Tag: Andy Flannagan

  • From the archive: “They wanted fireworks but what they got was a bloke talking about a mustard seed.”

    In the ‘now’ culture, we often expect quick results. But real change, that lasts, takes time.

    In my last job, I was praying about and preparing what I might say at a parliamentary launch, and the phrase, “They came expecting fireworks” dropped into my mind. It seemed appropriate for an event happening in the Houses of Parliament on the 5th of November! I resisted the temptation to arrive in a Guy Fawkes costume.

    It’s in the nature of a launch – with a new website with thousands of hits, a storm of positive Twitter messages and huge amounts of enthusiasm (140 people squeezed into a room designed for half that) – to expect some fireworks and glitz. Energy was high.

    So I pointed out that …

    In first-century Palestine, they also came looking for fireworks. An oppressed people were looking for liberation and they wanted it now. They were hoping for a mighty explosion of energy and light to restore their status as God’s chosen people, back in charge of their own destiny. Some were looking for a military extravaganza. And it looked like this carpenter of Nazareth might just light the touchpaper.

    They wanted fireworks, but what they got was a bloke talking about a mustard seed; a story about something practically invisible. He said, “This isn’t necessarily going to be fast. This might be slow.” He said, “This isn’t going to start huge; it’s going to start infinitesimally small.”

    The Japanese theologian Kosuke Koyama wrote a book about this kingdom called Three Mile an Hour God. Our God seems to move slowly. For him ends never justify means. For him it is about people, and he cares as much about the journey as the destination. You could say that the ‘how’ is as important as the ‘what’. He wants people to get to know him, as well as for his ways to shape the structures of our world. That is why, in politics especially, we must be in it for the long haul ~ because we care about people, not just ideas.

    We must not get sucked into the instant culture of the 21st century, where so much is about overnight sensations and the ‘next big thing’. We must be prepared to do the hard yards of building relationships. Change in political thinking and practice is rarely fast, but we must believe that the mustard seed will produce fruit. There is also something of sacrifice and death about that seed. We will not necessarily be lauded for what we do, but we can still prepare the ground.

    Andy’s book Those Who Show Up is available online.

    Main photo credit: Francesco Gallarotti via Unsplash

  • Opinion: The Politics of Christmas

    There is a recurring hilarious/facepalm (delete according to opinion) scenario in my marriage. I start to tell a story and fairly quickly my wife Jen detects a slight change in the tone of my voice that few else in the room would detect. She then bites her tongue and squirms with visible waves of tension coursing through her body, as she awaits the inevitable. She knows that even though everyone else thinks I am telling a worthy, important story, I am about to reveal that the whole (often lengthy) preamble has been the set-up for a particularly brilliant/excruciating (delete according to…you get the idea) pun.

    How you hear a story depends on what type of story you think you are hearing. You might also say that how you hear it depends on what you are looking for from the story.

    If all you are looking for is a bit of cheer at the end of a hard year, then that is probably all you will hear. Or if your only context for the Christmas story is that we are sinners and desperately need someone to sort out our sin, then whatever happens within the story will be fitted into that frame. If that is all you are looking for, that is all you will find. Where and when the story happens, and what else is going on at the time, is interesting, but to be honest just serves as Christmas decoration on the set of the central theatre.

    But the spectacular and subtle entrance of Jesus into time and space did happen at a particular time and in a particular space. The first person mentioned in Luke’s telling of the great story is not Mary. It is King Herod. My dear friend and church leader John Good recently did a great job of sketching Herod’s ‘backstory’. This was no shy, retiring bureaucrat. On his father’s death, with the skill of a politician, he secured an appointment from Rome to be the ruler of Judea. Yes his ultimate authority came from Rome, but he ruled with an iron grip. He flexed military muscle with pleasure, expanding his territory into modern-day Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. He built great aqueducts and amphitheatres, earning the moniker “Herod the Great”. In fact his mantra was “Make Judea great again”. (delete #fakenews as appropriate)

    However, none of his epic projects or conquests compared to the Herodium. This is a man who built a mountain to underline his greatness. Yes – a mountain. Built by slaves, with an artificial lake perched on top, no less, to commemorate his most famous victory against the Parthians. What type of man builds a pointless structure to massage their own fragile ego? I can’t imagine it happening today. Herod is a man who knows that appearance is everything, and if he looks powerful, he will be powerful. Herod’s grip on this power was enforced by remarkable cruelty, and his paranoia vented this cruelty even on his own family. There are few things more ugly than the combination of power and paranoia, and Herod lived right at their nexus, always fearing where the next challenge to his rule would come from.

    So what’s the one thing you don’t ask this all-powerful, near-psychopathic King?

    “Er, excuse us, your majesty. May you reign forever…and do you happen to know where the new King is?”

    Have they a death wish? These men are not ‘wise’. They are unhinged. Suicidal. Or maybe just gloriously, worshipfully naïve.

    The wise men thought they knew what power looked like. That’s why they headed to Herod’s palace. But then along comes a baby who looks the absolute opposite of powerful. Here comes a different kind of kingdom. Here comes a different kind of leadership. Here comes a different kind of politics.

    Herod’s reign is a huge part of the context that Jesus steps into. Our world is not uncontested territory. This is not a pleasant story, set in a neutral space, to make everything a bit more colourful and kind. This is not just chaplaincy to power. This is a direct challenge to the status quo, and although the story is of course so much more than just political, that doesn’t stop it being very political. Herod is not thinking, “Ah – no challenge to me – that’s fine – another spiritual guru – another religious service provider – a more interesting player in the ‘faith sector’”. He senses the cosmic scale of what is happening.

    And he wasn’t the only one. When Mary, the poor, shunned member of an oppressed people, told her cousin Elizabeth that God was ‘turning the world upside down’, she didn’t just mean the religious world. She meant the world. And boy do we still need that as 2024 beckons.

    But Herod’s genocidal response to the news of Jesus shows how far people will go to cling to power. We must realise this is a battle. Not against flesh and blood, of course, but a battle nonetheless. There is nothing more scary to those who hold power than those who know where ultimate power resides.

    So this Christmas, could we emulate my wonderful and mildly persecuted wife? Could we incline and train our ears to hear the political tone in the voice of the Christmas story? And moreover, could we refuse the easy answers of either abusing or eschewing power and instead walk the more complicated path of channelling it well? Much like the paradox of God as a baby.

    Politics is dirty. So was that manger. The challenge awaits.

    Main Photo Credit: Inbal Malca via Unsplash

    The all-singing, all dancing e-book NOTES FROM THE SHALLOW END – vids, mp3s, images

    http://bit.ly/flan-ebookyt – link to  vid 

    http://bit.ly/flan-ebook – link to order