Severe flooding across the Sahel region of West Africa has left hundreds of thousands of people without food and shelter, bringing fresh misery to communities already suffering their worst food crisis in decades. For more information about the work of Christian Aid visit www.christianaid.ie
Hillsborough parish church will be well represented when John Rutter, one the greatest living composers of sacred choral music, conducts a major concert in Belfast this month.John Rutter, 64, is best known for his many Christmas carol compositions and arrangements, and popular anthems such as Look At The World, I Will Sing With The Spirit, For The Beauty Of The Earth, The Lord Bless You And Keep You and A Clare Benediction, which are sung regularly in churches throughout the world, including St Malachy's.
In 1981 he founded his own choir, the Cambridge Singers, which
he conducts and with which he has made many recordings. He lives near
Cambridge, but frequently conducts other choirs and orchestras around
the world. In 1996 the Archbishop of Canterbury conferred a Lambeth
Doctorate upon him in recognition of his contribution to church music.
Tickets (£25 or £20 concession) are available from the Waterfront Box Office (tel: 9033 4455), or online at www.waterfront.co.uk
(This article first appeared in the Hillsborough Parish Outlook Magazine).
]]>
Rathfriland came to a standstill on Saturday as large numbers gathered to pay their respects to six-year-old Stuart Wilson. Stuart died on Thursday from injuries sustained in a tragic boating accident at
Cranfield Beach. He recalled Stuart fondly, describing his love of sport - and especially the football club at Iveagh Park - his enthusiasm in church and Sunday School and his mischievous streak. "He was a regular wee imp but adorable with it," said David.
Revd Somerville praised the Wilson family, who never left Stuart's side,
for their courage and grace. He also paid tribute to the medical professionals who fought to save Stuart's life - from the doctor and nurse on the beach to the specialist teams at Daisy Hill Hospital and the Royal Victoria Hospitals, "who explored every avenue to bring Stuart's little body
back from the trauma."
In an earlier statement, the family said that, although devastated by the death of their son and brother, they were glad that their last memories were of Stuart doing something he loved with his family and friends.
]]>
The tables were turned in Entebbe, Uganda recently as hundreds of Anglican Bishops from all over Africa gathered for their second All Africa Bishops Conference (AABC). The first took place six years ago in Lagos, Nigeria in October, 2004 with the theme - "Africa Has Come of Age" – this time the theme was “Securing the Future: Unlocking our Potential”.
Both the Prime Minster of Uganda, the Honorable Dr. Apolo Nsibambi, and the President of Uganda, His Excellency Yoweri K. Museveni personally welcomed the Conference. They also hosted a five-course formal dinner at the palatial State House, Entebbe, accompanied by a full orchestra playing revival hymns. Both men turned the tables on the assembled bishops by using the opportunity to both establish their credentials as sons of the East African Revival and also deliver challenging biblically based sermons. Their words were refreshingly direct.
The Prime Minister called on the participants to sit lightly on their status as bishops and stay true to the plain teaching of Scripture. The President reminded them of the dangers of religious intolerance and challenged them to follow the example of Jesus especially in his commitment to preach the Word, feed the hungry, heal the sick and love the downtrodden. The messages were delivered with clarity and conviction and well received.
Throughout the conference there were many calls on the various governments of the countries represented to be faithful stewards of their people's trust and their nations resources. This healthy interchange between church and government leaders was a reminder that Anglicanism has historically embraced the call to serve the common
good through deliberate engagement with those in civil government.
At the first AABC conference the Archbishop of Canterbury was conspicuous by his absence, this time he came and preached at the opening Eucharist. In his carefully nuanced sermon on Jesus as the Good Shepherd Dr. Williams warned the gathered bishops to listen to their people and take risks.
