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CMS Mission Community - OPEN EVENT

 Iffle


On Saturday 11 August 2007 & Sunday 12 August 2007 we will be holding two open events...

Please do come along if you have a free hour....


Further information for ANYONE interested in coming along....


CMS

CMS is a community that has heard God’s call to join in his loving outreach to the world and has rolled up it’s sleeves to serve others in mission.


Iffley Road Mission Community – What is it, and what will it be?

There is a growing movement of people who are involved in the development of different forms of intentional community to develop new and innovative ways of engaging with, and challenging, the culture and society we live in. During their move to Oxford, CMS purchased two houses on the Iffley Road, to renovat and house a ‘mission community’. Like the early apostles the 10-12 people who will come to live in this house will share resources and a common rule of life to reach out to the community they find themselves in. The nature of their life and work will be shaped by the local situations and opportunities that arise.


How can YOU be involved?

This community will need a supportive group of friends who understand the challenges of community life. If you have been thinking about how christians can respond to our life and times, then do come along to one of these events. We will also be looking to find people who might want to live in the community themselves.


Where and when…

We are holding two open events at 244 & 246 Iffley Road:

- 2.00pm to 3.00pm on Saturday 11 August 2007

- 3.00pm to 4.00pm on Sunday 12 August 2007


PLEASE do come along and bring friends who may be interested, this is NOT a fundraising event in any way.


RSVP if possible (Tea and Cake will be provided)

Lessons from nature...

Golden_eagleDuring my first few months of being a new Christian, I was given the really helpful example, or analogy, of the behaviour of Eagles.

In the first example I was given it was explained how Eagles taught their young to fly. Most Eagles do this by taking their 'unready' young and throwing them out of a nest, high on a cliff face. As the young bird tumbles through the air, the parent flies down below them and grabs them before they hit the ground. They repeat this exercise over and over again until their young learn to fly.

A couple of years ago I was in Scotland with my family (Parents, Brother, Sister-In-Law, Nephews and Niece) and went to see a bird-handler-blokey (I'm sure they have a proper name).  He was telling a story of how he came across a Golden Eagle who had gorged itself on the body of a large dead Red Deer. The bird was so huge it only just managed to get onto a post and was happily sat their, doing very, very little, as it digested it's enormous meal. He told how he went back to the same spot three days later and the bird hadn't moved.

Since Sunday I think I know a little of how this Bird feels. Over the weekend I went with Matt to a conference in York, where Richard Rohr was speaking. The theme of the conference, and the question it was attempting to answer was "Why is religion so bad at transforming people?" There is NO WAY I am going to attempt to blog on the stuff that came from the event. I would only do it a huge injustice.  Rather I just want so say I am feeling like the stuffed Eagle, full of stuff to digest, reflect and, hopefully, live out.

local happenings for local people...

P6040028 P6040029

One of the most annoying things about living in Oxford is the moment when you tell people you live in the city most assume you're a student (although I do get the opportunity to entertain my inverse snobbery by saying... "No, I never when to University").  As one of the many 'residents of Oxford' I feel pleased that the city has managed to build a strong residential identity... events such as Arts Week and the Cowley Road Carnival, along with venues where students appear reluctant to tread, such as the Magic Cafe and the Jericho Tavern, do a great job of supporting this.

This morning I awoke and ran to the co-op for a pint of milk and was chuffed to see evidence of another new initiative... the 'Local Plaque Initiative' - in this people are being asked to contribute stories and 'blue plaques' will are being established to honor these stories. Click on the photo of the blue circle above to read the story of Mary's altruistic act and it's consequences.

Work...

Broken_2Over the past 12 months I have been on my own personal journey to define a Christian Ethic to work, or at least my ethic to work - Mixing my own gifting and skills to best serve the world, the church and myself.

It has to be said... some of the exploring has been more successful than others. But... I have been truly blessed with some interesting work and exciting clients.

One of the books which has helped me enormously in this journey has been 'The Inner Game of Work' by W.Timothy Gallwey. Gallwey has been hugely credited by Peter Senge, who appears to use mush of Gallwey's work in his own 'Fifth Discipline' approach.

Last night I watched a recorded programme of Anthony Gormley preparing his latest exhibition at the Hayward Gallery. In it he says this..

