Today the Government's Education White Paper was published. We're still digesting it and trying to work out how it affects both Anne and I in our jobs. I'm doing so in a context - still reading 'Jesus and Politics' which is a tremendous gutsy review of Jesus life, principles, ministry and everything that has happened since; and also having taken up rather at random the 'Very Short Introduction to Habermas'. I first read Habermas as a 70's student, and his subtle, difficult but accurate analysis of the way we live has stayed with me.
Into that mental mix Michael Gove throws his white paper. I want to say 'yes' to so much he aims at; yet I wonder whether the system can deliver it, or these methods. A conversation this morning in a (great) coffee-shop in Tenterden with a colleague "education should enable children to fully discover who they are before God, and respond to his love and promises". Habermas didn't think that - but his analysis tells me that is the optimum way forward for lost humanity. I hope we can make space for it in this new dispensation.
Wednesday, 24 November 2010
Thursday, 18 November 2010
Sunday, 14 November 2010
Remembrance
Remembrance Sunday is always an important one. The community of Bethersden stood together in pouring rain and remembered; the little cubs, brownies, beavers and rainbows looking soggier by the second. Fortunately the church was good and warm and I kept the sermon short in the hope they wouldn't catch a chill. The realities of life and loss seemed combined and it was healthy. But, just as 70% of the UK population say they are Christian but only 5% or so attend church, so, too, the statistical truth is - most people weren't there, either at the Memorial or in Church. I think we have to be careful - the greatly increased coverage of Remembrance which Tony Blair seemed to energise is good, but we mustn't make it a test of a point of view. In a very new-Labourite way, the poppy seems almost to have been "rebranded" - (I'm not sure about this but what do others think?) , and the rise of the new charity 'Help for heroes' somehow suggests the poppy brand isn't working for everyone. It needs to. It's always most moving to see the politicians of all parties joining together at the Cenotaph; and Remembrance Sunday needs to be open to all. Which I believe it was at Bethersden. In a commercial world where everything is differentiated by brands and preferences, what is a unifying theme for us all as a nation?
I finished "The Vicar of Morwenstow" (see posts below) last night. In a strange way, the account of the eccentric Richard Hawker's controversial death (did he convert to Roman Catholicism or not?) has a similar disturbing quality. Having branded himself firmly as a mystical Anglican in his cliff-top parish, why did he accept those last rites of Baptism, Confirmation and Unction - against his 'brand'? I think he ceased to function mentally and his wife pushed him into it! The only reason for caring is the Remembrance Sunday question: how much does it matter what the symbols mean? What was the unifying theme of Hawker's life?
I finished "The Vicar of Morwenstow" (see posts below) last night. In a strange way, the account of the eccentric Richard Hawker's controversial death (did he convert to Roman Catholicism or not?) has a similar disturbing quality. Having branded himself firmly as a mystical Anglican in his cliff-top parish, why did he accept those last rites of Baptism, Confirmation and Unction - against his 'brand'? I think he ceased to function mentally and his wife pushed him into it! The only reason for caring is the Remembrance Sunday question: how much does it matter what the symbols mean? What was the unifying theme of Hawker's life?
Thursday, 11 November 2010
Ready for Change
It's all been out in the public domain for a few weeks now that we are leaving Bethersden and High Halden in January to take up a new job as Assistant Diocesan Director of Education (Schools Organisation). Whilst feeling great excitement about the new work, both just as an interesting thing to do and as a vocation, I also felt very guilty about leaving this job so soon.
But people have been marvellously kind and supportive. One said 'remember we are all grown ups' which was good; another said 'no way should there be a burden of guilt when you follow the Lord's leading' and I've taken that to heart. I want now to do the best job I can for the Benefice; and I think I've come to recognise my ministry has been what is recognised elsewhere as 'Interim Ministry'. In fact, it was that concept that we based the Wakefield 'Turnaround Team' projects on; and it's well-supported in Canada particularly through the Alban Institute and elsewhere.
Having just found deep strength at the monthly Prayer Meeting, I sense that the leaders of the Benefice are embracing the future positively. There is much yet to take shape in terms of Deanery reorganisation for the Benefice, and my own preparation for my new role (which must begin now in part because the current post-holder will retire before I start). Borne up by prayer, I think it will all work out well...
But people have been marvellously kind and supportive. One said 'remember we are all grown ups' which was good; another said 'no way should there be a burden of guilt when you follow the Lord's leading' and I've taken that to heart. I want now to do the best job I can for the Benefice; and I think I've come to recognise my ministry has been what is recognised elsewhere as 'Interim Ministry'. In fact, it was that concept that we based the Wakefield 'Turnaround Team' projects on; and it's well-supported in Canada particularly through the Alban Institute and elsewhere.
