Friday 29 September 2017

Ambae, academia and some thoughts on authority


We were having pastoral group lunch yesterday, as we try to do on the last Friday of every month. We share news, pray for one another, have a moan, have a laugh, eat....

Vanuatu flag - the chain of islands forms a kind of Y shape..
Chatting with Fr Anthony Ling from Vanuatu (who appears in this photo to have been relegated to the mat behind the small cupboard as though in some kind of naughty corner), he was saying that his government has ordered the compulsory evacuation of Ambae island, home to about 11,000 people, because of volcanic rumblings. It's where he went to school. Vanuatu's population is about 280,000 people and cyclones and earthquakes are part of life as it sits on what's called the Pacific’s 'ring of fire', a series of seismic faults around the Pacific Ocean. The Anglican Church of Vanuatu and New Caledonia, has instructed that its church properties should be used by families evacuated from Ambae and Vanuatu Christian Council Secretary General Pastor Shem Temar, has called on all churches to cooperate among themselves and work in harmony with the Government 'to ensure the spiritual and physical unity and safekeeping of the people in evacuation centres on Ambae in the current Manaro volcanic eruption.' Spare a prayer please.
From Vanuatu to Kiribati... One of PTC's PhD researchers, Rev Ruteru, gave a presentation this week to faculty and fellow researchers. I used to have to do that at Spurgeon's College, back in the days. It's a great discipline in terms of getting feedback and critical questions to help the work move along and shape up, but it can be a knee-trembling experience. The topic under scrutiny in Ruteru's case is
Sheep Stealing, Reef Crossing or Tidal Waves? A Comparative Historical Analysis of the Declining Membership of  the Kiribati Uniting Church compared with the Growing Membership of the Roman Catholic Church in Kiribati.

It involves a lot of statistical analysis, so I take my hat off to him for having the patience for all that. And here's how he references the title's key terms.

 ‘sheep stealing’[1] or ‘reef crossing’[2] or ‘tidal waves’[3]


[1]William Chadwick used this phrase for attracting and converting church members of another denomination (2001, 1).
[2] During low tide at ocean side, a fisherman can walk from the land onto the reef, and cross to the deep ocean for fishing. When it is getting to high tide, the fisherman swims back onto the reef and walks back to the land. This is known as ‘reef crossing.’ Likewise, if a believer from one church leaves behind his/her church and chooses a new church it is addressed here as ‘reef crossing.’
[3] If the loss of membership happens in a church because of particular issues such as fertility rate, immigration, etc., it is addressed here as ‘tidal waves'. 

So if you're reading this from the perspective of another place and another declining Church denomination, what's been going on? Any of those three?



I've received a kind invitation from the Fiji Corrections Service to give some theological input on the theme of Restorative Justice at their regional Conference coming up in November. So, a bit of thinking, planning and prayer needed for that and it's humbling to be approached. Over the years I've had connections with Prison Christian Fellowship, but not so much here in Fiji. However Prison Chaplaincy is alive and well through the denominations, not least the Methodists, so plenty of Fijian brains to pick, thank goodness.

Do you know this lovely hymn by Martin Leckebusch?

1.  In an age of twisted values we have lost the truth we need;
In sophisticated language we have justified our greed;
By our struggle for possessions we have robbed the poor and weak -
Hear our cry and heal our nations; your forgiveness Lord we seek.

2.  We have built discrimination on our prejudice and fear;
Hatred swiftly turns to cruelty if we hold resentments dear.
For communities divided by the walls of class and race
Hear our cry and heal our nations: show us Lord, your love and grace.

3.  When our families are broken; when our homes are full of strife;
When our children are bewildered, when they lose their way in life;
When we fail to give the aged all the care we know we should -
Hear our cry and heal our nations with your tender parenthood.

4.  We who hear your word so often choose so rarely to obey;
Turn us from our wilful blindness, give us truth to light our way.
In the power of your Spirit come to cleanse us, make us new:
Hear our cry and heal our nations till our nations honour you.

