Is this a dead blog???

Nothing new happening?
Well, we are studying, studying, studying…the grand finale of three years as student at St Mellitus College.
A bit scruffy around the edges, Edda's endless essay deadline extensions, staring at a computer screen to make sense of some pretty challenging conundrums, never enough time for anything else, yet….we wouldn't have wanted to miss the amazing opportunity of the training we received over these last three years. After all, this is what we thought we would be doing right at the beginning of our married life almost 18 years ago…
"In their hearts human beings plan their course, but the LORD establishes their steps." Proverbs 16:9
"Des Menschen Herz denkt sich einen Weg aus, aber der Herr lent seine Schritte." Sprüche 16.9 
Christoph's ordination will be at the end of June - as you can see he practiced really from the age of two.
Edda will complete the foundations degree in May 2013, once she submitted two further assignments in the course of the next academic year.
For now it's two more assignments for both of us before the end of June.



(download)

New songs we sing

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(This is an article Christoph has written for our latest church magazine. All quotes initalics are from his CD “Accidents & Emergencies”. You can listen to it further down in this blog or at lindnermedia.org)

Friday, 12 November 2010
Countdown, lights, applause from the audience. And then Mark Bingham, Martin Paine and I are up on stage and playing the first song from my new CD …

It has taken me ten years to write, compile and record these fourteen songs. I’ve given the album the title “Accidents & Emergencies”, as I first got serious about this project when a seemingly routine sinus operation had to be abandoned because of potential brain injury.

God often does his deepest work in the accidents and emergencies of life, but tonight we celebrate: his goodness, our friendships, the eternal hope that a faith in Jesus brings. What a gift to be a part of the community of the two St James - you have helped Edda and me to live and sing and write “new songs” for over ten years now! New songs we sing / Old are the tunes, but when played on a new string they are / New songs…

Wednesday, 3 November 2010
Together with some of my colleagues and friends from St Mellitus College I kneel down in the chapel of All Saints Pastoral Centre. The gentle worship music is balm to my soul. Tears. Prayers of thanks. “Lord, you know all my shortcomings and yet you want to use me to show Christ’s love to this messed-up world? What a crazy plan!”

It has been an exhausting week: As part of our “vicar training” we have done a course on character formation - “The Undefended Leader”. We come face to face with our defences, our traumas, the ugly dark corners of our lives. We speak God’s truth into each others lives. We allow his Spirit to begin the healing work. We know that this will be a life-long process. To learn to lead like Jesus did. King with towel, you kneel down before me, and you wash my feet…

Why has it taken me so long to start ordination training? Because, being a vicar’s son, I had to get over a few hang-ups. Because I had to learn that I can be an ordained priest and still believe in the priesthood of all believers. Because God’s timing is perfect. And because, sometimes, the Germans and their towels don’t get there first. Although that towel will come in handy now, if I am going to lead like Jesus did.

Monday, 30 August 2010
Edda and I celebrate ten years in England. For one year we have now been British citizens. House and garden are full with friends and neighbours. We’ve really grown roots here. When we arrived, we initially committed to three years. But after those years, Edda spoke fluent English and was leading the children’s ministry at St James. We are at home here and yet we haven’t lost our hunger for new beginnings. I breathe the air I see the changes all around me / How a new season is advancing / And abandoned like the leaves I join the dancing…

We are both training at St Mellitus College now, Edda for a Diploma in Contextual Theology, I for a BA in theology and ordination. We love the community, the learning, the great examples of innovative church ministry we see in our colleagues’ work. We dread the next essay crisis. Our work-rest balance needs attention. Has always needed it.

Saturday, 30 July 1994
Our wedding day! Another great church community rallies around us as we promise to love one another and to serve God in family, church and world. And off we go to Hamburg to start from scratch together: new town, new jobs, new church, new friends, new married life. The pile-up of too many “new somethings” takes its toll on our health. Our dream to become part of a new church planting movement comes to nothing. Our inner city jobs in education are often bruising. Did we make a mistake? Did God lead us down a cul-de-sac? We also discover the wonder of a shared life: trust, intimacy, laughter, tears, dreams, rows and reconciliations…
I felt a touch today / It was gentle and firm, two hands enclosing mine / Held by a greater hand / We walk into the future, with our lives entwined…

