A Johannesburg sunset! I'll miss Jozi... Here's the annoucnement about our future ministry.
The wonder of Christ's resurrection has such rich and blessed consequences for us all! I shall be preaching about these tonight at Bryanston Methodist Church (my second last service at BMC).
Of course we know that we can trust His promise that our sins are forgiven, we can know with certainty that we share in His gift of eternal life, and we can have the joy or participating with Him in sharing the gift of newness of life with others. What could be more blessed than knowing that we have true life, that this true and blessed life is intended to get better and last for eternity, and that we have a purpose in life - not only to be blessed, but to find ways of bringing blessing to others! It makes life worth living!
A quick not about the photograph in this picture. Yesterday we had a 'family event' in Johannesburg. Megie's cousins, aunts and uncles, all came together. There were 30 adults and a horde of children. It was wonderful to be together as a family! We caught up with people we should never have lost touch with, and we also had a chance to say our good bye's. This picture was taken from the porch of cousing Jackie's house in Northcliff - I shall miss to Jozi skyline! Although, I do look forward to living on the slopes of the Helderberg mountains with a sea view of False Bay in just over a week! Cape Town (well, Somerset West), here we come!!
The theme of 'new beginnings' runs throughout the Easter message. Easter was a new beginning for our Lord, it was a new beginning for his disciples, and of course it meant a new beginning for all of history and creation!
The Forster family (Megan, Courtney, Liam and I) are also facing a new beginning in just over a week's time! On Thursday this coming week Biddulphs removals will be coming to pack up our belongings. I have a wedding at St Stithians school in Johannesburg on Saturday, on Sunday I shall preach my final sermon at Bryanston, and then my good friend Pete Grassow (an absolute SAINT of God) will be arriving on a 5pm flight to drive to Cape Town in my car (Megie, Courtney and Liam will be in convoy with us in Megie's car) - as an aside, I cannot tell you what friendships such as those with Pete mean to me! It was a real concern to know that we have two cars to get to Cape Town, and I am still on crutches unable to drive (although I have driven to the office this last week - but that is just one gear change (500meters)). How wonderful to know that we have friends such as these! Thank you Pete!
So, what are we heading for in Cape Town? Well, here's a copy of the email that we sent to the Methodist Ministers email list. It explains it all:
First, let me wish all of you Christ's richest blessing this Easter. I pray that your Church's services, and other ministries, will be filled with depth and that many will come to know the love and blessing of our saviour through your ministry during this season of Christ's passion.Second, I wanted to write a brief note to express my gratitude to the MCSA and EMMU, and share some news about my own ministry going forward.
Some of you may have heard that I am moving from John Wesley College and the Education for Ministry and Mission Unit at the end of this month (March). My moving is a matter of choice, and is motivated by a sense of calling to move in a new direction in ministry. The move has been in the pipeline for about two years now. However, the decision to move was made in December last year. I have not been able to talk about up to this point since the pastoral commission for secondment
first had to run its course. That is done, and so here is some news.I have had the privilege of serving our Church as the dean of our seminary for the last 4 and a bit years. This has been a time of incredible growth and learning for me and I am grateful to the Church for trusting me with the responsibility of forming our student ministers. I pray that I have left some small (positive) mark on the
lives and ministries of a few of those wonderful servants. I have many fond memories of my ministry in EMMU, and of course as with any position, there have also been some struggles and hardships. I wish the Unit and the Church every blessing and success with the new Seth Mokitimi seminary, and trust that we will go from strength to strength as we train our ministers for effective, Christ led, Spirit empowered, ministry in Southern Africa. I am grateful to Neville Richardson, Dix
Sibeko, Ruth Jonas, Mantso Matsepe, Victor Tshangela, Charmaine Morgan, and Sidwell Mokgothu - each of them has been a blessing to our Church, and a great encouragement to me, over the past 4 years. The small team that makes up the full-time EMMU staff does an incredible amount of work under fairly trying conditions. When one considers that almost half of all of our active ministers in the MCSA are ministers in training, one can begin to understand the importance of
this critical task within our Church's ministry.I must also express my thanks to the clergy and members of the Bryanston Methodist Church where I have been a member, and had the joy of preaching (almost weekly), for the past four years. I shall so miss BMC - it has been a source of incredible blessing and growth. It truly is one of the remarkable Churches in our denomination. We have much to be proud of!
