Living In The Ruins
I found this article in the Christian Century courtesy of Maggi Dawn. It tells the story of six American Protestant theologians who have converted to Rome, to a large extent in frustration at liberal Protestantism. Maggi asks whether going Catholic is the answer, and for me it would not. But the metaphor ‘living in the ruins’ comes from one of the theologians who for a long time felt that however disgruntled he was in Anglicanism, his call was like that of Nehemiah in Jerusalem. This all assumes that God has led you there to be part of the rebuilding.
Anyone who knows me well is aware that I manage to exist in Methodism by being somewhat on the margins, even though it is the tradition in which I grew up. But my postgrad work in ecclesiology (and my long term interest in that doctrine) means that while I can probably find points of disagreement in all the traditions. The only one I entirely agree with is the Church Of Dave – and even that has adjusted its convictions at times!
Nevertheless, many of us do face the issues of ‘living in the ruins’. Like Nehemiah we need to know the call of God. Nothing else will sustain us. Earlier this year when he was still President of the Methodist Conference Tom Stuckey said he believed there was a new Pentecost coming for Methodism. It is precisely that kind of word many of us need to hear. And we probably need to hear it not only from people we trust but ‘for ourselves’. Coming as I do from the evangelical-charismatic part of the Church, I have been in the midst of a wider Christian culture that has been expecting ‘revival’ ever since the mid-1990s.
It’s that waiting without revival that led me to ponder the Old Testament texts that help Israel to live ‘in exile’ and see them as critical. But I’ve found them more useful for general Christian witness in the world than for survival (let alone thriving) in a denomination in which I find very little spiritual sustenance. Maybe I’m just not praying and listening well.
In some way linked to this, my main church at Broomfield will this coming weekend be having a Family Friendly Church Weekend with Mike Bossingham. This will be extremely important in deciding whether we rebuild, not in a material sense but spiritually and relationally. The odd prayer for us would be very welcome.
Technorati Tags: Christian+Century, Maggi+Dawn, ecclesiology, church
Sermon, ‘Now Wash Your Hands’ (Mark 7:1-23)
Here is tomorrow’s sermon.
Introduction
If you want to know the cause of the water shortage, I have the answer. It’s not July’s heat wave of not-so-blessèd memory. It’s not global warming.
It’s our daughter. No, at three and a half she isn’t old enough yet to be booking the bathroom for endless baths, showers and personal pampering. But ever since she learned to take herself to the toilet she has developed a fascination with washing her hands. Debbie says she has her first Obsessive Compulsive Disorder! If we’re not careful, the tap would drain our water tank and she likes to use enough soap to bathe an elephant.
And we have a Gospel story today about washing hands. But we would be very much mistaken if we thought this was a story about personal hygiene. It’s about ritual washing. It’s about Jesus having no regard for an oral tradition that had developed in Judaism to fill in the missing gaps where the laws given to Moses didn’t cover every eventuality:
‘In areas where the Law was silent the tradition was vocal, drawing the conclusions felt to be implicit in the mandates of the written code. The result was a vast legal complex … [that] was regarded as binding upon all Israel.’
[William Lane, The Gospel According To Mark, p245]
For disregarding this tradition, Jesus was in trouble. For undermining it, he was regarded as a threat. For rejecting the tradition – well, he was spiritually seditious.
So our story is one of conflict. But how might a dispute between Jesus and the God Police have anything to say to us? Let’s follow the story and see.
1. Charge
In mid-June Debbie and I were elated when our next door neighbours put up their house for sale. We have been progressively less elated every time we come back up the drive and still see the sign saying ‘For sale’ rather than ‘Sold’.
We were even less happy four weeks ago when the husband came knocking on our door. He had noticed oil marks on his precious drive when he came home from work that afternoon. They weren’t there when he left in the morning, he said. It must be our fault. How could he sell his house when we were making the place look like a council estate?
We knew it wasn’t us, but last week he complained to the circuit about us. He also told the circuit (not us) that he didn’t like the fact that we take our black wheelie bin out on Sunday night, not early on Monday morning. He has taken to moving it off the edge of the drive onto the pavement – in clear contravention of council instructions and in our opinion causing a dangerous obstruction for the elderly people who walk along our road to and from their residential home.
Perhaps he thought that a bunch of Christians would roll over meekly. If he thought that, he was wrong. We have rejected his allegations and our superintendent minister has supported our stance.
