tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-208471472024-03-08T03:16:45.785+13:00Lucky BearGlynn is a lucky bear. In Joan Phillip's book the luck of the bear is not due to circumstances but attitude. When shit falls a lucky bear uses it to fertilise. It is an optimistic attitude.
Spirituality and religion are about attitude. Are we sinful creatures who need correction and rules? Or are we magnificent creations whose imaginations and humour are part of the divine?Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.comBlogger168125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-59819691868745003452009-05-29T10:13:00.000+12:002009-05-29T10:14:31.519+12:00To Paint the World with Love<span style="color:#000066;">We painted Jesus a lot when I was in Sunday School. In that little back room of the hall our teacher with the long flowing skirt gave her pupils brushes. We splashed and sloshed, dabbed and dotted, browns and blues and lovely reds. <br /><br />Jesus always had long hair, like my older brother. He was invariably a blue-eyed blond, like most us. No one even thought he might look Semitic. He had long robes like the vicar, a kindly face, and was patting sheep.<br /><br />Our pictures though were far from stereotypical. With broad brushstrokes Palestine was transformed into a green and pleasant land with lots of red boulders and purple trees. The sky, God’s domain, was indigo and silver, with pink cherubs dotted about.<br /><br />We drew one another into the scene. We drew our teacher there too. We drew God and Jesus, who were sort of one and the same but different. We drew the pictures and the pictures captured us. The median was the message, and the median was fun.<br /><br />As I’ve grown older I’ve continued to draw Jesus, though usually these days with words. Every church I’ve been a part of and every Christian I’ve met have also drawn Jesus. We continue trying to paint pictures that are true to our knowledge and experience as well as our hopes and dreams. <br /><br />Sometimes in church he’s up there in the stained glass with a crown on his head and a far away look in his eyes. Sometimes he’s down here in the wine we share and in the children’s corner. Sometimes he’s in concepts profound but hard to apply. Sometimes he’s in talkative visitors who are hard to get away from. We find Jesus both where we look and where we least expect. <br /><br />The church of my childhood painted a kind and benign Jesus. Apart from the gender he was like the Queen of England going round smiling, doing apolitical good deeds, and living in heavenly splendour but still mixing with commoners. We could come to church without shoes and leave with paint on our clothes. Jesus didn’t mind. Why anyone would kill him was mystifying. His death was just a random act of violence.<br /><br />The church of my teenage years painted the cross in the centre. Rather than his death being a random act of violence it was a deliberate God-inspired scheme to save us from being bad. Like in Harry Potter the blood of the innocent willing victim [Jesus] would magically rescue us from the consequences of cosmic evil. We came to church with bibles under our arms and left with enough hope to survive a week in the jungle of adolescence. Jesus was our best friend, and sometimes our only friend.<br /><br />The church of my twenties painted Jesus in revolutionary colours. Jesus had done a course in structural analysis and knew all about racism, sexism, and indigenous land rights. He was the protester par excellence, carrying in his body and soul the pain of the oppressed, living and dying for the cause. We marched with a cross, saw the inside of courtrooms, and heard policemen lie. Faced with injustice and punitive power we learnt to pray simply and silently. Some things are too deep for words.<br /><br />These days I am part of a church that paints Jesus with a broad progressive brush. Jesus identified the human tendency to fix our God ideas and morality in the concrete of certainty. Jesus cracked and broke through that concrete in order that both new insights and innovations might be included and marginalized and oppressed people treated justly. This iconoclastic church is a blaze of vibrant and often contrasting colours, a wild and beautiful place… yet hardly restful. <br /><br />The life of Jesus seems to me to be bigger than any single interpretation of that life. It is a painting bigger than any one canvas. His Spirit cannot fit in any one church or every church combined. The plurality of Christian experience points to the mystery that Jesus is among us while also beating in other hearts and in other places we haven’t heard of. Tolerance and intellectual modesty are therefore important when trying to know Jesus. <br /><br />All these churches I’ve mentioned have this in common: they promote the ethics of empathy, compassion, and courage. These are the things that Christians really have in common, just as colours, brush, and canvas are the things that painters really have in common. The barriers of history, culture, theology, political, or national differences should not obscure for Christians our unity of purpose. Simply put that purpose is to splash and slosh, dab and dot, until the world is painted in love. </span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-72245351830141141702009-05-22T13:44:00.001+12:002009-05-22T13:47:03.522+12:00A prayer in gratitude to Richard HollowayWe hold in our common heart and mind: our whenua, our communities, our whanau…<br /><br />The giggles of children…<br />The sighs of animals…<br />The smells of kitchens…<br />The flicker of a smile…<br /><em>The incense of our gratitude perfumes the air like frangipani at dawn<br /></em><br />The cries of the little ones…<br />The fear of the beaten ones…<br />The grief of the wounded ones…<br />The brutality of the powerful…<br /> <em> The tears of our empathy water the pohutukawas of our resistance<br /></em><br />The beauty of holy space…<br />The prayers of the pious…<br />The transcendence of music…<br />The passion of the committed…<br /> <em>The embers of our courage are blown by the spirit of outrage to ignite hope</em><br /><br />Gratitude, empathy, and courage… may we uphold and be upheld by these… and hold out our open, wounded, and weary hands to others.<br /><br />Amen.Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-74959813675605583152009-04-08T10:11:00.002+12:002009-04-08T10:14:55.424+12:00Speech to UNITEC Graduates<em>The following speech was given last night in the Auckland Town Hall to the graduates of one of Auckland's universities [UNITEC]. The faculties represented were Design, Performing and Screen Arts, Social Practice, and Sport.</em><br /><br />Tena koutou te whanau o Unitec. Tena koutou e Hare, e Ted, e Rick. Tena koutou nga manuhiri. Nau mai, haere mai. Kia ora ra. Ki nga iwi e tau e.<br /><br />Today is a day to feel good, to celebrate, to congratulate yourself, to thank your long-suffering support team, and to thank and for most of you to say goodbye to the academic staff. Today is a day when your tenacious support team feels proud of you, proud of what you’ve achieved, and quietly relieved it is finished.<br /><br />What’s it all been for? “Well Glynn,” you might say, “It gives us a ticket – access – to a place and type of work that will hopefully stimulate, challenge, and pay us. The ticket indicates to society that we have the skills necessary for this stage in our chosen profession.’<br /><br />I’ve spent time in four tertiary educational institutions. There’s very little in the way of facts or formulas that I can still remember from those days. What I can remember is now intellectually, and probably morally, redundant. I did get four tickets that have been useful. Yet much more importantly tertiary education gave me five little pebbles.