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Friday
Jan162009

Why are you 'in the world'?

This is of course a very complex question! But, here are two wonderful general inputs towards discovering that purpose:

I am in the world to change the world. - Muriel Rukeyser, American poet and political activist (1913-1980).

And, here's another lovely quote from Scripture - perhaps we can all be part of God's 'new thing'?

I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. - Isaiah 43:19

Both come from the wonderful daily reflection from Sojourners called 'Verse and Voice'.

Thursday
Jan152009

Leaving on a jet plane

We're on our way to Plettenberg Bay from Cape Town to spend two days on team building and retreat with the Global Day of Prayer team. Please spare a prayer for us. We have a lot of critical planning for this important year!

In this picture, Graham Power and myself.

Blessings,

Dion
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Wednesday
Jan142009

For peace in the world...

Today I fasted and took time to pray for the people of Zimbabwe, for the suffering inflicted upon those who live in North Korea, for those whose lives are destroyed by war in the Democratic republic of the Congo, and for those who are being murdered in Gaza...

I find this simple discipline to be immensely helpful.


It was my birthday, but I thought that it would be a very small sacrifice to give up food and be reminded that not everyone lives in peace, experiences the blessing of love, and has freedom and joy. This reminder spurred me to pray for an end to war, hatred, abuse and the pain caused by bad religion and worse politics. I broke my fast this evening in a family meal (having fasted from before dinner last night) - it was special to be with my family and to experience their love.

Let us never forget that Christ is called the 'Prince of Peace', and that he pronounced blessing upon those who are peacemakers, saying that they shall bear the likeness of God.

And I heard a loud voice form the throne saying, "See, the home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them; he will wipe every tear from their eyes. Death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no more."

- Revelation 21:3-4

Thanks for the many wishes and kind words. I'm another day older, and thankfully not deeper in debt!

Monday
Jan122009

Join Desmond Tutu for a once a week fast for Zimbabwe

As many of you would know, Megan and started to fast once a week (two years ago when our son Liam was born).  It has been a significant spiritual discipline.  I am quite 'strict' about it (even if I'm invited to a function, a client event, or out for lunch etc., I still adhere to my fast).  It has reminded me of a number of things.


1.  I discovered that I was much more hungry for food than I was for God... I would plan my days around meals, but I would often skip my prayer time because I was too busy.  It's sad, but it's a reality for many Christians!  So, fasting helps me to prioritize my spiritual life and my devotion to Christ.  Whenever I feel hungry on my fast day it remind me to pray and engage in acts of mercy.

2.  It reminds me that there are many people in the world who do not have the luxury to choose when to eat and when not to eat.  In my own country, South Africa, 17% of our population subsist on less than US$1 a day, and 38% on less than US$2 a day - in fact more than half are regarded as poor and impoverished.  This one day of fasting gives me a great deal of compassion (helping me to understand in just a very, very insignificant and small way what others experience daily...).  Compassion is different from pity... Pity separates people, compassion joins them.

3.  For Megan and I, in particular, it reminds us to pray earnestly for sick Children, suffering children, and families who struggle with loss, illness, and other challenges.

Here, however, is a challenge to join Bishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu in fasting in solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe.  My encouragement is to link your fasting to prayer and acts of mercy.  On your fast day set aside your meal times to pray and also set aside the money (or food) you would have consumed to bless someone else.

Here's the story:

JOHANNESBURG, Jan 11 (Reuters) - South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu has called on all South Africans to join his weekly fasting in protest at the humanitarian crisis in neighbouring Zimbabwe, the 702 radio station reported on Sunday.

The 78-year-old Anglican archbishop said he had been fasting once a week in solidarity with the hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans facing food shortages and a cholera outbreak.

"If we would have more people saying 'I will fast' maybe one day a week, just to identify myself with my sisters and brothers in Zimbabwe," the radio station quoted him as saying.

Zimbabweans are suffering from hyper-inflation and severe food, fuel and foreign currency shortages. Cholera has killed more than 1,800 people. (Reporting by Agnieszka Flak; Editing by Charles Dick)  from http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSLB640138

Sunday
Jan112009

Back with a bang - peace from Africa

These wonderful paintings were my Christmas present from my loving wife, Megan. I absolutely love how they evoke elements of the peace, sense of belonging, and beauty of Southern African living. Thanks Megie!

Well, tomorrow it is back to work! It was Voltaire who said 'Work banishes those three great evils, boredom, vice, and poverty'. I am truly thankful for my work and ministry.

