Calling....  

0 comments Posted by Lauren



What does God's call feel like? Look like, sound like, taste like, smell like?

Does it sometimes feel like a weightless certainty, and at others as urgent as two labrador puppies on a leash - busting to get going but not 100% sure which direction, just away, just acting, not standing still!

Is it sometimes a burden,and other times a joy? Sometimes almost clear, other times a mystery? Sometimes close and other times all-enveloping?


I have a call, an insistent, not always pleasant call.

'Feed my sheep, travel if you have you, but feed them! I don't need another pew-warmer. Time is short. GET MOVING!'

'But how, Lord? Alone? Do I need innoculations, a passport, a degree, a church to sponsor me? Could you tell me a bit more? Perhaps make some aspects clearer? Should I stay here, work in the community, feed the lambs whose language I speak and know?'

'You will know when you're doing it right, just DO IT. Time is short, the flock is hungry. Move!'

Or do I imagine it? Is this insistent urge just a fantasy, a hope that God finds me useful enough to speak to and encourage and whip into shape?

Meantime I squirm in the pew, pray for guidance, look at all the options, feel like I'm not doing enough. And the call, the insistent, urgent, GET OFF THE TRACKS call... help me to decipher it.... please.

Please help me in praying for guidance, and for clarity. I would have said patience too, but I feel the impatience does not come from me...

As a church we have agreed to go ahead with the community garden project. We are going to build the gardens this Saturday morning. We have already had many kind offers of help. Someone donated $500, others are donating compost, untreated wood, seedlings, others soil and still others their skill and labour.

We decided in the end that we will split the plots - we will predominantly grow veges to give away as food but we will also grow seedlings to give away to encourage others to grow their own gardens. We figured the old saying of "give someone a fish you feed them for a day, teach them how to fish and you'll feed them for a lifetime" must also apply to veges. However, the reality is also that some of the people who come to or through our church do not have the land space or the physical, mental or emotional capacity to maintain a garden and therefore we will also need give away produce as well as seedlings. Our local area has a market that runs on a Tuesday morning and could be an ideal place to give away seedlings to encourage gardening. It is also possible that we could supply seedlings and food to some of the local networks who are part of the gardening initiative. We'll figure that stuff out as we go, but at the moment all eyes (and hopefully hands) are on building the plots.

Please go and read Ruth Gouldbourne's wonderful Advent post about a very difficult funeral within the Bloomsbury Baptist Church community. Having had to lead similarly difficult funerals, I especially loved her reminder that the promises of the Christian hope are promises and not answers.

Okay, so a few of us at NBC grew mos for Movember to raise money for our Relay for Life team. We are looking for the most stylish mo - not necessarily the bushiest but the most stylish. So, I'm wanting readers of this blog to tell me which mo they think is the most stylish. Write the number of the mo you think is the best into comments and feel free to suggest a name - e.g. I've called 5, 6, 12 "The Chopper" 13 "The Raurimu Spiral" 3 "The Coffee Stain":

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In the drought we long for mist; in the cool months, long-past summers fuel our dreams.

We live in a world in-between: forgetting to delight in the now. Forgetting to be present to the beauty that exists today.

This day.

Every day.

It's so hot and dry: the hills baked to the colour of ginger-crunch, the lake a desert oasis, the strange mist of a few mornings-ago a cool blessing.

The mist rose early, so deep that the world disappeared in its moist white embrace.

It pressed its damp cheeks to the house, repelling the sun that would disperse it.
We were all alone, marooned on an island of cloud.

Gone was the lavender outside the bathroom window; gone the burned grass bank behind it. Gone the rabbits, the pukekos, the hunting cat. The lake and ponds gone - erased from the canvas while we slept.

The mist pressed a cool compress to the baked earth. It smothered the sighs of the wilting olive trees, it caressed the dried arrangements that once bore fruit. It whispered to the land that one day the drought would end.

The quiet, shrouded earth rested, recovered a little.

The bell-bird who sips each morning from the flax flowers stayed in its nest. The tui in the gum, no more, no more.

No magpies gargled. No frogs creaked. No plants tap-tapped against the side of the house.

The morepork slept, his head pillowed on his chest, dreaming of the hunt just finished.

The clock ticked, time shuffled its weary feet, light imperceptibly slipped through the muffling mist.

The lavender - usually bee-buzzed by now - ghosted silently, empty against the window.
The trees tiptoed back into place, trailing cottony shrouds behind them.

Soft glints of sky peeled off the lake, the parched world was reviving.

The birds ran quiet sound checks before one by one rediscovering their voice, and they hailed the bright, hard sky as it returned.

Drought, broken for a brief time, is so much easier to bear. A promise glimpsed eases our pain, allowing us to appreciate anew the beauty here and now.

It's just a season: its time is limited.

The world will return to rights.

Relax, wait, enjoy.

This time too, will pass.

We are floating the following proposal at our AGM on Sunday:

PROPOSAL OF NAPIER BAPTIST COMMUNITY GARDEN:



PROPOSAL:
“That the church make use of the secure space behind the church by turning some of it into a garden to provide food for people in need within the church and the wider community.”

INTRODUCTION:
Our church is looking for ways in which we can “Make God’s Kingdom Visible” in our local community. The location of the church is in a very deprived area of Napier. Maraenui is rated 10 on the NZ Deprivation Index (the scale is 1-10). Our current financial climate is difficult and many think it will get worse before it gets better. This situation impacts the entire country but is especially difficult for low income families. They are the most vulnerable in situations of financial stress as costs and unemployment spiral upward and income spirals downward. To highlight this we can note the dramatic increase in the number of people making use of our church’s foodbank. As a result we are running low on stock and we are struggling to receive more stock from our suppliers. At the moment, supply is exceeding demand with our small foodbank. This year, the Maraenui Urban Renewal Trust has begun a project to encourage residents to plant gardens. This is sponsored by people like JJs Organics and Napier City Council and was highlight on a TV3 News Bulletin (you can also watch the clip at this link). We can therefore link into an already existing community project that is donig good things. In response to these realities, we thought of ways we could support the foodbank and serve our local community. We noticed that the large area out the back of the church (approx. 183 m2 excluding the area behind the auditorium where the trucks come for the paper recycling) was something of a “dead space”. The idea was floated of turning some of this area into raised gardens where we could plant and grow vegetables to give away to those in need of healthy and nutritious food. It is also possible that we could use some of the produce to make pickles, cutneys and other produce to give away.