<br /><br />The first pebble is a love of learning. Learning is for life. It is to be enjoyed. One of the greatest gifts you can give to children, students, or trainees is your infectious love of learning. So, never take a job (if you can possibly help it) where you don’t think you are going to learn anything.<br /><br />The second pebble is a rigour in your learning. Devise for yourself and your colleagues critical peer interaction. When you meet once a month for a coffee and catch up with the gossip, think also about another type of meeting when you’ve all read the same journal article and corporately critique it. Education is like tuning a violin. In time a violin goes out of tune, and sounds awful. You need to work out ways to keep your violins (your education) tuned, and don’t think your employers are always going to do it for you.<br /><br />The third pebble I call a bullshit detector. There is a lot of suspicious smelly stuff out there that gets passed off as true, good, and wholesome. Use your nose, the one with the sense of smell your tutors and you have been developing, and then have the courage to name it for what it is.<br /><br />I heard a story the other day that exemplifies what I mean. There was a school board in Tennessee in the heart of the Bible belt, which was wrestling with whether or not to introduce a foreign-language curriculum. After heated discussion, the debate was brought to an end by one board member who declared: “No way! If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it’s good enough for my boy.”<br /><br />Religion has a long history of being used as a vehicle for prejudice. But hopefully as you heard this story your bullshit detector was ringing loudly. Although you might not know the three languages Jesus could speak, you might have hunched that English wasn’t a language in 1st century Palestine!<br /><br />The fourth pebble that tertiary education gave me is the value of taking time to think. A business that has employees rushing around all day, performance measures that relate to the number of tasks completed, and a fixation on monetary outcomes is on its way to a crash. That business is not taking time to listen. To listen to its employees, let alone its customers. It is trading in what it knows, rather than listening for what it doesn’t know. It is focused on certainties, rather than making time to grapple with, and marvel at, the large uncertainties. <br /><br />The fifth and last pebble is to know what is at the heart of your vocation. Vocation is a big picture word, and I’m now going to make, as an outsider, an educated guess about the heart of your vocations.<br /><br />Design and Performing and Screen Arts seem to me to be about the power of beauty and the imagination. They are not about designing something or entertaining people – those are by-products. They are about creating beauty – of structure, space, movement and screen – and evoking the imagination. These feed our souls. They touch something deep within us. Your skills and sensibilities can create a grace-filled space in which hurt can be held - sometimes even healed – and dreams can be born.<br /><br />So when you are labelled by your status in your industry – apprentice designer, chorus line dancer, coffee collector… somewhere way down the totem pole – just remember that what you really are is a creator of beauty and a catalyst for the imagination, both of which nourish the world’s soul. And base your confidence and authority in that self-perception, not in your pay or position in the industry.<br /><br />The heart of the vocation of Social Practice is people and their communities and what makes them flourish. It is about connectedness, and how to restore it when it’s lost. It’s about walking with people, sharing kai, sharing pain, laughing, weeping… and using your self-belief to create the conditions for others’ self-belief to emerge and be emboldened.<br /><br />So when you are some junior social worker or trainee manager, remember that it isn’t about money (though money can help), nor is it about forms and papers (though they too can be helpful), nor is it about pleasing your superiors (though we all somewhat do it), but at heart its about a way of connecting with people that encourages and builds communities of self-belief, respect, and hope.<br /><br />The realm of sport, coaching, and the management they require, also has a vocational heart. My guess is that it’s to do with integrating mind and body, and minds and bodies with their environment. In spirituality we would call such integrating ‘building a unitive consciousness’.<br /><br />Let me give an example. I once saw eight 14-year-old boys in their season of rowing defeat that school’s Senior 8. The Senior 8 were all 3 or 4 years older with significantly superior skills, strength, and stamina. What the group of 14 year-olds had was their minds tuned to their bodies, and their minds and bodies tuned to each other. It was phenomenal to watch. They only beat that Senior 8 once though, but oh the glory of it. The unity of mind transcended the limits of the body to achieve the remarkable.<br /><br />Sport is not only about bodies, and skills, and winning. That’s just the surface stuff. The heart of it is fostering a oneness of mind, body, team, and environment. That oneness brings with it a vitality and deep satisfaction, which can then be woven into the whole course of people’s lives.<br /><br />So 5 pebbles: love of learning, and a rigorous pursuit of it; a nose for detecting dubious information and alerting others; the art of taking time to think; and knowing the heart of your vocation.<br /><br />I call them pebbles because there’s an archetypal mythical story (which is code for saying it didn’t actually happen but its important anyway) about a young boy David who challenged a giant Goliath to a duel. And David chose five pebbles as his weapons.<br /><br />There are values, thinking, systems, and structures – sometimes of Goliath proportions – that are opposed to the values within your professions. There are those who will seek to reduce beauty to utility, to reduce art to entertainment, to reduce social practice to sweeping up the messy bits discarded by fiscal and economic policies, and to reduce sport to medals, cups, and television. There will be pressure exerted upon you to conform to narrow definitions, to curtail your ideas to fit within blinkered plans, to prioritise obedience to the budget over the freedom of the imagination and the good of the community… These Goliath manifestations have the capacity to squash and demean and destroy anyone who gets in their way.<br /><br />The mythic story has David acting on behalf of and for the good of the many. I’m old-fashioned enough to believe that those who are blessed with the resources of mind, and sometimes capital, have a responsibility to use those resources on behalf of and for the good of the many.<br /><br />The mythic story also does not extol so much the power of the pebbles, but the courage of the one who carried them. They won’t do you much good unless you are the intestinal fortitude to use them. So be strong, be tenacious, and be brave. And be prepared to bear the cost for your courage. <br /><br />In the end David only needed one pebble. A little can change a whole lot.<br /><br />Kia kaha.Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-90025643863045560912009-03-06T12:46:00.002+13:002009-03-06T12:49:34.755+13:00Letter from Isabelle. No. 16Dear Revd Glynn,<br /><br />How did God make the world?<br /><br />Love, Isabelle.<br /><br /><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;color:#6600cc;">Dear Isabelle,<br /><br />As I think you know by now I don’t believe in a god who is a super being, who makes things and breaks things, and who determines how and what things happen. In times past many people did believe in such a god. They prayed to such a god for fine days and wet days, and they believed that this god considered their prayers and answered either yes or no or cloudy.