Thursday, June 05, 2008

A MESSAGE OF HOPE

Moving religion from harm to healing Ekklesia, 4 June 08. Religion that binds others with condemnation and superstition is far from the heart of the Gospel, says Simon Barrow. The church needs to face its arguments and seek to be a place of healing if it is to rediscover its global role.
FROM FEAR TO FREEDOM

Here's the first interlinear plug for a new book I have edited (and have five chapters in) which is due out for the beginning of July - possibly a little before. It's called Fear or freedom? Why a warring church must change, and I'm honoured to say that it has a preface by Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu. Contributors include Deirdre Good, Savitri Hensman, Christopher Rowland, Glynn Cardy and others. It takes a constructively critical look at the significance of ‘Anglican wars’ in the run up to (and well beyond) the 2008 Lambeth Conference, signalling some important fault lines in post-Christendom life and faith. Its message is positive. The churches can - and must - abandon their obsession with top-down control, and rediscover the Gospel as a subversive source of hope in society at large. Fear or freedom? will be published jointly by Ekklesia and Shoving Leopard, a new Edinburgh-based imprint run by my friend Janet de Vigne, whose mantra is "life in all its fullness was never 'safe'." You will not be able to order it yet, but as soon as it is online the information will be made available.
HILLARY ABOUT TO WALK

The BBC reports that Hillary Clinton will finally step down from the Democratic US presidential nomination race and endorse Barack Obama on Saturday 7 June. America clearly needs a substantial change of direction, but I confess that I remain sceptical about all the romantic hype surrounding Obama, and also about his capacity to win. If you look at his policies, he's not quite what the wide-eyed idealists imagine. I was hoping for something much more positive from Hillary, having admired her since her earlier attempts at substantial health care reform (which was extraordinary as a creative policy exercise, but from which she has had to learn hard lessons politically). So I feel more than a touch of sadness at the implosion of her campaign. Almost everyone else I talk to (including my American wife) is positive about Obama. I still think that Clinton would have been far stronger working the Washington system -- which, frankly, is what you have to do. Plus the anti-Hillary narrative has been drenched in sexism and an anti-women backlash, which is deeply disturbing.

Real change isn't dreamt up from the top. It comes from people at the grassroots challenging the shape of the agenda on which power politics (never less than a messy business) gets played out. So if people sit back and expect Obama to deliver whatever it is that they want - a reversal of Iraq policy, climate action, anti-poverty strategies, an Israel-Palestine settlement - they will, I fear, be sorely disappointed. The defining issue is likely to be the economy, where both he and McCain are less than sure-footed, both caught up in the neoliberal paradigm, and each -- for different reasons -- reluctant to challenge the vested interests of corporate America. For example, on a universal health care mandate - which one opposes and the other avoids. Hillary Clinton would have been in the same boat, and is in many respects an establishment figure. But I suspect she may have been bolder than in practice Obama will end up being, shorn of the rhetoric, if he gets to the White House. I would be delighted to be proved wrong, of course.

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

WISH FULFILMENT

"Our desires do not become respectable because we offer them to God in prayer. Prayer is the purification of desire. It is not only pointless but unintelligent to entertain a thousand desires when there are only a few choices." (Colin Morris, A Week in the Life of God )
ONLY COMMUNICATE

Dave Walker, of the excellent 'Cartoon Church', has done a good follow-up piece on the strange fuss about 'Faithbook', over at his regular Church Times blog. I belong to at least two inter-religious pages on Facebook, so I'm pretty sure that the idea of getting the whole gang "on the same page", so to speak, is very far from unique. But it seems that any time some "official representatives" from a religious group get somewhere near a newish medium that "ordinary people" have in fact been using for ages, it becomes a "story". The Times' "it's about combating extremism" angle was especially cute. Spend a moment or two trying to think how that might work and you will see why it seems a bit thin. This is not to say that there isn't value in as many ventures as possible to get people to talk across divides of world-view, belief and ideology, I stress. It's just the hype that doesn't help.