Well, Jesus didn’t roll over easily at the accusations thrown at him. He is challenged for his disciples’ failure to follow an oral tradition that was essential to the convictions of the Pharisees [ibid, p 247]. And as far as Jesus is concerned, they are hypocrites. You don’t roll over for hypocrites. If your obsession is with keeping up appearances by outwardly following tradition but don’t match that with a heart that is close to God [verse 6] then don’t expect Jesus to be quiet.
And the parallels are there in church life. How easy is it for us to major on minors and neglect what is of prime importance, namely our relationship with God (from which everything of worth flows)? Think about some of the contentious issues Christians sometimes argue about and you being to wonder whether Jesus might not have a few words for us. I think back with pain to my first appointment and remember some of the things that made me unpopular in certain circles:
I was told that only the minister was ever allowed to stand behind the communion rail (although this rule used to be miraculously suspended for the flower arrangers). There was a militant insistence that you didn’t kneel at the communion rail until everybody else was there – despite the fact that the church building was cramped and it took not so much communion stewards, more like traffic police to manage the flow of people returning to their pews and those going forward. You weren’t allowed to put nails in a wooden cross on Good Friday. You couldn’t pick hymns from anything other than Hymns And Psalms. And you certainly couldn’t suggest ripping out the pews and making a worship area more flexible.
None of these objections, in my opinion, had anything to do with Gospel imperatives. But they had everything to do with promoting style over substance. Never once did any of those who raised their loud protests against me want to know more about prayer or about sharing their faith.
It’s altogether too easy to put on an impressive outward show. We can fool not just those around us, but we tell the lies so often that we end up deceiving even ourselves. But we cannot fool God. One day sooner or later we discover that the Jesus whom we assume endorses our religious activities in fact our most fervent opponent.
So let us ask searching questions about our priorities. Are they about nurturing the heart towards God and sharing God’s heart for a broken world? Or are they about maintaining structures and putting on a good show? Only one of these approaches will give pleasure to God.
2. Counter-Charge
Jesus goes on the offensive: ‘You abandon the commandment of God and hold to human tradition,’ he says (verse 8). Not only that, ‘You have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God in order to keep your tradition!’ (verse 9). In the battle between human tradition and God’s commandments, God loses, says Jesus. And yet you claim you are his most faithful followers and representatives!
To prove his point, Jesus goes on to adduce a shocking case. The Ten Commandments say we should honour our parents. A particular expression of that is when they are elderly and infirm. Yet some in Jesus’ day diverted some money that would have helped their parents by dishonestly dedicating it to religious work.
So do we use our traditions to negate the commands of God, as Jesus charged the Pharisees? I know my father thought that, and once got in trouble with a superintendent minister for suggesting that Methodism placed more emphasis on ‘CPD’ [the Constitutional Practice and Discipline of the Methodist Church – our nearest equivalent to Anglican canon law]. Dad thought we had little moral superiority over the Pharisees whom Jesus condemned! Certainly at college we faced an exam in CPD but not in biblical or doctrinal matters. And Methodism can certainly get hung up on matters that are natural consequences of the Gospel at times. It was popular to say at college, ‘You can doubt the Virgin Birth, you can doubt the Resurrection, but God help you if you doubt infant baptism or feminism’.
But more seriously, do we invent traditions and practices in order to avoid the Gospel and commands of God? I don’t know that we’re always so blatantly devious as to invent a tradition like ‘Corban’ (verse 11), which sounds like a religious tax dodge. But I think we put other things in place so that we miss the imperative of the Gospel.
What do I mean? Well sometimes it’s about the expectations, atmosphere and culture of a congregation. The old criticism that churches can be little more than religious clubs is a serious allegation and it has a lot of truth behind it. We make for a lopsided church that is all about care for one another but has little active focus upon the world – except for the enthusiasts. I’ve heard it said that we shouldn’t concentrate on people outside the faith if it offends the faithful. Yet we have spent decades concentrating on the faithful and where has it got us?
We so fill our time with social activities that the ‘club’ epithet is altogether too well-deserved. We hide in perpetual business meetings. Or we duplicate within the church things that are done perfectly well outside but we prefer to go for the church version and stay in our little castle, behind the moat and with the drawbridge up. In all these ways and more we create a culture – our traditions – that helps us negate the commands of God.
All these reasons and more are why I called a year ago for a simpler structure for church. What we basically need in church life for the sake of the Gospel is fairly simple stuff. We gather on Sundays for worship and inspiration. We meet in small groups for worship, pastoral care, learning about the faith and mission. We hold such other meetings as are necessary for business and oversight. Beyond that there isn’t a lot we need. Most stuff beyond these bare necessities is extraneous and serves either deliberately or unwittingly to keep us away from the mission of God.