WHAT WOULD IT INVOLVE?
  • Gathering a group of passionate people who are able and willing to look after and maintain the gardens. My idea at the moment is to float this idea past some of our many passionate gardeners and gauge their interest. I would like to form a group of 10 or so familes/people who are willing to look after the gardens for one week out of 10.
  • Finding people who are able and willing to build the raised garden beds. This will involve getting the materials at the cheapest possible price. It has also been suggested that some people would be willing to pay for the cost of the materials.
  • Some top soil.
  • A plan of where to place the gardens so that people are still able to access the different entrances and exits and have appropriate walkways. We will have to allow trucks to get to the paper bins etc.
  • Seeds to plant. Some of these will be available through some of our many gardeners and we may also have to buy some.
  • Possibly partnering with Napier Family Centre or local social services to ensure the produce gets to people in need.

    BENEFITS:

  • Converting a dead space in our church into a fantastic ministry opportunity whilst maintaining access and walkways.
  • Provide healthy and nutritious food for families in need.
  • Ease the burden of supply for our foodbank.
  • The joy of children being involved in the building, sowing, growing process of the gardens.
  • The joy of serving people who are vulnerable and extending our vision of “Making God’s Kingdom Visible” in Napier.

    POTENTIAL PROBLEMS:

  • Security. The area is very well fenced all around with fences ranging from 5 foot to 8-10 foot (see pictures below). However we cannot guarantee that people will not jump over the fences and raid or ruin the gardens. In saying that, there are easier gardens to raid than these! We would address this if needed.
  • Loss of momentum and people willing to be involved and the gardens turning to ruin. There would need to be clear leadership, vision for the church to see this as a genuine way of serving the community and a group of passionate people maintained. I believe that with the right leadership and the gathering of many people to be involved (once every 10 weeks is doable), this is a sustainable project. It would be great to involve the children and the youth in this.
  • Loss of access. It would be very important to ensure that access and walkways are maintained – especially in terms of fire exit routes. This is simply a planning issue and making sure that the beds are placed in a way that takes this into account. The reality is that this areas is almost never used.

THE AREA WE HAVE IN MIND:

Life Together  

1 comments Posted by Andrew

The significance of what God's doing in a local church can often fly under the radar - I think God quite likes it that way. It's not until it's brought front and centre that you realise the significance of what's going on under your nose in a local church. Last Sunday we welcomed 14 people into membership at Napier Baptist and dedicated 7 children to God.

In membership we covenanted together:
As Baptist Christians we covenant together as a community of the disciples of Jesus Christ. Baptised into his name, we share the joys and responsibilities of fellowship: we gather for worship and to discern the mind of Christ; together we seek the kingdom of God through prayer, witness and service; and in the power of the Holy Spirit we seek to build one another up in love. Will you share with us in this common life and service, and will you walk together with us before God, in ways that are known and yet to be made known?
And importantly in our church we covenanted to "walk in the ways of the Lord, together, no matter what and to watch over one another in love."

It was great to see publicly what God has been doing under the radar for a long time.

Simon Jones is an English Baptist Minister who's contemplating a series on the book of Revelation. He asked for people's recommendations in terms of books on Revelation. That sparked me to think that I'd put up a bibliography of the major resources I've used in this series on Revelation. All of the books are books I own and the majority of the journal articles are available online if you google them. I didn't read every page of every book but these were the major sources I used. There are some notable omissions - Aune, Fiorenza and Collin's commentaries. Very simply, in weekly preaching there's only so much reading you can do!!
MY BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR REVELATION:

Bandy, Alan S. “Word and Witness: An Analysis of the Lawsuit Motif In Revelation based on the Witness Terminology.” Essay Presented at the Annual Meeting of the ETS 2005. Valley Forge, PA.

Barr, David L. Tales of the End: A Narrative Commentary on the Book of Revelation (California: Polebridge Press, 1998).

___________. ed. Reading the Book of Revelation: A Resource for Students (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2003).

___________. ed. The Reality of Apocalypse: Rhetoric and Politics in the Book of Revelation (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2006).

Bauckham, Richard. The Theology of the Book of Revelation. New Testament Theology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Beale, G. K. The Book of Revelation: A Commentary on the Greek Text. The New International Greek Testament Commentary. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999.

DeSilva, David A. An Introduction to the New Testament: Contexts, Methods and Ministry Formation. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2004.

______________. “A Sociorhetorical Interpretation of Revelation 14:6-13: A Call to Act Justly toward the Just and Judging God.” Bulletin for Biblical Research 9 (1999): 65-117.

______________. “The Social Setting of the Revelation to John: Conflicts Within, Fears Without.” Westminster Theological Journal 54 (1992): 273-302.

______________. “The Strategic Arousal of Emotions in the Apocalypse of John: A Rhetorical-Critical Investigation of the Seven Oracles to the Seven Churches.” New Testament Studies 54 (2008): 90-114.

Koester, Craig R. Revelation and the End of All Things. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2001.

Friesen, Steven J. Imperial Cults and the Apocalypse of John: Reading Revelation in the Ruins. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.

_____________. “Satan's Throne, Imperial Cults and the Social Settings of Revelation.” Journal for the Study of the New Testament 27.3 (2005): 351-73.

______________. “Myth and Symbolic Resistance in Revelation 13.” Journal of Biblical Literature 123.2 (2004): 281-313.

Guy, Laurie. The Book of Revelation. Class Notes from MB 638/738. Carey Baptist College, 2004. (Laurie was my lecturer at college on Revelation. He has a book on Revelation awaiting publication in the Regent's Study Guides Series.)

Keener, Craig S. Revelation. The NIV Application Commentary. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2000.

Maier, Harry O. Apocalypse Recalled: The Book of Revelation after Christendom. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2002.

