Monday 24 December 2012

Christmas, a time to consider true peace on earth.


We are living in an increasingly polarized world.   The gap between opposing sides are widening ... and that gap seems to be driven wider daily ... with anger ... hostility ... hatred ... often stirred up and enflamed by very powerful vested interests.

·        Blind prejudices are overcoming reason ... and any rational debate.

·        It is affecting all sorts of issues ...from the minor to the major.  The climate debate and mining ... refugee policy ... racial policy ... sexual orientation ... left and right of politics ... unions and business ...

·        I think we on King Island are about to begin our own local version ... to wind farm or not to wind farm.

Joking aside the worlds increasing polarization and ramping up of hate rhetoric is producing tragic results.

The end of the last century I think saw the end of the divide between communist and democratically elected governments.  At the time of the change of the millennium it seemed possible that the world was on the brink of being able to enjoy a lengthy period of comparative peace ... but it appears that the world needs conflict ... because into that gap of peace came a new topic of struggle and anger ... a new reason to hate ... a new excuse to go to war.  A new reason for old men to stir up the young to hurl insults ... hurl hate ... hurl rocks ... and aim bullets.

You may have been lucky this week and missed a story from Pakistan.  In a series of attacks eight young ... dedicated nurses ... male and female have been senselessly killed while going about their compassionate service trying to help Pakistan eradicate polio.  Polio ... a crippling disease ... often affecting the young ... the children ... and if they survive ... often leaving the child crippled for life. 

In a country without a good social welfare system like Pakistan ... this is a sentence to slow starvation ... begging daily in rags in the street ... being ignored by everyone ...

Not a thing you would wish on your worst enemy.

For some years now the United Nations have been working with the Pakistani government on a plan for this diseases eradication.  Enter the Taliban ... who sees in this an opportunity to enflame the passions of the vulnerable.  They have been spreading the rumour that the immunisation programme has all be a front in order to sterilize Muslims. 

The result of this irrational hate campaign ... Eight lives lost so far ... an immunization program that could end the suffering of hundreds of children and adults every year is in doubt.

·        What hope does the world have in the face of this level of prejudice and hatred?

Enter a baby in a manger.

There were great social, cultural, political and religious prejudices and hatreds in the community and the culture into which this special baby was born.

·        No one liked the Romans ... they had conquered and ruled Israel.

·        But there was a much older hatred against Israel’s long time opponents and foes ... Babylon (who had conquered them) ... Egypt (the land they were enslaved in and with God’s help escaped from).

·        Israel’s neighbours ... the Samaritans were despised (who Babylon resettled there after taking the Israel’s who inhabited that land originally into exile).

·        The poor ... Jews who had the wrong sort of job (tax collecting, people who kept pigs) ... those who lived outside the towns and cities (the shepherds, lepers the ritually unclean, the sexually promiscuous) were all thought to be being punished by God for their sins.

It is interesting to read the Jesus’ birth narrative and see just how many of these people feature in that short story.

·        Mary ... the mother of Jesus is an unmarried woman.  She could by keeping to the letter of the laws have been stoned.

·        The shepherds ... outcasts ... not trusted by the people who lived in the cities and towns

·        Shortly after His birth the Babylonians become involved ... the wise men from the east.

·        They visit Herod the Roman puppet King seeking the child who they foretold one day would be king.

·        When Herrod in fear went searching to kill this child ... the baby’s family become what we today would class as refugee ... people fleeing their country of birth because they had a reasonable fear of harm because of who they were.

And as Jesus grew we read of him meeting ... talking with lepers ... Samaritans ... Roman soldiers and officers ... often healing them ... tax collectors ...encouraging them and having them believe in him and them following him ... joining his small group of followers. 

Jesus broke open the prejudices and hatreds that kept people apart ... that provided a fertile ground for increasing the distrust that leads to hatred and in extreme cases ... violence.

Jesus did it by becoming one of us.  God did it by becoming human.  The incarnation ... is about God becoming a person and participating fully in all that it means to live a human life. 

·        It becomes possible to believe anything and everything of people we know nothing about.  They could be plotting to sterilize our children ... they could be making bombs to blow up our stadiums in their garages ... they could ... fill in any wild claim you can think of.

·        But when we see these same people ... and get to know them ... their hopes ... dreams ... concerns ... when we see people are not that different from us ... it becomes a lot more difficult to be prejudiced ... it become impossible to hate people if we see that they are not much different from us.

