Speaker:

It came to a head in a way. I began to become

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braver in my preaching and began to preach

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more like an Anabaptist from

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the sermon, from the pulpit.

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Did that have interesting results?

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It had profound results. I was in trouble for

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that. From my own congregation, rather

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than... I mean, they probably

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whispered it to those above me.

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Hew, welcome to the podcast. So, you've had an

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interesting story that we want to capture

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in today's episode. You're originally from the UK

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and were part of the Anglican Church,

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I believe.

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That's right.

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And so, let's just start at the beginning and get

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your story. Where were you born and

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what kind of church

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environment did you grow up in?

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I was born in Singapore. My father was in the

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army and the second from last man to leave

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Singapore because it was a colony but had gained

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independence and he was helping their

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army gain the knowledge they needed to stand on

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their own two feet. So, I was there for

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the first three years of my life.

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Now that's... Okay, so that's an interesting time

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in British history, I guess, as that

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colony is becoming independent.

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It was independent already.

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Okay.

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It was...

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Transitioning, I guess.

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Transitioning. And church background: he was

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inclining and in later life confirmed as an

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atheist. His parents would have been reasonably

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regular churchgoers in the Church of England.

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So that was his background and my mother had a

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Catholic education but wasn't from a

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Catholic family. So she went to a Catholic

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school. So she had a knowledge of Christianity

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that kicked in later, bless her, and it helped us

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out of a hard situation.

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And in her teenage years, she was involved with

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the Christian science movement. So, basically,

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that was often her default and she was

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disillusioned with that. So

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religion was not a big part

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or Christian faith was not a big part of our

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family upbringing. But we had lots of stuff

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in our house that was religious. We had plenty of

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little temple bits and bobs that we'd picked

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up in bazaars and thieves markets and things like

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that. So we had Buddhist scrolls on the

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walls and Indian images, copper images or bronze

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images of Indian holy men on the mantelpiece

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and stuff. So we had a lot of Eastern, what I

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look now as unhelpful junk. We didn't know

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where we were. We were just sucking up the

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culture around us and having none ourselves,

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really. That was the way it goes.

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Was there a lot of... Was

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this from your father's travel?

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My father's travels, my parents had been married

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for some time before I was born. I was the

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youngest of five and was 18 years younger than my

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brother. So we had a very spaced family

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and my father had done a lot of traveling with

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the army beforehand. Then life went on

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to Germany. We moved to Germany then and then

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Nepal. It's probably in Nepal that I

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had my first spiritual experience. It was

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basically an out-of-body experience that I

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first had. I was terrified by the whole

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experience. I was only six

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at the time or something like

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that. I would just head into my parents' bed

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after having this dream of just being

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able to push myself around my bedroom wall and

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float and look down upon my body beneath me.

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That was disturbing. When I told my mother this,

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she was quite stricken in some ways,

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because she had messed around with this as a

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teenager. This was back in the... Would've been

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back in the 40s, 50s. She had seen it as a very

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terrifying part of her own life. She just

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realized that it had just transferred down the

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generation to me. She said, "Well, look, Hew,

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there's something that will work. Let's pray the

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Lord's Prayer together." Upon praying the

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Lord's Prayer, that ceased in my life, which

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showed me something positive about Christianity

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that I wouldn't forget.

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This is age six, you said.

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This is age six. Wow. It's a pretty early...

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I had never been baptized. My older siblings had,

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but there was no kind of any Christian imprint on

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me at all. I was untouched basically at that

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point. That was a

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positive impact in my existence.

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Nepal was a pretty frustrating place to a point

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for me. I had difficulties in learning. I suppose

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they would put it down as dyslexia. I was pretty

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low in the class. I'm often being left behind.

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One day, I just banged my head on the floor. "I'm

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just with a load of babies. I want to do

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something else." My mother said, "Oh, well, I

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better send you to boarding school."

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At the age of six, I was sent off to boarding

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school, traveling with my sisters. They were

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living in Nepal, my father and father. My father

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reckoned that it was cheaper to send us to

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boarding school anyway than to feed us at home

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because the army gave such a generous subsidy

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on education at boarding schools. Wow. That's

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fine. Problem solved. Off to boarding school.

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Is this boarding school, it's there in Nepal or

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did you enter somewhere else?

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No, it was in England. In Devon.

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They send you to literally

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the other side of the world.

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Yeah, on the other side of the world.

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For the school term? Then you come back?

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They come back during the holidays. Wow. Quite

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traumatic at the age of six.

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Age six. Yeah, no kidding. That must have been

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confusing at that age or maybe disorienting,

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is a better word.

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It didn't last forever though and the occasion,

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was quite sad. My parents divorced in 1979,

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and then that was the end of the boarding school

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education. The army wasn't there to subsidize it.

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It suddenly becomes a very expensive thing. I go

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home and go to a village school,

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a village government school. I had a big shock

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coming because it was a very different world

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to my boarding school world. Boarding school,

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you've got lots of people like yourself,

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soldiers' children's, diplomats' children's, the

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odd African chiefs' children,

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a huge array of oddballs. You all get on very

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well. Then suddenly, you go to a village school

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and you're this weird guy that everyone picks on

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because you speak differently,

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and you've traveled and they

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haven't. It was a big struggle.

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A certain superstition took part in that. My

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family were pretty superstitious, actually.

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There is a religion in everyone, and they were.

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On one occasion, when we were down in Wales,

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I willfully broke a mirror. My sisters came to me

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and they said, "Ah, you. That's bad." That was

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only 11 at the time or something like that. She

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said, "That's seven years bad luck now."

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To a degree, they were right because it was a

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very dark time in my life and for seven years.

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Things began to change when I went to sixth form

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college in Torlton, a neighboring town.

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There, I met a different girl. She was from a

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Christian family and got to know her.

