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Showing posts with label trytank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trytank. Show all posts

Friday, 18 March 2022

humbler church Bigger God w/c Sunday 20th March 2022






 
Welcome to our exciting HeartEdge programme for 2022. We hope you will be able to join us, whether at online events or at our in-person events around the world. You can find all our events on our website — and if you're a HeartEdge partner, you can upload your own events through the members' area.

Last year, we launched Living God's Future Now, an online festival of theology and practice. We hosted workshops, webinars, spaces to gather and share ideas, lecture series, and more. This year, we're continuing our programming with a new theme — humbler church, Bigger God.

HeartEdge is fundamentally about a recognition of the activity of the Holy Spirit beyond and outside the church, and about a church that flourishes when it seeks to catch up with what the Spirit is already doing in the world. There was a time when church meant a group that believed it could control access to God – access that only happened in its language on its terms. But God is bigger than that, and the church needs to be humbler than that. Kingdom churches anticipate the way things are with God forever – a culture of creativity, mercy, discovery and grace – and are grateful for the ways God renews the church through those it has despised, rejected, or ignored.

We hope this reflects the lessons we've learnt from the past year: still trying to live God's future now, re-imagining our faith and our calling as a Church in a changing world. Thank you for joining us for the journey — we can't wait to see what this year brings.

Music and Liturgy for Easter: Sat, 19 March, 11:00 – 12:00 GMT. Register at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/music-and-liturgy-for-easter-tickets-275772501977. Andy Salmon (North West Co-ordinator of HeartEdge and Rector of Sacred Trinity Church) will give tips about creative liturgical resources for Easter whilst Andrew Earis (Director of Music at St Martin-in-the-Fields) and the Manchester HeartEdge Choral Scholars will share musical resources to help freshen up your Easter experience. We will be broadcasting on St Martin's digital platform but people are also welcome to come in person.

Theology Group - Sunday, 20 March, 19:00 – 20:00 BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/theology-group-tickets-248745844517. The St Martin-in-the-Fields and HeartEdge Theology Group provides a monthly opportunity to reflect theologically on issues of today and questions of forever with Sam Wells. Each month Sam responds to questions from a member of the congregation of St Martin-in-the-Fields who also chairs the session and encourages your comments and questions. In March the chair will be Jonathan Evens, who will be exploring with Sam the extent to which we can be co-creators with God.

Sermon Preparation with Sally Hitchiner and Sam Wells - 16:30 (GMT) Tuesday 22nd March, livestreamed here. Sam Wells and Sally Hitchiner discuss Sunday's readings and offer practical tips on preaching.

Community of Practitioners workshop - 16:00 (GMT) Wednesday 23rd March, Zoom meeting. Email jonathan.evens@smitf.org to register. This is a space for practitioners, lay and ordained, to reflect on theology and practice. Each week, we alternate between 'Wonderings' and discussion of a work of theology. Book to be read is ‘Improvisation’ by Sam Wells. 'Wonderings' help us to reflect and pray on what has stood out for each of us in the last week. Newcomers are very welcome. This week we reflect on recent experiences using ‘Wonderings'.

How to Thrive Post-Covid: New Frameworks of Discovery - Thursday 24 March, 19:00 – 20:00, Zoom. Register at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/how-to-thrive-post-covid-new-frameworks-of-discovery-tickets-260228770257. The three steps of design thinking are discovery, ideas, and trying. The process can also be used on existing ideas to see if they’re still working. This workshop will focus on several frameworks that can be useful in discerning what to keep and what to let go of post-Covid. Rather than simply relying on a “gut feeling,” we can use clear frameworks to penetrate the surface of an issue to identify what really matters at its core. This course is taught by the Rev. Lorenzo Lebrija, the founding director of the TryTank Experimental Lab, a joint venture for innovation in the church from Virginia Theological Seminary and General Theological Seminary. He is also the author of the “How to Try” book which came out July 20, 2021 from Church Publishing.

