The People You Meet

There has been more than one instance when I’ve been asked a curious question: “Do you know the people who comment on your blog?” The most recent person to ask was Rohan (occasional reader, even more occasional commenter from the famous “Rohan and Kate” partnership), and I thought that the question deserved a proper online reply. Because there has built up a bit of a crew who comment on here, and it might be nice to have a go at introducing one another. So there’s pretty much two groups: the people I know from real life, and the people I’ve (pseudo-)met through the blog.

Real Life Aquaintances

  • BecAlways put your fiancé first: I might not know many rules to this thing, but I do know that one. :) We’ve known each other fractionally longer than we’ve known that each other blogged, but if you’re ever in danger of dying of boredom, it’s quite amusing to have a look at the early flirtations (circa March – July 2006 here and at allsaidanddone.com) happening online.
  • Scott and Christina – When I got a preaching gig at Ranges a couple of Sunday’s ago (which I’ll post the MP3 link to when Scotty puts it online), we pointed out that Scott actually taught me when I was in Sunday school. Scott and Christina were both a part of YVV for quite a while, and in the past year or so, it’s been great to get to know the better and to interact with the great things that they both write (although there has been a slow-down in the frequency of postings due to a certain little girl called Jemima)
  • Gerry and Melinda – Gerry sometimes posts as Deri, but Gerry and Melinda are my future parents-in-law.
    They are genuinely lovely people, and as a bible translator for Solomon Islands Pijin, Gerry brings a unique perspective to just about anything he talks about.
  • Virtually Paul – Although he might have started out as Bec’s friend, little Paulie is now a good mate – to the point that if the planets align correctly, we should be housemates for a little while before long.
  • Tim – When it’s without an “O” or “Ogilvy” after it – it’s usually one of my groomsmen Tim. He links off to “halfdecentcoffee.com” despite the fact that there hasn’t been anything there for as long as I’ve known Tim well enough to want to check it out. But we have breakfast together every fortnight – so he’s a good bloke!
  • Tim O(gilvy), aka Timmeh – This is a different Tim: far more likely to say something inflammatory in the interest of either starting something interesting or just for the sake of saying something controversial.
  • Laura, Hannah, Emily – More likely to see Laura (Bec’s twin) on here commenting, but Hannah and Em-face have at times put up their heads. They are Bec’s (lovely) sisters.
  • Rohan – Rohan is a funny one: he’d read my blog before I’d met him, but he was in the course I’ve been doing at Tabor. Lovely guy, always got something interesting to say. And he’s married to Kate who is equally as interesting and fun.
  • Burkie – Can’t believe I missed the penguin on my first attempt, but James Burke (wedding photographer extraordinnaire) along with his lovely fiancé Beth are also semi-regular commenters here. I know Burkie because Bec knows Burkie. But now I like Burkie as well.

People I’ve Only Met Through Blogging

  • Asta – It’s been a while since I received a comment from my favourite Lithuanian reader – but I’m pretty sure that Asta is still catching up on TheGeoffRe(y)port. I was amazed to see a regular reader from Lithuania not that long into blogging, and it still makes me chuckle. I love it
  • Rick – Rick started reading and I started realising that I was actually out on the internet. He writes (much more often than I) at rianniello.blogpsot.com, and has some great stuff to say – especially for a religious-right calvinist (who’s also got a bit of Vineyard in him). Very fun and very funny. And he lived in Germany for a while!
  • Mark Edwards – You’d be hard pressed to find a man more blindly in love with a team that plays in purple than Mark Edwards. I initially connected a little bit with Mark after discovering that Ra’ah – the Australian pastors blog was linking through to me, and we’ve traded comments on each others blogs since.
  • Wayne Field - Same story as Mark only with less Fremantle ravings. These guys sort me out if I start getting too emerging :)
  • Rodney Olsen – Perth radio host, prolific blogger and all round nice guy – Rodney is always keen to connect with everyone and anyone in the blogosphere. He’s always got good things to say, and he was nice enough to surprise Bec and I immensely when he posted a congratulations up after our engagement.

Now I’m sure there are people here that I’ve missed – if you let me know I might even edit you in here. But that might give you an idea of where people fit.

Entrepreneurial NGO

Kiva.org has got to be an example of what happens when smart, economist types get really passionate about doing something against world poverty. Once again it was on Makeesha’s blog that I saw the link: but this is a really cool initiative.

Basically, you lend money directly to people in developing countries for the express purpose of starting or improving their businesses. Each loan request has a detailed description of who the person is, what they are doing, and what they plan on spending the loan on. Once they pay back the loan, you can either take your money back (greedy so and so) or re-invest straight into someone else. It means that ultimately, you’re making an investment into these communities in a direct and tangible way. So go on: sign up. I’m a loaner – you should be one too!