<br /><br />Today there are some people who still believe in such a god. ‘Evolution is a theory that is wrong’ they say. ‘God made the world in 7 days’ or something like that.<br /><br />Then there are people who don’t believe that god has anything to do with making the world. Solely by evolution and chance the world has come to be. <br /><br />Then there are other people, probably most Christians actually, who believe in both evolution and god making things – working together you might say.<br /><br />What I believe is a little different from all those. Part of what I call god is a creative energy, a spiritual energy, which is within and around living creatures on our planet. That creative energy is a part of the ‘making’ of the world.<br /><br />You could think of it like baking scones. You put in the flour, butter, cheese, salt, baking powder and milk, and then stir. The milk and the baking powder react together, creating a new ‘energy’ when in the oven, that makes the scones rise. Try making scones some time without the baking powder and spot the difference!<br /><br />That spiritual creative energy, best called ‘Love’, is what makes life worthwhile and satisfying and rewarding. <br /><br />Your friend,<br />Revd Glynn</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-39293895161712596112009-02-12T15:13:00.001+13:002009-02-12T15:15:10.467+13:00Isabelle TheologyDear Revd Glynn,<br /><br />Where is God's house?<br /><br />Love Isabelle.<br /><br /><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;color:#990000;">Dear Isabelle,<br /><br />We understand a house in two ways. Firstly it is something physical. It is a building with roof and walls, that is situated usually on a piece of land [some people's houses are boats!]. Secondly it is something in which people live. The house becomes a extension of their personalities. My daughter, for example, has a bright pink room - and she is a bright pink girl!<br /><br />Now, as we've discussed before God isn't a human-shaped being. God doesn't eat, sleep, and go to the toilet like we do. God is a power we can't see. The best way we have of describing God is as 'the power of love'. So God doesn't have an address - like 1 Grace Street, Faraway, Heaven. God doesn't have a physical house to come home to, stretch out the legs, have a warm milo, and read a nice book.<br /><br />However 'the power of love' does have places it calls home, places that are an extension of love's personality. Sometimes churches are experienced as a home for the power of love. Sometimes a very saintly person is thought to be a 'home' for the power of love. <br /><br />The Bible talks alot about the human heart. Not the physical one that pumps blood around the body, but the imaginary one where love, kindness, and tolerance is thought to reside. If God, 'the power of love', has any house then it is the human heart that makes room for love, forgiveness, justice, and peace.<br /><br />Love,<br />Revd Glynn</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-35081207608021875982009-01-25T07:42:00.000+13:002009-01-25T07:44:00.823+13:00Soul DiscoveryLearning how to operate a soul takes time. ~Timothy Leary<br /><br /><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;">We are cared for and loved<br />We follow and are rewarded<br />Yet we do not know our soul<br />Until we stand alone, believe and act alone,<br />And know both the joy and cost of it.<br />Then Holy Wisdom, as of old, takes our hand<br />And we dance.<br /></span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-27629564957827078122008-12-30T14:32:00.000+13:002008-12-30T14:33:39.363+13:00The New Year PartyOne of the things about Jesus both in his teaching and social practice was that he liked parties. Time and again his stories end with a party. Time and again he is found with society’s desirables and dregs happily mulling life over around the dining table. <br /><br />His critics noticed. ‘The people are suffering and yet you are celebrating?’ they sneered. ‘Mr Jesus, how can you be pious and party?’ <br /><br />They had a point. Jesus lived in Galilee, Palestine. It had been invaded by the Roman Empire and its greed some years before. Taxation was heavy. Most people lived on very little and were pressured to pay more. Resistance was brutally suppressed. There seemed little to celebrate.<br /><br />This December in New Zealand there also seems little to celebrate. The pre-Christmas lay-offs featured. As the discretionary dollars dry up so does tourism. So do many consumer goods industries. Staff Christmas parties were downsized. More insidious and destructive however is the daily diet of ‘it’s going to get worse’.<br /><br />In the time of Jesus there were other prophets who went around telling people a similar message. ‘It’s only the start of bad things’, they’d say. These prophets advocated belt-tightening, prayer, and hope that a God somewhere off the planet would come and rescue them. <br /><br />Jesus, seemingly uniquely, had a confidence in the basic goodness of a God who was close at hand and close to the heart. It was an irrational confidence. Yet from that confidence emanated hope. It was a quiet assurance that all would be well even when everything looked so bleak.<br /><br />There are many people who can look back over this year and recall heartache, tragedy, and pain. The deaths of the six students and their teacher in the flash flood at Mangatepopo. The abuse and murders of children like Nia Glassie and Jyniah Te Awa. The little publicised suicides that have been steadily increasing since the downturn in the financial markets. <br /><br />Having a party to celebrate life when times are tough is not a crass act of denial but a tentative act of faith. It is not ‘eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow we die’, but eat, drink, and be merry for today we are alive. It is getting together in the faith that no matter how desperate things seem the spirit of life is stronger still. <br /><br />This New Year I hope we will not fix our minds on the over-consumption of beverages, or the resolutions we vainly hope to achieve. I hope we will not be bewitched by the usual talismans of success and our inability to acquire them.<br /><br />Instead I hope we will quietly take stock of the good things in our lives. Many of us have relationships with partners, parents, children, or friends that nourish and sustain us. Many of us live close enough to walk or drive to a beach, or a forest, or a hilltop. Many of us can listen to nice music, watch a sunset, or admire a beautiful piece of art. Many of us are spiritually sustained by what we call ‘God’. We need to quietly take stock and be thankful.<br /><br />Gratitude is a discipline. Irrespective of whether we in good health or not, been successful or lucky or not, or are rich or poor or somewhere between, gratitude is something we can choose to nurture within. We can then choose to share our sense of gratitude by giving to others.Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-33334937207694616082008-12-24T15:22:00.001+13:002008-12-24T15:23:33.310+13:00A Special Christmas Present<span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;">The whole thing of getting and giving presents, Christmas stockings, et al, isn’t really in the Bible. What is in the Bible though is living a generous life –<br /> inviting people to share a meal with you,<br /> helping someone who is in need,<br /> being kind to strangers<br /> giving to others<br /><br />The origin of Santa Claus was this European bishop called Nicholas. Probably the best known story about him is when the poor tailor couldn’t afford the money necessary for his daughters’ weddings [he had 3 daughters!]. So Nick, quietly so no one would notice, climbed to the top of the tailor’s roof and dropped a bag of gold down the chimney.<br /><br />Nick was generous. The tailor’s daughters were grateful.