Friday, 25 November 2011

For your diaries


Just a quick post flagging up two upcoming events to put in your diaries. 

Firstly, as trailed at the Water and Sanitation gathering the other week, we are collaborating with Synergy, the young adult community at St Barnabas to hold a joint discussion looking at the pros and cons of pacifism and non-violence (especially within a faith context). The meeting will be on the 30th November (that's next Wednesday) at the Elephant Pub in Finchley from 7:30pm and will be similar to the recent informal gathering at Catcher in the Rye - an opportunity to meet other people and wrestle with a topic over a few drinks. The Facebook event is here, if you are interested and on FB.

Secondly, our main session in December will be a week earlier than usual due to Christmas, so come along on the14th December for a festive celebration of Justice Matters' first year, featuring live music from the very talented Tanya Cristina. As usual, meet from 7pm for food and networking, 7:45 for the main session. The Facebook event page is here.

Hope to see you at one of the gatherings!


Sunday, 13 November 2011

November update

Last Wednesday we had our first informal gathering of Justice Matters - a discussion of the Occupy protest camp and the way St Paul's Cathedral responded to it. This was an experiment for us, an effort to build more regular get togethers into our pattern with a view to encouraging a deeper sense of community and participation among members outside the monthly formal sessions. We had a good turnout and some interesting discussion. We anticipate to book in more of these less structured get togethers over the coming months, sharing ideas and our lives over a drink or two, so get yourself along to one soon.


Next week is out main event for November, and we are very excited about it. We have not one but two guest speakers joining us for the evening to talk on the subject of water and sanitation in the developing world. Tim Pegg spent two years working with MedAir first in Afghanistan and then Madagascar, delivering water and sanitation projects to people in extreme need. He's going to tell us some stories from that experience, and then Ali from WaterAid will talk to us about how we can get involved in this important area of need.


I'm sure you'll agree that sounds pretty good, so do come along - you could even bring a friend or two. If you're on Facebook, the event page is here. As usual, join us from 7pm for food. The talks will kick off at 7:45. See you there...


Friday, 30 September 2011

Autumn re-launch

This Wednesday we held our second open invitation Justice Matters gathering at Coffee Republic in North Finchley. Members were invited to arrive from 7pm to share food and conversation before the meeting proper began and a good number took up this offer. Once the plates had been cleared and the coffee mugs drained, attention turned to the formal part of the gathering.

At our first open gathering at the start of the summer we had changed those present with making a pledge - to identify one small, achievable thing they could do that would make a difference. Pledges had included showing kindness to a neighbour, signing up for a charity's information newsletter and giving a homeless person something to eat. Naturally, we wanted to find out how people had got on with this task, so the first item was to discuss and share stories of what had happened. Of course, there were some newcomers, so they too were invited to share anything they had done over the summer which had made a difference, pledge or no pledge. Needless to say, our wonderful friends and members had been very diligent in rising to this challenge and there were several encouraging stories shared.

All stories being told, Victoria and Sam moved on to present the Justice Matters manifesto. This manifesto is a simple document that outlines the founding members vision for the community, followed by the values and characteristics that we feel the community should embody. After that, there is a brief explanation of what kind of things the community will do - our offer to members - and finally those things what we would ask of members. You can read the full document and learn more about our vision for Justice Matters elsewhere on this blog.

(You will notice that some words have been highlighted in bold italic in this post. These words represent our community rhythm, inspired by our vision statement. They will inform the flavour of our gatherings and this session had been deliberately crafted to include a taste of all of them. In case you were wondering...)

Next up was an interview with Hannah Knight from the Besom in Barnet on the subject of seeking justice through volunteering. Hannah explained what the Besom in Barnet does ("provides a bridge between those who want to give time, money, things or skills, and those in need") and her experience of getting involved in volunteering. One of the ways that Besom delivers on its ambition to bridge resources with need is to organise ad hoc projects where a number of people get together on a Saturday to undertake a project - clearing a garden, decorating a flat, etc. Since one of the things we have committed to as a community is to undertake practical action, we have pencilled in a few dates when Justice Matters will be helping Besom to deliver one of these projects. We hope you can join us.