I wonder whether the unfortunate "with-it vicar" syndrome of the '60s and '70s (when a hapless cleric would be meaninglessly lauded for getting a motorbike, going down the pub or featuring in a pop video, say) hasn't morphed into pretty well any place where "faith leaders" try to latch onto the spokes of a fast-turning a-religious culture that many suspect they don't really "get", having been advised by anxious acolytes to throw themselves at in order to "communicate". No doubt we will have the Archbishop of Canterbury on Twitter soon, a few weeks before it is declared to be formally passe by some Arbiters of Cool.

Chill, everyone.

[Cartoon (c) Dave Walker and weblogcartoons.com. He also has at least one book out, which is very good. Now go keep him in cookies by buying it.]

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

FACT AND FAITHBOOK

Boy, you have to be careful what you say these days. This morning I noted the small story by Riazat Butt of The Guardian on the launch of something called 'Faithbook', which aims to promote dialogue between people of different religious persuasions. So I Googled to find out what it's about. As far as I can see (and I may be wrong), Faithbook is simply another page on the Facebook social networking site. Which doesn't seem quite such a big deal as the media interest (which is growing by the minute) might suggest. There are a variety of other, mainly evangelical, initiatives out there that use the term, by the way.

Anyhow, I "joined" the page and left a comment, which simply said, in a spirit of puzzled enquiry: "Um, is this it, then? Just another group on Facebook?" Lo and behold, a few hours later, I get pinged from a page on The Times, where Joanna Sugden duly informs the world that, in my capacity as co-director of Ekklesia, I have "criticised" Faithbook. Goodness. That's news for you. And to me, frankly! For the record, I'm a bit sceptical about the fuss, but if it promotes sensible conversation (as distinct from immediate pigeon holing), so much the better.
PROXIMATE TO ALL, CONTAINED BY NONE

When the Emperor Ptolemy sacked Jerusalem in 63 AD, and entered the Holy of Holies in the Great Temple, he was baffled to find an empty room -- no picture, ascription or image. Emptiness is a negative description of the God who cannot be named, described or contained." (Colin Morris, The Word and the Words)

"The characteristic form of God's presence is absence" (Deny Turner)

Monday, June 02, 2008

CHRISTIANS AND OTHER ALIENS

The Prodigal Kiwis (Paul Fremont and Alan Jamieson) have a new post on William Stringfellow - an inspiration of mine, who died 23 years ago. Stringfellow was a lawyer in largely black East Harlem, an Episcopalian, a radical activist and a very substantial lay theologian who took American Christianity by the scruff of the neck and gave it a good shaking. Indeed, Karl Barth once famously told a staid theological conference that this was the man they should listen to. His work (including An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land) appeared in a series of now out-of-print books and latterly in Sojourners magazine.

In 1997 I helped with a conference in Oxford about Stringfellow's legacy, primarily organised by Tony Dancer. I led a seminar which became an essay called 'Talking Nonsense to Power' in Tony's book William Stringfellow in Anglo-American Perspective (Ashgate). There's a brief excerpt here. Among the other contributors are Rowan Williams and Chris Rowland. Unfortunately (especially for a book that seeks to represent a grassroots intellectual) it costs £45 in hardback. A paperback edition is sorely needed. When I met ++Rowan at a Lambeth reception a year or so ago we mentioned approaching the publisher about that. I ought to follow up. Thanks, Paul and Alan, for keeping Stringfellow's profile up there.

Sunday, June 01, 2008

UNBOUNDED GRATITUDE

I am neither a greater follower of celeb news nor a regular reader of the Mail on Sunday, it won't surprise you to know. But, cynicism aside, there was a touchingly authentic article today by actor Natascha McElhone -- whose husband, surgeon Martin Kelly, suddenly and tragically dropped dead of a severe heart attack recently, at the age of 42. Its tenor was not self-pity but gratitude, which makes a refreshing change in the narcissistic world of 'Californication'.

