Last Sunday’s Playlist: Meet the Super-Humans / Deformity before Conformity!

Last Sunday’s Playlist @ Newmarket Baptist 

30th September 2012, Ordinary Time 26B: Colour: Green

Highlights from our Sunday 10am Community Prayer space ‘playlist’… in the hope that it may re-source you to better follow Jesus in your world…

MoW (Ministry of the Word):

We read this weeks gospel lectionary Mark 9:38-50 alongside this amazing promotional ad for the London Paralympics.

You can watch the video by clicking here.

<p><a href=”http://vimeo.com/46732057″>Channel 4 Paralympics – Meet the Superhumans</a> from <a href=”http://vimeo.com/iwrf”>IWRF</a&gt; on <a href=”http://vimeo.com”>Vimeo</a&gt;.</p>

It’s an ad that takes the standard highlight package drama of elite sport with the pumping, Public Enemy backing track and then rupture’s it mid-way with footage of a pregnant woman’s ultrasound, a road accident and an explosive device being detonated while servicemen patrol the streets of a modern day warzone.

We considered Jesus, the man who has healed a withered hand in Chapter 3, enabled a paralytic to walk in Chapter 3 and healed a blind man in Chapter 8 rupturing our often domesticated image of him blessing the children with his own powerful image of deformity; indeed self mutilation.

We considered the quote of Dan Berrigan:

 In the house where all cry out  “I see” and continue to do the works of darkness
There is only one classic option open to the wise.
Strike yourself blind and explore that kingdom.

We considered what the slogan “Better Deformity Than Conformity” might mean for our spirituality and in what ways the Paralympics showed us what it may mean to be ‘fully’ human.

“Was it always your dream to win Gold at the Paralympics” asked one reporter.

“Not before the accident”! was the athletes reply that left the reporter stunned and exposed the shallowness of the conception of ‘the dream’.

We considered ways in which our dreams and desires for success, security,  happiness or life itself can so easily be transformed into what Pete Rollins describes as a ‘death drive’ that disfigures human bodies and life; of ourselves and others.

We reflected on responses to the local tragedy of the death of Jill Meagher and prayed for our friends at the Brunswick Baptist Church as they respond.

Given the images of children in the passage and the hype of Grand Final Week in Melbourne, we considered how the Sherrin /AFL child labour football controversy reflects our own idolisation (Little Leauge) / devaluing (Child Labour) of children.

Where such ‘sin’ becomes the norm the gospel suggests we must disfigure ourselves in relation to it.

The text suggests that it is what we do and don’t do with our hands, feet and eyes; where we stand, what we see … the stuff of power and agency that will lead us to destruction.

Ched Myers suggests that if these images seem bizarre to us in church today it is because we are not involved in the counter-cultural struggle of what he describes as ‘de-fective’ living.

He connects the phrase ‘where their worm never dies, and the fire is never quenched.’ with the real experience of physical/cultural ‘death drive’ addiction.

Instead of promoting the health and wealth culture we are addicted to he suggests we need church to play a similar role to a twelve step recovery group, characterised as a community of genuine dis continuity, with a bigger theology of sin that moves beyond superficial behaviour management.

To this end we considered the body in ascetic/monastic christian traditions and how we may re-imagine the traditional vows of poverty, chastity and obedience for today.

We concluded with the gospels imagery of community healing.  “Everyone will be salted with fire”; the ancient remedies for amputation.

People were invited to place a pinch of sea salt in our prayer tray as a response and we ‘passed the peace’ of Christ as an expression of the phrase “have salt among yourselves and live at peace with each other”.

David Beckham with vision impaired footballer Dave Clark, photo by Mark Oblow.

Last Sunday’s Playlist: Great Service

Last Sunday’s Playlist @ Newmarket Baptist 

23rd September 2012, Ordinary Time 25B: Colour: Green

Highlights from our Sunday 10am Community Prayer space ‘playlist’… in the hope that it may re-source you to better follow Jesus in your world…

MoW (Ministry of the Word):

We participated in a Lectio Divina on this weeks lectionary gospel reading of Mark 9:30-37.  During it we heard the voice of MLK captured in this video.

