He overturned the tables
Yesterday we had a meeting, just three of us: me, Gwen and Lisa. Now given my acknowledged meetings phobia you might be surprised by this. But it was a different kind of meeting. There was cake and as you can see by the photograph, it was chocolate cake.
We sat around the table and ate the cake and talked, remembering the bible as we went, remembering those with and for whom we worked, telling stories of families and friends both near and far away, cataloguing our prayerful concerns and our priorities for action. We were three women and some might have called us wise.
We were re-setting the table. On the day when we remembered the table up-setter who said ‘My house shall be a house of prayer’ we were resetting a perfectly ordinary table to be the centre of such a revolution.
In my remembered bible this is a week of tables, from those upset to those reset. Just as the stuff slips off of one table so it is placed more carefully on another. Of course we can, and do, become obsessed with furniture. I once heard of a church that had to have a secret ballot to move a lectern six inches. It could be one of those church myths but I don’t think it is.
You see this table re-setting is not about the actual table but about what goes on around it and where it takes us. It’s more about who is invited to the table and the sharing that happens there. This week I have been reading Lavinia Byrne’s book The Journey is my Home (2000, Hodder and Stoughton) in which she tells her own faith story. I used to know her when she was ‘Cybernun’ at the CCBI but we’ve not been in touch since then. I wanted to tell her how much the book had helped me to ‘re-set the table’ this week, so I’m telling this blog in the hope it goes into cyberspace somewhere.
Later this week, I will take a journey to meet a new community, the Lay Community of St Benedict, who have invited me to reset the table with them. I’m looking forward to it and I’m hoping there will be cake.
Who is this?
We are surprised by a donkey.
Our stereotyped view of donkeys has them gentle and readily overlooked
But there are many kinds of donkeys:
Slow seaside plodders in kiss me quick hats,
Old thin burros their bones sticking out showing their years of toil and abuse,
Warm nosed nuzzley donkeys in comfortable family farm parks,
The silly ass of popular cartoons,
Each one bearing the cross sign burned into the fur on its back.
The audacious one comes, donkey riding,
Challenging our stereotypes,
As he takes the cross wise way.
There was nothing luke warm about the response of those Palm wavers,
The day had taken a different turn
Everyone was excited.
These days a guy on a donkey is not likely to raise much comment.
The audacious one still comes,
Challenging our stereotypes, winding along the Cross Street,
Will we bear the cross-wise call, burned onto our lives
A few days later, broken trees, discarded branches,
were all that remained to remind them he had taken that route.
The donkey was back in its stall or on with its normal daily grind.
Everything back to normal or was it?
Look for the Holy,
Call out Hosanna,
See the blessed one,
The audacious one,
Coming to claim us.
The leftovers
They left the Upper Room, going, I was told, to the Mount of Olives, singing as they went. I stood on the threshold, looking in, waiting. As their voices receded and the air became still it was as if I could rerun the scene in my mind: the talking and arguments, the chaos and then the still point with him in the centre. I stepped into the room and crossed to the table where the left overs were scattered around, abandoned without thought. The other women came panting up the stairs with trays and cloths to help me clear up. They saw me standing by the table and stopped, as I had. ‘What is it?’ one queried from the back of the group. ‘Come in’, I said ‘Come over here’.
They gathered around and I took the left overs and passed them round. Surely he hand’t meant to leave us out. ‘Here, take this. It is his body’ I said, just as I’d heard him say moments earlier. They looked surprised. ‘Eat it’ I urged. ‘Do it to remember him’. Then I took the cup with only the dregs left in it. I lifted it up and said ‘Drink this all of you, it is his blood. Do this to remember him’. They passed the cup round taking a small sip of its bitterness.
‘Every time you eat and drink like this you remember the Lord Jesus, until he comes back again’ I said, and we began to clear the tables.
Good Enough Friday
What sort of Friday did you have?