The final element of the evening was an invitation for those present to read and sign a select number a petitions and campaign postcards at the Defend station and to write a hope or prayer for the community and peg it to the light net on the Plead station. That being done, it was time to grab another drink (too late for coffee if I wanted to get any sleep - I learnt that from last time!) and chat some more before heading for home.

We had a great evening and we hope you did too. The plan is to meet at 7pm every third Wednesday of the month unless otherwise advertised, so see you next time!

PS - Despite abstaining from coffee at 9pm, I still didn't get much sleep...!

The Justice Matters Manifesto

Vision and Values
Members of this community will be characterised as individuals who are compelled to act in the face of injustice. The issues and causes about which we are passionate may be varied but we all share a common purpose – to “learn to do right, seek justice, encourage the oppressed, defend the cause of the fatherless [and] plead the case of the widow.” (Isaiah 1:17).

In addition, the community will manifest the following values:
  • Unashamedly Christian, accessible to all
  • A welcoming place to meet like-minded people
  • Engendering a culture of generosity – with our time, money and energy
  • Driven by love for people not projects or politics
  • Respect and support for an individual’s ability to be the change they want to see
  • Members looking out for each other’s wellbeing.
Our community rhythm
Leading on from that vision, our gatherings will be flavoured by one of the following five themes:
  • Seek: Rolling up our sleeves and making a practical difference
  • Learn: Training, guest speakers and discussion
  • Encourage: Sharing stories and experiences
  • Defend: Advocacy, campaigning and lobbying
  • Plead: Prayer, petition and intercession
What we’ll do
  • Equip existing activists – including practical skills, learning about issues and exploring the spiritual foundations of justice
  • Undertake practical expressions of justice as individuals and as a community – for example volunteering, going on a march, filling in postcards; we may occasionally send out members (individually or as teams) to undertake larger projects
  • Network newcomers to develop real relationships that exist beyond the confines of the meetings
  • Highlight opportunities for getting involved to help members who don’t know where to start
  • Pray for the world, our country, our community and each other
  • Champion social justice within the congregation of St Barnabas Church, Finchley and beyond
  • Eat together
Members agree to
  • Meeting as a full community regularly in a neutral public setting (Coffee Republic)
  • Making a practical difference once a month (ie. volunteering / working in third sector)
  • Supporting other members by attending or providing practical help for one-off events
  • In addition, established members agree to take on some leadership functions (e.g. arriving early to welcome, organising an event about a specific passion, arranging a social, setting up and packing away, attending occasional planning meetings).

Friday, 19 August 2011

Blessed are the peace makers

Captain Kirk and the cult of just warfare
The thing about the original series of Star Trek is that, regardless which sector of the galaxy they were exploring, or which homogeneous planet they landed upon, it always ended in a scrap - usually between Captain Kirk and a bloke in fairly unconvincing make-up on an equally unconvincing set. Looking around at the current crop of summer blockbusters, its clear to see that this model - the good guy overcoming evil by force of arms - remains a central theme in our culture. From Bond to Batman, Iron Man to Avatar, the forces of good invariably prevail through a combination of righteous valour, luck and vastly superior weaponry.

Let’s face it: in our culture, good guys with guns are cool. Under fire and outgunned, they always prevail and the forces of evil - whether alien robots, international criminals or rogue scientists - are brought low.

This idea of heroic combat is not limited to the silver screen - in Afghanistan, Libya, Iraq and elsewhere we can see real men and women taking up arms to fight injustice. Just like in the movies, our media has painted a black and white world full of good guys and villains for us to cheer for and jeer at in turn. As a consequence of this narrative, in recent months we have seen Americans gleefully celebrating the assassination of Osama Bin Laden while NATO forces are bombing Libya for the protection of civilians. Indeed, we even find ourselves pondering whether assassinating Gaddafi isn’t perhaps the best way to end the stalemate and suffering in Libya?

