Wednesday, 29 October 2025

The Sound of Silence: God’s Presence in the Quiet and the Struggle

A Sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
2nd November 2025

1 Kings 19.1–18; John 12.27–28

We live in a world filled with noise.

The sounds of the city, the endless chatter of media,
            the clamour of opinion and outrage,
            all of it can drown out the quieter movements of the heart.

Even in church life, we often find ourselves
            caught in the rhythm of activity and performance, of constant doing.

Yet there comes a moment, for every person of faith,
            when the noise must stop,
when we find ourselves, like Elijah,
            worn out and longing for something deeper than words.

His story speaks to that place in us
            where exhaustion meets encounter,
where God is found not in the whirlwind of success or the blaze of certainty,
            but in the stillness that follows.

Elijah the prophet, perhaps Israel’s greatest,
            comes to the end of himself,
and it is there, in exhaustion and despair,
            that he discovers the presence of God
not in the earthquake, or the wind, or the fire,
            but in “a sound of sheer silence.”

It’s a strange story for All Saints’ Sunday,
            but perhaps an entirely fitting one,
because the lives of the saints, those we celebrate today,
            were rarely stories of endless triumph.

They were lives that moved through noise and silence,
            through hope and despair, through struggle and grace.

The question before us this morning is this:
            Where is God to be found when the noise dies down?

Where is God when faith feels thin,
            when the clamour of the world overwhelms us,
            when the work of justice or compassion seems too heavy to carry?

The story begins in fear.

Elijah has just faced down the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel
            in a dramatic showdown of fire and faith.

He has experienced the heights of prophetic success,
            a moment of public vindication.

But immediately afterwards, Queen Jezebel threatens his life, and Elijah runs.

He flees into the wilderness, collapsing under a broom tree,
            praying for death. “It is enough; now, O Lord, take away my life.”

Here is the prophet undone by his own vocation.

He has been faithful, courageous, unyielding,
            but now he is simply tired.

His courage has run out.
            His faith feels hollow. He cannot go on.

And God’s response? Not a rebuke.
            Not a rallying call to get up and try harder.
            Not a sermon about resilience or duty.

Instead: sleep, food, water.
            “An angel touched him and said, ‘Get up and eat.’”

God’s first act of grace is not a command but compassion.
            The prophet’s body, mind, and spirit all need tending.

Before God speaks, God feeds.
            Before the divine word comes, there is divine care.

This is a profoundly pastoral moment.
            It tells us something crucial about the God we worship,
            a God who meets us not at the height of our zeal
            but at the depth of our weariness.

Many of us know this place.
            The point at which the work of faith, the labour of love, becomes too much.

When the news feels unrelenting,
            when the world’s injustice feels immovable,
            when hope seems to slip through our fingers.

I think of those who have given themselves to the work of justice,
            campaigners, carers, community organisers,
            who find themselves burnt out, unseen, unheard.

Elijah’s prayer under the broom tree, “It is enough,”
            could be their prayer too.

And yet God meets him there.
            Not with triumphalism, but with tenderness.

Sometimes the most spiritual thing we can do
            is to rest, to eat, to let ourselves be cared for.

God’s presence is as real in the meal shared in exhaustion
            as in the mountaintop experience.
Holiness begins with humanity.

Strengthened by food and rest, Elijah travels forty days and nights
            to Mount Horeb, the mountain of God.

There, in a cave, he waits.

And then comes one of the most beautiful and mysterious passages in Scripture.
            There is a great wind, strong enough to split mountains,
                        but the Lord is not in the wind.
            Then an earthquake,
                        but the Lord is not in the earthquake.
            Then fire, but the Lord is not in the fire.

And after the fire, “a sound of sheer silence.”

The Hebrew phrase is delicate: it means, literally,
            “a thin silence,” or “a gentle whisper.”

It suggests not simply the absence of sound,
            but a fragile, almost imperceptible presence,
            a silence that speaks.

This is revelation stripped of spectacle.
            God does not appear in the signs of power
            but in the space left when power has spent itself.

It’s as if Elijah must unlearn everything he thought he knew
            about how God works.

At Mount Carmel, God’s fire had fallen spectacularly.
            But now, that kind of power is absent.

The divine presence is not in the loud, the violent, the overwhelming.
            It is in the quiet that follows.

And perhaps this is where many of us most need to find God.
            We live in a world of earthquakes and fires,
                        of headlines and crises, of politics and protest,
                        of social media noise.
            We are surrounded by clamour and outrage.