Neufeld, Dietmar. “Under the Cover of Clothing: Scripted Clothing Performances in the Apocalypse of John.” Biblical Theology Bulletin 35 (2005): 67-76.

Osborne, Grant R. Revelation. Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2002.

Peterson, Eugene H. Reversed Thunder: The Revelation of John and the Praying Imagination. New York: HarperCollins, 1988.

Rossing, Barbara R. The Rapture Exposed: The Message of Hope in the Book of Revelation. Colorado: Westview Press, 2004.

_______________. “Prophecy, End-Times, and American Apocalypse: Reclaiming Hope for Our World.” Anglican Theological Review 89.4 (2007): 549-63.

Rowland, Christopher C. “The Book of Revelation.” Pages 501-743 in vol. XII of The New Interpreter’s Bible: A Commentary in Twelve Volumes. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1998.

Spilsbury, Paul. The Throne, The Lamb and The Dragon: A Reader’s Guide to the Book of Revelation. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2002.

Witherington III, Ben, Revelation. The New Cambridge Bible Commentary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Some useful online websites:
Bernard Bell's Series on Revelation.
Craig Koester's Cities of Revelation.
Dr. Loren L. Johns website.
Mark Bilby's website.
Phillip Harland's website.


I was away on Sunday for NZ Baptist Assembly. In terms of my enjoyment, it was a bit of a mixed bag. The highlight for me was hearing from our great friends Paul and Barby Windsor as they reflected on their years serving NZ Baptists (Paul is finishing as Principal of Carey Baptist College early next year). It was very moving to hear from people you love and admire and to hear the tributes of some of those that they have impacted over their many years serving NZ Baptists. It struck me on the weekend how much I am going to miss them firstly when Paul finishes at Carey and then especially when they (likely) move overseas in a few years for Paul's new role at Langham Partnership.

If you want to listen to any of the speaking sessions from Baptist Assembly (I'd hugely recommend listening to Paul and Barby's reflection), then go here.


My mate Alistair has been downloading the sermon series we have been doing at Napier Baptist on Revelation (you can access our sermons here) and listening to them. This had been freaking me out a bit because Alistair and I went to Bible College together and he was a very smart cookie who loved to exercise his mind in service of God. Then I read this that he wrote on his blog:

When it comes to the book of Revelations…
this is the best series on the book I’ve heard. And yes, I’ve listened to DA Carson’s Revelations messages.
Andrew Picard is the Pastor of Napier Baptist (see my links to NZ Blogs). He and I went to Bible College together and I’ve always liked his commitment to intellectual rigor in all things Christian while at the same time not coming off (to me) as an egghead. He approaches Revelation by trying to understand what the original readers heard through the genre of apocolyptic writings, and then applies that message of that highly symbolic writing to today - and he does so without watering down the truth that God’s word is God’s word.


Wow! It's not always easy approaching Revelation from a very different perspective than what is often espoused in popular Christian circles and it's great to get encouraging feedback. Thanks for the high praise Alistair - and he's not even on the payroll. We will now have to make some alterations at home so that my head can fit through the door!
UPDATE: If anyone's interested in reading an excellent article that I drew on a lot for Revelation 13 then go here to read the article by Steven Friesen. It's not an easy read but persevere because it does an excellent job of putting Revelation 13 into its context.


I was given an article this week to read from the Challenge Weekly on why men hate going to church. It argues that the world's largest unreached people group are men - apparently a young single man between 18 and 35 is the person least likely to show up in church! David Murrow, who also authored the book Why Men Hate Going to Church blames (among other things) the feminisation of the church and gender neutral bible translations. I don't agree with a lot of what he says (which seems to be to design the church to be alpha male) but it raises an important point. I did appreciate his thoughts on developing a band of brothers who mentor and support each other in discipleship but it's got to be more than chest beating, alpha male, tarzan talk. What are your thoughts? What could we do differently without making the church baptise a white alpha male culture? Go here and check out his website and let me know your thoughts, because I'd love to hear them whether you agree or disagree...

The Decison 08 website has a helpful page where you can compare and contrast the different policies of the different parties. Go here.

With elections looming in NZ and around the world I'd encourage you to consider what it means to live and vote as global Christians (i.e. not Christians narrowly focussed on what you're going to get out of this election). The Tearfund website has some very helpful material about voting as global Christians available online here. So too does the Micah Challenge website here. I especially enjoy Jim Wallis' article on Faith Priorities for this Election.

The following comes from the Tearfund website and raises critical issues for the world's economy and focus at the moment.

WITH the meltdown of international banking and credit filling investors with dread, developed nations are using the crisis to legitimise backing away from the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), said TEAR Fund Executive Director Stephen Tollestrup.
The MDGs signed by 189 nations promised to halve poverty for the poorest of our planet’s people by 2015 and increase aid to 0.7 per cent of their countries GDPs.
“The truth is”, says, Mr Tollestrup, “the MDGs go well beyond a handout. If we dare to think outside of the square we will find that we need to see productive and growing economies in the developing world to help us move out of this current mess and bring long term economic stability.
“Rather than simply throw a trillion dollars at failed Wall Street financers, perhaps it’s time to think clearly about an economic shot in the arm for the two-thirds world. This will strengthen the global economy and counter the poverty where over a billion fellow human beings languish and die, and fundamentalism and terror incubate.”
Micah Challenge advocates for governments to honour their commitment to the MDGs, TEAR Fund, as a member of this international Christian campaign, is urging New Zealand voters to make honouring the MDG promise an election issue.

I've had a couple of e-mails asking me when the sermons are going to be updated - they have just been updated here. We have someone who's a very busy professional who takes it upon himself to record the sermons, convert them into mp3s and host them on his webstie - and all he does all of this in what little spare time he has as a global executive! So, please be gracious and patient.

Rees, if you read this, thanks so much for all that you do for our church...

An Update  

0 comments Posted by Andrew

I'm back from Auckland and back into things at Napier. The book of the trip was a bit of surprise because I didn't go there planning on reading it. I picked it up off the shelf and browsed through it briefly and I was hooked. The book of the trip was From Midterms to Ministry: Practical Theologians on Pastoral Beginnings and I'd recommend that anyone who has or is or is going to make the transition from Bible College/Seminary to local church ministry read it. It was one of the highlights (especially the article by Thomas G Long) of my reading spree.

