Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Slow Bible - Part 1 of 3


You might have heard of Slow Food or The Slow Food Movement. It advocates for regional produce, organically grown food, food prepared with care and nutritious food. It’s a contrast to fast food like takeaways and microwave meals; meals which are obviously not always the healthiest option. In a culture often obsessed with fast (food),ultra-fast (broadband), and even instant (noodles); slow goes against the grain. We even seem to be obsessed with speed when it comes to reading the Bible. Bible-in-a-year plans encourage us that in just 3.2 chapters a day we can read our way through the whole Bible in 365 days.
 
 
That’s a pretty quick when you consider you’re attempting to read, contextualize, comprehend, and apply to 21st Century life an historic document that is 2000 + years old and originally written in Hebrew and Greek. Notwithstanding if you get a couple of days or weeks behind you’re going to be reading like crazy to catch up!

 
I’d encourage you to embrace ‘slow’ Bible reading, especially when we remember that the goal is ‘Bible living’ not simply ‘Bible reading’. The Bible contains the big story of God at work in our world. In this big story it is possible to make sense of humanity’s story, of this mysterious and beautiful world we live in, and of our own individual stories and experiences. The Bible, as God’s Word invites, inspires and challenges us to re-orientate the whole way we live. It frees us from our own small worlds and the ruts we get ourselves into. It invites us to be lost and found in God’s great love story. Viewed like this, reading the Bible is an enticing proposition and potentially life changing experience.

 
It’s not always an easy book however. Filled with genealogies, enigmatic poetry, quirky stories and letters written to particular people in a particular time and context far removed from our own 21st Century postmodern world; it’s a grand-narrative to be worked through slowly rather than in a great rush. A qualitative reading of comprehension and application will be a hands down healthier approach than a quantitative reading of a quickly consumed daily word count.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Where is Your Church?

As a Pastor I’m often asked where the church I pastor is. Where is St Luke’s? In many ways it is a logical question, but at the same time, a question that misses the point in regards to what the church is. We’ve become culturally conditioned to equate a church with a building. St Luke’s doesn’t have a building or a facility. A church isn’t simply a building. Where is St Luke’s then?

A church is a community of people who’ve responded to God’s call to live the Way of Jesus with faith and trust in him. So on a Sunday you’ll find our church gathered at the Mount Sports Clubrooms (you’re welcome anytime). The rest of the week however you’ll find our church scattered here and there throughout the Tauranga community. Young and old, students, stay home mums or dads, doctors, sparkies, dentists, teachers, builders, volunteers, those looking for work, those retired from work. You’ll find us here, there, and everywhere. A Church is therefore not a building, but rather a community that gathers and scatters to live out the call to follow Jesus.
 
 
We gather to celebrate the work of God in our lives and world. We gather around God’s Word, around the Lord’s Table and in his presence. We don’t gather simply to watch or to consume a ‘service,’ rather we gather to participate in community. We gather to stand alongside each other, to love one another, to pray for one another, to encounter God in one another, to encourage one another, and to greet and welcome the stranger and the sojourner. We call this ‘churching’ and we gather to ‘church’ each other; it’s a verb!

We’re not always gathered though. We scatter. We scatter embracing the challenge of living as those that bear witness to the life changing reality of God in the nooks and crannies of everyday life. We attempt to live as representatives of love and grace in our work places, where we study, in sports teams, to the stranger and in our various friendship circles; everywhere and anywhere life takes us. We are called to be the church Monday through Saturday, to at times shine boldly as a light and to at times flavour subversively as salt the world around us, with creative and authentic proclamation of the Good News of Jesus. 

You’re welcome to join us when we gather this Sunday. We’re a community not a building.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

13 for 2013


My previous post covered my goals for 2013, mainly a quest to eliminate certain things for a month rather than to add more into my life. Someone described it as a year long Lent. It is a bit like that I guess. I see this as a good thing. 
 