Wrestling with pacifism
As a man, I have to admit that military hardware and martial heroes like Bond are strangely alluring. As a student of history, I am aware of many occasions when not standing up in the face of injustice would seem not to be not only counter-intuitive but unforgivably negligent. We need only think of the Second World War, or the Rwandan Genocide. However, the problem with this whole narrative of Just Warfare and martial heroism is that it lies in direct contradiction to Jesus’ teaching on peace and justice. As such I find myself wrestling with pacifism and increasingly identifying myself within that school.

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus proclaims: “Blessed are the peace makers, for they shall be called Children of God.” (Matthew 5:9) It’s just one sentence among many now familiar and powerful phrases. Its quickly read and passed over, but it’s worth spending some time considering more closely.

Sermon on the Mount in context
The Sermon on the Mount was delivered in a context of imperial subjugation by Rome and domestic political unrest. There is some disagreement about how significant the Roman presence was in first century Palestine, but it is clear that Jerusalem - once a great centre of influence - was now little more than a backwater town on the fringes of civilisation. While some Jews were happy to keep their heads down and make do, others were less than satisfied with the status quo.

Banditry was common in hinterlands and border regions where government authority was ambiguous, where peasant gangs reacted to their lack of opportunities and influence by ransacking the homes of the wealthy out of spite. Often the leaders of these bandit gangs would portray themselves as a kind of royalty, wearing purple robes and stolen crowns - the Godfathers of Galilee.



Another group responded to Roman rule with
more organised insurrections. The most famous of these movements was the Zealots. The Zealots staged several violent revolts including one around 4 B.C. in Sepphoris, the Capital of the Galilee and home of the wealthy elite, only four kilometres from Nazareth. The revolt was crushed by the Romans; hundreds of people were crucified or sold into slavery. Since Nazareth was a thoroughly peasant village, it is likely that at least some Nazarenes were sympathetic to the revolt and perhaps even participants with the Zealots. This event would certainly have been a traumatic part of the collective memory of those listening to Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount.

A third brand of resistance was apocalyptic prophesy. Charismatic, prophetic individuals attracted followers by using symbolism from Jewish liberation history to preach the imminence of the restoration of Israel by divine action. One such prophet lead his followers from the wilderness to Jerusalem where he promised that by marching around the city, God would act on their behalf and overthrow the Roman occupation of Jerusalem. The prophet sought to re-enact the people of Israel's journey from slavery to freedom and Joshua's triumph over Jericho to provoke similar divine action on behalf of first-century Jews living under occupation.

Among the crowd it is possible that each of these types of people were represented and indeed most will have expected Jesus himself to fall into the final category - the apocalyptic prophet preaching doom to the Romans and puppet regime. However, the message that Jesus brought - blessed be the peacemakers - rejects violent action (whether by man or God) and challenges his listeners to embrace a different path.

In this teaching and others, Jesus challenges us all to adopt a response to conflict that is more constructive and ultimately more difficult than taking up arms. In his own life, he responded to persecution and violence with love and self-sacrifice that perplexed, frustrated and transformed the lives of his enemies (as well as costing him his own). We have convinced ourselves that fighting evil with force is a righteous response to injustice - that we are the good guys standing against the evils of the world, but we should remember that Jesus never said "Greater love has no man than this: to kill those who oppress others”.

A creative response to conflict
Responding to aggression with peace sounds mad, especially in light of the injustice we see on the news every day, but it is perhaps not as foolhardy as it first seems. The illusionist Derren Brown - a man with a particular insight into the human character - tells an interesting story in which he confounded a violent aggressor.


"A couple of years ago I was walking back from a hotel at three in the morning. A guy came up to me looking for a fight. Rather than playing the authority game he was trying to set up, I said to him 'the wall outside my house is four foot high' to confuse him. His eyes glazed over and all the adrenaline left him. He was still on the verge of hitting me but then I said 'but when I was in Spain, the walls were really, really low.'

"What I did induced a state of complete confusion and in that state you're desperate for something to make sense so that you come out of it. He burst into tears and I ended up giving him advice on how to cope with his girlfriend - they'd had a fight."

Now I’m not arguing that Derren Brown is a perfect role model, but this story illustrates that when Jesus promotes a non-violent path, it doesn’t mean we have to tolerate violence or to ignore it, but rather we should find ways to respond to it creatively.

