Part 1 was published on 11th November 2022. From now on posts will not be numbered and will be more varied topic wise.
Wednesday, 15 January 2025
Tuesday, 14 January 2025
Part 362. A theological journey.
Sunday, 12 January 2025
Part 361. Love your neighbour is all the theology you need.
Friday, 10 January 2025
Part 360. Musical Chairs
Next week the Territorial Appointments Conference of the United Kingdom and Ireland Territory of The Salvation Army meets to decide on the disposition of commissioned officers and territorial envoys in 2025/26. There will be played out an odd game of musical chairs as there will be more seats that participants. Last year some corps became unofficered. Closures and mergers have happened. Will this trend continue?
The Salvationist this week published an article by a participant in the process of appointments:
"Divisional leaders have been asked to look where appointed leadership will have the most impact. I discern a greater sense of collaboration where corps and centres are in geographical proximity and are building on each other's strengths in a shared understanding of mission. Sometimes this is in a cluster and at other times within a local authority borough, so that the Army can speak into local issues with greater clarity and share resources."
I thought integration was a major policy decision anyway. Talk of collaboration, shared understanding and clusters is for me management-speak for more shared officers, mergers and closures. It is managed decline.
But is the cavalry riding to the rescue in the form of employed spiritual leaders? Such individuals will have contracts of employment and could be made redundant. Commissioned officers are not employed by the Army and cannot be made redundant, although they are subject to dismissal if they run foul of the Army's regulations. The iron fist in the iron glove. How these two classes of leaders will interact should prove interesting.
It looks as though there will be an increased emphasis placed on the role of local corps leaders who have been described in the Salvationist as having "stepped up" to take on more significant roles.
In the Church of England the resignation of the Archbishop of Canterbury has led to his work being undertaken mostly by the Archbishop of York and to a lesser degree the Bishop of London. The replacement will not be voted on until the latter end of 2025 and it is not a forgone conclusion that a decision will be made. The successful candidate must command a two thirds majority and given the current strife within the Church of England and the Anglican Communion a stalemate is a distinct possibility, particularly as a stalemate exists currently in the appointment of two diocesan bishops.
Tuesday, 7 January 2025
Part 359. Experiences of churches.
Many year ago I attended a theology course organised by the Church of England. The CofE is diverse, not only in its theology, but in the nature of its services. Course members were invited to visit CofE churches with different theology and churchmanship from the one we attended. We were asked to visit also churches of other denominations.
Thus it was that I stepped out one Sunday morning and attended a service at my local Salvation Army Corps' Citadel. The people were friendly, nearly all wore uniforms. We were regaled with singing by the choir (known as Songsters) and a piece by the brass band. The sermon was conservative evangelical in content. Hymns, choruses and prayers as well. Overall it was a typical evangelical hymn sandwich service, but not happy-clappy.
The following Sunday I ventured to the meeting room of the local Society of Friends. Basically an hour of silence; no music, no singing, no prayer. Time for contemplation. At the end of the hour two individuals shook hands to signify the termination of the proceedings. Tea and biscuits and polite conversation followed. A pleasant group of Quakers.
On the third Sunday I presented myself at the local Anglo-Catholic Church of England Mass. Greeted with a number of pieces of paper from which one was left to one's own devices to navigate the service content. Billowing incense and ringing bells as I expected. The priest's apparel was exotic. I half expected him to speak in Latin. It was different certainly to my experience of Prayer Book Holy Communion. The people were friendly but very few were from the immediate locality.
Some years later I began attending The Salvation Army meetings on a regular basis as I was impressed by the social work the Army engages in, although its evangelical stance grated somewhat. However more recently, as I went through a period of deconstruction and also dismay at the lack of inclusivity on sexual orientation matters, I decided to leave.
Where to go now? I dislike being isolated and seek fellowship with like-minded people. Possibly the Quakers are my best option?
Saturday, 4 January 2025
Part 358. Fellow travellers on the deconstruction road.
