Have you been to a wedding lately? There’s a one in three chance, that if there is a Bible reading, the couple will have asked 1 Corinthians 13: 1-13. (I’m told by those who conduct marriages, that this is a reliable statistic!). However, I heard three days ago, not at a wedding, but at a commemoration of those who lost their lives in defending our country, The logic is clear – the sacrifice shown by these soldiers was, in one way or another, an act of love to protect those who lived on. And it prompted me to read, afresh, the passage, and to pray over it, searching for what it was saying, in an everyday context, both for me as an individual, and for us as a community, living in the blessing of knowing personally, the impact Christ’s sacrificial act of love has had on our lives. Please join me in this reflection and prayer time.
20190404 Family – mine, yours, and ours
In the education research world, there was a meta-study conducted about a decade ago, analysing the world of gifted and talented education research. It became a significant piece of research in the ongoing debate in this important area of education. Its most contentious statement was this – that the younger the subject of the research was, the less reliable any measurements were. One methodology that was commonly used would, in some contexts, yield moderated results that suggested 98% of Prep Grade aged students were gifted or talented when measured. Which doesn’t really make any sense. The meta-study concluded that many studies in the field did not adequately remove bias in the statistical calculations they undertook.
20190321 “More anything?” “More everything!” A template for prayer?
Devotees of comedy, as delivered by online streaming services, may have encountered Seinfeld in their browsing. Nine seasons, 180 episodes – a show “about nothing”. Sadly, I count myself amongst those of an “older” generation who waited, week by week, across the nine years of its production for the weekly release of a new episode of this sitcom – one that was very much anchored in its time and place.
“More anything?” “More everything!” Season 4, Episode 12. “The Airport”. This interplay between an airline steward and an exultant Jerry Seinfeld plays out in this episode, one that explores society’s “haves” and “have nots” in the context of airline travel.
What has this got to do with prayer? Isn’t this show the antithesis of humble living in the light of a redemptive faith in Christ? Why the reference?
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20190307 Aiga faatasi e faavavau (Family together forever)
I have been immersed in Samoan culture this week, keeping company with a Samoan indigenous man “Tee”. A Christian man with a fascinating background, deeply grounded within both cultures he has lived for substantial periods of his life, Tee has been unpacking for me the nature of family in his culture, and its many parallels to the culture of family within our Australian indigenous nations’ customs and practices. My own journey with local indigenous friends of mine, one of whom “Bee” has been present for these conversations this week, has enlivened my thinking in terms of how we as a community explore the ways of getting back to “heart and hands” expressions of family togetherness that transcend simple genetic relationships. We are, for each other, family who deserve respect, honour and a hearing – independent of where we’ve come from or when we first met our creator in a personal relationship.
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20190221 Echidnas and the Glory of God
Job 12:7-10 “But ask the animals, and they will teach you, or the birds in the sky, and they will tell you; or speak to the earth, and it will teach you, or let the fish in the sea inform you. Which of all these does not know that the hand of the LORD has done this? In his hand is the life of every creature and the breath of all mankind.”
Inspired by our celebration of “mini-beasts” here at school this week, I got to thinking about my favourite creature that fits into the palm of a human’s hand. Whose hand are we talking about? Mine, yours, Andre the Giant’s?
20190207 Thumbwrestling, Spanish Cooking and Chemotherapy
1 Corinthians 12:12 For just as the body is one and has many members, and all the members of the body, though many, are one body, so it is with Christ.
On Christmas Day, like many families across Melbourne, across the nation, I participated in the “gathering of the clan” – these days, for me, it includes extras. These “extras” are often potential clan members, attached or affianced to one of the multitude of cousins, nephews and nieces that join the gathering. Christmas Day 2018 was special for our extended family – Kris and my younger daughter, Mary, was able to come home for three weeks for the first time in three years, leaving her husband and moody pup back home in Seattle – Josh couldn’t get leave which was very sad – a hot Christmas experience awaits him some time in the not too distant future.
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201812 Let the Games begin
“My son’s a gamer.” These four words could potentially be the most awkward admission the modern-day parent feels they can make to their parenting peers. For Christian parents, if we are truly transparent with one another, there are no real “rules” for navigating this space, no personal teenage experiences to draw on that even vaguely resemble this.
If I were to say the word “Fortnite” in the school car park a few months back, the looks of despair were palpable. What will be the next game title to elicit similar looks of dread and hopelessness?
2018 Tribute
Each of our students is an image-bearer of God. Our challenge, and our responsibility, as educators and parents, is to build an environment for each student which is transformational; a place where all want to learn, in which the gifts bestowed uniquely on each one of us can be explored enthusiastically through empowerment and enabling.
This is no small challenge – and, as a community, we turn to Christ, the embodiment of God’s grace extended to each of us, to see what he would say we should do. As a community, we gather around God’s word, the Bible, whilst leaning into our own faith journey experiences, to create these surroundings for our children.
20181213 If it is to be, it is up to me
This profoundly deep statement on leadership is attributed to William Henry Johnson, a free African-American who was said to be, in modern terminology, the personal assistant to Abraham Lincoln (the 16th President of the United States of America, who is attributed with leading the nation through the Civil War, thus preserved the Union, as well as abolishing slavery, strengthening the federal government, and modernising their economy). There is no clear reason why Johnson said it, or when it was said; indeed, it is his only known quote.
It is profound, because it is a statement that cuts to the heart of being servant-like in leadership; it is profound because there is an acknowledgement of cost BUT no counting of the cost.
20181129 Bathed in God’s grace
The trumpeters and musicians joined in unison to give praise and thanks to the LORD. Accompanied by trumpets, cymbals and other instruments, the singers raised their voices in praise to the LORD and sang: “He is good; his love endures forever.” 2 Chronicles 5:13 (NIV)
The ark of the covenant arrived in the temple, built by the Israelites under the supervision of King Solomon. It is a big moment; the ark – containing the tablets on which the 10 commandments, given by God to Moses many years before, are written – finally has a home. Israel worshipped, giving thanks and praise to the Lord God. In the following chapter of 2 Chronicles, Solomon speaks. He gives the credit for the temple’s completion to God. He reminds them that Yahweh has been with them since the very beginning.