Posts filed under 'Resources'

Journey home

We are now safely back in the UK, after a wonderful journey by train from Zambia to Tanzania. It was a great way to see more of both countries – and it is amazing how fast time goes when you can just sit and watch the world go by! We’ve uploaded a few photo’s to our flickr pages – which are also inserted as a slide show below. Looking forward to settling into UK life once our heads and bodies recover from the journey!

See the photo’s in full on our flickr pages.

Add comment 25 September, 2007

MCZ Copperbelt launch

Micah Challenge Zambia is now embarking on a series of provincial launches across the country, and this week saw the Copperbelt provincial launch take place in Kitwe. We were joined by Joel Edwards of the EA UK and Andy Clasper of Micah Challenge UK, as well as the District Commissioner for Kitwe representing the Minister for the Copperbelt. The national media covered the story, but dwelt more on what the Minister ’said’ even though he wasn’t even there in person… but any coverage is better than none!

We’ve uploaded a few photo’s that you can see on our flickr pages.

District Commissioner & guard

Add comment 30 August, 2007

Cultural viewing?

Now we don’t own a TV – but plenty of people (especially in urban areas) do, and so Zambia has just as many TV-addicts as elsewhere in the world. So in a spirit of cultural exchange I thought that you may be wondering what most Zambians like watching? We’ve talked about the perils of ‘exporting the empire’ a few times on this blog and TV schedules in Zambia are far from immune, but even bearing that in mind it may still be a bit of a surprise to know that some of the most popular TV programmes in Zambia are from World Wrestling Entertainment (what used to be known as WWF). We are pretty sure that the afternoon service at the church we go to was rescheduled so it wouldn’t interfere with the Sunday afternoon wrestling programme… if you have broadband and want to get a glimpse of what you may or may not be missing out on click here.

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Add comment 13 August, 2007

How to get your own website

I’ve been thinking of writing a post about how to set-up your own WordPress.com website for a while (that is the software and hosting we use for this site) – it is so easy, free and whilst being simple also has some fairly advanced stuff too. It is also Opensource which makes it even better in my view. However, I no longer need to write a post about it as Dave Walker has – more specifically he explains how to set up a church website, but it’d work for a personal blog, family website or any website! Here is the guide and here is the example ‘church website’. 

Add comment 13 August, 2007

Exiles by Michael Frost

Over the past 4 or 5 months we have both been reading Exiles: Living Missionally in a Post-Christian Culture by Michael Frost – another good book that we’d recommend. In a nutshell the book explores ways of being church, or communitas, in a post-Christendom western-culture dominated by consumerism, isolation and indifference, where the church too often harks back to the ‘good old days’.

Frost talks of ‘exiles’ that have left ‘the church’ out of frustration and boredom and are heading out into what he calls the third places of their communities instead (the 1st place being our home, the 2nd our work, and the 3rd, increasingly in the West, often being bars/cafes or I think they could be social/interest groups, yet for Christians the 3rd place is usually restricted to ‘church’):

“Exiles have figured out that churches don’t value people who won’t turn up for every meeting, attend every event, and locate all their significant friendships within the congregation. They have decided to slip away from the ever-spiralling vortex of so-called Christian fellowship. It sucks you in demanding everything of you, leaving you completely socially disconnected from your neighbours, your community. And it won’t be appeased by a half-hearted allegiance. It demands your all, always… Exiles, having read the dangerous stories of Jesus, have decided that the best way to do the Lord’s work is to follow him out into the third places in their community.”

The strongest theme of the book for us explored what it would mean for these exiles to live missionally in a host empire. Frost advocates the ideas of communitas – an intense community spirit, the feeling of great social equality, solidarity, and togetherness – and liminality as ways forward. Alan Hirsch (who co-wrote The Shaping of Things to Come with Micahel Frost, and whose book The Forgotten Ways apparently explores these ideas further) says:

“…the related ideas of liminality and communitas describe the dynamics of the Christian community inspired to overcome their instincts to “huddle and cuddle” and to instead form themselves around a common mission that calls them on a dangerous journey to unknown places – a mission that calls the church to shake off it’s collective securities and to plunge into the world of action, where its members will experience disorientation and marginalization but also where they encounter God and each other in a new way”

The first two sections of Exiles (Dangerous Memories and Dangerous Promises) are the strongest, but later, in the final part (Dangerous Songs), Frost also helpfully tackles the issues of ‘Exiles at the Altar’, speaking out against what can probably be best summed up by the ‘My Jesus, My Boyfriend’ phenomenon of modern worship, and questions the modern church service in a broader context.