Even within the church, there can be a longing for spectacle:
            big visions, powerful leaders, visible results.

But the God of Elijah resists being contained in such displays.
            God is not in the earthquake or the fire.
            God is in the quiet that follows.

The silence of Horeb invites us into another kind of holiness,
            one that listens rather than proclaims,
            that attends rather than commands.

But silence is not easy for us.

We live in a culture that fears it,
            where even churches can fill every gap with words or music,
            lest we mistake stillness for emptiness.

Yet it is often in those unfilled moments
            that God’s voice becomes audible.

At Bloomsbury, we are surrounded by the noise of the city,
            buses, sirens, the hum of Shaftesbury Avenue,
                        the restless pulse of London.

It is a good noise, a reminder that life is happening all around us.
            But the call of God to Elijah asks whether, within that noise,
            we can still find the quiet space where divine presence is known.

Silence is not the absence of engagement;
            it is what makes true engagement possible.

When we allow silence into our worship and our activism,
            we resist the world’s demand for constant production.

We make space for the Spirit to move among us,
            for compassion to take root,
            for justice to be born not out of rage alone but out of love.

For the prophets, and for the saints,
            silence was never retreat.
It was preparation, the grounding of courage in contemplation.

Every act of public witness, every step toward justice,
            needs first the inner stillness that listens for the whisper of God.

If the church today is to speak meaningfully in a fractured world,
            we must learn again to be silent,
not because we have nothing to say,
            but because we long to hear what God is already saying
            in the depths of the world’s pain and beauty.

And this, I think, is what the saints have always understood.
            The saints are not those who shouted the loudest,
                        but those who learned to listen.
            They are the ones who discovered, often through suffering,
                        that God’s voice is heard most clearly when the noise subsides.

Think of Julian of Norwich, sitting in her cell,
            listening to the quiet of divine love;
of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, writing from prison,
            finding God in the silence of waiting;
of countless unnamed faithful ones who, through prayer, compassion, and courage,
            have quietly borne witness to the God
            who does not need to shout to be heard.

This is the holiness of attentiveness,
            the capacity to discern God’s presence in the stillness of everyday life,
            in the spaces between words, in the pauses between actions.

For those of us engaged in the work of justice, as we are,
            through Citizens UK and our own community life,
            this is a vital lesson.

There are moments for speaking truth to power,
            for action and confrontation.

But there must also be moments of stillness, of silence,
            of prayerful listening.

Without that, we risk mistaking our own voices for the voice of God.

The sound of sheer silence is where discernment begins.

And then, out of the silence, comes a voice:
            “What are you doing here, Elijah?”

It is the same question God asked before the earthquake and fire,
            but now it means something different.

In the silence, Elijah’s complaint, his self-pity, his loneliness,
            is met not with sympathy but with purpose.
God sends him back, not to die,
            but to live differently.

“Go, return on your way,” says the Lord:
            Elijah’s work is not over.
He is to anoint new kings
            and to call Elisha to share his ministry.

He learns that he is not alone:
            there are seven thousand others who have not bowed to Baal.

The silence has given birth to renewal.
            The prophet’s despair becomes vocation reborn.

This too is a word for the saints, and for us.
            God’s revelation is never an end in itself.
The silence of encounter always leads back to the noise of life.
            We are fed, refreshed, renewed, and then sent.

There is a rhythm here that we might recognise
            as the rhythm of discipleship:
rest and return, silence and service, contemplation and action.

Elijah’s story reminds us that faith is not sustained by solitary heroism
            but by shared vocation.

When God sends him back down the mountain,
            it is to discover companions in the work,
            Elisha, Hazael, Jehu, and the seven thousand who have not bowed to Baal.

The prophet who thought he was alone
            finds that God’s purposes have always been larger than his vision.

This is, in many ways, what it means to be church.
            We are not a gathering of the self-sufficient
                        but a community of the renewed,
            people who, at different times, have each known something of Elijah’s weariness
                        and each been called again into life.

In worship, in prayer, in the breaking of bread,
            we hear again the quiet question:
“What are you doing here?” and the gracious invitation to begin anew.

At Bloomsbury, this renewal often takes flesh in our shared life for justice,
            in the partnerships we build through Citizens UK,
                        in the welcome we offer to strangers,
            in our full inclusion of LGBTQ people within the life of our church,
                        in the standing together that gives courage
                        to those who would otherwise lose heart.

