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So with the outline in my previous post, I’m starting the series on Ancient Worship, Anglican Future and the intersections with Emerging Church today.
These days there seems to be a deep suspicion of all organisations, and in particular any structure, hierarchy and a basic resistance to anything that is an ‘institution’. And I for one, am convinced that institutions are the enemy of good practice (if I may paraphrase Alasdair MacIntyre badly).
By this, I mean that any institution that people form in order to deliver good practice will always wrestle with it becoming so bureaucratic and concerned for itself that it undermines the very thing it seeks to deliver in the first place.
We see this today with hospitals. Places dedicated to providing medical care to human beings can become so caught up in politics and management conflicts that the medical care they are supposed to provide becomes undermined and, in many cases, people suffer. We see the same with the church. The organisation of the church to facilitate the incarnation of the gospel quickly becomes an obstacle to the very nature and purpose of the church in the first place, and people are harmed more than helped.
Often, in reaction, we think that, in having no programmes, no hierarchy, the removal of the institution will solve the problem. After all, if the institution is getting in the way of the purpose, get rid of the institution. This response is increasingly ingrained in us, such that even using the word ‘institution’ is anathema to those seeking new ways of doing and being church. But I think how ever well intentioned, this approach is naive and inadequate to the task of being Church.
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Friday morning next week I’m flying to Belfast, to speak at Summer Madness. It’s a pretty large event with about 5,000 in attendance, and my first visit.
I’ve been asked by John Kee and his team to do a seminar each day for three days, and one main stage talk. In terms of titles/themes I’ve been asked to speak on, they’ve been advertised as:
Seminar 1
GOD AT WORK
Career and job choice are not just questions facing school leavers. Most people change career and job many times. How do I choose? Is God interested? Jason shares his thoughts and experiences – from a background in City of London trading/investment broking – to pastoring a Church.Seminar 2
I SHOP THEREFORE I AM
How does the church – all of us – face up to the challenge of living life in a world where ‘purchase power’ is everything and the culture of defining who we are by what we own, and wear, and drive…and know – is all pervasive.Seminar 3
GOD ON FACEBOOK
if Jesus came back today, how would the Internet influence his ministry? What would he think of the idea of ‘Facebook’ friends who connect in cyberspace without ever meeting face-to-face? What are the new ‘online realities’, what is happening online and how can it extend or undermine our formation.MAINSTAGE TALK – SATURDAY PM
“Finding Myself: In the last place I might look”Now I just need to get on and prepare them!
Brian McLaren will be there, I’m looking forward to catching up with him, and my oldest friend and best friend, Andy Hickford who introduced me to Jesus just over 23 years ago.
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So I am beginning my series here on the Ancient Worship Anglican Futures conference, as promised.
In this series, I’ll be including:
1. Presentation: A summary of my presentation that opened the conference, within which I gave some of the issues that I think some of the emerging church has to face, where might be stuck/struggling and why. Also presenting these areas with regards to how the great tradition of the church might resource those issues. In other words given my location and limited experience planting a church and being involved in emerging church, what are some of the biggest challenges within that, that the conference focus be able to might resource.
2. Resources/Responses: Then having done that, I’ll be posting my thoughts from the conference, the speakers and input they gave, in terms of how some of what they brought to us at the event, might relate to those issues, and help, connect.
3. Book Chapter: This will also be an outline of the chapter I am writing for the book that will be a product of the event.
4. #AWAF: In keeping with the hash tag we used to twitter during the event, all my posts in this series will included the tag #awaf, and be cross linked/posted to facebook and twitter, for the #awaf archive/group.
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You might have noticed a new plug in for all the posts on this site. For example, if you open the post about the Ancient Worship Anglican Futures, you’ll see under the post and before the comments two icons you can click.
One will send the post you are reading to facebook and the other to twitter. So some more ways to share the love and good posts with your friends.
The much promised report from the Ancient Worship Anglican Futures, and serialisation of the chapter I am writing for a book for that event, will begin this week.