"The social contact of being an artist is that you don't work for pay, doing other people's bidding. You have to find out what is worth doing and do it completely. That's very easy to say and difficult to do, but part of that contact is that you tell it how it is."

For me, this is the most succinct description I think I've found on the Christian ethic to work.

So that's why...

...I forget all of the information sent by email.

For the last few years I have just come to accept that I only partly digest a small proportion of the information people send me by email... this results in me having to ask people again for dates they have sent, or more likely missed a subtle nuance.

Apparently, according to Margaret Attwood in the aforementioned 'Start The Week' reading from a screen  is harder for the brain. This is because the 'printed' words flicker and appear temporal, which frustrated the brain as it attempts to digest the information.

So, from now on either tell me face-to-face, call my phone or send a printed and bound copy through royal mail.

Thank you all..


The Problem of Evil… (Again)

Noose An interesting BBC radio programme (thankfully podcasted) is Start The Week (STW). For those unfamiliar with the format, Andrew Marr gathers four people usually with good and interesting fair to flog (typically books, plays, films etc), each one has a few minutes to talk about their ‘fairs’ then allows the others comment. Sometimes this can be a little tedious (obviously dependant on the goods and people) and I actually really preferred David Baddiel as the chair, who was much warmer and engaging with the ‘floggers’ (as an aside Jeremy Paxman was truly awful in the chair).

Anyhow this weeks edition is really worth downloading (available on itunes), as the starting participant is Philip Zimbardo, who as a young researcher conducted the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE). And, interestingly, has defended one of the Army officers involved in the Abu Ghraib abuses, using many of the findings from the SPE 

Zimbardo has now released a new book titled The Lucifer Effect: Understanding how good people turn evil. The release of his book and the radio programme are interestingly timed, not least because of the tragic incidence on Monday at Virginia Tech.

In fifteen words or less, Zimbardo’s main thesis is that the environment people are placed in can turn them toward the most inhuman of acts. One of the most shocking things about the HPE was how quickly the behaviour of the participants moved to the most inhuman of acts. The experiment was called off after only 4 days to protect the participants.

This programme and the incidents at Virginia Tech, took me back to a conversation with a close friend in April 1999, after Columbine. He had worked for a short time in the US, and we both felt the environment created in US high schools can be very dehumanising for those who don’t ‘fit-in’.

Many of you know I am a huge fan of Walter Wink, and so much of his work on ‘the powers’ looks at exactly this kind of stuff. During STW, Zimbardo talks a little about the consequence of focussing on personal sin against corporate or ‘environmental’ sin.

I guess, once again, it’s just easier and more comforting to blame the bad apples than examine the barrel created to store apples.

Vows

Img_5784Phew.. after a rather packed month I was really quite relieved to arrive at Easter, and in some ways felt really unprepared for taking my vows on Good Saturday.

I consoled myself with two thoughts, one - I questioned how many people are truly prepared when then come to take vows? Scott Peck once said the purpose of 'falling in love' was to dupe people into a love-drug-haze so they were able to take their marriage vows without too much thought, otherwise they might truly consider the step they were taking and pull out. (please forgive my paraphrasing) Two - In many ways the whole of the past 12 months has been a time over which I have been preparing to take the vows, so it felt a really natural step.

For anyone who is at a loss about what I'm talking about, you can find more information about the hOME chapter and vows here.

Easter weekend was, all in all, pretty packed. On Good Friday we held the hOME stations of the cross 'experience' followed by a Eucharist. Then on Saturday our service of Vows at Dorchester Abbey and on Sunday we had breakfast together followed by a short Eucharist. During our set-up for the Saturday service Juliet talked me into going to Burford Priory for their Easter morning service at 5:15am.  We just about made it in time.

After this I headed off to Cornwall for three days, with two of my Godchildren, amongst some other hangers-on. The hangers-on then provided much grief when they though I wasn't living up to my vows. Photos of Cornwall can be found here.

Been Away...

See below a small selection of pictures from recent skiing trip (WARNING: This was four blokes left alone in a chalet for a week)

Our father's hat...

Hat_1Last week Alan Hirsch blogged this entry called 'don't emerge before you get missional'. Matt and I read this within 5 minutes of each other, and I think it's fair to say we were both quite deeply challenged by it.

