29 May 2007

Mackenzie Thorpe

Falling in Love
a sculpture in bronze by Mackenzie Thorpe
Photo by Mart the Rev

There's a fantastic exhibition of four of Mackenzie Thorpe's bronze sculptures at the Christchurch Arts Centre for a couple of months. I'm aiming to build next Sunday's service around the themes they offer as well as preach on the one pictured at the induction of a colleague this Thursday. The exhibits with their bronze curves look fantastic against the neo-Gothic Arts Centre buildings. The exhibition has coincided with the opening of a stunning permanent display of sculptures representing the experience of people suffering from dyslexia just over the road from the Centre. Falling in Love is part of the permanent display. I will post my reflections on the Thorpe sculptures on the St Stephen's website after Sunday.

25 May 2007

Thoughtful words from Jim Wallis

Jim Wallis, the inspirational leader of The Sojourners Community, delivered the following inspiring words at Georgetown University on Sunday, May 20 under the title What's Acceptable? What's Possible?
"... what are you going to no longer accept in our world, what will you refuse to tolerate now that you will be making the decisions that matter?
Will it be acceptable to you that 3 billion people in our world today - half of God's children - live on less that $2 per day, that more than 1 billion live on less than $1 per day, that the gap between the life expectancy in the rich places and the poor places in the world is now 40 years, and that 30,000 children globally will die today ... from needless, senseless, and utterly preventable poverty and disease? It's what Bono calls "stupid poverty."
"...What we see now offends us, offends our understanding of the sanctity and dignity of life, offends our notions of fairness and justice, offends our most basic values; it violates our idea of the common good, and starts to tug at our deepest places. We cross the line of unacceptability. We become intolerant of the injustice.
But just changing our notion of what is unacceptable isn't enough, however. We must also change our perception of what is possible.
In that regard, I would encourage each of you to think about your vocation more than just your career. And there is a difference. From the outside, those two tracks may look very much alike, but asking the vocational question rather than just considering the career options will take you much deeper. The key is to ask why you might take one path instead of another - the real reasons you would do something, more than just because you can. The key is to ask who you really are and what you want to become. It is to ask what you believe you are supposed to do...
"Ask where your gifts intersect with the groaning needs of the world - there is your vocation."

You can track the whole speech by clicking the Sojourners link over on the left of this blogpage.

24 May 2007

Birthday!




Anne did well today... I received a good sized print of Michael Smither's stunning Rocks with Mountain to put up on the wall in my study/office. It is mounted on a thick black block - it will be near my Colin McCahon print In truth - but alas, they have to be copies!


I'm also looking forward to reading a new U2 book... U2 Show by Diana Scrimgeour which includes interviews with behind the scenes crew and organisers who have helped the band on tour over many years. Yay!

18 May 2007

CD compilation on my birthday

Here's my cd of songs I've enjoyed through the last year... the list is in order of making it a good mix more than actual preferences although #1 and #2 are tops with me.
Explanation for some of the choices included...
city of blinding lights - U2 opening track at the U2 concert we went to in Melbourne... alluding to the new jerusalem???
isn't it amazing - hothouse flowers used it at a memorable church service & went to concert last year and they sung it!
lungs - cowboy junkies part of an extra group of covers on the one soul now album '04
my black heart - the ghost who walks this is neil mccormick, rock critic and author of the brilliant I was Bono's Doppelganger & U2 by U2 - I imported this from the UK and love it. He also released a song after the London bombings - you can see it on http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DECobDuX_YQ Neil is in the middle of the clip holding his child.
wired - mephymology this Dunedin NZ band are finding their way - a great bunch who stayed on their way north to tour in the summer. Check them out at http://www.mephymology.co.nz/ They have some tracks on their my space site from a great concert last year.
window in the skies - U2 used this at church after Easter... great lines esp in opening verse
accustomed to the light - dave dobbyn Dave is one of NZ's heros he played this one evening in ChCh this summer with band & orchestra - profound! As was his version of Cohen's Hallelujah.
map of the problematique - muse me and my boys love these guys, i love this following dave's song
magic bracelets - hothouse flowers from the latest flowers album - full of optimism.
fade into you - mazzy star a song on my brother's compilation that struck a chord, one of my daughter's favourites as well
not ready to make nice - dixie chicks the most 'pop' of the songs on this list... i like the anger but hope they find a way to move on from their stand re George Bush and the stuff that came at them because of it!
nothing wrong with me - the audreys also on the compilation... they won the best blues & roots album in Australia 2006 check them at http://www.theaudreys.com.au/
thunder road - cowboy junkies springsteen's song in junkies style also from the one soul now extra cd
red right hand - nick cave & the bad seeds a close competition with their song do you love me?
angel - massive attack enjoyed this played on The West Wing end of series 4
forever young - bob dylan i honestly hadn't really heard this song until this year!