·        That is what the baby in the stable did.  He showed us what it is to be human in the very best and fullest sense of the term.  What it is to love other people more than oneself.   What it is to risk all for the sake of a stranger.

·        And Jesus calls us who believe to live his incarnate life ... so prejudices might break down ... so faith might grow ... so a new redeemed people might be the salt and light in this world.


So that God might be glorified by the people of this world no matter what group they may have by accident of birth been born into.
 

“Glory to God in the highest,

And on earth peace to people on whom his favour rests”

 

 

Thursday 13 September 2012

King Island Abattoir Closes:

This week has seen closure of the abattoir on King Island.  75 people put out of work instantly.   It would be easy to predicting a future of doom and gloom.  I do wonder what the immediate future might be for us on King Island.  How will the Island cope?
As I have read the history of King Island, one of the things that struck me is that the Island and her people have had to struggle for much of that history.  Right from the beginning, ship wrecks, unpredictable weather, and as the Island progressed fires, the struggle with the land anda series of businesses booming and then closing.   
For generations people have survived and even thrived here for much of that time with few of the luxuries or conveniences the world took for granted.  They built their homes, they built a community and they left a legacy.  From what I have read they seemed happy in what they did have.  Their Island home, their friends and family and for many a deep faith in God.
·        When times of trouble have come people have shared the little they did have with those who had none. 
·        They did not asked what is in it for me?
·        There was a strong commitment to the idea of the “common good”. 
Sharing, caring for those in need, the elderly, the sick and the less able is fortunately a strong and visible value on this Island.  But it is under attack. 
·        We live in an age where individuals rights are emphasised over or our community responsibilities. 
·        We live in an age where everyone looks to the “bottom line” … “what’s in it for me?”
·        And advertising tells us …”look after the most important person in the world … you”.
The Island way of the ‘common good” is worth protecting; a community that does care for those in need.

It is a value that goes to the heart of the Christian message.  Jesus just hours before he was betrayed but knowing what was to happen to him said to his followers …
“A new commandment I give unto you … that you love one another as I have loved you”.
Jesus used a specific word that we translate as love: agape.

The best characterization of agape that I have come across is from New Testament scholar, Leon Morris … who writes …
 Agape is a love lavished on others without a thought of whether they are worthy to receive it or not.  It proceeds rather from the nature of the lover, than from any merit in the beloved.”
This definition distinguishes agape love from what we would normally regard as love. 

We most commonly show love to those who are loveable.  In other words because there is something about the other we like, or want, there is a bottom line in it for us.
But the love Jesus commanded his followers to show was a love for all people that was a sacrificial love.  A love that did not expect to be repaid.  This is what the ‘common good’ is about.  Caring for those in our community who may never have the ability or means to repay us but caring for them and loving them because it is right, because it is good, because they are our neighbours and friends.
If we care for members of our Island in this way, I don’t think we will have much to fear no matter how bad the fallout of the abattoir closure might be, because the whole community will be sharing and supporting the cost equally.

Tuesday 7 August 2012

Eulogy for my Dad

My Dad passed away last week.  What follows is the euglogy I delivered at his funeral.

To Ronnie James Oldfield, with thanks for being my Dad.