Peace
Whatever our intention, however well meaning we may be, we cannot make peace through conflict. At best, tensions are suppressed, but they remain unresolved, waiting. Ultimately, even the best intentioned violence only ever leads to more violence.

However, not doing anything is no a response either. Well meaning words and platitudes are equally unhelpful - especially to those suffering. As the Derren Brown story illustrates, to be true peace makers is to embrace our creativity and confound evil with love.

The United Nations
Last summer, Victoria and I visited the UN in New York. Throughout the building are provocative quotes and statistics about the state of the world and the work of the UN. One of the quotes that stood out was from Eleanor Roosevelt, who said: “It isn’t enough to talk about peace. One must believe it. And it isn’t enough to believe in it. One must work at it.” Another observed that “Like war, peace must be waged.”

In light of these rousing statements, it was distressing to learn that the total annual UN peace keeping budget is less than 0.5% of all global military expenditure.

It was former American President and General Dwight D Eisenhower who lamented the rise of military spending at the expense of tackling injustice in more creative ways. In his final speech as president he reminded the world that: “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in a final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed – those who are cold and not clothed.”

Eisenhower was right that there are better things to spend our resources on that weapons or war, better ways to bring justice than with the sword and semi-automatic. Spending more on peace keeping isn’t the answer however, since it still conforms to the idea of meeting violence with violence, or at least the threat of violence.

No, the role Jesus challenges us to embrace is not that of peace keepers, but peace makers - an active, creative posture. But what on earth does that mean? How do we rise to this challenge? Must we wander into conflict zones with face paints and footballs?

Life as it should be
The truth is that we can be peace makers wherever we are. Although so far we have been considering peace in terms of the absence of armed conflict, the Hebrew word for peace - SHALOM - is not limited in this way, but rather refers to things being ‘as they should be’. As Radiohead might put it, peace, shalom, means everything in its right place.


This is not a new commission that Jesus presents to his audience. Being peace makers - shalom makers - was a role that God entrusted to Adam when he charged him to tend the Garden of Eden in Genesis. Being a good steward of creation is to cultivate Shalom - to bring harmony, balance. Later in Genesis, Abraham and his family were charged with modelling Shalom - life as it should be - to the nations.

In light of this legacy, Jesus’ encouragement to be peace makers becomes more accessible - if still challenging. To be a peace maker is to bring shalom, which means to bring healing and wholeness, to lives, people, the world. To bring shalom means deliberately looking for the shattered, the hungry, the lost, the down-trodden, and to act in such a way as to bring change.... to feed, to liberate, to raise up. Therefore, when Jesus calls us to be "peacemakers," He is calling us to be the ones to bring healing and wholeness to a broken world.

Justice Matters
Being a peace maker therefore is to do more than talk the talk. But where to start?

Since January this year a small group of friends have been gathering in coffee shops and homes around Finchley to wrestle with this very question. Out of this small gathering of activists, optimists and ordinary radicals has grown Justice Matters - a new community for people seeking to make a difference, an effort to start doing something - however small our individual contributions may be.

Justice Matters held its first public gathering before the summer. We had 25 people join us to
discuss the social justice issues close to their heart - from poverty to sexual violence against women, water and sanitation to political oppression. The theme of the evening - aside from being an opportunity to meet some like-minded people - was to encourage one another that our individual efforts to be peace makers are not lone acts of delusional hope in an ocean of darkness, but rather form vibrant sparks in an incandescent network of shalom bringers. Together we can - together we are - making a difference.

Making even the slightest dent into these global problems may seem impossible, but the worst thing we can do is not act because the task seems too great. Even one step for the better is worth taking: Every hungry person fed and watered, every woman rescued from sex trafficking, every older person granted dignity, every tribesman given economic independence, every child immunised against a preventable disease - each of these is a victory for shalom.