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But I have to backtrack a little bit here

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because, whilst I was still

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at finishing off at school,

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my brother and his wife had a first child, and

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they wanted to have a Christening ceremony.

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We went down to the local vicar and spoke to him

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about it. He said, "Well,

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the first thing I have to ask you is, have you

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been confirmed and have you been baptized?"

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My mother and I both had to answer that we both

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were not baptized or confirmed.

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We were out of the loop, so to speak, in the

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Anglican mindset. That had to be done. We were

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invited to come along to a confirmation class.

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Can you define,

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when he's asking you to be confirmed, What does

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that mean? Also, for those who aren't familiar

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aren't familiar with Anglicanism, What is a vicar? Can you define

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that as well? A vicar would be a minister, a

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minister who is responsible for preaching

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and leading out the service prayers, visiting in

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a parish area. Things are changing now because,

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to a degree, in certain parts of the Anglican

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world anyway, numbers are going down, so parishes

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would be getting bigger. Then he would have a

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responsibility of a village and its surrounding

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countryside until the next village is hit. That's

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helpful. Basically, your brother is going to the

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local vicar and this is what he's telling them.

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My brother wanted us to be godparents.

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Well, he needed to be a

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godparent. Of course, I was 15 at the time.

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We went through this confirmation class and I

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came out of it, not as a Christian, but I came

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out of it believing in one God. Because, of

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course, the upbringing we'd

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had, there were gods all over the place,

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in our house. Yeah, interesting. There were

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works of art, let's put it

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that way, but I think it's a

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bit more than that because they would have meant

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something to somebody else in a different way.

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Anyway, as a result, I was going to be confirmed.

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Then the vicar remembered,

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"But you two haven't yet even been baptized."

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Just before we were off to see the bishop to get

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confirmed, he said, "Come over here." He baptized

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both my mother and

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myself. Then we went off to see

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the bishop to get confirmed. The bishop then lays

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hands upon you, which represents the giving of

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the Holy Spirit. You then become a confirmed

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Anglican. Usually at the time of 14 or 15 or

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12 or 13, that's the time as a young person you

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leave the Anglican church. There's a joke about

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this in Anglican circles. Very often church buildings have

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problems with bats and they're flying around

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and dropping droppings on the furniture and what

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have you. One vicar's

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complaining, "Oh, we've got

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a real problem with our bats." The other one says

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to him, "Well, there's a way around that, you know."

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"Oh really?" "But you've got to be careful. You

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can't do things that are to bats because they're

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protected." He said, "We don't. We baptize and

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confirm them, and then we never see them again."

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So that is almost the point of Anglicanism at

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that time and it probably

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still accounts to very much.

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Wow. So it doesn't seem like there was much

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expectation of continual

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involvement after this point for you.

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But having said that, it was an evangelical

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Anglican church. So there was a degree of

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expectation that we would continue and I did. I

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continued to go to church and I would put on a

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suit and a tie and go to church. In fact, I went

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more regularly than my mother. Something was

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drawing me there.

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Could you pinpoint it at the time?

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I think it was probably, there was a certain

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sense of belonging, but what I didn't want to do

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was to talk to anyone after the service. So once

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the service was over, I shot out of there

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straight away before anyone could nab me, because I

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felt someone would gonna, "Oh, nice young person,

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he's still coming to church. Let's go to speak to

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him." And so I would disappear very quickly.

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Anyway, back to the girl I met at Sixth Form

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college. She was different because the young

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bloods went to chat her up because she was

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pretty. And I observed

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this. Interestingly enough,

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they kind of walked off. I thought, "What's this

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girl? She's a Christian. She's not going to be

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doing the things that we'd like to do with her."

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And so, "Well, that's a bit different." And I go

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to church. I got to know her, but then pointed

259

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out what my worldview was, and she could very

260

00:13:42,238 --> 00:13:45,908

clearly see. Though I attended church and the

261

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Anglican church, she was a Baptist minister's

262

00:13:47,826 --> 00:13:50,621

daughter. And though I attended, I wasn't a

263

00:13:50,621 --> 00:13:53,666

Christian because I believed that the world

264

00:13:53,707 --> 00:13:57,836

centered around me and others were just cardboard

265

00:13:57,836 --> 00:14:00,798

cutouts that were convenient to help me pass my

266

00:14:00,839 --> 00:14:06,178

time. That was how self-centered and rotten I

267

00:14:06,178 --> 00:14:12,184

was. Anyway, to cut a little story short,

268

00:14:12,184 --> 00:14:14,853

we had a friendship, but she said, "But I'm not

269

00:14:14,853 --> 00:14:21,402

your girlfriend." And we did get pretty friendly.

270

00:14:22,403 --> 00:14:25,614

Anyway, she invited me along to the tail end of a

271

00:14:25,614 --> 00:14:28,784

beach mission service. I have to explain

272

00:14:28,826 --> 00:14:31,412

about beach missions. This is going into the more

273

00:14:31,412 --> 00:14:34,915

of the evangelical circle of nonconformity,

274

00:14:35,165 --> 00:14:40,462

generally, in Britain. And they would, at seaside

275

00:14:40,462 --> 00:14:43,799

resorts, they would have young people

276

00:14:44,967 --> 00:14:48,762

looking after the bored children on the beach

277

00:14:48,762 --> 00:14:51,682

whose parents were just sunbathing and maybe

278

00:14:52,725 --> 00:14:56,103

just letting- the children were a bit unoccupied.