TryTank meet and greet - Thursday 24 March, 20:00 – 21:00, Zoom. Register at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/trytank-meet-and-greet-tickets-262572029007. TryTank is the experimental lab for church innovation. Our work is to look ahead 10 years to where the church might be headed and use that foresight to inform our actions today. If you want to learn more about our work and perhaps partner on an experiment, join a conversation with the Rev. Lorenzo Lebrija, the director of TryTank.

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Curtis Mayfield - We Gotta Have Peace.

Sunday, 27 February 2022

humbler church Bigger God - March 2022







HeartEdge is fundamentally about a recognition of the activity of the Holy Spirit beyond and outside the church, and about a church that flourishes when it seeks to catch up with what the Spirit is already doing in the world. There was a time when church meant a group that believed it could control access to God – access that only happened in its language on its terms. But God is bigger than that, and the church needs to be humbler than that. Kingdom churches anticipate the way things are with God forever – a culture of creativity, mercy, discovery and grace – and are grateful for the ways God renews the church through those it has despised, rejected, or ignored.

‘humbler church Bigger God’ is the new title for our ongoing online festival of theology, ideas and practice. We’ve developed this in response to our changing world. The church is changing too, and - as we improvise and experiment - we can learn and support each other. This is ‘humbler church Bigger God’’ - talks, workshops and discussion - hosted by HeartEdge. Created to equip, encourage and energise churches - from leaders to volunteers and enquirers - at the heart and on the edge.

The online programme includes:

Regular workshops: Church History (Fortnightly on Mondays), Sermon Preparation (Weekly on Tuesdays) and Community of Practitioners (Weekly on Wednesdays)
One-off workshops and series on topics relevant to renewal of the broad church including Contemplation as a Gift to the Church and Reconciling Mission: Being Better Neighbours.

February's humbler church Bigger God programme includes:

Church History course:

A new course providing an introduction to and an overview of church history. If we are to see a humbler Church and a bigger God, we need to deal with the history of the Church to understand where we are now, and why. The course starts on Monday 24 January and runs twice a month at 7.45 pm on Mondays until 25 July (see below for dates and topics). It will be led by Rev Ruth Gouldbourne who has been a Baptist minister for more than 30 years, ministering in churches in Bedford, London and Cheadle Hulme, as well as being a tutor at Bristol Baptist College. An Associate Fellow of Spurgeon's College, she is also Senior Research Fellow of IBTSC Amsterdam, and a Research Fellow of Bristol Baptist College.

The schedule is as follows: Week 4 - Augustine towers over us all March 14; Week 5 - Christendom; love it or hate it, you need to deal with it March 28; Week 6 - A thousand years when nothing happened April 11; Week 7 - Middle ages; Light April 25; Week 8 - Middle Ages; Dark May 9; Week 9 - Middle Ages; Shadow May 23; Week 10 - Reform of all shapes and sizes June 6; Week 11 - Reason and romanticism June 27; Week 12 - Expansion and disintegration July 11; Week 13 - Reconfiguration – and nothing new under the sun. July 25.

Register for the Zoom link at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/church-history-course-tickets-280175220627.

Sermon Preparation with Sally Hitchiner and Sam Wells

Tuesdays, 16:30-17:30 GMT live-streamed at https://www.facebook.com/theHeartEdge. Join us for our weekly discussion of the lectionary readings for the coming Sunday with Sam Wells and Sally Hitchiner.

Community of Practitioners workshop:

Wednesdays at 16:00 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Email jonathan.evens@smitf.org to register. This is a space for practitioners, lay and ordained, to reflect on theology and practice. Each week, we alternate between 'Wonderings' and discussion of a work of theology. The book to be read is ‘Improvisation’ by Sam Wells. 'Wonderings' help us to reflect and pray on what has stood out for each of us in the last week. Newcomers are very welcome.