St. Ignatius of Loyola reportedly said ...“Give me a child for his first seven years and I will give you the man.”
Dad was born the depression; they must have been hard times for his parents.  No work and no money to feed a young family.  His mother began entertaining men while his father was out trying to earn a living.
Dad has horrendous memories of that period of his life that have left their scars on the man he was to become.  He remembered afternoons and mornings spent locked in a cupboard by the strangers that visited his home, often with threats of violence if he told his father what his mother had been doing.
But his father did find out.  Coming home early he caught my grandmother with a ‘friend’.  Dad saw his mother stab his father with a kitchen knife and then running away, leaving his father for dead and Dad and his younger sister with the body of their father.
My Grandfather did survive but I don’t think he ever really got over what happened that night.  He was not able to look after his three children, so Grandfather, Dad and his two sisters Elsie and Yvonne were taken in by his grandparents.  His grandmother willingly caring for the two girls but telling Dad he was there only because it was her ‘Christian duty’ to do so.  Never wanted.  Rejected by his mother.  These early years as I have said, left lasting scars on Dad.
Grandfather was now an alcoholic; drinking his wages on a Friday night and coming home drunk to give Dad lessons in being a man.  He would get Dad in a corner and demand he put up his fists and fight him.  Dad never could bring himself to hit his father. 
But he did learn two lessons ... never hit someone weaker than you ... and how to fight, and that is just what Dad did at school.  Dad fought but he never picked on anyone smaller than himself as he saw that as cowardice, always someone bigger and never any one weaker than himself.  As a result Dad seemed to have spent most of his school years standing outside the teacher’s office waiting for the cane.  
He told of one year picking on a bigger new boy the first day back at school; unfortunately this time Dad really did pick the wrong student.  The new boy was his new teacher’s son.  The way dad told the story was with him spending the rest of his schooling getting ‘six of the best’ on each hand every hour of the school day. 
Poor Dad, he really didn’t like teachers at all but ended up with two daughters, countless in-laws and now grandchildren who are teachers.
Not surprisingly Dad didn’t see he had much future as an academic and left school around this time.  His employment plans involved giving someone he knew all the money he had to get him a gun.  Fortunately whoever that was ‘ripped’ Dad off and took the money, but never gave Dad a gun.
Dad did have better memories of his childhood.  One very profound memory was of his grandmother reading the Bible aloud.  The passage was from St. John’s gospel that Sandra has just read us, which speaks of someone going to prepare a room just for him. 
Dad never had a proper bedroom, instead his bed was in a hallway connecting the rest of the house with the kitchen, the backdoor, the pantry at one end, and the bathroom at the other and all his few processions kept in a box under the bed.
Although Dad did not understand what the passage was about it impressed him hearing of someone who loved him and was building a bedroom just for him, something Dad longed for.
Last Sunday I was in this church with Mum and Clive spoke about David and Bathsheba, a story of adultery and murder ... echoes of Dad’s own story.  Dad was damaged by the events of his childhood.  He spent most of his life believing if people knew who he really was that they would think he was unlovable.  He was deeply scarred by the events of his childhood.  
Dad’s life really could have ended in violence and another tragedy but fortunately he met two people who loved him unconditionally; Mum and Jesus. God sees through the walls we can all build around ourselves in an attempt to protect ourselves from being hurt.  God sees our real heart and I believe saw the little boy who had a great capacity to love and was loveable, who had real compassion to care for those weaker than himself; the little boy that Dad might have been if his life had been different.
With Mum’s love and God’s healing grace Dad’s adult life became very different from his childhood.  Mum and Dad built a life and home together that was loving and nurturing, a home and family which my sisters and I could not have wanted any different.
Last Sunday’s services finished with the familiar words I say every Sunday at the communion service,“We do this until he returns”.
After saying those words this week I took Mum’s hand and said to her, “Dad is in heaven now and at last enjoying perfect communion with God”.
And  I saw Dad there as that little boy he might have been, taking delight in a room of his own built for him with loving hands by the master carpenter, Jesus.


Thursday 19 July 2012

Another Funeral address

The tiny community of King Island has has a spate of recent deaths of King Islanders or people who have lived and worked on the Island for some time.  At last cound 14 in the past 6 week.  I have given gospel presentations, encouraged the people to consider there own mortality.  This one I thought needed tio be particularly about comfort.

Comfort:
We have been hearing people speak this afternoon of Graham and how special a person he was.  Visiting Jenny and her family on Monday morning I saw a home full of photos of family.  I heard stories of the bonds between Graham and his siblings, his friends, his children and his grandchildren.  Jenny although still in a state of shock at the suddenness of her Graham’s death, told me just as I was leaving what privilege it had been to be part of Graham’s life and family for the 42 years of their marriage. 

Some of the words I remember Jenny using ... he and his brothers got on so well ... a gentleman ... he didn’t swear ... loved his family ... so many friends ... lots of interests ... everyone will want to say farewell.

·        But many of you didn’t get that chance to say that final farewell.  Graham’s death was so quick, so unexpected.  
·        That is just one of the reasons funerals are so important. They give us the opportunity to say our goodbyes.   
·        And comfort each other in our shared grief.
God’s comfort in our time of grieving.
This afternoon I want to offer what I hope are a few words of comfort.  They come from the Bible.
God cares for us all ... he weeps when we weep.
Comfort, Comfort my people says your God.  Speak tenderly to them  ... Do you not know?  Have you not heard?  The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth.  He will not grow tired or weary, and his understanding no one can fathom. He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.  Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall; but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.  They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.