We return from our own caves of isolation to find a fellowship already forming,
            the Spirit already at work ahead of us.

The saints we honour today are not just figures of the past
            but companions in this same movement of grace,
those whose faithfulness has made possible our own,
            and whose lives remind us that every act of renewal is also communal.

God’s voice still sends us back into the world,
            not alone but together,
as part of the company of those who listen for the sound of sheer silence
            and then speak words of justice, mercy, and peace.

And it is the rhythm of the saints.
            The holiness we celebrate today is not withdrawal from the world
                        but engagement with it,
            shaped and sustained by the quiet presence of God.

Those we remember today, our saints, our loved ones, the faithful departed,
            did not live perfect lives.

They lived faithful ones: lives of prayer, service, courage, and compassion.
            Lives that listened for the still, small voice and followed where it led.

Our Gospel reading adds a further layer to this theme.

In John 12, Jesus, facing the reality of his own suffering,
            says, “Now my soul is troubled. And what should I say?
                        Father, save me from this hour?
            No, it is for this reason that I have come to this hour.
                        Father, glorify your name.”

And then a voice comes from heaven:
            “I have glorified it, and I will glorify it again.”

Here, as with Elijah, divine communication
            comes in a moment of vulnerability.
Jesus’ soul is troubled, his purpose tested.

And again, the revelation is misunderstood.
            Some who hear it think it is thunder;
            others say an angel has spoken.

God’s voice is always available, but rarely obvious.
            What some hear as thunder, others recognise as love.
Revelation is not spectacle; it is relationship.

This is the same dynamic as on Horeb.
            God’s speech is not designed to overwhelm
            but to draw us deeper into communion.

It is heard not by the loud, but by the listening.

Jesus stands in that long prophetic tradition of those
            who hear God not in the noise of power
            but in the quietness of intimacy.

And in him, that quiet presence becomes flesh,
            the Word who dwells among us, full of grace and truth.

The story of Elijah ends not with spectacle,
            but with a renewed sense of companionship.

He learns that he is not alone,
            that there are others who have kept faith,
            others who listen, others who act.

This is the deep truth of the life of faith:
            none of us walks the journey in isolation.

The communion of saints is not a distant company of the departed
            but the living network of grace
            that binds us to one another in God’s love.

It includes those who have gone before, yes,
            but also those beside us now,
the companions who encourage, challenge, and sustain us
            in the work of discipleship.

It is the quiet solidarity of believers who keep showing up,
            who listen and pray and act,
            who refuse to let the world’s noise have the final word.

God’s presence still comes to us in the stillness of compassion,
            in the courage of community, in the whisper of conscience.

And through that presence, we are sent,
            back into the world, back into the work of love and justice,
            back into the places that most need the quiet persistence of hope.

So let us listen again.

Not for the earthquake, or the fire, or the wind,
            but for the sound of sheer silence,
where God is still speaking, still calling,
            still renewing life in us and through us.

Amen.

Communion Service for All Saints Day

Theme: In the Sound of Sheer Silence

Gospel Words

“After the earthquake a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire;
and after the fire, the sound of sheer silence.
Then there came a voice…”
1 Kings 19.12–13

“Listen! I am standing at the door, knocking;
if you hear my voice and open the door,
I will come in and eat with you, and you with me.”
Revelation 3.20

Invitation to the Table

Here is the table of Christ, spread as for a feast:
bread for breaking, wine poured for sharing,
signs of love freely given, symbols of life renewed.

This is the table where saints have gathered through the ages—
those whose names we know and those known only to God.
They come not in triumph but in trust,
not in noise but in the quiet assurance
that God meets us here in mercy and grace.

So come, not because you must but because you may;
not because you are whole but because you are hungry;
not because you have found peace, but because you long for it.
Come and meet the risen Christ, who is known in the breaking of bread,
who speaks still in the sound of sheer silence.

Confession and Preparation

Loving and holy God,
we come as those who walk in the footsteps of your saints,
some bold and faithful, others faltering and unsure.
We confess that we have not always listened for your voice,
that we have filled our lives with noise and neglected your silence.

Forgive us for the harm we have done,
for the words we have spoken that wound,
and the words we have withheld that might have healed.

Speak your still small voice into the chaos of our hearts;
quieten our fears, still our striving,
and prepare us to receive your peace.
Through Jesus Christ, who shared our humanity
and draws us still into your holy presence. Amen.