Shut In Shut Out Shut Up: Disability and Church: Intersectionality – Fridays, 4, 11, 18 March, 16:30 GMT. Register at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/shut-in-shut-out-shut-up-tickets-275653155007. Intersectionality is a way of describing how social categories (eg disability, race) combine to create overlapping systems of discrimination or disadvantage. In this 4th series of Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up we explore the intersectional experience of disability and neurodiversity, gender, mental health, sexuality, race and poverty. What are the key issues in the context of faith? What are our calls to the church? Since 2012 the Living Edge conference has held space for disabled and neurodivergent people to gather, to resource each other and the church. These HeartEdge events share some of this experience, providing new space to ask challenging questions. Join us for more honest conversations.

Speakers: hosted by Fiona MacMillan with guests including: Molly Boot, Alex Clare-Young, Lamar Hardwick, Kate Harford, Ann Memmott, Rachel Noel, Alexis Padilla.

Topics
4 March - Disability & Neurodiversity
11 March - Gender
18 March - Mental Health
10 June - Sexuality
17 June - Race
24 June - Poverty

Access information
Image description: Church building behind iron gates; gates are shut and locked with a padlock and metal chain.
90 minutes on Zoom in meeting mode. Each session combines input from speakers with time in small groups and plenary discussion.
BSL and automatic captions are available.
Sessions will be recorded and posted on the HeartEdge YouTube channel.
Previous series of Shut In Shut Out Shut Up can be found at: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLO43Y1gJDjYT5iOQlxc3vpRbo8EfFWU80

Speakers

Fiona MacMillan (she/her) is a disability advocate, practitioner, speaker and writer. She chairs the Disability Advisory Group at St Martin in the Fields and is a trustee of Inclusive Church. Fiona leads the planning team for the annual Living Edge disability conference, now in its 11th year.
https://www.plough.com/en/topics/justice/politics/human-rights/calling-from-the-edge
Calling from the Edge (2017) & Something Worth Sharing (2019) (editor). Calls, ideas & practical resources for creating change - https://www.inclusive-church.org/disability
Fiona is on twitter @jpuddlegoose

Alex Clare-Young (they/them/Alex) is a pioneer minister in the United Reformed Church with a particular call towards working alongside those marginalised in church and society for social justice and equity for all. Alex’s lived experiences as a transmasculine non-binary person who is multiply neurodivergent and disabled inspires this call.
https://alexclareyoung.co.uk/ - Alex’s website
https://www.ionabooks.com/product/transgender-christian-human/ - Alex’s book
Alex is on twitter @alex_clareyoung and on Instagram @alex.clareyoung

Ann Memmott (she/they) is the author of the Church of England autism guidelines, and a member of the St Martin in the Fields/Inclusive Church disability conference planning team. Ann is autistic & disabled, and is a carer. Ann works nationally as an adviser on neurodivergent inclusion, working with a variety of organisations, and has been a regular contributor to Radio 4's Prayer for the Day.
https://d3hgrlq6yacptf.cloudfront.net/61f2fd86f0ee5/content/pages/documents/20211006-doc-mission-ministry-welcoming-autism-church-guidelines-v01.pdf
Ann's autism blog https://annsautism.blogspot.com/
Ann is on twitter @AnnMemmott

Rachel Noël (she/her), known locally as the Pink Vicar, is Priest in Charge of St Mark’s Church, Pennington, a HeartEdge church in the Diocese of Winchester. Creative, colourful, enthusiastic, autistic, ADHD, bipolar, and vulnerable to covid, she is passionate about diversity and inclusion. Rachel is a member of the Community of Hopeweavers.
Rachel's blog: thepinkvicar.com
Rachel is on twitter: @ThePinkVicar

Faith in the time of the ‘new normal’: Session one - Where are we now?: 3rd March 7:15pm. Register at https://form.jotform.com/212773252401043. A series of Lenten conversations hosted by The Queen’s Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education. This series aims to help congregations and house groups reflect on how Christians may understand the changes we’ve been through as a society, and the new ‘place’ we may be entering. It will draw on and introduce participants to resources from the tradition and offer them some tools for reflection to carry forward towards Easter. Sessions will take place on Thursday evenings during Lent and will be streamed live from the Queen's chapel to groups gathered online. Resources will be provided for the weeks where there are no hosted sessions. Thursday 3rd March: Where are we now? This session will explore where we are culturally in the wake of the pandemic, drawing on the Psalms to consider change, struggle and growth as an anchor for reflection.