From the 7th of April I shall be starting a new chapter in my own ministry - I will be working with the International Transformation Network (and particularly closely with my friend Graham Power, a Methodist lay person who has developed a remarkable ministry in recent years) based in Cape Town. My ministry will entail working in three primary areas:
1. Working among business and government leaders throughout the world, "building prototypes of transformation in government, education, business, communities, cities and nations across the world." - http://www.itnafrica.com/
2. With Church leaders and among local Churches in Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Europe in the Global Day of Prayer, helping to foster prayer based ecumenical transformation and healing. Specifically helping the GDOP to further transition from a single day event towards an ongoing process of healing and transformation (i.e., helping to capitalize on the relationships and co-operation in communities, that arise from planning the single day prayer event, to set up community based projects that address the greatest needs in that context,
particularly focussing on projects that bring about healing and transformation such as HIV / AIDS work, economic empowerment and development, reconciliation, etc. - http://www.globaldayofprayer.com/3. Assisting in the facilitation, and participating in the run up to the next Lausanne Conference on World Evangelism and Mission that is to take place in Cape Town in 2010 - http://www.lausanne.org/ This is the third time that this conference has met since 1974, (first in Lausanne in 1974, then in Manilla in 1989, and next in Cape Town in 2010).
Together with this I shall also continue to write (please keep your eyes and ears open for two very exciting books that Wessel Bentley and I have worked on that will be launched by SYNOD this year!) The first book is a challenging theology of Wesleyan and Methodist Mission (among the authors are Dr Stanley Mogoba, Bp Gavin Taylor, Rev KK Ketshabile, Rev Kevin Light, Rev Gcobani Vika, Prof Joan Millard (Jackson), Rev Peter Grassow, Dr Sol Jacob, and myself...) Second we
have a book that seeks to address some of the 'hot topics' of our context such as the same sex debate, issues of women and feminism, lay ministries, issues of the environment, youth, African interpretations of scripture, leadership and succession in the Church, creative approaches to worship, mission and postmodernism... (among the authors are Rev Mantso Matsepe, Dr Wessel Bentley, Rev Ruth Jonas, Rev Debbie van de Laar, Rev Mogomotsi Diutwileng, Rev John van de Laar, Rev Madika Sibeko, Rev Sox Leleki, Rev Kevin Light, and myself...). We hope that both these books will be available by SYNOD this year! So please do keep a lookout for these great books by our own ministers and theologians! It is my intention to continue with such projects that will enrich our denomination and scholarship in Southern African Christianity. Please keep an eye on my website http://www.spirituality.org.za (see the 'books and resources' section) for information on future publications.Please could I ask you to keep the Unit, the College, and our family in your prayers as we face the changes that lie ahead?
So, that's our exciting news! I can't tell you how excited we are about the ministry opportunities that lie ahead! I asked to be released to do this ministry two years ago and was not given the freedom to do so. Now, at last, the time has come! It will mean a fair amount of travel (throughout South Africa, Africa, and the world). I start with a trip to Israel in May. Please could you pray for my healing and swift recovery! I need to be able to walk without crutches by then!
As for Megie, Courts, (and of course Liam) they are so excited about the move back to Somerset West. Somerset West is a very special place for us - not only is it the city in which Courtney was born, it was also our home for 6 years when I was a minister at Coronation Ave Methodist Church. We have many close friends in that area, and many wonderful memories of our time there. We shall be renting a house to start with (even though we own a small town-house in Somerset West), and then depending on how our finances work out we would love to be able to buy a more suitable family home.
So! That's our news! It is incredibly exciting and a most incredible opportunity! Thanks for your patience!
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