make you become aware that God’s kingdom is all around us, if only we’d learn to turn the other cheek and go the extra mile in generosity. I barely seem able to persuade myself of these things. Herding people must feel to God an awful lot like herding cats: we are independent to the bone…. Oh miaow…please will you give me my water and my food exactly when I want it!  In order for us to grow and become as beacons, lights shining in the world, a daily decision is needed: the decision of covenant and commitment. We must confess our need for God; indeed if we are to develop as disciples I honestly believe we need one another. This is the reason that I am so passionate about the work that goes on in our fellowship groups, and also why the dissertation for the Master’s Degree that I am undertaking will seek to assess whether the Inspire Bands among us (small groups of three or four who meet to encourage and challenge our walk with God) are really helping us to grow in this ‘accountable’ and beautiful discipleship. We could not have built the Beacon alone, we needed to work as a body as a church. I am also of the belief that we need one another to nurture and inspire us as disciples. This next year one of our core themes will be Shelter, with the catch phrase: ‘It is in the shelter of each other that people live.’ -Irish Proverb. Still that is for next year. For this year, thank you again for the privilege of sharing with you the sometimes bumpy journey of faith.  

Stephen

Friday, March 27, 2015

Kintsugi

Jesus Says, ‘I AM, EASTER’

May I first begin by wishing you a blessed EASTER!
I wonder have you heard of the Japanese art of kintsugi? It means ‘golden joinery.’ At a recent Rock Solid (youth group) I heard a lovely description of the way that this art almost parallels the story of Easter.  The story goes that in the 15th Century a Japanese shogun, Ashikaga Yoshimasa, sent a broken tea bowl back to China to have it mended! He was unhappy with the result! To make it better an art-form developed involving adding real gold into the resin, the cracks are now not hidden; they are emphasized but made to look beautiful.  The broken pottery has been ‘born again.’
                To me this is a parable of Easter. The pot that is broken is of course humanity or our world. All sorts of efforts are made, but in truth the brokenness remains. So God decides to pour his pure gold into the wreckage of our broken world.  Of course there remain many ‘pots’ or lives or situations that remain fractured and broken. However there is now available the hope of transformation.  The pure gold which we all so desperately need is the love and forgiveness of the son of God. Everything can be made beautiful with a touch of this love. Nothing need be discarded, all things can be transformed. 
The key to understanding this story is to really appreciate just how valuable and precious the gold is.  The pure gold is poured out upon broken crockery: the Japanese shogun must have really loved his tea bowl…. And the God of Easter must truly love us.
                A final twist on the parable: if we have been restored, (ie if we have his gold in our brokenness) we are also equipped to be part of the restoration of others. Pots that have been repaired are dynamic, the gold is alive in us, indeed can become infectious from us to help others receive the healing and grace which we all need!
                So again: Happy Easter to you and those you love. May the pure gold of Jesus restore your life, so that others can see his beauty and even receive an offering of his love from you.

Stephen


Thursday, March 12, 2015

Thanks for all the teachers!

A Blog from my Thought for the day on Radio Bristol 

I've realised that I am getting old, today is my last ever parents evening.  My children have had some wonderful teachers over the years; indeed I hope I am one of them, although I suspect I have taught as many bad habits as good ones!
People that teach us come in all shapes and sizes. I remember a Physics teacher who, single handed, changed my life: he didn't see me as my chemistry teacher did: ‘lazy, immature and not as clever as he thinks he is!’ My Physics teacher lit a spark in me; he saw potential neither I nor others had seen. Then there was a welcomer at my old church: Dennis. He knew everyone’s name and made every one of us feel special. Sometimes people teach us by the way they cope with things, their reactions. I remember Tony and Beth whose son, a friend of mine was murdered by two of his ‘friends’. They helped me to mourn and also showed incredible mercy towards their son’s killers and families. At the time I was losing my faith, their response showed me something incredibly deep.
Of course, as I get old, I’m supposed to be a teacher myself… trouble is I still have so much to learn. That’s why I still try to spend time with my teacher every day. Like my physics teacher his patience still lights a spark in me.

                So there’s my thought, as we approach an election where there’ll be arguments about free schools and tuition fee’s and all sorts … stop, and think of all the people who have taught you,  and find a way to say thank you, even if that means showing kindness to someone else.  

