An Amazing Weekend

We have just returned from the last of this season’s ReSource weekend. I have been doing these weekends for about ten years now and always enjoy them! I don’t think there’s a better way t learn about mission than to be immersed in a context and meet people involved in mission there, hear their stories and reflect on it. I have reviewed several weekends so it was nice this time to see that Kim who is on the MA course got back and wrote a blog post reflecting on her first ever ReSource so read her review – an amazing weekend.

We have lined up dates for four weekends from October 2013- May 2014 and will be posting details shortly so watch this space.

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‘People are endlessly complicated and infinitely interesting’ – Interview with Rob Winn

A fascination with people drives Rob Winn, in the first year of his MA in Pioneer Mission Leadership with CMS, together with a desire to find out how faith can help them live in a way that is good news for everyone. Helen Harwood finds out more.

Images from Following the Star, a nomadic, mixed media art project exploring the themes of Christmas and Advent.

Images from Following the Star, a nomadic, mixed media art project exploring the themes of Christmas and Advent.


HH: Hi Rob, thank you for agreeing to be interviewed. I know our readers will want to find out what makes you tick but first can you say a bit about Venture FX, and your involvement in it, please?

RW: Hi Helen, thanks for inviting me to be interviewed. Venture FX is a really exciting initiative funded and supported by the Methodist Church. It’s exciting because it gives people like me opportunities to try out all sorts of interesting and unusual things – more on that later… The vision is to see the Christian faith creatively engaging with contemporary culture and each of the 14 VFX pioneers across the country are doing that in many different ways. There’s more information on the website at www.venturefx.org.uk.

OK, on to you, Rob, and what makes you tick! What is it that drives you and makes you work the way you do? I understand you want to share the gospel in culturally sensitive and contextually relevant ways. Tell me more… And also can I ask about your introduction into mission and pioneering?

I think the thing that makes me tick is people. I’ve always loved being around people: helping people, learning from people, laughing with people, sharing with people…People are endlessly complicated and infinitely interesting. One of the most significant things in my life is my faith. I am interested in finding out ways that faith can positively influence the people that I meet. Can it inspire, encourage, challenge people to live in a way that is good news for everyone, for them and for their communities?

Mission and pioneering has always been just an extension of how my faith influences me because it’s something I believe is worth sharing. One of my first memories of doing something ‘pioneering’ was when MSN Messenger first came out. I organised a profile for our school CU to take it in turns logging into the account and chatting to people online about faith. That was an early memory of doing something pioneering but I don’t remember ever being properly introduced to it.

Can you tell us about the work that you’re doing in Milton Keynes, is there a formula churches can follow or is there more to it than that?

My work in Milton Keynes is really varied and often a lot of fun. I don’t think there’s a formula to it but there are probably some useful principles worth noting. The main emphasis of my project is just being with people, taking the time to listen and to learn, and supporting them however I can. As part of this I go along to the YMCA residents’ lounge each week and I go to a spirituality discussion group where people on different spiritual journeys are able to share ideas.

I try and take part in the city’s festivals when possible; last year I ran a tent for prayer or reflection at the International Festival and MK Pride, and we provided an art installation at the Carols in the Wood event in the city’s tree cathedral. We also put artwork around the city in the week before Christmas, inviting artists to create a piece based on the title ‘following the star’ – more details and pictures at www.followingthestar.co.uk.

Milton Keynes is a fast-growing city and so there is lots of need for groups which help to bring people together. I’m currently working on setting up a volunteering collective for people to meet like-minded people and help fund-raise or run community events.

There are lots of different aspects to my work but there are also some common themes. I always try to start by listening to what people want/need. I spent a lot of time during my first year asking people what they thought about life in Milton Keynes and what else was needed. I also try to avoid repetition. There are loads of great groups and events which already take place in the city, the last thing I want to do is compete with them, so where possible I’ve tried to get involved and support what they’re already doing

What would you say was the harvest of your work so far, and what have been the toughest bits? Do you have a good sense of humour, and does this help?

To stretch the harvest metaphor, I feel like we’re still in spring, there are lots of flowers and buds shooting up but who knows what the harvest will be? There’s lots of beauty and creativity coming out of the conversations I have and the things that I’m doing with people that I’m really pleased with. When I first started I wasn’t convinced that anything would grow at all. The toughest bit was certainly the first year. It takes time to get to know people and to get to know an area and I felt like I was barely making any impact.

There have been lots of positive experiences. Taking a group of people I met at the YMCA to Greenbelt was one of them (and definitely needed a good sense of humour). I’m also really looking forward to what might come out of a volunteering collective I’m setting up.

How has connecting to the Pioneer Mission Leadership Training course been helpful to you?

As well as the excellent teaching and opportunities to meet other people doing similar pioneering work, it has also been really helpful to carve out some time for reflecting on my work. On Tuesdays when I come to CMS I feel like I can leave lots of the organisational day to day aspects of my work behind and use the course to stimulate thinking about my work overall and to reflect on how it’s going.

How do you see your work developing and continuing into the future?

I’m not sure…I don’t know whether one or two of the various things will take off and become the focus or whether it will continue to be a range of different activities all going on in parallel. I’d like it if some things became self-sustaining so that they can continue to grow organically when I’m no longer able to run them, and I know other things will come to a natural end over time. Of course, something completely different might be just around the corner.

