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Entries by Dr Dion Forster (1887)

Friday
Apr222011

A little bit of heaven on earth - Schapenberg Mountainbike trail

Below are a few photos from the new Schapenberg MTB trails just outside of Somerset West (Sir Lowrys Pass).  Since it has opened my friend Greg and I have ridded the black route three times with minor variations.  The full black route is quite hectic with two very serious climbs!  The first climb is a killer!  But it does get one to some awesome single track through the forests above Sir Lowrys pass village.  The second climb is the one up to Hans se Kop with kilometers and kilometers of fairly technical downhill single track!  Super riding indeed!

 

Wednesday
Apr202011

One of the stupidest philosophies in the world

Yesterday morning I began my talk to the Unashamedly Ethical community [MP3, 29MB] with a confession.  I confessed that I am an addict.  I am addicted to a way of life that is killing me, killing others, killing the world - it is even killing generations to come.  I live for tomorrow and don't value today sufficiently.  I want bigger things, better things and more things.  Who I am and what I have just doesn't seem good enough

I am dangerous.

But, I am a recovering addict.  Since being encountered by the Prince of Peace I have embarked on a daily journey that seeks peace.  I live my life in the cause of true peace - peace with God, peace with people, and in fact peace with all creation.  It is not an easy journey when you're as addicted to yourself as I am.  Perhaps it is easier for you?

Just to mention that my confession was motivated by this incredible video made by my friend Alan Storey - thanks Al, you continue to inspire and challenge me along my journey.

You can listen to my talk by downloading it here.

This quote made sense in the context of my confession.

Here is one of the stupidest philosophies of life I have ever heard, and yet it is the one that drives our whole civilization: it’s the idea that the purpose of life is to get good things in the future that you don’t yet have, rather than enjoying the good things in the present that you do have. A thought voices from every corner of our culture whisper that lie. Fight the voices. Command your own thoughts (they’re yours to command!) to look at the present and its beauty. If you have to force yourself to stop and smell the roses, well, then, force yourself.

— Peter Kreeft, Before I Go: Letters to our children about what really matters, n.18, pp.30-31 (United Kingdom: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007) (via @firstbreath90)

Wednesday
Apr202011

Clever spammers and hackers are keeping us in contact. Thank you!

Yesterday I got a few emails from friends asking if I had truly given up using my Apple Mac in order to buy a cheap Chinese laptop... (in truth, the Apple is a cheap Chinese laptop with a huge markup... But let's not talk about that now ;-)

The reason for all of these emails was that everyone in my address book had received the following email from me:

 

Dear,

How are you?

I'm so happy today because just received my laptop from {insert URL for cheap Chinese electronics reseller here}  the with such low price of the quality goods , you can have a look if

God bless you !

 

The subject was either 'Good News!' or 'Whit is new today?'

So, I logged onto my gmail account to discover that the clever little hackers had managed to gain access, send out the email above to my whole contact list... But here's the clever bit!  They also set my 'vacation message' to autoreply to everyone who sends me an email with the above message.

2 points for the spammers!  I love ingenuity, and I'm impressed by creativity that leads to innovation and unconventional productivity...

I just wish it wasn't the spammers who were so clever!

Why can't a few of these clever women and men apply their superior intellect to solving complex conflicts, or resolving the world's energy crisis!?

Anyway, if you received an email from me, I'm glad we 'touched base' in some way - and no, I'm still using my Macbook White.  I promise to email you personally if I should every decide to buy a cheap Chinese laptop.  Deal!?

Needless to say I have changed my passwords - I encourage you to do the same!

Monday
Apr182011

The cost of right choices

This is the start of Holy Week in the Christian Calendar. In my devotional time this morning I prayed the following prayer:
O God, whose very presence causes us to choose whom we will serve, help us to joyfully choose always for you. Let us not be tossed about by conflicting motives but live solely for you. In the power of Christ's name. Amen.
May you be blessed as we journey towards the celebration of Easter, remember that God chose us, and so we can choose Him.
Sunday
Apr172011

Riding the new Schapenberg Mountainbike trail from Ongegund in Somerset West

Greg and I headed out to ride the new Schapenberg MTB trail ride this afternoon - it is just above Sir Lowrys pass in Somerset West.  We intended doing the red route.  But, when we arrived they were closing up and so Johan Kriegler (the guy who does the Wines2Whales trail) told us how to get in along the Knorhoek road.

We met up with a few friends along the way and started riding the route with them. They turned off onto the shorter yellow route and we decided to take the red route.  About 10 km into the ride we realised that we were at the cut off point of day one of the wines2whales!  We knew that with just a little climb we would link up with the most amazing single track (from Hans se Kop down into the valley). So, we braced ourselves and climbed the black route... Quite a climb to the top, but some beautiful views and incredible single track on the way to the top!  It was worth doing the black route!

At the top we made the turn and hit the road down.  Greg was in fine form flying down the technical stuff!  I was a little... shall we say ‘sensible’ about my descent? Just when we thought it was over the route took us into a tunnel of trees and a whole new section of single track!  At the end of that we climbed next to the railway for a few km’s only to be taken into another section of incredible downhill single track – some of it quite steep like on our Helderberg ride.  Super stuff.