279

00:14:56,729 --> 00:15:00,065

And so this youth group would wear blue shorts

280

00:15:00,065 --> 00:15:05,154

or blue skirts, blue shorts, and yellow or red

281

00:15:05,154 --> 00:15:08,949

t-shirts. So they would be identified as a

282

00:15:08,949 --> 00:15:10,784

team of young people. And they would teach the

283

00:15:10,784 --> 00:15:14,872

young people Bible verses. They would have a shop

284

00:15:15,080 --> 00:15:17,541

where if people had learnt to say so many Bible

285

00:15:17,541 --> 00:15:21,128

verses or achieved certain merits in the games

286

00:15:21,211 --> 00:15:23,589

they did on the beach, they would occupy the

287

00:15:23,589 --> 00:15:25,090

children and they would give a nice place for

288

00:15:25,090 --> 00:15:28,344

they could get out of the sun, sunshade area

289

00:15:28,344 --> 00:15:29,428

where they would meet and

290

00:15:29,428 --> 00:15:31,305

teach them simple songs and

291

00:15:31,388 --> 00:15:33,724

that sort of thing. But then they would invite

292

00:15:33,724 --> 00:15:35,517

the children and the

293

00:15:35,517 --> 00:15:37,770

parents back to a gospel meeting

294

00:15:38,312 --> 00:15:42,483

in a local church that hosted them. And so I was

295

00:15:42,483 --> 00:15:45,819

there at this service where a chap called,

296

00:15:46,403 --> 00:15:50,991

I think his name was Nigel Lee, was preaching and

297

00:15:50,991 --> 00:15:55,079

he gave a very clear gospel message.

298

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And the gist of it to me anyway was that you

299

00:15:58,999 --> 00:16:02,920

can't just walk on the fence.

300

00:16:03,337 --> 00:16:06,548

You have to be for God or against him. He doesn't

301

00:16:06,548 --> 00:16:10,803

take people who run with the hare and hunt with

302

00:16:10,803 --> 00:16:18,394

the hounds. You need to be in his church or out

303

00:16:18,394 --> 00:16:21,522

of it. There is no halfway point.

304

00:16:22,398 --> 00:16:25,901

And I realized that I was attending church, but I

305

00:16:25,901 --> 00:16:27,027

had no knowledge of Christ.

306

00:16:28,904 --> 00:16:30,447

I knew about him, but he certainly wasn't

307

00:16:30,447 --> 00:16:33,951

dwelling in me. And that there was an offer

308

00:16:34,284 --> 00:16:39,206

of salvation if we would come to Christ and

309

00:16:39,206 --> 00:16:43,001

repent from the sins we knew about.

310

00:16:43,877 --> 00:16:49,049

So a gospel call was made and I was invited to go

311

00:16:49,049 --> 00:16:52,177

up if I felt that my life needed to change.

312

00:16:52,428 --> 00:16:59,518

And so that was back in 1988. I think it was on a

313

00:16:59,518 --> 00:17:01,645

Sunday in August of 1988,

314

00:17:01,645 --> 00:17:02,771

I gave my life to Christ.

315

00:17:03,522 --> 00:17:06,150

Initially, there's a lot of work to be done on me

316

00:17:06,150 --> 00:17:10,654

since, a huge amount. But that was a first step

317

00:17:10,821 --> 00:17:16,160

anyway. And I at that point felt the indwelling

318

00:17:16,160 --> 00:17:17,995

of the Holy Spirit. And

319

00:17:17,995 --> 00:17:21,039

though God had to do a lot

320

00:17:21,039 --> 00:17:24,752

more work with me, there was such peace in that

321

00:17:24,752 --> 00:17:27,671

encounter with God. Interesting point though,

322

00:17:27,713 --> 00:17:29,798

you know how self-conscious

323

00:17:29,798 --> 00:17:31,216

you are when you're about 18.

324

00:17:32,676 --> 00:17:36,722

I felt that I was going up with a great company

325

00:17:36,722 --> 00:17:39,850

of others. But when I turned around,

326

00:17:40,893 --> 00:17:45,397

there was nobody else. So God brought me up there

327

00:17:45,397 --> 00:17:47,816

with the thought that there were many behind me

328

00:17:48,358 --> 00:17:51,487

and there wasn't one person. So I'm sure Nigel,

329

00:17:51,487 --> 00:17:54,740

as he preached there, was a bit disappointed that

330

00:17:55,157 --> 00:17:59,453

his eloquent sermon and his forceful preaching

331

00:17:59,453 --> 00:18:03,499

had only produced one person. But thank you,

332

00:18:03,874 --> 00:18:06,126

Nigel, if you're listening out there, thank you.

333

00:18:06,335 --> 00:18:07,711

I'm very grateful for your preaching.

334

00:18:08,378 --> 00:18:12,466

Anyway, about a year before I went up to from

335

00:18:12,466 --> 00:18:17,763

sixth form college, which is up to the age of 18,

336

00:18:17,805 --> 00:18:24,686

19 to university. So I was accepted at university

337

00:18:24,686 --> 00:18:28,649

in Abberistwyth initially to study geology.

338

00:18:30,067 --> 00:18:34,738

But in geology, it was something that I'd started

339

00:18:34,738 --> 00:18:37,533

when I wasn't a Christian and I wanted to do it.

