The first cycle of Open Book for 2015 is largely done and dusted. For those who have journeyed with us, it’s been a rich time of reading James Smith’s book, Desiring the Kingdom. Together we’ve explored how to leverage our everyday habits to align with and experience the reign of God. Through the combination of rich liturgy (Taize songs, Northumbrian prayers, creative Bible reading), open discussion, reflection on art, and the designing of rich practices, we’ve each been in the process of forming a new habit that helps us follow Christ in the fullness of life he offers. We have two sessions (June 4 & 18) before we take a month-long break.
In our second cycle for 2015 (starting July 23) we get down to brass tacks.
Here’s our big question:
How can I seek first the kingdom
through my everyday vocation?
We’re talking about vocation. Whatever you do with the majority of your time can become a vocation, situated within your call to follow Christ.
The book is Amy Sherman’s Kingdom Calling: Vocational Stewardship for the Common Good. It’s far more practical than Smith’s book, which is good news if that was a hard slog for you! Her companion web-site here gives you a feel for its scope. Whether you’re a business person, a bar tender, a builder, a teacher, or an artist; whether you’re a student, a retiree, a mum, or looking for work, there’s lots of great stuff here to discuss. … How do you restrain sin and promote shalom in your everyday “work”? What does it mean to be a “righteous” person who works for the common good?
Check the calendar at the bottom of the page for key dates, and pdf links to carry you through until you get your own copy of the book (presently $10 on kindle!). Also, you might consider registering for Malyon College’s “Transforming Work” conference on June 20, or auditing “Principles of Vocational Stewardship” at Malyon Tuesday nights if you want to go even deeper.
We have a soft-start from 6:30pm – feel free to rock up early and eat your dinner or share a cup of tea. At 7pm sharp we get into the night, finishing each night by 9pm with supper together and an unrushed chat over coffee. OPEN BOOK includes some basic spiritual practices and prayer, before unpacking the pre-reading scheduled for that night.
For each week, it helps to think through how the reading provokes you in 4 ways:
1) Questions: what didn’t make sense?
2) Challenges: what did you think was wrong?
3) Implications: if this is true, what does it mean for how the church follows Christ today?
4) Applications: what does it look like for you to live out of this vision?
Following are the dates when we’ll meet. I’ve also included pdf links for the readings if you’re not able to get the book in time–just click the KC references below. That said, give credit where credit’s due, so do buy the book preferably by the first week.
If you want to get an overview of Sherman’s book, listen to her one hour talk at Q Ideas on “Seeking the Prosperity of Our Neighbours” here.
OPEN BOOK, THURSDAYS 7PM:
June 4 | OUTDOOR MOVIE NIGHT & SUPPER – We’re either watching The Intouchables or The Way (email us with your preference!), following up the theme of embodied worship. … Bring an outdoor chair, a blanket to keep warm under the stars, and a snack or drink to share … We’ll provide the hot chocolate! (Indoors if bad weather.) … The movie *starts* at 7pm, so arrive from 6:30pm as always.
June 18 | “HOSPITALITY & HOME-COOKED DINNER” – Bring some food to share for a pot-luck dinner, eating at 7pm. This night is a fusion of Open Book with Open Table … so, have a read of the 12 page chapter on the practice of hospitality (Ana Maria Pineda “Hospitality”), and join us for a really relaxed night of eating, discussing, laughing, and sharing in communion. It’s open to anyone. The key question is this: “What does hospitality look like in my life, and how can I extend God’s table grace to others?”
[On this theme, you might find these other articles/chapters stimulating:
Yancey (1997) on Babette’s Feast
Dorothy Bass on “Eating”
Wendell Berry on “The Pleasures of Eating”]
Then, we’re into the new cycle on KINGDOM CALLING [KC] from Thursday 16 July.
July 23 | Kingdom Calling #1: KC 1-23 (Foreword + Intro)
August 6 | Kingdom Calling #2: KC27-44, KC45-63, KCAppA235-241(Ch. 1, 2 + Appendix A)
August 20 | Kingdom Calling #3: KC64-75, KC77-86(Ch. 3, 4)
September 4 | Kingdom Calling #4: KC91-100, KC101-115 (Ch. 5, 6)
September 17 | Kingdom Calling #5: KC116-128, KC129-140 (Ch. 7, 8)
October 1 | Kingdom Calling #6: Open Week Sharing + watching either a session of LICC “Fruitfulness on the FrontLine” or Regent College’s “Reframe” series … Read KCAppB-D (Appendices B, C, D)
October 15 | Kingdom Calling #7: KC143-150, KC151-168 (Ch. 9, 10)
October 29 | Kingdom Calling #8: KC169-182, KC183-198 (Ch. 11, 12)
November 12 | Kingdom Calling #9: KC199-222 (Ch. 13)
November 26 | Kingdom Calling #10: KC223-234 (Conclusion/Afterword … Integration/Application)
December 10 | END OF YEAR CELEBRATION – details t.b.a.
Hope to see you there!

Over the last three books, we’ve explored the importance of our bodies and imagination in forming kingdom habits (
Ever since Constantine’s ‘vision’ of the Chi-Rho–‘
Enter Brian Walsh and Sylvia Keesmaat with their provocative commentary, 


Endō, a Japanese Catholic, was no stranger to occupying the place of the Other: too foreign, too Oriental, to be understood by the West, and too Christian, too iconoclastic–not to mention insufficiently Buddhist–to be accepted at home. His work of historical fiction is set in 1635 as Portuguese missionaries seek to proselytise the Japanese during a time of extreme persecution. Following rumours of their leader (Ferreira) abandoning his faith, two younger Jesuits (Fr. Rodrigues and his companion Fr. Francisco Garrpe) head to Japan to uncover the truth and shore up the struggling converts. How will this collision between cultures resolve, as each grapples with the other? Will Rodrigues and Garrpe, too, betray their Lord, trampling his crudely formed icon (

We must, however, count the cost. Incarnation always leads to the cross.
Recapping this first point, then, our times increasingly resemble the novel’s setting. Christianity, once popular and even powerful, is on the outer, and a nation “come of age” is prone–with some good reason–to marginalise and even persecute the Church as a threat to the common (read “secular”) good. As missiologist Lesslie Newbigin argues powerfully (see
Mercifully shorter than my first rationale, a second reason this book is timely to discuss is that the much anticipated movie rendering of Silence by Martin Scorsese has come! Thirty years in gestation since first reading, this master director describes its production as his own “pilgrimage”. It’s set to be released in Brisbane on February 16, 2017. God willing, we’ll watch it together on Thursday March 2. Obviously watching the movie, mid cycle in Open Book, comes with a complete “spoiler alert”! That said, his adaptation is receiving 




The Last Supper, Leonardo Da Vinci (1494-1499)
The Table of Hope, Joey Velasco



Vulture Stalking a child, Kevin Carter, 1993 (Sudan).
The Return of the Prodigal Son, Rembrandt (1661-9)
‘the forgiving father’ by Frank Wesley
Light of the World, William Holman Hunt (1851-3)
The Wedding Feast at Cana, Paolo Veronese (1563, The Louvre)
The Marriage at Cana, Jan Cornelisz Vermeyen (1530, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam)













The old has gone, the new has come! Okay, Christ’s Pieces isn’t as exciting as the eschaton! Still, we hope that through this experimental Christian community at 