Brain Beer

Thought I should share this pearler from Makeesha (whose blog I got onto through my beautiful fiancé).

Many things I read in “pop media” are more like brain beer for me – tasty, relaxing, refreshing, makes me go ahhhh….but also sort of lulls my brain into a groggy, tired stupor that makes me slur incoherently, and I have to read much more of it than is healthy in order to get revved up.

– “Brain Coffee – Swinging from the Vine

TheGeoffRe(y)port – keeping you updated with good stuff from the blogosphere.

Quick Thought From Mr McKnight

Scott McKnight describing the Sermon on the Mount: “Jesus simply doesn’t think everyone wants to follow him; in fact, he thinks many don’t.” It’s obvious, and yet I don’t think I’ve ever heard it articulated before. Maybe this changes our instinct to try and “bludgeon” people into the kingdom who are quite certain that it’s not for them, and instead evangelise in a way more akin to offering truth rather than convicting sinners. Just a thought.

The Tension of Individual Spirituality

I picked up a book from the Forge National Summit which I’d heard a little bit about: David Tacey’s “A Spirituality Revolution”. I’m only about a quarter of the way through, and I’m not sure that I’ll end up reading it all – once I’ve got the “big idea” behind non-fiction books like that I tend to find that the rest is the much less interesting details – but there is something deeply intriguing about what Tacey describes and proposes.

David Tacey is a lecturer at LaTrobe University, and he is renowned for his first year spirituality subject where most of the classes are (according to my third hand source) just about having undergrad students talk about their feelings towards spirituality. From the undercurrents of those discussions, Tacey has done significant amounts of research and become quite the go-to-academic for study into spirituality in Australia – and specifically the trends in spirituality amongst young people.

Tacey holds that the trend away from organised religion has not coincided with a lack of interest in spirituality: quite the opposite. He believes that young people in particular in western societies are experiencing a re-invigoration in curiosity and exploration of spirituality, as people seek to account for the questions of spirit they are unable to find answers to in the scientific worldview. In many ways, because organised religion has become associated with the same “a+b=c” approach to spiritual matters it is dismissed out of hand by these new type of spiritualist seekers, because it fails to account for the personal, spiritual journey they find themselves on.

Tacey almost mourns our inability as the church (as well as other religions) to embrace what he calls “the mystery of the spirit”, instead choosing to rely on our systematic theology, and a rule based understanding of interaction with the Living God, which sells short the experience of interaction with the creator of the universe: reducing it to that which can be understood within the realms of human comprehension. Tacey seems to describe religion as being first about self-sustainability, rather than guiding and respecting the spiritual walk of the individual: particularly when the individual experience sits outside traditional parameters for understanding of interaction with God.

In a nutshell: he’s right. And wrong. There’s little doubt that churches: whether they Anglican, Catholic, Baptist or Vineyard; have failed at being accommodating and helpful for just about anyone who doesn’t sit within our (conservative) parameters for understanding God. Churches ought to be a place where questioning and probing is not seen as an indicator of immaturity, or just purely as a step towards “crossing the line” and becoming a Christian to be made into a clone of everyone else in church. Instead, questioning and curiosity must be a reflection of the natural reaction to encountering a mysterious God. It means not holding so closely to creeds and dogma that finding any truths about God not found in the church tradition is no longer considered a heresy. It means loosing our grip on the status and standing we have individually to show the humility to comprehend not having the full picture.

Ultimately this is not just what Tacey is prescribing, but the same call as that of Brian Mclaren, Campolo and (for my reading) C.S Lewis. And I like it – I think it makes beautiful sense and I think that if churches can actually start believing that the truth of Jesus lies not only in the hearts of its own tradition, but that the law of God is written on the hearts of all men – we might be able to learn some of what it is to draw close to God.

But there’s a flip-side, and it there is undoubtedly some real danger in the grounding behind some of these ideas; and I believe they open up the prospect of doing damage to the message of the kingdom of God. Because if we follow the path that Tacey would set out for us: to show almost limitless respect and reverence for the individual journey of all we encounter, we run the risk of falling into a cult of individualism, self-aggrandisement and pick-and-mix theology. That’s not to say that this is the only endpoint for such an approach

It seems to me that the only way to “respect the individual spiritual journey”, give space and credence to the inherent mystery of God, whilst remaining followers of Christ in much more than just name, is to do this thing in community. Not community in a “meeting together once a week for 2 hours”, but community that shares their experiences of encountering Jesus, shares their struggle and sacrificially serve one another.

If we can allow people, in that environment of living for one another in such a real way, help people to explore the mystery of who Jesus is, of who God is, and of the ways that his spirit does indeed live within us – we might end up leaving the religion behind and just be chasing after the kingdom of God.