I said a moment ago I wanted to offer you some words of comfort.  Three words in fact ... Hesed ... Shalom ... and grace.
Hesed.
Is a Hebrew word the Bible translates in a few different ways.  The unfailing love of God; the never ending love of God; the special unchangeable love of God towards his people.
It is the love that God has for us that can never be taken away, that can be depended on at all times.  It is about the God who is always there.
When everyone else is busy, he is listening.

When we wake lonely in the middle of the night and long for someone to talk with; cry with or shout our pain too; Hesed is the promise that God will be there when you need him.

Shalom
Shalom is another Hebrew word that holds the promise of comfort.  Shalom again has several expressions of meaning.  It is about peace with God and from God that results in wellbeing, safety, prosperity and completeness.

Shalom is peace that comes from God.  Knowing God cares for us, it about knowing that despite how we may be feeling today that the sun will rise tomorrow morning because God is in absolute control of the universe.  That God is the almighty, all-powerful creator but at the same time is the God who is watching over us, living with us and is here now weeping beside us today.

·        Shalom gives rise to peace of mind in the midst of our sorrow and grief.  It helps us trust there will come a time when life will resume.  That the pain you presently feel  will not last forever; there will be a time when you will be able to remember Graham not with sorrow or a tear, but  gladness and a smile as his memory brings back the joys you have shared with him

The third word is Grace.

Grace is a key attribute of God.  Grace means God is merciful, long-suffering, and abounding in goodness and graciousness.  Grace is always associated with mercy, compassion, and patience as the source of help and deliverance in our distress.

Grace is the reason Jesus became a human person just like us.  He experienced the pain of seeing people he loved die, his earthly father Joseph, his cousin John the Baptist and his  close friend Lazarus.

·        God has been in the same place you are now, he knows what it is like to lose someone you love dearly.

·        Grace means that God will listen if you call to God for help, and that God knows your pain because he has felt it too.

Friday 6 July 2012

A funeral address

I had to take a funeral yesterday for someone I got to know reasonably well in the two years i have been on King Island.  I always find funeral services particularly difficult.  I want to comfort those there, but I also want people to think about their own mortality.
This is the address I gave yesterday.

Today is a sad occasion it is Ken’s funeral.  For many of us on King Island, Ken was a long time resident and involved in many Island organisations ... a very well known and respected member of our little community ... for others Ken was a good friend and mate; someone whose company and friendship will be missed .   For his family he was Dad, grandfather, uncle or cousin; someone who was loved deeply and who will go on being remembered and missed for as long as you live.
 We are here today to share our grief and support each other through that sorrow.   Death is painful, it is not something we like to dwell on but lately it has been unavoidable.  Someone said to me when they heard Ken had passed away that he is the 10th person they knew with King Island connections to have died in the last couple of months.  Poet John Donne wrote ...
No man is an island entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main;
If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were,
As well as any manner of thy friend or of thine own were; any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind.
And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.
Death diminishes us, the death of someone we know changes us.
I have usually taken scripture classes in most of the places I have worked.  In my last place, Norfolk Island I had most of the children in the local school at some time over the four years I was there.
Classes often said ... “Why do we have to waste time doing this when we should be doing something important like maths or science?
The last year I was there was very different.  During the school holidays the brother of one of the boys in the class I was to take died in very tragic circumstances a few days before the first lesson.  So instead of the lesson I had prepared we spent the time letting them express how they were feeling and trying to answer any questions as best I could that they had about death when they asked.
I prepared the next weeks scripture lesson but the week before had raised more feelings and more questions for the class so we spent that lessons as well looking at the possibilities of what might happen after death, what other people and faiths taught  and when they wanted to know, I told them what I believed.   Over the next weeks we looked at life’s other big questions: why are we here?  What did they really want from their lives?  How would you know if you had wasted your life? 
Six months later one of the boys (as 6th class boys will) started mucking up.  I did not get a chance  to do or say a thing because one of the other boys got up told him to be quiet ... “the stuff we were talking about was really important.”
What we believe about life and death if we stop and take the time to consider it properly, is important.  When we look at the possibility of our own mortality it can change our priorities, it can sort out what is really important to from what is not.
It can help us face our death and can give comfort when we mourn the death of someone we love dearly.
I believe that the grave is not the end.  We are all made to live beyond the grave.  All the major faiths share that belief in common but they do not all agree on what that life is like, or how you get to enjoy it.
For me I believe we receive that life as a gift from God through faith in Jesus Christ, who lived, died, rose from the dead and showed himself to hundreds of witnesses as proof of who he was and that life is eternal.
We all have to make up our own minds what we believe.  Today I want to encourage you to take that question seriously and not just brush it off as of no importance.  Ask yourself what do  you believe happens after death? and What evidence do you have for believing it?
Can you face your own mortality with confidence?
... any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind.And therefore never send for whom the bell tolls; for tomorrow it may toll for thee.