We sang it in Friday Chapel but I chose a tune we sometimes use for a much loved Samoan hymn, Faafetai I Le Atua. See - it's all on this blog isn't it? Even free worship resources. Am I good to you or what?!
And here's the sermon. As ever, all comment and critique most gratefully received.

Matthew 21:23-32 (NRSV)  The Authority of Jesus Questioned

23 When he entered the temple, the chief priests and the elders of the people came to him as he was teaching, and said, “By what authority are you doing these things, and who gave you this authority?” 24 Jesus said to them, “I will also ask you one question; if you tell me the answer, then I will also tell you by what authority I do these things. 25 Did the baptism of John come from heaven, or was it of human origin?” And they argued with one another, “If we say, ‘From heaven,’ he will say to us, ‘Why then did you not believe him?’ 26 But if we say, ‘Of human origin,’ we are afraid of the crowd; for all regard John as a prophet.” 27 So they answered Jesus, “We do not know.” And he said to them, “Neither will I tell you by what authority I am doing these things.

The Parable of the Two Sons

28 “What do you think? A man had two sons; he went to the first and said, ‘Son, go and work in the vineyard today.’ 29 He answered, ‘I will not’; but later he changed his mind and went. 30 The father went to the second and said the same; and he answered, ‘I go, sir’; but he did not go. 31 Which of the two did the will of his father?” They said, “The first.” Jesus said to them, “Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you. 32 For John came to you in the way of righteousness and you did not believe him, but the tax collectors and the prostitutes believed him; and even after you saw it, you did not change your minds and believe him.


It seems that the leaders of the people haven’t listened to the people. At least that’s the way Matthew’s Gospel wants to angle it: the story Matthew wants us to hear. Pretty often in this Gospel we’re told that the crowds grasped a vital message: the λαός (laos) in the Greek, where we get the word ‘laity’ from. But the ἀρχιερεύς (archiereus) – think ‘hierarchy’, in this case the chief priests, and the πρεσβύτερος (presbyteros), think ‘presbyter’ – sometimes translated ‘priest’, but in this part of the gospel read ‘elders’ - didn’t get the message. Terms for leadership in the New Testament can get a bit brain twisting and it makes me wonder whether any of it will actually matter in the slightest, when the Kingdom comes. 

We can't escape the fact that Matthew’s Gospel spends quite a bit of time criticising Jewish religious leadership and praising ordinary people. His criticism is sometimes very hostile, accusatory and insulting. In chapter 3.9, Do not presume to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our ancestor’; for I tell you, God is able from these stones to raise up children to Abraham. Hardly respectful and reverential towards our great Father Abraham. In chapter 16.21, Jesus must go to Jerusalem and undergo great suffering at the hands of the elders and chief priests and scribes. And in 20.18 the Son of Man will be handed over to the chief priests and scribes, and they will condemn him to death. We have to be alert and sensitive to that accusatory, anti-Jewish angle, and how it's been used at worst to fuel anti-Semitism. It’s also key to remember that Matthew is writing towards the end of the first century. Rome has already destroyed Jerusalem in 70 AD and we’re in the period after that. There’s a tremendous amount of tension around between those who’d come to follow Christ from a Jewish background, in contrast to Gentile Christians who had no knowledge of synagogue formalities, little interest in circumcision, food laws, sacrificial obligations etc. So at this time in history, Gentile Christians too were being ostracised, oppressed and persecuted by Jewish Christians for flouting the conventions. That doesn’t justify use of this Gospel by preachers and teachers to ostracise, oppress or persecute anyone – then or now! The background just reminds us that Matthew’s Gospel gives us a window onto a tense bit of New Testament history: its sadnesses and complexities. So, we lodge all that in our minds as we proceed. 

Nevertheless, we are still left with undeniable acclamation and praise in this Gospel, numerous times, for crowds getting the point when the hierarchy didn’t. What point did they get? Something about authority. In chapter 7.28-29, the crowds were astounded at Jesus’s teaching because he taught with authority. In 9.8, after the raising of a paralysed man, the crowds were filled with awe and glorified God who had given such authority to human beings. The human being in this case a rather alternative Rabbi, from Nazareth of all places. In chapter 21.9 the crowds call him ‘Son of David’ – the one who comes in the name of the Lord – no greater authority. It would have been better for the leaders of the people if they’d listened to the people, don’t you reckon? The people recognised time and again God’s authority flowing from the life and ministry of Jesus. 


