Monday, May 25, 2009

Castel de Monte

Castel de Monte, octagonal in shape, was built by Fredrick II between 1229 and 1249. It was designed with astrological and algebraic calculations and its construction is quite amazing. . It is situated on a small hill at an altitude of 540 m giving it beautiful view over the valley in all directions.

It was used primarily as a hunting lodge by Frederick until his death in 1250. It was later turned into a prison, used as a refuge during a plague, and finally fell into disrepair. It originally had marble walls and columns, but all were stripped by vandals.





Alberobello

Alberobello is a Unesco World heritage sight famous for its Trulli styled housing.
A Trullo (plural trulli) style hosue is a stone dwelling with a conical roof. Traditionally they were built without any cement or mortar, thus avoiding taxation.

The roofs are constructed in two layers: an inner layer of limestone boulders, capped by a keystone, and an outer layer of limestone slabs ensuring that the structure is watertight. In Alberobello there is often a symbol on the roof which may iinclude planetary symbols, the malochio (evil eye), the cross, a heart, a star and crescent, or quite a few others.

The walls are very thick, providing a cool environment in hot weather and insulating against the cold in the winter. The vast majority of trulli have one room under each conical roof. Children would sleep in alcoves made in the wall with curtains hung in front.




Saturday, May 23, 2009

Grotte di Castellana

Grotte di Castellana

We visited the Grotte di Castaellana. A series of caves about 45 minutes from Bari. They were quite extraordinary with all sorts of stalactites, stalagmites and other formations. The first chamber which has an opening in the top is huge. Up to 70 metres deep it is difficult to appreciate the scale from the photos. We then proceed on a 3 km walk underground through the various caves until we reached the White Cave which is quite magnificent and considered one of the most beautiful caves in the world.




Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Ken and Mark

I have just had Pastor Ken and Mark Hutchinson for a week. Dr Mark is from Alphacrucis Bible College (formerly Southern Cross). I think it was a very significant week. We had a number of strategic meetings with a number of Pastors and leaders to put plans together to help their churches to grow. We also had some important meetings for developing education programmes for the church across Italy. If we can implement what we have planned over the last week I really think the nature of the church in Italy will change over the next several years!

As well as the planning meetings Pastor Ken also ministered at a series of leaders meetings and church meetings. It was a pretty busy week and we squeezed in some visits to some local sights as well. Although I don’t know what was more exhausting, the meetings or the constant eating (including about a 7 course lunch on Sunday!!).





Monday, May 11, 2009

Frecce Tricolore

The Italians are very proud of their airforce's aerobatics team, the Frecce Tricolore or Tricolour Arrows. Many of the pilots become household names as they perform all around Italy. Friday was Bari's turn and thousands of people lined the water front to watch, at time, a breathtaking display over the water.

Infamous Dropkicks

From the NZ Herald on a couple of dropkick incidents. One in rugby and one in rugby league.

In one NRL season, Lamb - who sits high on the NRL record books in all manner of categories - dropped a goal and ran back to halfway with his arms aloft, saluting the victory. It took a team-mate to point out Lamb's faulty maths and the fact that the Bulldogs still needed another point to win.

Waratahs and Wallaby prop Matt Dunning reeled off a successful drop goal from 35m in the 2003 match against the Chiefs. Only problem was, his team needed a bonus point from scoring four tries to progress to the playoffs.

Dunning knew the referee was about to award the Waratahs a penalty, from which a kick to touch would have been followed by a lineout and the chance of a try. So his drop goal was designed to miss - so the ref would blow for a penalty.

But it didn't. It sailed majestically over, robbed the Waratahs of their momentum and helped cost them a playoffs spot. It has also given huge amusement, even six years later, as no-one can figure out why he chose to go for goal.

Dunning said after the match: "I don't even know why I did it. It was just heat of the moment."

Talking of heat of the moment, at the end of the season, Dunning and others then went on a massive bender which ended with Dunning breaking a team-mate's nose, a cab driver being harassed and poor behaviour in public, including another team member vomiting over a student. Give that man the Order Of The Dropkick.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

God's work in Nepal



Today we had a visiting pastor from Nepal visiting church. Salon Karthak and his wife rebecca. He spoke on the remarkable history of the church in Nepal.

Until the 1950’s Nepal was a completely closed country to the gospel. It was a Hindu nation. In 1950 his church started with 11 people in Kathmandu. Now it has 11,000 people.

In the 1980’s most of the nation had still not heard the gospel. When he visited villages most had never heard of the name of Jesus. He asked one man if he had heard if Jesus, the man replied “No, perhaps he lives in the next village”. They decided that they needed to get the gospel to everyone, so they visited every house in the country!

120,000 Nepalese were driven out of neighbouring Bhutan into refugee camps in Nepal. 12,000 became Christians – more than in the entire nation of Bhutan. There is purpose in our circumstances!

Today 5 per cent of the nation are born again believers. That is growth without resources. He mentioned in their church Praise and Worship is important but they don’t have much in the way of instruments. They dance and clap and with on the Holy Spirit.

He gave some reasons for such growth in his nation:
1. Reliance on the power of the Holy Spirit.
2. Focus on biblical teaching.
3. Giving of tithes has been essential for the growth of the church (it is mandatory for church members). They are not a wealthy people but they when they sell their cow, goat or on any income they tithe. They are not only building a strong church but they are supporting missionaries in India.
4. There is an emphasis on growing young leaders, with the support and guidance of experienced leaders.
5. A focused effort to evangelise by every Christian.
6. Self-supporting church, not relying on finances or governance from western churches.
7. Self- propagating – they are planting churches.


Thursday, May 7, 2009

Horse Dead...good!


I ate this magnificent beast yesterday. Some guys gave to me as a gift to eat while Andrea was away and could not protest.