340

00:18:37,533 --> 00:18:40,077

I'm fascinated with it. It helped later on in

341

00:18:40,077 --> 00:18:45,124

life with an interest in creation. But I felt

342

00:18:45,165 --> 00:18:47,251

that the reason I was doing geology was just

343

00:18:47,251 --> 00:18:50,045

about me. And those who are with me

344

00:18:50,963 --> 00:18:56,093

were very much that way focused or on just

345

00:18:56,093 --> 00:18:59,471

themselves. I felt I wanted to do something

346

00:18:59,513 --> 00:19:05,978

better for the world, for God's kingdom, for poor

347

00:19:05,978 --> 00:19:07,187

people. And I thought, well,

348

00:19:08,021 --> 00:19:10,482

what can I do? I need to transfer out of this

349

00:19:10,482 --> 00:19:12,943

geology to do something else. So I actually was

350

00:19:12,985 --> 00:19:15,571

able to switch to doing agriculture with business

351

00:19:15,571 --> 00:19:19,825

studies. And so I spent four years at

352

00:19:21,368 --> 00:19:24,204

university in Abberistwyth. And I'm glad I did,

353

00:19:24,580 --> 00:19:28,292

because I met my wife there who's sitting back

354

00:19:28,292 --> 00:19:37,509

there out of range. And we met at St. Michael's

355

00:19:37,509 --> 00:19:42,306

Church, Abberistwyth. And we had the ministry, the minister

356

00:19:42,639 --> 00:19:47,769

at that time was the Reverend Stuart Bell, a

357

00:19:47,769 --> 00:19:51,815

good, clear preacher of the gospel. And

358

00:19:53,066 --> 00:19:56,904

I grew in my faith there, I have to say. It was

359

00:19:56,904 --> 00:19:59,740

an evangelical,

360

00:19:59,740 --> 00:20:03,702

small-c, charismatic congregation

361

00:20:04,077 --> 00:20:07,956

that was showing some growth. And there was a lot

362

00:20:07,956 --> 00:20:10,792

of outreach to students. So it was very much a

363

00:20:10,834 --> 00:20:14,588

student. It was the hip student church to be in

364

00:20:14,588 --> 00:20:16,924

at Abberistwyth University, very much definitely.

365

00:20:17,132 --> 00:20:19,509

The majority of the students went there. And I

366

00:20:19,509 --> 00:20:21,762

involved myself to a degree with the Christian

367

00:20:21,762 --> 00:20:24,640

Union that was always having spats between

368

00:20:24,640 --> 00:20:27,976

Pentecostals and Calvinists, generally speaking.

369

00:20:27,976 --> 00:20:32,439

There was often flack there, but it was

370

00:20:32,439 --> 00:20:35,442

nonetheless quite formative. Meeting

371

00:20:35,692 --> 00:20:41,531

Jeanette, I met her in the street and it was my

372

00:20:41,531 --> 00:20:48,163

flatmate. I knew Jeanette before I knew her.

373

00:20:48,705 --> 00:20:51,208

And I was looking over his shoulder thinking,

374

00:20:51,833 --> 00:20:54,670

"She's a rather nice girl." But my flatmate did

375

00:20:55,212 --> 00:20:57,798

thought she was too. And he made no attempt to

376

00:20:57,798 --> 00:21:02,636

introduce me. So it was a couple of years

377

00:21:02,678 --> 00:21:07,891

before we met later. And at the time, our now

378

00:21:07,891 --> 00:21:12,104

brother-in-law was the parish worker,

379

00:21:12,396 --> 00:21:15,941

and he wanted to get us together, didn't he? So

380

00:21:15,941 --> 00:21:19,027

he invited himself to tea and I thought, "Oh,

381

00:21:19,027 --> 00:21:21,697

no, the parish worker's coming." And I was living

382

00:21:21,697 --> 00:21:22,948

with a bunch of non-Christians

383

00:21:23,782 --> 00:21:28,078

in an outlying town called Borth on the coast as

384

00:21:28,078 --> 00:21:33,667

well. And suddenly, in come two parish workers actually,

385

00:21:34,459 --> 00:21:35,419

and a girl with them. And it's

386

00:21:35,419 --> 00:21:37,004

the same girl I saw in the street.

387

00:21:38,130 --> 00:21:42,092

Pretty soon, we were seeing more of each other.

388

00:21:43,010 --> 00:21:46,930

And Jeanette will laugh, but I had to talk to

389

00:21:46,972 --> 00:21:50,684

her mother, didn't I? I got to befriend her

390

00:21:50,684 --> 00:21:53,228

mother securely and then

391

00:21:53,228 --> 00:21:54,354

everything fell together.

392

00:21:54,771 --> 00:22:01,319

I was such a nice boy. Anyway, but when we got

393

00:22:01,319 --> 00:22:02,154

together and we were

394

00:22:02,154 --> 00:22:05,824

talking before we got engaged

395

00:22:06,324 --> 00:22:10,037

about the importance of if we were to marry, we

396

00:22:10,037 --> 00:22:13,123

wanted to be serving God in some form or other.

397

00:22:13,915 --> 00:22:15,751

And what denomination were you at this point?

398

00:22:16,084 --> 00:22:18,336

Still Anglican. We were still attending an

399

00:22:18,336 --> 00:22:23,216

Anglican church. And we have at the time,

400

00:22:24,468 --> 00:22:26,178

another brother-in-law, a future

401

00:22:26,178 --> 00:22:28,805

brother-in-law, and Jeanette's sister,

402

00:22:29,181 --> 00:22:32,184

were serving with an organization called Emmanuel

403

00:22:32,184 --> 00:22:35,937

International. And they are an

404

00:22:36,021 --> 00:22:39,691

interdenominational evangelical missionary agency

405

00:22:39,691 --> 00:22:45,197

based in Canada. And we were very impressed with

406

00:22:45,781 --> 00:22:48,867

Wendy and Glenn, my brother and sister-in-law, in

407

00:22:48,867 --> 00:22:53,288

their work amongst the poor people of Malawi.

408

00:22:54,873 --> 00:22:58,418

Jeanette actually went out to visit them. And I,

409

00:22:58,418 --> 00:23:00,420

at an earlier point, had visited my sister

410

00:23:00,420 --> 00:23:05,300

in Malawi. And so we had another thing in common.

411

00:23:06,176 --> 00:23:10,138

And I actually gave you a radio to give to a

412

00:23:10,180 --> 00:23:14,184

forest ranger I'd been for a

413

00:23:14,184 --> 00:23:17,437

walk with. And so that was little things there

414

00:23:17,437 --> 00:23:21,483

to do things, to make connections. And I

415

00:23:21,483 --> 00:23:22,651

actually, at that time, I was

416

00:23:22,651 --> 00:23:23,902

visiting my father in Malaysia.

