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church gallery

Recently I was at a CreativeSydney debate. It was apart of Vivid and held at the Museum of Contemporary Art. The debate question was: Is Sydney pricing creativity out of the picture?

One of the concerns was the difficulty of obtaining studio and/or gallery space. Partly due to expense, location (many of the ‘places’ are concentrate in the city and displace artists from their communities), and even if you did have such a space no audience (Sydney: GO! VIEW! ART!)

Some of the solutions bandied about were: property owners loan your property/retail space to artists on temporary basis (artists promise they won’t become squatters and never leave); have local artists showcasing in their local communities, and pitching to their local community. Success doesn’t mean 2000 people coming to view your exhibition or piece. Aim to reach people on your street, your neighbours! The panelists in the debate even suggested that more churches need to be transformed into art space.

I thought this was a) a snide comment of the panels opinion that churches are a dying, they are wasted space, only being used on a Sunday and could serve local communities better than just preaching a sermon on Sundays! and b) a great encouragement to the endeavors our church and others like York St Anglican Church are doing with art!

York St recently had a festival in their church. Here is a snapshot comment from Jenny Ihn on using church space as an art space.

Unlike contemporary white gallery spaces, we did not have a space that primarily existed ‘for’ the Art. We had, if you like, a ‘historic space loaded with memories of the past’.

Read more of Jenny’s reflections here

church is made out of shipwrecks

humbled by this poem (and brilliant video).

Is this how you look out on you congregations and the world around you? “When he [Jesus] saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.”

Listener “Wooden Heart” from Nathan Corrona on Vimeo.

WOODEN HEART (sea of mist called skaidan)
We’re all born to broken people on their most honest day of living
and since that first breath… We’ll need grace that we’ve never given
I’ve been haunted by standard red devils and white ghosts
and it’s not only when these eyes are closed
these lies are ropes that I tie down in my stomach,
but they hold this ship together tossed like leaves in this weather
and my dreams are sails that I point towards my true north,
stretched thin over my rib bones, and pray that it gets better
but it won’t won’t, at least I don’t believe it will…
so I’ve built a wooden heart inside this iron ship,
to sail these blood red seas and find your coasts.
don’t let these waves wash away your hopes
this war-ship is sinking, and I still believe in anchors
pulling fist fulls of rotten wood from my heart, I still believe in saviors
but I know that we are all made out of shipwrecks, every single board
washed and bound like crooked teeth on these rocky shores
so come on and let’s wash each other with tears of joy and tears of grief
and fold our lives like crashing waves and run up on this beach
come on and sew us together, tattered rags stained forever
we only have what we rememberI am the barely living son of a woman and man who barely made it
but we’re making it taped together on borrowed crutches and new starts
we all have the same holes in our hearts…
everything falls apart at the exact same time
that it all comes together perfectly for the next step
but my fear is this prison… that I keep locked below the main deck
I keep a key under my pillow, it’s quiet and it’s hidden
and my hopes are weapons that I’m still learning how to use right
but they’re heavy and I’m awkward…always running out of fight
so I’ve carved a wooden heart, put it in this sinking ship
hoping it would help me float for just a few more weeks
because I am made out of shipwrecks, every twisted beam
lost and found like you and me scattered out on the sea
so come on let’s wash each other with tears of joy and tears of grief
and fold our lives like crashing waves and run up on this beach
come on and sew us together, just some tattered rags stained forever
we only have what we rememberMy throat it still tastes like house fire and salt water
I wear this tide like loose skin, rock me to sea
if we hold on tight we’ll hold each other together
and not just be some fools rushing to die in our sleep
all these machines will rust I promise, but we’ll still be electric
shocking each other back to life
Your hand in mine, my fingers in your veins connected
our bones grown together inside
our hands entwined, your fingers in my veins braided
our spines grown stronger in time
because are church is made out of shipwrecks
from every hull these rocks have claimed
but we pick ourselves up, and try and grow better through the change
so come on yall and let’s wash each other with tears of joy and tears of grief
and fold our lives like crashing waves and run up on this beach
come on and sew us together, were just tattered rags stained forever
we only have what we remember
credits from Wooden Heart Poems, released 06 July 2010

How to feed the 5000 (or slightly less)

The friendly folk at Petersham Baptist Church have created a cook book to help you cook for 60 to 100 people

the PBC Recipe Book has 26 recipes,and can be Downloaded in PDF format (204 kb).

Churches Caring

image from thenewsstar

Some churches in the USA celebrated “A Day of Caring”, by reaching out to those in need in their communities.  Margaret Croft, from The News-Star, reports that volunteers from five different Christian denominations gathered  to put together 500 “flood” buckets with emergency supplies for flood victims.

Bishop William W. Hutchinson said about the day: “It is our great hope that through this endeavor, United Methodists can show how much they care about their communities and want to be a ‘part of the solution’ in the elimination of poverty…”

Read the full article here

com·pas·sion| kəmˈpaSHən |

Repeatedly the gospels tell us (Matt. 14:14 Matt. 15:32  Matt. 20:34) that Jesus was motivated by compassion to love the crowds. This sort of compassion is costly and we see this in the character of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37) who when walking past the ‘neighbour’ lying in the ditch, “he saw him, he took pity on him”. Jesus, at the end of his story, tells the reader “Go and do likewise.” Today, that call for both compassion and action at a time of need remains the same.

It should be the hope of our churches to continually grow in our ability and capacity to creatively meet the real needs of locals and honouring God by loving our neighbourhoods as God has so lavishly and compassionately loves us.

  • Who is your neighbour?
  • What are their needs?
  • Where are the gaps that people are falling through?
  • How can you be of assistance where your weaker neighbours are falling through?
  • How can you offer mercy and lavish compassion?

Why mission week is worth doing?

This is a review of last year and why we will do it a third time in 2011.

Reaching Those We Know

Each year we have a goal at Church by the Bridge and in 2011 the goal is this: “Reaching Those We Know”

Challenge: Choose 3 people that you do know, and think how can you can reach them with the good news of Jesus “

Q How will you pray?
Q How will you love as Jesus loves?
Q How will you take every opportunity to speak about Jesus?

…all for the glory of God

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