<br /><br />Nowadays at Christmas time it seems most people want to be a tailor’s daughter and receive a nice present; and not many want to be a Nick – giving and getting nothing in return.<br /><br />This year I received a special present when a group of people came and gave their time helping me move house. Apart from feeling very grateful it made me feel like helping others in similar circumstances.</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-41293472170592566552008-12-14T19:28:00.001+13:002008-12-14T19:30:25.203+13:00Walking in the Woods with God<span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;">A friend of mine in Canada, his name is Tom, shared this story with me:</span><br /><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;"></span><br /><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;">A man wants to take his children out to the woods to experience nature, to enjoy creation and find a connection to God in it. He and his kids walk through the woods with the kids talking and stomping in streams, breaking dead sticks, kicking the leaves on the forest floor. Birds scatter at their approach and there is no other wildlife to be seen. The man, on several occasions, admonishes his kids to stop making so much noise so they can enjoy the sounds of the forest. The kids try but they just can't do it for more than a few seconds at a time. The man becomes increasingly frustrated and returns home with his kids feeling angry that the connection he sought and wanted to share with his kids couldn't be found. He tries this several times - hoping that, this time, the kids will be able to be silent and enjoy the sounds of nature. Each time he is frustrated and eventually gives up on his quest to encounter God in creation with his kids present. The walks continue. Then, as he is walking with his kids, talking and crunching and splashing their way through the woods he realizes that God has been screaming at him the whole time - through the conversations with his kids, the time together, in the splashing in the streams, in the crunching of the leaves and, yes, even in the scattering of the wildlife as they approached. The surprise of God was that God was present the whole time, just not where<br />the man was looking.<br /><br />Tom </span><a href="mailto:ocams.razor@gmail.com"><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;">ocams.razor@gmail.com</span></a>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-91434452214890473672008-12-09T11:16:00.001+13:002008-12-09T11:17:36.588+13:00Letter from Isabelle: Is Jesus alive?<span style="font-family:georgia;color:#990000;">Dear Revd Glynn,<br /><br />Is Jesus still alive?<br /><br />Love from Isabelle.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;color:#000099;">Dear Isabelle,<br /><br />The answer is no and yes. Let me explain. <br /><br />Jesus was born about 2,012 years ago and he died about 1,979 years ago. He was a real man, made of real bones, skin, and flesh and blood. When he died all that real bones, skin and stuff died too. There is no real flesh and blood Jesus hiding in heaven or anywhere else.<br /><br />However there is more to us, and more to Jesus, than just bones, skin, and flesh and blood. The most ‘real thing’ about Jesus was his love and his vision for how he wanted life to be. That ‘real thing’ lived on in his followers after he died. That ‘real thing’ still lives on in people who try to love as he did, and try to make the world a place similar to his vision.<br /><br />This is what many people in the Church understand by the word resurrection. It wasn’t that the real bones, skin and stuff of Jesus came back to life and continued walking around in Palestine for the next so many years. Or that the real bones, skin and stuff of Jesus continues walking around on earth or up in the clouds somewhere. Rather resurrection is a way of talking about how the real love and vision of Jesus lives on within his followers, and sometimes even within people who aren’t his followers but love anyway.<br /><br />Glynn</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-10115315542057182602008-11-16T07:36:00.001+13:002008-11-16T07:38:33.306+13:00On the subject of angels - Scene IV<span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;color:#330033;">One of the things we know about Jesus and about the stories he told was that hospitality was important. The simple meal was spiritual. Unlike a number of the religious thinkers of his day it wasn’t so much what you ate but your attitude towards those you ate with, or to be precise those you refused to eat with. Jesus practised an open hospitality refusing to let the social, political, religious rules governing who should socialize with whom, govern the tables he sat at. In the minds of many he opened himself to disease, to heresy, to spiritual impurity, to violence, and to the damnation of his soul. It is hard to get our 21st century minds around the foreign parameters of 1st century Palestinian culture.<br /><br />To follow Jesus is to be hospitable enough to be uncomfortable. Sometimes this means giving up your ‘seat’, your place of privilege, for a guest while you perch on the edge, uncomfortable and inconvenienced. <br /><br />When I was a child my grandparents had a custom of always cooking enough so that one more person could sit at the meal table. You were never sure just who might turn up and need some food. There was always an angel, whether prince, peasant, or pauper, who might need entertaining.</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-42839318091730542382008-11-04T14:59:00.002+13:002008-11-04T15:02:48.261+13:00On the subject of angels - Scene III‘Goodness’ can be used to describe pleasure. A meal superbly cooked, served on the verandah, with the company of old friends and a slow sunset receives the accolade. As do other pleasurable pastimes and events.<br /><br />Such goodness is a sensation. It is pleasure. Goodness is trust in friends. Goodness is letting the beauty of earth envelope our soul. Goodness affects our being. It is all around us and it is spiritual, or should we say ‘angelic’.<br /><br />I have a friend who watches a lot of sport, of all varieties. He looks for those moments when the blend of fluidity, skill, and magic takes ones breathe away. Those moments for him give substance to the word good. They are wonderful to watch. For those of us who have participated in sport we also know those moments. They keep us turning up to practice. There is a grace of movement that affects us spiritually.<br /><br />Yet there is a goodness that transcends these sensuous and often spiritual moments of pleasure, friendship, beauty, movement and skill. There is a goodness that seems to be just beyond us, offering a bigger all-encompassing horizon. Occasionally we catch a glimpse of this among us. Like a light that comes on only for a few seconds it leaves us with the sense of potential. In those glimpses we sense a bigger, more generous world where everything might still be possible. This is goodness that lifts our vision as we imagine what society could be.Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-87544425843206965352008-10-28T07:00:00.001+13:002008-10-28T07:03:02.974+13:00On the subject of Angels - Scene II<span style="color:#003300;">Edward Burne-Jones the artist once wrote: “The more discoveries science makes the more angels I shall paint.” His mission was to offset the negative influences of technology through the positive power of art. Of course science also can be creative and life-giving, and art can be destructive and life-sapping. But artists don’t like to acknowledge that.<br /><br />As a theological thinker I find his angels more interesting. In the popular imagination angels are white-winged creatures, carrying bows or messages, well supported by the Christmas card industry. The Bible dispenses with the wings and has them purely as messengers. Note that a messenger of the Divine can also be a human being, or in Balaam’s case an ass. They don’t need to be invisible human-shaped demigods.