(Disclaimer: I know that this is way too long, and that most of you won’t get through all of it. If you have – I appreciate you wading through my waffling!)

Been a long time…

Browny after the winIf a change is as good as a holiday, then a holiday must have been good for a change: specifically a change in fortunes. The Mighty Tiges – no longer the holders of the “gallant defeat” title but instead were tonight crowned “comprehensive victors”. Richo pulled in about 17 marks for the night, Jake King put in an awesome effort on the half-backline (am I the only one who thinks he looks like Gavin Wanganeen?) as did Graham (aren’t you glad Freo traded him) Polak who has to be shaping for Richmond’s best and fairest this season. And do I even need to mention Nathan Brown! Three goals after 11 months out of senior footy is a pretty decent return.

Richo and Browny - how could you not love ‘emYouth commitments meant that I didn’t see the first half of the game, but these are some great signs. Nathan Foley is turning into a midfielder. Thursfield gave Russell Robertson a bath and a half: these are long term prospects. Now if we can just sure up some long-term forward options, as well as perhaps one more decent tall defender, we’re going to build a side that can do some damage in the years to come.

GO TIGES!!

The Me, Me, Me, Meme

Actually that should be 8 “me”s but I’m lazy. To break from the contentious pieces I’ve been posting (haphazardly) of late, I thought I’d respond to Monsieur Smulo’s tag. So here are 8 things about me. They’re not that exciting, but they are all true:

  1. The last three pairs of shoes I’ve bought are all size 11. One fits beautifully, one feels a teeny bit too big, and the third a teeny bit too small.
  2. I play tennis (almost) every Thursday night socially. And even though I’ve been playing for about 2 years, I still don’t have a service action that I’m settled with.
  3. I’m pretty close to postponing the rest of my college studies. This semester has stretched me beyond what I can realistically put out, and I can’t see the next semester with an upcoming wedding being easier. So I’m looking at deferring, or possibly taking the credit and using it for some other course later. But it’s killing me because I love the course and I really want to do the next module.
  4.  I am far too likely to say yes when I’m asked if I can do something. Unless I’m at home in which case I have the opposite problem.
  5. I saw a ripper of a movie last night: “Driving Lessons“. Everything a British movie ought to be: funny, quirky, confronting and brilliantly acted.
  6. I’ve got a preaching gig at Ranges CC on Sunday. I’m really quite excited about it, but not at all sure what to expect.
  7. I have a wonderful fiance who I love very, very much, and who I am so proud to even be associated with. And she even likes me back!
  8. I don’t even really like memes that much, but when I get tagged (especially by someone as eloquent and well respected as John) I feel like I should definitely participate.

This is the part where I’m supposed to tag people, but I tend not to on principle. If through some freak accident in the equilibrium of your own private universe, you were inspired to take part: feel free to link back here to let me know. Trust me – I’ll find out :P

Slice of Silliness

I know that there’s not been a lot of activity here, but having had a few people comment on my choice to start reading fundamentalist diatribe, I thought that I just had to share this pearler:

Rob Bell of the emerging church says that he has the answer to stop the fighting, “the teachings of Jesus, who pioneered a brilliant way of loving nonviolence…” However was preaching this “loving nonviolence” really why Jesus was brutally tortured and crucified?

- taken from Rob Bell and the Calling All Peacemakers Tour

Is it just me, or is the answer to the rhetorical question posed here a whole-hearted “yes”? Maybe that’s not all he was crucified for, but I did have to laugh at this one.

Please don’t, George

I like George Pell on the whole. There are certainly times when I hear what he’s saying and think that he’s doing a really good thing. But stuff like this just makes me want to slap him until he snaps out of it. I don’t agree with using embryonic stem cells either, but this sort of tripe is the reason so many people dislike Christians:

CARDINAL George Pell has faced a tirade of criticism from NSW state Catholic MPs, including the Premier, Morris Iemma, and his deputy, John Watkins, for threatening them “with consequences” if they voted for legislation to expand stem-cell research. (The Age – “Pell’s knell for stem-cell Catholics”)

Just don’t do it George. Threats aren’t winning anything for us

Google Reader can now be read offline!

picture-2.jpgGoogle Reader has just taken the jump from being a purely online feed-reader to providing functionality that allows me to read any of my 2000 last Google Reader subscription items without needing to be online. It does this through what is ultimately a browser plugin: “Google Gears”. Once you install the Google Gears plugin – you get a little green download icon on the top right of your Google Reader, and you can download all your latest feed subscriptions.

Google Gears sounds like it’s bigger than just that, but this is possibly the coolest thing about the feed-reader that was already well and truly my favourite going. It might just convince you Bloglines laggards to make the switch.