Faith in the time of the ‘new normal’: Session two - Living in the tension: 17th March 7:15pm. Register at https://form.jotform.com/212773252401043. A series of Lenten conversations hosted by The Queen’s Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education. This series aims to help congregations and house groups reflect on how Christians may understand the changes we’ve been through as a society, and the new ‘place’ we may be entering. It will draw on and introduce participants to resources from the tradition and offer them some tools for reflection to carry forward towards Easter. Sessions will take place on Thursday evenings during Lent and will be streamed live from the Queen's chapel to groups gathered online. Resources will be provided for the weeks where there are no hosted sessions.

Music and Liturgy for Easter: Saturday 19 March, 11:00 – 12:00 GMT, Sacred Trinity Church, Chapel Street, Salford M3 5DW.

Theology Group: Sunday, 20 March, 19:00 – 20:00 BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/theology-group-tickets-248745844517. The St Martin-in-the-Fields and HeartEdge Theology Group provides a monthly opportunity to reflect theologically on issues of today and questions of forever with Sam Wells. Each month Sam responds to questions from a member of the congregation of St Martin-in-the-Fields who also chairs the session and encourages your comments and questions. In March the chair will be Jonathan Evens, who will be exploring with Sam the extent to which we can be co-creators with God.

How to Thrive Post-Covid: New Frameworks of Discovery - Thursday 24 March, 19:00 – 20:00, Zoom. Register at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/how-to-thrive-post-covid-new-frameworks-of-discovery-tickets-260228770257. The three steps of design thinking are discovery, ideas, and trying. The process can also be used on existing ideas to see if they’re still working. This workshop will focus on several frameworks that can be useful in discerning what to keep and what to let go of post-Covid. Rather than simply relying on a “gut feeling,” we can use clear frameworks to penetrate the surface of an issue to identify what really matters at its core. This course is taught by the Rev. Lorenzo Lebrija, the founding director of the TryTank Experimental Lab, a joint venture for innovation in the church from Virginia Theological Seminary and General Theological Seminary. He is also the author of the “How to Try” book which came out July 20, 2021 from Church Publishing.

TryTank meet and greet - Thursday 24 March, 20:00 – 21:00, Zoom. Register at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/trytank-meet-and-greet-tickets-262572029007. TryTank is the experimental lab for church innovation. Our work is to look ahead 10 years to where the church might be headed and use that foresight to inform our actions today. If you want to learn more about our work and perhaps partner on an experiment, join a conversation with the Rev. Lorenzo Lebrija, the director of TryTank.

Faith in the time of the ‘new normal’: Session three - Same boat or same storm?: 31st March 7:15pm. Register at https://form.jotform.com/212773252401043. A series of Lenten conversations hosted by The Queen’s Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education. This series aims to help congregations and house groups reflect on how Christians may understand the changes we’ve been through as a society, and the new ‘place’ we may be entering. It will draw on and introduce participants to resources from the tradition and offer them some tools for reflection to carry forward towards Easter. Sessions will take place on Thursday evenings during Lent and will be streamed live from the Queen's chapel to groups gathered online. Resources will be provided for the weeks where there are no hosted sessions.

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Al Green - Chariots Of Fire.

Saturday, 17 July 2021

Living God's Future Now - w/c 18 July 2021

 







'Living God’s Future Now’ is our mini online festival of theology, ideas and practice.

We’ve developed this in response to the pandemic and our changing world. The church is changing too, and - as we improvise and experiment - we can learn and support each other.

This is 'Living God’s Future Now’ - talks, workshops and discussion - hosted by HeartEdge. Created to equip, encourage and energise churches - from leaders to volunteers and enquirers - at the heart and on the edge.

The focal event in ‘Living God’s Future Now’ is a monthly conversation where Sam Wells explores what it means to improvise on God’s kingdom with a leading theologian or practitioner.