<br /><br />Burne-Jones uses angels as symbolic of transcendent goodness. When a piece of art is so outrageously attractive it eclipses a nearby machine that is the work of an angel. When a piece of music penetrates into the recesses of our soul it is the work of an angel. When a graceful action touches the mediocrity of our day and lifts our spirit that is the work of an angel.</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-27165384711611612612008-10-26T12:04:00.001+13:002008-10-26T12:06:26.621+13:00On the subject of Angels - scene 1<span style="font-family:georgia;color:#330033;">There was an old social worker I knew. She had fostered and cared for countless numbers of children. Although she was a gentle soul the words her son said at her funeral have stayed with me: ‘She cared enough to be angry’.<br /><br />There is an anger that destroys the soul and there is an anger that fuels it. There is a flaring anger that leads to violence and destruction and there is an ember anger that fires the engine of change. The latter is stoked with compassion. <br /><br />The old social worker didn’t just pick up society’s rejects she sought to challenge and change the causes of rejection. She was angry that the priorities of profit took precedence of the priorities of alleviating poverty, and she did something about it.<br /><br />One of those children at the funeral called her ‘my angel’. By her actions she held out to us all a way of being both good and spiritual and challenging.<br /><br />Another accolade that struck me at that funeral was that ‘She was humble enough not to give in’. Acquiescing to another’s power or the power of bureaucracies, while at times expedient, is not beneficial to the ‘little ones of the earth’ from whence the word humble derives. Sometimes the only way to be true to the earth, and be true to the collective good of all, is to stand against the arrogant assertions of others.</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-13594526305175942732008-10-25T12:26:00.003+13:002008-10-25T12:54:16.627+13:00Lucky's silenceHi everyone,<br /><br />I'm aware that I've been rather silent recently. There have been three main reasons for that which I'd like to share with you.<br /><br />Firstly, I've spent a lot of time this year writing liturgy. Liturgy when its written for a congregation needs to involve considerable consultation. As such a liturgy takes about 6 months - beginning with writing and sharing that writing via email with a group of 6, then sharing it in public forums, then sharing it with theologians, then writing music for it, and finally trialling it with the congregation and inviting feedback over a two month period. This year I've initiated and crafted two. The current one is found here [following the notices for the week]: <a href="http://www.stmatthews.org.nz/images/UserFiles/File/WH%20&%20Pew%20Sheet.pdf">http://www.stmatthews.org.nz/images/UserFiles/File/WH%20&%20Pew%20Sheet.pdf</a><br /><br />Secondly, I've spent a lot of time over the last three months bringing to conclusion a negotiation with our neighbour, the Auckland City Mission. They are wanting to do a major redevelopment of their site [a $70 million redevelopment] to enhance their services and offer new ones. Between our church and the Mission is a carpark that belongs to us. We have been negotiating to lease that carpark site to the City Council in order to transform it into a park whilst keeping a small portion [250 sqm] on the road front for a cafe/administration building. You can see a model of what is planned here: <a href="http://www.missioninthecity.org.nz/">http://www.missioninthecity.org.nz/</a><br /><br />Lastly, Lucky's time has been occupied caring for his wife who has fractured her back.<br /><br />I have been writing sermons and a few other things which you can access through <a href="http://www.stmatthews.org.nz/">www.stmatthews.org.nz</a> I'm currently working on a piece that is supportive of the Revd Ann Holmes Redding of Seattle who will shortly be defrocked for the crime of being both a Christian and a Muslim.<br /><br />Blessings to you all,<br />GlynnGlynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-88247233809715045182008-08-22T13:02:00.002+12:002008-08-22T13:06:20.587+12:00'King' CrowSteve Crow is right out of the Bible. With his ‘Boobs on Bikes’ parade in Auckland he’s styled himself as the wily David out to slay the Goliath of Auckland City Council and anyone else who dares disagree with him. And like King David of old he’s a great manipulator of public opinion.<br /><br />There are ongoing debates in our society about the public displays of human flesh and sexual expression. The line that we consider permissible regarding nudity is somewhere between the latest swimwear fashions and nothing at all. With sexual expression that line is somewhere between kissing and copulating. In any ordered society there is always a line which the majority wish their government and councils to maintain and enforce. <br /><br />Crow wants to cross the line. He calls himself the ‘King of Porn’. His product is pornography. To promote and launch his Erotica Lifestyles numerous porn stars, employees of Crow and his ilk, bared their chests down Queen Street.<br /><br />There is also an ongoing societal debate about pornography. Pornography reduces sex to enhanced bodies and actions, whereas most adults consider sex in terms of love and commitment. This debate also has some gender demarcations. Generally speaking women see a connection between pornography and violence. And generally speaking men don’t. <br /><br />As with nudity and sexual expression, our society via the Office of Film and Literature Classification draws a line about what is pornographically permissible. It also sets an age classification. That Office has no jurisdiction over Crow’s public street performance.<br /><br />Yet undoubtedly King Crow’s parade, this year featuring scorpion tanks, is theatre. Political theatre. Crow knows he’s crossing the line of public decency and knows he can’t lose. His goal is to publicize his product. A mass arrest of the offending exhibitors, for example, would have helped his publicity even more.<br /><br />Of course he argues that it’s not about his product but rather ‘freedom of expression’. In a culture that values pluralism kiwis are loathe to curtail freedom or invoke censorship. Yet he is manipulating the virtue of liberty for his own ends. Should his freedom to promote his product take priority over the freedom of others who are offended by it? What are the limits to diversity? Should his sense of taste be allowed to sour the public palate? Should we even have a discriminating palate?<br /><br />To argue that topless porn stars should not display their silicon in public is to run the gauntlet of being called a prude, a religious moralist, a feminist, or politically correct. Every critic can easily be boxed and thus dismissed. The Auckland City Council was damned if they acted and damned if they didn’t. He’s crowing all the way to the bank.<br /><br />The biblical story of David and Goliath is a piece of manipulative royal spin-doctoring. It was designed to tell King David’s followers he really was the big man. King Crow is trying to do the same.Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-60090010357008785342008-07-31T14:06:00.002+12:002008-07-31T14:11:10.270+12:00blue day god?it’s raining again<br />the damp seeps into my soul<br />not much good<br />hap’ning today<br />feeling fat, tired, and cold<br />winter blues<br />even the coffee tastes bad.<br /><br />most religions have<br />a god who will lift you<br />when you are down<br />a friend when you’re in need<br />a divine rescuer.<br />god is a shot of spiritual caffeine<br />who makes you feel good.