Monthly Archives: May 2016

LitBit Commentary – The language of worship

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Perhaps the largest challenge for the language of worship is that one set of words…needs somehow to embrace, express, and elicit the worship of a whole group of people. From the perspective of a worshiper, public worship always involves using words that come from someone else. One skill for worshipers to hone is the skill of “learning to mean the words that someone else gives us,” whether those are the words of a songwriter or prayer leader. This skill requires a unique mix of humility (submitting ourselves to words given to us by the community of faith), grace (willingness to offer the benefit of the doubt when those words may not have been well chosen), and intention (actually to appropriate those words as our own).

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MtE Update – May 11 2016

Friends,

the latest MtE Update!

  1. This Sunday May 15 we have Lisa Sammut, Convener, Homeless Action Group as our After Worship guest speaker.
  2. On Thursday evening, May 19, we are co-hosting a public discussion, “Whose problem is the ‘Problem of Islam'”; the details are here.
  3. Please consider signing this online petition regarding Melbourne City Council’s not having continued the tenure of the current operators of “The Venny”, a partner service of Hotham Mission.  In addition to the petition there will also be a  Community Meeting at the Kensington Town Hall TONIGHT (Wed 11/05) 6:30pm to “discuss the future of the Kensington Adventure Playground”. This is a community consultation process whereby the voices of the local residents and patrons of The Venny will have a chance to have their voices heard and questions answered. It would be great to have as many people present as possible as this is a significant change which will have long-term impacts on the youth in the area.
  4. The next issue of Mark the Word is coming up: reflections on our current “futures” thinking are invited, or anything which might be on your mind! Please let Suzanne know if you have written or are intending to write something. Contributions are due May 23.
  5. If you can’t get to church on Sunday morning (15th), you might like to come to Evensong at St Mary’s North Melbourne at 6pm – a service in which we’ve been invited to share: 6pm.
  6. The latest issue of the Synod eNewsletter (May 3) is here.

Other things of potential interest:

From the Taizé in Melbourne, Working Group

Please join us this Saturday, 7 May at 5.30pm (Singing practice at 4.45pm) for Taize prayer at Trinity College Chapel, Royal Parade in Parkville.

The dates for the rest of the year are:

  • 7th May
  • 4th June
  • 2nd July
  • 6th August
  • 3rd September
  • 1st October
  • 5th November

You can connect with us on Facebook: Taize in Melbourne, Australia.

Later in the year, one of the Taize Brothers will be in NSW leading a retreat, details are as follows:

The Courage of Mercy – with Br Ghislain – Retreat for Young Adults with music and prayers from Taizé

Where:  Mt Carmel Retreat Centre, 247 St Andrews Road, Varroville, NSW, 2566 (near Campbelltown).

When:  Sep 26 @ 3:00 pm – Sep 29 @ 4:00 pm

Cost:  Single rooms with ensuite ($315.00), camping: $200 (suggested donation).

Please hear that these costs are ‘suggested’.  So, if these are too expensive, then the Taize brothers have requested that people pay what they can afford.

Contact:  John Ransom, General Manager, Mt Carmel Retreat Centre.  Ph:  0435 857 690, or by email:  generalmanager@carmelite.com

Retreat Description

“According to the Bible, God is mercy, in other words, compassion and kindness. By telling the parable of the father and his two sons (Luke 15), Jesus shows us that God’s love does not depend on the good we can do; it is given unconditionally. The father loves the son who remains faithful his whole life long. And he already holds out his hands to one who left him, while that son is still far away.

God’s love is not just for a moment, but for all time. Through compassion, we can be a reflection of this love. As Christians, we share with so many believers of other religions the concern to place mercy and kindness at the centre of our lives.”
“The Courage of Mercy” – Br Alois, prior of Taizé

During this retreat, we’ll journey together into the arms of this God of Mercy. Using traditional Taize chants, prayers and presentations our retreat will be a time to pray and reflect so that we can take action, taking mercy out into our troubled world.

8 May – That the world may know

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Easter 7
8/5/2016

Revelation 22:12-21
Psalm 97
John 17:20-26


I’ve been doing a lot of thinking over the last week about our meeting last Sunday, and what we have been doing as a community before and since then.

