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January 31, 2008

Funding stream to support community work

A 130m pound government fund has been set up to support community projects across England.The scheme is designed to support grass roots organisations, and grants of as little as 250 pounds will be available for smaller groups.The Community Development Foundation is running the three-year programme on behalf of the Cabinet Office.The fund will be divided into an 80m pound small grants programme, and a 50m pound endowments programme. This is intended to allow local funders to get matched investment to place in endowments, increasing their ability to provide long-term funding.Third sector minister Phil Hope said: "I want grass roots organisations in our communities to thrive so that they can help with the individual challenges that face each local community

Funding stream to support community work - Children & Young People Now

January 24, 2008

Passion TV series set for huge national impact


The Chair of the Churches’ Media Council has written to a hundred national church leaders urging them to prepare for the broadcast of BBC1’s series The Passion.  In his letter Rev Dr Joel Edwards says “from time to time opportunities arise nationally that provide significant moments for the Christian faith to engage with our culture.  One such opportunity will be the forthcoming BBC series The Passion.”  He expects the series to make “a huge national impact”  over the Easter season.  

The series, which starts on Palm Sunday 16th March, will be scheduled in peak time on BBC1.  It is likely to attract audiences in excess of 10 million.  It tells the story of the last week of Jesus’ life, his trial and crucifixion.  The last episode, to be broadcast on Easter Sunday 23rd March, dramatises his post-resurrection appearances.  It has been made by award-winning drama producer Nigel Stafford-Clark, who was responsible for Bleak House and Warriors.  The cast includes Cold Feet star James Nesbitt as Pilate and EastEnders actor Paul Nicholls as Judas Iscariot.  The part of Jesus is played by the relatively unknown Joseph Mawle, who at 33 is the same age as Jesus during the events of the Passion. 

A multi-denominational group convened by the Churches’ Media Council today launched a website to provide resources and information about the series.  It can be found at www.churchesmediacouncil.org.uk/passion.  The group is encouraging the Christian community to seize this “golden opportunity to contribute to a contemporary public discussion about Jesus.”   Guidelines on the site encourage the Christian community to welcome the retelling of the stories for a new generation, but to treat it as drama first rather than theology. 

Andrew Graystone, Director of the Churches’ Media Council, was profoundly moved by  early versions of the series.  “This is an extremely vivid piece of drama.  You feel you are right there, in amongst the Passover crowds, alongside the disciples as Jesus comes out with these simple but earth-shattering messages.  And then of course, he’s taken away and makes the ultimate sacrifice, and like the disciples, you’re left to decide what you are going to do about it.”   

A hundred Christian leaders will be invited to a preview screening of the series in February.  Meanwhile a panel of speakers has been formed to contribute to national press, radio and TV discussions.  The Passion website also has ideas to help local churches prepare for the series.

The website www.rejesus.co.uk will act as a one-stop-shop for anyone who sees the series and wants to explore Christian faith. 

Andrew Graystone urged Christians to “cancel all leave” and prepare a welcome for the series, describing it as “a once-in-a-generation opportunity” to engage the whole nation in a public conversation about the Christian message.  “This Easter the whole country will be talking about Jesus.  Not about church politics or the finer points of theology, but about Jesus.”

New Book: Revisiting Relational Youth Ministry

Relational youth ministry, also known as incarnational ministry, can feel like a vicious cycle of guilt: "I should be spending time with kids, but I just don't want to." The burden becomes heavy to bear because it is never over; adolescents always seem to need more relational bonds, and once one group graduates there is a new group of adolescents who need relational contact.

It may be that the reason these relationships have become burdensome is that they have become something youth workers do, rather than something that youth workers enter into.

In Revisiting Relational Youth Ministry, Andrew Root explores the origins of a dominant ministry model for evangelicals, showing how American culture has influenced our understanding of the incarnation. Drawing from Dietrich Bonhoeffer, whose work with German youth in troubled times shaped his own understanding of how Jesus intersects our relationships, Root recasts relational ministry as an opportunity not to influence the influencers but to stand with and for those in need. True relational youth ministry shaped by the incarnation is a commitment to enter into the suffering of all, to offer all those in high school or junior high the solidarity of the church.

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