In his Conference address Archbishop Ian Ernest, Chairman of CAPA (Council of Anglican Provinces in Africa) responded by making it clear that Dr. Williams was there to listen to the voice of the Anglican Communion in Africa and not take risks on its future. He went on to state that the existing leadership structures of the Communion had
failed, were increasingly irrelevant and unrepresentative of the majority of the Communion. This view was echoed Archbishop Henry Orombi, Primate of Uganda and host of the conference, who declared to one reporter “the Anglican Church is very broken. It (church) has been torn at its deepest level, and it is a very dysfunctional family of the provincial churches.”
These challenging words were delivered respectfully but there was no mistaking the determination and resolve. In a meeting with the Primates, Dr Williams was left in no doubt that unless he was willing to follow through on the numerous decisions to exercise discipline towards The Episcopal Church (USA) and its fellow travellers, the Anglican Communion focused on Canterbury will continue to disintegrate. Both Archbishops Ernest and Orombi also made it clear that the days of deference to the West as the sender of missionaries and resources were over. They are now ready to turn the tables and re-evangelize the West understanding that Gospel mission is no longer from the “West to the rest” but from “everywhere to anywhere”.
The conference itself was a combination of enthusiastic worship, energetic expositional Bible Studies and a wide variety of plenary presentations and group discussions that dealt with many of the practical issues that confront Anglican Churches in Africa. The
spectrum was wide including issues of climate change, HIV/Aids, corruption, neglect of women and children and the need for economic empowerment. At times the language for these sessions sounded more like that of a United Nations development conference and several participants cautioned that while the church must engage in practical social concerns it must always do so mindful of its distinctive role as the Body of Christ with spiritual resources that are indispensible if we are to see a lasting transformation of the communities where they serve.
In keeping with African tradition the tea breaks were generous and it seemed that much of the real work of the conference took place as leaders from across Africa met, drank tea, shared experiences and prayed together. One of the most moving moments in the Conference took place when bishops from those countries experiencing violent conflict
were invited come forward and kneel for extended prayer from the rest of the conference participants. This willingness to be humbled before one another and before the Lord is, of course, a distinctive element of the East African Revival and was embraced by all present.
The overall attitude of the conference was a recognition that while many problems remain the remarkable growth that they have all experienced in the past six years is a sign that they are ready to take on the challenges before them. The Gospel they proclaim is Good News of Great Joy for all people and it showed in Entebbe.
The Rt. Rev’d Martyn Minns,
Missionary Bishop CANA, Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion)
Monday, August 30, 2010
This autumn Willowfield & Mount Merrion Parish Churches get back to basics with the Ten Commandments.Visit the Just 10 website to discover more about the programme.
]]>
Speaking at the Inter-Faith Conference, Bishop Michael Jackson calls Christian Churches to engage more actively with social and political developments that shape modern society.
Referring to the Church of Ireland's Hard Gospel Project, which focused on living with difference and emerged from the experience of Christian communities confronting the legacy of sectarianism in Northern Ireland he said that it offers a model for engaging in a range of issues including sectarianism, but also of use in developing positive inter-faith exchanges:
"One of the things I would rejoice to see is a renewed and refreshed confidence in the working out - that is the verbs more than the nouns – of the Hard Gospel principles in the specific arena of Inter Faith relations. Ireland offers us a particular cluster of opportunities and possibilities. Vast tracts of our country and people are constantly and continually in danger of being taken back into sectarianism, whether polite or less polite, from a vacuum to a vortex. The political and social theory has moved ahead of the church's response in terms of words, ideas, activities but still the philosophy of A Shared Future remains unfinished and contested business in Northern Ireland."
Full text of address follows:
The Hard Gospel and Inter Faith Encounter – why would you bother?
Two booklets produced within the Church of Ireland: Life beyond Boundaries, a publication of The Hard Gospel Project (2006) and Guidelines for Interfaith Events and Dialogue, prepared jointly by the Committee for Christian Unity and the bishops of the Church of Ireland (2007) form the basis of a two-day Conference on Inter Faith issues being run by the Inter Faith Working Group of the Church of Ireland’s Commission on Unity and Dialogue held in the Church of Ireland Theological Institute on September 1st and 2nd.