I also notice that Real Live Preacher has posted his second video on his series on hell here.

I know that with elections looming many pastors get cornered about who people should vote for, or even worse, you get cornered asking about who you're voting for (with the less than subtle subtext that it should be the same party as the person who's asking you!)? Another useful website to have a careful snoop around is the New Zealand Council of Christian Social Services. It represents 6 denominational Social Services networks, one of which is NZ Baptist Action. They work on the front line of social service and their vision is to work for a just and compassionate society in Aotearoa New Zeland. They provide some excellent information and articles on some of the pressing social issues that I think one should consider before deciding who to vote for.

RLP and Hell 1  

1 comments Posted by Andrew


Sorry for the low output of the blog from my end, I'm up in Auckland with some study leave - geeking out in the library. Will do a proper post soon but in the mean time BAndy has given me a heads up that Real Live Preacher has issued the first of three videos on his series on hell (which I mentioned here). You can go here to watch the video.


With elections looming here and in the US, I thought I'd link you to a post by Ben Witherington III. He is an outstanding biblical scholar and thoughtful evangelical and has written a post on a "A VOTERS GUIDE FOR THINKING EVANGELICALS " I'd encourage you to go here and read it before voting.

New look  

4 comments Posted by Andrew

Thought the old design was ugly so changed it again. Sorry if you don't like blue! To begin with, regulars might find that the old design still displays when following links you had gone to before the update. Just click refresh to fix it.

I have just read a brilliant "must read" post by Julie R. Neidlinger on why she walked out of a church she attended as she seeks a new church in a new area (hat tip to Stu). It is brilliant! One part of it reminded me of a conversation we had at a recent Family Forum at our church about how we can be hospitable to the many new people coming to our church. Do we organise or roster someone(s) to "be nice to the new people" (as if being nice to new people is a ministry!) and plug them into some group, or do we just actually try being Christians and be welcoming to new people like we would a visitor who came to our house? (We went for the latter and not the former)

1 Cor 4:13 - "We have become the scum of the earth, the garbage of the world (another translation - the scrapings from everyone's shoes) - right up to this moment."


Wow, what's going on with the Christian worship and leadership scene? There's the fall of Todd Bentley, one of the leaders of the supposed "revival" in Florida, and the outrageous fall of Mike Guglielmucci (of Hillsong and Planetshakers fame), who wrote the song "healer" as an outflow of him supposedly learning he had terminal cancer - he was lying! How sick is that? What's going on in the Christian worship and leadership scene?! I have good friends who have family that have gone to Florida to "catch the fire". We have an amazing young Christian man in our church who has cerebral palsy, his favourite song is Healer because he felt that the guy singing that song (Mike Guglielmucci with his terminal cancer) could identify with him. This week he found out that Mike Guglielmucci's terminal cancer was a lie (this guy even sung with an oxygen tank as part of the charade!) when in reality this was part of how Guglielmucchi was dealing with his addiction to pornography! What the hell is going on in Christian circles!? I'm not into shaming him (him and his family must be going through hell right now), but asking what's going on in our church circles that someone would want to do this? I'm sure the answer to that is very complicated, but I'm immediately struck by one aspect - the Christian celebrity culture. So many of our leaders are obsessed with becoming some sort of celebrity that they'll go to any length to get there. And we can't remove ourselves from responsibility when we are often the ones fueling, encouraging and idolising this ugly obsession (going to conferences, concerts and buying cds and dvds). The Christian celebrity culture and leadership obsession in the West is very ugly. It comes with tantalising promises of fame, success and triumph that are NEVER promised in scripture.

The church in Corinth also had a leadership obsession, connecting themselves around superstar leaders - "I belong to..." (put in here your favourite superstar preacher, singer, whatever) and the churches wanted a superstar leader, just like the superstar leaders that secular gatherings had, who would look good and wow the crowds. They were embarrassed by Paul and some of the other Christian leaders who didn't fit the superstar leader style (1 Cor. 10:10 "For some say "His letters are weighty and forceful, but in person he is unimpressive and his speaking amounts to nothing.""). In 1 Cor 4, Paul defends himself and his humble, self-effacing leadership style as being what specifically Christian leadership really looks like. To do this, he uses irony and satire to mock the Corinthian desire for high status and high rank (Christian celebrity culture) as being totally UNCHRISTIAN. The point that Paul makes in 1 Cor 1-4 is that Christian leadership is NOT meant to look like secular leadership or celebrity culture because it has been redefined by the cross:

1 Cor. 4:8-13: "Already you have all you want! Already you have become rich! You have begun to reign - an that without us! How I wish that you really had begun to reign so that we also might reign with you! For it seems to me that God has put us apostles on display at the end of the procession, like those condemned to die in the arena (this is an image of captured slaves who were dragged around at the rear of a Roman victory parade as the spoils of their victory before they were slaughtered). We have been made a spectacle to the whole universe, to angels as well as human beings. We are fools for Christ, but you are wise in Christ! (celebrity secular leaders boasted of their wisdom and hated foolishness) We are weak, but you are strong! You are honoured, we are dishonoured! To this very hour we go hungry and thirsty, we are in rags, we are brutally treated, we are homeless. We work hard with our own hands (something disgusting to any civilised Roman leader). When we are cursed, we bless; when we are slandered, we answer kindly. We have become the scum of the earth, the garbage of the world (or another translation - "the scrapings from everyone's shoes") - right up to this moment."
Here's a clip of an interview with Mike Guglielmucci:

Stem Cells  

6 comments Posted by Lauren



I'm doing a 'Bioethics' paper through Carey and need to get Christian responses to stem cell research.

What is 'a Christian' response to the use of human embryos to obtain stem cells for research?

What of the use of adult stem cells?

Are there situations where the deliberate death of an embryo for stem cells is justifiable?

Does the age of the embryo make a difference?

Where should the line be drawn??
Lots of responses please...