Friday, 12 November 2010, again…
The concert is nearly over and I am on the phone to my parents. A spontaneous idea I have had just before the concert. To show them how much their support means to me. They have been listening to my songs in their sitting room in Germany while we’ve been playing them live here at St James! I ask them what their favourite song is. “New songs…”
Edda and I don’t know what the future holds, what new songs we will sing. What exactly will happen when we finish our training in the summer of 2012 (apart from a loooong holiday!)…

Trees need strong roots to spread out their branches. And we have roots: the support of our families, our amazing church family and friends, our faithful God: He gives you and me a new song to sing amidst the noise of this world: Sing them out, make them heard / They need our voice so that more ears can listen to those / New songs…

Internet Fasting - erm, no… / Internetfasten? Nicht wirklich…

[ENGLISH] It has happened. I have finally given up my long-standing resistance and signed up to Facebook. Yes, it is "another thing". Yes, it has the potential of redefining "friend" in a not altogether helpful way. Yes, it has the potential of becoming addictive. Yes, it needs good boundaries and self-restriction in what I publish to avoid self-promotion and exhibitionism. And, yes, it is a very poor substitute for real, face-to-face, "incarnational", rubbing-of-shoulders communication. I stand by all that. But the first 48 hours have been quite exciting: Amazing how quickly a network of friends mushrooms after just inviting a few people to start with. Amazing to find people on there I did not expect. Great to have the chance to be in touch with an old friend from university days in Germany or an ex-member of our church who moved back to the US last year. To find out that a much-loved elderly member of our church, who does not get out of the house much these days, is there and has made contact with me. And it is a bit of fun for a quick break during the day. I am sure my enthusiasm will dial down to a sustainable level in a couple of days' time. My main reason for signing up was that we have quite a thriving St Mellitus student community on Facebook. Being "mixed mode students" (i.e. we work in a local church for most of the time and study for two days a week, only one of those being together in college, plus a residential weekend per month), it really helps to feel connected inbetween. I have already seen that yesterday while finishing one of my essays and being able to track the progress of a number of other students! A couple of days ago senior bishop in the Church of England called for a "technology fast" during Lent. The main focus seems to be more on saving our planet, but the Bishop of Oxford also commented how difficult he would find it to do without mobile phone and email and that we need to concentrate more on "face to face" communication. An excellent "Beyond Belief" BBC podcast on religion and the web stated that on average children and young people in the UK spend 13.8 hours per week surfing the internet. The panelists talk about info-lust (I need to know this now!) and info-gestapo (serious pressure if you do not respond to electronic communications quickly). One of the panelists, Dr Douglas Groothuis, rejects the idea that the internet is "neutral". With Marshal McLuhan ("The medium is the message") he argues that it has intrinsic strengths and downsides / dark sides: narcissism, self-obsession, a lack of healthy boundaries (they don't shirk the huge issue of internet pornography in the programme), a drive towards instant gratification, loss of ability to focus on one thing only, etc. Sounds like I should try abstaining from my electronic media on my day off ("info Sabbath", "cyber fast")... [GERMAN] Jetzt ist es also doch passiert. Ich habe meinen hartnäckigen Widerstand aufgegeben und mich bei Facebook angemeldet.
Ja, es ist “noch eine Sache”. Ja, es kann unter Umständen den Begriff “Freund” gefährlich entwerten. Ja, es hat Suchtpotential. Ja, es braucht klare Grenzsetzungen und Selbstbeschränkung um Eigenreklame und Exhibitionismus zu verhindern. Und, ja, es ist ein ärmlicher Ersatz für direkte, “eingefleischte”, Schulter-an-Schulter und Nase-an-Nase Kommunikation. Das sehe ich alles immer noch so. Aber die ersten 48 Stunden sind recht spannend gewesen: Erstaunlich, wie schnell sich “von alleine” ein Freundesnetz entwickelt, nachdem ich nur ein paar Leute eingeladen habe, mein Freund zu werden. Erstaunlich, Leute zu entdecken, die ich nicht auf Facebook vermutet hatte. Schön, wieder Kontakt aufzunehmen mit einem alten Studienfreund in Deutschland, einem Ex-Mitglied unserer Gemeinde, die jetzt wieder in Amerika lebt. Herauszufinden, dass ein älteres Gemeindemitglied, den ich sehr bewundere und der nicht mehr sehr mobil ist, auf Facebook ist und Kontakt mit mir aufnimmt. Und es ist eine kurzweilige Arbeitspause, die mich ein paar mal am Tag auf andere Gedanken bringt. Ich erwarte, dass meine Begeisterung in ein paar Tagen auf ein gesundes Normalmass zurückfährt. Hauptgrund für meinen Sinneswandel ist, dass wir eine recht lebendige Studentengruppe von St Mellitus auf Facebook haben. Da wir im “gemischten Modus” studieren (wir arbeiten die meiste Zeit in einer Ortsgemeinde und studieren zwei Tage in der Woche, davon nur einen gemeinsam im College, plus einmal im Monat ein Studienwochenende), hilft es, dazwischen im Kontakt zu bleiben. Das habe ich bereits gestern erlebt, als ich eine schriftliche Hausarbeit zu Ende brachte und sehen konnte, wie andere mit mir kämpften! Vor ein paar Tagen riefen einige Bischöfe in der Anglikanischen Kirche zum “Technologiefasten” während der Fastenzeit auf. Der Hauptakzent lag wohl auf Bewahrung der Schöpfung, aber der Bischof von Oxford bemerkte auch, wie schwer er es fände, auf Handy und E-Post zu verzichten, und dass wir mehr Wert auf direkte, persönliche Kommunikation legen sollten. Eine ausgezeichnete “Beyond Belief” Sendung der BBC über Religion und das Internet stellte kürzlich fest, dass Kinder und Jugendliche in England im Schnitt 13.8 Stunden pro Woche im Internet surfen. Die Diskussionsteilnehmer sprechen von “Info-Lust” (Ich muss das jetzt sofort wissen!) und “Info-Gestapo” (ernsthafter Druck, wenn du nicht schnell auf eine elektronische Nachricht reagierst). Ein Diskussionsteilnehmer, Dr. Douglas Groothuis, widerspricht der populären Meinung, dass das Internet neutral sei. Mit Marshal McLuhan (“Das Medium ist die Botschaft”) meint er, dass das Internet eingebaute Stärken und Schattenseiten hat: Narzissmus, ein Fehlen von gesunden Grenzen (das Programm weicht nicht dem riesigen Problem von Internetpornographie aus), Sofortbefriedigung jedes Bedürfnisses, Verlust der Fähigkeit, sich auf nur eine Sache zu konzentrieren, usw. Klingt als ob ich versuchen sollte, an meinem freien Tag auf elektronische Kommunikation zu verzichten (Infosabbat, Cyberfasten)...