The foreword to Life Beyond Boundaries by Archbishop Eames, as Primate of All Ireland, issues a challenge in the name of The Hard Gospel Project hich in what it says remains as urgent today as it was in April 2006: 'But it (The Hard Gospel) calls for action, change and serious readjustment. Above all it represents for me the sincerity and integrity of internal examination on the same basis the Church has often demanded of society. We are in other words doing unto ourselves as we have asked of others.’
I quote this in full for the following reasons: (1) It sets before us the imperative not only to talk but to act (2) It locates such performance and transformation in a personal response (3) It reconnects with society a church which is increasingly in danger of withdrawing from society (4) It gives an interesting twist to an over-used Biblical cliché – Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. In any of these particulars, it is worth delaying over. In one respect, I think the foreword could go further. It says suggestively: ‘The Gospel is a hard gospel when we take it seriously. Yet the path to Calvary was not easy...’
The Inter Faith outworking of the Hard Gospel philosophy, on which we have embarked in this Conference, takes us through and beyond Calvary - to Emmaus for the Resurrection appearances of Jesus, to Jerusalem for the Day of Pentecost and the giving of the Holy Spirit and onward to all nations. I say this because Inter Faith encounter and dialogue are a form of witnessing to one’s own faith in the context of another person’s presence as witness to his/her own faith. The last point is important because demonizing is so much easier when someone is absent. Too much of our thinking is conditioned now by media catch-cries like: clash of civilizations and axis of evil. Too much of this sentiment is itself conditioned by the Messianic complex in a secular context of Blair and Bush in response to militant Islam. If we remain stuck at this point, then the experiment and the imperative of The Hard Gospel will leave us cold and out in the cold.
One of the most important distinctions to keep in mind is that between the mirror and the mirage. Very often we think that we are ourselves seeing things when we are in fact distorting them to our own advantage and vanity. Genesis 1.26, a text shared by all three so-styled Abrahamic Faiths, is insistent that humankind is made in God’s image and likeness. The Guidelines for Interfaith Events and Dialogue argue that all people are our brothers and sisters by virtue of creation. The argument from creation brings in the argument for peace and justice as something which respects and enhances the integrity of creation. But it also personalizes it. The Corinthian Epistles in particular press home for Christians the recognition of the face of Jesus Christ in the face of the other. This again is a feature of Christian theology common both to The Hard Gospel and to Inter Faith encounter. God reveals the self of God.
The Jewish injunction to love God and love our neighbour as we love ourselves presents a comprehensive challenge to all three Abrahamic religions, and it is this:
Is a particular religious identity, any religious identity, of itself so self-justifying that the religious person assumes that he loves God and that this never needs to be questioned? To my mind this goes some way to offering an explanation as to why the young lawyer in St Luke 10 makes the assumption of himself that it is self-evident that he loves God. It has been the tragedy of a society infected and imbued by sectarianism, such as the island of Ireland, to assume, selectively and according to one’s own denominational-cultural allegiance and affiliation, the best in oneself and the worst in others. It remains the on-going and tragic flaw of a country which maximizes the importance of its own religio-cultural identity to assume, selectively once more, the best in oneself and the worst in others. Self-knowledge and self-love involve and require the presence of our neighbour. Both repudiate self-hatred and hatred of the other. Hence, the commentary on the Parable of the Good Samaritan in Life Beyond Boundaries is particularly helpful: ‘We also need to learn how rightly to know and love ourselves – to know and understand our true identity, in the context of a sustained and loving relationship with God and our neighbour.’
Archbishop Eames, in my opinion rightly, raised the issue of the church’s internal examination – in terms of action, change and serious readjustment – on the same basis as that on which the church has often demanded of society. This takes us to the heart of our dilemma and, like any dilemma, it is not and can not be simple. The old-style Christendom is dead and gone. There are, however, still many monolithic states where culture and religion dictate and control much of life from day to day both in terms of practice and policy. Two other components need to be remembered. There still is an expectation of a benign presidency by the church in society – and yet as any of us who was involved in the now-defunct Church in Society Committee in the Church of Ireland knows, once there was anything on paper which sounded in any way progressive, there was intense twitchiness in many parts of the Church of which we as Members of that Committee were also part.