I do also want to make sure I do a few random things throughout the journey of 2013 as well though.
 
 
Here they are...  

1. sleep under the stars (pretty sure this one won't look like the picture)
2. take Annamari for dinner at a restaurant
3. distill my own vodka (harder and easier than you might think)
4. go to a concert (missed Weezer unfortunately)
5. read The History of NZ
6. run a half marathon (my own one prob)
7. preach a series on the book of Revelation
8. take Lisa on a surprise date
9. take Romeo to an All Blacks Test   
10. finish the hull on the Endeavor
11. jump off a bridge (can't remember when last did)
12. bake someone a cake (a gateau)
13. ???
 
I need help with one more?

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

2013 Goals

Goals in my experience tend to be about adding, fitting, squeezing and cramming more into your life than before. This year I’ve decided to make my goals more about taking things out; removing rather than adding. I don’t think I could fit much more in anyway. They are not all “no” goals but most are. I still need help with two more months if you have any ideas.


Jumping on board with an idea a Facebook friend made me aware of, basically setting goals one month at a time or rather for a month, I’ve 12 goals for 2013. You can read the article Rethinking Resolutions here.

January – Knock 1/3 of grocery bill for the month.  Attempt to make grocery bill 2/3 of normal bill by eating more simply, more cheaply and also by consuming some of the food items that have sat in the freezer or pantry for an extended period of time.  

February – No sugar for a month.  No lollies, sweet treats, alcohol, fizzy, ice cream etc.

March – No social media for a month. No Facebook, no twitter, no blogs. Consuming or producing.

April – No caffeine for a month. No coffee or caffeinated drinks.

May –

June – No consuming for a month. Other than AP’s, utility bills etc. No spending for a month. Only places money will be spend will be supermarket and petrol station.

July – No meat for a month. One month as a vegetarian. Bring on black beans!

August – Read The History of New Zealand by Michael King. I’ve wanted to do this for ages and with my reading largely dictated by studies, this August I’m saying “No, I will not be dictated do!”

September –

October – No staying up late for a month. Go to bed early, lights out, by 9:25pm each night.

November – No television for a month. No watching sport, movies, docos, the news etc.

December – No brand new Christmas gifts. Up-cycle/re-cycle/homemake all Christmas gifts and accessories. This includes cards, wrapping paper, etc.

Caveats: If needs be will swap months around. Also I will compromise on a goal for pastoral or missional reasons if it would be prudish to not make an allowance. This is not to create an easy out but rather the goals are to serve me and be help me but I am not a slave to them.  
You're welcome to join me on any of these.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Why we are all at least “implicitly” guilty in regards to the death of Jacintha Saldanha.


In my opinion we are implicitly guilty in regards to the death of Jacintha Saldanha because we are the ones who collectively created the culture, context, environment, atmosphere, conditions (whatever you want to call it) that fostered the event of the prank call, the magnitude of the reaction and the severity of the humiliation (be that real or only perceived).

(For those unaware, Jacintha was one of the nurses involved in caring for Katherine Middleton during a recent hospital stay. She was also the victim of a prank phone call and responsible for forwarding the pranksters call through to nurses caring for Kate on the ward).
 
You and I are not explicitly responsible for the recent and tragic death of Jacintha Saldanha. Obviously embarrassed for falling for the pranksters trick call, perhaps fearful of losing her job, likely distort and humiliated that her error had gone viral, that she was the brunt of a globally televised joke; Jacintha tragically chose to end her life. Neither you nor I are responsible for this. It was Jacintha’s choice. We don’t know what else was happening in her life, this may have been “the straw that broke the camel’s back”, it was still Jacintha’s choice. Truth be told however, when news broke in regards to the death of Jacintha, it wasn’t too hard to appreciate that the story unfolded as it tragically did.