417

00:23:24,903 --> 00:23:29,825

And I sent Jeanette a postcard or two. And my

418

00:23:29,825 --> 00:23:33,578

writing is absolutely awful. It's really bad.

419

00:23:33,995 --> 00:23:40,252

So when Jeanette saw my writing on this postcard

420

00:23:40,252 --> 00:23:41,586

that I'd sent her, she thought,

421

00:23:41,586 --> 00:23:46,466

"Oh, this guy must have terrible

422

00:23:46,466 --> 00:23:49,136

disabilities or something like that.

423

00:23:50,011 --> 00:23:52,889

He's got such awful writing and punctuation and

424

00:23:52,889 --> 00:23:53,849

spelling and everything."

425

00:23:54,891 --> 00:23:57,686

Anyway, there you go. But she overlooked that.

426

00:23:58,436 --> 00:24:01,940

And coming to the end of 1992,

427

00:24:03,150 --> 00:24:08,071

I proposed to her and she accepted. And then I

428

00:24:08,071 --> 00:24:10,699

had to ask her father. And very fortunately,

429

00:24:10,699 --> 00:24:15,245

he said, "Yes, that's really good news." And we

430

00:24:15,245 --> 00:24:16,621

got married the following year.

431

00:24:18,123 --> 00:24:21,793

Then, following on from this desire to serve God,

432

00:24:22,627 --> 00:24:23,670

we were impressed with

433

00:24:23,670 --> 00:24:25,046

what Wendy and Glenn had to

434

00:24:25,046 --> 00:24:28,675

say about the Emanuel International. But then, I

435

00:24:28,675 --> 00:24:29,843

was also interested in

436

00:24:29,843 --> 00:24:31,303

Tearfund, which is a British

437

00:24:31,386 --> 00:24:35,640

charity that works overseas. But they said,

438

00:24:36,725 --> 00:24:38,852

"Well, for the first year of marriage, we won't

439

00:24:38,852 --> 00:24:41,271

even consider you because you need to have that

440

00:24:41,271 --> 00:24:45,442

year of living together in your local culture and

441

00:24:46,234 --> 00:24:49,029

getting through the teething problems of

442

00:24:49,029 --> 00:24:52,574

marriage." And then we

443

00:24:52,574 --> 00:24:53,825

asked Emanuel International

444

00:24:54,743 --> 00:24:56,912

and went to some interviews there. And we said,

445

00:24:56,912 --> 00:24:58,288

"Do we have to wait here?" And they'd say,

446

00:24:58,330 --> 00:25:01,833

"Normally we would. Normally we would." But on

447

00:25:01,833 --> 00:25:03,752

this occasion, they bent

448

00:25:03,752 --> 00:25:04,961

the rules somewhat for us.

449

00:25:05,795 --> 00:25:10,508

So we went off to training [in] Canada and Jamaica as

450

00:25:10,508 --> 00:25:12,469

missionaries. And the way Emanuel International

451

00:25:12,636 --> 00:25:16,514

worked, or maybe still works, was that you would

452

00:25:16,514 --> 00:25:20,519

do your training first and then be offered to

453

00:25:20,560 --> 00:25:24,689

churches around the world who like the look of you

454

00:25:24,689 --> 00:25:27,317

and thought you'd be able to fit into

455

00:25:29,277 --> 00:25:32,280

the programs they were offering. So it wasn't...

456

00:25:32,781 --> 00:25:34,449

This was a little different than training to be

457

00:25:34,449 --> 00:25:36,868

a minister, say, or something. This is different

458

00:25:36,868 --> 00:25:39,621

than that. This is a missionary worker. This is

459

00:25:39,621 --> 00:25:41,998

mission. Underneath the local church. So we

460

00:25:41,998 --> 00:25:45,293

weren't going off... It happened to be an

461

00:25:45,293 --> 00:25:48,004

Anglican church that we went to and I'll say more

462

00:25:48,004 --> 00:25:49,756

about that. But before

463

00:25:49,756 --> 00:25:52,050

that, I have to say, because it

464

00:25:52,092 --> 00:25:54,844

was during training that we had our first

465

00:25:54,844 --> 00:25:59,975

encounter with Mennonites. Because we come

466

00:25:59,975 --> 00:26:02,310

from an Anglican background, the mission agency

467

00:26:02,310 --> 00:26:05,563

wanted to shake us up a bit. So they like to put

468

00:26:05,563 --> 00:26:08,692

you with a church that you had no experience of.

469

00:26:09,484 --> 00:26:14,072

And so we were put in this local church of

470

00:26:14,072 --> 00:26:17,367

Mennonites in a place called Stoville, which is

471

00:26:17,367 --> 00:26:21,830

east of Toronto, east of Markham in Canada,

472

00:26:22,455 --> 00:26:27,252

in Ontario. And we were with the First Mennonite

473

00:26:27,252 --> 00:26:30,255

church. And I only discovered recently the First

474

00:26:30,255 --> 00:26:32,841

was actually the name of the

475

00:26:32,841 --> 00:26:34,843

denomination of Mennonites in Canada.

476

00:26:34,843 --> 00:26:35,385

Oh, interesting.

477

00:26:35,635 --> 00:26:35,844

Okay.

478

00:26:35,844 --> 00:26:38,847

I thought it was the first Mennonite church. And

479

00:26:38,847 --> 00:26:41,766

in the UK, we have cub scouts. And if you're the

480

00:26:41,808 --> 00:26:43,977

first troop of cub scouts to be in a certain

481

00:26:43,977 --> 00:26:47,355

village or a town, you get first. And the other

482

00:26:47,355 --> 00:26:50,108

one would have to put second and a third and

483

00:26:50,108 --> 00:26:51,985

fourth if there were more of them being set up.

484

00:26:52,861 --> 00:26:54,946

So it wasn't that. I discovered that recently.

485

00:26:55,280 --> 00:26:56,448

That was the name of the

486

00:26:56,448 --> 00:26:57,490

denomination of Mennonites.