Prince Charles at St Mellitus - the photos…

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(From left to right: HRH the Prince of Wales, Graham Tomlin (Dean of St Mellitus) with his wife Janet, Nicky Gumbel (Vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton) with his wife Pippa, Ken Costa (Church Warden at HTB and chairman of Lazard investment bank) And here is the whole set on flickr... And the official St Mellitus Report is here...

From Royal Brompton to Royal Highness in 48 hours

[ENGLISH] We had a fun morning today. Christoph was discharged from the Royal Brompton Hospital on Wednesday afternoon, and this morning we were back in London: Edda dropped Christoph off at St Paul's Church where we go for our theological training each week (and which is literally a two-minute walk from the hospital!). A month ago the ordinands from our college were invited to a morning with a distinguished guest to celebrate theological training and the life of the church in London. It was all shrouded in secrecy, but it was clear from the security (access only with personal invitation and photo ID) that it was someone important. Most popular guesses among the students were Tony Blair or Prince Charles. In the end it was Prince Charles! Encouraging to hear him speak about his active interest in the future of the Church. As our friend Paul Williams remarked (who was also there), it was a fitting conclusion to our year of applying and receiving  British citizenship! In the meantime Edda had a coffee with Paul's wife Sarah and returned in time to see the Prince leave the church. Suddenly someone called her name and it turned out that one of the security guards is a member of our church in Gerrards Cross. A fun morning indeed.
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[DEUTSCH] Heute hatten wir einen eher ungewöhnlichen Morgen. Christoph wurde am Mittwoch aus dem Royal Brompton Krankenhaus entlassen, und heute früh waren wir schon wieder in London: Edda lieferte Christoph mit dem Auto ganz in der Nähe der St Paul's Kirche ab, wo wir jeden Montag Theologiestudium haben (die Kirche ist gerade zwei Fußminuten vom Krankenhaus entfernt!). Vor einem Monat wurden alle Studenten, die in unserem College zum Pastor ausgebildet werden, eingeladen an einem "Event" mit einem Ehrengast teilzunehmen. Das Ereignis sollte würdigen, was augenblicklich in London im kirchlichen Leben und theologischer Ausbildung passiert. Von den Sicherheitsmaßnahmen konnten wir schließen, dass es sich um eine recht bedeutende Persönlichkeit handeln musste: Einlass nur mit persönlicher Einladung und Fotoausweis! Die meisten Studenten tippten auf Tony Blair oder Prince Charles. Es war dann in der Tat Prince Charles. Sehr ermutigend zu sehen und hören, dass er aktiv an der Zukunft der Kirche interessiert ist. Wie unser Freund Paul Williams bemerkte (der auch da war), war das ein passender Abschluss des Jahres in dem wir die britische Staatsbürgerschaft beantragten und erhielten! In der Zwischenzeit machte Edda einen Besuch bei Sarah Williams (Pauls Ehefrau) und kam gerade rechtzeitig zurück um mitzubekommen wie der Prinz die Kirche verließ und davonchauffiert wurde. Plötzlich spricht sie jemand mit Namen an und sie stellt fest, dass einer der Sicherheitsbeamten ein Mitglied unserer Kirchengemeinde ist: Wirklich ein gelungener Freitag morgen.