Friday, February 27, 2015

Excuses Excuses

EXCUSES EXCUSES!
Sorry my blog today  is a bit of a rant … so best start with a story!
            There’s a story told about two young brothers who’d become really hard work.  This was way back before ASBO’s and their poor Mother was struggling. When they were accused of stealing from a neighbour, she decided to act… she took them along to the church with its lovely stained glass to see the rather stern local priest. He started telling them all about Jesus. Then he asked them if they could see if they could find Jesus for themselves. One of the boys simply tore out of the church back to his Mum. Ma Ma, it wasn’t me I didn’t do it, I didn’t steal Jesus!

            I tell that story because it seems to me we also haven’t grown up, we haven’t learnt to be honest and take some blame, to take responsibility. How many more bankers are going to have to tell us it wasn’t their fault, how many more politicians claim, I’ve done nothing wrong.  And to be honest it’s no good just blaming others: I’m 50 years old, if I haven’t started influencing society for good by now, then that’s my fault. So I say it’s time we grow up, accept our faults and if you have none, then how about challenging the rest of us. We don’t live in a world where walking by on the other side, or simply observing on TV, makes us innocent. No, if racists push a black man of a train, the very least we can do is get off the train and stand with him. Better still, get of the train and offer him your place. If my colleague fiddles his expenses, or boasts about his tax dodge or works on the black market then my responsibility is to challenge him and ultimately to shop him. It’s time we started challenging ourselves and standing up for what we believe to be right. 

Thursday, January 15, 2015

TRANSFORMATION or DESTRUCTION….

I can still remember the first time that I heard the second law of thermodynamics explained to me. I was sitting at the very top of a quite large lecture theatre, and I was only barely listening. Sadly this means that I have never quite accepted or indeed understood the law. (Alan, this is not an invitation for a lesson!) I took it at the time to mean that the universe was, according to physical laws, in a relentless unstoppable decline. I seem to remember that at the time I wrote a poem called Entropy to Disaster. The readers will be glad to know that said poem was written before the advent of personal computers and the like, and thus happily it is lost in the mists of time! It seemed to me to be a direct challenge to faith, with which I was struggling at the time. Nothing could get better, everything was doomed to decline.

I am still only barely conversant with this particular law, but my earlier fears were in part unfounded. I may have understood it better had I realised that nothing can re-generate itself without work and energy being offered to it. So I move onto the theme of this article, transformation. Recently a friend of mine Nick was introducing Moses and the new covenant. He used a beautiful passage from 2 Corinthians 3: “Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.” This passage reflects on the way that Moses, when he encountered God, practically shone. But of course according to the laws mentioned above, when he was removed from the energy which is the very presence of God, such glory waned, even though it was so brilliant that a veil had to be placed over Moses’ face to cover the brilliance. Moses was transformed, and brought transformation, because the energy hidden in the burning bush was given to him, to give to others.
In essence my particular energy slant on this interaction can also illustrate something of the difference between the Old Covenant and the New. The glory of God in the Old was recorded as being tangible, but passing. People encountered God, but it did not linger. With the New Covenant something intrinsic changed. It is not that God had changed, rather our relationship or should I say our proximity has changed. According to the laws of thermodynamics, one energy or heat source can only influence another object while they remain in proximity. To illustrate this, my wonderful wood burner can only heat my lounge whilst it is a. burning and b. in my lounge! Although the Bible records that Moses encountered God on many occasions he did not have the same privilege that a Christian can have. Our transformation “into his likeness with ever increasing likeness” can continue because the energy, the love which is able to bring about our transformation, does not leave us, as it did even Moses. Because with the new covenant God’s spirit is, ‘poured out upon us’ and he ‘lives’ within us, we have the very energy source, the presence of God within us who can help us to effect this on-going, day by day transformation. (the wood burner is very much alight, and in the ‘lounge’ of our hearts!) Of course transformation is only possible when we choose to co-operate with the love of God, but the reality is we can choose at any time to respond. This is because through the work that Jesus did God’s spirit no longer simply ‘hovers’ or ‘broods’ (Gen 1) over us. As Jesus explained to Nicodemus, he can be born within us. He dwells with us and we dwell with him. Now that’s what I call central heating!
I personally think Moses was pretty blessed. But our blessing is more permanent and lasting, and it is of course in order that we may be an on-going blessing of love to others. It is because of God’s great love that all is not destined for destruction. He is even now at work within our hearts, that we might ‘reflect’ his glory. (Go on, put some more wood on the burner in your heart… that you may shine with the love and radiance of God, who lives within you.)

Stephen