Have a look at the new website for Education for Ministry here in Australia. It's in its beginning stages but already is a great repository of information and sharing. If you've heard of EfM but never really looked into it, the website is a great place to check out some of the details.
Read MoreThe Faithful Families blog
Research suggests that if you want the faith of children to grow it needs to happen primarily in the home. It's great to have supporting programs happening in the parish but the home is the locus.
Taking this seriously, Stephen Harrison has created the Faithful Families blog, weekly resources to help families grow faith at home. Every idea is simple and easily used.
Read MoreThe STEP Bible (Scripture Tools for Every Person) project
Tyndale House has recently released a beta version of the STEP Bible (Scripture Tools for Every Person) project. You can find more information here:
http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/index.php?page=STEP
From the web site:
STEP Bible is a Tyndale House project to build high quality free reliable Bible tools, with the aim of enabling anyone who wants to study the Bible seriously to do so. This has grown out of the free Tyndale Toolbar which is being used by thousands of people all over the world.
Read MoreAunty Jean's Christmas Cafe
Religion: a matter of faith
Anglican perspective on ABC local radio
Local ABC Radio has recently started a series of radio conversations to help the general public have (a greater) awareness of different faith perspectives. This is in coordination with the Toowoomba ‘Model City of Peace and Harmony’ initiative. Jonathan Inkpin has become the Christian participant (specifically as an Anglican)...
A Bible for reading
The first thing that strikes you about Adam Lewis Greene's project, Bibliotheca is the beauty of what he is creating.
The picture above captures some of that, even before you open one of the four (soon to be five) volumes that make up his reprinting of the Bible. Using the American Standard Version of 1901, Green has aimed to make a Bible that is suitable for reading, rather than proof-texting.
Read MoreInterested in improving your work with youth, children and families?
From 2015, St Francis Theological College will begin offering subjects especially targeting ministry with young people, families and children. You can work towards a diploma or to audit (reduced fees and optional assessment).
And what’s on next year?
Read MoreDirecting the spiritual life
The MEC Spiritual Direction Formation Program is an ecumenical program that offers participants the opportunity with experienced spiritual directors to both discern the call to the ministry of spiritual direction and develop the skills necessary to assist others in discovering the sacred in everyday life.
Read MoreAdding spice to your sermon
The well-known US Christian video resource site Sermon Spice (http://www.sermonspice.com/) serves at least two major purposes for Anglicans here in the Anglican Church Southern Queensland. In the first place the site is an absolute treasure trove of video material for everything from adding a welcome, to stories that enhance homilies, to blessings with heart. But what is the second??
Read MoreWish I Was Here
Aidann Bloom (Zach Braff) and his wife Sarah are facing one of life’s great challenges: Aidann’s dad, Gabe (Mandy Patinkinn) is dying. If that wasn’t enough, Gabe’s health means that Aidann needs to start homeschooling their children. But what does he know? Not much as most of the kids’ questions, inspired by their grandfather’s plight, are about faith, belief and other big life questions.
Read MorePaula Gooder
Paula Gooder is one of the authors of the wonderful Pilgrim: a course for the Christian journey. Our diocese is just about to launch into a focus on these materials for small groups and faith formation. Exciting! Paula was recently the guest of St Francis Theological College where she gave the Felix Arnott lecture and a few workshops. She was brilliant! Articulate and witty, her thinking is top rate, but she also has the gift of being able to explain her thoughts in ways that don't distance.
Read More21st Century Faith Formation
John Roberto is a world expert in faith formation and has been working in the field for many years. I recently attended a conference run by him and it was inspiring to say the least. His website is full to the brim with resources and ideas for faith formation in parishes.
You'll find everything from models of formation, to training PowerPoint materials to links to other great pages of resources. There's so much here...
Read MoreHow One Church Is Finding Faith Through Art
My colleague Stephen Harrison and I have long been interested in ways that we can learn about faith through the arts. A little while back we wrote some of that work up. That work was aimed at schools but I'm always excited to see worshipping communities doing the same thing.
Read MorePrayer stations by Meredith Jackson
Merdith Jackson has collected a stack of resources for prayer stations at her Pinterest site located here.
There are usable resources here as well as the kind of images that will set you imagination flying for creating your own series of stations.
Useful, inspiring and beautiful: a great mix!
The Jesus Dojo
Imagine a world where we shifted our mindsets about worship: from worship services to service worship?