When he calls us to be peace makers, Jesus reminds us that the Kingdom of God is more than well-meant words and a warm glow inside. Rather it is a call to action. In the Church we can be guilty of thinking that praying against injustice is enough. Certainly, prayer is vital - we cannot achieve real change in our own strength, but as Shane Claiborne writes in the book Follow Me to Freedom:

“When we pray for the hungry, let’s remember to feed them. When we pray for the unborn, let’s welcome single mothers and adopt abandoned children. When we give thanks for creation, let’s plant a garden and buy locally grown fruit and vegetables. When we remember the poor, let’s reinvest our money in micro-lending programs. When we pray for peace, let’s beat our swords into ploughshares and turn military budgets into programs of social uplift. When we pray for an end to crime, let’s visit those in prison. When we pray for lost souls, let’s be gracious to the souls who’ve done us wrong.”
Don't worry if you feel small and that you have only a little to give. As the environmental activist Julia Butterfly Hill says: “The question is not, ‘Can you make a difference?’ You already do make a difference. It’s just a question of what kind of difference you want to make."

Thursday, 11 August 2011

The smell of success

"Hello Rioters. Look at your friend, now back to me; now at your friend, now back to me! Sadly, he isn't me; but if he stopped using antisocial behaviour and started using job centre he could be like me. Look down, back up. Where are we? You're at an interview, with the man your friend could work for! What's in his hand? It's an application form to that job he needs. Look again... the form is now money! Anything is possible when you get a job and stop looting. I'm at a desk."

Courtesy of the excellent Stuart Smith.

Sunday, 17 July 2011

What is Justice Matters

At our first public gathering Victoria gave this brief introduction to how Justice Matters came about and where we're headed...

This all started for Sam and me when we visited the United Nations in New York last September. Looking around the UN we were reminded of our passion for social justice – for the number of people in need across the world due to preventable problems. However we also realised that we had become so caught up with the busyness of daily life in London that we ’d become quite able to hear of a problem on the news or in our church and want to do something but just not quite get round to it. Rather than being people characterised by the inability to ignore suffering, we were letting injustice happen because we were too busy to do anything about it.

So on our return home we gathered a few friends who were either in a similar position to ourselves, or who were actually doing something but perhaps finding it difficult to get people involved and gradually Justice Matters was born. We’ve been meeting since January and working out what this group could look like, and what we might actually be able to do. Now we are pleased to be at as stage to welcome you to join us.

Those of us who have been involved in setting up this community are coming to this from a place of faith and we want to be upfront about that. However, we believe that there is something in our common humanity which does not allow us to see injustice without a desire to see it changed. On our own it can seem that the problems we see are just too big for us to make a difference. We hope that through this community we can explore the issues together and learn how we can begin to do something.

In the coming months we plan to meet together to hear guest speakers, learn from one another and undertake practical action as a community. We hope you'll join us.

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

Live Below the Line - Update

Today is Day Two of my Live Below the Line challenge and its going pretty well so far.

Over the weekend, my lovely wife and I worked out a menu for the week - three square meals a day and even deserts, all for just £1 each a day. Keeping it below £10 and healthy was hard, with plenty of items coming on and off the shopping list as we honed our menu to be as lean and efficient as possible. Even as a couple who are used to planning a week's food at a time, working with such a small budget meant it took much longer than normal.

The shop itself was equally time consuming, with lots of selecting and weighing veg to make sure we found the cheapest choice. Although we are doing this to raise awareness of people in extreme poverty overseas, the experience of working with such a small budget raised my empathy for those struggling on low incomes in this country.

The week before last I was queuing at the tills behind a lady for whom our challenge this week was clearly her everyday experience. Repeatedly asking the cashier to run a sub-total on her shopping, she kept having to remove items from the belt to keep below her budget. I hope I exuded quiet compassion as I waited behind her, but I fear that my mere presence, witnessing her struggle to make ends meet, may have heightened the humiliation for her. As someone who has never had to face that kind of hardship, this week of self-imposed struggle is teaching me as much about loving my neighbour across the street as my neighbours beyond the sea.

Saturday, 30 April 2011

Live Below the Line

For five days in May some friends and I are going to try living on just £1 of food a day. We're doing this to raise awareness of global poverty and the 1.4 billion people on the planet today who have to exist on the equivalent of £1 a day for everything they need. In addition to making lots of noise about what we are doing and why, we're going to be giving all the money we would usually have spent on food to support Salvation Army International Development, who resource, empower and support developing communities to defeat poverty and injustice and enable them to build a better life and future.