I believe Jesus calls us to a tough choice between the unhealthy traditional culture that strangles the spiritual life like a weed and a simpler, more radically prioritised vision of church that is set free to share in God’s mission and be faithful to the Gospel. Which way will we go?
3. True Defilement
Sometimes you can’t allow yourself just to be caught up in a perpetual argument. Not long ago I was being regularly attacked on the Internet by a militant atheist. For a while I answered his points, but eventually it became clear that an ongoing debate was going to be fruitless, because his attitude was arrogant and he had little desire to listen.
And it strikes me it’s a bit like that with Jesus in this story. He has his spat with the scribes and Pharisees, but after having answered their charge and countered with his own allegations, he turns away. In verse 14 he stops talking to them and starts addressing the crowd. Rather than being bogged down in a tedious argument, he uses the disagreement to make a teaching point to those who are listening and watching. In a way, he’s giving an answer to the scribes and Pharisees if only they would listen, too.
And his point is basic and stark: true spiritual defilement isn’t about failing to wash your hands in the same way that a priest would, nor is it about clean and unclean food. At best those are but outward signs of the inner state. And it’s the heart that matters. For there is the evidence of whether we follow the commandments of God.
‘It is what comes out of a person that defiles. For it is from within, from the human heart, that evil intentions come: fornication, theft, murder, adultery, avarice, wickedness, deceit, licentiousness, envy, slander, pride, folly. All these evil things come from within, and they defile a person.’
[verses 20-23]
Material purity isn’t the issue: moral purity is. It’s right through the Scriptures, yet it doesn’t seem to have been obvious to any of Jesus’ hearers – religious professionals, general crowd or his own disciples. You can keep all the religious rules you like and look good in the eyes of those who find such things impressive. But none of those rituals on their own will cleanse the pollution of the heart. And straightening out inner corruption is a much higher priority than how we wash our hands or what food we eat.
Or in our terms, you might say that living a winsome, holy life is the priority, rather than worrying about the rules of our denomination or putting on a good religious show that impresses only the shallow.
And it isn’t just about the big issues. Yes, we are to abstain from violence. We are to keep the marriage bed pure – Jesus’ prohibitions against both fornication and adultery mean he upholds a sexual ethic that maintains fidelity within the marriage covenant and celibacy outside.
But he also includes the everyday matters like ‘envy, slander, pride [and] folly’. And maybe these are the ones where our witness is most regularly compromised. In envy we look altogether too much like our consumerist world. In slander, we speak with sly digs, character assassinations and tawdry gossip that make us like small-scale versions of the gutter press. In pride and folly we forget our need of grace and that our boasting should only ever be of Christ.
The snag for me in the reading is that Jesus doesn’t propose an answer. That comes elsewhere in his teaching and in the writings of Paul, John and others. And it’s the usual basic Christian stuff about confession, repentance and co-operating with the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives.
But maybe Mark ends the story here deliberately to challenge us. The radical message of Jesus is that the ‘Keeping Up Appearances’ approach that makes us look like real-life Hyacinth Buckets is neither funny nor sad. It’s an outrage against the Gospel. He is challenging us to prioritise on the call to holiness and the mission of God.
Too much of our society today is all about surface and little about substance. What hope is there if we go down that road? Our world needs a radical, courageous and deep challenge from those of us who claim to be the disciples of Jesus to go below the surface and address the heart.
We need spiritual heart surgery, and so does our world.
Sermon, ‘Now Wash Your Hands’ (Mark 7:1-23)
Here is tomorrow’s sermon.
Introduction
If you want to know the cause of the water shortage, I have the answer. It’s not July’s heat wave of not-so-blessèd memory. It’s not global warming.
It’s our daughter. No, at three and a half she isn’t old enough yet to be booking the bathroom for endless baths, showers and personal pampering. But ever since she learned to take herself to the toilet she has developed a fascination with washing her hands. Debbie says she has her first Obsessive Compulsive Disorder! If we’re not careful, the tap would drain our water tank and she likes to use enough soap to bathe an elephant.
And we have a Gospel story today about washing hands. But we would be very much mistaken if we thought this was a story about personal hygiene. It’s about ritual washing. It’s about Jesus having no regard for an oral tradition that had developed in Judaism to fill in the missing gaps where the laws given to Moses didn’t cover every eventuality:
‘In areas where the Law was silent the tradition was vocal, drawing the conclusions felt to be implicit in the mandates of the written code. The result was a vast legal complex … [that] was regarded as binding upon all Israel.’