Having just found deep strength at the monthly Prayer Meeting, I sense that the leaders of the Benefice are embracing the future positively. There is much yet to take shape in terms of Deanery reorganisation for the Benefice, and my own preparation for my new role (which must begin now in part because the current post-holder will retire before I start). Borne up by prayer, I think it will all work out well...
Saturday, 6 November 2010
Food and Family; labyrinthitis and reading
It's been a week of great meals out: fantastic pub lunch with clergy at the Stone Ferry Inn Thursday; great fish boona from the Rajah of Kent yesterday; and today a slightly belated birthday lunch with Mum and Charlie and families at Raffles in Cranbrook. Each day I've really been unable to eat a third meal; shameful really.Kate, Luke, and Ellie joined us back at Charlie's house and it was a pleasure to be with them too.
The week stated badly with labyrinthitis really kicking back in - linked as usual to some poor nights' sleep - but, better rested, I now feel 200 times better and almost symptom-free. I have a hope maybe this is the final fling of it but I can't tell. It's five months since I was hospitalised with it so I reckon, on average, I'm about due to be well again.
One pleasure of our week in Suffolk was catching up with David and Gillian Shacklock in Debenham - a very fine lunch in a very fine house, enjoying our coffee in the gallery that has been there since it allowed spectators to watch Shakespeare and the Kings Men perform in the courtyard below. Better still, it is a house with a built in secondhand bookshop which David presides over. I remembered he collected works by Sabine Baring Gould but didn't think I'd buy one until I found SBG's "The Vicar of Morwenstow". Anne and I visited Morwenstow once on a sunny day off when Tom and Claire were tiny and picnicked on the hillside overlooking the church and the Vicarage with its eccentric chimneys (each is built in the miniature of the church towers where Harker the Vicar had ministered). Anyway, the book is highly entertaining and has many anecdotes which we enjoy for their Victorian humour, clerical eccentricity, and Cornishness. Great bedtime stuff.
And today I took delivery of 'Jesus and Politics' by Alan Storkey. Those who appreciate the work of AS know the kind of treat I am in for - to my shame I didn't know he'd written it - it came out in 2005 just when I dropped out of paid ministry for my 'self-funded sabbatical' on the RHDR. Read the first 40 pp tonight: well worth it for the background material on Herod alone.
Talking of books I spent much of Friday sorting (and clearing) out books at New Romney ready to reintegrate the library from Bethersden. Found many old friends - including Edersheim's 'Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah' which AS quotes - and also 'Eeyore's Little Book of Gloom' from which I quote to close:
Sharpen your Bluntness:
"I've got a sort of idea," said Pooh at last, "but I don't suppose it's a very good one"
"I don't suppose it is either," said Eeyore
The week stated badly with labyrinthitis really kicking back in - linked as usual to some poor nights' sleep - but, better rested, I now feel 200 times better and almost symptom-free. I have a hope maybe this is the final fling of it but I can't tell. It's five months since I was hospitalised with it so I reckon, on average, I'm about due to be well again.
One pleasure of our week in Suffolk was catching up with David and Gillian Shacklock in Debenham - a very fine lunch in a very fine house, enjoying our coffee in the gallery that has been there since it allowed spectators to watch Shakespeare and the Kings Men perform in the courtyard below. Better still, it is a house with a built in secondhand bookshop which David presides over. I remembered he collected works by Sabine Baring Gould but didn't think I'd buy one until I found SBG's "The Vicar of Morwenstow". Anne and I visited Morwenstow once on a sunny day off when Tom and Claire were tiny and picnicked on the hillside overlooking the church and the Vicarage with its eccentric chimneys (each is built in the miniature of the church towers where Harker the Vicar had ministered). Anyway, the book is highly entertaining and has many anecdotes which we enjoy for their Victorian humour, clerical eccentricity, and Cornishness. Great bedtime stuff.
And today I took delivery of 'Jesus and Politics' by Alan Storkey. Those who appreciate the work of AS know the kind of treat I am in for - to my shame I didn't know he'd written it - it came out in 2005 just when I dropped out of paid ministry for my 'self-funded sabbatical' on the RHDR. Read the first 40 pp tonight: well worth it for the background material on Herod alone.