As a follow-up Alan then used the following quote by Picasso

"the best way to preserve tradition is to have children, and not by  wearing your father’s old hat"

I have been pondering this for a couple of days now, and want to make the following defence/observations, while at the same time holding fast to Alan's critique. There are three points I've playing with, which are still only partly formed. Which are:

1. I believe the reason many of us are using many variations of ancient practice is an attempt to understand 'why our father wore this hat in the first place'. Meaning, over the past 90 or so years many parts of the church have abandoned ancient practices, citing them as 'religious' or 'traditional'. While at the same time, those outside the church are seeking spiritual experiences elsewhere, with the church appearing nowhere on their list of places to visit along the way.

2. In talking this through with Matt, I likened our use of liturgical practice, to using a woodworking tool. At first, you must learn to use the tool 'by the book'. Then later on, once mastered, it can be used with individuality and flair. As a community, I feel we are still of step 2 of 7. After a few years of practice, we will then adapt and use these tools for missional purpose.

3. More controversially, I also wonder whether our 'going back' is a form of repentance.  A turning from a church which has either lost or misinterpreted is missional calling. Which, over time, will be incarnated again, with a fresh vision a re-vitalised calling?

Blah.. Entrepreneurship

Blahgrab_1

OK... I know Jonny's already blogged this but... as further encouragement...

If you are at all interested in entrepreneurship and what it means for you or the church then PLEASE, PLEASE sign up for this day.

March 31st  |  The Entrepreneur Imperative
with Bill Bolton  10am – 4.00pm on the HMS President, Victoria Embankment

Bill leads the field on thinking about entrepreneurial talent. He has been closely involved in the 'Cambridge Phenomenon' - he set up the St. John's Innovation Centre which now has an international reputation for generating new businesses and nurturing entrepreneurial talent; it helped to launch about 500 businesses - 2 businesses a week for 5 years.  He was a UNESCO professor of Innovation and Technology Transfer and is a specialist in Business Incubators. He has written three books, and has developed an entrepreneur evaluation tool that identifies people’s entrepreneur potential and also that of entrepreneur enablers. While his background is in business, he sees entrepreneurs working with three kinds of capital – economic, social, and spiritual.  He has also recently written a grove booklet on entrepreneurs and the church.

A changing world is the entrepreneur’s natural habitat. Business, mission, spirituality, social transformation are all environments where there is huge change. So it makes sense to see what might happen if we can encourage more entrepreneurial thinking and activity.

Cost including lunch and refreshments £15

Book online at http://blahentrepreneurship.eventbrite.com/

Blah learning days are a partnership between CMS and Moot. This day is being held in conjunction with Ethos.

Just Jack (and Chewy)

Just_jack
So... went to see Just Jack tonight (thanks to Claire for the tickets)... very, very good gig!

Half way into the second song I thought "Hold On"... "That's Chewy"

And there he was... the brother of one of my closest mates playing drums in Jack's band.

It was nice to catch up with him post-act, as he signed autographs for 18 year olds and talked to two of the oldest people at the gig.

It SNOWING...

Bike_in_snowWow...!! It's snowing (and settling) in Oxford (almost unheard of)... OK it's about 3 inches deep across most of the UK.. but hey all that matters to me is Oxford.

No doubt London will grind to a halt any minute now.

I'm now going to email any other slackers to see if they can bunk off this afternoon to go sledging in South Park??!!

Any takers??

In addition... I left the house to walk to my 'office' at around 9.30 to be bombarded with snowballs thrown by students. They had clearly taken the Met Office advice to heart and decided it was far to dangerous to travel to lectures. I've half a mind to write to the government to stop their grants!

PS... Matt and I are aiming to get to South Park at 3.00ish for some sledging.

Still feudalistic puritans...?

Puritan_couple_1I'm reading through a rather brilliant book at the moment - 'The Inner Game of Work' at one point the author, Timothy Gallwey, says this...

... The assumption is that if you're enjoying what your doing it's not work..  ..There is a long standing Puritan tradition behind this attitude, and behind that a long standing feudal tradition of workers being motivated by fear. The Puritan ethic was rooted in the idea that worldly success and future salvation were linked. Being successful was understood as a sign of grace and an indication that one was among the few chosen for salvation. Success was a result of embracing good Puritan values of hard work, thrift, and self-discipline.