Real Live Preacher is doing a study on hell in the New Testament. If you're interested in engaging in a debate about what the NT says (or doesn't say) on hell, or just trying to learn more about what the NT says, here would be a good place to go.

Broken  

6 comments Posted by Lauren


I once wrote a book called "Bent Not Broken".
The title was a lie.
I was broken.

Broken, broken, broken.
Like an old-fashioned thermos flask that had been dropped - I was okay on the outside but the slightest shake revealed the shimmering shards inside.
Broken.

Not the pretty kind of broken, nor the wee chip that elephant glue would mend, but ugly, nasty, dangerous, mixed up broken.

Broken like a box of crystal glasses that has been drop-kicked then gift-wrapped. Don't hug it too hard to your chest - the gift is broken, and dangerous.

Broken like a heart, like a vow, like a bone.

Broken like the psalmist who wrote:

I am poured out like water,
all my bones are out of joint;
My heart is like wax;
it is melted within my chest;
My strength is dried up like a potsherd,
and my tongue sticks to my jaws;
you lay me in the dust of death. (Ps 22 14-15)

And still broken.

Still smashed up inside, still trying with the help of God to straighten my bends, to heal my brokenness, to fix me up from the inside out.

No more plastering over the cracks, no more smoke and mirrors but bare raw broken wounds that weep for divine healing.

Heal us God, give us guidance, for the ways of the world are broken.

Broken.

Broken.

I'm preaching in a few weeks and I'm exploring the issue of "when God is silent".

I'm interested in what others think about whether God chooses not to speak to us and why (is it him not speaking or us not hearing - or something else). What is your response if/when you can't hear God - how does it make you feel? How does it affect what you believe about God? What impact does it have on your faith?

David Upgraded  

1 comments Posted by Andrew

I got this in an e-mail this week (sorry of it upsets any Americans who might read this blog!):




After a two year visit to the United States, Michelangelo's David is returning to Italy . . .



I came across Barbara Rossing's book The Rapture Exposed: The Message of Hope in the Book of Revelation a few years ago and bought a copy for myself. Whilst it can be provocatively polemic in parts I found it to be an excellent book to debunk some of the strange and speculative views of Revelation (e.g. Left Behind) that dominate many of our churches and give a much broader, healthier and more faithful approach to Revelation Here is a clip of an interview of Barbara Rossing talking about (against) Rapture theology:

Thank you Lauren! She has spotted the obvious that I hadn't - the globe on the coin with Domitian's son on it cannot represent the earth as the ancients thought the earth was flat (see Rev 7:1). I've been looking forward to finding out more on this one since you raised this on Sunday Lauren. As you say, the globe definately does not represent the earth. I think Janzen's words are "The globe represents world domination and power" rather than the globe as the earth. I might have been misleading in my comments on Sunday's 1st service (I was clearer in the 2nd service that it was the seat of authority but I will clear it up this coming Sunday). If anyone can shed further light on what the globe represents please share it with us! There might be a lolly in it for any NBC people and an online hug for others... It's easy to access info online about it by googling "coin" and "domitian" and "son" another useful word is the technical word for this sort of study - "numismatics". Be careful where you read because not everything online is trustworthy. But if anyone comes across anything good or are a scholar that can help us out, please share it with us.

Coins  

1 comments Posted by Andrew



As I've been reading through various commentaires and journal articles on Revelation I've come to realise how significant coins are in comprehending some of the images of Revelation. Coins were a big part of the propaganda machine of the Roman Empire and played a big part in promoting the Imperial Cult. If you're interested in reading more about coins and the Imperial Cult go here or here or here.
The coin above is a coin minted during the reign of Domitian following the death of his young son. The following comes from here. On one side it has the bust of Domitia (Domitian's wife) and on the other it has their infant son sitting naked on the globe with his arms outstrectched surrounded by 7 stars. It has the inscription DIVUS CAESAR IMP DOMITIANI F which means "the divine Caesar, son of the emperor Domitian". Ernest Janzen in an article called “The Jesus of the Apocalypse Wears the Emperor’s Clothes” in Society of Biblical Literature Seminar Papers 1994 writes “The globe represents world dominion and power, while stars typically bespoke the divine nature of those accompanied. … the infant depicted on the globe was the son of (a) god and that the infant was conqueror of the world” How significant is it now that John, in his depiction of the glorified Jesus in Rev 1:12-16, describes his as holding the seven stars in his right hand. From the title of Janzen's article I've entitled Sunday's sermon as - "The Emperor has no Clothes!"

We're underway in our series through Revelation at NBC (you can download sermons from the series here - the date it started was July 6th). I'm planning to post some helpful online resources for people to access as we journey along. If you're looking for a really helpful resource for the letters to the 7 churches in their historical setting, have a look at Craig Koester's page here.

Sermons Online  

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I'm back after a break away on holiday. It was great! While I was away one of my good mates from church found out how to record sermons and convert them into mp3 files. So, if you're interested in accessing and downloading some of my sermons (and other guest preachers) at Napier Baptist go here. A little disclaimer: I am nervous about putting anything of mine on the www, so please respect the fact that these sermons are formed within the life of a local church and are for forming that local church in its life of love and witness to God. They're not delivered as something for TV, nor are they essays or theological treatises. They are my puny words (often still needing refinement) which I believe the living Word promises to take and use for his purposes.

I’m holed up in bed at the moment with a bronchial virus (think disgusting green phlegm everywhere). One good thing about it is that it’s given me some time to respond to my mate Stu on the future of the church. Stu was interviewed by someone on this very topic and he wondered what my thoughts might be. So I thought I’d better respond.I wrote a dissertation that touched on this from a Baptist perspective (if anyone wants a copy just leave your e-mail in the comments):

Trying to predict the future of the church is fraught with danger. There is a randomness about history that has a habit of biting us in the bum. Who would have predicted the growth of millions of new Christians in the last 30 years in Asian nations while their political regimes actively suppressed Christianity? However the continual reality of the church in NZ (and in the West) for at least the last 40 years has been decline – not just in terms of numbers but its influence and role in society. Newspapers used to publish the resolutions passed by denominational Public Questions Committees. Even if they disagreed people still listened to what the church was saying. Today, at least for Baptists, there is no Public Questions Committee because no one cares what the church says – no one is listening. As Michael Jinkins says the only thing that seems to be growing in mainline churches is more and more literature about its decline.