I wonder if we are becoming obsessed with days of the week, especially ones we have chosen to designate as something particular. Feel good Friday is one of these. It refers to that historical thing the weekend which used to occur at the end of the working week. After working five days we’d get a weekend off, preceeded by, of course, Feel Good Friday.
But in these days of the gig economy and so many other euphemisms for dodgy work practices, many people don’t get a weekend off and there’s nothing feel good about Friday.
We’re now at the end of week 11 of our Spring term and this year we will break up for Easter holidays at the end of next week. So we’re in the market for that well known Spring argument, who decides when its Easter?
Not me. This year we miss out on being at school during Holy Week, so we have to do Holy Week early if we’re going to have it at all.
As a result, this week we’ve celebrated both Palm Wednesday and Palm Friday with two palm processions, one for Preschool and one for years 1 and 2.
During the Palm Friday procession, the ultimate piece of remembered Bible for the term, the last word in Feel Good Friday, came from our young cross carrier. Trying hard to keep the processional cross upright in the wind, he said: ‘This cross is making my arms hurt’. That really made today Good Enough Friday.
The sweet smell
There was a strange smell in the Sixth Form this morning. Something had ‘gone off’.
May the sweet smell of kindness,
And the warmth of concern
Fill your hearts and minds
And dispel the sour smell of fear,
Today and everyday.
JAL: 16.03.2017
For Silcoates Sixth Form
On not keeping silent in the churches
There are many kinds of silence in our churches. In some you will encounter reverent and prayerful silence but in too many you will encounter oppressive silences concerned with things we can’t say or talk about. This also happens in the councils of the church, like Synods and the other layers of meetings which can clutter up our life together, but in certain smaller denominations these rarely make headlines.
So as one of the gender previously exhorted to keep silent in the churches, I find myself once again giving voice. Of course, this is not all that surprising as one who’s primary vocation is as a speech therapist because that lies at the very centre of who I am.
In the end it was that fundamental aspect of my identity that I relied on the guide me away from the harmful practices of my local Synod. Others, including those still inside it would tell this story differently. I can only tell it myself.
I have just completed my first half term of ministry outside and already feel lighter. I didn’t expect to become the Chaplain of Silcoates School and I certainly didn’t expect to be still doing it 7 years after beginning in a temporary role. But I have stayed, now outside the Synod, to share to Gospel there and listen to God’s call to us all.
As a school affiliated to the United Reformed Church it began life as the Northern Congregational School nearly 200 years ago when faith and education in the same sentence was not such contentious ground. Now, with 6 such schools, and independent education a hot bed for debate, it’s clear that most local dissenters don’t know what to do with us.
‘It wasn’t fair’ for the school to have one of the Synod ministers for any longer than 5 years, was one comment recorded in the Synod minutes when the decision to cease its involvement in the school Chaplaincy was announced. The argument goes we, in the proper churches, have to share ministers, and therefore one whole minister only doing Chaplaincy to 600 or more children and their families was clearly profligate in the extreme. Besides which ‘no other Synods do it like this’ according to the final review report. It was just one example of Synod members demonstrating their lack of awareness of the central message of the Gospel. They seemed unaware of God’s profligate love. They don’t seem to realise there are many ways of being church.
Well all this, however painful to live through and even recall now, is history. Indeed at the time it didn’t surprise me. But I didn’t predict how profoundly it would effect my sense of identity.
Having grown up in the United Reformed Church I find myself drifting further and further from what it now is. Are we not called to be profligate too? To give away our gifts and resources to further the Gospel call to ‘tell everyone’?
We seems to be content to swap this for some kind of partitioning that has bits of ministry scattered here and there, some time 70/30% split, sometimes 66/34% split, presumably depending on the mathematics of any particular Synod (the significance of the 4% of ministry still eludes me). The result is not better leadership just more squabbling about ‘our share’ and more knackered ministers who it seems fear to voice their own reservations or more to the point, vision.
Well enough is enough. I do remember and restate the call to ministry I received: Christ’s is the world in which we move, Christ’s are the folks we’re summonsed to love.
