Computers For Ministry

As Dave Warnock has noted, Methodist ministers and deacons now have new support for all things computing. After a lot of imaginative thinking (only teasing), it has been called ‘Computers For Ministry‘.

The best part is undoubtedly the chance to have a proper work email address, something certain other denominations have had for a while. Anglican and Catholic dioceses in my experience have a system; the Salvation Army has a national one. I have registered one this morning. So my new work email address is:

david DOT faulkner AT methodist DOT org DOT uk

(set out in the strange way above to stop spammers harvesting it from this page).

Dave Warnock thanks those who have put this in place, and hints there would be a long shopping list for improvements. I think he is right on both counts. I think the frustration for me with the new system is a selfish one: I can’t expect it to be set up for technophiles. Instead, it is computing for people who don’t like computing. (Rather like buying a Gallo wine has been said to be wine for people who don’t like wine.)

The giveaway is on page 6 of the booklet we were sent last week, where we find these priceless words:

‘Activating the Computers for Ministry WebMail System: Please note that this process requires access to the Internet.’

It’s on a par with buying a bag of peanuts, and being warned they may contain nuts.

So the webmail is a good start, so long as you accept that as with most church things in the UK, it’s not on a par with ‘secular’ offerings. (A real sign we’re not professionals, Dave!) The inbox will only contain 256 MB, rather short of the 2 GB my Gmail inbox will take. Messages are limited to 15 MB in size, so there will be no emailing around of grooving video files.

A more serious problem with the webmail, though, was this. Although the actual webmail is on a secure web page, the page that generated my default password was not. I went to log out of that page, and realised it was safer to close that tab in Firefox!

The parts I shall opt out of are the broadband and PC equipment provisions. Methodism has done deals with two companies I loathe: BT and PC World. (But again, they’re more likely to be suitable for people who are afraid of computers.) I think there are real problems with these parts of the package. I don’t see the need to tie in with PC World for the purchase of PCs; it seems an unnecessary layer. I certainly don’t see why any agreement needs to be with their Business division. It all sounds professional, but the average Methodist minister working from home is doing so in a very different way from someone in an office. A business contract means paying out more money, usually.

Which brings me to the fact that we’ll also have dead trees sent to us by BT. Methodism proudly tells us it has negotiated a discounted package with them. Except again, it’s a discounted business package. Er, why? Especially as the discount still comes in at £23.99 per month, a rate that is easily beaten by other ISPs offering comparable packages. I won’t be migrating from the excellent PlusNet (even though, sadly, they were bought out by BT some months ago).

I read out the BT and PC World parts of the glossy booklet to my wife. By profession, she is an auditor. Her reaction was, ‘Backhander.’ Now I don’t suppose for one minute that someone in Methodism has done any such unethical deal, but I do have to query whether the PC and broadband parts of ‘Computers For Ministry’ have produced ‘best value’ for the church. They don’t look that way to me, as an outsider. The booklet says on page 15 that consultation happened between

‘members of the Connexional Team and various groups and bodies (chief among them the Ordained Ministries Committee and the Connexional Allowances Committee)’.

I would have been reassured if they had told us that people with technical expertise had been involved. I expect they were, but they don’t seem to have been given sufficient prominence.

In passing, the one relief about the PC equipment part of the package is that the derisory sum of £150 per year that circuits must put away for ministers to buy a new computer every four years is confirmed as a minimum amount. It would buy a modest laptop, but not the software, nor the peripherals such as a reliable printer. I am glad to serve in a circuit that has for some years given a rather more generous computer allowance to its ministers. They also pay our broadband subscriptions (we refund a proportion for personal use), whereas the BT deal here is invoiced to the minister or deacon.

There we go, glad I’ve got that off my chest. (Aren’t blogs great for that?) Now off to worry about things that put this in the shade – like the unevangelised, the poor, the sick and those suffering injustice.

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Free Websites

Two of my churches have been talking to one degree or another about setting up websites. There are always two obstacles: one is cost, and the other is time. We have now found a solution, and it’s from those kind philanthropists at Microsoft. As part of their Office Live offering for small businesses, you can sign up for Office Live Basics, which gives you a free website and domain name. The site is designed online, and anyone with word processor skills can contribute. No coding knowledge is needed. Up to 25 email addresses can be assigned to the domain – more than enough for the relevant departments of my churches.