September 2009

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The most eventful month of the year, maybe even decade....to name some of these events: Christoph starts ordination training in earnest, Edda starts Diploma course (as an independent student at the same college as Christoph), Christoph's colleague Chris is getting married to Rachael with a big wedding at St James, St James Church celebrates 150 years, Martin Williams is introduced as the new Rector of St James (i.e. our boss), Edda misses her cousin Stefan's wedding, we become British Citizens (we have dual citizenship now and are still German). Wohl der ereignisreichste Monate des Jahres, wenn nicht sogar des Jahrzehnts....hier die wichtigsten Ereignisse in Kurzform: Christoph beginnt die Ausbildung zum Pastor, Edda beginnt die theologische Weiterbildung als unabhängige Studentin am gleichen College wie Christoph, Christophs Kollege Chris und seine Verlobte Rachael heiraten, St James Kirche feiert 150 Jahre, Martin Williams wird neuer Hauptpastor von St James (und damit unser Chef), Eddas Cousin Stefan heiratet - schade, dass ein Wochenende in Frankfurt  nicht auch noch reinpasst, wir sind britische Staatsbürger geworden (doppelte Staatsbürgerschaft - wir sind auch noch deutsch).
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November 2009

Was filled with preparation for the various Christmas events at St James and both of us wrote our first essay as part of our courses. The photo was taken by Christoph at St Pancras train station at the beginning of his journey to France, where his first study week took place (first journey through the Eurotunnel). ...war überwiegend mit Vorbereitungen für die verschiedensten Weihnachtsgottesdienste und mit schriftlicher Hausarbeit ausgefüllt. Das Foto hat Christoph am Bahnhof St Pancras in London aufgenommen. Er hatte eine Studienwoche in Frankreich und ist zum ersten mal durch den Eurotunnel gefahren.
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On our way to St Mellitus…

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Christoph and Edda on the tube into London: Our first Monday together at St Mellitus/St Paul's theological college. Edda is studying for a Diploma in contextual theology (3 years) and Christoph is training for ordination and studying for a BA in Theology (also 3 years). Next Monday things will get serious: We will start even earlier (8.30am) with an introduction to New Testament Greek.  So far we really enjoy being stretched in our understanding of God. The college has a great ethos of doing theology in the context of "real church" and "real worship" - every morning we start with half an hour of worship together. And of course it is very special for the two of us to be doing this together! Christoph und Edda in der U-Bahn auf dem Weg nach London: Unser erster Montag im St Mellitus/St Paul College. Edda studiert für ein Diplom in kontextueller Theologie (3 Jahre) und Christoph wird zum Pastor ausgebildet und studiert für einen BA in Theologie (auch drei Jahre). Nächsten Montag wird es ernst: Erster Kurs um 8.30 Uhr - Einführung in neutestamentliches Griechisch. Bisher haben wir es genossen, unser Verständnis von Gott zu erweitern. Das College hat als Grundprinzip, Theologie im Raum der Kirche und umrahmt von "Gottesdienst" zu betreiben - ganzheitliche Theologie sozusagen. Und natürlich ist es etwas ganz besonderes für uns zwei, dies gemeinsam zu erleben.