<p>Video from <a href=”http://www.karmatube.org”>KarmaTube</a></p&gt;

And so Jesus gave us a new norm of greatness. If you want to be important—wonderful. If you want to be recognized—wonderful. If you want to be great—wonderful. But recognize that he who is greatest among you shall be your servant. (Amen) That’s a new definition of greatness.

And this morning, the thing that I like about it: by giving that definition of greatness, it means that everybody can be great, (Everybody) because everybody can serve. (Amen) You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. (All right) You don’t have to make your subject and your verb agree to serve. You don’t have to know about Plato and Aristotle to serve. You don’t have to know Einstein’s theory of relativity to serve. You don’t have to know the second theory of thermodynamics in physics to serve. (Amen) You only need a heart full of grace, (Yes, sir, Amen) a soul generated by love. (Yes) And you can be that servant.

King’s “Drum Major Instinct” sermon, given on 4 February 1968, was an adaptation of the 1952 homily ‘‘Drum-Major Instincts’’ by J. Wallace Hamilton, a well-known, liberal, white Methodist preacher. King encouraged his congregation to seek greatness, but to do so through service and love. King concluded the sermon by imagining his own funeral, downplaying his famous achievements and emphasizing his heart to do right. He was assassinated 2 months later.

We also considered Matt Skinner’s thought’s on the passage in this short video.

 

Last Sunday’s Playlist: Clean Sparkling White Melbourne

Last Sunday’s Playlist @ Newmarket Baptist 

2nd September 2012, Ordinary Time 22B: Colour: Green

Greetings,

At this stage Sunday’s 10am gathering is central to our Rhythm of Prayer at Newmarket Baptist.  As we can’t each be present every Sunday we like to share highlights from our ‘playlist’ in the hope that it may re-source you to better follow Jesus in your world…

PoC (Prayer of Confession):

Clean Project by Nic Lowe of 2006.

With the closing ceremony of the London Olympics and Paralympics in progress this years lectionary coincided with a similar theme from 2006 when I was working at Urban Seed:church and the Commonwealth Games were in Melbourne.

“This evening Urban Seed: church was competing with the Closing Ceremony of the Commonwealth Games so I went with it.  For our Call to Worship we listened to the African drum rythyms of the Late Late Service’s  “All the Earth is the Lords” (LLS4) and then quietened it down by singing “He is Lord” accapella. Every knee bowing and every tounge confessing that Jesus is Lord.   I contrasted the once called Empire Games with that of the Roman Empire and bunting that appears all over Melbourne.

For our own bunting I used the wallpaper of the CLEAN exhibition that was part of the Next Wave festival that had run concurrently with the Commonwealth Games.

For the exhibition they wallpapered a big section of Hosier Lane, the Melbourne City laneway famous for its street art and now the home of Living Room, the medical service for homeless people that was first located at Urban Seed.  Urban Seed’s Kate Allen was down Hosier Lane with Nick where a street artist was complaining about the wallpaper that had covered the graffiti during the Commonwealth Games.   Nick told him to look more closely….the CLEAN wallpaper consists of athletes and cleaning products covering over lots of the “unclean” images of the city.

It’s a broader statement about what we lose or is covered over when we seek to “clean up” the city.  For example the same week the State Govenment spend $60,000 to house homeless people in hotels during the Games they also spent $160,000 on flowers to line the streets.

Beyond the visuals the exhibition involved an “audio ambush” where speakers were ingeniously hidden in rubbish and the voices of homeless people etc. were contrasted with triumphant sounds of sporting success. The sounds were triggered as people walked up the alley way. Nic did some of recording at Urban Seed’s Credo Café of homeless people sharing a meal during the Games.

I juxtaposed CLEAN with the banner of the movie Dirty Filthy Love, a movie that takes a serious look at obsessive compulsive disorder in a light hearted way.  There is a scene in the movie where the therapy group of pathological clean freaks wallow around in a field of mud as a cathartic act of liberation. (You can scroll to 32.45-35.30 on the video embedded below)  I had always thought this scene would make a good basis for some kind of confessional prayer and the idea of sitting it alongside the themes and images of CLEAN was too hard to pass up.