Not only did the crowds recognise Jesus’s authority: before that, they’d given the thumbs up to John the Baptist too. In chapter 3.5 we’ve heard about him drawing the crowds. Then the people of Jerusalem and all Judea were going out to him, and all the region along the Jordan, and they were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. 

Now that’s quite a crowd. It covers a fair bit of territory, including Jews, Gentiles, even Samaritans. A diversity of people latched onto this unusual source of authority. They grasped that John the Baptist, strange and hairy and loud and chewing locusts – not betel nut like the Melanesian preference - dripping wet because he was in and out of the river all the time and with one relentless message to give you earache – Repent and be baptized! – was God’s prophet. Jesus confirms this when teaching the crowds in chapter 11. 8. What did you go out to see in the wilderness? You were expecting that God had sent one of the ‘hierarchy’ to prepare the way for the Messiah, weren’t you? All dressed up in ‘soft robes’, as one translation has it. That makes me think of how many of us will look at College Graduation Day in a few weeks, all floating around in silk and velvet and in funny hats in an attempt to convince the world we know something: that we have some kind of intellectual authority. God appears to have chosen different sorts of authority figures in Matthew’s Gospel: a loud and hairy prophet for one, picking bits of locust from his teeth. And it’s the ‘laos’ – the ordinary people – often the neediest and most rejected – the blind, the lame, the lepers, the deaf, the poor – who know God’s authority when they meet it, whether that be in the prophet John the Baptist or the Son of God himself. 

I believe that still happens today you know? Time and again. Ordinary people – and I don’t really like that phrase because we’re all simultaneously ‘ordinary’ and ‘special’ - know God’s authority when they meet it. They’re not blinded by our robes and our titles. It will become abundantly clear to them if leaders either in ‘soft robes’ or ‘camel’s hair’ act justly, love mercy and walk humbly: whether we love God and love neighbour as self. Authority in God’s way has an amazing way of revealing itself through some people. We don’t even need to ask for a CV or a transcript. 

Maybe that’s why Jesus isn’t so interested to play the question and answer debating game about authority with the chief priests and elders who want him to. See their furrowed brows and agonised faces. If we say this – this will happen. But if we say this… even worse! And it’s as though Jesus shakes his head and says to them, ‘If you can’t taste and see the authority of God before you, in John and his ministry of baptism and now in me, no clever debating will sort that out for you!’ 

Perhaps a parable might. If nothing else works, tell them a story. A story, in this case, about obeying or rejecting a Father’s authority. Which son recognised authority and did the will of his Father? ‘The first!’ said the hierarchy. No problems getting that message.

But it interests me, and I hope you too, that Jesus, when he unpacks the parable before them, from verse 31, doesn’t even use the vocabulary of ‘first son’ or ‘second son’. The one who got it right; the one who recognised authority and did the will of his Father, was the one who changed his mind. So, by implication, you leaders haven’t changed your minds, and that’s why you’re in a bit of a mess. 

And so we’re prompted to ask a big question, of all our nations, wherever they are – by all means start with Britain; and of all our churches whatever denomination they are; and of ourselves, whoever we are; and the big question is this. Can God’s authority be truly recognised and followed today without minds being changed? 

You decide. 

Amen. 



Saturday 23 September 2017

Good things out of Nazareth


Meet some companions in meditation from a lovely day spent together last Saturday.

Prompted by a sentence in the Catholic cathedral's weekly bulletin - always good to read and inwardly digest a church notice sheet from any denomination before making it into a paper aircraft - I discovered something else I never knew about Fiji. Mind you, this is a list that rapidly expands. We have a national centre for Christian meditation, affiliated to the World Community for Christian Meditation [WCCM]. I didn't know much about that either, though had come across the work of the Benedictine Fr Laurence Freeman OSB, successor to Fr John Main, who brought the ministry into being.