Lastly, Rob, how can we pray for you? And is there anything else happening you want to tell us about?

I’d love it if people could thank God for the things he’s already doing and that he’s willing to let me (and others) get involved.

I’d also like to tell you about (shameless plug coming up…) a day event we’re running in June for for Christians seeking to understand and engage with contemporary spirituality and spiritual seekers. It is on 8 June, 10am-4pm at the Church of Christ the Cornerstone in Central Milton Keynes. We will have talks and workshops from Andrea Campanale, Ian Mobsby and Steve Hollinghurst. Details and tickets from www.engagingevent.info.

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Pioneering in Seoul

seoul streets - gents

I was invited to visit the Diocese of Seoul by Rev Ambrose Kim, well known to CMS Asia and to CMS in Britain. This was something of a surprise but I felt that it was a good thing to do and agreed to go for a week.

Ambrose spent a day with us at CMS pioneer training in the pilot year 3 years ago. Unknown to me he tucked it away in his mind to see how one day he could see if S Korea could get something similar going. The backdrop to this is that through visits by Phil Simpson and others from CMS there has been lots of sharing about mission shaped church and fresh expressions. And Ambrose and others translated and published Mission Shaped Church in Korean. There was also a visit by a group of clergy to an international conference organised by Fresh Expressions in Sept 2011 (I think that was the date).

The diocese is small – around 50 churches. It is traditional and formal especially around liturgy. Its members are by and large older so it is very aware of the need for change.

I met with the diocesan staff of the mission and education departments to share about pioneer ministry and training. I gave a public lecture at the cathedral in mission, culture, pioneer ministry. They seemed to relate most to stories. It was quickly clear that for the Anglicans this was all very new and the creativity especially around liturgy and worship was quite a surprise. There were also others there who were a bit more up to speed on missional approaches including someone from IVP who had translated Alan Hirsch’s Shaping of Things to Come into Korean. It turned out that Stuart Murray Williams was also in Seoul lecturing at a seminary at the same time!

I went to the Anglican theological seminary and had an evening with ordinands in informal conversation. Again stories won the day.

I took a 3 day workshop for around 25 people – all Anglican apart from one. They were mainly ordained and from 3 of the four dioceses in S Korea. I took 6 sessions which pretty much fried my brain after all the translating. But on day 2 something shifted. It’s hard to put my finger on what made the difference but after lunch when we talked about pioneering I asked who identified with it and 8 people said they did. We got them in a circle to share their experience and stories with everyone else sat around and you could have heard a pin drop. I asked for it not to be translated so it flowed so I just got summaries afterwards. One person told how she had left her role being a priest because she just couldn’t fit. After she spoke one of the people said – “I approve you a pioneer” and everyone started cheering. It was amazing. By the end of the conference they had agreed that they need to start a network to keep talking and seeing how they can develop things.

I also spent some time showing some of the training we have developed, although I was very keen to stress the importance of making whatever they do fit Korean soil. My tour guide when I had free time was Benedict. He has finished training to be ordained and really wants to try and pioneer something new. So we had lots of time to talk that through. He is keen to visit the UK and see some fresh expressions and maybe join a module of pioneer training. I think this could really help as there are quite few models at least that are Anglican in S Korea.

I had breakfast with the Bishop of the Diocese of Seoul and one of the things he said in conversation was that he thought they should get one or two people to come and visit some things. So watch this space.

food korean style

It was great for me personally as I had not been to East Asia at all so I feel I have gained some good cross cultural learning. My chopstick skills have improved and they seemed amazed that I just ate everything they put in front of me (which was quite a lot). Thank you to CMS for sending me!

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Cook@Chapel

Katharine Crowsley who is in the second year on the pioneer course has some of the story of cook@chapel on the fresh expressions web site. It was also good to see Kim’s interview which was a couple of blog posts down got reproduced for the Church of England newspaper this month.

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Tales of a Pioneer – those first months…

Rob Ryan is a pioneer in Gillingham. He has recently moved from working in Rochester and this makes for something of a new start. We have discussed on the course what it is that you do in the early days of pioneering. Rob’s latest volume of tales of a pioneer spells out what he does. And I think his reflections on presence are also really helpful.

Rob did the mission entrepreneurship module with us…

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Ordained Pioneer Ministry

Mark Broomhead shares his thoughts on ordained pioneer ministry on a 12 minute interview at fresh expressions. It’s still early days for the Church of England on this one and he touches on selection, deployment, resourcing, support – conversations i feel like i have had with people and continue to many times over. At cms we are now training ordained pioneers which is going well so far…

The latest fresh expressions newsletter had lots of stories in so there seems to be loads going on still which is encouraging. I liked this update from boring wells. It seems being told not to meet on a Sunday morning ended up being a big plus!

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New Prospectus

pioneer_prospectus-cover

We’re pleased to say that we have a new prospectus. We had run out of copies of the original one and since then things have changed with a new MA, an approved pathway for ordained pioneers, and well we now know what we’re doing! Hope you like it. Please do let us know if you can think of people who would like one and do pass on the pdf version.

Get a PDF version of the new prospectus

If you would like a printed copy of the prospectus, please email pioneer@cms-uk.org

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