The online programme includes:
  • Regular weekly workshops: Biblical Studies (Mondays fortnightly), Sermon Preparation (Tuesdays) and Community of Practitioners (Wednesdays)
  • One-off workshops on topics relevant to lockdown such as ‘Growing online communities’ and ‘Grief, Loss & Remembering’
  • Monthly HeartEdge dialogue featuring Sam Wells in conversation with a noted theologian or practitioner
Find earlier Living God’s Future Now sessions at https://www.facebook.com/pg/theHeartEdge/videos/?ref=page_internal.

Regular – Weekly or Fortnightly

Tuesdays: Sermon Preparation Workshop, 16:30 (GMT), livestreamed at https://www.facebook.com/theHeartEdge/. Please note there will be no Sermon Preparation workshop on Tuesday 6 April.

Wednesdays: Community of Practitioners workshop, 16:30 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Email jonathan.evens@smitf.org to register.

Fortnightly on Mondays: Biblical Studies class, 19:30-21:00 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Register in advance: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMrcOmgrTgsHt2ceY7LepLhQYqQxS1G1ix9 2021 dates - Gospels & Acts.
  • 26 Jul: Lecture 14 Parables and The Kingdom of God

* Our Sermon Preparation Workshop and Community of Practitioners are currently on a summer break *



Monday


Culture Clinic: Monday 19 July, 14:00-15:00 BST, Zoom. Register here. Culture Clinic is the new monthly offer for anyone and everyone looking for support in developing their church cultural engagement - from setting up a gallery space, developing space gigs, hosting comedy or movie nights. The clinic offers 'how to'... help. Always practical, useful, full of ideas and tactics. The clinic is monthly 1:1 support with Sarah Rogers - HeartEdge Culture Development coordinator.

Tuesday

Reconciling Mission: Building Bridges across Europe
Zoom
Tuesday 20 July, 14:00 (GMT)
Register here
In this webinar, we will explore how Christians might contribute to overcoming current tensions by building bridges across some of the boundaries within Europe. Participants: Alastair McKay is director of Reconciliation Initiatives, Brother Matthew is part of the Taizé Community in France, Cornelia Kulawik is a pastor in Berlin-Dahlem, who is on the board of the Community of the Cross of Nails, Germany, John Witcombe is the Dean of Coventry, and +Robert Innes is the Bishop of Gibraltar in Europe.

How to Try: Design Thinking and Church Innovation
Zoom
Tuesday 20 July, 19:00 (GMT)
Register here
Lorenzo Lebrija, director of TryTank, a lab for church growth and innovation, has developed a straightforward framework for experiments in new ministry based on research and interviews. His book gives tools and templates for how to do just that, and to find God in the failures as well as the successes. Lorenzo will be in conversation with Jonathan Evens and Andy Turner.

Thursday

Reimaging church spaces
Zoom
Thursday 22 July, 19:00 (GMT)
Register here
What are the implications of the HeartEdge 4 Cs for church buildings? How can our buildings be used as places of worship, a resource for community development, spaces for cultural expression, and sites for commercial enterprises? What place should concepts such as ‘Living Heritage’ and ‘Heritage for All’ play in thinking about the use of church buildings? With input from Phillip Dawson, Consultant for FBM Architects, Kathryn Harris of Nick Cox Architects, Nigel Walter, founding director of Archangel, and Revd Robert Thompson.

Friday

Jesus Is Just Alright: A Rock Agape
Zoom
Friday 23 July, 16:30 (GMT)
Register here
We will aim to further demonstrate the potential for use of rock and pop music in mission and ministry by extending the Jesus Is Just Alright series and offering an experimental Rock Agape in Zoom. The Agape meal is a Christian fellowship meal recalling the meals Jesus shared with disciples during his ministry.

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The Revolutionary Army of the Infant Jesus - After the End.

Sunday, 14 June 2020

'How to Try', 'Growing online communities' & 'Faith in the future'





‘Living God’s Future Now’ describes a series of online seminars, discussions and presentations hosted by HeartEdge. They are designed to equip, encourage and energise church leaders, laypeople and enquirers alike, in areas such as preaching, growing a church, shifting online, deepening spirituality in a congregation and responding to social need.