This is certainly a route worth riding.  Because we came in from the side (since the Ongegund office was closed) we probably missed the first 18km of the trail.  But, the last 23km we did ride was absolutely amazing!

Blessings,

Dion

PS.  If you have google earth installed on your computer just click on the attached file for a ‘fly through’ of the route.  If you don’t have it installed download google earth from here:

http://www.google.co.za/earth/

Saturday
Apr162011

The fire on the Helderberg Mountain, Somerset West

This morning a fire broke out in the Helderberg Nature reserve.  From what I have heard it started at around 8am.  Unfortunately the vegitation in our area is extremely dry at this time of the year - our rainfail comes in winter.  That, accompanied with the very strong South Easterly winds is a recipe for dissaster.  The fire quickly spread across the side of the mountain.  By lunch time there were 4 helicopters and 2 crop-duster planes trying to put out the fire.  In addition I heard that somewhere between 80 and 250 firefighters and volunteers were on the mountain trying to stem the spread of the fire.

I'm not sure how many homes have burnt down.  There are man different rumours about how many have burnt down.

One of my photos was used in the Times Online article today. The article gives some more information about the fires.

Below are a series of photos - most of them were taken by my wife, Megan.

This photo was taken from my friend Graham Power's home at about 8pm this evening.

I took the photo below with my iPhone when I went cycling this afternoon. It shows the width of the fire.  From here it 'hopped' around the left hand side of the mountain towards Stellenbosch (along the R44).

Here are some photos taken by Megan of the helicopters and planes tryinig to put out the worst of the blaze.

In this picture you can see one of the helicopters scooping water from a dam at the bottom of the nature reserve.

This is one of the two crop dusting planes that also pitched in to help.

Please spare a prayer for the firefighters and those who have evacuated their homes, and those who may have lost homes and possessions.

Sunday
Apr102011

Another chapter published!

On Friday I received an email from Paul Chilcote to let me know that 'Making disciples in a world parish: Global perspectives on Mission and Evangelism' was published.

I was privileged to contribute one of the chapters that make up this book.  I wrote about the theology and ministry of Christians in Southern Africa in response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic.  In my chapter I discussed issues such as the contextualisation of theological methodology, an insight into what it means to live with HIV/AIDS and what it could mean for Christians and the Church to respond appropriately in that context.  It is entitled 'Evangelism, mission and discipleship in Southern Africa: How hope is overcoming tragedy'.

I'd encourage you to check out the book at the following URL - you can purchase the book from Amazon here.

Sunday
Apr102011

Liam's cool boat!

Thursday
Apr072011

Lent - the importance of Easter in the Christian faith

As I'm going through Lent, and preparing for Easter, I have been reflecting on the importance of this feast in the Christian tradition. Somehow in the West we place more emphasis on Christmas - perhaps it is because we're so self centered and are caught up in the reward and response of giving and receiving gifts!

This quote reminded me how important Easter has been for all of Christian history:

Take Christmas away, and in biblical terms you lose two chapters at the front of Matthew and Luke, nothing else. Take Easter away, and you don’t have a New Testament; you don’t have a Christianity; as Paul says, you are still in your sins. We shouldn’t allow the secular world, with its schedules and habits and parareligious events, its cute Easter bunnies, to blow us off course. This is our greatest day. We should put the flags out.

- N.T. Wright, Surprised By Hope (via @invisibleforeigner's tumblr blog)

May the Lord richly bless us as we prepare to celebrate the significance of God's generous gift in Christ.

Friday
Apr012011

Rob Bell - Love Wins

I picked up my copy of 'Love Wins' after I saw a young friend, Ryan Vermooten, reading it when I visited LA last week. Ryan is extremely contrarian. He has dreadlocks, multiple piercings and both his arms are works of contemporary art - I love looking at his tattoos! But, Ryan is passionate about Christ and the ways of Christ. He is doing his DTS (discipleship training school) with YWAM (Youth With a Mission - an international evangelical mission agency). In fact as I write this he is serving on a mission in Haiti - that's deep, sincere, Christ-like, commitment!

Perhaps, Ryan is the kind of person for whom 'Love Wins' was written? I have encountered many young people who are passionate about Christ and the ways of Christ, yet they are less passionate about the narrow theology and approach of traditional evangelical Christianity (particularly as it is expressed in the Western world).

Please take a few minutes to read Ryan's perspective on 'Love wins' here. It sat next to him as he typed this... It is awesome to see a person who loves Jesus think so deeply and critically about our faith, the contemporary debates within the faith, and about ways in which we cultivate an authentic witness to the person of Christ!

I will start reading the book this weekend and then let you know what I think about it. The review below has been quite helpful in framing my approach to the book.

invisibleforeigner:

I had been eager to pick Love Wins up for while. I’ve read both Velvet Elvis and Sex God, and found both simplistic and boring, but I figured a book about an evangelical universalist understanding of hell might be interesting. Once I got past the strange prose, the book was engaging, and I can see why evangelicals are up in arms about this issue.

