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A Skinny Fairtrade Latte in the Food Court of Life

  • Joyfully Messy...

    Today's Messy Sunday School saw our biggest numbers yet - nine children aged 3 to 10 - and it was joyful, messy, fun and full of hope.

    Whilst we were making a colourful coat collage, hearing the story of Joseph from the OT, making and sharing sandwiches, finger painting and thinking about how families come in all shapes and sizes, the adults were having something of a Roger Jones fest, with hymns and songs from his musicals.

    When I arrived here almost two years ago, Sunday School was weekly with one or two children, and congregations were in the mid-twenties.  Now we are anywhere up to ten children, with Sunday School being monthly, and congregations regularly well in to the forties.  It's certainly messy... and complicated (have to remember which week we are on!)... and it's joyful, colourful and is a reminder that God isn't finished with us yet!

      

  • Summer Suns are Glowing...

    ... and today I effectively 'break up' from my College job until mid-August, having staggered my two sets of leave so that I get two half and three full weeks of rest, relaxation and refreshment.

    It's really hard to believe I have now completed two academic years, and almost two calendar years in my bi-vocational ministry, and only now do I have any sense of starting to get the hang of it!  As I look back, I reckon I've done okay... I spent yesterday and today doing a lot of emails and admin tasks, along with a little bit of planning/organising into next academic year for my Vicar School job, and found myself thinking, yeah, I really am contributing something of worth here (I'm an ISTJ and an Enneagram 1, so being hard on myself is a 'go to', this is me being positive about what I've done!).

    Another week of churchy stuff before my break, and some similar reflections there - yup, I and we are doing okay, lots of good stuff, lots to be thankful for.

    Not going 'away away' this year, but lots of little things to look forward to including an overnight in London, a day trip to Bute (only me!), an exhibition at Manchester museum, and a day on the edge of the Peak District.   Just some space to slow down, rest, reflect, and be re-created feels like a 'good thing'... and whether or not the sun continues to glow, I am pretty sure that it will be good.        

  • "Off you go"

    My last preaching Sunday at the Railway Town Baptist Church for this academic year, and the Lectionary invited us to ponder the healing of Naaman and the sending by Jesus of the 70/72.  As I pondered the readings, I was conscious of how often the word 'go' and its derivatives arose, and so this formed the basis for my reflection 'Off You Go'.  It didn't feel to me like the greatest thing I've ever prepared, but by the mysterion that is the movement of God's Spirit it seemed to land, and land with a variety of folk who sought me out to thank me for the service. 

    When I arrived almost two years ago, the average attendance was around thirty people, now we are regularly passing forty.

    When we chose to close our Sunday School and try something else, we were down to one or two children; now most weeks we have around half a dozen.

    When I arrived we were operating on a deficit budget, now our deficit is even bigger, as some generous givers have 'been promoted to glory' and our finances are increasingly precarious.  Yet we keep on keeping on. 

    Soon, I'll begin my summer leave, and then we'll move into our final year of travelling together (this was a three year appointment)  and must seek to discern what the next 'off you go' will look like.

    According to the gospel attributed to Matthew, just before he left them to get on with it, Jesus said something like to his 'Newly Accredited Sent-ones'... "Off you go, to places close at hand, and far away; share my story, do my work, dunk those who want to join our movement; and remember, whatever happens, in good times and tough times, even though you can't see me, and probably won't be aware of me, I'm with you every step of the way, until, together, we reach journey's end."

    And it's from the old we travel to the new - keep us travelling along with you!

  • Bubbles, Lego... and Celebration

    Yesterday was our College Community Day and Valedictory Service, a day characterised by all that makes us who we are, who we have been, and who we will be in a slightly different guise going forward.  We worked hard to prepare for the day, and all that hard work surely paid off as Spirit-ordered Godly-chaos gave rise to laughter and tears, songs and stories, serious and silly, in a hopeful, hope-filled, hospitable and happy day.

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    From a story-box retelling of the Vashti story, to the Magnificat in BSL with interpretation to English; from Lego models to rainbow fridge magnets, party bags to bubble blessings; from tiny tots to life-long connections, liturgical responses to hands raised in praises... and a whole lot more... this Northern Baptist College, a crazy, creative, Christ-loving community that is simultaneously around 60 years old and more than 200 years old! 

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    As we honoured the past, and embraced the future now unfolding, it was a day to treasure. 

    I first entered the portals of this place in 1998, as a lay student, exploring my call to ordained ministry.  A year later I began formal training and, a quarter of a century later, I now enjoy the privilege of working with others to help form minsters for a new generation.

    For all that has been, thank you; for what is yet to come, yes!   

  • Life is full...(enegised-if-slightly-knackered!)

    The photo is from yesterday evening, when I'd spent an hour or so tidying up in the garden and paused to admire the glorious colours of the buddleia, hydrangeas and roses.  Somehow it reflects the richness and fullness of my life as bi-vocational minister at a time of year when lots is happening!

    Last Saturday was the grand opening of our Community Garden, a lovely day that saw around 60 people gathering to celebrate hard work and hopeful dreams

    This Saturday (tomorrow) I will be teaching Baptist History for the first time to a group of ministers in training.  The amount of preparation I've put in is, I am sure, out of all  proportion, and my Impostor Syndrome is through the roof, not least as the content is a fraction of what others would include, but overall, I am pleased with my preparation and looking forward to it. 

    Next Saturday is our Vicar School Community Day and Valedictory Service, which is really exciting and important as it marks an important moment in our life together.

    Somehow, all of this diversity integrates into a thing of beauty, hope, and a bit of God-ness... and some slightly random, stream of consciousness, thoughts:

     

    • When I was a teenager, my Mum, not given to much positivity, in an unguarded moment said, 'I think you might be famous one day'.  Well, no, not famous, and not infamous, but yes, I have my place in the Baptist story and it is somehow quite significant... who'd have thought it? Not me for sure!      

    • As a child I absolutely loved history, and often questioned why we kept on repeating the same mistakes, then some appalling teaching meant a grade E at 'O' level and a sense I was rubbish at this after all... But studying industrial history in my engineering degree and church history in my theology reassured me that I was right, history is awesome and it does matter

    • It's hard to explain the 'Hotel California' nature of the Vicar School, and why it matters so much to me, but it does.  Next Saturday we reach a significant moment in our ongoing story.  With only a slight stretch of the imagination, given their shared origins, I can claim to have studied engineering and theology at the same college, founded in London's East End at a time when protestant non-conformists weren't allowed to go to university.  With less of stretch of the imagination, I can see how my own childhood connections to Methodist, and URC churches, and eventual homecoming in the Baptist tradition are part of a journey to this place

    So, yes, I am knackered, good knackered, knackered-but-energised... in all things God works with those whom God loves for good, and somehow, as I looked up from weeding the garden to admire the flowers, I was reminded of just how true this is.