If you've been reading this blog before, you'll know that I am involved in establishing a community of restless idealists and faithful activists, each passionate about bringing social justice to our hurting world. We've been meeting in locations around Finchley every fortnight since the start of the year and we're using this week of self-enforced poverty to live out the words we say. 

I'll be posting updates on my Twitter feed and Facebook status, as will others, so watch this space. Maybe you'd like to join us in this experiment? If so, drop me a note or comment below.

We can't end poverty overnight, but we can't stand by and ignore it either.


Wednesday, 20 April 2011

The counterfeit bailout

"We spent hundreds of billions of dollars to save the richest companies and people in America, offering them a safety net that we had long since decided not to grant the poorest Americans - lest they 'take advantage' of it... What the banks were supposed to do with our money was to start lending again - which they had stopped doing - to credit-worthy businesses and homeowners for whom critical capital had dried up.

The American people were asked to trust the smart people who knew best and to count on the banks to restore the credit flow to individuals and small businesses that needed it. But some banks bought up (with our money) stocks, bonds, and other assets at rock-bottom prices and then made a killing in profits as the stock market stabilised and began to rise again. Then, to congratulate themselves for seizing this opportunity for making a profit, they gave out record compensation bonuses to themselves whilst wages for the rest of the country continued to fall and more and more people found themselves without a job at all.

It was amorality play almost too unbelievably bad to be true ; yet that is exactly what happened."

From Rediscovering Values by Jim Wallis, 2010 (Hardcover, p220)

Friday, 18 March 2011

The social cost of fiscal profit

"In 1720, the Grande-Saint-Antoine, a merchant ship, was placed under quarantine by officials in the French city of Marseilles. Several crew members had become sick and died from the plague. But this effort to stop the spread of the plague from the ship to city was soon ended by the city's merchants, who pushed for the authorities to release the ship from quarantine so they could bring its valuable cargo to market.

Uncontained, the disease proceeded to kill fifty thousand people in the city, about half its population, and an additional fifty thousand in the surrounding area. These one hundred thousand needless deaths ensued from [the mercantile pursuit of profit and the belief that the market is god]."

From Rediscovering Values, by Jim Wallis, 2010 (hardcover, p71)

Thursday, 20 January 2011

A Community for Social Justice?

On Wednesday 5 January 2011 Victoria and I met with a group of friends and fellow rabble-rousers at the Elephant pub in North Finchley to discuss the possibility of forming a new Missional Community around the theme of social justice. After introductions, we used variously shaped post-it notes to capture our passions, skills and initial ideas. A survey of these post-its revealed a range of passions, including:

  • Inspiring action – challenging apathy, raising awareness, envisioning and empowering
  • Meeting practical needs – water and sanitation, housing
  • Championing equality – including wealth, opportunity, rights of children and women
  • Fighting poverty – at home and abroad, Fairtrade and economic development
  • Sustainability
  • Building community and relationships
  • Theology.

In terms of the talent, those present were well equipped to support the running of a new Community, with project management / administration, publicity / social networking, event management and listening / mentoring / enabling all mentioned on the post-its.

In discussing ideas for what sort of things such a Community might do, there was a clear agreement that our meetings shouldn’t simply be about listening to speakers (though this will no doubt form part of our activities), but should balance hearing and doing. Suggestions included:

  • Hosting public events with guest speakers (eg. Tearfund, WaterAid, Burma etc)
  • Getting involved with wider campaigning opportunities, such as World Walk for Water
  • Holding prayer meetings for global issues – might be directed at rallying church(es) or perhaps something accessible to outsiders
  • Hosting film nights to show thought-provoking movies or documentaries (perhaps in association with Co-op and the Phoenix Cinema) with post-screening discussion (and prayer?)
  • Running / joining a reading group (perhaps with similar aims to the above)
  • Running a regular Justice Café with proceeds going to fight poverty
  • Hosting an Unfair Games event in partnership with Active Barnet or Barnet FC / Saracens / London 2012
  • Assorted practical activities such as litter picking, adopt-a-nursing home, English lessons for refugees
  • Short-term mission to international development-related partners (such as Helping Hands, Compassion, Feed the Hungry, Habitat for Humanity).