Thursday 28 June 2012

A life ruined for the ordinary. Part 3.

I wanted to find somewhere to study but from what I had seen the theological colleges could not provide the sort training I was seeking to work with the people I thought I was being called to work with. I wasn’t interested in being ordained either as I thought a ‘dog collar’ would be a hindrances instead of a help in relating to these people as well.  I had known a couple of “odd” people who did not fit the normal mould of church workers who had been through Church Army and who worked in the sort of ministries I was interested in.  This was the same at time that Church Army was changing their training model.
It seemed just the sort of place that might offer what I was looking for, so I applied, had an interview and was accepted as a candidate.  At that time it was expected that our theological education should be done through one of the ACT accredited Theological Colleges and Church Army provided the practical training.  I liked the faculty at Moorling Baptist College so studied with them while doing the Church Army training during the semester breaks.
They were three very exciting years for me.  I had left school thinking further study was beyond me.  It stretched me, and gave me a good grounding in ministry and God’s word.  Better still was being apprenticed beside two Church Army Officers who mentored me.  It was just what I was needing and looking for.

Three years after beginning I graduated and was commissioned as a Church Army Officer, at the same time a vacancy came up in Airds, the place most of the kids I had been working with came from.  God had things worked out perfectly.  I applied for the job at Airds but I did not get an interview.  Again what was God saying and doing.  This was the place I had just spent three years training to work in.  I had a passion for public housing ministry and a belief that I had a calling to it.

God works in surprising ways.  Airds was closed to me, (but I love that recently Church Army has begun a work planting a church there) but another door opened.  St Stephen’s Villawood had recently been amalgamated with a couple of other parishes into an experimental parish.  I applied and was given the job as Assistant part time Minister to St. Stephens.  I was given responsibility for ministry in a small church in the old public housing estate of Villawood. 
The old church building was in poor state, my carpentry skills came in handy, the building was reclad inside and out. The congregation was very small and had no contact with the community.  A Church Army mission launched an after school children’s program.  To make contact with the community we started a community garden that was going to use the grounds of the church for the garden plots.  Around the same time I had a phone call from a man in the Villawood Immigrant Detention centre asking to talk to someone about Christianity.

He was a Muslim who had picked up a Bible in the detention centre, and wanted to find out more about what he read. I met with him, he wanted to hear more and so I arranged to meet with him again ... when next I saw him he had invited some of his friends to hear what I had to say.  Eventually I was visiting the centre two days a week and meeting with a group of up to a dozen people at a time of all nationalities and faiths.  We sang songs, prayed together, and looked at what the Bible had to say.  Some requested baptism, some come to faith, and some who were already Christian were supported while in detention. 

Bishop Brian King supported the work and appointed me Chaplain to the Detention Centre.  The Australian government at this time had a policy of Temporary Protection Visas.  Meaning that those released into the community could not receive a lot of the benefits of normal citizens.  Some were released on temporary entry permits, meaning they were not entitled to any benefits.  A Somali family was released so that the government would not have to pay for the medical treatment and childbirth costs but would eventually be paid for by a charity. 
To help and support these newly released asylum seekers I met the NSW Ecumenical Council and we together we started the House of Welcome (http://www.houseofwelcome.com.au/).  This was the time of the Kosovo War.  There were many in the detention centre at that time who had come from that conflict seeking a place of safety.   There were unaccompanied children there as young as 5 who their parents had sent away hoping they might be cared for and safe in Australia.  Those children were looked away in a virtual prison full of young single male adults. There was a Doctor who had fled Iraq because his job in Iraq included amputating the hands or feet of deserters and thieves. 