"I don't know why I'm not surprised that his life came to an abrupt end. I didn't think 'Why us? Why me?', I just thought, "Thank God I've lived like this thus far. Whatever happens, it was worth every ounce of pain I'm going through now."

Saturday, May 31, 2008

THE POT BUBBLES

Reaction to Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali's comments continues. Thinking Anglicans does its usual reliable job in providing an ongoing round-up. The response includes a sympathetic profile by Riazat Butt, a cartoon from Dave Walker for the Church Times, and a lead on my Guardian article in Episcopal Cafe ('Should the Church have special status?'). By the way, I did not choose the headline Blinkered bishop, and would wish that the disagreement could be conducted without calling names.

Friday, May 30, 2008

HOW ABOUT THE CHURCH BEING MORE CHRISTIAN?

Surely bemoaning that society does not pay sufficient attention to church leaders and fails to implement their preferred policies or treat their ethics with respect misses the point - which is that it is the church's job to nurture disciples who might lead people to suspect that the Gospel offers something rather more significant than consolation to an in-group and a stiff telling off to everyone else? Aside from my concerns about the dangerously reactionary implications of 'Christian nation' rhetoric, that is my main theological objection to Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali's attempt to shake us back into restoring the civic religious mould.

Blinkered bishop Simon Barrow Guardian Comment-is-Free May 30 08, 09:00am: Michael Nazir-Ali has the wrong target. Rather than expecting the nation to be Christian for him, he should urge churches to practice what they preach.
MAKING PEACE IN DANGEROUS SITUATIONS

118 Days: Christian Peacemaker Team Held Hostage in Iraq, edited by Tricia Gates Brown, is a new book that I have contributed a chapter to (on media reporting) with US Ekklesia consult Tim Nafziger. It is available in the UK through Metanoia Book Service. On November 26, 2005, Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) members Tom Fox and Jim Loney along with delegation members Norman Kember and Harmeet Sooden were kidnapped in Iraq. Tom Fox was killed on March 9, 2006. Jim, Norman and Harmeet were freed two weeks later on March 23 after 118 days of captivity. The kidnapping of these four peacemakers was like a rock thrown into a pond. This collection describes the ripples on the water, the impact and results of that rock, in stories characterized by hope, courage, friendship, and forgiveness. 118 Days bears witness to vital peacemaking being done around the world in these times. Available from 5 June 2008. See also www.118days.org
THE VISION THING

I am speaking at a policy discussion on 'Renewing the Vision' in Exeter on 7 June, 2pm - with Ben Bradshaw MP, theologian Professor Tim Gorringe from the University of Exeter and Sue Errington from the Global Centre. It is organised by the Christian Socialist Movement (CSM). Further details: http://www.thecsm.org.uk/policydiscussion.html
FEAR IS NO BASIS FOR PROGRESS

The Guardian 's Comment-is-Free has carried a thoughtful response from Inayat Bunglawala (pictured) of the Muslim Council of Britain to Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali's Standpoint article on the disintegration of 'Christian Britain' -- which is now available online here incidentally. (And I mention that not just because Inayat has been kind enough to quote me approvingly.) There's also a trenchant editorial calling on Rowan Williams to speak out in the The Guardian today.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

CHRISTIAN FUNDAMENTALISM ON FILM

I have a new column up for the Wardman Wire Thinking Aloud series, examining some background to the recent Channel 4 TV 'Dispatches' programme - which looks at the views and tactics of extreme Christian groups in Britain. See: A fundamental problem?
LONGING FOR A LOST PAST

Bishop Michael Nazir Ali - who is all over the media this morning - seems to have become spokesperson-in-chief for a Christendom vision of society. His main article appears in a new monthly called Standpoint. I fear that it is an essentially backward looking approach, and will succeed mainly in alienating more people from Christianity, ironically. There's an overview here, and I have made my own brief comment on behalf of Ekklesia, as follows: "It is misguided to try to defend the myth of a ‘Christian nation’ rather than looking at how Christianity has often historically lost its way by becoming a cosy part of a withering social, political and cultural order.

