Electing Trustees, Eating Georgeous Lunches, Talking and Listening.
February 28, 2007 by Graham Doel
Filed under Church
Tucking into a toasted Panini filled with Spinach, Bacon and Brie gave me an opportunity to reflect on a busy couple of days. I’ve spent yesterday tucked into an airless room devoid of natural light. That aside it was an inspiring, invigorating and challenging day.
Monday I travelled down to London to stay over at my brothers (he is now vicar of St. Marks and St. Luke’s in Deptford), the train journey takes a while from Morecambe to London but it is a good opportunity to sit and catch up on things that need time. This time I edited a chapter of my friends book (more of that another time). It was nice to see Steve and their new house (I didn’t see Jenny and the kids until the morning). The house has obviously under gone a major transformation since he posted some pics on his blog. Catching up with Steve and co. was an added bonus, the real reason for my trek down to London was to go to what is rather grandly called “The BMS Council of Reference“.
When I think about B.M.S. (the Baptist Missionary Society to the uninitiated) I get both excited and nervous. I get excited because of the fantastic stuff they do all over the world. I get nervous because of the scale of the organisation, and its resources. I’m sure you know what I mean, big organisations sometimes exist in their own big organisation vacuum and the need to control the message of the organisation takes away its spontaneity and personality.
One of the things I love about B.M.S. is that the team that the trustees have running the charity are forward thinking and much more familiar with their post-modern landscape than their official speeches and documents lead you to believe. Another great thing is that the five strategic themes that influence their practice echo the life and ministry of Jesus. “OK Gray cut the blither.” I hear you saying.
The council of reference exists to:
- Appoint Trustees.
- Eat delicious lunches.
- Feed back to the Trustees how the churches in our area are perceiving the work and life of the charity.
To my surprise it does seem to work! We are particularly good at doing the first two things, and the trustees and senior staff are very good at listening to the discussions. They appear to hear what is said and include it in their discussions about the future.
I have been paying a fair amount of attention to the B.M.S. since I moved to Morecambe and one of the things I have noticed is that they are a progressive organisation. They are:
- Influenced by the best of the current trends in Missiology.
- Changing as an organisation away from the western “we know best” approach of the past.
- Allowing themselves to be influenced by the needs of the churches that provide their income.
One of the most interesting things I heard today was about their work in India. They have significantly changed their approach and have noticed that the best missionary practice is happening on the fringes of the organised church. Indigenous people are training others and releasing them into mission among their peers. The really great news is that B.M.S. are directing some cash at supporting those indigenous mission projects. It’s FANTASTIC! I am particularly interested in this subject because from my limited observations I think that the best Missionary practice in Britain is happening on the margins of the church.
I am left with two particular questions as I return home:
- Although the organisation is influenced by current Missiological and Theological trends, how much space is created for them to think Missiologically and develop in their thinking beyond being influenced by the current tends? There is a training section called “The International Missions College” which does a great job of preparing individuals for cross cultural mission. It’s not intended to be an academic institution but does it create space for thinking and writing rather than mere reaction?
- B.M.S. are taking more people from non Baptist backgrounds as missionaries and volunteers, I wonder how those churches are represented within the structures. The church up the road from us (Carnforth Free Methodist Church) have released one of their members to serve with B.M.S. I wonder if those who stand outside our peculiarly Baptist structures but have a significant investment in the Society have any way of feeding back into the organisation.
Phew, what a relief!
February 14, 2007 by Graham Doel
Filed under Church
Peter (The Changing Rooms Reverend) and I have been involved in a project connected with the “Incarnate Network“. The Incarnate Network is a the first time within the Baptist sphere people who are involved in church planting have had the opportunity to network. In my spare time (mmm…), I have been involved with developing the web site. It has caused me some headaches and some very early mornings (I’m not good at late nights).
Today we sent out an e.mail to every one we can think of within and outside of the denomination that might be interested in church planting inviting them to visit the web site and participate in the Network. Hooray! it feels like we have reached a milestone. If you’re interested pop over to the site and have a nose. Suggestions are always welcome.
For the record the site is built round some ace open source software.
- Joomla powers the site.
- OpenWordPress powers the podcasts.
- Community Builder provides the social networking aspects.
- YANC provides the mailing.
- Joomlaboard provides the discussion forums.
The site is hosted on its own dedicated server, so it should never fall over (mmm… we will see!).
I’ve made the switch!
February 11, 2007 by Graham Doel
Filed under Computers
Windows annoys me. The longer you have it installed the slower it goes. It costs a fortune, is difficult to reinstall and has loads of programs that also cost a fortune.
For the last year I have been intentionally switching to programs that are designed to be cross platform (ie you can use them on Windows, Linux or Mac) so that next time my computer needs upgrading I can migrate away from Windows. All these programs are free because they are developed by a community of people rather than owned by a company to make a profit (people do make a profit from them, but that is another story). My three favourites are:
- OpenOffice: A complete office suite that is Microsoft Office Compatible. It does have some minor incompatibilities but I have been using it for over 5 years with no real problems.
- Thunderbird: Thunderbird does e.mail.
- Firefox: Firefox is a web browser.
There are others that I use, but more about those another time. So faced with a slow computer, and in need of a job to keep my mind active I backed up, formatted my hard drive and installed Ubuntu (more from wikipedia, take a peek).
I have played with Ubuntu before, it is installed on Isaac and Alice’s computer and it runs fine. It is free and well supported. Above all it works. I installed it on their computer and never had any problems. However, when I installed it on my laptop I have had two problems.
- I can’t get the wireless network to work (neither can my friend Matt for that matter). I think it is because the card defaults to off and for some reason won’t turn on. I will solve the problem by buying an external wireless card. However, for now I have a wire trailing accross the living room floor, at least it got me to finally wire up the network wires I installed when I rewired.
- The DNS settings seem to (for no apparent reason) reset themselves. I think I have found a fix here, but time will tell.