In my mind the best commentator on the trends of the church in New Zealand is Peter Lineham. He’s written 2 recent articles – “The Current Status of the Church” and “The Shape of the Future Church” in the recently published New Vision New Zealand Vol. III (Auckland: Tabernacle Books, 2008). It seems likely that that the church will continue to decline (Lineham projects that the total rate of Christian profession could easily fall from currently being just below 50% (it was 90% in 1956) to 35% in the next 20-30 years unless the church can win back 20 and 30 somethings) and it will have a very different make up. There will be less Europeans in it, hardly any Maori (whose young people appear to be less interested in what seems to them to be a European religion), and more and more Pasifica and Asian people. The New Zealand predictions follow well the evidence that Phillip Jenkins has shown in his work on the coming shift in the balance of power in the global church – the days of European domination of Christianity are numbered. I’m not going to predict whether mega churches will keep growing or if micro niche churches will start popping up all over the place. As a side note, Lineham shows how the movement towards mega churches mirrors the trends in wider consumer society and retailing – the decline of the family operated shop and the rise of shopping malls, franchises and large chains. I wonder if the niche churches represent the organic shops or the boutique Mediterranean supplier? Lineham also notes the decline of the 80-200 member suburban church and the rise of the mega church and that instability is a big issue for mega churches - 66% of people attending churches have attended their church for less than 5 years! If you want to read more about the likely future reality of the church is trends continue, have a read of New Vision New Zealand Vol. III.

What I am especially interested in is how the church should respond to all this – how can we save the church? The decline of the church creates a significant fear within it and its leaders, what Jinkins calls thanataphobia – a fear of death. We are dying, what can we do to survive? Whether it’s mega this or emerging that, churches are doing what they’re doing in order to appeal to prospective religious clients and therefore survive. In this vision of things, the church must save itself. For Stu this means that the church needs to become more appealing by doing the things that people want to be part of because as Stu says “The onus is on us – not God – us.” Whilst I agree with Stu’s heartbeat (a desire to see the church be all that it could and should be), for me I see things a little differently. For me, I’m not so comfortable with the idea that it’s all up to us and, being an anxious person, the ideas I come up with when my anxiety is heightened (we must save the church!) are very different than the ideas I come up with when I soothe myself and consider things a little less anxiously (and I'm sure this is true of the church and its leaders). So what follows is me trying to help soothe the church's amygdala (the part of the brain that plays a significant role in emotional functions and fear reactivity). I’m always open to critique and engagement and what comes next comes in the context of adding to a good conversation:

I worry that the idea that the church has to save itself detaches the Risen Christ from the church and makes him to be an absentee landlord. John Webster notes how much church life is predicated on the on the assumption that God is only real, present and active in so far as the church’s moral action or spirituality makes God real, present and active. He says the idea that the church is now responsible for its own future “is a miserable burdening of the church with a load it cannot hope to support.” Webster is hugely helpful in pointing out that the gospel is independent of the church, precedes it and calls it into being, the church is not in its creaturely capacity the primary bearer of responsibility for witness to the gospel. God is the first witness to the gospel whose sum and substance is Jesus Christ. “In the power of his resurrection and in the energy of the Holy Spirit, Jesus Christ goes ahead of the church and testifies of himself in the world… He – not the church – is the true witness. He – not the church – is the light of the world.” The primary agent of the church’s witness is God in the Risen Christ through the Spirit’s power. “God’s own witness does not dissolve into that of the church; the church does not replace him, but simply witnesses to the witness.” I think this is so crucial and yet so missing in all the churchly talk about the church’s future. The future of the church is with God in Christ by the power of the Spirit.

Michael Jinkins sees the church’s decline and possible death as a gift, giving the church an unparalleled opportunity to comprehend and to render its life. “When the church faces death, in point of fact, it encounters a critical moment when it may know the power of the resurrection.” The church is not called to save itself, it’s already got a saviour and he knows his way from death to life pretty well! As G. K. Chesterton wrote: Christianity has died many times and risen again; for it has a Saviour who knows the way out of the grave. The church’s life does not depend on its own competence, expertise, planning or relevance, the “church’s life depends on the power and faithfulness of God to raise the Body of Christ from every death, because its life is a continuing participation in the death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.”

In the book of the Revelation John the seer writes to the 7 fragile churches in Asia Minor who are facing significant problems externally and internally. Externally there is pressure to conform to the ways of Rome and worship the Emperor with the likely threat of violence or death (see the martyrdom of Antipas Rev. 2:13) or economic exclusion for Christian traders who did not have a seal indicating that they had sacrificed to the Emperor and therefore no one would buy, sell or trade with them (see Rev. 13:14-17). Internally some were leaving the church, others were denying the faith and others were significantly compromising the faith. John begins by offering them a vision to sustain them (Rev. 1:9-20). The vision is not about the church simply pulling its socks up (although that is part of it!), it is primarily a Christophany, a magnificent vision of the risen and glorified Jesus Christ. He is said to stand among the seven golden lampstands (Rev. 1:12-13) and later we read that he walks among the seven golden lampstands (Rev. 2:1). The seven golden lampstands we are told by John the seer are the seven churches of Asia Minor and with seven representing wholeness it must also refer to the whole church throughout time. The image is of the Risen Christ standing with his church and moving in and through his church. And his first words to the church are: “Do not be afraid.” I think there’s a good reason that these are his first words – thanataphobia is not new in the church! “Do not be afraid. I am the First and the Last. I am the Living One; I was dead, and now look, I am alive forever and ever! And I hold the keys to death and Hades.” This is an image of the Risen Christ, standing with his church and moving amongst it, who holds the keys to life and death for the church. The church is nothing without the immanent presence of the living Risen Jesus Christ by the power of his Spirit.