And I feel that I have to say… that You People are Wonderful.

Why does the preacher dare to declare such an unlikely thing?

We have committed to a once in a generation process, and it probably feels to some of you that it seems to be taking a generation to wind up!

Last week’s meeting was kind of clunky. We made a clear decision or two, although not necessarily the decisions some thought we were making. We’ll probably have to backtrack a little, which may become confusing or simply exasperating.

In the weeks leading up to the meeting, and even more so since, there have been some rather “frank” conversations in the working group and church council and other places on questions of procedure, content and interpretation, although no blood spilt.

It is all very time consuming, and there are other things we’d prefer to be doing.

And yet you’re all back here again today, smiling!

In fact, as long as the process has been even to now – and as expensive – and as murky as the future seems at this point, there has been much encouragement and gratitude and understanding of what we are all confronted with. This has meant that there has been a strong sense that it is we who are doing this, working together, seeking a common mind.

And so I’m more than happy to declare that if I had a choice as to who it would be with whom I would be doing something like this, it would be you.

But it is important that that declaration not be heard as sentimentality. I’m not saying that I think that you are particularly nice (although some of you really are). I’m not saying that you are right in what you want to come out of this – some of you are probably quite wrong, if rightness and wrongness can actually be determined here.

Sentimentality sees only what it wants to see, or wishes to be seen only in a particular light. It mistakes the absence of war for peace, the lack of resistance for assent or consent. Sentimentality imagines that you want what I want. Sentimentality white-washes.

The wonder of the Congregation of Mark the Evangelist, for the moment, at least, is not a matter of sentimentality so much as a theological wonder – something of a miracle even.

For we are in the process of choosing a future or perhaps, more strongly, of creating a future, and this has the potential to be very dangerous.

A safe approach to this would be to imagine the future to be much the same as the present. This is the sentimental approach: because it is, it is right; what we have and can carry over, is enough. It is the safest approach, if we can pull it off, because it is the least disruptive.

But I doubt that we can. Too much is up for grabs for sentimentality to win the day in the end, but it may still seriously cloud our vision and thinking if we are not wary of it. Shifting back to UMC will not be the same kind of thing as moving from there to here was. Refitting this place and continuing to worship here will not be the same as what we’ve experienced here in the last 6 or 7 years.

None of this is to predetermine which we should choose. The point is simply that we understand what lurks in the future, behind those choices. And I don’t mean simply that the future is always unpredictable, and therefore potentially dangerous. This is the risk of the future as the proverbial bus, not seen until it is too late. We can’t do anything about that kind of future risk, except decide that we will not fear it simply because it might happen.

The particular risks in the future which confront us as a congregation are we ourselves, the members of the congregation. The scariest thing about tomorrow is always the people we will meet there, or that some will not have come with us to that new time or place. It does not have to be the case that these threats are realised, but only sentimentality would deny their possibility.

If it seems that I’m getting a little overdramatic and pessimistic here, imagine … a Thursday night. It has been a taxing week – more so than usual. But finally you can withdraw to a safe place, out of sight. It’s the Passover again, and you need to focus. Jesus seems to have a little more to say than usual. “Love one another, as I have loved you”. Yes, you think, as you look around the group. We can do that. Something which doesn’t make sense happens between Jesus and Judas, but both Jesus and Judas often don’t make sense. We can sort that out later; maybe Saturday or Sunday. Jesus continues, now praying: As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me. The glory that you have given me I have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.

It’s a nice prayer, you think, although you wish Jesus would pray in a nice straight line for once, from here to there, and not go on and around in circles like that.

When Jesus’ disciples hear this prayer, the betrayals and denials and doubts – the crucifixion – are yet to happen; there is more than a little reality checking about to kick in. Prior to all these things, the experience of love in the community of disciples, and then the command to love, and then even Jesus’ prayer for a united community, might just be more warm fuzzy sentimentality. The desperate need of Jesus’ love command and love prayer is not felt until “it” all hits the fan.