The Institution

On the night before he died, Jesus gathered his friends around a table.
They were fearful, uncertain, and far from holy.
Yet he took bread, gave thanks, broke it, and said:
“This is my body, which is for you.
Do this in remembrance of me.”

In the same way, after supper, he took the cup, saying:
“This cup is the new covenant in my blood.
Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.”

For as often as we eat this bread and drink the cup,
we proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.

So now we take this bread and this wine—
ordinary things of earth—
and we pray that by the quiet working of your Spirit
they may become for us the life and peace of Christ.

Let us give thanks.

Thanksgiving

Creating and redeeming God,
we give you thanks for all your saints,
those who have gone before us and those who walk beside us,
who have heard your voice in the whisper and in the storm.

We thank you for Jesus Christ,
in whom your word became flesh—
who ate with the lost, touched the broken,
and bore in silence the violence of the world.

We thank you for the gift of your Spirit,
the breath that moves through our weariness,
the whisper that calls us to courage,
the silence in which your truth is born anew.

As we eat this bread and drink this wine,
may we be renewed as your body in the world:
a communion of saints,
called to do justice, to love mercy,
and to walk humbly with you.
To you be glory, now and always. Amen.

As we break bread and drink wine together,
            all are invited to share with us in this food that comes as a gift from God.

If, however, you would rather not take communion this morning,
            please just let the elements pass you by.

Please eat the bread as soon as it has been served to you,
            but retain the cup of wine until all have been served,
            so that we can all drink together.

The Breaking of Bread

Among friends, gathered round a table,
Jesus took bread, broke it, and said:
“This is my body, given for you.”

Take and eat in remembrance that Christ died for you,
and feed on him in your heart by faith, with thanksgiving.

(The bread is shared, each eating as served.)

The Lifting of the Cup

After supper, he took the cup, saying:
“This cup is the new relationship with God,
sealed in my blood.
Whenever you drink it, remember me.”

(The wine is shared, all drinking together once all are served.)

This is the cup of life,
the sign of God’s enduring promise.

Prayer After Communion

Silent God,
in this bread and wine we have tasted your presence.
In the stillness of this moment
we have met you anew.

As you have fed us, send us out to feed others.
As you have forgiven us, send us out to forgive.
As you have met us in silence,
send us to speak your word of peace
in a world of noise and fear.

Grant us courage to walk the path of the saints before us,
to live faithfully, to love boldly,
and to trust that beyond every shadow
there is the light of your unending day. Amen.

Tuesday, 28 October 2025

A reflection given at the funeral of Tom Ball


Ecclesiastes 3.1-4
Psalm 23

The writer of Ecclesiastes reminds us that life unfolds in seasons, held within the mystery and purpose of God.

There is a time to be born and a time to die, a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance.

These words do not try to explain everything, but they do name life as it is: full of movement and change, light and shadow, joy and sorrow.

And they affirm that all of it—every season—is known to God.

To live wisely, says Ecclesiastes, is to accept the times we are given, to find meaning in the moment, and to trust that the whole is held within something greater than ourselves.

That trust does not remove our grief today, but it does remind us that our grief belongs within the larger story of divine compassion.

The psalmist speaks of that same trust. “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.”

This is not the confidence of someone untouched by suffering, but the faith of one who has known dark valleys and found, even there, the quiet presence of God.

The shepherd does not always lead by easy paths, but he does not leave us to walk alone.

When we reach the edge of what we can understand, God is already there before us.

It is this faith that allows us to look at a human life, with all its complexity and strength, and say: it was a gift.

Tom’s life was rich in vision, energy, and conviction.

He sought meaning in what was made by human hands, and in the beauty of movement and form.
But today our reflection is not only on what he achieved, but on the grace of the One who gave him breath, who sustained him through every season, and who receives him now.

For in God, the seasons do not end in loss.

Beyond weeping there is laughter, beyond mourning there is dancing.

And so we commend Tom to the shepherd who restores the soul, and we trust that he now dwells in that house of love where every rhythm of life finds its rest, and every movement finds its completion in the dance of God.


Organising for Hope

Organising for Hope, 28 October 2025


“Organising Across Difference”

Friends,
One of the most extraordinary things about Citizens
            is the way it brings people together across difference,
across faith, race, class, and culture
             to act together for the common good.

In a city like London, that’s no small thing.