In reading this my first question was, "do I believe this?", to which I responded a resounding "YES.", I see it ringing true all the time, but especially when I talk to groups about motivation. I am continually coming across people who believe they, and others, are motivated by fear. ALL the studies show people are paralised by fear not 'motivated' by it.

But if this is true then the implications could be huge... My thoughts took me to looking at Church leadership. The conversation of 'salvation by grace' goes on and on, but could it be true, that, a deeper level, we still believe that success is a sign of grace? of salvation?

Bullying...

Mac

For a few years now, some of my peers have done their best to stop label me a second class citizen, all because I use a PC and not a Mac. Every single small problem I experience with my PC, can apparently be solved by 'getting a Mac'. At Greenbelt this year I even heard an angry mob shout 'Get a Mac' at a very peaceable and loving member of the Menonite community from London, as he experieced a minor problem getting his laptop to swap between powerpoint and the DVD's he wanted to show (Poor Bloke).

But even now, rather than further improving the already apparently 'Brilliant' Mac, Apple themselves appear to be engaging in bullying tactics, giving the message that only sad 'office' focussed nerds use PC's while cool laid back folk use Mac's.

See the propaganda and subject yourself to their psychological operations for yourself, here!

Venus

VenusWent to see Venus on Friday night. I can't recommend it enough. Mark Kermode said it was in parts 'morally ambiguous', which is true. But in many ways that was intrinsic to a film which really goes into the guts of love, sex, intimacy and death. It holds up a rather clean mirror to our societies current mores. And, in my mind at least, shows both our our beauty and 'lostness', grace and gracelessness.

Gift in the Marketplace [3]

 The importance of gift and letting go – gift as anti-protectionism

Hunters

In his book 'It's not how good you are, it's how good you want to be.' Paul Arden writes, 'Do not covet your ideas. Give away everything you know, and more will come back to you.' This has become, or been translated into, a much loved economic principle; anti protectionism.

Protectionism, for those unfamiliar with the principal, is where one country, or or economic community, imposes a series,or combination, of subsidies, quota's, tariffs and tax cuts, in order to protect it's market. At the moment the US is 'protecting' it's steel markets through such a system.

Without going too far into the ethics of protectionism vs anti protectionism, I just want to state out loud many of the inherent problems with protectionism, in both corporate and individual terms.

A couple of years ago Jamie Oliver told the UK population why he always sprinkled a small amount of Nutmeg into his Spaghetti Bolognaise. Little did he realise what a crisis we was about to unleash. A friend of mine is a senior bod at Tesco's, and ran around for some time trying to find more nutmeg to fulfil customer demand, despatching buyers to the four corners of the earth. They came back with bad news, the only place where they could 'seriously' source nutmeg was Grenada, and Grenada had sold out!  It turns out that during colonial time, many countries were assigned their own spice, Grenada - Nutmeg, Madagascar - Vanilla etc (Arrhh the genius of the empire)... another was Windward Islands - Banana's.

To be brief, basically the Farmers of the Windward Islands are now dependant on the UK for their entire livelihoods, see here. (as an aside, surely this is just a latent form of Colonialism).

These farmers are suffering enough, but if scientist discovered tomorrow that Banana's (or nutmeg for that matter) caused bowel cancer, it would wipe out whole countries. And this problem of the Banana market has been well known for over 40 years. (BTW: I still purchase fair trade bananas, but  for other reasons).

Well that's enough on protectionism at the 'corporate' level. Back to the individual...

Having worked in many organisations over the years, I am still coming across people who do these two things. Work to ensure they are 'indispensable' to the organisation, or keep their  'expertise' to themselves, believing this will protect their place in the organisations. Inevitably this fails ,the organisation moves on, people get tired of working with the closed and protective individual.

Paul Arden wrote: "The problem with hoarding is that you end up living of reserves. Eventually you will become stale. If you give away everything you have, you are left with nothing. This forces you to be aware, to replenish."

In the spirit against my proposition... Banksy wrote the following...

Blagging

(BTW. I'm a fan of Oliver, he gets unfair stick from the press, who are just far to keen to find fault in everyone; to the point of nihilism.)