If Christ rules and reigns over the church and he really does hold the keys to life and death for the church then the church can stop farting, fussing and obsessing about its future. We have feet of clay and he has feet of burnished bronze, let him bring the church through to his future and we can get on with serving the world. I remember hearing someone say of the church and its growth – the tide will come in and the tide will go out. You can’t make the tide come in by throwing a bucket of water at it (e.g. our programs or alternative this or mega that or Missional this and emerging that) nor can you make it go out by taking a bucket of water out of it (e.g. our screw ups and mistakes). The tide will come in and the tide will go out, if you’re there when the tide comes in, lucky you, make the most of it. If you’re there when the tide goes out, hang in there!

When I was inducted into the ministry my mentor Brian Smith gave me Herbert Butterfield’s “principle” from his book called Christianity and History. This last weekend I offered it to Mike our new youth pastor as the ribbon of steel I think we need for ministry. Butterfield, a Cambridge historian, surveyed Christianity throughout history and noticed the randomness that exists in history. History is always changing and going down paths you never expected. Butterfield searches for some solid ground to place his feet on but notes that it can’t be historical realities because you can’t trust them, they’re random. In the end he finishes with one principle that is a ribbon of steel for me in ministry – “hold fast to Jesus Christ and to all else be totally uncommitted.”

I love what Michael Jinkins says about the church trusting in the power of the resurrection. Jinkins asks, can we not imagine announcing in word and deed the gospel of Jesus Christ to a culture held captive by consumerism? Can we not imagine proclaiming the good news that people are neither consumers nor products to be sold? It will be very difficult for the church to proclaim this gospel convincingly if it too gives in to the temptation to repackage itself as just another commodity. Finally, Jinkins asks, can we not imagine a church that is attractive to others because it does not desperately need them for its institutional survival? A church living in fear for its own self-preservation does not draw others to it, but a church that courageously holds up the cross of Christ in its corporate life and that trust in his resurrecting power has, as St. John tells us, the power to draw all humanity. It is when the church, unconcerned about its survival, recklessly gives itself over to Christ and trusts in his resurrecting power to bring it out of all deaths that it is most attractive. I think the future of the church is with God in Christ by the power of the Spirit and therefore the church needs to be a lot more reckless and a lot less interested in survival…

Ok so I reckon that ... is THE best punctuation to use in any correspondence. An exclamation mark was my favourite punctuation for its drama but it doesn't have the mystery and suspense of ... What do you think is the best punctuation...? (It's very addictive...)

We've had a swag of children's birthdays in our church recently and lots of parents working hard to host parties for little munchkins. So this one is for all our hard working parents who I'm sure can identify with this...



Revelation  

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I'm starting a series on the book of Revelation in a month or two and I've spent a lot of time reading books and articles on it. I thought I'd post some of the helpful things I come across from time to time to do with Revelation. So far the best pithy quote comes from David L Barr and his book Tales of the End. He helpfully says about the use of numbers in Revelation that they (the numbers) are "qualitative not quantitative"; they signify qualities not quantities. If people who were trying to read Revelation remembered that there'd be a lot less hurt in the world (seriously!).

If you're looking for access to good scholarly material on Revelation your first stop should be Revelation Resources.

BAndy has a great post below that I hope sparks lots of discussion. He's asked me for some "quotes" from Sunday's sermon. The problem is that I don't use many notes so I'm not sure if the quotes he means are mine or someone else I quoted (let me know BAndy). Sunday's sermon was on Acts 15 and the reality that Christian faith is not a bounded set (with lots of rules and cultural traditions to abide by in expressing faith) but a centred set (centred on the grace of Jesus - Acts 15:11) and therefore looks and tastes very different in different contexts. Instead of giving lots of quotes I'll post a few you tube videos of what worship can look like in other parts of the world:







I have been saturated in the European church scene my whole life. Surrounded in funny little rituals like bowing my head when someone prays, dressing nicely on a Sunday and holding hands when saying grace. There are so many more that I wouldn't be able to name because I don't see them as cultural rituals but Christian rituals. The things that Christians do.

I wonder what our church would look like if we stopped trying to make "European" Christians. What does a church for "Maraenui" Christians look like? I have a feeling if we were serious about providing a comfortable environment for the locals then the process is that we change and then then come, because if it were the other way around I think we'd be waiting a while. Like, forever.

What are some other cultural rituals that we as European Christians perform? What things could we do in our churches to make certain minorities (in the church attendance sense) feel more comfortable?

Pentecost  

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This Sunday is Pentecost Sunday - the celebration of the birth of the global church through the gift of God's Spirit to everyone. I stumbled across a blog post by Karl Fisch (of Shift Happens fame) on Pangea Day - a global event trying to bring the world together through film. It has some really sweet utube clips where people from one nation singing another nations national anthem. I thought "I will borrow (read - steal) that for the blog for Pentecost". These clips remind me of God's vision to redeem one great humanity from every tribe, language, people and nation (Rev 5:9) and that this was manifest at Pentecost.

Australia sings for Lebanon:





Kenya sings for India:




Japan sings for Turkey:






France sings for the United States:


The United States sings for Mexico:


The United Kingdom sings for Argentina:

Shift Happens  

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We're currently exploring the theme of Colliding Worlds and last Sunday in my sermon I made use of some stats of global trends (our world today colliding with the world of tomorrow) that some people were interested in. These stats have been around on the web for a while but they still make you think. I first came across them through Alan Jamieson. Below is the u tube called Shift Happens:




Yesterday 3 Christian protestors broke into the Waihopai Spy Base and deflated one of the large domes covering one of the satellites. Their actions came out of their Christian convictions about peace and Jesus Christ being the Prince of Peace. One of the activists said they felt they were just being faithful as to how they understand the Gospels and their faith in terms of peace-making and following Jesus. How does this sit as an expression of Christian faith for you?

Below is the statement that has been issued from the protestors. You can read more at the Ploughshares website along with the The New Zealand Herald.