On the Move - Bono


I've just ordered a copy of Bono's little book On the Move - his speech to a White House Prayer Breakfast and photos he took when he and Ali first went to Ethiopia in 1986. I have a copy of the speech and it is great - and I probably don't need the book (just as I don't really need every CD by U2, a dozen U2 books, pretty much every CD single since 1993 and a pile of rock magazines with articles on U2) but if having it in any way supports his mountain-moving work in Africa, then I'm in!

16 May 2007

Favourite Albums












































It is a year or so since I started this blog - I began and then stopped for months... shifted cities etc etc.

Two years ago on my birthday I burned a compilation CD of songs I enjoyed the most through the year. The songs didn't need to be new - just enjoyed. I'm about to do that this year and I'll include the list here when it is done.

In the meantime I got thinking about what were my favourite albums. This is more complicated because for me the criteria of what makes a great album means assessing the collection of songs as a whole rather than saying it is great because of a few songs. Thus for me, U2's Joshua Tree has some of their best songs but the B-side (One Tree Hill aside) just hasn't got under my skin. Anne and I have similar enough tastes in music and the question of what are our favourite albums has been a topic I have raised as we have walked in the mornings (not always appreciated when we have just woken up!).

Here's the list so far in order of my preferences...
#1 Achtung Baby - U2 1991
#2 Songs From The Rain - Hothouse Flowers 1993
#3 The Trinity Sessions - Cowboy Junkies 1988
#4 Abbey Road - The Beatles 1969
#5 Brothers In Arms - Dire Straits 1985
#6 All That You Can't Leave Behind - U2 2000
#7 Into Your Heart - Hothouse Flowers 2004
#8 Dark Side Of The Moon - Pink Floyd 1973
#9Coming From Reality - Rodriguez 1971
#10 Together Alone - Crowded House 1993
#11 The Rising - Bruce Springsteen 2002
#12 Wish You Were Here - Pink Floyd 1975
#13 The Globe Sessions - Sheryl Crow 1998

Anne would want to add Time After Time - Eva Cassidy 2000, I'm not so sure it ranks with the above ones.
Closing in though is the 2006 debut album of the Australian group The Audreys - Between Last Night & Us.
I want to add a compilation my brother put together featuring The Audreys, Nick Cave, Mazzy Star, Cowboy Junkies & Chris Isaak... it is quite fantastic but it doesn't fit the criteria.
What albums would you rate as your favourites?

11 May 2007

Edmund Anscombe at Otago University







Photos by Mart the Rev

As mentioned earlier in a blog, my great grandmother's brother was an architect. One of this masterpieces was the archway at the University of Otago where I earned degrees in Arts & Theology in the 1980's.

New Thing in the Presbyterian Church

Sally Carter a colleague, alerted me to the relevance of a quote another colleague used in a presentation to Christchurch Presbytery this last week… it comes from Albert Einstein and seems pertinent to what New Thing (an emerging group in the PCANZ) is trying to be about.

“The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them’ - Einstein

I think that our church especially how it goes about its life together in these days of diversity needs a new way of thinking – a stepping back. I think that this is what New Thing is attempting to explore… but it isn’t easy. Already some of the ways we address one another’s point of view in our discussion forums reflects the old skins we have grown up in.
How do we enable new ways of being the church in these diverse times that don’t diminish people and their way of seeing things, yet still hold to the integrity of the Christian faith?