[William Lane, The Gospel According To Mark, p245]
For disregarding this tradition, Jesus was in trouble. For undermining it, he was regarded as a threat. For rejecting the tradition – well, he was spiritually seditious.
So our story is one of conflict. But how might a dispute between Jesus and the God Police have anything to say to us? Let’s follow the story and see.
1. Charge
In mid-June Debbie and I were elated when our next door neighbours put up their house for sale. We have been progressively less elated every time we come back up the drive and still see the sign saying ‘For sale’ rather than ‘Sold’.
We were even less happy four weeks ago when the husband came knocking on our door. He had noticed oil marks on his precious drive when he came home from work that afternoon. They weren’t there when he left in the morning, he said. It must be our fault. How could he sell his house when we were making the place look like a council estate?
We knew it wasn’t us, but last week he complained to the circuit about us. He also told the circuit (not us) that he didn’t like the fact that we take our black wheelie bin out on Sunday night, not early on Monday morning. He has taken to moving it off the edge of the drive onto the pavement – in clear contravention of council instructions and in our opinion causing a dangerous obstruction for the elderly people who walk along our road to and from their residential home.
Perhaps he thought that a bunch of Christians would roll over meekly. If he thought that, he was wrong. We have rejected his allegations and our superintendent minister has supported our stance.
Well, Jesus didn’t roll over easily at the accusations thrown at him. He is challenged for his disciples’ failure to follow an oral tradition that was essential to the convictions of the Pharisees [ibid, p 247]. And as far as Jesus is concerned, they are hypocrites. You don’t roll over for hypocrites. If your obsession is with keeping up appearances by outwardly following tradition but don’t match that with a heart that is close to God [verse 6] then don’t expect Jesus to be quiet.
And the parallels are there in church life. How easy is it for us to major on minors and neglect what is of prime importance, namely our relationship with God (from which everything of worth flows)? Think about some of the contentious issues Christians sometimes argue about and you being to wonder whether Jesus might not have a few words for us. I think back with pain to my first appointment and remember some of the things that made me unpopular in certain circles:
I was told that only the minister was ever allowed to stand behind the communion rail (although this rule used to be miraculously suspended for the flower arrangers). There was a militant insistence that you didn’t kneel at the communion rail until everybody else was there – despite the fact that the church building was cramped and it took not so much communion stewards, more like traffic police to manage the flow of people returning to their pews and those going forward. You weren’t allowed to put nails in a wooden cross on Good Friday. You couldn’t pick hymns from anything other than Hymns And Psalms. And you certainly couldn’t suggest ripping out the pews and making a worship area more flexible.
None of these objections, in my opinion, had anything to do with Gospel imperatives. But they had everything to do with promoting style over substance. Never once did any of those who raised their loud protests against me want to know more about prayer or about sharing their faith.
It’s altogether too easy to put on an impressive outward show. We can fool not just those around us, but we tell the lies so often that we end up deceiving even ourselves. But we cannot fool God. One day sooner or later we discover that the Jesus whom we assume endorses our religious activities in fact our most fervent opponent.
So let us ask searching questions about our priorities. Are they about nurturing the heart towards God and sharing God’s heart for a broken world? Or are they about maintaining structures and putting on a good show? Only one of these approaches will give pleasure to God.
2. Counter-Charge
Jesus goes on the offensive: ‘You abandon the commandment of God and hold to human tradition,’ he says (verse 8). Not only that, ‘You have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God in order to keep your tradition!’ (verse 9). In the battle between human tradition and God’s commandments, God loses, says Jesus. And yet you claim you are his most faithful followers and representatives!
To prove his point, Jesus goes on to adduce a shocking case. The Ten Commandments say we should honour our parents. A particular expression of that is when they are elderly and infirm. Yet some in Jesus’ day diverted some money that would have helped their parents by dishonestly dedicating it to religious work.
So do we use our traditions to negate the commands of God, as Jesus charged the Pharisees? I know my father thought that, and once got in trouble with a superintendent minister for suggesting that Methodism placed more emphasis on ‘CPD’ [the Constitutional Practice and Discipline of the Methodist Church – our nearest equivalent to Anglican canon law]. Dad thought we had little moral superiority over the Pharisees whom Jesus condemned! Certainly at college we faced an exam in CPD but not in biblical or doctrinal matters. And Methodism can certainly get hung up on matters that are natural consequences of the Gospel at times. It was popular to say at college, ‘You can doubt the Virgin Birth, you can doubt the Resurrection, but God help you if you doubt infant baptism or feminism’.