We live in a time when difference is often weaponised,
            when people are told that those who are not like them are somehow a threat.

But Citizens shows another way, a way of building trust across difference,
            through shared action and deep listening.

And for those of us in the churches, this isn’t something new or alien.
            It’s part of our calling.

Within our congregations we already practise this
            — learning to live with people we don’t always agree with,
                        to listen deeply,
            and to build community across the lines that so easily divide.

We do it across denominations,
            and across faith traditions, too.

The campaign for the Living wage,
            celebrating its 25th anniversary next year,
is a lived example of how organising can build trust across difference,
            because it draws people into a common cause
            from across the wide spectrum of British society
– with recent immigrants campaigning alongside white working-class workers,
            as they share common cause in seeking fair employment.

In London Citizens, and in the life of the Church,
            we’re discovering that trust grows not from ignoring our differences,
but from engaging with them
            — face to face, story by story, relationship by relationship.

That’s the work of hope: the slow, deliberate building of trust
            that makes real change possible
— in our congregations, our communities, our city, and across the UK.

Organising and the Church: Building a Relational Culture 

When churches get involved in community organising,
            one of the first questions people ask is:
            how does this fit with what we’re already doing?

The answer, I think, is that it fits perfectly
            — because at its heart, organising is about relationships,
            and that’s something the church knows a thing or two about.

The Centre for Theology and Community’shttp:// Organising for Growth programme,
            which we’ve been part of at Bloomsbury,
            has helped us rediscover what it means to be a relational church.

It’s given us tools to strengthen the community we already have,
            and to reach beyond it.

1. Listening and 1-to-1s

A lot of it starts with listening
            — not the kind of listening where we’re planning our response,
            but the kind that really seeks to understand.

In organising, that’s often done through one-to-one conversations.

Now, I’ll be honest
            — in church life, we sometimes find the idea of 1-to-1s a bit awkward.

It can sound manipulative, or utilitarian,
            as if we’re trying to get something out of the other person.

But actually, it’s far more human than that.

I sometimes reframe it like this:
            I want to share a bit of my story,
            and I want to create space for you to share yours.

It’s a mutual encounter. It’s the beginning of trust.
            And it’s something Jesus himself modelled
            — think of his conversations at wells, or by roadsides, or around tables.

When we practise this kind of intentional listening,
            it changes the culture.

We begin to see one another not as roles or functions
            — not “the treasurer”, “the deacon”, or “the newcomer”
            — but as people with stories, passions, and struggles.

That’s where relational power begins to grow.

2. From Listening to Action

But organising doesn’t stop at listening.
            It always moves towards action — shared action.

When we listen well, we start to discern what matters to people.
            And when we act on those concerns together,
            we strengthen the fabric of community.

In church, that might mean responding
            to an issue of injustice in our neighbourhood.

Or it might be something internal
            — addressing the needs of those
            who feel unheard within our own congregation.

At Bloomsbury, for instance, as we’ve deepened our listening,
            we’ve found ourselves drawn into new partnerships
            — with other churches, with mosques and synagogues,
                        with schools and universities —

And we’ve also found ourselves developing relationships
            with those who share the use of our building:
with a hip-hop dance company, three community choirs,
            a night shelter, an organisation that campaigns on racial justice,
            and a prison mission.

Through our intentional relationship building,
            we’ve brought people together who previously shared a building,
                        but who now are discovering shared values,
            and a shared desire and capacity to act in the world,
                        as we learn together how to turn shared values into shared action.

3. The Inner Work of Organising: From Comfort to Courage

There’s another layer to all this
            — the inner work of organising.

Because when we begin to listen deeply,
            and act together for change,
we soon discover that the real challenge isn’t just out there in the world;
            it’s also in here, within ourselves.

Organising invites us to move from comfort to courage.
            It asks us to take risks — to speak up, to lead, to confront power,
            and sometimes to be vulnerable with one another.
And that can feel unsettling.

In church life, we often like things to be harmonious.
            We value kindness, gentleness, getting along.
Those are good things.

But sometimes, our desire for harmony
            can stop us from having the honest conversations we need.

Organising teaches us that tension isn’t the enemy of community
            — it’s often the birthplace of transformation.

There’s a phrase I love from community organising:
            “No change without tension.”
That’s true of spiritual growth, too.

The gospel doesn’t call us to comfort;
            it calls us to courage.

It calls us to step into the spaces where love and justice meet,
            and that’s rarely easy.

