I am humbled as I think of the faith of those younger than me.
It may be someone in training in the church, or a member of our family, or someone else, but I think, you are streets ahead of where I was at your age in terms of faith and Christian maturity.
It may be someone working for a charity in Africa, or the excellence of Christian ministry to students, or someone moving to a difficult area so they can be a witness thee for Jesus. I think, 'wow'
I see too how faith is passed down the generations. Not that faith is inherited, but that the Christian upbringing provides a foundation which can be built on.
One generation shall praise thy works to another, and shall declare thy mighty acts. (Psalm 145:4 KJV)
Pastor Bill Johnson speaks of how the faith ceiling of our own generation should be the floor of the next.
I also had one of those Wow moments when I saw one of our children's leaders waiting outside St Paul's. They were just back from SOLID, an activity day for our children. It had been a long day, they had mud up their legs, they were tired, but there was a smile on heir face!
"One generation shall praise thy works to another, and shall declare thy mighty acts."
Their love and faith is being passed on. Thank you for giving that time. Thank you for nurturing our young people in the faith. They will build on our faith. Well done!
Tuesday, 17 July 2012
One generation shall praise thy works to another, and shall declare thy mighty acts. (Psalm 145:4 KJV)
Wednesday, 11 July 2012
Celebrating Christian Learning
At the Cathedral tonight we celebrated gifts of learning. Certificates were presented to those who have completed the Course of Christian Studies. From St Paul's and St Mary's Harlow we we celebrated with Kingsley Yeboah.
And we celebrated with those who have completed the Evangelist Course and the Pastoral Assistant Course. Bishop Stephen spoke of the importance of the ministries of evangelists, pastoral care and preachers.
Roger Matthews in his sermon spoke of how though we may finish studies but God has never finished with us!
He spoke of how a key part of 'CCS' is how we learn from one another. In Romans 12, Paul writes in the plural. What might it mean for us to be 'a living sacrifice'?
Paul puts his teaching in the context of he has said in his earlier chapters, a response to the mercies of God. In the Greek, Paul begins with the offering of ourselves (sacrifices). He then goes on to speak of our minds, so that we might respond to him and say a bigger and a bigger yes. He offers this as a circle. It is a now and forever thing. God has not finished with us yet.
God's call may come thorough someone else. There is a part for everyone to play and we need each other's support, as we each play our part. This is what a healthy church needs. We all have a vocation.
God can use 'even me'. Will we support one another together so that together we might serve our Lord more faithfully.
'You did not choose me but I chose you'. And he continues to choose. Tonight is but a beginning. Will you say, 'Here I am, send me'.
We also celebrated those who have completed the Evangelist Course and the Pastoral Assistant Course. Bishop Stephen spoke of the importance of the ministries of evangelists and pastoral care.
Wednesday, 4 July 2012
Deep Security - first thoughts on The Age of the Unthinkable
Yesterday, scientists gathered to hear confirmation thesis overly of the Higgs boson. A new vital an key part of 'quantum' physics is in place.
Quantum physics deals with the fact that at the very tiniest level we are surrounded by huge uncertainty. The laws of nature that hold for the everyday and indeed for the universe as a whole do not hold at the smallest level. In the everyday, this means that eg there is increasing uncertainty as to how reliable a computer might be. It is impossible to be totally sure what the tiny electrical charges that make it work will do.
And how true this is of life as a whole. 200 years ago we we beginning to think that we could control the world - scientific theories, treaties between nations, and so on - but Freud, Einstein, Global Terror, weather patterns (I could go on) show us how wrong we can be. The Titanic sums it all up.
Sometimes human pride gets the better of us. The Paris Peace Conference after the First World War was an example of politicians thinking they could solve the problems of Europe by paperwork (and it imploded into World War II.) Some fell for it thinking that Iraq would be easy to sort out, and we have discovered our error.
In The Age of the Unthinkable, by J C Ramo, the author explores what the answer might be. How can we know the 'deep security' of an immune system in life that, like that of our bodies, is flexible and powerful enough to cope with the random and uncertain risks that come our way. He suggests cubism as a image to help understand modern complexity - we need to learn to see things from every angle. He says we need to learn:
What is Ramo's solution? The answer he suggest is to hand power over to as many as possible, so that you get an explosion of "curiosity, innovation and effort". You spread power instead of hoarding it. He offers the example of Wikipedia: "The average time between vandalism of a Wikipedia page and its repair is now less than five minutes. The average time to fix an error in that version of the Encyclopaedia Britannica you have on your shelves is, well, never... (And even if you bought a new edition, you'd have to wait years between version.)"
I'm not sure Ramo is totally right. Just to take the example of software, it is far from obvious that open source software is better than 'commercial'. However, perhaps there is much truth here, especially as we learn to be humble in the world God has made, and as we seek to value one another as free children of God..