Sister Denise, back row far left, is a Marist with special responsibility for this work throughout Fiji and she lives in community at the beautiful Nazareth Prayer Centre, on a hill just outside Suva, overlooking the bay. She guided the day sensitively, kindly and clearly with a great heart for teaching Christian, meditative practice.



Chapel overlooking the bay


This is what we thought about:





The silent periods of meditation last 25 minutes, introduced and concluded by three soundings of a resonant gong. Within the WCCM, the practice is required twice, at the start and towards the ending of each day. It's a discipline to be absolutely still and focussed, repeating in the mind only the mantra MA-RA-NA-THA Our Lord Come - one of the earliest prayers of the Christian Church in Aramaic, 1 Cor 1.22. Sr Denise was telling us that many of Fiji's schools now encourage children in this discipline of meditation. The younger friends with us on Saturday were certainly a great example: backs straight, hands on knees, eyes closed, in deep concentration. Who says kids can't sit still? Their eyes glowed with a real sense of holy accomplishment when the ending 'gong' struck after 25 mins and they exhaled with big smiles, relief and a giggle or two, collapsing for a brief roll around on the mat.

In helping us into the periods of meditation, we were given wise words. 

St Bonaventure speaks of three eyes: the eye of the body, the eye of the mind and the eye of the heart. Meditation is a  journey to the heart.

Anthony de Mello tells the story of God one day feeling very weary of human beings and asking his angels where he might go to escape them. 'Should I go to the moon?' 'Oh no', said the angels, 'humans go to that place'. 'What about down to the deepest ocean?' 'Afraid not', said the angels, 'they send their submarines down there'. 'So where then?' God sought the advice of his wisest angel. 'Go to the human heart: the soul', said the angel with a smile. 'They never go there'. 

And, on the practice of Christian meditation, don't judge - just do it.  Don't ask..

- how did I feel about that meditation?
- did I get something out of it?
- was it a good experience or a bad one?
- did I do it properly? etc

All these are ego questions. It's not about you, it's about God. Just do it.

Two participants shared testimonies of how transformative the practice of twice daily Christian meditation has become in their lives over the years, though they had been doubtful and sceptical at first.They attested to the 'just do it' philosophy. It made me think of the relentless and ego prompted responses to acts of worship in many of our Churches. Did I like it? Did I get something out of it? Did I agree with the preacher? Did I enjoy the hymns/songs. 

Don't judge. Just worship. Now there's a thought.



The meeting room and some time for focussed prayer-walking outside, being aware of the earth beneath our feet




The glory of God in the grounds of Nazareth Prayer Centre



 A Chapel of touching simplicity and tremendous beauty, looking out over Lami bay, where we had the closing Mass

It was a nourishing day.


And now Monday morning beckons and the first job will be ant elimination, sorry to say. Here's the cupboard, and the floor beneath, where we keep all the course textbooks to post out to students.





Faithful Nisha and Tonia had discovered the activities of our insect brothers and sisters last thing on Friday afternoon. Shamefully, I'm afraid we sprayed them with death potion and will shake corpses out of the books and sweep up on Monday. 

We always kind of hope that students receiving textbooks will find the contents lively and animated, but it can be taken too far.


To make matters worse, as part of the retreat I've just been describing, we'd been reminded yet again about the care of our common home, God's creation, and its fine eco-balance that we're gradually destroying. Pope Francis has much to say about this in his letter Laudato Si which echoes the sentiments of St Francis, gentle champion of all God's creatures.

Oh dear.

Oh dear Oh dear.

Even more to meditate upon.






Sunday 17 September 2017

Riches and repositories

Pretty sure I bored you about Project PTCEE a few posts ago, but we're green for go now. Every important committee and person in authority has given it the thumbs up. So watch, as they say, this space... 