I’ve found that this work has changed me
            as much as it’s changed our congregation.

It’s taught me to listen more deeply, to speak more truthfully,
            and to trust that the Spirit is at work in the discomfort.

So perhaps part of building a relational culture in our churches
            is learning to see tension not as a threat to our unity,
            but as a sign that something real is happening
— that the Spirit is stretching us, reshaping us, calling us to grow.

And when we find the courage to stay in that space
            — to listen through the tension, to act through the fear —
we often find that the relationships which emerge on the other side
            are stronger, deeper, and more hopeful than before.

4. Reflection and Leadership Development

Organising also teaches us to reflect on our action.

That’s another area where it aligns beautifully with the life of faith.
            After each action, we ask: What happened? What did we learn?
            How did power shift? What’s next?

It’s remarkably similar to the process of theological reflection
            — seeing where God might be at work,
            and discerning how to respond.

And out of that reflection comes leadership development.
            People grow in confidence and in skill.
They learn to speak, to negotiate, to plan, to act.
            It’s discipleship in a very practical form.

I’ve watched members of our congregation
            discover their voice through Citizens training
— people who never saw themselves as leaders
            stepping forward to lead meetings, speak to power, or coordinate campaigns.

5. The Theology of Relationship: Where the Spirit Dwells

Underneath all of this — the listening, the acting, the reflecting —
            lies a profoundly theological conviction:
            that the Spirit of God is at work in relationship.

When we speak of building relational power,
            what we’re really talking about is discerning
            where the Spirit is moving between us.

In the book of Acts, the Holy Spirit doesn’t only descend on individuals;
            the Spirit draws people together
— Jews and Gentiles, slaves and free, men and women —
            into new and surprising communities of belonging.

That’s what organising does at its best.
            It takes the fractures of our social life
            and says: the Spirit can move here too.

In the church, we can be tempted to think of mission
            as something we do for others — an act of outreach.

But organising invites us to see mission as something we do with others
            — an act of relationship.

It’s the difference between charity and justice,
            between service and solidarity.

And in that process, we discover something of God.
            Because if God is love, and love only exists in relationship,
            then the practice of deep, honest, mutual relationship
            is itself a form of prayer.
It’s a way of entering the life of God.

So when we engage in one-to-ones,
            or build alliances across difference,
            or act together for the common good,
we are not simply being good citizens
            — we are being the Church.
We are embodying the Spirit’s work of reconciliation.

It’s what I sometimes call a sacrament of encounter
            — those moments when we meet another person deeply enough
            that we glimpse something holy in them, and they in us.
That’s what sustains the work.
            It’s what keeps hope alive when campaigns drag on and victories seem slow.

In those encounters, we see the New Jerusalem taking shape
            — not as a vision of heaven far away,
but as a community of justice and peace being built,
            relationship by relationship, in our midst.

In our church this has led to us developing
            a new monthly meeting called ‘Breathing Space’,
where we gather to deepen our relationship with God and with one another,
            creating a context for honesty, prayer, silence, and scriptural reflection.

We have found people growing in confidence
            about how to articulate the depths of their spiritual experiences,
and others discovering a new language of faith
            that gives voice to their doubts and their hopes
            and their deep longings before God.

6. Translating Citizens-speak into Church-speak

Of course, sometimes the language of organising can sound a bit alien in church.
            We talk about power, campaigns, strategy, actions.
            Those words can make us nervous.

But when we translate them, they become deeply familiar.
            Power becomes the capacity to act together.
                        Campaigns become shared missions.
            Strategy becomes discernment.
                        Action becomes faith in motion.

And suddenly, we see that organising isn’t an add-on to the gospel
            — it’s one way of living it out.

7. The Challenge and the Invitation

The challenge, I think, is to let organising reshape the culture of our churches
            — not just as something we do, but as something we are.

To move from being programme-driven to relationship-driven.
            To trust that transformation begins not with grand vision statements,
            but with small, honest conversations.
To believe that when we really listen to one another,
            the Spirit can move among us to build something new.

So perhaps the invitation to all of us
            — whether we’re seasoned organisers or new to it —
            is simply to try it and see how it feels.
Have one intentional conversation this week.
            Share a bit of your story,
            and create a space where someone else can share theirs.

You might be surprised at what grows from that.
            Because when we build a culture of relationship,
            we begin to glimpse the Kingdom
— not as an abstract ideal,
            but as a living, breathing community of hope.