I was 18 months into my first speech therapy post when I was invited to speak to a group of parents of children with learning difficulties, as the local service had proved unwilling to respond to the request. I sat down and the Chair invited questions. The Manger of the local service rised to accuse me: ‘You would give all our skills away, you would’. Guilty as charged. I would, I continue to do so and I would again.
Only now I say we should give all our ministry away. No more tiny shares for this church or that in ever expanding geographical challenges. Only a whole lot of ministry in any one place for a vision, a light house, to be built or a new thing pioneered. If there’s no sign of vision and all folks want is maintenance until death they can arrange that for themselves. Harsh maybe but also generous. Give it away and see what comes back.
If we continue with our present piecemeal plans we are fast running out of life. Too many exhausted people running dysfunctional Sunday clubs (it seems few will actually vote to close theirs however unsustainable it has become).
A new thing is required, not just for our churches, but of any who want a more outward looking faith that actually engages with people where they are now.
Back in the so called Dark Ages, Columba sent Aidan to Lindisfarne to Christianise the North of England. When they got there, they found a faint echo of the faith left behind by Paulinus and earlier pioneers. They were not Chritianising the North, they were re-christianising it. The local people welcomed the monks who had come to be with them, to create community, not foist unjust taxes on them.
So to our task, the echo is still just about there. But it will not have much effect if all it does is echo around the insides of the tombs we have created. It is time not to keep silent in the churches.
‘Leave the tomb, it is empty. He has gone before you’.
On a train…
I wrote this on a train. In the seat in front of me a young child exhorts her mother to ‘more bubbles’. Yes please, Let’s have more bubbles: more bubbles of enthusiasm, of joy, more bubbles of colour and light. More bubbles to float our concerns for the world, to take our sins and short comings far from us, more bubbles of leadership from the youngest among us. Of course I’m a speech therapist, I’d spend my last breath on bubbles. Better than on the unhealthy, cold, closed in silences of churches and Synods that don’t know a light house when they see one.
In our life and our believing
The love of God
We are dust
Remember you are dust….
We are dust,
the very stuff of the universe;
atoms and molecules make us
and all things.
We return to dust
to be recycled across the cosmos
atoms and molecules
scattered across the heavens.
Dust to dust:
this is how we are resurrected,
born again, light years away,
bringing to birth the hope of heaven.
Dust creator, you cherish your creation:
Help us so to cherish it.
Dust bearer, you too come from dust:
May we wear our status humbly.
Dust animator, you activate us:
Whirl us up to dance together
In tune with God and with each other,
For 40 days and more.
Forgiveness
Following on from yesterday, this morning I read this: “I am not yet ready for my heart to soften, I am not yet ready to be vulnerable again, not yet ready to see that there is humanity in my tormentor’s eyes, or that the one who hurt me may also have cried.”
*From Desmond and Mpho Tutu’s The Book of Forgiving (William Collins)*
and so I wrote this….
Did any of you cry?
I’m pretty sure some of you didn’t.
There was a profound lack of empathy;
Few waves reached me here.
I have heard of the human spark in some of you:
One ‘didn’t look at all happy’,
Another tells a tale of sleeplessness,
But mostly there was silence.
And I who read a lot of silence
Have struggled to read this
Because I am hurt and rejected:
your silences feel hard and cruel.
So, although I can be vulnerable
In other places with different people,
I am not yet ready to be vulnerable again
With what I once considered my spiritual family.
Maybe the humanity I encounter
Beyond the hard edges of the church
Will be the catalyst
that softens my heart again.
On our hearts and on our homes
The Blessing of God
On our school and on our working
The Help of God
In our coming and our going
The Peace of God
In our life and our believing
The Love of God
Confused?
The word ‘confession’ shares several letters with the word ‘confusion’, so as one confused I’ll start there. I decided I was confused when during worship this morning we were urged to consider confession and forgiveness. Well, it was a church, so maybe that’s not too surprising.