It was superb. I highly recommend eating horse!!

According to Wikipedia it is slightly sweet, tender, low in fat, and high in protein. For the majority of mankind’s early existence wild horses were hunted as a source of protein. It is now a major meat in only a few countries, notably Central Asia, but it forms a significant part of the culinary traditions of many others, from Europe to South America to China. The top eight countries consume about 4.7 million horses a year.

Because of the role horses have played as a companion and as a worker, it is a taboo food in many cultures. These historical associations, as well as ritual and religion, led to the development of the aversion to the consumption of horse meat. The horse is now given pet status by many in the western world, which further solidifies the taboo on eating its flesh. There is also an element of sentimentality, as horses have long enjoyed a close relationship with many humans, on a similar level to household pets – this can be seen projected in such Anglophone cultural icons such as Black Beauty and My Little Pony.

Nb. Actual horse consumed may not be the one pictured. Actually they tell me that horses bred for meat are short ugly things – I prefer to think of the one in my fridge along the lines of Black Beauty!

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Il Nostro Meraviglioso Dio

Il Nostro Meraviglioso Dio

Jer 23:24
Potrebbe uno nascondersi nei nascondigli senza che io lo veda?», dice l'Eterno. «Non riempio io il cielo e la terra?», dice l'Eterno.

Can anyone hide in secret places
so that I cannot see him?"
declares the LORD.
"Do not I fill heaven and earth?"
declares the LORD.

Our God is big!!
Il Nostro Dio e` grande!

I was reminded of this while reading Wired Magazine this week. They feature some images from the Hubble Telescope! Have a look at the other images too!

Our Creator God fills the universe. His splendor is everywhere…and He loves and know even me!

Il Nostro Dio mi conosce !


Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Reason, Faith and Revolution

In today’s New York Times there is a review by Stanley Fish of Terry Eagleton’s book Reason, Faith and Revolution. It is worthwhile reading the whole article as it is part of the ongoing global debate initiated by the likes of atheists Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens (from whom Eagleton derived contemptuously the fictional character ‘Ditchkins’.)

The interesting thing is that Eagleton does not profess to be a Christian; however he attacks the poor arguments of Ditchkins in their war against religion and in particular Christianity.


In the opening sentence of the last chapter of his new book, “Reason, Faith and Revolution,” the British critic Terry Eagleton asks, “Why are the most unlikely people, including myself, suddenly talking about God?” His answer, elaborated in prose that is alternately witty, scabrous and angry, is that the other candidates for guidance — science, reason, liberalism, capitalism — just don’t deliver what is ultimately needed. “What other symbolic form,” he queries, “has managed to forge such direct links between the most universal and absolute of truths and the everyday practices of countless millions of men and women?”

Progress, liberalism and enlightenment — these are the watchwords of those, like Hitchens, who believe that in a modern world, religion has nothing to offer us. Don’t we discover cures for diseases every day? Doesn’t technology continually extend our powers and offer the promise of mastering nature? Who needs an outmoded, left-over medieval superstition?

And as for the vaunted triumph of liberalism, what about “the misery wreaked by racism and sexism, the sordid history of colonialism and imperialism, the generation of poverty and famine”? Only by ignoring all this and much more can the claim of human progress at the end of history be maintained: “If ever there was a pious myth and a piece of credulous superstition, it is the liberal-rationalist belief that, a few hiccups apart, we are all steadily en route to a finer world.”

“Self-sufficient” gets to the heart of what Eagleton sees as wrong with the “brittle triumphalism” of liberal rationalism and its ideology of science. From the perspective of a theistic religion, the cardinal error is the claim of the creature to be “self-originating”: “Self-authorship,” Eagleton proclaims, “is the bourgeois fantasy par excellence,”

The book starts out witty and then gets angrier and angrier. I spent some time trying to figure out why the anger was there and I came up with two explanations.

One is given by Eagleton, and it is personal. Christianity may or may not be the faith he holds to (he doesn’t tell us), but he speaks, he says, “partly in defense of my own forbearers, against the charge that the creed to which they dedicated their lives is worthless and void.”

The other source of his anger is implied but never quite made explicit. He is angry, I think, at having to expend so much mental and emotional energy refuting the shallow arguments of school-yard atheists like Hitchens and Dawkins. I know just how he feels.

Monday, May 4, 2009

L' Acqua Effervescente

For one week I have only drunk carbonated beverages. In Castellammare di Stabia the water is fizzy. It comes up from springs in the ground already fizzy. Most homes when you turn on the tap the water is fizzy and all bottled water is fizzy! It is really strange and poses a few problems when preaching. All the carbonated drink has obvious effects on oneself! Fortunately as I have a translator I have a few moments to get rid of gas build up without a microphone near me.

There is a drinking fountain in the middle of town with, of course, fizzy water.

Naples

I really enjoyed Napoli and Castellammare. We were able to visit Sorrento one morning, a beautiful sea side town.



We also went to Pompeii. I was expecting a half hour or hour drive to these preserved ruins, however after 3 minutes in the car we were there! It surprised me how big the area was and how well preserved everything was.







I did not get a chance to have a good look around Naples itself, but liked what I saw as we were driving through. There are a lot of historic buildings to explore. We ate in one of the oldest Pizzerias there one night.


Ministry in Naples

I have just spent a week ministering in Naples. I have been based at Chiesa Emmanuel in Castellammare di Stabia.

I had a great time and met so many great people. We were hosted really well. We had so many long lunches.

I spoke each day for the week, including three nights of leadership training with the Church's leaders. I also spoke at a church in Naples and at a Youth Conference.



Saturday, May 2, 2009

Castellamare di Stabia


I spent most of the week in Castellmare di Stabia near Napoli. A nice place and the people were great. We were treated really well and had a fruitful time of ministry.