‘How to Try’
17 and 18 June. 11am to 1pm (EST).


Design thinking is a process for creative problem-solving. Design thinking has a human-centered core. In other words, it encourages congregations to focus on the people they're serving, which leads to better experiences, ministries, and impact in our world. Harvard Business Review says that "design thinking works."

Learn and practice the core concepts of design thinking for a church setting from TryTank—the experimental lab for church growth and innovation.

They’ve designed this two-day workshop to give you a foundational, practical understanding of the essential design thinking skills and mindsets.

Register here: https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07egqoqu2h880a7475&oseq=&c=&ch=.


Growing community online - Part 3:
Friday 19 June, 4.30pm (BST), livestreamed at the HeartEdge facebook page


Sally Hitchiner, Lorenzo Lebrija and Rachel Noel explore 'how to' build community online for churches.

Practical tips, stories, keeping in touch, sharing insights, finding support, promoting your services - via the mainstream press, and websites including 'ChurchNearYou' for the C-of-E, or across denominations Find a Church. With news of apps, websites and resources plus alternative approaches and structures. Watch the first two workshops at https://www.facebook.com/pg/theHeartEdge/videos/?ref=page_internal.

Sally Hitchiner is Associate Vicar for Ministry at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Her work includes liturgical and organisational aspects of the church. She currently leads ministry to the dispersed congregation of St Martin's via a confidential online community space and pastoral care groups. Sally set up an online Christian community as a university chaplain and founded the Diverse Church initiative with over 1000 participants across the UK. Diverse Church grew from one community to a community planting organisation, launching a new community of 60-100 Christians across the UK and Ireland each year.

Rev Rachel Noël, known locally as the Pink Vicar, Priest in Charge of Pennington Church, a HeartEdge church in the Diocese of Winchester, an estate church on the coast of the New Forest. Creative, artist, priest, contemplative, neurodiverse, leading a church that is flourishing online this season, and engaging deeply with the local community including through a large community yarn bomb of the Easter Story on the churchyard hedge.

Fr. Lorenzo Lebrija is founding director of the TryTank, the experimental Lab for church growth and innovation. He is responsible for the entire process of development and implementation of experiments for innovation in the church. (It's a staff of 1, so don't be that impressed!) Prior to launching TryTank, Lorenzo was the Chief Development Officer for the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles. He served as the Pastor on behalf of the Bishop at St. John's Episcopal Church in San Bernardino, CA, and as priest associate at St. Athanasius Episcopal Church at the Cathedral Centre of St. Paul in Los Angeles.


Faith in the future - Friday, June 19, 2020, 3:00 p.m. ET (8.00 p.m. BST)
Pay what you can (see link for details)
Register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/webinar-faith-in-the-future-registration-106147760810.


What is the church of the future? Will church—as we know it—even exist? 

Author and noted futurist Bob Johansen, a distinguished fellow with the Institute for the Future, will join Dr. Lisa Kimball, the Associate Dean of Lifelong Learning at Virginia Theological Seminary to look at current trends, beyond those trends, possible disruptions, and why a new way of thinking is required for leaders of the church. 

Rather than a fearful future, we should embrace it as an opportunity for new spectrums of meaning-making. It’ll be a fascinating, yet practical, conversation where your questions will also be considered.

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C.O.B. - Chain Of Love.

Friday, 17 April 2020

HeartEdge: Growing Community Online


This week HeartEdge has been sharing some of what St Martin-in-the-Fields and other churches have been doing online since lockdown by means of a HeartEdge workshop on ways to grow community online for church congregations. Sally Hitchiner and Adrian Harris from St Martin's took part together with Rev Lorenzo Lebrija from TryTank, one of HeartEdge's US partners.