The Futures Project small groups in April were asked about what they would consider “deal breakers” with respect to any option we might consider for our future. The two things most often identified were maintaining our theological, liturgical and communal integrity, and the preservation of Hotham Mission.

I think that these commitments will be a great guide to us as we think together.

But the question is: are these sentimental commitments? They don’t have to be; but do they reflect a glossing over of what we really do and or really are as a congregation? In fact, we can’t really say until we are confronted with the possibility of cutting Hotham Mission or the possibility of a fracture in the congregation if it seems we can’t find a way forward.

It is one thing to be warmed on a cool spring Thursday evening by good wine, confident that because Jesus is on my side I’m on his. It is another thing, when that confidence is undermined and we have to deal with what has not yet come to the surface.

This is the marvel of what we have done to date.  Minds are changing, visions are shifting, in all directions. We have done well so far, but there is still a long way to go, whichever of the many options before us we choose. Making the choice itself will threaten to consume us, let alone then acting on it.

How then to approach what still lies before us?

We can simply resign ourselves to the hard slog. This is a bad idea. Resignation and sentimentality are basically the same, in that both are without hope: the resigned are sadly hopeless because nothing will change and the sentimental are happily hopeless because nothing needs to.

This is not the outlook of the people of God.

We are seeking to act because we must. This “must” is not the something-must-be-done-about-the-church “must”; that’s just resignation again, brightened up a little with a sense of responsibility.

The “must” which causes us to act is indicated in the snippet of Jesus’ prayer we heard in our gospel reading:

“that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.”

That is, the “must” is not the buildings question; the buildings are just the material – the object – around which we are gathered.

The “must” of what we are doing concerns the “we” ourselves who are gathered.

When we first began this process I proposed that we are not in the process of preparing for mission by sorting out such mundane things as buildings and budgets, positioning ourselves for some as yet unstarted missional push. We are, rather, in this very process, engaged in mission.

How is this this case? Because in this process we are “proving” the gospel, understanding “prove” here as much in its older sense as in its usual modern sense. To prove something – in its older sense – is to test it; consider how car manufacturers test their new vehicles on their “proving grounds”.

We test: Will the gospel expose to us where we are being more sentimental than truthful in our sense of who we are and what is required of us? And, having so revealed who we are, will the gospel enable in us a step further into the unity for which Jesus prays?

We must prove – test – the gospel in this way, for it is only so that we ourselves are tested, proved.

In this proving of the gospel which is our testing of its capacity to work among us, there opens up the possibility of the second (more familiar) sense of proof, which Jesus also implies in his prayer:

[…may they] become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.

We are not “preparing for” mission in our difficult deliberations. If that were what this was about we would be in the realm of sentimentality again, happily bulldozing our way to what is – to me – the “obvious” outcome.

“Love one another” is our mission. That is so difficult that Jesus imagines that it requires even him to pray for it.

The gospel question to us is whether we believe that the unity of believers can communicate to the world that the Father sent the Son. Put differently, the question is whether we believe that gathering around the table each week “remembrances” – makes present to us and the world – Jesus himself, sent from God. These are the miracles God offers his people today.

You have done well so far. You are wonderful. If you won’t take my word for it, ask the God whose Christ thinks you are worth his prayer.

Continue to be such a marvel, that we the church and the world around us may know that the Father sent the Son.

Public Discussion: Whose Problem is Islam?

The Institute of Post Colonial Studies, Arena Publications and the Congregation of Mark the Evangelist

present a Public Discussion

Thursday May 19th

North Melbourne Uniting Church Hall

4 Elm Street North Melbourne

7.30pm – 9.30pm

 

Whose Problem is the ‘Problem with Islam’?

It is a widely held view in Australia that there is ‘a problem with Islam’. Even people of good will who are against the scapegoating and demonisation of Muslims often call for a reformation within Islam. Whether we are talking about war in the Middle East, terrorism or boat arrivals, the lament, ‘If only Islam had had its own enlightenment’, is suggested as a point of entry into dialogue across cultures and religions.