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Paul writes… I was singing along to that dull dirgey chorus…“oh miserable day
oh depressin day
when Jesus washed
my sins away…”…when I realised that was not at all what the words said. It was a happy tune singing about a happy day. So where had I suffered such a misinterpretation that christianity was about misery and suffering?
I hold my hand up and say I am going through a miserable and unhappy time. I acknowledge that this is not going to be a sunny piece cos of where I’m coming from. It’s going to be slanted and I own my biases.
One of the things that struck me about the AWAF conference was Dr Stephen Long (I think) saying that christianity is all about happiness. That was a bit of a shock to me so I confess I may well have passed out and missed the context/point of why he said that. But taking that on face value this is what I’m hearing:
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For me, this year is becoming a year of getting some writing published.Back in 2006, I had a chapter published in ‘Let My People Grow’, on spiritual formation in a western emerging context.
It was based around one of the chapters for my Doctor of Ministry dissertation, ‘Via Media: the necessity of deeper theological reflection for the genuine renewal of church in the emerging culture and context’. I published that dissertation online with Lulu.com, and now Lulu have listed it on Amazon.com, you can find it here.
Then this year, I have two chapters for a book with Scott McKnight and Pete Rollins, titled, ‘Christ and Postmodern Culture, that should be out end of the year.
And now I’m editing my presentation from Ancient Worship Anglican Futures, along with my summary of the event into a chapter, that will be part of a collection of the presentations from the event.
And I will start posting some of those reflections at the end of this week here. Later today I’m off to Rippon College, at Oxford University. I’ve been asked to give the homily at their eucharist service.
I’ll be talking about the experience of being a low church minister, engaging in the renewal and retrieval of liturgy.
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I just received an invite to a discussion on 13th July, for the launch of a new online resource, www.testoffaith.com.If you are looking for some accessible resources for the science and faith debate, take a look, they look very useful
From their web site they describe themselves as being about:
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I’ve just agreed to be interviewed for Alex McManus’s Blog Talk Radio channel, in late September this year. And in doing so have discovered Blog Talk Radio.I’ve just been listening to an interview with Leonard Sweet about his latest book, as I bash through my all the emails in my inbox after being away.
Next week I’ll start the post series on what some of what I learned from the Ancient Worship Anglican Futures conference last week. Seems the presentations will be published later this year, and I am going to edit my presentation on the challenges the Emerging Church faces, and how the Great Tradition might be a resource to some of those issues. So my post here starting next week, will be an outline of my writing for that chapter and publication.
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I just got home from my time at Trinity, for the Ancient Worship Anglican Futures.
To say the event was superb would be an understatement. I’m going to use my notes/journal to make a series of posts, with highlights from my time there.
For other locations to track follow up to the event, make sure you take a look at Holly Rankin Zaher who led the event with me. Also one of my best mates, Paul Mayers, was with me, and I’m sure he’ll be blogging his thoughts too, at his blog, and here.
And I hope the blog set up for the event will get updates too.
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I’m still at Trinity, immersed in presenting and facilitating the conference, and having the most amazing time. It’s reminded me again of the privilege of engaging in theological education and training, for the exploration and participation in church life.
And that reminds me of the training available at Kings College London, details below.
Maybe you’ve resolved to focus on learning and training for ministry in 2009. One resource, might be the MA courses at Kings College London.
- Are you a minister or otherwise involved in Christian ministry?
- Have you considered studying for an MA?
- Would you like to do so in a prestigious university in the centre of London?
- And would you like the option of a modular programme, so that you can choose from
a range of courses?I couldn’t recommend Kings College more highly (especially as it’s the location for my PhD work). The MA’s they have cover the following areas:
MA in Youth Ministry
MA in Theology, Politics and Faith Based Organisations
MA in Contemporary Ecclesiology
MA in Contemporary Worship
MA in Christian Education
MA in Pastoral Ethics
MA in Bible and Ministry
MA in Mission and Ministry in the Modern AgeIf you want to know more, visit the theology and ministry MA site at Kings.