MoW (Ministry of the Word)

Mark 7:1-8,14-15,21-23

“It’s not that clean and unclean does not exist and is not important in any culture.  It’s just that Jesus redefines purity in terms of what comes out of a person in the qualities we demonstrate in relationships.”  

– Sarah Dylan Bruer  www.sarahlaughed.net

The other idea we explored is that the idea of purity as demonstrated by Jesus as being something fragile that is easily contaminated, is on the contrary contagious, the we can pass on in the way we live and bless others.

 

 

 

Last Sunday’s Playlist: Asylum Seeker Psalms & “If you Eat, You’re In”

Last Sunday’s Playlist @ Newmarket Baptist 

19th August 2012, Ordinary Time 20B: Colour: Green

Greetings,

At this stage Sunday’s 10am gathering is central to our Rhythm of Prayer at Newmarket Baptist.  As we can’t each be present every Sunday we like to share highlights from our ‘playlist’ in the hope that it may re-source you to better follow Jesus in your world…

C2W (Call to Worship):

Our Call to Worship was taken from this weeks Sunday Lectionary, Psalm 34, which for the purposes of reflection upon the week ‘s national and global events we dubbed “The Asylum Seeker Psalm” based on its traditional prefix,

 ‘Of David, when he feigned madness before Abimelech, so that he drove him out, and he went away.’

This is based on a story from 1 Sam. 21:10-15 where David sought refuge but instead found himself going from frying pan to fire.

We read the Psalm 34 singing the antiphon, ” I make my boast in the Lord, let the humble hear”, from Issac Everrets’ Emergent Psalter.

PoC (Prayer of Confession):

We considered theses two images above of aslyum seekers from the weekly news.

The first are “Boat People” travelling to Australia via Indonesia who’s plight has been influenced by the passing of legislation in the Australian Parliament reinstating the so called ‘Pacific Solution’.   The second image is from protests in London where the Ecuadorian Government granted asylum to “Wikileaks” founder Julian Assange.

We asked people to imagine the words of the Psalm in the mouths of those depicted in the images.  How would we hear the Psalm if we were in their shoes? The descriptions of David feigning madness and the warnings of predicted mental illness for boat people who face mandatory and possible indefinite detention was sobering and people were invited to respond by voicing or writing their own confession.

One offering reflected a protest banner outside the the Ecuadorian Embassy stating “In the Kingdom of Lies the Truth is Treason” and how it might lead us to confession of complicity in our own failings of honesty, courage and hospitality, both personal and collective.

We noted that for the Psalmist the terror and fear of foes was meaningfully surpassed by a greater fear (awe and reverence) for God.  We prayed this for ourselves and others.  The Assurance of Forgiveness was based upon verse 4, 5, 7 and 22 of the Psalm.

4 I sought the LORD, and he answered me,

and delivered me from all my fears.

5 Look to him, and be radiant;

so your faces shall never be ashamed.

7 The angel of the LORD encamps around

those who fear him, and delivers them.

22 The LORD redeems the life of his servants;

none of those who take refuge in him will be condemned.

And so I declare to you, that in Jesus Christ,

your sins are forgiven.

            Thanks be to God.

MoW (Ministry of the Word) :

“The will to live life differently can start in some of the most unusual places” – Pam Warhurst

We compared the word of Jesus in this weeks Lectionary Gospel reading John 6:51-58 

Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me, and I in them.

with the motto of the Incredible Edible “Propaganda” gardening project in Todmorden in Northern England.

IF YOU EAT, YOU’RE IN! 

The video above explains in part why we have re-worked the garden at the front of our church building and are investing our vision of  renewal in local connections through our People’s Pantry & Table Projects in Flemington.

Together we considered how the ‘feeding ministry’ of Jesus in passages such as John 6 might relate to this contemporary call to conversion by Pam Warhurst and become something more profoundly sacred for each of us in our lives and neighourhood relationships?

“Can you find a unifying language, that cuts across age and income and culture that will help people themselves find a new way of living? See spaces around them differently? Think about the resource they use differently? Interact differently? Can we find that language and then can we replicate those actions?  The answer would appear to be yes and the language would appear to be FOOD!” – Pam Warhurst

Much Grace & Peace,

Marcus