I had to pray with an Iraqi who was to be returned to Iraq because he did not meet the requirements as an Asylum seeker.  He was an army deserter.  He knew what his fate would be once home.  This was also the time of protests, of detainees going on hunger strikes; of sewing up their mouths so they could not eat or be fed; of meeting with people who could not speak to me because they had stitched up their mouths in protest.  The authority’s response was to return these protesters back to where they had come from without appeal, or looking into why they were seeking asylum.  This I believe led to the death of a few when returned to their country of origin.
They were vulnerable, they needed someone to speak publically and make their plight known.  Public opinion had been manipulated for political ends at this time.  Asylum Seekers had been dehumanised and demonized, anything was thought possible of them, as was demonstrated by ‘children overboard’ incident.  I told the people I met with that they could not afford to protest, that someone from outside had to speak for them, but who?  Few people knew what was really happening in these centres.  I decided I should speak on their behalf, and spoke at rally outside Villawood detention centre.  I told three stories to give a human face to those locked away behind the razor wire of the centre.  As a result when next I visited the Detention Centre I was told I was told I had been banned from entering any Immigrant Detention Centre in Australia. 

Some month later the Iraq war was about to begin and our involvement as a nation was being debated.  I listened to it over radio.  One very well know government minister was defending the need for us to go to war by telling the Australian people of the way deserters are treated in Iraq, by having their feet amputated.  How barbaric that was. He neglected to mention though that Australia sent asylum seekers back to Iraq to have this barbaric operation happen to them.
Last night I witnessed a special broadcast on television of Parliament House where both sides were debating the recent tragedies of capsizing boats and the deaths of over a hundred people from these tragedies.  I became sad and angry as I watched what was being said, I could not believe the hypocrisy I heard said by politicians about their “sincere interest” in the protection of innocent people.  Now they are in opposition it has become unacceptable to send unaccompanied 13 year olds to Malaysia because of what might happen to them.  If that is unacceptable for 13 year olds in Malaysia to face the possibility of rape surely it was unacceptable when it happened in Australia to 5 year olds.  It was now unacceptable to send people to a country that was not a signatory to the United Nations Convention on Refugees, supposedly because of how the refugees might be treated in those countries.  Yet when they were responsible and in Government it was fine to released people from detention with no means but to begging of obtaining medical help, shelter, food, and clothing.

Once again I was not able to minister to the people I had felt called to.  Funding for my position at St. Stephen’s Villawood also ceased at about this time.  I was soon to be unemployed, and I was left wondering what God was doing.

Friday 22 June 2012

A life ruined for the ordinary. Part 2

I left school half way through year 11, or as it was then 5th year.  I got a job as an apprentice carpenter.  By the time I was 26, I had a trade, a wife, two children and a brand new home on the edges of Sydney’s vast urban sprawl on a Landcom Estate, which meant that 6 months before moving in the suburb had not existed.  We attended Church in the next suburb as ours did not yet have a church. In time a minister was appointed to our suburb, and a block of land and a grant of money was made available to build a church with.  Until the church building was completed we spent a few years meeting in a community hall.  It was a good time, with the minister appointed to us we planted a church, planned and built a building and along the way had to try all sorts of new roles, find all sorts of skills and gifts we did not think we had.

Being a newly developed area there were hundreds of children and teenagers.  As a parish we thought it would be good to employ a part time youth worker to work in the school and in the church to reach out to the teenagers.  I thought that if we went did employ someone, they would need some help, so when scripture union with the local Fusion centre decided to run an Urban Mission over the Christmas School Holidays, I thought it would be good to be part of, to see what young people were like and if I had any aptitude for working with them.

I was surprised, I had not realized what my suburb was like after dark.  We met homeless kids, kids that travelled 100km to where we were because they had heard we were feeding kids.  Kids living on the trains, kids that could not go home on weekends because Dad was drinking, or Mum had the boyfriend over, as well as dozens of ordinary kids looking for something to do during the long school break.

