Sunday 31 May 2009

New Community Hall Kokstad Natal


The Hall largely funded from donations from Caverham Heights and Great Ayton Methodist Churches. The hall will provide facilities for primary health care and a centre for young people.



Wednesday 27 May 2009

Serving up a grande passion

On a sunny morning my golden retriever Fergus enjoys nothing more than a little alfresco styled fellowship and fuss at a table outside our local coffee shop.

Arranging a coffee in the company of Fergus is quite a strategic operation. Last summer he followed me into the shop with a table securely attached to his lead.


However this time the barista saw my predicament. She told me to sit down, brought the coffee and water for Fergus. I was then surprised and delighted when she refused to take any money. Instead complimented Fergus on his good looks!!!

"Surprise and delight" is a core value being adopted by many companies. Michelli in his book The Starbucks Experience accounts how baristas in a America have gone out of their way to create opportunities to do random acts of kindness.


  • Memorising customer details such as their pet's name.

  • Serving up coffees to a parting business. Then alerting another outlet of the arrival of the business in a new neighbourhood.
I was intrigued to discover that the Missouri Conference of the United Methodist church have got into the act. Radical hospitality is one of their five core values. I quote from. The Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations by Robert Schnase Abingdon Press 2007

Radical means "drastically different from the ordinary practice, outside the normal," and so it provokes practices that exceed expectations, that go the second mile, that take welcoming the stranger to the max. It means people offering the absolute utmost of themselves, their creativity, their abilities, and their energy to offer the gracious invitation and reception of Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations.

Considering our British reserve some would write this off as too risky or even too naive.

However I believe many people are looking for authentic evidence of faith lived out in community rather than what is often regarded as the cloistered experience of Sunday worship.

The good news is that hospitality is not an acquired skill, it's an attitude. It's a brew of the soul. It's a cup easily served .

Is it going to be tall, grande or massimo?

Sunday 24 May 2009

Starbucks and encounters of a third kind!


Michael Frost in his book Exiles mentions the idea that people need "third place"environments to meet, develop friendships, discuss issues and interact with others. The "first place" is home where we live. The "second place" is the work place. For many people, home is a place of privacy and withdrawal and work is a highly pressurised environment.

The subject was discussed at a recent Mission Shaped Ministry workshop (Southhampton). A number of us (I am pleased to say!) suggested that Starbucks Costas etc were good "third place" environments

Some who attended the course ruefully commented that church should be an ideal "third place" However the busy life of maintaining church a organisation had to a degree pushed out this "third place" environment lessening the focus on interaction, relationship and conversations about faith.

Should we be looking for modifications in our church programme or should we be hunting for a "fourth place?"

Friday 22 May 2009

Hout Bay near Capetown

"...if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, Move from here to there' and it will move. Nothing is impossible for you." Matthew 17:20 (NIV)




Thursday 21 May 2009

Starbucks! Can the church sip from this brew?

Universally Starbucks opens 5 outlets per day. (That was stated before the credit crunch!) The company attributes it's success to a focus on hospitality rather than profit making.

The Starbucks core values sounds like a highly intentional church mission statement on fellowship. Could the church learn something from this brew?

Michelli in his book The Starbucks Experience lists the five core values as principles for turning the ordinary into the extraordinary. He prefaces each of the values with a quotation which I have included.They are as follows:

Make it your own
"This is the true joy of life, the being used up for a purpose recognised by yourself as a mighty one; being a force of nature instead of a feverish, selfish little clot of ailments and grievances, complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy."

George Bernard Shaw

Everything matters
" Too often we underestimate the power of touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear. an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have a potential to turn life around."

Leo Buscaglia

Surprise and delight
" I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was a service. I acted and behold, service was a joy."

Rabindranath Tagore

Embrace resistance
"Don't mind criticism. If it is untrue,disregard it; if unfair, keep from irritation; if it is ignorant, smile; if it is justified, it is not a criticism - learn from it!"
Author unknown

Leave your mark
"How wonderful that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world. "

Anne Frank

The Starbucks core values remind me that Koinonia (Gk: fellowship , having a share in, common participation, communion) is a vital part of church life.
However has it been neglected? Do we need to rediscover passion? Do we surprise and delight? Do we try to change the ordinary into extraordinary.

Tuesday 19 May 2009

Sunrise in Natal


As part of my sabbatical Charlene and I went out to South Africa. This was taken at Shelly Beach South Natal near our chalet.

Saturday 16 May 2009

BRIDGE IMPLIES A "WAY"

I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the father except though me. John 14:6



Well known but troublesome passage. It has been a stumbling block to friends of mine who see it as an expression of superiority and arrogance. I often feel a double take coming on when I use the words in funeral service attended by a largely secular audience



Did Jesus really put his hands up in the air and say HALT that's it, ignore all other faiths and philosophies!



Commentaries suggest that we should look the root meaning of way and the context of the passage.



ROOT: New Interpreters Bible ( Vol IX page 742) suggests that the "Way" has it's roots in Judaism and is translated "lifestyle of the wise" It suggests to me that Jesus was pointing towards Himself as an example of the nature that his followers should have.

Therefore arrogance and superiority would be counter to the intention of the passage.



I like what McLaren (A New Kind of Christian) says:

I think some Christians use Jesus as a short cut for being right.In the process they bypass becoming humble and wise. They figure if they say "Jesus" enough it guarantees that they won't be stupid.



Peterson (The Jesus Way) ..and who wrote The Message believes that metaphors (such as "way") are vulnerable to "bullying" by those who have personal agendas.



CONTEXT: The New Interpreters Bible (Vol IX p744) suggests that the John passage reflects the words of a particular 1st century community who were convinced of the truth and life they they had received from the incarnation. Also to apply it as a sweeping statement about 21st century Christianity and it's relationship to other faiths is to take the meaning out of context.



For me this means that I can celebrate Jesus as the way , truth and life and at the same time respect other faiths and philosophies.



CONCLUSION: Maybe as Christians the greatest gift to theworld is in our attempts to imitate Jesus. The nature of Jesus is the "palette" by which we paint our relationships with each other and the world. The colours are best described by Paul in Galatians 5:22, love, joy peace patience, kindness, goodness and faithfulness.







Saturday 2 May 2009

BRIDGES: Can history help us?

  • Can the history of bridges show us any thing about our faith journeys? Having seen the Caversham Bridge and short of getting the"T" shirt, I went to see the "movie" at the Reading Museum.
    Reading was thought to have begun it's genesis as a ford across the river Thames.
  • 1086 there was a settlement of 600 people.
  • 1100s saw the development of pilgrimage points at each side of the river.
  • 1121 This was developed by King Henry I 1121 with the financing of Reading Abbey.
  • Kings poured money into the development of the bridge as an important "way" to other places.
  • The town prospered as a crossing place.
  • It had it's of pain and conflict with the Vikings, Dissolution of the monasteries and the civil war.
  • Rivers (Thames and Kennet) and bridges featured were consistent features in the history of Reading
My thoughts are:
  • We need a history of bridges in our faith journeys.
  • Bridges prompt new beginnings and refreshing experiences.
  • They are places of conflict.
  • Thy are places of vulnerability.
  • They are places of prosperity.
  • They give rise to a "way" or direction.
  • Our histories of bridges are life stories.
  • Our experiences of bridges adds value to communication with others.
  • Bridges and can build community life.