But more seriously, do we invent traditions and practices in order to avoid the Gospel and commands of God? I don’t know that we’re always so blatantly devious as to invent a tradition like ‘Corban’ (verse 11), which sounds like a religious tax dodge. But I think we put other things in place so that we miss the imperative of the Gospel.
What do I mean? Well sometimes it’s about the expectations, atmosphere and culture of a congregation. The old criticism that churches can be little more than religious clubs is a serious allegation and it has a lot of truth behind it. We make for a lopsided church that is all about care for one another but has little active focus upon the world – except for the enthusiasts. I’ve heard it said that we shouldn’t concentrate on people outside the faith if it offends the faithful. Yet we have spent decades concentrating on the faithful and where has it got us?
We so fill our time with social activities that the ‘club’ epithet is altogether too well-deserved. We hide in perpetual business meetings. Or we duplicate within the church things that are done perfectly well outside but we prefer to go for the church version and stay in our little castle, behind the moat and with the drawbridge up. In all these ways and more we create a culture – our traditions – that helps us negate the commands of God.
All these reasons and more are why I called a year ago for a simpler structure for church. What we basically need in church life for the sake of the Gospel is fairly simple stuff. We gather on Sundays for worship and inspiration. We meet in small groups for worship, pastoral care, learning about the faith and mission. We hold such other meetings as are necessary for business and oversight. Beyond that there isn’t a lot we need. Most stuff beyond these bare necessities is extraneous and serves either deliberately or unwittingly to keep us away from the mission of God.
I believe Jesus calls us to a tough choice between the unhealthy traditional culture that strangles the spiritual life like a weed and a simpler, more radically prioritised vision of church that is set free to share in God’s mission and be faithful to the Gospel. Which way will we go?
3. True Defilement
Sometimes you can’t allow yourself just to be caught up in a perpetual argument. Not long ago I was being regularly attacked on the Internet by a militant atheist. For a while I answered his points, but eventually it became clear that an ongoing debate was going to be fruitless, because his attitude was arrogant and he had little desire to listen.
And it strikes me it’s a bit like that with Jesus in this story. He has his spat with the scribes and Pharisees, but after having answered their charge and countered with his own allegations, he turns away. In verse 14 he stops talking to them and starts addressing the crowd. Rather than being bogged down in a tedious argument, he uses the disagreement to make a teaching point to those who are listening and watching. In a way, he’s giving an answer to the scribes and Pharisees if only they would listen, too.
And his point is basic and stark: true spiritual defilement isn’t about failing to wash your hands in the same way that a priest would, nor is it about clean and unclean food. At best those are but outward signs of the inner state. And it’s the heart that matters. For there is the evidence of whether we follow the commandments of God.
‘It is what comes out of a person that defiles. For it is from within, from the human heart, that evil intentions come: fornication, theft, murder, adultery, avarice, wickedness, deceit, licentiousness, envy, slander, pride, folly. All these evil things come from within, and they defile a person.’
[verses 20-23]
Material purity isn’t the issue: moral purity is. It’s right through the Scriptures, yet it doesn’t seem to have been obvious to any of Jesus’ hearers – religious professionals, general crowd or his own disciples. You can keep all the religious rules you like and look good in the eyes of those who find such things impressive. But none of those rituals on their own will cleanse the pollution of the heart. And straightening out inner corruption is a much higher priority than how we wash our hands or what food we eat.
Or in our terms, you might say that living a winsome, holy life is the priority, rather than worrying about the rules of our denomination or putting on a good religious show that impresses only the shallow.
And it isn’t just about the big issues. Yes, we are to abstain from violence. We are to keep the marriage bed pure – Jesus’ prohibitions against both fornication and adultery mean he upholds a sexual ethic that maintains fidelity within the marriage covenant and celibacy outside.
But he also includes the everyday matters like ‘envy, slander, pride [and] folly’. And maybe these are the ones where our witness is most regularly compromised. In envy we look altogether too much like our consumerist world. In slander, we speak with sly digs, character assassinations and tawdry gossip that make us like small-scale versions of the gutter press. In pride and folly we forget our need of grace and that our boasting should only ever be of Christ.
The snag for me in the reading is that Jesus doesn’t propose an answer. That comes elsewhere in his teaching and in the writings of Paul, John and others. And it’s the usual basic Christian stuff about confession, repentance and co-operating with the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives.