Exiles is a book well worth exploring – especially for those wanting to journey into church at the edge and explore emerging ideas of being missional in a post-Christendom culture.

Add comment 29 June, 2007

Bombs by Faithless – action trick

Action TricksI came across the video for Bombs by Faithless months ago and keep forgetting to blog about it. The video and song would be a great tool for a creative look at injustice and the world – it would work well for a church service talk or reflective meditation. The images and lyrics talk of a world in pain, oppression and violence – where, ‘one man’s loss is another man’s gain’. It is pretty self-explanatory really and open to all sorts of uses.

You can watch and download the video here on the green.tv website – which incidentally has loads of ‘green minded’ videos. We’ve also added it to our vod:pod along with a few other videos we like - you can explore them all here.

So much heaven, so much hell. So much love, so much pain. So much more than I thought this world could ever contain. So much war, so much soul, one man’s loss, one man’s goal. So much more than I thought this world could ever hold… We’re just children, we’re just dust, we are small, we are lost, and we are nothing at all… nothing at all.

Lyrics to Bombs by Faithless

Add comment 21 June, 2007

The hidden CMS

Last year we mentioned that we had written about why we chose to work through CMS for a new Lonely Planet book on volunteering. We explained that one of the main attractions to CMS for us was that ‘it is an organisation not afraid of change, open to experimenting with the new and drawing on the past’.

Recently while reading a summary of ways CMS is investing in new forms of mission and experimentation, it reminded me of a related thing we respect CMS for – the way they often work without anyone knowing about it and/or without heavy branding. Their approach refreshingly lacks a style of language that says ‘you must do mission our way’ or ‘support this particular programme we control’. Obviously this must cause tensions with the marketing guys, but to me it makes it much more authentic and effective than what a lot of organisations pump out.

However, one drawback of this style is that it is hard sometimes to know exactly what CMS is actually doing – so when I was reading recently Jonny Baker’s summary, in response to a separate discussion, where he talks about many of the things CMS are experimenting and investing in, and which indicate their style and approach, I wanted to highlight it – you can read it here.

By the way… it seems that the Lonely Planet book has now been published – I’ve no idea if we are now in print or not, but if next time you’re in a bookshop and you see a new Lonely Planet title called Volunteer: A Traveller’s Guide to Making a Difference Around the World have a look and let us know!

Add comment 19 June, 2007

Audiomission podcast

This month we have made it onto the CMS Audiomission podcast.

Issue 16 – April 2007 is called ‘Dare to be salt and light’ and is based on an interview we did at CMS whilst in the UK in January. Despite many of the programme details we talk about having changed – and the fact that we were exhausted when we did the interview and didn’t think they’d be able to use it at all – they have mixed it well and, though we sound tired, the end result seems alright!

If you have good connection you can listen to it using the player below – just click on the play button below – or you can download the MP3 file here.

Add comment 24 April, 2007

Crucial connection

DSCF0500

Hooray! Polly has finished her dissertation. The past three months have seen Polly busy researching and writing her long put off dissertation, which is part of her Masters in Education for Sustainability. She has been looking at aspects of participation and what is locally relevant with an eye to helping community projects empower local people. She battled with power cuts and a laptop that broke halfway through… but still managed to finish by the deadline… all ready to email it on Monday…. but when it came to email it, for the first time ever, we experienced a (temporary) breakdown of internet services in Ndola! Not just at the office but every internet café in town could not get online. But nothing could dampen her spirits… the hard slog is over!

Add comment 16 April, 2007

Easter e-card – New Life*

Alex4

As I was thinking about Easter… the pain and suffering of the events of Holy week as Jesus was condemned to death – and then the new life we celebrate in the resurrection of Jesus – I reflected on what that ‘new life’ really means… and so I thought of Alex in the photo above.

I met Alex last week – he lives in a rural part of north western Zambia and is HIV+. He has known great suffering. Having discovered he was HIV+ 8 years ago… he was condemned to death… but then four years ago he was able to start taking Anti-Retroviral drugs that would transform his life…

Alex knows what new life is… he lives and breathes it every new day.

This Easter may you know the joy of new life

Matt & Polly

If you can’t see the image above clearly – click here.

Photo: Alex is happy for us to identify him as HIV+ and is pictured here holding his Anti-Retroviral drugs. He is married with one daughter and lives in a rural community where health facilities are still very limited – he is the chairperson for the constituency committee for action on HIV created at a Jubilee Centre led workshop last week. The words are those of Jesus from John 10:10.

 

1 comment 5 April, 2007

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