487

00:26:58,366 --> 00:27:01,202

And they would have not been as conservative as

488

00:27:01,202 --> 00:27:05,123

you are, but they still retained. And I hope they

489

00:27:05,123 --> 00:27:06,916

still do. And God bless you if you're listening

490

00:27:06,916 --> 00:27:10,879

from you dear folks in Stoville,

491

00:27:10,879 --> 00:27:14,215

First Mennonite church. You had a big impact on

492

00:27:14,215 --> 00:27:18,553

our lives. And one of the things we remember

493

00:27:19,846 --> 00:27:22,640

very clearly about that was the hospitality that

494

00:27:22,640 --> 00:27:25,769

we were shown. After the end of the service,

495

00:27:25,769 --> 00:27:29,230

we were always invited to someone's house for a

496

00:27:29,230 --> 00:27:31,524

meal. They took us under their wing.

497

00:27:33,360 --> 00:27:35,070

And I'll have to say a very amusing

498

00:27:35,070 --> 00:27:35,945

cross-cultural

499

00:27:35,945 --> 00:27:38,323

misunderstanding, a couple of them which took

500

00:27:38,365 --> 00:27:41,326

place, which were quite telling at the time.

501

00:27:42,786 --> 00:27:45,622

First of all, it was a simple misunderstanding.

502

00:27:46,664 --> 00:27:48,833

Sunday School, for instance, came about in the

503

00:27:48,833 --> 00:27:51,127

service. And for us, Sunday School was something

504

00:27:51,127 --> 00:27:54,297

that those who are perhaps under 12 or under 13

505

00:27:54,297 --> 00:27:55,632

would go to. But the

506

00:27:55,632 --> 00:27:56,883

adults would be in the service

507

00:27:57,467 --> 00:27:59,427

and the children would be out there somewhere.

508

00:27:59,928 --> 00:28:03,515

But here, adults did Sunday School. So that was

509

00:28:03,515 --> 00:28:06,059

something very new to us. So off we went into our

510

00:28:06,059 --> 00:28:09,396

little groups. And we went down into the basement

511

00:28:10,188 --> 00:28:13,983

to a men's group. And there, one of the fellows

512

00:28:13,983 --> 00:28:17,529

leading it said, "Ah, lovely to see you. I've

513

00:28:17,529 --> 00:28:21,282

brought some cider along to drink during Sunday

514

00:28:21,282 --> 00:28:24,160

School." I thought, "Oh my goodness me. It's only

515

00:28:24,160 --> 00:28:27,205

10 o'clock half past in the morning and we're

516

00:28:27,205 --> 00:28:32,168

drinking alcohol?" What has

517

00:28:32,252 --> 00:28:37,090

this mission agency brought us to? Oh,

518

00:28:37,507 --> 00:28:38,383

that must have been a

519

00:28:38,383 --> 00:28:39,676

shock. So then here we were.

520

00:28:40,135 --> 00:28:42,470

Okay, well, when in Rome, do as Rome does. So we

521

00:28:42,470 --> 00:28:44,139

were like, "All right, it's only apple juice.

522

00:28:44,139 --> 00:28:46,391

It's okay. That's all right." And then that was

523

00:28:46,391 --> 00:28:48,309

one thing. And the other

524

00:28:48,309 --> 00:28:49,811

one was a bit more serious.

525

00:28:49,811 --> 00:28:53,773

This was towards the end of our stay at the

526

00:28:53,773 --> 00:28:56,484

church. But we were asked to do something that

527

00:28:56,484 --> 00:29:00,071

was a cultural practice from our own countries.

528

00:29:01,239 --> 00:29:05,118

And it happened to be the beginning of November.

529

00:29:06,661 --> 00:29:09,372

There's a tradition in Britain called Guy Fawkes

530

00:29:09,372 --> 00:29:16,713

Night. And it reenacts the time in history when

531

00:29:16,796 --> 00:29:21,301

James I was the king and he had started

532

00:29:21,301 --> 00:29:24,220

encouraging the Bible to be more widespread

533

00:29:24,888 --> 00:29:27,056

and for the country to be generally a much more

534

00:29:27,056 --> 00:29:32,645

Protestant nation. And there were subjects of his

535

00:29:32,645 --> 00:29:36,483

who were Catholic who did not like this. And

536

00:29:36,483 --> 00:29:38,067

among them was a man named

537

00:29:38,067 --> 00:29:40,069

Guy Fawkes who plotted with

538

00:29:40,069 --> 00:29:47,118

about 21 others to rent cellars underneath the

539

00:29:47,118 --> 00:29:51,414

houses of Parliament and then pretend it was for

540

00:29:51,456 --> 00:29:54,209

firewood storage, but actually be putting

541

00:29:54,209 --> 00:29:57,462

gunpowder in there. And then on Guy Fawkes Night,

542

00:29:58,588 --> 00:30:02,800

November the 5th, to ignite it and blow the House

543

00:30:02,800 --> 00:30:05,553

of Lords/ Commons to smithereens with the

544

00:30:05,553 --> 00:30:10,433

King. Then there could be an invasion because

545

00:30:10,725 --> 00:30:12,435

everyone would be in disorder because all the

546

00:30:12,435 --> 00:30:15,104

royalty and the nobles would have been wiped out with a

547

00:30:15,104 --> 00:30:17,482

great explosion underneath the Houses of Commons/

548

00:30:18,149 --> 00:30:25,156

Lords. And one of the plotters warned a

549

00:30:25,156 --> 00:30:27,659

Catholic nobleman to, you know,

550

00:30:29,035 --> 00:30:31,829

"You're one of us, don't be there tonight." But he

551

00:30:31,829 --> 00:30:34,457

was a loyal subject to the King, warned the King.