“There are indeed serious issues about moral cohesion in modern, plural societies. But diversity and disagreement cannot be wished away, and a vision of social justice and responsibility will not be created by lecturing people, seeking to restore Christian privilege, portraying Islam as the new threat, or bemoaning the loss of a monoculture."

"The churches need to be seen as small-scale communities of positive hope, not wounded dinosaurs complaining that people do not take them seriously any more and that the country is going to the dogs.”

When I worked for Churches Together in Britain and Ireland I sat alongside Bishop Michael on a theological commission for a couple of years. I also interviewed him not long after he came here from Pakistan to take up the general secretaryship of CMS. I've always had high personal regard for him, but I confess that I'm surprised and disappointed by how far he seems to have lurched to the right in recent months and years. His views always used to be on the conservative side, but thoughtfully so. Since the Canterbury debacle, however, he appears to have been increasingly marooned, and the outcome is not a happy one, unless you share a rather paranoid Daily Mail view of the world.

I have written more about this for The Guardian's Comment-is-Free. My piece should appear between 9-10am tomorrow.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

SPEECH ACTS

Here's a revised and re-published version of the reflection I referred to on 18 May: Hearing hope through the babble. Ekklesia, 27 May 08. Globalisation constructed as top-down control and the triumph of the powerful needs to be disrupted by a different and gentler logic, says Simon Barrow. But will we choose Pentecost or Babel?

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

WRITE OUT LOUD

"Myth does not mean something untrue, but a concentration of truth."

"If you travel with us, you will have to learn things you do not want to learn, in ways you do not want to learn them."

"I'm always astounded at the way we automatically look at what divides and separates us. We never look at what people have in common ... this is a disease of the mind, the way I see it."

"All kinds of thing go on in life that are not permitted in our philosophies."

"That is what learning is. You suddenly understand something you've understood all your life, but in a new way."

"What matters most is that we learn from living." -- Doris Lessing.
EXTRA ORDINARINESS

"These signs we call sacraments say to us that the power of the Holy is available to us not by way of magical rites but through the natural channels along which our energy flows for daily living; profound truths mediated through everyday deeds - taking, breaking, eating, drinking, washing and spilling." (Colin M. Morris)

Monday, May 26, 2008

WHEN CONVICTIONS COLLIDE

Here's a very good article by Stephen Heap, who coordinates chaplaincy services at the University of Bedfordshire, on how we negotiate uneven and sometimes deeply antagonistic base-level convictions in a plural society. The answer, he suggests, is to create the space to face one another, rather than to try to write 'the other' out of the script. The term he uses for this, with an awareness of its richness which is wholly lacking among many who merely use it as an anti-religious slogan (including some respondents to this article), is 'secular' -- which, as he points out, "does not mean a space where there are no claims to absolutes, but one where together we learn to face the undoubtedly real and disturbing conflicts our opposing claims create."

"It means a level of public discourse in which truth and truth claims are dealt with without ridicule but with a deep acknowledgment that we disagree, at times profoundly so, and yet somehow have to survive together on the same plot of land. Creating such properly secular spaces is a major challenge to which we must rise if our conflicting allegiances are not to tear us apart."

This is no woolly liberalism, though. Heap gives some concrete examples of ways in which Christians and others may find themselves strongly at odds with the social or legal consensus on issues like war and civil rights. The idea that religious convictions must always be discounted or subsumed to the interests of the state is as dangerous and unhelpful (to all concerned) as the idea that they can or should claim dominance or special privileges. Rightly handled, our disagreements keep us moving forward together. Wrongly handled, there is hell to pay.