By this stage I was self employed.  I went back to work after the two weeks of mission, and back to my comfortable home with a fridge full of food and a warm bed every night.  But I could not get it out of my head that there were kids I had met who were still hungry, cold, and vulnerable.  I spoke to the Fusion worker who had led the Urban Mission team and said I wanted to do something for those kids.
We began a ‘drop in’ program called Warehouse in the local youth centre.  We had a TV, a pool table, tea and coffee and some food.  We started running it one evening a week.  The work grew rapidly.  One of the boys had got into trouble with the police and had to appear before the courts the next day and he asked if I would come along with him to keep him company. After that I could no longer work on Fridays, the day the children’s court met.  In that first year we found accommodation for over 50 kids. 
Some were also becoming interested in Christianity, so I began a small group exploring what it was to be a Christian.  But they needed more.  I took one group of kids to a church one Sunday morning, they enjoyed it so much they did not want to go home and stayed there on the grounds long after everyone else had gone home.  An elder seeing this grew worried and had the police come and remove the kids.
I next went to the big Anglican Church in the area and talked with the minister.  He told me not to bring any street kids to His church’s youth group, because if I did, the other parents would take their teenagers from the group in case they got interested in the street kids romantically.   But he did make an application for a grant to employ someone who could run a specialty ministry with these kids.  The grant was successful and it was time to find someone to fill the role as a church planter to these kids. 
We failed to find one trained person who would be able to take on this ministry, or who was willing to try. 

What was God doing? 

In asking that question, I began to suspect the answer was ... God is calling me to this sort of ministry, but I needed some good training.   Where would I find a place to train that would prepare me to work with people who do not normally fit in a church?

Tuesday 12 June 2012

A Sister’s Grace.

After church last Sunday one of the young boys was sitting looking rather glum. School still has another week of holiday to go; I figured he should have been feeling quite chirpy, so I asked him why the long face?

His Mum heard me asking and spoke for him.  “His sisters, you have three as well ... perhaps you could have a talk to him?”

I think I knew just what he might have been feeling having had three sisters of my own.

So after asking him what was up ... I told him a true story about my Dad, though it may have been embellished over the years with the retelling.

Dad had two sisters.  One day one of those sister became one sister too many.  Dad being a boy of action decided it was time to do something to fix the situation. He thought of a very “clever” plan.  He wagged school, got a shovel from his Grandfather’s shed and went out back of their home at Rockdale.  In those days it was a large market garden and had very sandy soil that was easily dug.  Dad began digging and continued most of the day.  He produced a lovely deep hole, just perfect to put his sister. 

It was then that Dad realized his “clever” plan had one short coming.  He had forgotten to bring a ladder.  He was stuck, and couldn’t get himself out of the hole he had dug for himself.  All he could do was start calling for help, which he did. 

You may have already guessed who it was who heard his cry for help?

That sister who was the one sister too many found him, stuck in the hole.  My Dad had to swallow his pride and ask her to rescue him.  Aunty Elsie did.  She pulled him out. 

Dad thought then that maybe that ‘one sister too many’ might not be quiet as bad as he had thought.  That maybe the reason they had not been getting on was more to do with his attitude and behaviour and how he had treated her.

Dad’s two sisters have both passed away now, and Dad misses then both deeply, but they both had a very real lively faith in the grace and forgiveness Jesus offer everyone who trusts what he did on the cross.  He has the comfort that death is not the end and they will all be reunited one day in heaven with God.

Wednesday 6 June 2012

A Life Ruined for the Ordinary (Part 1)


I have just got back home after attending the Church Army Conference.  The program was mostly the societies endorsed Evangelists sharing the story of their lives and subsequent ministries.  I was very encouraged hearing of the extraordinary things God has been doing in the lives of these relatively ordinary people, so I thought it might be worth recording my story on the chance someone might find encouragement in the work God has be doing in me.
Mine is not one of those dramatic conversion stories some people have.  My parents turned back to God after the birth of a still born child when I was 5.  My earliest memories are of us as a family attending church, being part of a Sunday school and of parents who served God in a variety of ways in their local Church.  At that age I naturally trusted and believed in God, this is not to say I have not had to develop my own faith.  Since then I have had doubts and times when I have wandered far from God but each time God has brought me back and through that process deepened my understanding of Him and I have grown in faith. 

My sisters and I ready for church on Sunday morning
I recently celebrated my 58th birthday. I have been following Jesus for something like 53 years. 
My first experience of actively taking on a ministry responsibility was when I was about 14, I was a keen member of CEBS (The Church of England Boy’s Society) and the CEBS leader wanted to begin a group for the very young boys, 5 – 7 year olds.  After thinking about it I talked to the leader and he agreed to let me try.  Once a week for an hour and a half I had charge of half a dozen excited boys, and needed to prepare a program to maintain their interest, lots of games, a devotional, some skills work.  I was only ever half a step in front of the boys but it was fun and I learnt quite a bit about ministry and leadership and serving God.

