Links to other missioners' resources

  • You can download the Code of Practice on Bishops' Mission Orders, plus skeleton Orders and other information, from the Church Commissioners' Pastoral website here.
  • The Share website – run by Fresh Expressions and Church Army - contains information on Learning Networks and a Guide with 100+ pages of how-to-do-it advice on starting, developing and sustaining fresh expressions of church.
  • EvangelismUK works in partnership with Start The Week. An ecumenical resource, it brings you regular, brief news items on evangelism across the UK. It's maintained by Jim Currin of the Group for Evangelisation.

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March 15, 2008

The BBC Passion

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This one is big. Warm thanks to those at rejesus, CEA, GfE and especially to Andrew Graystone and colleagues at Churches Media Council for all the work they've done to bring it to the attention of the churches. The CMC website has lots of helpful resources for churches who want to make a media-friendly response to the screenings.

Here's the schedule:

Episode 1

Palm Sunday 16th March, BBC ONE, 8pm (after Eastenders)

It's Passover in Jerusalem, and the city is bursting with pilgrims. It's a tense time for those charged with keeping order - like Pilate the Roman Prefect and Caiaphas the High Priest. The arrival of a preacher from Galilee called Jesus causes great excitement when he enters through the East Gate on a donkey's colt, fulfilling prophecies of the coming of the Messiah. For Jesus' band of disciples, hardened by several years on the road, this is the moment they've been waiting for, but none of them suspects how momentous this week will be.

Episode 2

Monday 17th March, BBC ONE, 8pm (after Eastenders)

Caiaphas is growing increasingly anxious that Jesus' preaching will provoke unrest and bring in the Romans, and when Jesus appears to threaten the Temple it's the final straw. As Jesus tries to explain his destiny to the disciples, Caiaphas calls a council and presents it with a stark choice. With Passover approaching, a fateful decision is taken, and Judas finds himself placed in an impossible position.

Episode 3

Good Friday 21st March, BBC ONE, 9pm (after Question of Sport)

Jesus shares his Last Supper with the disciples, and teaches them their last and most important lesson. Whilst Judas slips away to fetch the Temple guards, Jesus leads the disciples to the Garden of Gethsemane and tries to prepare himself for what is to come. The next few hours will bring him face to face with Caiaphas, with Pilate and with his own destiny.

Episode 4

Easter Sunday 23rd March, BBC ONE, time TBC (around 8pm)

As Jesus is taken from the cross and buried, his disciples cower in hiding. Caiaphas, fearful that the body will be stolen, orders the tomb to be guarded. But when Mary Magdalene discovers it empty, a chain of events is about to begin that will transform the lives of the disciples and reverberate throughout the world for the next two thousand years.

SGM Lifewords - online Holy Week resource

SGM Lifewords (formerly Scripture Gift Mission) invite you to re-imagine the Easter story:

SGM Lifewords will host an online reflective journey through Holy Week this Easter. Each day a new animation will be posted online at www.sgmlifewords.com/easter, and subscribers will receive an email with a link to the day’s content.

Beginning on the 17th of March with his triumphal entry into Jerusalem, the animations use the Bible’s life words to tell the story of the last week of Jesus’ life, through art, music and spoken word. With distinctive and striking visuals, the animations present the Easter story in an abstract, poetic way that captures the imagination and encourages personal reflection.

“SGM Lifewords didn’t want to just recount the events of Easter, we wanted to bring people into the story,” says programme developer Jeremy Williams. “Easter is a journey from hope to confusion, to despair, and back to hope. If we can enter into the emotion of Holy Week, and live through its questions one day at a time, perhaps we can gain a new appreciation for a familiar story.”

The journey begins at www.sgmlifewords.com/easter, where users can subscribe to the daily email, download supporting resources, and leave comments on the dedicated Easter blog.

The online journey is part of SGM Lifewords work in the UK to inspire churches and individual Christians to engage creatively with the Bible’s life-giving words.