I'm starting with a bang. This week I'll be in Knysna for some strategic planning, then a Directors' stay over at Bergkroon just outside of Paarl, then off to Johannesburg for meetings with Heartlines, the 'For Good' campaign, Religious leaders forum and government around ethics, then off to speak at the Seth Mokitimi orientation at the University of Kwa Zulu Natal in Pietermartizburg. In the days between I shall savor every minute I have with my family. They are such a precious gift. My holiday seems over far too quickly, and it will certainly pull at my heart to leave them (even to go my office down the road, let alone elsewhere in the country!)

I have a few overseas trips on the cards for 2009, some new places (mainland China, Thailand) and some returning visits (England, Latin America, Hong Kong, Korea and possibly the US).

One thing I am sure of is that our Lord offers me courage and comfort to work for unity in the Church, influence change in society, mediate renewal in business perspectives, and push boundaries between persons who have entrenched themsleves in their corners of conviction (whether conservative, or liberal (like me)...) I understand the weaknesses of others because I am so prone to them myself. As Paul says in Phil 3:13, it's not that I have already attained these things, or been made perfect; but I forget what it behind and strain forward to take hold of the prize for which Christ Jesus has called me.

Thankfully, whenever I return to Africa I find blessing and peace with Megie, Courts and Liam. I am perhaps the most fortunate person alive! I have an incredible family, a remarkable and stimulating vocation, the a knowledge and love for the One who gives me all these things as a gift of grace.

2009 looks to be a good year! Please pray for. We have much to do, many demands to face, and a lot to learn.
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Sunday
Jan112009

E.T the alien on the way to Kleinmond

Just before the exit to Pringle Bay (after you've passed Betties Bay) if you look left you'll see E.T. in the field! He's been defined a bit over the years. When I first saw this E.T. Shaped rock a few years ago it only had eyes. Now the rock has eyes, a mouth and a body!

E.T. phone home!
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Friday
Jan092009

Cory Doctorow: Writing in the Age of Distraction

This is an exceptional article from one of my favourite bloggers, Cory Doctorow. He has written some of my favourite novels (see the links at the end of this post for more information). I have written about Cory's position on Creative Commons licensing a few times in the past, and the fact that he is the person who convinced me of the 'rightness' and value of giving away my work. As, I've mentioned on numerous occasions - I am in the fortunate position that my writing does not have to put food in my children's tummies! I realise this is not the case for every author, but in my case it applies. I write because I think about things and I find that there are not always others who think about the same things, or who think about them in the same way, or even if they do, there are few who process them like I do and even fewer who have the privilege of the years of education and training that I've benefited from. I am humbled to be able to give my books away. As always, you're welcome to download copies of 3 of my 6 books here - just follow the link and scroll about ahalf way down the page to find them (I own the rights for these three, the others are either joint ventures, or I wrote/edited them for the benefit of other individuals or organisations and so cannot give them away with as much freedom).

Right, that being said, Cory is one of the most remarkable writers and thinkers of our age! He represents a new generation of author, not the reclusive artist, but the engaged thinker. Like me he enjoys contact with people and systems - these stimulate his creative thinking, and when the stimuli can be managed so that they don't hinder to process of recording and crafting his thoughts, it leads to some of the most engaging, well researched, and cutting edge works on the internet....

That, however, is the key! If you're a busy person, and have a fairly short attention span and are prone to distraction (or procrastination!) then you need to garner some tools and cultivate some personal discipline to help you write. Thoughts are fleeting! However, when you can create enough time and space to process them and record them, they become enlightening and useful to yourself and others.

So, here's Cory's wonderful article from Locus Online about writing in an age of distraction.

Cory Doctorow: Writing in the Age of Distraction

from Locus Magazine, January 2009


We know that our readers are distracted and sometimes even overwhelmed by the myriad distractions that lie one click away on the Internet, but of course writers face the same glorious problem: the delirious world of information and communication and community that lurks behind your screen, one alt-tab away from your word-processor.

The single worst piece of writing advice I ever got was to stay away from the Internet because it would only waste my time and wouldn't help my writing. This advice was wrong creatively, professionally, artistically, and personally, but I know where the writer who doled it out was coming from. Every now and again, when I see a new website, game, or service, I sense the tug of an attention black hole: a time-sink that is just waiting to fill my every discretionary moment with distraction. As a co-parenting new father who writes at least a book per year, half-a-dozen columns a month, ten or more blog posts a day, plus assorted novellas and stories and speeches, I know just how short time can be and how dangerous distraction is.

But the Internet has been very good to me. It's informed my creativity and aesthetics, it's benefited me professionally and personally, and for every moment it steals, it gives back a hundred delights. I'd no sooner give it up than I'd give up fiction or any other pleasurable vice.