Gift in the Marketplace [2]

The Gifting Business model - paying it’s way in the world

Buyshit
A question I have to start this post is... if the internet was 'closed down' today, would we still revert to the business models of the mid-1990's?

I think it will be no surprise to hear, from me at least,  the answer is No!

The creation of enterprises such as you-tube, napster and google (among others) has shaken the more traditional business models to their core. Just this past week the New York Times has opted to release the whole paper on-line (with the exception of it's thought and opinion pieces; though I think this is just a matter of time)

In the late 1990's most of the major museums in London stopped charging people an entrance fee. Much of their funding loss was , admittedly, met from Government coffers. But if this funding dried up would they return to charging...? Again I think not... the answer 'footfall'. Since the DCMS introduced their Free Admissions Policy in 2001 those participating have seen entry increase by 83%. See the press release here.

The beauty of the Museum model is that more people entering the place, the more valuable the sponsorship the more money they get from sponsorship they more they spend on the exhibits... and on and on..

However there are some other interesting reactions to the changed market; which speak to me more of panic than a sound response to very serious competition. For example anyone who has watched any programme on ITV over the past 12 months cannot have missed the number of fake quizzes with 0898 numbers, or the even more scary 'late night quiz programmes'. (BTW: HBO operating in the states meets the competition through making brilliant television. Clearly beyond ITV? Watch as they are sold to Sky within 10 years)

What's interesting to me in all the changes which have been bought to bear over the past 10 years, is the different responses people have made. In a more competitive environment, it is those who have taken the greatest risk (the risk of gift) who have profited the most.  Giving away that which has a very low production cost, can in many cases, reap benefits in the medium to long term.

Thanks to Banksy for providing the images for this series (FOC)... after postponing it for a long time, I will now purchase Wall and Piece. Proof of my proposition or self fulfilling prophecy?

Gift in the Marketplace [1]

Gift and non-gift – the use and abuse of gift in the market economy

Media

I will come as a surprise to no-one that gifts have been used in commerce as a means of informal bribe, and tool of persuasion, for more years you can shake a stick at. In my youth my father would return home during the Christmas period with enough bottles of Whisky to stock a small distillery.

What has been missed, perhaps, are the more subtle ways. Many people still question why every piece of charity junk mail contains a 'free' pen... well guess what 'it works!' In the early 1990's when charities first began this practice, they saw a 100% increase in the  numbers of people responding. It is hard to say exactly what motivated the 'additional' people to respond, was it the gift they received or was it that it helped overcome a barrier in them responding in the present moment?

What is clear however is that gifting (no matter how small) is playing an important role in persuasion and influencing tools. It's been proven by Robert Caldini that gifting is enormously effective in the art of persuasion. What is not so well known is how very, very small things can make a big difference. Paul Mckenna, the well know UK illusionist, uses gifting extensively to get people to do the most extraordinary things, I once saw him ask people in the street to give him their car keys and wallets, then walked away. It would take a few minutes for people to catch onto what was going on, at which point they would run after him. One chap even fell for it twice. All McKenna was doing was using Caldini's principles in very, very subtle ways.

But, as people, this leaves us in a tricky position. I now know I am inflencing people when I have them over for dinner, when I buy them a drink, when I send a get-well card...  but none of these things are bad. Interestingly I heard a story recently of some people who held a dinner party for a group of friends, a few days later, one of the couples sent a thank you note along with a cheque. The note explaining how busy they were, and seeing little chance of returning the invite asked them to accept a cheque for £30.

Are we so scared of being in debt to people? This conversation might lead nicely to some of the practices of the Alpha Course... but I'll leave those for another day.

Maybe from an ethical stance what we need to look at most closely, be most aware of, is our 'intent'? And just as importantly our awareness of what are we contributing toward?  Without this awareness, our interactions in the market place, might not simply appear crass, but may well lead us toward a greater poverty of spirit.

Alternatives..?!

Destroy_1

Over the past few days I have been reading and rereading Jonny and Kester’s posts on ‘Gift’, and have sat somewhat unquietly through these readings… there are a number of reasons for this which I would like, if you would be so generous, to explore here..

Firstly, I get the sense through both of their posts on this subject, each are still holding on to a rather romantic vision of socialism. (I would insert a ‘smiling, winking’ emoticon here, if I didn’t find emoticons so infuriating. ie - please read this as an impertinent question rather than definitive statement)

Secondly, I’m conscious of the fact my personal and professional challenge is to model and proof ‘profitable’ or ‘balancing’ organisations.