Having read and discussed our passions, skills and ideas, we moved on to explore some of the finer details of how such a Community would function, what it would do and how it would meet the framework set out by Henry, Colin and David.

A clear voice for justice
One of the key questions was about the balance between seeking social justice locally and campaigning for it internationally. The majority opinion in the group was that international campaigning was a must, predominantly because of the great need beyond our own borders and also because international issues are perhaps more accessible, making it easier to attract new members to the Community. Whether the group adopts one cause at a time or several remains the topic of further discussion.

Some voiced concern that setting up a Community centred on social justice absolves the remainder of St Bs from engaging with such issues. To avoid this, we propose to model ourselves as an ‘MTF’ for social justice - that is to say, a community of passionate individuals and friends who will provide leadership and structure on the matter of social justice within St Bs, raising awareness of the issues and creating opportunities which will enable others within the congregation (and beyond) to play their own role.

In addition, there was agreement that while the local Church does need to be corralled into a more visible position on social justice, this Community was primarily about connecting with the wider community of Finchley, not just the church goers, enabling everyone to get involved in making a difference to social justices. Given Finchley’s population it is reasonable to believe that there will be folk out there who are interested in getting involved with a group like this. Moreover, with influential, educated professionals living locally there is a real opportunity to shape culture and policy not just locally but across the capitol region. For some, this Community may provide focus and structure for their existing campaigning activities; for others it will provide the tools needed to help them turn goodwill into practical action. This will be a core purpose of the Community - to help local people who want to do good but aren’t sure where to start.

A role in sowing social justice locally
Although many felt that the Community’s primary focus should be speaking up for international, there was a clear sense that some local action was required. However, what form that local action would take was less clear. On one thing we were agreed – we (and presumably many others in the church) didn’t understand enough about local needs to decide a local cause. It was suggested that it would be valuable for those present to spend some time investigating local needs and perhaps use this learning to highlight needs to others in the church. In this way our Community could serve a practical role in raising awareness and supporting the development of other St Bs Communities centred on the needs we identify.

Thinking about taking action locally, there was uncertainty as to how much could reasonably be achieved in one night a week (assuming that the Community was to meet fortnightly and only half the sessions would be dedicated to local issues). Likewise, there was concern that most causes would be disinterested in ‘hit-and-run’ help.

Some possible options options discussed to address the local element of the Community were:

  • Research and gather information about local charities and ask members of the community to commit to volunteering at one or more in their own time. Give frequent opportunities for people to feedback and share what they are doing and to provide accountability.
  • Advertise ourselves to local charities and organisations as an available resource when they need extra help for extraordinary occasions such as larger campaigns or events. Engage with CommUNITY Barnet and Barnet Pledgebank to identify one off volunteering opportunities that would benefit from our manpower.
  • Give members ‘homework’, challenging them to carry out ‘tiny acts of good’ that sow genuine community during their everyday lives (for example introduce yourself to your neighbour, plant bulbs in the garden of your block of flats, befriend your supermarket till clerk etc).

For some of those present, there was clearly a desire to dedicate more time to local issues than international campaigning. It was suggested that these individuals might like to get together to pray about the possibility of forming a Community that centres more directly on a local need into which they might pour their energies.

A Community with soft edges
We did begin tentative discussions about the rhythm or structure of the Community’s gatherings, voicing a desire to be radically inclusive of all members (Christian or otherwise). While we understand that the leadership have proposed a model wherein the Community meets twice a month - once for a public event and once for a more traditional celebration - we were concerned about drawing such a stark division between the Christian and non-Christian members.

While no clear alternative model has yet been defined, it is our hope that the each of the Community’s gatherings would faithfully and unashamedly reflect the faith which has inspired its existence without creating a boundary between the Christian and non-Christians members. In this way, we hope to live out our faith openly and develop genuine, inclusive relationships with all those in the Community, allowing them ownership of the group's activities and development. In this way we hope to avoid a sense of those who are ‘in’ and those who are ‘outside’ and instead generate a culture where we welcome people wherever they are at and draw them along on our journey.