There is, further, an expectation of asking theological questions in today’s society. People talk theologically in coffee shops, over dinner, in the bus as well as at home. This comes from a number of factors – all of them derived from the information technology revolution, now slumbering and coming to life alternately in most Western sitting rooms and coat pockets – laptop, iphone or ipad. The global information revolution poses cosmic questions. These questions are rightly considered theological but they are not the sorts of questions which churches regularly ask. Churches have ecclesiasticized theology and have ecclesiasticized information. Theological questions of the broadest kind are frightening to many church people for another reason and, to my mind, it is this: because they ask them to witness, to substantiate their faith. They are, in the idiom of The Hard Gospel pamphlet Life beyond boundaries: questions beyond boundaries. And the very asking of them takes us beyond sectarianism and denominationalism. The movement of the Holy Spirit coming in and out of the church means that we cannot control a wind which blows where it wills (St John 3.8).
One of the by-products of the lazy easiness with which we have accustomed ourselves to a low-density, small-input Christian culture is that it is all rather vague when anyone asks us any questions. Christianity is so glorious, in my opinion, because it is so richly complex. Conflictual journalism and confrontational interviewing have a field-day because no two people will argue or plead in the same way about the same religious topic or issue. From the outside, other world religions seem devastatingly straightforward. Jewish people seem to recite the Torah three times a day – and that is it. Muslims seem to pray five times a day – and that is it. Buddhists seem to sit and meditate – we’d all love to do that, we think – and that is it. Christians seem to go to church for one hour each week – and that is it. Caricatures abound and all of them are unhelpful.
People involved in Inter Faith dialogue are, rightly, concerned to make very clear that it is not Ecumenism nor is it religious syncretism. There are, nonetheless, specific things we need to keep in mind and to learn from ecumenical thought and practice as we embark on Inter Faith life and work in the Church of Ireland in a serious, meaningful and organized way. In the ecumenical context, Fr Michael Hurley SJ spoke of ecumenical tithing, that is, spending one tenth of one’s time of worship, prayer and charity in a denomination other than one’s own. Is there scope for a version of such a model in an Inter Faith understanding? Beware the high theological level and not honouring the local and the simple goodness of human achievements! It is important that those who lead stand with those who follow. It is important also to realize and to celebrate that, as in the ecumenical realm, the local sharing of life and respect is often more efficacious than the cerebral interchange of ideas. Do not be frightened to be adventurous! God does not need us to prop him up in our section of the church for God to continue to exist, flourish and love worldwide in abundant graciousness. Expect things to be sporadic and do not be knocked down at the first challenge or insult! Remember too that we are members of the Anglican Communion and that the resources of NIFCON (The Network for Inter Faith Concerns) are there to be called upon and used.
Personally, I am more interested in verbs and nouns and it is for this reason that I welcome words like: action, change and serious readjustment in the foreword to Life Beyond Boundaries. It is because so much is shared and learned in the doing together and in the surprises which come through in that doing. But there are nouns and there have to be nouns – because nouns are, of course, the result of what verbs do. They need to be addressed if we are to move forward. We need, as a matter of urgency, to address the relationship between a number of pairs of words if we are to deal with difference positively in Ireland and in our churches today: principle and prejudice; permission and precedent; analysis and action.
One of the things I would rejoice to see is a renewed and refreshed confidence in the working out – that is the verbs more than the nouns – of the Hard Gospel principles in the specific arena of Inter Faith relations. Ireland offers us a particular cluster of opportunities and possibilities. Vast tracts of our country and people are constantly and continually in danger of being taken back into sectarianism, whether polite or less polite, from a vacuum to a vortex. The political and social theory has moved ahead of the church’s response in terms of words, ideas, activities but still the philosophy of A Shared Future remains unfinished and contested business in Northern Ireland. The findings and recommendations of the Consultative Group on the Past – alias The Eames-Bradley Commission – despite already being used as a template in sophisticated conflict resolution internationally, found its impact whittled away almost to nothing in the minds of so many because of the specific £12,000 payment suggested to families of victims. In the Republic of Ireland, in relation to the registration of civil partnerships, we have been dragged into the present of other European countries and have been forced to admit that, while we might prefer it were the state to create a special category for civil servants who as Christians dissent in conscience from involvement in any way in such registrations, we accept the entitlement of the state to legislate for equality in this area. Citizenship and conscience need to converse, co-exist and move forward in good faith.