I find it stupid that a modest majority from a gathering of 300 or so people can or should be determining what happens in the church where I minister in terms of who they can call into any form of leadership etc (The PCANZ General Assembly made a ruling in 2006). I’m with Albert in that I believe we aren’t going to sort this stupidity out by using the same systems that created the initial stupidity – what a deep hole we will end up with then!

10 May 2007

Bono's Birthday




I know that the date above says I posted this yesterday - but in NZ we get the new day first and I write this at 1-45pm on 10 May. My friend Beck txts me every year on this day to wish a happy Bono's birthday.


He's got a year on me - he arrived on 10 May 1960. Anne's reading Michka Assayas' book Bono on Bono - conversations with Bono. It is full of so many good stories. One story we like is about his friend Guggi. Guggi grew up thinking that any presents he got for his birthday should be shared so he would turn up at Bono's house with half the present. Bono doesn't remember his own birthdays but well remember's Guggi's ones because Guggi taught him how to share.
What a good approach to life - anything we are given we share - the world could be changed with that kind of attitude!

Happy birthday Bono!

Most of the time it is person to person

Here's some of what I'm working up for Sunday...
We have been focusing the last few weeks on the changes in the early church where they discovered that the Spirit was calling them across some of the divides in their culture. Peter finds himself meeting a disciple of Jesus who is female, he accepts an invitation to stay at the home of Simon the Tanner (who touches the carcasses of dead animals and is therefore unclean) and then in a dream he is challenged to cross the greater divide – to go to the home of a Gentile – a Roman Officer, and there discover that God has been at work – and it is OK. All through these accounts is the common thread that the followers of Jesus were being called out – called out to go to where God was working. I have been arguing that these stories are important for our time in that it is no longer enough to expect people to have to come to us and fit in with us – we too are being called to be the ones who go to where others are – to cross the lines and cut across the boarders and boundaries that we have so often constructed and hidden behind.
There are all kinds of ways we might then follow these provocative texts up… the temptation is to come up with a list of what we can do now… 10 steps to a more effective church5 things that you can do to make a difference tomorrow… I can see the book titles already… I might even get asked to go on a lecture circuit!
But this is not a programme. Church is not a programme. Relating to people is not a formula and it is manipulative of people (and thus diminishing of them) if we just employ a tactic to get them in. Where is God leading us? I think the answer isn’t too difficult… love your neighbours. Be the person in your street who takes an interest in people. Be the one who invites people in for a cuppa. Be the one through whom others see that to be a Christian is ok, that to worship God is a good thing… be hospitable as God is hospitable… One thing I have come to learn is that the Christian faith has almost always been a thing passed on from person to person. Occasionally a big event happens – Pentecost Day, a Billy Graham rally – but most of the time, it is person to person. We don’t need fancy books and super-duper programmes… we just have to cross a few of the lines in our neighbourhoods. A bit of hospitality here and a bit of generosity there… not far behind there will be people’s deep questions and their innate thirst for God awakened… not far behind the loosening up of the defences is the fertile ground for God’s Spirit to speak and be heard.

The Stewarts of Warepa


Here's my great-grandmother on the Stewart side - Eliza who gave up a fairly straight-forward life in Dunedin as a painter to be farmer's wife and mother of seven. I think I can name them all... Gilbert & Eliza, Winifred, Grace, Alice, Nora, (I'll have to come back on this!) & Lloyd my grandfather. Lloyd was born in 1908 - he looks about 8 years old here - thus the picture was taken around 1916.

Alice McIntosh was the one I knew the best. She lived in Balclutha and was the last survivor in the family. Alice also painted (as did Nora) and I have two of them. Alice was a character who drove everywhere picking up hitchhikers and visiting the extended family. I attended her 90th birthday some years back.

09 May 2007

Those who have been



This week the church youth group had a as our guests a couple who are into genealogy in a big way. The question 'who am I?' is addressed in part by how we have been shaped by those who have been before us.

