Duncan Macleod on the Gold Coast

Archive for the ‘Youth Ministry’ Category

Postcard Radio Podcast Launches

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

Steve Drinkall in Brisbane has launched Postcard Radio, a podcast site focusing on emerging missional church in Queensland, sponsored by the Churches of Christ, Queensland Baptists and Uniting Church in Australia.

Postcard Radio Header

Postcard Radio is committed to discovering and interviewing those brave souls who are finding innovative new ways to communicate an old message. All of the people interviewed on the site live, serve, work and play in South East Queensland and all have a passion for helping ordinary Australians connect with the person of Jesus.

I’m one of the first three interviewees, along with two Baptists…

Billy Williams is serving and reaching urban aboriginal people in Brisbane’s northern suburbs. As the founders and leaders of Dhiiyaan , Billy and his wife are reinventing what it means to be the church at a park on any Sunday afternoon.

Mick Cross, youth pastor at Reedy Creek Baptist on the Gold Coast, has taken the challenge of multiplication seriously in his youth ministry. He has restructured everyone into “Tribes” and allowed student interests to dominate where they meet, what they do and who will lead them.

Some of the ideas here are small, some are large. Some involve thousands of people, some involve just a handful. Some require lots of resources and some are completely free. We hope that these stories and ideas will create a new movement of innovation in living and sharing the message of Jesus with people in our region. Tune in, switch your brain on and imagine what else we could do…

www.postcardradio.com

Doctor Who At Church

Monday, September 17th, 2007

Doctor Who is being featured in a worship service held in Cardiff on Sunday September 23, near the site of the fictional rift in time. Worshippers are being invited to compare a Time Lord with the Lord of Time during a eucharistic service.

Taste is a new cafe style worship experience for young people in Cardiff, part of the Anglican-sponsored Enter the Mystery experience. Teenagers and young people in their early 20s are being targeted for the “cafe-style” Communion service, with music and video clips from the hit series, at St Paul’s Church in Grangetown, Cardiff.

The Anglican church was used as a location two years ago for the Father’s Day episode of the first series, in which a giant reaper creature attacked wedding guests at the church.

Fr Dean Atkins, youth officer with the Diocese of Llandaff and one of the organisers of the service, said: “The figure of Doctor Who is somebody who comes to save the world, almost a Messiah figure. In the series there are lots of references to salvation and the doctor being almost immortal. We are using the figure of Doctor Who as a parable of Christ. The language used in the series lends itself to exploring the Christian faith.”

He added: “Christ is a kind of cosmic figure as well if you like, somebody who does not travel through time but all eternity is found in him. He is a kind of encapsulation of the beginning and the end, in fact he existed before time began and he will exist when time ends.”

Poster for Doctor Who Cafe worship service

Parish priest Fr Ben Andrews said: “I love the series, and it has such a great following that we couldn’t resist doing something for young people on a Doctor Who theme. Lots of people think that young people are the future of the Church. This kind of event will show they are part of the church of the present and have an important part to play in its future. We are building on the past but always looking forward.”

See the story on the BBC site, including a streamed interview with Dean Atkins.

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Gen Y Spirituality Roundtable

Wednesday, March 21st, 2007

I’ve spent today at a conference in Melbourne in which Christian Research Association researchers are sharing the results of their work on Gen Y spirituality in Australia. The research reflects the strong buy in from major denominations and, understandably, the attendance this week reflects an in-house institutional response. I’m part of that, connecting with a team of Uniting Church mission, youth ministry, social justice and communications staff from around the country.

Today we had a look at the results so far, putting our hands on the freshly published book, “Putting Life Together”, Findings From Australian Youth Spirituality Research by Philip Hughes. The other three researchers on the team, Michael Mason, Andrew Singleton and Ruth Webber, are publishing “The Spirit of Generation Y” in July.

It’s clear, from the conversations with them during the day, that there is more than one way to interpret findings from the research. But a common theme coming through is that so-called generations are not necessarily different to one another. There is a strong sense of continuity between the present beliefs and values of Baby Boomer parents and their Gen Y children.

Attending this summit has been a part of the re-emergence of my doctoral studies project, “Generations in Conversation”. Now that I’m in the second year of my latest job, it’s time to get stuck in and finish off the work I started when I was living in NZ. I’m planning to spend some time in the USA this year, focusing on interviewing and writing for the theological reflection course I started developing last year.

I’ll write more about the conference at Generations in Conversation.

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