STATEMENT OF THE WAIHOPAI ANZAC PLOUGHSHARES (from the Ploughshares website)
They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift sword against nation; and there shall be no more training for war. Isaiah 2:4

Waihopai Spy Base Penetrated

This morning, 30 April 2008, we entered the Waihopai Spy Base near Blenheim. Our group, including a Dominican Priest, temporarily closed the base by padlocking the gates and proceeded to deflate one of the large domes covering two satellite dishes. At 6am we cut through three security fences surrounding the domes - these are armed with razor wire, infrared motion sensors and a high voltage electrified fence. Once inside we used sickles to cut one of the two 30-metre white domes, built a shrine and knelt in prayer to remember the people killed by United States military activity. We have financed our activities through personal savings, additional part-time employment and a small interest-free loan from one of our supporters. We are responding to the Bush administration’s admission that intelligence gathering is the most important tool in the so-called War on Terror. This war will have no end until citizens of the world refuse to let it continue. The ECHELON spy network including Waihopai, is an important part of the US government’s global spy network and we have come in the name of the Prince of Peace to close it down.
The base is funded by New Zealand tax payers and located on New Zealand soil which makes New Zealand a target through our association with the UKUSA intelligence cooperation agreement. Five years ago the Clark government opposed the US-led invasion of Iraq. Yet at the same time the Bush administration was using the National Security Agency’s ECHELON system, of which Waihopai is an integral component, to spy on UN Security Council members so it could more easily swing them in favour of an invasion. There have been over 100 Ploughshares actions over the last twenty years around the world. Ploughshares direct actions are linked through the common factors of: entry to locations connected to military activity, Christian prayers and most involve some form of property destruction.

Mike Sandbrook  

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Over the last year our church has been searching for a new youth pastor (with some associate responsibilities). It has been a good process if a little long. However, it is with excitement that I can announce that the church issued a call to Mike Sandbrook for this role and he has accepted. Mike comes to us from Avalon Baptist in Wellington with a lot of experience, gifts and wisdom. We can't wait for him and Jess and Dylan and James to join our church community here at Napier and walk the journey with Jesus together. Mike will be joining us in June.

Please Pray  

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This week has seen a horrible tragedy in New Zealand. 7 people from the Elim Christian College in Auckland lost their lives in an Outdoors Pursuit disaster at Mangatepopo. This has had a significant affect on New Zealand and especially on the New Zealand Christian community. There are many who have connections with the college or those who attend the college. The teacher, Tony McClean, who died trying to save one of his students is the son of Baptist pastor John and Jeanette McClean at Eastview Baptist. Following Steve Taylor's lead, we will have 2 cards for people to sign on Sunday morning - one for John and Jeanette McClean and the other for Elim Christian College. Please pray for those affected by this tragedy and the agony, pain, anger, guilt and fear that will be raw at this time.

We've begun a series at Napier Baptist on "Making God's Kingdom Visible" because I believe that is the call to the church. This week the sermon text is Lk. 4:16-30. This text has probably impacted me more than any other when it comes to understanding something of the mission of Jesus. I believe this passage (epecially the quote from Isaiah) is the key to understanding Luke's gospel (as well as who Jesus is and what was his message in the gospel of Luke). I came across this prayer in my reading this week - it seems to hard and unrealistic for me to pray. What do you reckon...?

Prayer for the Gift of Poverty:
Lord Jesus, I ask you for a new fullness of the charism [gift] of poverty. I ask you to reveal to me my inordinate attachments, my holding on to things or to persons, my 'richness' that keeps me from saying a more complete yes to you.
I surrender to you my excessive search for material comforts, and whatever material goods I have that I do not really need to serve you.
I surrender to you my excessive need for attention, for acclaim and applause. I surrender my selfish ambition, my search for honours, my vain glory and my pride.
I surrender to you my possesiveness of those whom I love. Teach me to love freely, leaving others free, teach me to love with an open hand. Teach me to love more and better.
Give me the interior poverty that depends on you and not on the world's acceptance. Teach me to enter by the narrow gate that leads to life. You are that gate, Lord, let me follow you, taking up my cross.
For you alone, Lord, are my portion. I have no inheritance, for you are my inheritance; I want no possessions, for you are my possession (Ez. 44:28).
- Robert Faricy in John Fuellenbach, Proclaiming His Kingdom: Meditations for Personal Recollection (Manila: Logos Publications, 1994).


George Wieland was my NT lecturer at Carey. He started there around the same time as I began my studies. George had a massive impact on my life as a Christian and a pastor. I majored in NT and Systematic Theology and so I had George as a lecturer many times. I can remember being new to teriary study (I had been a mechanic and my highest qualification was 6th form certificate that I only scraped through on) and talking with George about my insecurities associated with study and academia. George is one of the best listener I have ever met and he graciously listened to me and encouraged me. I've just completed a BTh (Hons) degree and managed to get 1st class honours and now I can look back to those many years ago sitting in George's office and see how much his gracious encouragement impacted me. George is among those people I turn to when I want someone I trust to speak into my life on significant issues.
To go with all that, George is an amazing NT lecturer, scholar and a brilliant preacher. So it was a thrill when I asked George to come and spend a weekend at Napier Baptist that he agreed. George is with us on Saturday 19th April and Sunday 20th April. He's going to lead a weekend on the Missional Church, drawing on huge amount of research he's done on the Pastoral Epistles (1 & 2nd Timothy & Titus). The weekend's title is:

Mission Insights from Titus: Telling and Living the Good News.

Saturday 19th April 3pm – 5pm:
Telling the Good News - George will set the scene of mission in the challenging context of the island of Crete in New Testament times. He will then look at how the first generation of Christian missionaries found ways of connecting with the beliefs and aspirations of the people they were trying to reach.
Sunday 20th April 9am and 10:30am:
Living the Good News - George will show how Paul expected the grace-trained lives of those who had become believers to impact their families and communities.


George is Scottish and holds a PhD in New Testament from University of Aberdeen on the topic of "The Significance of Salvation in the Pastoral Epistles" and published a book in 2006 through Paternoster Press on The Significance of Salvation: A Study of Salvation Language in the Letters to Timothy and Titus. Before lecturing at Carey Baptist College George spent many years in Baptist ministry in the UK and in cross cultural mission in Brazil. George recently lead a cross cultural mission trip to India and is on the Tranzsend (NZ Baptist) Mission Council.

If you're in the Hawkes Bay area, please feel free to come and join us (it doesn't cost anything).

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