It kind of reignited my interest in my forebears. So far I have got the birth, death and marriage dates of the two generations prior to me (not that hard really) and I'm slowly working backwards. I don't know many of the names of my great grandmothers & g-fathers, but have some idea on a few of them. One of them has a little bit of notoriety - Eliza Stewart (nee Anscombe) was a reasonably talented painter. Half a dozen of her works are stored in the Hocken Library in Dunedin and she is listed in a publication and on the web. Her brother Edmund was the famous one - he was a significant New Zealand architect, designing many buildings (including churches) in Dunedin and Wellington as well as being the designer of the 1940 NZ Centennial Exhibition in Wellington and the 1925 NZ & South Seas Exhibition in Dunedin.
One of the delights of looking back was finding out (after she was named) that my daughter Hannah had a great-great grandmother with the same name. Hannah Dawson died in 1946, I'm off to find out where and when she was born and what her maiden name was.

04 May 2007

Clare Short quote from Sojourners


I subscribe to the free weekly email from the Sojourners Community in Washington DC - this week's quote is from Clare Short, a British MP who resigned as Secretary of State for International Development over the U.K.'s involvement in the Iraq War... here it is:

"You can’t take the evil of slavery out of the world and abolish it without making the world more just. You will never prevent people living in bonded labor or from getting caught up in sex trafficking while they are so desperate that they have no other choice but to sell themselves. As long as we in the West crave ever more excess, we conspire in their desperation, exploiting it and make ourselves sick in the process."


03 May 2007

Sunday looming




I've found my entry point for Sunday's sermon. Usually I only need the start and the rest unfolds... sometimes it is a thought, sometimes and image, sometimes a quote...


“…transcendence cannot be forced upon us. It doesn’t yell, doesn’t announce its presence with a bullhorn, doesn’t advertise itself on roadside billboards. There is nothing bullying about transcendence.
What it requires is noticing. Witnesses to transcendence don’t create transcendence. The transcendence is already here, or there. But in our hurry to get someplace else, we miss it. There is always more than meets the human eye. We miss a lot. We need friends who will grab us by the shirttails, turn us around, and show us what we just now missed in our hurry to get across the street on the way to the bank. We need friends who will tap us on the shoulder, interrupting our non-stop commentary on the talk of the town, so that we can hear the truth. We need witnesses to transcendence. Writers. Angels. [and Preachers!] We stop, we look, we listen.”
Eugene Peterson in Subversive Spirituality Eerdmans 1997 p42

I added the 'and preachers' but in the sermon I might also add 'and Christians' - a bit of salt and light.

The text is Acts 10 - the Spirit calling the early church through Peter to cross the lines and see the bigger picture, the ministry of God to all people, even Gentiles! One of the ways we might cross the lines in our community could be through pointing to the transcendence at work in the everyday of people's lives. How might we be more attentive to the transcendence?

Aerial view of Golden Bay (I didn't take it!)


01 May 2007

Golden Bay images

I mentioned in another blog that I'd been to Golden Bay at the top of the South Island... here are two of my photos... Golden Bay Triptych & Golden Bay Sunset








Grace & Law


I found this on the naked pastor blog site... he does a few cartoons and this one is ironically true... churches seem to do better when they emphasise rules more than grace.

Maybe it is because the majority of people inclined to an institutional way of expressing their faith are like the idea of certitudes and rules... I'm a grace man myself... I'm inclined to think that God can work stuff out with people without my having to be too hard about defining the parameters or placing limits or making judgements.

I think God is in the door opening business while much of the church's expression seems to be about building walls and securing the doors and windows.

Frederick Buechner makes a good call on grace in his book Wishful Thinking... he defines grace in terms of God's generous unconditional love meaning for us that 'there's nothing you have to do, there's nothing you have to do, there's nothing you have to do.'

So often after I have preached God's unconditional love and grace someone comes up to me and says, yes, but... Why don't we just stop at yes and see what happens? I think that if people get the dimensions of God's 'yes' they will soon want to think about what kind of response they can make... I think God has a way of drawing that out of us without others having to take over as managers!

Ricky Gervais on bbc red nose day

I spotted this on a U2 news site... it pokes a bit of fun at some of the ways celebrities push causes... while still hinting at the worthiness of the causes...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-ia__1d_rM