I think I've managed to balance things out through a few simple techniques that I've been refining for years. I still sometimes feel frazzled and info-whelmed, but that's rare. Most of the time, I'm on top of my workload and my muse. Here's how I do it:

  • Short, regular work schedule

    When I'm working on a story or novel, I set a modest daily goal — usually a page or two — and then I meet it every day, doing nothing else while I'm working on it. It's not plausible or desirable to try to get the world to go away for hours at a time, but it's entirely possible to make it all shut up for 20 minutes. Writing a page every day gets me more than a novel per year — do the math — and there's always 20 minutes to be found in a day, no matter what else is going on. Twenty minutes is a short enough interval that it can be claimed from a sleep or meal-break (though this shouldn't become a habit). The secret is to do it every day, weekends included, to keep the momentum going, and to allow your thoughts to wander to your next day's page between sessions. Try to find one or two vivid sensory details to work into the next page, or a bon mot, so that you've already got some material when you sit down at the keyboard.

  • Leave yourself a rough edge

    When you hit your daily word-goal, stop. Stop even if you're in the middle of a sentence. Especially if you're in the middle of a sentence. That way, when you sit down at the keyboard the next day, your first five or ten words are already ordained, so that you get a little push before you begin your work. Knitters leave a bit of yarn sticking out of the day's knitting so they know where to pick up the next day — they call it the "hint." Potters leave a rough edge on the wet clay before they wrap it in plastic for the night — it's hard to build on a smooth edge.

  • Don't research

    Researching isn't writing and vice-versa. When you come to a factual matter that you could google in a matter of seconds, don't. Don't give in and look up the length of the Brooklyn Bridge, the population of Rhode Island, or the distance to the Sun. That way lies distraction — an endless click-trance that will turn your 20 minutes of composing into a half-day's idyll through the web. Instead, do what journalists do: type "TK" where your fact should go, as in "The Brooklyn bridge, all TK feet of it, sailed into the air like a kite." "TK" appears in very few English words (the one I get tripped up on is "Atkins") so a quick search through your document for "TK" will tell you whether you have any fact-checking to do afterwards. And your editor and copyeditor will recognize it if you miss it and bring it to your attention.

  • Don't be ceremonious

    Forget advice about finding the right atmosphere to coax your muse into the room. Forget candles, music, silence, a good chair, a cigarette, or putting the kids to sleep. It's nice to have all your physical needs met before you write, but if you convince yourself that you can only write in a perfect world, you compound the problem of finding 20 free minutes with the problem of finding the right environment at the same time. When the time is available, just put fingers to keyboard and write. You can put up with noise/silence/kids/discomfort/hunger for 20 minutes.

  • Kill your word-processor

    Word, Google Office and OpenOffice all come with a bewildering array of typesetting and automation settings that you can play with forever. Forget it. All that stuff is distraction, and the last thing you want is your tool second-guessing you, "correcting" your spelling, criticizing your sentence structure, and so on. The programmers who wrote your word processor type all day long, every day, and they have the power to buy or acquire any tool they can imagine for entering text into a computer. They don't write their software with Word. They use a text-editor, like vi, Emacs, TextPad, BBEdit, Gedit, or any of a host of editors. These are some of the most venerable, reliable, powerful tools in the history of software (since they're at the core of all other software) and they have almost no distracting features — but they do have powerful search-and-replace functions. Best of all, the humble .txt file can be read by practically every application on your computer, can be pasted directly into an email, and can't transmit a virus.

  • Realtime communications tools are deadly

    The biggest impediment to concentration is your computer's ecosystem of interruption technologies: IM, email alerts, RSS alerts, Skype rings, etc. Anything that requires you to wait for a response, even subconsciously, occupies your attention. Anything that leaps up on your screen to announce something new, occupies your attention. The more you can train your friends and family to use email, message boards, and similar technologies that allow you to save up your conversation for planned sessions instead of demanding your attention right now helps you carve out your 20 minutes. By all means, schedule a chat — voice, text, or video — when it's needed, but leaving your IM running is like sitting down to work after hanging a giant "DISTRACT ME" sign over your desk, one that shines brightly enough to be seen by the entire world.

I don't claim to have invented these techniques, but they're the ones that have made the 21st century a good one for me.


Cory Doctorow's website is Craphound.com, and he is co-editor of Boing Boing: A Directory of Wonderful Things.
Previous Cory Doctorow columns posted on Locus Online:

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Friday
Jan092009

Not sure what scares me more... Stunning Pink, or their Video

This has to be one of the scariest advertisements I've EVER seen! Yikes, Stunning Pink...