There are disadvantages, but none of them is critical for my churches. There aren’t all the bells and whistles of similar paid-for offerings in the church community, such as the excellent Church Edit. So we’ll have to shrink our JPG photos before uploading, rather than having it done automatically for us. And we won’t be able to podcast the services or sermons, due to bandwidth restrictions. But then, it’s free, and Church Edit, Church 123 and 2Day understandably have to charge fees.

Likewise, there is a limited number of templates. But Church Edit and Church 123 also have a finite selection of templates. The Microsoft ones are as reasonable as any.

So watch this space – hopefully before long Broomfield Methodist and Hatfield Peverel Methodist will have decent-looking online presences, to join St Augustine’s, who have had a simple site for a little while.

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Harvest Sermon: Healing The Land

Text-wise, this is a shorter sermon than usual this week (don’t cheer too loudly). You’ll see this is built around a TEAR Fund film, and you’ll need to watch the film at the point where I provide the link, before coming to the summary.

2 Chronicles
7:12-22

Introduction
Our text for Harvest Festival this year is 2 Chronicles 7:14:

‘If my people who are called by my name humble themselves,
pray, seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from
heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.’

It’s an odd text for Harvest. It comes from a night-time
divine visitation that Solomon received after the dedication of the Jerusalem
Temple. But I was attracted to it, because of the reference to healing the
land. Healing the land seemed a good theme for harvest, and especially because I
wanted to tie in our theme with the sermon series I began on healing three
weeks ago.

In that respect, the context of God’s promise to heal the
land if his people come to him in penitence is a relevant one, I think. For God
anticipates a time of drought, a locust invasion or pestilence (verse 13). And
these plagues are very similar to what we witness in our world today. At a
harvest time when we are so grateful for the plenty we have, we are conscious
that millions in our world do not enjoy that.

So firstly, let’s consider some of the ways in which the
land needs healing in our world today. I’m hoping we can now see a ten-minute
film from TEAR Fund from their ‘Be Part Of A Miracle’ campaign. (Link
here.)

Summary
Healing the land is God’s promise to those who turn to him. But he calls us to
be partners with him. As Sophia said in the film,

‘You can’t just say, ‘God, help me,’ when you are not taking
care of yourself. You need to take care of yourself, but you also need his
help.’

And as Cuthbert quoted Augustine at the end,

‘Pray as though everything depended on God. Work as though
everything depended on you.’

Yet is the church in Fombe doing anything different from other
relief agencies? Secular charities would instigate similar relief work. More
widely, we will share in the concern to change our lifestyles to mitigate the
effects of climate change. We, too, shall campaign for fairer rules on
international trade. We shall work to see medical drugs made as available for
the poor as for the rich of the world.

But our text calls for people to pray, to seek God’s face
and turn from our wicked ways. There is a Christian distinctive here. We partner
God in healing the land, because the Creator made us to be his stewards of it,
not people who do what they like with it. Treating creation rightly is part of
the bigger picture of repentance, the call to turn our entire lives back to
God. So it’s good to see TEAR Fund link their service of the poor in the way
Cuthbert said near the end about the church:

‘We are always close to the community, enabling people to
step out of poverty, and bringing them to faith.’

A true healing of the land is linked with the healing of the
person – healing their alienation from God by bringing them to faith in Christ.
And so healing the land is for the Christian a spiritual activity. We may well
do many of the things that secular agencies do, but it will be based on prayer
and connected with sharing our faith. In healing the land, the Creator calls
his stewards, the human race, back to himself.

Cuthbert said,

‘Would you start by committing to pray?’

I want to commend TEAR Fund’s ‘Be Part Of A Miracle’
programme to you. I receive their prayer diary. Every day there is material for
intercession or thanksgiving regarding their work among the poor and oppressed
of the world. If you are willing to take up Cuthbert’s challenge to start by
committing to pray, then speak to me afterwards. Let’s make a start in healing
God’s land.

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