I am lucky. When I left my religious fellowship I retained my friendship with many of my former colleagues, but we do not discuss theological matters. I was fortunate to meet up with a local group, Radical Pilgrims, that is part of Progressive Christian Network Britain. The group meets monthly, is eclectic - and that is good for discussions on a variety of topics.
I find the Facebook Group The Lasting Supper most helpful in keeping me engaged with fellow deconstructionists.
I am at the stage where I have given up attempting to understand 'god'. My interest is in loving neighbours whether by helping at point of need or campaigning for social justice. Indeed I have pursued this path for many years, but now I am free of the shackles of bible inerrancy, doctrine, dogma and regulation. It is so liberating, yet there are times when I feel isolated and lonely and almost wish I could undo my deconstruction. Perhaps I am seeking comfort over challenge.
Friday, 3 January 2025
Part 357. More interesting articles.
Part 356. Known: Unknown
Wednesday, 1 January 2025
Part 355. Interesting short articles. Well, I think so.
Tuesday, 31 December 2024
Part 354. Action, not talk.
Part 353. Knowledge or mysticism or both or neither?
Sunday, 29 December 2024
Part 352. I have been banned by SENTRY: yippee
Friday, 27 December 2024
Part 351. Just musing.
Monday, 23 December 2024
Part 350. What will 2025 bring?
2024 has been a turbulent year in the Church of England. The Living in Love and Faith (LLF) process continues to meander through General Synod. The conservative evangelicals are pushing hard for an additional province loyal to their interpretation of scripture and doctrine. In the event (likely) of failure will disaffected Anglicans flounce off in schism? The resignation (so far) of the Archbishop of Canterbury (others to follow?) over the appalling failures of safeguarding may well slow the LLF process. The next meeting of General Synod could be explosive.
The Salvation Army in the UK & Ireland territory has witnessed a growing demand for full inclusion regardless of sexuality. 2025 is the year when decisions will have to be made, do nothing, embrace full inclusion or produce a fudge. There have been questionnaires, conferences, discussions, meetings and the point has been reached where kicking the can down the road no longer is appropriate. At least one hopes this is the case.
I think it is fair to state that organisations seeking to alleviate poverty at point of need and/or promoting systemic change to challenge its causes are not enamoured by the Labour government elected in 2024. In some respects the government has made the position worse. I intend in the coming year to continue posting on poverty issues. Followers of Jesus demand social justice for the have-nots of society.
On a positive note, the government has indicated its intention to introduce legislation banning conversion therapy.
Part 349. God in us
Friday, 20 December 2024
Part 348. It's all in the mind, isn't it?
My journey of deconstruction has led me to the conclusion that there is no objective truth. Concepts such as morality, natural law, divine law, and human rights are not of metaphysical origin: they are creations of the human mind. We may choose to to live a life of love, of kindness, of humility, of caring. We my choose to support and campaign for concepts of human rights and social justice. However, we should not delude ourselves into believing that such concepts are the creation of an objective agency external to humanity. The temptation is to cloak such concepts with a veneer of objectivity or universality: of being god given, or an element of a natural order.
What matters are the choices we make. My choice is to try to follow and promote the concepts of love and justice attributed to Jesus. It doesn't matter who Jesus was, it is the ideas ascribed to him that matter.
Tuesday, 17 December 2024
Part 347. How did I deconstruct?
It was not my intention at the outset to deconstruct my beliefs. Nevertheless it happened. Three main elements in the process were:
* Seeking to understand the bible. The conclusion I drew was that the bible is not the inerrant word of God, nor were its authors inspired from God. Attempting to understand the context in which the authors wrote I sought to interpret the underlying concepts contained in the text. Finally I came the conclusion that I would apply the ideas of the postmodernist Jacques Derrida, namely that words mean what the reader or listener takes them to mean.
* Defining god. I came to the view that it is an impossible, indeed pointless, task to define god. Whatever god may be in our minds it is beyond our comprehension, beyond metaphor, beyond symbolism and most certainly beyond anthropomorphism. When we pray, to what are we praying? To ourselves, to our personal concept of god telling us what to do?