Does Islam need to be reformed? Is ‘our’ Western ‘enlightenment’ part of the problem and are ‘we’ implicated in the ‘problem with Islam’? What are the hidden commitments and political-cultural moves in this lament, and how might we better understand the possibility of talking across and between cultures and religions?

Our speakers:

Fethi Mansouri (Director, Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation)

Micaela Sahhar (University of Melbourne)

Joshua Roose (Australian Catholic University)

Maher Mughrabi (Foreign Editor at The Age and Sydney Morning Herald)

 

All welcome at this free event
Further information: Alison Caddick (Arena Publications): 0418 304 500

1 May – God’s life, inseparable from ours

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Easter 6
1/5/2016

Revelation 21:9-22:5
Psalm 67
John 14:23-29


“I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God the Almighty and the Lamb.”

Did ever a text seem so apt to the occasion on which it was read, considering the business of the meeting to follow worship this morning: “I saw no temple”?

The problem is that whenever what a text seems to be saying is obvious, we are at great risk of not hearing at all what the text is saying, but what the text confirms about what we were hoping it would say. That is, we never read the Scriptures innocently. We come to God with agendas. What joy when God’s agenda seems to be ours!

And so what “obvious” thing does this text say to us about the matters before us? “Obviously”, no temple means no temple. This, “obviously”, means no church building.

Or, perhaps, something else is obvious here. Immediately following this verse we hear: “The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and the Lamb is its lamp.” It is obvious that our city – here and now – does have need of a sun and moon. These texts, then, “obviously” cannot be about us in this time and place, which is not yet heaven and so requires still a people “called out”, distinct in politics and presence from the rest of world. (The Greek word for “church” is ek-klesia, “out-called”). It is, then, not at all obvious that there is no place now for temples.

So, given that two potentially diametrically opposed conclusions are “obvious” from John’s declaration about the people of God and their temples, let us set the obvious text for today aside and pick up another which is rather less so.

“They will see his face, and his name will be on their foreheads”.

What is not immediately obvious, but a moment’s thought makes clear, is that the people and God are looking at each other. This is one of the ways in which John characterises heavenly relationship to God – gaze: God in ours, us in God’s.

From our perspective, there is something new here. At the start of John’s gospel (probably a different John [author] from the seer of Revelation), we hear, “No one has ever seen God…” This echoes the Old Testament understanding that no one can look upon God and live, not even Moses. Here, however, something new takes place. “God’s home is with mortals”, as we heard last week (21.3). Heaven is seeing God – face to face – and seeing by, or via, God: there is no sun or moon.

But why is God’s name on our foreheads? For whose benefit is this? If heaven is about the gaze – ours into God’s, God’s into ours – who is supposed to read this name?

The only candidate is God himself. It is God who reads God’s own name on our foreheads.

Why does this matter? Is it possible that we might get lost, and God might have to rummage through a lost property box to find us, and know that we are his because we have his name on our forehead?

If the divine name merely labels us, then the implication of the text seems to be that God still might forget us or lose us: that there might yet be more death and mourning and crying and pain (contra 21.4), all of which are supposed to have been wiped away.

But the name written on our foreheads does much, much more than this. When God looks at us, he reads not our names but his own. It is as if God sees God when looking at us.

We have to say that it is as if God sees God when looking at us, not merely because we must preserve God’s dignity, but also because we have to preserve our own. It is still we who bear God’s name, we who remind God of himself and his promises, who call God to faithfulness. Whereas believers are accustomed to thinking and proclaiming that our life is inseparable from God’s, the gospel puts it the other way: God’s life is inseparable from ours. God, after a fashion, needs us if heaven is going to be heaven.

“The home of God is among mortals” (21.3) is not a declaration that God might live somewhere else and still be God, yet just happens to live here. It is a “property” of God – something appropriate to God – that God’s life is with ours: with us who mourn what has been lost, who hope in things which cannot be realised, and who cause others to mourn and despair.

It is God himself who writes his name on our foreheads, and so nothing can wipe it away: no choice, no failure, no success.

And so in all things we are more than conquerors through him who loves us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor tent nor temple, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

In all things, God will “out” – and out as God for us.

This is the gospel, out of which we look to the future, out of which any choice can be a choice for life.

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