What if we gathered together to encourage each other towards love and good deeds by actually doing love and good deeds together in the name of Christ?
Jon Humphries shares:
"What if our worship was spiritual and faith practice joined as one? Where we listened for the Word of God who is Jesus as we reflected on Scripture by living out the teaching, by actually feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, visiting the imprisoned, setting the captives free, helping the blind to see and proclaiming the time of the Lord's favour?
I love Mark Scandrette's concept of the 'Jesus dojo'. The idea of making faith an actual practice, where we practice our faith by exercising our faith in loving service to God and others at the same time in real and practical ways, is pretty inspiring.
The problem is that it requires me to step out of a perfectly safe boat (even one which seems to be slowly sinking) and step out with Jesus onto the water. What if I don't have enough faith and sink?
We all know what the right answer. I just would love some people to step out with me."
Pilgrim Launch and Orientation
Mark the 25th of October in diaries now. That afternoon will be the date of the launch of the Pilgrim course in the diocese. Bishop Cameron Venables will do the launching as we embark on a great journey together. Noted in the Archbishop’s address to Synod this year, the Pilgrim course is a great resource for new or experienced Christians in small groups. The course, created by The Church of England, has flexibility and is easy to run; there are leader’s and participant books, weekly video clips and liturgical resources for every session. It’s middle of the road theologically; any parish could use it!
Come along to find out more about the program, check out the books and other resources and receive some initial training for the small group work. UK theologian, Paula Gooder, one of the authors of the program will stop by via some specially shot videos!
The Details
1-4 pm 25th of October
Lecturer Room 1
St Francis Theological College
Cost: nil
Who is it for? Anyone who wants to know more about Pilgrim: a Course for the Christian Journey. You might be a prospective leader of the program in your parish, or just want to know more about how it works. You might be thinking about starting some new groups and looking for material, or maybe you've been running a group for a long time. You're all welcome!
www. Anglicannews.org is a service that aggregates news from around the Anglican communion into one easy site, making it simple to keep up to date with the Anglican Church around the world.
As well as listing the news, you can sign up for a daily email that means you get a reminder of what's going on and where.
One of the by-products of a site like this is that you can glance over its contents and get an interesting picture of what the Anglican Church is all about. What does it think is important? Where do its values lie? One answer to that question is found here.
Anglican Communion News Service
21st Century Faith Education Ideas...
It is perhaps time that we more fully and more intentionally embraced modern styles of learning into the way we foster and develop people as disciples in the Church - ironically this 'modern' way of learning looks very much like the way Jesus approached learning and discipleship with his followers.
For much of the life of the the Church, (That which we call Christendom - the time when Christianity was the dominant religious, moral and cultural societal paradigm) learning has been controlled by the learned - that is knowledge is shared/passed-on by the knowledgeable.
Much of the recent life of Church has been shaped by modern-ist forms of thinking where there are certain truths to be told, known and understood as they have been told, known and understood by the Christian culture that the learning takes place in. There was in effect a set of beliefs to be believed and often they took form a creeds to be learnt. There were morals to be followed and certain duties to be performed. The Christian discipleship equation worked along the lines that if you believed the right things, attended Church and served dutifully and lived with the right morals then salvation was the reward. There is much value in this as most of the elements are are good and helpful for righteous living. Of course this is also an oversimplification and a gross generalisation. However, this type of faith and discipleship can lead to religious complacency.
As we continue to move into a new millenium, we have moved into a new era for the Church. Christendom is nowhere near as strong as it was within our globalised, multi-cultural, and multi-faith world. Post-modernism and its balancing corrective of post-post-modernism has seen a shift in the way people approach questions of truth and belief. With the inception and growth of the internet and computing technologies, knowledge is now accessible on an increasingly exponential scale.
All this means that the style of education and learning has shifted, to a point where learning is less about the learner receiving a package of knowledge from the learned and knowledgeable teacher. We are increasingly moving in to a learn-ED (learning- Educational) focus. Here the emphasis is less on acquiring a certain packet of knowledge, but more on learning to learn and how to gather the knowledge that is needed at the time. This is not about devaluing knowledge, but is more about how we apply it and use to situations and circumstances. What hasn't changed is the learning of skills, but there has been a re-emergence around the skill of learning and learning how to learn. It is also about learning how to think and develop skills.