What is it in a nutshell? Well, up to now, the Pacific Theological College's Education by Extension (Distance Learning) programme offers only print-based courses, mailed out to hard working students across the small islands, who then return their work by post. We won't stop doing print-based for those in really isolated places with little or no internet access. But it's 2017 and the Pacific islands communicate digitally and online. We urgently need to upgrade, upskill and get the computers, technology and platforms in place for online courses, open access resources and a much more flexible and helpful learning approach. The initial set-up costs are daunting but once in place, PTCEE will be considerably more cost effective and accessible. We're so determined, and doing everything we can locally here in Fiji. If you can come on board the PTCEE canoe and help us row a bit faster into the future, we'd love to hear from you. Click HERE for all the finer details and the maths!
In an attempt to keep one step ahead of these developments and sound vaguely convincing at meetings, I've just done a MOOC. A Massive Open Online Course on the topic of Open Education Resources and Repositories. And I've been Certified to prove it, excuse me. In the great scheme of things, our present print based material will be digitized and new material added as we build up a wonderful repository of accessible courses and resources for the Pacific. Please God.

You know the four R's of OER? Bind them on your foreheads.


Among the residential students, it's been submission week for Masters theses so much midnight oil burned and a fair bit of last minute proof reading has come my way. I enjoy it, and learn a huge amount, but don't enjoy witnessing the stresses and strains that our scholar-pastors endure on the journey to submission. They don't, as the common misconception goes, 'bring it all on themselves' for not being organised enough. A number of elements converge to make thesis writing at PTC a great deal more agonising and hurdle jumping than it need be. But better not get me started...  

One thesis - I won't credit the author just yet but will when the time comes - took me right back to my ministerial training at Wesley Bristol 1989-91. Do you know, to my shame, I don't think I've studied John Wesley's 'money' sermons since then. And I know you've scrutinised them at least twice a week and done a Powerpoint. Sermon 50 is on the Use of Money and Sermon 51 examines characteristics of The Good Steward  In Sermon 50, we find Wesley's classic trinitarian principle of economics; Gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can'. Ever tried that? How did you find it? 

In reading some of the thesis I was glad to be reminded of how the original Methodist class meeting, in its desire to 'watch over one another in love', watched over finances with particular care and distributed wealth to the poorest; offering small loans for business and the like. Local stewards were entrusted with the 'penny a week' offerings and made to account for them meticulously. Accountability before God for the right use of resources was of massive importance for Wesley. Be prepared, he warns. One day, the Lord will enquire of us...

 “How didst thou employ the worldly goods which I lodged in thy hands?

...in what manner didst thou employ that comprehensive talent, money? — not in gratifying the desire of the flesh, the desire of the eye, or the pride of life; not squandering it away in vain expenses — the same as throwing it into the sea; not hoarding it up to leave behind thee — the same as burying it in the earth; but first supplying thy own reasonable wants, together with those of thy family; then restoring the remainder to me, through the poor, whom I had appointed to receive it; looking upon thyself as only one of that number of poor, whose wants were to be supplied out of that part of my substance which I had placed in thy hands for this purpose; leaving thee the right of being supplied first, and the blessedness of giving rather than receiving? Wast thou accordingly a general benefactor to mankind? feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, comforting the sick, assisting the stranger, relieving the afflicted, according to their various necessities? Wast thou eyes to the blind, and feet to the lame, a father to the fatherless, and an husband to the widow? And didst thou labour to improve all outward works of mercy, as means of saving souls from death?”

And there it is in that last sentence. All of this is about care of the soul as much as the body. Money matters are fundamentally mission matters. All God's work. The hypothesis being tested out in the aforementioned thesis is whether Wesley's writings on money and stewardship, read in 2017, offer workable, contemporary principles for the financial strategies and operations of our denominations and indeed our personal stewardship responsibilities. How much direct application of them might be helpful? Fascinating. Sit up, Finance Departments everywhere!