But maybe Mark ends the story here deliberately to challenge us. The radical message of Jesus is that the ‘Keeping Up Appearances’ approach that makes us look like real-life Hyacinth Buckets is neither funny nor sad. It’s an outrage against the Gospel. He is challenging us to prioritise on the call to holiness and the mission of God.
Too much of our society today is all about surface and little about substance. What hope is there if we go down that road? Our world needs a radical, courageous and deep challenge from those of us who claim to be the disciples of Jesus to go below the surface and address the heart.
We need spiritual heart surgery, and so does our world.
Tom Stuckey: A Passion For Mission
On Thursday night I was in Chelmsford Cathedral for the inauguration of our new Methodist District. Much of the service was not culturally ‘me’ although it was typically Methodist, but one highlight was the sermon by Tom Stuckey, the Ex-President of the Conference, on Romans 1:8-17. He said that our Districts (and those who chair them) are to be about mission – I was glad to hear that, because much of this reorganisation that has been planned for a few years strikes me as more like rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic.
Tom said that it all starts with passion. Paul says in verse 16, ‘I am not ashamed of the Gospel’. He compared this with the passion Paul demonstrated after arrest in passages such as Acts 26.
But, he said, it’s not enough to have passion: terrorists have a passion. The passion must be driven by vision, and Paul’s vision was that the Gospel ‘is the power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith, to the Jew first and also to the Greek’ (verse 16 again). Paul wants to live on a bigger map, he said. His doctrine of justification by faith is a protest on behalf of the Gentiles against Jewish exclusivism (so Professor Jimmy Dunn).
But then comes the question of motivation: how do you keep going with this in what Tom called ‘a tired church’? Here he quoted verse 17 about ‘the righteousness of God’. Passion comes from compasion, and compassion comes from a righteous God who justifies by grace through faith (following Luther).
Somewhere within the sermon he quoted Rowan Williams’ definition of mission, that it is ‘seeing what God is doing in the world and joining in’.
It was a terrific sermon, but a lot hangs on personal interpretation. The Williams definition just quoted is very popular, but it needs teasing out. It could be very appealing to a Methodist theology, because it chimes with a doctrine of ‘prevenient grace’ (i’e., that God is always acting in grace before and ahead of people). Questions arise in terms of how we know what God is doing in the world. If we are not careful we just leap on the latest bandwagons, religious and/or secular. We then end up just as copycats, rather than being the innovative children of the Creator God. But if we do sense the prophetic words and deeds of God going ahead of us, then this is dynamic.
The other part that I would have preferred to have had fleshed out a little more was the section on vision, and justification being a protest against Jewish exclusivism. There is also something quite natural here for Methodist theology. We have our roots in Arminianism rather than Calvinism: ‘for all, for all my Saviour died’ – he did not die merely for the elect. We can resonate with a lot of the social and political concerns for ‘inclusion’ of various sorts. What we can lose sight of is that a Gospel with an inclusive offer ends up as one with an exclusive result. Everything hangs on what we make of the inclusive Gospel offer.
My greatest sadness of the evening happened after the sermon. There was – as I hope I’ve just indicated – a lot to ponder. Space was created for reflection. ‘Parsons’ Noyse‘, a classical trio consisting of three ministers, played some Beethoven. Perhaps people didn’t quite know how to treat this part of the service. The response was to treat it as a recital. The ‘performance’ (and I’m sure the members of Parsons’ Noyse didn’t see it this way) earned applause. And for me the volume of the applause drowned the Gospel challenge that Tom had brought.
Technorati Tags: Chelmsford+Cathedral, Methodist, Tom+Stuckey, mission, Jimmy+Dunn, Luther, Rowan+Williams, Arminianism, Calvinism, Parsons+Noyse, Beethoven
Online Prayer Labyrinth
Whenever an opportunity has been nearby to walk a prayer labyrinth, my diary has prevented me. Now it is possible online:
Link via the email list from Pray Without Ceasing.
Preaching In Postmodern Context
Chris Erdman on why we still need preaching in postmodern Christianity, albeit a slightly different rôle:
odyssey: What “Emergent Preaching” Might Learn from the Synagogue
I love the idea that the preacher teaches the community how to read the texts – this seems to be the training rôle envisaged for Christian leaders in Ephesians 4.
As a by-product, the model espoused here has something for churches that don’t see their minister every week. (Ring any bells, brother and sister Methodists?)
Technorati Tags: preaching, postmodern, church, Methodist