HOPE 08 latest

1. Resources for the Big HOPE (Lent & Easter) available at http://www.hope08.com/Group/Group.aspx?id=51055

2. Gareth Squire writes from CEA:

We are producing a second film of hope for the HOPEinfo.co.uk website in time for Easter.  In fact, there will be FIVE new films.  In collaboration with Reaching the Unchurched Network (RUN), we are featuring four films from their forthcoming iMatter DVD.  This is a wonderful example of partnership in the Gospel that I hope you will support.

The goal of all of this effort is of course, to enable people to engage with the hope we have in us.  HOPEinfo.co.uk is already having a significant impact, with more than 200 people visiting EACH DAY.  As well as the impact of the films, the website is facilitating conversations about hope and encouraging and enabling visitors to contact CEA to learn more about Jesus.

New Bishop of Bolton

Another Diocesan Missioner makes good with the announcement that Chris Edmondson, Warden of Lee Abbey Devon and for several years missioner in Carlisle, has been appointed Bishop of Bolton in the diocese of Manchester. Warm congratulations to Chris, and prayers for him and the family as they make the long pilgrimage north.

Lee Abbey say:

It was announced from Downing Street on Monday 10th March that Chris Edmondson has been appointed to be the next Bishop of Bolton, in the Diocese of Manchester.  He is to be consecrated by the Archbishop of York, in a service in York Minster on Friday April 25th at 11.00am.  This means he and Susan will be moving on from Lee Abbey in early April.

Chris said:  ‘I feel both excited and humbled to have been nominated as the next Bishop of Bolton.  The Diocese of Manchester, under the leadership of Bishop Nigel McCulloch, will be an exciting and challenging area in which to work, with its vision based on Hebrews 12 and 1 Corinthians 13 of ‘Running the race, looking to Jesus, and passing on His Faith, Hope and Love’.  Their strategy is that under God, churches will grow, people’s gifts and talents will be released, and the communities of Greater Manchester be served.

For both Susan and me there is a strong sense that this is a right move, in terms of calling, timing and location.  Having said that, as you can imagine it will be hard to leave Lee Abbey, after five and a half exciting, fulfilling and challenging years.  Please pray for us, as we embark on this next stage of the adventure of faith,  for those who will be taking extra responsibilities during the interregnum, and for the process of selecting my successor’

Team Missioner vacancy

Many will know Don Brewin, who led SOMA UK for many years. He writes from Africa:

Dear friends,

Greetings from Kampala!  I hope you are all well.

Our local team ministry at home is looking for a Team Missioner!  Stephen Dinsmore suggested I contact your network to see if you might draw the attention of any suitable candidates to the St Albans Diocesan website under "Ouzel Valley Team" (http://www.stalbans.anglican.org/downloads/ouzelsummary.htm).  It is important to Sandra and myself as one of the churches he or she would be responsible for, in addition to the main task of planting a new congregation on a vast housing estate, is our local village ...
Best wishes
Yours ever
Don

RUN Conference with Brian McLaren

Chris Stoddard at RUN has this news of their conference:

"More than this..."
Breaking the mould of mission           June 17 – 19   2008            Peterborough

Download run_conference_brochure_pdf.pdf

Brian McLaren is the keynote speaker for this year's RUN conference and he will be joined by a superb team of contributors including Mark Greene, Gerard Kelly, Lizz Babbs, Anne Hibbert and Nick Cuthbert.  As well as  opening up the issues facing Believers at this time we will also be looking at practical ways we can make an impact for the Kingdom of God in our communities. We have an excellent line up of specialist seminar speakers and the conference will also have a strong emphasis on creative worship and space to just meet with God. In true RUN fashion … this event will not be boring - there’s even a pig roast!

More than this… is being held at the excellent Kingsgate Centre in Peterborough which is one of the best conference venues for this type of event that we have seen.
Full details on our brochure or from
www.run.org.uk

Cell UK Leadership Link

Laurence Singlehurst writes from Cell UK:

Please find our latest Leadership Link Letter attached. 