And talking of money matters, I live next door to our College's Director of Finance and Administration these days. He moved in after Anna, Kasa, Ema and Lucia moved out. Try to keep up. I can feel the power seeping through the walls and swear I can hear the steady clink, clink of Pacific pennies being counted one by one into bulbous jars at 2 in the morning by candelight. Actually, Sanjeet and another member of our awesome Finance Team, Rima, have just been at one of Fiji's swanky resorts attending the Certified Public Accountants bash and claiming, via Facebook photos, that they have the biggest minds.



But as amply illustrated earlier in this post, I too have been Certified and PTCEE has a bigger Repository. So there.

Here's Sanjeet on the right with his Mum and Dad who were visiting. I had friends over for Fiji Father's Day - including three proud Dads. 






...and even though Wendy's Dad was in the same room, she still insisted on calling.



Thanks for reading. Don't forget the homework: John Wesley's Sermons 50 & 51. 
Or else...



Sunday 3 September 2017

Ready...steady...GO! 1st Sept 2017

First September in the UK features in the psyche of many with Methodist leanings as the start of a new 'Methodist Year'. In Fiji, it doesn't feature much. The enormous and very influential Methodist Conference here has just ended with new leaders chosen and inducted, but they don't actually get in the saddle and grab the reins until 1 Jan. They're unlikely to be on horseback either. Our forebear did it differently...




Church elects new leader               Mere Naleba [Fiji Times]
Tuesday, August 22, 2017

New general secretary elect Reverend Ili Vunisuwai and new president elect of the Methodist Church of Fiji and Rotuma Reverend Epineri Vakadewavosa after the elections during the conference at Centenary Church of Fiji last night. Picture: JONA KONATACI

REVEREND Dr Epineri Vakadewavosa is the new man at the helm of leadership for the Methodist Church in Fiji and Rotuma.

Mr Vakadewavosa was yesterday elected president of the church, taking over the reins from outgoing president Reverend Tevita Nawadra Banivanua.

Mr Banivanua served as president since 2014.

Reverend Ili Vunisuwai replaces Mr Vakadewavosa as general secretary.

Abudant prayers for them, please, not least because 2018 will bring General Elections here. Our Prime Minister spoke to Conference about climate change and the press reported as follows:



The Prime Minister, Voreqe Bainimarama, yesterday categorically responded to queries from Methodists at the Bose Ko Viti about his role as COP23 President.
The PM was invited by the church to attend the meeting and talk about climate change.
He told a packed audience at the Methodist Centenary Church in Suva that his presidency role at COP23 in Bonn, Germany, in November was not about politics.
“Fiji’s position to fight against climate change is not about gaining a name for myself or the country,” the PM said while responding to questions from the audience who had asked him if such big world events were being used to gain political mileage.
“It is however about saving the world and giving a voice for small island nations and standing by what is right for the benefit of all Pacific Islands.
“Climate change should not be taken as a chance to gain political attributions, but it is about fighting for the people, for the sake of the next generation and generations to come.”
The PM then requested the audience to leave aside questions about politics because he was invited to the meeting to talk about climate change and COP23.
Church leaders then asked the PM if he was shaken by the fact that United States President, Donald Trump, had withdrawn from the Paris Agreement.
Mr Bainimarama said: “If we wait for Trump we won’t gain anything. We have been waiting for him and inviting him to various events, but if he is not willing to stand with us then we will continue with COP23.
“We want him there, we want everyone around the world to talk about climate change. We don’t want him because he is America’s president, but because he needs to support this initiative and join others around the world.”

Seems to have been ridiculously busy at the desk recently, what with getting Project PTCEE up and running. It had to get through a number of committees, but now we're doing the big push for digitisation and online developments. Find out more about it here.
A one-off injection of funds is required, especially if we want to employ extra personnel for managing a learning platform and for instructional design. But it'll be well worth it, and it's long, long overdue. 
We were sad to farewell Pona and the beautiful Kaikuyawa Family returning to be with Rev Rex in Papua New Guinea. We had a traditional farewell ceremony organised by our Fijian ethnic group, then an afternoon tea. Some tears shed, not least by the youth group in which the kids have been so involved. Love to you all - you'll be so missed.


Oh and yes, 1 Sept 2017 marks a silver anniversary for me. Praise be!