Implicitly though, we (I think) are all somewhat guilty in regards to the death of Jacintha. Nothing ever happens devoid of a context, an environment, a culture. Why was a prank call made? Why did radio dj’s in Australia call a hospital in England? Why did a nurse expecting to spend a shift aiding the ill, suddenly find herself the brunt of laughter and mocking all around the world (or at least feeling like she was)? I think because we’ve created the kind of conditions that lead to this being, in the words of the Matrix’s Agent Smith, an "inevitability."
1: We buy into and perpetuate a cult of celebrity to one degree or another.

Whether you have any interest in Will and Kate as celebrities or not we’ve still managed to create a cult of celebrity. We have television programs, tabloids and blogs etc dedicated to tracking the lives of celebrities – and they come in every shape and form. We have the rich, the famous, the important, the trendy, the haves. We’ve those with “status” and those without. God’s intention in Christ Jesus however is the undoing of status, that there would be neither Jew nor Gentile, slave nor free, male nor female but rather an appreciation of the dignity, value and worth of all humanity, and that all would be found as one in Christ. Truth be told however, we even have celebrities in the church scene.
2: We buy into and perpetuate entertainment at the expense of others, even the humiliation of others.

We laugh at prank calls, designed to deceive, wind up, make fun of and even manipulate the emotions of others for our entertainment. Things like in this case, radio stations prank calls, Wind Your Wife Up, Punked and so on. At times it seems harmless enough, but we all know what it’s like to be humiliated, it’s unbelievably shameful. So often mocking results at the expense of someone’s innocence, someone is entirely unaware of what is going on and they are exploited. We too easily sit in the seat of mockers knowing all too well how much we despise being mocked and made fun of.
3: We’re quick to pass on the misfortune of others and/or we’re quick to read, take note of, dwell on, and essentially consume the misfortune of others.

Rather than focusing on that which is true, noble, just, pure, lovely or worth of a good report; the virtuous and the praise worthy, we’re consumed with passing on or hearing about the misfortune of others. More often it is the negative report that is dwelt on rather than the positive. More often the headlines are attacking rather than building and encouraging. Media perpetuates this and social media perpetuates this.

Sin is to miss the mark, to fall short of representing God as the image bearers we were created to be. It manifests itself in the choices we make as individuals for sure but it is also systemic. Collectively we create cultures, systems and environments contrary to the ways of God. We live within these systems attempting to resist their pull, living “in the world” but hopefully “not of the world.” At times we are all victims within these systems. At other times we are perpetrators of these systems; we contribute to them being what they are. I would say we’ve all contributed to a “sinful system” in which as I stated the events of the last few days unfolded with a sense of inevitability.

The cult of celebrity we’ve created meant a lady sick in pregnancy couldn’t be left in privacy, even in hospital. A prank was made, because it entertains us, we consume it. It was at the expense of another’s innocence and their humiliation. We laughed. We showed others. We passed it around the world. It was deemed worthy to make headline news all over the world. Because of a cult of celebrity, because of our desire to laugh and pass things on, an innocent and incredibly localised mistake (that could be dealt with locally) became a globalized mistake. I’d imagine it’s pretty hard to have the world laughing at you.    

Now the degree to which you might feel like you have or haven’t contributed to this kind of culture is something you’d have to work out for yourself. I think we’re all guilty to one degree or another, but truthfully it’s not my place to judge and maybe my claims are too all encompassing. You’ll have to work it out for yourself.

Ever watched Punked? Ever listened to Wind Your Wife Up on the Rock (or whatever it is)? Ever listened to Guido Hatzis? Ever laughed at someone’s misfortune? Passed it on? Ever tuned into E Television? Ever got your photo taken with someone “famous” or their signature and proudly displayed it to the world? Ever wished you were famous and not “ordinary”?

Grace and peace to your family Jacintha Saldanha, your friends and loved ones and all you leave behind this Christmas season.

Caveat: The following is written notwithstanding all sorts of details in regards to the death of Jacintha that are unknown. The photo is from Google images and to the best of my knowledge is Jacintha.