<br /><br />is there a blue day god out there? <br />you know one who<br />is sitting beside you<br />drinking cheap whisky<br />bemoaning the world<br />and feeling like crap…<br />one who feels as ugly as you?<br /><br />or does god just do<br />happy cheer up<br />caring<br />hold your hand<br />pray for you stuff,<br />and poems like this<br /> are heresy?Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-18958044637150595582008-06-15T20:35:00.001+12:002008-06-15T20:36:26.539+12:00A Visit to Hagia Sophia<span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">Hagia Sophia, the Church of Divine Wisdom, is one of the great gems of the world. It holds a special place in architectural and Christian history. The original church was built by Constantine in the 4th century CE but was destroyed by fire. In the 5th century the second church was built but that too was destroyed. In 537 under the patronage of Emperor Justinian I the current church was completed. Two geometricians Anthemius and Isidore led a team of 7,500 architects, stonemasons, bricklayers, sculptors, and mosaic artists who amazingly finished the building within five years – and drained the treasury. Never again would the Byzantines construct such a grand edifice. For nearly the next 1000 years it was the greatest church in the world, and the largest domed building in Europe. In 1453 when the Ottomans conquered Istanbul they converted it to a mosque. In the mid 20th century it was turned into a museum where Christians, Muslims and others can come and admire its past glory.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">For the last twenty years I’ve wanted to walk inside this building. I’ve wanted to feel its presence and awe. I’ve wanted to imagine the great preachers of the past who have proclaimed the sovereignty of God and critiqued the political powers of the day. I’ve wanted to say a prayer inside it, giving thanks, remembering, and hoping for a future that honours our Christian past and improves on it.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">So it was with some surprise and unease that the building did not stir my soul. This architectural masterpiece, gem of history, and nursery of Christianity did not inspire me. Something was missing.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">Maybe I should have paid more attention to the sign outside. It called the building a ‘museum’ - a place that was about the past, not the present. It felt like visiting a graveyard where tourists come to admire the architecture and beauty of the gravestones but know or care little about those buried there. The visitors are certainly not related to the dead.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">It was relationship that was missing. There was no community who cared and prayed in Hagia Sophia. Even in St Peter’s, Rome, that glorious tribute to Vatican power, where like Hagia Sophia the tourist trains rumble through by the minute, there is a living community that imbues the building with a sense of religious devotion. Although as a Protestant I am no admirer of much Vatican-think, I do know a holy building when I’m in one.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">Is a church building without a community of faith no longer a church but a museum, a mausoleum? It felt that way. The two-decade-old scaffolding that cuts the nave virtually in half speaks volumes. No community of faith, Christian or Muslim, would live with that. They would find another way to care for their building. Restoration has to serve the faith community, not vice versa.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">I think for the sake of its soul Hagia Sophia should not have left the embrace of either Christianity or Islam. Of course it would have been wonderful if these two great religions could have shared it. But they haven’t and look unlikely to. Therefore it would be better if Hagia Sophia reverted to being a mosque rather than continue as it is today. Its better that this great Church of Christendom has a praying community than remain a tombstone of past religions. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">And who says that the Christian God isn’t listening when a Muslim prays?</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-35628971053466373672008-05-18T07:09:00.001+12:002008-05-18T20:40:10.955+12:00Post-General Synod Reflections<span style="color: rgb(51, 51, 153);font-family:verdana;" >Lucky is back in his usual habitat, enjoying the cubs, and answering lots of questions from other bears about General Synod.<br /><br />Here are a few post-Synod reflections on the whole experience:<br /><br />The venue, while opulent, had its limitations. We stayed on floor 20, ate on floor 17 and met in conference on floor 16. At one stage I didn’t walk outside the building for two days. The conference room was also just barely big enough. If environment affects not only the way business is conducted but also its contents, the Church was cooped up and cut off.<br /><br />There was nothing spoken or decided that will make the front page of any international religious newspaper or magazine. Rather there was a lot a confirmation of previous decisions and directions.<br /><br />In particular the Synod confirmed its ‘three-as-one’ Primatial arrangements. While the threesome reflects the power sharing between tikanga that is important to model, there are concerns that internationally it will decrease our power [having a different person to represent us every third meeting] and it will lead to a less than forthright critique of our Church and society [as evidenced in this years Primatial charge to the Synod].<br /><br />The episcopal structure of the Diocese of Waikato was confirmed. This is two bishoprics [regions] joined by a common administrative arrangement. Each of the two bishops is Bishop of Waikato. We have our first co-bishop arrangement. Maybe a world first?<br /><br />Regarding episcopal structures, the General Synod also passed legislation allowing for the appointment of a coadjutor bishop. This is where a bishop announces his/her intention to resign, the diocese elects a successor who is second-in-charge until the resignation, and then the coadjutor automatically becomes the diocesan bishop. The implication of this legislation is that if Auckland Synod wishes we could have an election for a coadjutor before the end of this year.<br /><br />Regarding issues of the international Anglican Communion and homosexuality, the General Synod largely expressed its previous directions. It affirmed that there is a diversity of opinion within our Church, that we need to keep talking, that we don’t think there are reasons we should walk away from the Communion, and that most of us don’t think a Covenant is necessary. In the ‘most of us’ category, it was particularly powerful to hear a strong unanimity of pro-gay opinion from the Maori Church. Polynesia’s opinion was more mixed. In the Pakeha dioceses Waiapu and Dunedin were clearly pro-gay, Auckland, Christchurch, and Waikato mixed, and Nelson and the current Wellington leadership against.</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-59325875011124542472008-05-15T08:18:00.000+12:002008-05-15T08:19:55.298+12:00Lucky 'fesses up<span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 153);">I wish to thank the Liturgical Commission for their work in continuing to slowly mark in legislation the variations to the Great Thanksgiving that the whole Church can currently accept. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 153);">I am among those who write liturgy that is quite different from what the whole Church can accept. Indeed speaking in this forum of this subject is somewhat akin to a 21st century novelist sharing their work with the Shakespearean Society, when the Shakespearean Society has the power to censor. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 153);">Thank you too to tikanga Maori. The principle of the intent of the inherited words is helpful to some in my tikanga too. It encourages local variation. One of the great examples is the Te Reo Maori translation in the New Zealand Prayer Book of “We are all in Christ” – “Ko te Karaiti te pou herenga waka”. Te Reo pictures Christ as a mooring post and we in wakas.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 153);">“Intent” is very helpful in our passion to be a mission-focused Church. Our liturgies are one of our faces to a world that knows little of Christ. Too often the language of the past makes liturgy unintelligible to newcomers, and I might add many regulars. So parishes like ours, in order to preach Jesus, take license with liturgy. We prioritize mission ahead of liturgical compliance with tradition.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 153);">I hope and pray that the words we say with our lips and believe in our hearts will have the ability to communicate our truth to those who have never heard it.</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-27073809976954384812008-05-15T08:17:00.000+12:002008-05-15T08:18:20.196+12:00Lucky moves a bill<span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);"></span><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">“Mr President,</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">This bill seeks to regularize and affirm what is commonplace in many parishes. While it is usual for marriage services to be conducted in church buildings or customary places of worship, there arise from time to time good pastoral and missional reasons for the service to be held elsewhere. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">On the one hand, for example, I have taken a service in a home where the grandmother was dying. On the other hand I have taken a service in the grounds of Larnach Castle. The latter venue, like a number of wedding venues in Auckland, was chosen not just for its beauty and ease of having the reception 10 metres away. Indeed it is not as simple as assuming that the couple want somewhere ‘pretty’ compared with the local parish church which mightn’t meet such expectations.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">Larnach Castle was chosen because, like for many couples or one half of the couple, they had some disquiet about having a wedding ceremony in a church. Many people believe they can only have a ‘church wedding’ if they hold to the beliefs and doctrines of that church. Despite attempts by clergy like me to assure them otherwise they often feel hypocritical coming into a church for this one time in their lives. It is often a big enough step to have a cleric involved in their wedding ceremony. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">This is what I mean by missional reasons. Weddings outside church buildings are opportunities for clergy and other licensed ministers to share by their presence and language something of the truth and inclusiveness of God’s love and grace. It is in a sense the church going out to people. I think there is something deeply moving about representatives of the church being invited to participate in witnessing the expression of committed love between two people and naming it as a window into God.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">Marriage is the only sacrament for which a venue is legislated. The Eucharist can be celebrated anywhere. Baptisms are sometimes done in other places, notably hospitals. Ordinations have been done in other places, for example nga marae. Holy Unction is nearly always done outside a church building. Confessions are be heard anywhere. Although not a sacrament, funerals frequently take place in other settings. Of course God too is not confined to ecclesiastical buildings, although some have tried.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">There is an increasing trend in our society for marriages to take place in venues that aren’t exclusively religious. Our present Anglican rules discourage this. Some clergy ask their bishop for permission although strangely it doesn’t seem to be required. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">There are often practical drawbacks with other venues. The sound quality is usually wanting. The acoustics for music are usually dreadful. After one bad experience I stipulate that there will be no wedding service if alcohol is served immediately prior.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">However there is one huge advantage in an outside wedding. The couple, whether acknowledged or not, have identified a place that they think is sacred, just as their love is sacred. That provides the priest with the opportunity to talk about sacred things, about God, and about how spirituality can be nurtured.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">St Matthew-in-the-City is an iconic neo-Gothic building to which some 70 couples come for marriage or blessings every year. Many of those couples seek us out via the internet and make their decision based on our theology rather than just our architecture. Still, there are many couples for whom crossing the threshold of a church building is too much, and yet they still want a priest involved.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(204, 0, 0);">I would ask this Synod to consider favourably this amendment proposed by the Diocese of Auckland and standing in my name.”</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-67593928077681974492008-05-13T22:00:00.000+12:002008-05-13T22:02:54.387+12:00Lucky does process<span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">It’s hard to keep a bouncy bear down. Yep, you guess, he popped up again this morning at General Synod/te Hinota.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">“Mr President, please pray tell, what plans are in place to engage critically with the six politicians visiting us this evening?”</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Yes, that was the programme. In this election year the Synod wanted to engage with our parliamentary parties regarding poverty, health, education, and housing.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Three hours later the bear got an answer. We were to listen to each politician for 20 minutes, leaving a grand total of 10 minutes at the end for questions.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Lucky pulled at his ears trying to clean out a twig or two. Did they really say “10 minutes??”</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Well, sometimes a bear has to do what a bear has to do.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">“Mr President, I move the suspension of Standing Order 10 [F] to discuss over the next two hours what we think the issues facing the nation are, collect our thoughts, and present those thoughts to our guests prior to listening to the upcoming political prattle.”</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Lucky got lots of backslaps and was suddenly popular.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">And so it happened. This preparation should of course have taken place months ago. The result tonight however was better than nothing. And, so he was told, the bear saved the company face. It’s nice to be appreciated sometimes.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">One thing Lucky Bear can always spot is a great royal cock-up.</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-15191693854593272362008-05-13T05:42:00.000+12:002008-05-13T05:43:38.397+12:00Lucky takes a stand<span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);"></span><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">“Members of General Synod/te Hinota, </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">There is a question of justice.