As all things often do, they seem to come back round to where they were some time before. This is perhaps beginning to happen in the Church. We have at the core of our theological endeavour always accepted that God is always more that we can fully comprehend and there is always more to be learnt as disciples both in terms of understanding our faith and applying it in our ministry and service to others. Faith-based learning is about learning to learn and learning to think in order to better live out God's call to discipleship through living and loving in caring service to God and others. It is about accepting the limitations of knowledge and moving beyond having a fixed set of doctrines that must be learned by rote, to see doctrines as being important foundations in which we build our own faith and discipleship through communion with God and with each other as the Church.
Faith based learning is about a learn-ed model of being which is about all people discovering and taking responsibility as learners so that all can carry the tradition and teaching of the Church rather than a group of experts. This does not mean that we don't need educated people who are experts in the Bible and theology. What is means is that there is a shift in their role as educators from being teachers which impart their knowledge and download it into their students, to teachers who use their knowledge and expertise to shape learning pathways for others so that others can learn fr themselves. It is a move from the learned being imparters of knowledge to being facilitators of learning and understanding. Knowledge is still shared.
'Godly Play' is one good example where the use of story by the 'teacher' is augmented by open questions which in turn open questions in the learners which then leads them to do their own thinking and processing in order to draw links and connections to other learning, to other parts of the faith tradition and to how they might apply their learning in practical ways in their faith and discipleship.
Teaching still occurs, but the style shifts back more to the way of Jesus and his simple and challenging way of story and explanation that almost always had a practical application to any learning that took place.
It is something to perhaps do more thinking and learning about.
- Jon Humphries
posted at https://www.facebook.com/groups/formingfaith/permalink/440394136100662/
Since our churches have a life long goal of working at nurturing their own communities and the one around them, this article by noted theologian Parker Palmer is helpful. It opens up some of the old ways of thinking about community and outlines newer, more helpful ways to move us forward in creating places of safety, challenge and love...
Parker J. Palmer, founder and Senior Partner of the Center for Courage & Renewal, is a world-renowned writer, speaker and activist who focuses on issues in education, community, leadership, spirituality and social change. He has reached millions worldwide through his nine books, including Let Your Life Speak, The Courage to Teach, A Hidden Wholeness, and Healing the Heart of Democracy.
Parker holds a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of California at Berkeley, as well as eleven honorary doctorates, two Distinguished Achievement Awards from the National Educational Press Association, and an Award of Excellence from the Associated Church Press. In 2010, Palmer was given the William Rainey Harper Award whose previous recipients include Margaret Mead, Elie Wiesel, and Paolo Freire. In 2011, he was named an Utne Reader Visionary, one of “25 people who are changing your world.”
Parker Palmer’s Thirteen Ways of Looking at Community
Calvary
Dir: John Michael McDonagh
Father James Lavelle (Brendan Gleeson) is hearing confession when a bombshell hits: He will be killed at the end of the week because of abuse committed by others. As the next seven days unfold James continues his care for his community; amongst domestic violence and family issues he is beset by the unbelief of his parishioners. His daughter from a pre-ordination relationship visits after a suicide attempt. All the while the spectre of Calvary looms.
As you might have discerned this is not a cheery film. It is, however, funny in a very black way. Throughout his travails, Fr. James keeps his sense of humour amidst a streak of world-weary exasperation. But make no mistake, this is a dark film that will be hard going for some. Moments of optimism arise and thankfully they are bright indeed, especially in contrast. Fortunately there is more to this than bleakness. McDonagh’s previous movie with Gleeson, The Guard was a fish-out-of-water tale and in a sense this is too: a priest with a realistic faith attacked on all sides by the abrasive doubt of others. A strong supporting cast features Chris O’Dowd (The Sapphires), Aiden Gillen (Game of Thrones), Domhnall Gleeson (It’s About Time), Dylan Moran (Black Books) and Kelly Reilly (Flight). Each contributes immensely to create more than the sum of their parts.
In the end this is all about self-sacrifice and vocation: to what extent does one equal the other? Whilst the final moment might be slightly over-egged, the parallels with Holy Week and the inexorable lurch towards Golgotha are clear. As such it is a film that stays with you. It might not be for everyone, but for those who choose to take the trek to Calvary, it will never be forgotten.
This film is in limited release. Watch for it soon on DVD or through on-line sources like i-tunes etc.
Film Review: Calvary