Thoughts



Personalise it?

I’ve been increasingly aware of the lack of article activity on this site lately, and I must offer an apology, since there has been plenty going on in the parish.

I’m also wrestling with what form the regular updates might take, because the sites I visit and read regularly are generally made up of one person posting stuff, and I don’t want this parish website to be all about my perception of what’s going on… I’ll continue to wrestle.

In the mean time, note a couple of changes to your regularly scheduled programme:

Children’s Church is moving from 11.00am to 4.30pm!
Yes it’s still on the third Sunday of the month, but now it’s in the afternoon. Most parents I’ve talked with are already saying this is a good idea, so we’ll see how it suits people in practice. Next month’s gathering is on the 19th August.

Contemplative worship has found a time slot at 4.00pm on the 4th Sunday.
4th at 4 is the key to remembering that one. Last month we walked the labyrinth, and I’m thinking that we’ll do that next month as well (weather permitting). That would be on the 26th August.
Then we might look at having an indoor service using song and chant and candles etc on the 23rd September.

Refugees in faith

Thanks to Cheryl Lawrie for spotting this good article in The Age today.

Find it here: Looking for Jesus: refugees in faith

I wonder if there are any groups like that in Bacchus Marsh? … or if there are any people who would like to be a part of an ‘alternative’ discipleship group like this in Bacchus Marsh? (I’m game if you are.)

We all want to be happy

I stumbled across this neat little quote as I was preparing for Easter weekend. I like it.

The world says you will be happy when you get other people to treat you the way you want to be treated, but Jesus says you will be fulfilled when you learn to love others the way he loves you. The world’s recipe turns you into a slave, in bondage to how other people treat you. God’s recipe makes you free, because you can always draw upon his love and choose to serve others.

by Gary DeLashmutt

Easter Symbols

I wrote this article for our local newspapers, but I don’t think it’s going to be published until after Easter. So here it is - a web-preview for the internet-savvy:
…….

from the roundabout Easter billboard 01

I helped put up two billboards out the front of our church last Friday. One has a picture of a chocolate egg, with the question over the top, “Is this what Easter is really all about?” They were trashed on Saturday night.

At first I rolled my eyes and thought that this was just some random hooliganism, but the vandals had methodically sheared off forty or fifty pop-rivets before they were finally able to bash the sheet metal off the frame of the sign. I hadn’t realised chocolate was so important to some people.

So on Sunday morning, as people arrived for worship, they were struck by the image of two broken billboards hanging from their frames by a few lonely rivets. Such violence done. Who would do such a thing to a simple message? Luckily, the vandals hadn’t finished what they started — perhaps they were interrupted. A couple of our fellas were able to take the signs down and be creative. A bit of panel-beating experience brought our signs back to order, if not perfection. They were raised again that afternoon.

Part of me had wanted to leave them as they’d been found — trashed and pitiful — and write a note of protest to accompany them. I wanted to make some sort of symbolic Easter connection between the destruction visited on these signs, and the destruction visited on Jesus — and many other prisoners of conscience down through the ages — by the powers of violence and domination.

But it would have been a hollow symbol. After all, metal can be repaired, paint can be touched up. It’s fully within human power to bring this message back ‘good as new’. But a living body? Flesh and bone and beating heart?

Perhaps a generation raised on video-games and action films can believe it’s easy to spring back to life after your enemy knocks you off. I’ve worked in cancer wards. There’s no getting around it — death is final.

No, if what the church has claimed down through the ages is true, Jesus didn’t just swoon, or pretend to die and get up again in order to be home for dinner. He was killed by an efficient political regime that knew how to make ‘examples’ of troublemakers.

Likewise, if what the church claims is true, through Jesus’ death God entered into the fullness of our human experience — mortality. Not only was God born among us, God died; something that gods just aren’t meant to do.

The Easter message of hope, if what the church continues to claim is true, is that death has been overcome. Somehow Jesus was raised by God to new life, not the same mortal life as before; a new eternal life. It’s almost too much to hope for — a troubling claim — particularly when it’s then extended to all of us. How can we accept this hope in the face of all the death in the world? Is it enough? Does it cover all the death we experience?

The easy church answer is yes, it does. Sometimes I wonder. In the world we live in, I desperately want to know that death has been overcome. That violence and domination are not the final answer. That they threw everything they had at Jesus, and in the end God brought life out of this death. That’s what I desperately hope for.

It’s a hope beyond reason in some ways. A trust in the quietly powerful goodness of God. A challenge to me each day to live with the expectation of seeing life emerge from death because that is God’s nature — life-bringing.

As Desmond Tutu once put it, “We give thanks to God that goodness is stronger than evil, love is stronger than hate, light is stronger than darkness and life is stronger than death — that victory is ours through Jesus Christ.”

A couple of bent metal signs will never properly symbolise that.

Token Nationalism?

I just watched a report on the ABC’s 7.30 Report about the increasing numbers of young people at The Big Day Out wearing Australian flags and other icons of nationalism. Apparently there’s also an increase of Aussie tattoos being requested, and we’ve seen the growth of Gallipoli attenders.

I’m intrigued as to the cause. Is this something that is observable across a range of ‘brands’. Are we seeing the increase in nationalism as one of many other things that provide identity for people? Are we uniquely a generation that wants to brand itself? How does belonging factor into it? I feel sure there must be studies that have probed these sorts of questions, I just haven’t read them yet.

Is it about pride? Not in the negative sense, but in having something to be proud of, to admire and look up to? In losing our traditional mythic resources from the social fabric - through knowing every back-story, and seeing every flaw in our heroes, traditional or otherwise - have we also lost something to be proud of?

Is it about belonging? Of needing something to identify with so that we don’t feel alone, or outcast? Although I am deeply aware that the attractiveness of belonging these days doesn’t outweigh people’s fear of responsibility or accountability. We want to belong as long as there are no strings attached.

Also, as someone who reckons there is actually a best cause to pledge one’s allegiance to, I wonder whether there’s a more useful focus to offer people than nationalism. Jesus and other prophets have for a long time continued to call for a radical break from nationalistic idolatry, even clan idolatry in the worship of family.

What can the church, as caretakers of the story of God, offer in this time when the church itself is so radically unpopular (in the West)? My intuition calls me to proclaim things like love and peace before proclaiming church, or even Jesus. Not without proclaiming church or Jesus, but as a first step - the first rallying cry, after which discussion about the source of love, and the source of peace can occur, and people can be invited deeper.

Still thinking…