The gospel story was about a woman ‘take in adultery’, a somewhat old fashioned phrase for an activity that takes two at least. You might wonder if this story is ever heard at the chapel door, but it is. A few years ago, a young woman who had survived a sexual assault told me that ‘If I was going to give a sermon it would be about that one where he says ‘anyone who has not sinned can throw the first stone’: that one’. It was an interesting comment from someone who had been under the age of 16 at the time of the assault, not a woman but a child, a victim a survivor. Of course there are many silences in the story recorded in the gospel as well.
And in most situations where the call is for forgiveness and confession there are also a lot of silences, which bring me back to confusion. Who should I forgive? What should I confess? I have a lot of things going round in my heard but mostly I’m confused. I’m told God will forgive me, but my experience is that like Zaccheus, I have been forgiven before I even thought of asking (note that Zach entertains Jesus to tea before he, Zach, makes any public statement of putting right past wrongs, and it’s Jesus who invites himself to tea, not Zach who initiates the tea thing).
I’ve heard folks say it can help a person feel better to forgive others, but as far as my own situation is concerned, God does not seem to require this of me, at least not yet. Understanding the depth of my hurt, God just stays with me. With so much silence surrounding the events themselves and no one much taking any responsibility for them, I still feel in limbo. The situation is unresolved. Should I forgive someone for sending me a poorly worded email for example and if so how?Am I forgiving an individual or a post holder who was doing a job on behalf of others that none of those involved had fully thought about? Where does the forgiveness start and what is my part in it? How will I record my forgiveness? I’m pretty sure the email is long gone in the memory of most, along with the reports, the inconsistencies, the insensitivity, the lack or truth or transparency, the poor leadership, and the silence of the bystanders who still don’t know what to say. I wonder if this will not change until the silence is broken somehow but I’m confused about how and where that happens.
Forgiveness is complicated so its no wonder confession and confusion seem to be linked. I don’t want to be dragging stuff along with me for ever but neither do I feel that brushing it all away or ignoring the hurting is a good idea. Whilst there is silence there is still something unresolved. Forgiveness implies an ongoing relationship. At the moment I don’t think I have one with those who caused the hurt. So I’ll remain confused at least for now.
There’s confusion in the gospel too. Zach stands at the bottom of the tree and the neighbours must be confused. Jesus writes on the ground with the stick when the woman is accused. We don’t know what he wrote, which is a bit confusing.
After the service we were offered bubbles to blow. At least that’s not confusing. I blew my bubbles and felt, as they floated away, that I’d aired the subject.
In our life and our believing
The love of God.
All the baptised
I read a tweet that said ‘Church unity is the responsibility of all the baptised’.
Great, I thought: another one to add to the church this afternoon when we celebrate the Sacrament of Baptism for Jacob, who is 5 years old.
I’ll suggest he joins a Church Unity Commission straight away.
That’s the problem with unity; it has a musty smell and is reminiscent of stale biscuits. More 5 year olds doing Christian Unity would be a great thing. Too much of the time we think these things are just for adults.
This is a false idea. The church is all of us. It’s not about waiting until some of us are more grown up before we take our place. We already have a place: remember that.
The children and young people with whom I work are the Church now and for most of them these division in the Church and ‘different sorts of Christians’ is unfathomable. They just get on with following Jesus where they are alongside each other. To most of them denominational labels have less meaning than the sort of biscuits they prefer.
This afternoon, I shall ask him ‘Do you want to follow Jesus?’ not ‘and shall we dress like this, and meet at these times and say these words only, and let only these people do this, and exclude these ones and make these rules and so on and so on and so on. I realised years ago that once again I’d ‘gone native’ with them. But it makes sense to me too. The wide appeal of Messy Church points to it: make it messy, keep it simple, welcome everyone.
We are doing Christian Unity already, every day. As usual its taking the adults a while to catch up.
In our life and our believing
The Love of God.