Love Wins asks a lot of good questions that evangelicals, at least in my experience, are afraid to ask. As someone who has wrestled with the idea of hell, I found myself sympathizing with Rob Bell’s determination to challenge people who might be too complacent about the existence of hell and the eternal damnation of the people around them. Love Wins is very good at talking about the beauty, glory, and mercy of God. God is radiant in this book, and some of the extended meditations on the overwhelming God has for his creation were heartbreaking, in a good way. His view of creation as a place that reveals and displays the glory of God is a powerful corrective of an unfortunate Christian tendency to treat heaven and hell as distant places in the future, and reminds us that what we do in this world important.

Unfortunately, that’s all I really can say that is positive about Love Wins. I think part of that is because I am not the book’s intended audience. Rob Bell is reaching an audience of evangelicals who are disenchanted with a narrow view of a vicious God who condemns people to hell for no good reason, and I commend him for that. However, this book should be the start of discussion, if we have to talk about it at all. Bell messes up basic elements of theology and church history; he treats people like Origen as venerated mainstream church fathers, when the reality is far more complicated; he misquotes Martin Luther; he assumes the worst of opposing views of hell; he calls other views of salvation tribalistic and narrow-minded; he treats demonstrably poetic language as literally as possible when it suits his purposes.

In the end, he reminds me of a less educated version of N.T. Wright, or even of C.S. Lewis. Lewis writes a powerful rebuttal of a narrow view of hell in The Great Divorce, and yet manages to convey that approaching heaven is a terribly painful process, one that will demand the total casting off of everything we held dear. Love winning in The Great Divorce requires losing ourselves utterly, while in Love Wins it just seems to demand infinite amounts of time. While I’m sympathetic to Bell’s worries about hell, I can’t quite say that I’m convinced. I think he tries too hard to make the Gospel palatable, and sin insignificant.

I know that Bell is writing towards a specific audience of evangelicals, particularly the ones who are bitter towards a God they think is cruel. I think a lot of the people who read this book will be pushed towards a deeper understanding of who God is, what Jesus did, and what salvation and sanctification are all about. I know that this book should be taken as an introduction to people who have no idea about the depths of Christianity, and the best case scenario will be that this book will cause people to seek out people like N.T. Wright, and hopefully continue on to reading church fathers like St. Athanasius.

However, I also know that there will be people for whom this book is the last word. Instead of freeing Christians to explore the depth and breath of God’s faithfulness and their faith in full, this book could be the end of the questioning for some. For that reason, I found the book shamefully lacking. Other elements of Christian thought, such as the concept of realized eschatology, which both John Howard Yoder and Stanley Hauerwas write extensively about, would have strengthened Bell’s argument, and would have been far more convincing than platitudes about how a God that damns his creation to hell cannot be loving and glorious. The Eastern Orthodox understanding of theosis and the impassibility of God would have been a welcome addition to a text that is sorely in need of depth.

In the end, I hope that this book allows people to seek out what makes Christianity great. I hope people find Jesus in these pages, but I don’t think I did.

If you've read the book I'd love to hear your thoughts!

Thursday
Mar312011

The body of Christ

I'm reading Hauerwas, Yoder and Cavanaugh...

The task of the church in the temporal is to embody what Christ has already accomplished in history by remembering his broken and victorious body. Christ’s victory is already won, and the Kingdom is to have transformative effects on Christian practice in history. The task of the church is to live as if this is the case, until Christ comes again and fully consummates his reign.
— William T. Cavanaugh, Torture and Eucharist(via @invisibleforeigner's tumblr blog.

And it is good...

I would suggest that you follow invisibleforeigner's tumblr blog. It has been such a great blessing to me to read the quotes, thoughts and ideas on it, many of which you will see on my blog. Thanks!

Tuesday
Mar292011

Back to Cape Town - 27 March 2011

Our time in the US ended on a high note - the two day conference on our book, 'Transform your work Life' and our Unashamedly Ethical campaign went off extremely well. Both Graham and I were well received by the 180 people in attendance, we ended the weekend with the establishment of a UE community in Palos Verdes and another in Hollywood. We also had close to 90 persons commit themselves to the Unashamedly Ethics commitment to ethics in personal and business life.

LA was wonderful! It is such beautiful place, and our hosts, Dave and Kristen Wendorff were just wonderful. I feel that I have made friends in them that will last me a lifetime!

I am truly grateful for your prayers, the Lord blessed us in so many ways. I look forward to being back in the USA in June. But for now I cannot wait to get home! Our flight goes from LA to Washington (5 hours), then Washington to Johannesburg (via Dakar, which is 16.5 hours) and then Johannesburg to Cape Town (which is another 2 hours). Together with the airport lay overs it is almost 2 days in transit, but for the joy of being with the wonderful friends in Jacksonville, San Francisco, San Jose and LA, AND for the joy of getting home it is worth it! I cannot wait to see Megie, Courtney and Liam! They will collect me at just before 10pm.