* Following the message of Jesus. We can each discern concepts and their application found in the teaching of Jesus as set out in the synoptic gospels. It doesn't matter if Jesus was an actual person, or a myth, the texts being written many years after the concepts were formulated. What does matter is the overriding concept of love for all, for justice, for preferential treatment for the poor, marginalised and discriminated against. It is a powerful message that does not need support by any claim of supernatural origin.
Each person comes to their conclusions on the meaning of scripture, god and Jesus. There is no right or wrong interpretation and we should not presume to claim to have the correct understanding, nor should we seek to influence others with disparaging comments, nor by flaunting an air of superiority, nor by being arrogant.
Thursday, 12 December 2024
Part 346. Tackling poverty.
Wednesday, 11 December 2024
Part 345. Inherited poverty and homelessness. The Big Issue.
Part 344. The way it is.
Tuesday, 10 December 2024
Part 343. Action is the antidote to despair.
Sunday, 8 December 2024
Part 342. Love your neighbour: duty of care
I am of an age when the inescapable reality of one's mortality sinks in. It is inevitable: I accept it with equanimity. Friends and colleagues have died and my time will come. My belief is that death is the end, no after-life in heaven or hell. So, I do not order my life in order to secure a passport to heaven. I refuse to accept the blandishments of purveyors of the concepts of metaphysical theology, doctrine or creeds.
Instead, I seek to follow the teaching ascribed to Jesus encapsulated in the command to love your neighbour as yourself. Loving your neighbour is inclusive: no exceptions. It does not recognise boundaries. All fall within its remit. Furthermore it is not limited to supporting people at the point of need. It extends to seeking the sweeping away of the causes of oppression, exclusion, marginalisation and poverty. It is a demand for systemic change to achieve social justice.
Systemic change involves challenging those with the power to effect change: politicians, church leaders, business leaders. Such challenges are a threat to the established order and are likely to be opposed vigorously. It shifts the balance between the haves and have-nots. Any shift towards social justice requires extension of the concept of duty of care.
This will be the subject of later posts. Here is an example to be going on with, hopefully to whet your appetite. In the UK thousands of families live in destitution. Previous posts have referred to reports on this situation. The demand should be that families are lifted out of destitution and the way of achieving this is for the state to owe such families a duty of care to ensure their lot is improved. It would require legislation to impose a duty on government to achieve this objective. The extent of such a duty and its enforcement would be delineated by the legislation.
Wednesday, 4 December 2024
Part 341. A paradigm shift
Monday, 2 December 2024
Part 340. Future posts
My posts 332 to 339 summarise my current theological thinking. I have nothing further to add and have no desire to engage in repetition. This is my final post on theology, for the time being, Future posts will concern the ongoing battle for equality within The Salvation Army and the disputation within the Church of England over Living in Love and Faith.
I intend to post on the subject of the interrelationship of politics, economics, law and sociology in the context of social justice issues.
Saturday, 30 November 2024
Part 339. Faith and certainty
In Hebrews 11:1 we read:
Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. Revised Standard Edition.
Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see, New International Version
The fundamental fact of existence is that this trust in God, this faith, is the firm foundation under everything that makes life worth living. The Message
Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. King James
So, what is it that is hoped for and how certain can we be that our hope will be realised? Or not? I will write only from my point of view. My starting point is that I do not believe in an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, metaphysical or anthropomorphic god. Nor do I believe in being consigned to heaven or hell when I die. Therefore I do not need to conduct my life in such a way as to ensure I realise my hope, indeed the certainty, of reaching god in heaven.
I surmise that Jesus articulated a set of ideals to be acted upon and that evidence of this is to be found in the synoptic gospels. These documents are not to be taken literally but as an expression of a way of thinking and living. They express the need for love, for helping the poor and marginalised in our society and the imperative of action to achieve change. My hope is that by our deeds we shall see loving our neighbour in action, both in terms of assisting individuals at point of need and systemic change to achieve social justice.