A couple of years later I was part of the church’s youth group when all the older teenagers became young adults, got married or moved on and we suddenly found that the group no longer had any of the older teens left to lead it, and in fact I was now one of the older teens at 16.  Again I took on the leadership of the youth group and started an after church on Sunday night ‘coffee shop’ for those that did not have to rush home after evening service. 
The coffee shop became popular and teens started dropping in who were only loosely connected with the church and they had not all gone to church before dropping by or some came from other churches in the area.

This was the mid sixties, the beginning of modern youth culture.  Rock music, long hair, beards, motor scooters and motor bikes.  Of rebellion, of the counter culture, of Vietnam and moratoriums, peace, love and dropping out. Of teenagers questioning everything and everyone searching to find who they are and what they stand for.
It was a time of deep conservativism in mainstream Australia, of Robert Menzies and Bob Askin. It was a time when the Church of England had just started calling itself the Anglican Church and still used the 1662 Book of Common Prayer.

When the church’s parish council heard what was happening on Sunday nights, of teenagers in front of the church and staying after services were over they became concerned.   They did what many churches have been doing and continue to do with those they do not know or understand, who are different to them.  They shut the door on them.  They informed me that the coffee shop was closed.
And I knew to the core of my being that something was not right in their decision.

I asked the Rector if he would arrange a meeting with the three Parish Wardens.  The meeting took place and I asked them to reconsider their decision.  I suggested these were the very people that the church existed to reach out to, those who did not yet know God.  They listened and we prayed and the coffee shop was allowed to remain open.

Those men are all long dead now.  I cannot imagine it was easy for them to trust a kid like me with what they feared might happen to their old historic building but they did, they were gracious, and I think it was in that time that my life’s journey was set a course.

Monday 14 May 2012

Depression

Depression is now epidemic today in the western world. 

·        1 in 6 men have clinical depression.
·        1 in 5 women also have clinical depression.

·        It is estimated 1 in 4 teenagers now have clinical depression.

·        Every person is likely to suffer a form of depression at some time in their life.

·        Only I in 9 people who have clinical depression seek treatment it.

Yet figures suggest the earlier that treatment is started, the easier and quicker it is to remedy.
Dr. Martin Seligman has made a study of depression.  His ideas dominate psychology in the USA and have caused a revolution in the treatment of depression in American in the last 10 years.
Until Seligman’s research it was widely believed that a person was powerless to change their circumstances.  It was believed that people are simply programmed to act and respond in certain ways that can not be changed.

Then one day his 5 year old daughter taught him a profound lesson.  Seligman and his young daughter were out weeding the garden.  He the busy phycologist was concentrating on the task at hand ... weeding the garden as quickly as possible.  His daughter on the other hand, was more interested in having fun.  She found delight in pulling the weeds and tossing them in the air and watching them flutter back to the ground.
In a cranky tone he reprimanded his daughter for not getting on with the task.  Work now.  Play later.  

His daughter a little upset but with the honesty of a young child finally came back to her father with a question.  “You know how I learned not to be whiney by the time I was 5?  Well, why can’t you learn not to be grumpy?”

·        This simple childish question changed modern phycology.   It set Seligman learning and studying how to become happy.

Depression robs us of happiness but if we can learn how to be happy it can act as a buffer to prevent depression. If we suffer depression happiness can help make antidepressant drugs more effective.
Happiness was not the only buffer Seligman found.  He ended with a list of 13 buffers to stress and depression.  The list includes: Courage.  Future mindedness.  Optimism.  Interpersonal skills.  Faith.  Work ethic.  Hope.  Honesty.  Perseverance. Capacity for insight.  Forgiveness.  Resilience and happiness.

Before Seligman’s work an America Psychologists could loose their licences to practice if they asked about a person’s faith.  Seligman found in his study of happiness that the happiest people are conservative Christians.
Since Seligman’s work it is now compulsory for Psychologists to take a spiritual inventory of all patients.  Faith is understood to be so helpful in the process of prevention and recovery that a Psychologist who does not do this with each patient they see is now considered negligent if they do not take this inventory.

It seems that science and Phycology are only now just discovering what Christians have always known.  We humans are wonderfully made by God but we made with design limits that can not be exceeded without real harm to ourselves. We are designed to be healthiest when we are in relationship with our creator.