Talking of books I spent much of Friday sorting (and clearing) out books at New Romney ready to reintegrate the library from Bethersden. Found many old friends - including Edersheim's 'Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah' which AS quotes - and also 'Eeyore's Little Book of Gloom' from which I quote to close:
Sharpen your Bluntness:
"I've got a sort of idea," said Pooh at last, "but I don't suppose it's a very good one"
"I don't suppose it is either," said Eeyore
A note for RHDR followers
It's a fortnight now since I drove Hurricane for a day on the 'Purple' timetable. Turning up at 8am to light up, I was worried she'd be cold, as according to the roster she hadn't been out all week, but evidently there had been a fusible check and water change the day before and - I'm glad to say - either hot water had been used or she'd been warmed through. I had my first taste on the footplate of the magnificently overhauled Dr Syn (just to chuck the fire out but that was enough). Thrilled to find the double regulator had been retained; love the livery but very sad because it's the livery I had hoped No9 might get when she comes back. She was black lined yellow the first time I saw her - I've an old photo from a slide (just realised it's not on this hard-drive - I'll try and upload it on Monday) - notice the pipe going into the chimney, part of the experiment with oil-firing going on then - but she looked superb. I wonder what livery she will get now?
And I had a fantastic day, very lucky with the weather. The road hadn't been checked, so it was a 10mph crawl out to Dungeness - at one point much slower because the rail up to Half Mile Curve was dreadful - and I do mean 10mph as I don't know how you can spot an open joint from a steam loco going any faster (I'd been told there had been two such the previous day). Anyway, all was well, and I decided my challenge would be absolute minimum coal usage. At one point I tried too hard and was losing steam and water; but No8 seemed on good form, steaming steadily at 170psi and not 150 as used to be normal.
I took advantage of the last long break at Dungeness to clean the top off thoroughly, saving time back at Romney and enabling me to do a thorough job underneath, and tube properly - when disaster struck and I caught the blower ring with the rod and bent it about four inches out of alignment. It wouldn't sit back properly and I had to leave an apologetic booking in the Repair Book.
And I had a fantastic day, very lucky with the weather. The road hadn't been checked, so it was a 10mph crawl out to Dungeness - at one point much slower because the rail up to Half Mile Curve was dreadful - and I do mean 10mph as I don't know how you can spot an open joint from a steam loco going any faster (I'd been told there had been two such the previous day). Anyway, all was well, and I decided my challenge would be absolute minimum coal usage. At one point I tried too hard and was losing steam and water; but No8 seemed on good form, steaming steadily at 170psi and not 150 as used to be normal.
I took advantage of the last long break at Dungeness to clean the top off thoroughly, saving time back at Romney and enabling me to do a thorough job underneath, and tube properly - when disaster struck and I caught the blower ring with the rod and bent it about four inches out of alignment. It wouldn't sit back properly and I had to leave an apologetic booking in the Repair Book.
Tuesday, 2 November 2010
Political Aristocracy
Pondering on politicians - we have married partners in Cabinet, a battle between two brothers for leadership of Labour... surely there is a bigger gene pool of talent out there to draw on? Is this healthy? Reading (I shall probably give up -it's very dull) Douglas Hurd's 'Memoirs' - his father was also a Tory MP. I was DH's constituent for a while, he was an excellent MP, answering my student letters of protest in longhand, courteous, considered.
Anyway, I recently finished Diane Purkiss's The English Civil War: A People's History and now I muse, after our incredible history, what kind of democracy have we achieved? A very strange one, I think - a good one, but weird and wonderful. Like so many things in British life, if you started with a blank sheet of paper, you would not design this: but haviung got it, we tinker with it at our peril. We all await the promised civil liberties legislation, promnised by the Coalition to restore freedoms eroded under the last government. I'm afraid I'm cynical they will happen - but it would be best they do as the only historically verifieable method by which the British populace have made their elected governments accountable is protest, riot, or war. All very undesirable. So come on, political aristocrats - do your democratic duty.
Anyway, I recently finished Diane Purkiss's The English Civil War: A People's History and now I muse, after our incredible history, what kind of democracy have we achieved? A very strange one, I think - a good one, but weird and wonderful. Like so many things in British life, if you started with a blank sheet of paper, you would not design this: but haviung got it, we tinker with it at our peril. We all await the promised civil liberties legislation, promnised by the Coalition to restore freedoms eroded under the last government. I'm afraid I'm cynical they will happen - but it would be best they do as the only historically verifieable method by which the British populace have made their elected governments accountable is protest, riot, or war. All very undesirable. So come on, political aristocrats - do your democratic duty.
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