552

00:30:35,375 --> 00:30:40,338

And then the plotters were arrested and for their

553

00:30:40,338 --> 00:30:42,549

treason, horrible things happened to them.

554

00:30:43,508 --> 00:30:48,680

And so on Bonfire Night, an effigy of Guy Fawkes

555

00:30:48,680 --> 00:30:50,890

is made in some places

556

00:30:50,890 --> 00:30:54,561

and a big bonfire is put up

557

00:30:54,727 --> 00:30:59,023

and the effigy is burned. And so we had plenty of

558

00:30:59,023 --> 00:31:03,027

things to burn around the mission buildings in

559

00:31:03,611 --> 00:31:07,156

Stoville. And we thought, well, let's do a

560

00:31:07,156 --> 00:31:09,534

British cultural demonstration to our Canadian

561

00:31:10,451 --> 00:31:14,414

hosts and friends. And so we had the sausage

562

00:31:14,414 --> 00:31:17,542

sizzle and we had a big bonfire constructed.

563

00:31:18,710 --> 00:31:23,131

And the accountant of the mission had this very

564

00:31:23,131 --> 00:31:25,508

involved little daughter and she was really into

565

00:31:25,508 --> 00:31:29,012

it as well. So we got some old clothes and

566

00:31:29,012 --> 00:31:30,096

stuffed them with old wet

567

00:31:30,096 --> 00:31:31,431

leaves that were lying around

568

00:31:31,431 --> 00:31:35,476

because it was autumn or fall. And we made this

569

00:31:35,476 --> 00:31:39,355

effigy of Guy Fawkes with a big floppy hat and

570

00:31:40,023 --> 00:31:42,817

you know, big, big, big, small, moustache and

571

00:31:42,817 --> 00:31:45,320

beard. And we had them all the time on fire. And

572

00:31:45,695 --> 00:31:48,531

we invited the local churches that hosted us

573

00:31:48,531 --> 00:31:50,283

because a lot of us were from Britain as well,

574

00:31:50,283 --> 00:31:52,785

no others. So we all took part in it. And we had

575

00:31:52,785 --> 00:31:54,996

this, you know, sausage sizzle and

576

00:31:55,538 --> 00:32:00,126

big bonfire. And one of the guys from our church,

577

00:32:00,126 --> 00:32:04,714

a young man, was a part-time fireman. And

578

00:32:05,214 --> 00:32:10,928

he was absolutely disgusted and said, "This is

579

00:32:10,928 --> 00:32:12,472

sickening." He was a Mennonite.

580

00:32:13,848 --> 00:32:18,061

"This is sickening. I'm a part-time fireman and I

581

00:32:18,061 --> 00:32:21,898

have seen humans burn in cars, in houses,

582

00:32:21,898 --> 00:32:24,525

when I haven't been able to rescue them. And here

583

00:32:24,525 --> 00:32:26,235

we are burning an image,

584

00:32:26,778 --> 00:32:28,988

an image of a human being

585

00:32:28,988 --> 00:32:32,075

that's made in the image of God." And I never

586

00:32:32,075 --> 00:32:33,660

thought the same about fireworks night or

587

00:32:33,910 --> 00:32:39,957

Guy Fawkes night from there onwards. Something of

588

00:32:39,957 --> 00:32:43,252

his conviction made him brave enough to speak

589

00:32:43,252 --> 00:32:49,217

out and challenge what had just happened. But the

590

00:32:49,217 --> 00:32:51,552

two women spoke out as

591

00:32:51,552 --> 00:32:52,679

well in the church service,

592

00:32:53,054 --> 00:32:55,848

giving thanks for the way the church had helped

593

00:32:55,848 --> 00:32:57,600

them. One of them's husband had broken his leg

594

00:32:57,642 --> 00:33:02,230

badly and couldn't get the harvest in. And

595

00:33:02,230 --> 00:33:05,400

basically the church people who could, pitched

596

00:33:05,441 --> 00:33:10,154

in and brought in the harvest and helped out. And

597

00:33:10,154 --> 00:33:11,572

another one, whose husband

598

00:33:11,572 --> 00:33:12,657

actually tragically died.

599

00:33:14,200 --> 00:33:18,329

The same thing happened. The congregation pitched

600

00:33:18,329 --> 00:33:20,665

in and the harvest was taken in,

601

00:33:20,957 --> 00:33:23,793

the day was saved. An immediate relief was given

602

00:33:23,793 --> 00:33:25,670

to a problem that faced both women.

603

00:33:26,629 --> 00:33:32,009

And to us, from our church backgrounds, that

604

00:33:32,009 --> 00:33:35,388

spoke volumes. For you coming from

605

00:33:35,388 --> 00:33:37,223

Mennonite backgrounds, that's just what you do.

606

00:33:37,724 --> 00:33:39,517

But it wasn't something that happened

607

00:33:40,017 --> 00:33:42,520

from our backgrounds. Yes, if there had been a

608

00:33:42,520 --> 00:33:43,187

bereavement, you would

609

00:33:43,187 --> 00:33:44,188

have had a very compassionate

610

00:33:44,397 --> 00:33:48,776

visit from the vicar. And maybe there would be

611

00:33:48,776 --> 00:33:51,237

some help from a neighbor farmer,

612

00:33:52,238 --> 00:33:55,783

but the church would not have acted as a body to

613

00:33:55,783 --> 00:33:59,871

help do what's done in the general sense of

614

00:33:59,871 --> 00:34:05,001

our experience. That would have been neighbors

615

00:34:05,001 --> 00:34:07,545

who may have been, but it just wouldn't happen

616

00:34:07,628 --> 00:34:09,505

together. Not like a church, an

617

00:34:09,505 --> 00:34:11,966

actual church unified in this way.

618

00:34:12,550 --> 00:34:14,552

Is that just culturally or

619

00:34:14,552 --> 00:34:15,928

traditionally? That's just the way it is?