The Section 75 (1) provision of the Northern Ireland Act 1998 - alias the Equality Agenda – does not apply directly to churches in respect of the need to promote equality of opportunity. Section 75 however, does go on to provide that public authorities must have regard ‘to the desirability of promoting good relations between people of different religious belief, political opinion or religious group.’ Would it not be something rather wonderful were the Church of Ireland to grapple creatively, compassionately and courageously with the spirit contained within the letter of Section 75, rather than, perhaps, looking quizzically at it over our half-moon glasses, and looking to see what of ourselves as we are we can safeguard as we pick through it? This is where, in a sense, I have my biggest bone to pick with the young lawyer. Eternal life is not an inheritance, a commodity, an achievement. It is a present which is partially opened already in this life. We have confused the kingdom of God with moral correctitude; we have put our own values between the generosity of God and the people of the land, that is, those whom Jesus embraced and whom no self-respecting religioso would touch; we have turned into a commodity on the shelf of our own religious supermarket God’s pearl of great price.
The hope expressed in The Hard Gospel Scoping Study Report is that ‘members of the Church of Ireland would be equipped to become more confident in their inclusive Christian identity, engage in good citizenship, make a positive impact on society and experience the freedom to be truly Christian and part of a diverse but unified church.’ Personally, I should like to see more evidence of this and hear of more models of sustained good practice on a regular basis. The Hard Gospel programme, approved by the Standing Committee of the Church of Ireland in 2005, confirms that ‘The Church of Ireland wishes to make a creative contribution to the new and diverse society which is emerging in Ireland, north and south.’ This society is emerging and will continue to emerge whether we are part of it or not. It will not wait for us to agonize over our identity in an era of change. Again, if I may be permitted to draw and take a parallel from ecumenism, we in the Church of Ireland have done all too little to make the various ecumenical Agreements of which we are part across European Christianity work within Ireland itself. The one noble exception is Porvoo and it is in fact to a Porvoo Meeting in Oslo in 2003 that we owe the genesis of our Guidelines for Interfaith Events and Dialogue. Three members of the Church of Ireland were there as were two of the speakers at this Conference.
We live daily the dilemma of two clear Patristic theological emphases in Europe. This choice at its starkest is between (a) an exclusivity in Christian belonging, derived from the later Augustine and excessively influential in contemporary western theological systems which are derivative of Augustinianism, all of which have a hard doctrine of the Fall and (b) the theology of Irenaeus which has a very different, developmental understanding of Christian discipleship and the emergence of maturity and adulthood with responsibility over a lifetime of living with God, as propounded primarily by the Orthodox traditions. In my own understanding, the doctrine of creation ex nihilo leads through to the diversity of the body of Christ. A body which does not move does not go anywhere. The energy of believing has not got to do with making us more like ourselves or even making our neighbour more like us, but with letting God make both our neighbour and ourselves more like God.
The Church of Ireland Theological Institute is delighted to announce the appointment of the Revd Ted Woods as part-time Internship Co-ordinator. With preparations already well underway for the commencement of the inaugural internship year from September 2011, Mr. Woods, who continues to serve as Rector of Rathfarnham Parish, will take up his appointment of approximately one day per week with immediate effect. The video above is one of a series of four entitled 'Proclaim: Sharing Stories of Faith in Action' and was commissioned by the Down and Dromore Council for Mission.
It shows an initiative of Bangor Parish - taking prayer onto the streets of the town. It's not costly, not showy, but requires something many churches possess - a few committed individuals and faith.
]]>