What's worse, the product or their marketing department!? Both scare me a WHOLE LOT! Thanks to @prieurdp for the twitter...

Thursday
Jan082009

Eating where the whales hang out... good theology (not mine) and other blessings!

We went to Hermanus for lunch today. It was a perfect day. The last day or two of leave are quickly passing! But, I'll confess that I'm ready to get back to work! Here's a little video of the family (except Courts who was eating ice cream).

By the way, Liam was saying 'Kitty in the water' because there were some rock rabbits (Dassies) on the rocks near the water's edge. There wasn't a REAL kitty in the water! The whales would have eaten it ;-)

Be blessed!

Oh, and I've been re-reading Wes' and my new book - entitled What are we thinking. With all humility - it's brilliant ;-) Well, in truth it IS brilliant, but that's because of all the great authors (11 of them in total) that contributed incredibly thought provoking, challenging and insightful chapters! It is a must read for anyone who is grappling with some of the most contextual issues of our day (same sex relationships, care for gay persons in the Church, the environment, economics and poverty, gender issues and women's rights (in Africa and elsewhere in the world), postmodernism and fresh expressions of Church, reaching young people for Christ without compromising the Gospel, how people misuse texts in the Old Testament to justify Rape in Africa... It's an incredible collection of theologies from a wide variety of scholars! You can order the book here.)

Dion

Thursday
Jan082009

The numbers don't lie... how the Bush administration has impoverished the US (and world) economy.

This very interesting post shows how the Bush administration has systematically impoverished the United States and world economies... I have a feeling that their own bank balances look better, even though the rest of the world's bank balances look worse!


Salon's got a good, meaty, heavily linked and referenced roundup of the damage done to the US economy and body politic during the Bush administrations:
How much poorer are we going to get before we start getting richer again? Here are some (scary, morbid, gruesome) clues.

Expected shortfall of gross domestic product below normal growth path in 2009: $900 billion

Decline in the Dow Jones Industrial Average from its decade high to its value at the close of business, Jan. 7, 2009: 5,394.83, or 38.1 percent

Number of manufacturing jobs lost since 2000: 3.78 million

Increase in number of unemployed workers from 2001 to 2008: 4 million, a jump of 2.7 percent in the unemployment rate

Real median household income according to the 2000 census, adjusted for inflation: $51,804

Real median household income as of August 2007: $50,233

Of course, the government didn't sit idly by while our financial future was disappearing down the drain. Instead, the feds have pumped in hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars, hoping to juice lending and public spending.

Cost of finance industry bailout: $350 billion, with another $350 pending congressional approval

Cost of auto industry bailout: $17.4 billion, so far

And even though there's widespread agreement among economists that the government needs to be spending a large sum of money on an economic stimulus package, it still won't look pretty on the public balance sheet.

National debt: $10.6 trillion

Amount of that debt owned by China: At least $800 billion

W. and the damage done

Tuesday
Jan062009

Launch of my new book 'What are we thinking? Reflections on Church and Socieity from Southern African Methodists'

This is an advert for my new book (co-edited with my good friend Dr Wessel Bentley), so please feel free to skip this post.

The book can be purchased from Connexion Resource centres in most of South Africa's major cities (formerly Methodist Bookshops, such as those in Cape Town, Pretoria, Bryanston, Benoni, Durban... You can get the phone numbers and addresses from the order form). Or you can use this order form to purchase a copy. You're also welcome to contact me directly if you'd like to order a copy through me. I hope that it will soon be added to Amazon

Endorsements for What are we thinking?

'My enthusiasm for this book is fired by a number of factors. First, there is the variety of authors and topics. Second, the variety of topics reflects key points in our social, cultural, economic and political context. Third, there is a crying need to up-to-date books that relate the whole gospel to the whole world. Fourth, the book does not aim to indoctrinate us, but rather to challenge us to become thinking Christians in our own contexts. And while Christian readers of all denominations will be challenged and enriched by this book, a fifth reason for my enthusiasm is that it gives contemporary expression to the spirit of John Wesley. Not only were his interests wide ranging, as are the topics in this book, but he managed to develop that rate and precious mix of a theology that is simultaneously passionate and reasonable, both deeply spiritual and socially engaged. That is the excellent mix that this book also offers' - Rev Prof Dr Neville Richardson

'This timely release introduces the reader to fresh, diverse, provocative and urgent voices within the Wesleyan tradition. They share insights on a number of contemporary issues that will push theological boundaries, spiritually enrich, motivate and challenge to action. Each contribution draws from the deep wells of their own life and pastoral experience and beckons the reader to drink from this veritable calabash of collective wisdom which adds to the current theological and public discourse. What are we thinking? is a source for growth. I recommend it to all thoughtful readers' - Rev Ivan Abrahams, Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa.