Download leadership_link_feb_08.pdf

This has been written by our friend David Robertson who leads the Salvation Army at Arnold in Nottingham.  David has been working with Cell Groups for a number of years now and has some really helpful observations to make on how we look at not only the cells in our churches but the life of the church as a whole.

We have just had a very exiting day in Southampton running one of our multi track training days; it was good to meet old friends and make new ones.  We have another one of these days coming up on Saturday April 19th this time in York so if you are in travelling distance do make sure you book your places to be with us.  Just download a booking form from our website and post to us here in Harpenden.
Yours
Laurence 

Cell UKMinistries
Highfield Oval
Harpenden
Herts  AL5 4BX
01582 463232
www.celluk.org.uk

March 02, 2008

Gone for Good? Review-article from Tracey Messenger

Leslie Francis and Philip Richter have given the missional community another helpful gift, following "Gone but Not Forgotten" ten years ago.

Warm thanks to Tracey Messenger at Church House Publishing for this review-article:

Gone for good? Church-leaving and returning in the 21st century

Leslie J. Francis and Philip Richter, Epworth, 2007,368 pp, £19.99

Gfg As the title suggests, Francis and Richter’s new book is a sequel to their 1998 study Gone but not forgotten. In that work the authors, noting the downward trend in church attendance figures, suggested that an investigation into the reasons for church-leaving should be of foremost concern to all churches.

Whilst there have been major developments and initiatives in mission across the churches since 1998, many successful in getting people through the front door, evidence still suggests that just as many are leaving through the back door. The question ‘why?’ continues to be important for all those concerned about the Church, although most leavers find that no-one bothers to ask.

Francis and Richter have the laudable aim of redressing this omission by listening to church leavers. They do so not only for good pastoral reasons, but also to learn lessons:

‘We take the view that programmes and invitations to welcome new members to enter by the front door into church life remain unproductive and inadequate unless attempts are also made to review what is happening at the back door through which church-leavers exit’ (p. 300). Such an exercise also enables us to leave the door open for a return: ‘Their story of disengagement offers clear insight into their potential for re-engagement’ (p. 303)

It is worth taking note of this book for several reasons.

Firstly, this work draws on a much wider pool of empirical data than Gone but not forgotten. Since 1998 the authors have doubled their database of church leavers, and extended its geographical spread. Their findings are based on a relatively small sample of qualitiative interviews and a much larger quantitative survey, involving response to a 200-part questionnaire by about 800 participants in York, Exeter and London. 

Individuals recruited for the survey had once attended a church of any denomination at least six times a year (not including Christmas and Easter) and subsequently lapsed to less than six times a year. Three-fifths of these respondents had once attended an Anglican church; one-fifth a Roman Catholic church and one-fifth a Methodist church.

Secondly, Richter and Francis have greatly expanded their original typology of broad reasons for church-leaving to 15 overarching ‘themes’ (themes can encompass a variety of reasons). This reflects the greater breadth and depth of their empirical data, and the fact that church-leaving is a complex phenomenon: there are a whole host of reasons for walking out of the door.

Each of the fifteen themes are discussed in separate chapters and range from matters of belief and unbelief, life transitions, issues of general dissatisfaction with church leadership, styles of worship or theological differences, through to a sense that the church was becoming irrelevant to the person’s lifestyle and/or was not sufficiently rewarding.

Within each chapter, the data is further analysed according to gender, age and denominational differences. These allows the authors to investigate whether women are more likely to leave than men and whether churches are losing more young people than old. The authors also analyse whether the leaving was sudden or more gradual and whether there is a likelihood of the person ever returning to church.

This extensive analysis of the data, while impressive, can be a little overwhelming for the reader with a less academic interest in the subject, or those easily bored by percentages. In the view of this reader, the chapters really come alive when the authors allow church leavers themselves to speak of their experiences (using excerpts from the qualitative interviews) and one wished for more of these to be included.