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">Mindful of our Bible Study this morning of the Parable of the Good Samaritan and where our location might be in the story, I speak as one responsible for an inn - an inn where the beaten, the Samaritans, and even wayward priests, Levites, and the odd lawyer come to enjoy a pint or dram, and receive some comfort or challenge.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">Our inn, St Matthew-in-the-City Auckland has for a long time now been both the home and a symbol of hope to the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities, and we have been privileged and at times daunted by the responsibility to speak out.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">We have a deep anger and profound disappointment in the way the International Anglican Church has treated Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire for the so-called sin of being true to who he is and daring to love another man. That anger is compounded by the silence of so many church leaders both at home and aboard in publicly declaring unequivocal support for the justice struggle for the gays, lesbians, and their families.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">We do acknowledge and give thanks for the bishops, priests, and laity some of whom are in this room who have stood beside, ordained and blessed gays and lesbians in relationships. Thank you for your courage and solidarity. May justice one day come, even in the Church.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">Our Anglican Church has heard from those with opposing views to St Matthew’s and who are hurt, angry and wish to walk away. And of course those views hurt us at St Matthew’s, as no doubt ours do to them.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">There are some among us who also wish to walk away and join those who already have. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">However most of us at the inn, after another round, are sticking with the Church, for better or for worse, as our gay and lesbian ancestors and saints have done throughout the ages. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(0, 102, 0);">This is not just an issue of church polity or unity but an issue where marginalized communities on the periphery of church life are waiting to hear whether justice is being compromised by how we Christians read the Bible.”</span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-21277392515277106002008-05-13T05:39:00.001+12:002008-05-13T08:16:02.102+12:00Lucky supports the Diocese of Waikato<span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 153);font-family:arial;" >They’re a little different in Waikato. It’s a rural diocese with far too many theological conservatives. It’s got two distinct regions and two nice bishops – one the boss and the other the second-in-charge (2IC).</span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 153);font-family:arial;" >Well they want to model Episcopal partnership. The boss and the 2IC want to share the job. They don’t however want to split the diocese into two and replicate all those lovely boring and expensive diocesan structures. Instead they want a catamaran: two hulls [one in each region] with a minimal and shared structure linking them.</span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 153);font-family:arial;" >Their motivation is mission. They want to have their bishops close to the people, enabling mission, rather than stagnating in committees and buried in canons. It sounds good to Lucky.</span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 153);font-family:arial;" >It didn’t sound good to Christchurch. They do conservatives of the bigoted variety down there. Their bright idea was that anything innovative like this should in the light of international Anglican unrest be sent out to the wider Communion for consultation. The norm they said was ‘One bishop, one diocese’. This was a ‘treasure’ and not to be tampered with. </span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 153);font-family:arial;" >Lucky was having a quiet vomit under his seat after hearing this. But he composed himself, girded his loins with a little something, and once again addressed the microphone:</span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 153);font-family:arial;" >“What comes first: mission or the structures to support mission [like episcopacy]? Structure has for too long taken priority over and curtailed our mission. The reason that structure was so fluid in the New Testament was because mission was so strong. The church is forever muddling up the cart and the horse. It is mission that leads structure, not the other way round.”</span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 153);font-family:arial;" >The Waikato table gave Lucky an appreciative grin, and later at the bar paid for Lucky’s fluid requirements. </span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20847147.post-11118697082967900802008-05-10T21:45:00.001+12:002008-05-10T21:46:50.705+12:00Lucky goes into committee<span style="font-family: arial; color: rgb(153, 51, 153);">It’s hard work being a bear. I had to sit still nearly all day and listen to the boring deliberations of church leaders concerned for good order. Good order needs to happen of course. All that good order is preferable to bad order, or unjust order, or ‘oops-we-forgot-about-that’ order. It’s just that I’m a bear who likes to play, and laugh, and create… Oh well, maybe I can crash a party tonight or something.<br /><br />We sat around circular tables in diocesan groups and have our diocesan opinions canvassed. The lawyers talked too much – their concern with words seems to override any awareness of the somatic effects of their tones. I think there was one or two laughs, although I can’t remember any jokes.<br /><br />Mind you some of the language in the papers was laughable. How about this one: ‘the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd’. When the Church resurrects a Greek word from the first few centuries CE you know you are in trouble. ‘Catechesis’ is a dumb way of saying ‘a learner’s guide’. This particular guide for the about-to-be-educated was called the Good Shepherd. Again relevancy to contemporary culture has never been the Church’s strong point. There are no shepherds or sheep in downtown Auckland and we’d like to keep it that way. For the biblically minded Jesus was a carpenter not a shepherd. Yes, he once used the language in a parable, a made up story, to illustrate his point. In downtown Auckland we don’t need carpenters either – they tend to be in the ‘burbs. Made up stories, like mayoral speeches or newspaper editorials, though are part of our life.<br /><br />As a bear I dream of the day when the Church will make up some new stories about Jesus and us. He could be the ‘good bear’ who tells the hungry cubs and their parents where the honey is. Or he could be the ‘good hunter’ who only shoots us with a camera. As a downtown bear JC could be the good barista who knows what we want before we enter the shop. Or the good parking warden [if that’s not an oxymoron] who only puts tickets on the cars of rich people.<br /><br />Another language thing today in the General Synod was the promotion by Wellington Diocese, and most of the UK Anglican apparatus, of ‘Back to Church Sunday’. Lucky immediately thought of all the ways that church is backwards including its marketing department. The promotion of course assumes that once upon a time you went to church. Most of my friends at the café and on the street haven’t. Then again do you really want some of those who left church to come back? You know the bossy bank manager who was trying to create a new fiefdom? Or the organist who couldn’t play for peanuts but thought she could?<br /><br />I think I will need to download some more stamina before tomorrow,<br />LB<br /><span></span></span>Glynn Cardyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16451692575754047815noreply@blogger.com0