This online workshop generated lots of discussion and debate among those watching on the HeartEdge facebook page as Sally, Adrian and Lorenzo shared examples and ideas about livestreaming services, congregation facebook pages, companion groups and more. There was lots of discussion about the numbers watching services, whether large or small, and what viewing figures on facebook and other platforms were actually recording.

People watching said that their online worship is connecting them with people who just aren't able to get to church - housebound and others - and has proved a boon to such people enabling them to feel more part of the community. One person commented, 'I'm ashamed to say that until now we've not provided for them on a Sunday morning.'

There were lots of practical ideas such as using the comments for people to make their prayer requests and to share the peace. Others mentioned use of WhatsApp groups and other things outside worship - thought for the day, baking, film club, parish quiz night etc. There was a recognition that some members of the congregation are really relying on what is being offered in order to get through lockdown.

The workshop can be viewed online here.

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The Beatles - Come Together.

Tuesday, 14 April 2020

Special HeartEdge workshop - Developing community online with congregations


A special one-off HeartEdge workshop has been organised for Friday 17 April at 4.30 pm on the HeartEdge facebook page.

This workshop will explore ways to develop community online with congregations. Sally Hitchiner, Adrian Harris and Lorenzo Lebrija will discuss this topic and share examples of interesting and innovative practices from their congregational and national church perspectives.

Sally Hitchiner is the Associate Vicar for Ministry at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Her responsibilities include leading the Sunday morning congregation alongside the pastoral care, liturgical and organisational aspects of the church. She is currently leading ministry to the dispersed congregation of St Martin's through a confidential online community space and pastoral care groups. Sally cut her teeth in setting up and leading online christian community as a university chaplain and in founding and leading the highly successful Diverse Church initiative. This set up online communities for over 1000 participants across the uk, many of whom had left physical gatherings of church and through DC rediscovered christian community which led them back to local churches. Diverse Church grew from one community to being a community planting organisation, launching a new community of 60-100 Christians across the UK and Ireland each year.

Adrian Harris is Head of Digital at the Church of England which supports dioceses and local churches to engage in digital for the opportunities it brings to become a growing Church for all people and for all places. In the last month the team has been developing and sharing services, training churches to use digital platforms to reach their communities during social distancing, and developing new content and resources.

Fr. Lorenzo Lebrija is the founding director of the TryTank, the experimental Lab for church growth and innovation. He is responsible for the entire process of development and implementation of experiments for innovation in the church. (It's a staff of 1, so don't be that impressed!) Prior to launching TryTank, Lorenzo was the Chief Development Officer for the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles. He also served as the Pastor on behalf of the Bishop at St. John's Episcopal Church in San Bernardino, CA, and as priest associate at St. Athanasius Episcopal Church at the Cathedral Center of St. Paul in Los Angeles.

As with our sermon preparation workshops, this workshop will be a conversation for about 30 minutes between Lorenzo, Sally and Adrian about the topic, including the sharing of examples of interesting or innovative examples. The second half of the workshop will involve them in responding to questions or comments from those viewing their discussion on facebook.

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Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir (featuring Liz Swain) - Hold Onto Your Faith.

Saturday, 25 January 2020

HeartEdge at Rooted in Jesus 2020




I was in Atlanta, Georgia, this week as the HeartEdge representative at the Rooted in Jesus 2020 conference organised by the Episcopal Church.

HeartEdge was there at the invitation of TryTank Experimental Lab, one of its US partners, who ran a series of workshops on innovative mission at the conference. Together with another US partner, Rev Paige Fisher of Trinity Church Boston, I led a workshop on 'Resourcing Innovative Mission' that introduced HeartEdge and key concepts such as 'being with' and 'renewal from the edge.'

Through the conference I was able to renew existing contacts in the USA and make new contacts not just in the US, but also in Canada.

Rooted in Jesus 2020 was intended to assist the Episcopal Church to take a bold new step into the next decade by talking about discipleship, leadership, evangelism, formation, preaching, and much more, in order to go out and be the Body of Christ. It was an interesting and opportune moment in which to be sharing ideas on mission with new contacts and existing partners in the US.

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Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II - The Danger of Worship Without a Conscience.