About the book:

What are our emerging theologians thinking and saying about some of the pressing issues confronting the church and society today? Most of us need to have our thinking stimulated and challenged from time to time. Here is just such an opportunity. You may not necessarily agree with everything you read, but the issues are critical and need to be debated!

Contents include:
Whose truth will set us free?
Searching for an African Methodist Liturgical theology
How we can read the same Bible and reach different ethical conclusions
Pastoral care with Christian gay women
A response to global warming and the environment
The economic implications of Biblical principles
Biblical metaphors of healing and transformation
Reading the Scriptures through women’s eyes
A perspective on youth development in South Africa
The use of rape in the Bible as a military metaphor
A call for ‘affirmative action’ for theological application

Contributors:
Rev Dr Wessel Bentley | Rev Mogomotsi Diutlwileng | Rev Dr Dion Forster | Rev Kevin Light | Rev Mantso Matsepe | Rev Madika Sibeko | Rev Alan Storey | Rev Debbie van de Laar | Rev John van de Laar | Rev Vusi Vilikati

The full reference for the book is:

Bentley, W & Forster, DA (eds.) 2008 What are we thinking? Reflections on Church and Society from Southern African Methodists. Cape Town. Methodist Publishing house. (ISBN 978-91988352-6).

Here's a bit more information from a section that I wrote in the Editors' introduction:

The idea for this book grew out of a conversation with Bishop Ivan Abrahams, the Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa. One afternoon he and I sat in Christ Church College, Oxford, speaking about the richness of our Southern African Methodist heritage. As we talked we celebrated the blessing and diversity of our Methodist Connexion. The Methodist Church of Southern Africa covers a geographical area that spans 6 nations (Botswana, Mozambique, Swaziland, Lesotho, Namibia, and South Africa). Within the denomination there is a veritable rainbow of cultures, and age groups - not to mention the divergent theological perspectives and styles of worship. When you mix the Wesleyan passion for Christian perfection with such diversity and a rich social history, the outcome is quite remarkable to say the least!

In the weeks that followed that conversation I thought how sad it was that we did not have a resource, such as a book or a journal, that could capture and reflect the blessing of our theological diversity. So, early one morning, I emailed a number of 'emerging' scholars with the following idea: Each one was to write a chapter for the book. The only requirement was that their chapter should reflect a clear position on some theological or social issue about which they felt passionate. Many responded enthusiastically to the challenge, and so this book began to take shape!

In the pages of this book a variety of topics have been considered. Some chapters deal with theological issues (such as the notion of theological truth, approaches to theology, and the use of metaphor in theology and scripture), others consider more practical matters (such as economics and the Christian faith, the training of laity, youth development, and crafting an authentically African liturgical tradition), still others have considered some of the topical issues of time and context (such as the Church and persons of a same sex orientation, gender issues, and issues of the environment).

This book has two simple aims:

1. To present a compilation of 'position papers' by Methodist scholars that reflect some of the issues that Southern African Methodists are praying about, talking about, and thinking about. In this sense the book aims to be 'zeitgeist' (a 'spirit of the times'), reflecting some of our current theological thinking on contemporary issues. You may not necessarily agree with all of the points made here. However, you are encouraged to consider the points that the author makes, to understand why he or she holds the position that is presented, and then to go on to form your own opinions and understanding of what you believe in relation to the issue at hand.
2. This leads to the second aim, namely that we wanted to open the way for our members to begin to think critically about some contemporary challenges and opportunities that Southern Africa, and the Church in Southern Africa, faces. In this regard the book aims to stimulate prayer, thought, further conversation and ultimately courageous action.

I pray that you will be challenged to grow in your own faith as you read the chapters of this book. Ultimately our common aim is to find the most effective, Christ-like, God honouring ways of establishing God’s Kingdom here on earth.

Thanks for wading your way through this advert! I am so pleased with how this book has turned out, each of the contributors has made a very, very significant contribution towards scholarship and theology in contemporary Christianity! Here's the order form to purchase a copy.

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Tuesday
Jan062009

It's been leaked! The BRAND NEW Apple Macbook without a keyboard!

Yup, the buzz is all over the internet! This was leaked before the Apple Keynote address at Macworld.


Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop With No Keyboard

You know, when I look closely, this looks a lot like my Macbook Air with a clickwheel photoshopped where the keyboard should be... No, they would never do that ;-)

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