So what are their conclusions? Which reasons for leaving were the most important? While the authors note that ‘there are identifiable patterns and trends underpinning motivation for church-leaving’ (p. 302), you really need to trawl through the book to find out (although a handy summary appeared in a news report in the 25 January edition of the Church Times, stating that one in three of the respondents had given loss of faith as a key reason for leaving). Quite rightly, the authors note that there is unlikely to be any one reason for an individual leaving church and insist on the importance of looking at an individual’s whole story. However, they note that it may be worth identifying what was the ‘tipping point’ which finally made the individual walk out of the door and not come back.

The authors do identify those most likely to return to church – those ‘whose church-leaving was associated with life transitions and life changes, and alternative lives and alternative meanings’ (a term the authors use to describe tensions between the demands of everyday life and church attendance). (pp. 302-3).

On the other hand, those least likely to return included ‘Those whose church-leaving was associated with matters of belief and unbelief, growing up and changing, incompatible lifestyles, costs and benefits, disillusionment with the church, problems with relevance, and problems with conservatism’ (p. 303)

Given the wide range of reasons given for church leaving, and basing their theory on the theology of individual differences propounded by Francis in recent works, the authors go on to suggest that ‘church switching’ is infinitely preferable to church-leaving and argue that this be encouraged. They propose a ‘multiplex church’ which like the mega-cinemas familiar to us all have many points of entry and departure and a number of different styles to choose from, according to personal taste. The term encompasses both a multiplicity of separate congregations within the same premises as well as a multiplicity of different styles of church in a given locality.

In conclusion, this is an important piece of work which deserves to be noted, debated and taken further.

Fresh Expressions updates

Firstly from Andrew Wooding highlighting an aspect of SHARE:

A brand new section has appeared in the guide part of the Share website: ‘How can we sustain our fresh expression?’ Arguably it is one of the most important sections of the guide, which makes it ironic that it is also currently the shortest.
It includes Share’s first shot at sharing some wisdom on sustainability, but it is far from the last word. There are almost certainly other themes that Share should address, so they need your help.
•    What have you learnt about sustainability from your own experience – from triumphs to botches?
•    What other themes should this section contain?
•    Would you be willing to help write any of these themes?
Please register with the Share website (run by Church Army and Fresh Expressions) at www.sharetheguide.org, so that you can log in and leave your insights in this new sect
ion.

And this from  Andrew Roberts on Vision Days:


‘That’s amazing!’ exclaimed former Scripture Union missioner Max Reynolds when he saw the story of the Surfers Church Tubestation at the Stafford Fresh Expressions vision day. Twelve years ago Max and his team had led a beach mission on the very beach featured on the DVD. The team had prayed that the place would become a new centre of Christian mission. To use a little bit of theological language Max was ‘gobsmacked’ to see how his prayers had been answered.

The Stafford day was attended by over 100 people as were recent days in Watford and Hope (Flintshire). Forthcoming vision days include:

Venue                                  Date   
            
Dartford                              Saturday 8th March

Luton                                  Saturday 8th March

Copmanthorpe, York             Saturday 12th April


Ashford                               Saturday 26th April

For more information on these days, including costs and how to book, please go to www.freshexpressions.org.uk/Vision

For more information about Vision Days or if you would like to find out how to host a day in your area please contact Rachel Matthews rachel.matthews@freshexpressions.org.uk Tel: 01384 294454.

BBC Passion - latest

Andrew Graystone has this snappy update from Churches Media Council:

The BBC has published an outline of the four episodes, together with lots of other useful material, at
http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/programmes/thepassion/.

The final schedule will be announced this coming Wednesday afternoon.  I will circulate the details as soon as they are available, and also post them at www.churchesmediacouncil.org.uk/passion.

Christian Enquiry Agency also have this poster for churches to download:

Download the_passion_christian_enquiry_agency.pdf