Thirdly, I think the ‘Gift Economy’ is as complex, distorted and unaware as the wider, currently more powerful ‘Market Economy’ we are mostly working in.

Despite these struggles I have been provoked into thinking further about what it is about ‘gift’ that both excites and interests me. I think I have whittled it down to three, which are:

· Gift and non-gift – the use and abuse of gift in the market economy

· The Gifting Business model - paying it’s way in the world

· The importance of gift and letting go – gift as anti-protectionism

So over the next few days will post on each of these topics… but before I do I want to return to this question of ‘a romantic visions of socialism’

Please believe me when I say I was just being just a little cheeky in my earlier accusation toward Kester and Jonny… … it is clear from both their posts they believe in mixed economies, which both market and gift have a place.

The trouble is we (in the UK at least) live a bit of a bi-polar economic existence, presented with an either or choice of economic model, simplistically summarised as ‘state vs individual’. Blair, at least in his pre-PM days, flirted heavily with ideas of communitarianism, but this has only been translated into practice through some of the grant giving from the national lottery. Really just tinkering at the edges.

I feel the Church also happily participates in the continuation of this bi-polar myth, often helped along by the likes of Christian Aid. Although I sympatise, and stand alongside them, in their call for preference of the poor, I cannot excuse their often biased analysis, and simplistic answers, often simply dressed-up protectionism (I’ll talk more about protectionism in the last post).

December 31st last year was the day on which Seymore Martin Lipset died. Lipset was a fascinating guy for many reasons, not least because, as an American, he once joined the ‘Young People’s Socialist League, Fourth International’ – yes an American socialist.

He was also the political scientist who discovered the following demographic fact – More young people supported the Vietnam War than did any other section of American population. As the war progressed, the whole country turned against it, but those under 30 remained least likely to regard it as an error.

And so can be credited, somewhat, with idea of ‘the innate conservatism of young people’. But back to economics…

Lipset insights into the US and Socialism are, at least here, most interesting. For many years their existed the question ‘Why didn’t socialism catch on in the US, in the way it did across much of the rest of the world?” – This became known as the ‘American Question’.

Lipset explained the American Question, though an answer which has been termed, or built upon the term, ‘American Exceptionalism’, which states; 'America is different because it lacks a feudal past, is more socially egalitarian, more meritocratic and more individualistic. It has also rejected state religion; instead individuals enjoy a personal relationship with their God.'

The thing is that all these values which characterise American Exceptionalism, are being, or have been, increasingly adopted by the rest of the world. If we are to seriously create alternative economic models (and not simply critique the current flow), we must first understand and accept this reality.

I hope the next three posts will provide a small suggestion as to the direction some of these alternative models may… possibly… move… toward.

At last...

Big_brother

I admit this is an unusual reaction to the current furore surrounding the current 'Celebrity'* occupants of the Big Brother house.

The reason for my somewhat disappointing and tainted delight, is that we are beginning to get a serious discussion on race in this country once again.

As a white middle class bloke originating from the West Midlands, my understanding of racism in the UK was pretty piss poor, that was until I began working alongside black and Asian colleagues. Seeing just a little of the world as they experience it, showed me something of the undertide of racism still alive and well in the UK.

While the Stephen Lawrence inquiry and subsequent Macpherson report, clearly shook up many insitutions, to many of the general public it was a rather stale and academic discussion. And since the publication of the Macpherson report there have been numerous attempts to define and redefine  'Institutional Racism', again leaving most of the public cold and detached from the discussion.

The 'joy' of the current Big Brother is that it becomes a 'water cooler' discussion point (to use a rather horrid late '90's expression). The tragedy is, I fear, it will be a polarised discussion, unless there are enough enlightened and self aware people to facilitate a group around the kettle and instant coffee...?

For those who wish to explore further I cannot recommended the following book enough:
"Why Are All The  Black Kids Sitting Together In The Cafeteria?" - Beverly Daniel Tatum

The best press piece I've read on the whole current BB discussion is by Shyama Perera here.

* Interesting to note, as pointed out by Perera, the 'biggest' celebrity in the place is Shilpa Shetty !