620

00:34:16,637 --> 00:34:21,517

I think it's something deeper than that. I think

621

00:34:21,517 --> 00:34:27,398

it's something whereby faith and practice go hand

622

00:34:27,398 --> 00:34:32,195

in hand in the Anabaptist setting. And they don't

623

00:34:32,195 --> 00:34:35,907

always do that--not to say they never do that--in

624

00:34:36,324 --> 00:34:42,246

Protestant/Anglican circles, but it's not

625

00:34:42,246 --> 00:34:44,457

so common. It's very rare.

626

00:34:44,999 --> 00:34:46,125

Well, it definitely made an

627

00:34:46,125 --> 00:34:47,168

impression on you. It did.

628

00:34:47,627 --> 00:34:50,588

Powerful. So you continue on from

629

00:34:50,588 --> 00:34:53,341

this point, and you're still Anglican.

630

00:34:53,925 --> 00:34:54,967

I'm still Anglican.

631

00:34:54,967 --> 00:34:56,886

Basically, you've been Anglican this whole point

632

00:34:56,886 --> 00:34:58,846

from when you became a

633

00:34:58,846 --> 00:35:01,390

Christian on. Do you return

634

00:35:01,390 --> 00:35:05,144

to the UK and continue life there then in the

635

00:35:05,144 --> 00:35:06,395

Anglican church? Or what happens?

636

00:35:07,271 --> 00:35:11,359

After that, we had some time building up our

637

00:35:11,359 --> 00:35:15,196

funds. We went back to the UK for a while.

638

00:35:17,073 --> 00:35:20,701

At the time, we discovered we were going to have

639

00:35:20,701 --> 00:35:22,995

a baby. It was Richard, our first son.

640

00:35:23,746 --> 00:35:29,627

He was born in England, in southwest England. Our

641

00:35:29,627 --> 00:35:33,589

funding did come in. It did mean that we

642

00:35:33,631 --> 00:35:39,595

went to Uganda. In Uganda, we were teaching as

643

00:35:39,595 --> 00:35:41,097

well as being tutor for agriculture,

644

00:35:41,514 --> 00:35:42,473

because we had to grow

645

00:35:42,473 --> 00:35:44,308

our own food at the college.

646

00:35:47,270 --> 00:35:52,608

Anyway, that was a long story. So it was suddenly

647

00:35:52,608 --> 00:35:54,861

we're thrown into missionary life there.

648

00:35:55,778 --> 00:35:58,447

Added to that, in northern Uganda, there was a

649

00:35:58,447 --> 00:36:01,409

war zone. We were generally kept within the

650

00:36:01,450 --> 00:36:05,329

confines of Gulu, but it was a very dark time.

651

00:36:06,414 --> 00:36:07,039

You would often be

652

00:36:07,039 --> 00:36:08,499

hearing gunfire in the distance.

653

00:36:09,125 --> 00:36:12,295

And sometimes the conflict came very close, and

654

00:36:12,295 --> 00:36:16,632

we would have bullets raining down on our roof

655

00:36:16,716 --> 00:36:19,552

sometimes. And sometimes we had, on one occasion,

656

00:36:19,552 --> 00:36:23,264

we had a tank fire outside our house, which

657

00:36:23,764 --> 00:36:24,974

was quite... That's an experience.

658

00:36:24,974 --> 00:36:26,809

That was an experience. It brought a lot of dust

659

00:36:26,809 --> 00:36:27,518

down from the roughness.

660

00:36:27,560 --> 00:36:32,190

Yes, it does. There's a lot of percussive force

661

00:36:32,190 --> 00:36:34,108

behind a weapon like

662

00:36:34,108 --> 00:36:36,903

that. So, wow. Okay, so yeah,

663

00:36:36,903 --> 00:36:39,572

you're definitely getting a variety of experience

664

00:36:39,572 --> 00:36:41,324

here. But it's

665

00:36:41,324 --> 00:36:42,658

interesting. I didn't know Anglicans

666

00:36:42,658 --> 00:36:45,411

were in Uganda, so you were connected with a

667

00:36:45,411 --> 00:36:46,621

church that was already established.

668

00:36:46,829 --> 00:36:47,496

They were already established.

669

00:36:48,122 --> 00:36:50,625

Yeah, they had the first missionaries who'd come

670

00:36:50,625 --> 00:36:53,377

in in 1911 to northern Uganda.

671

00:36:53,669 --> 00:36:55,087

So that's just over 100

672

00:36:55,087 --> 00:36:56,464

years ago. So not that long, man.

673

00:36:56,964 --> 00:36:59,383

And they had tried to bamboozle the Africans with

674

00:36:59,383 --> 00:37:03,179

technology initially by filming them,

675

00:37:03,888 --> 00:37:07,433

doing dancing and throwing spears and what have

676

00:37:07,433 --> 00:37:10,770

you. And that actually backfired badly,

677

00:37:10,978 --> 00:37:12,730

because once they were shown the films of

678

00:37:12,730 --> 00:37:16,317

themselves, they thought their spirits had

679

00:37:16,317 --> 00:37:20,196

been trapped upon the screen. And so they thought

680

00:37:20,196 --> 00:37:22,031

the missionaries were sorcerers and

681

00:37:23,115 --> 00:37:27,203

kept well away from them. So it was actually a

682

00:37:27,203 --> 00:37:30,248

long time that the trust was built up again.

683

00:37:30,665 --> 00:37:34,168

Yeah, that wasn't a good plan. So

684

00:37:34,168 --> 00:37:36,504

how long were you in Uganda, then?

685

00:37:36,545 --> 00:37:39,215

We were there for two years.

686

00:37:39,757 --> 00:37:41,425

Okay, so you went back to...

687

00:37:41,425 --> 00:37:43,886

We went back to the UK and then did our second

688

00:37:43,886 --> 00:37:50,726

year. So we were in Uganda from 1995 to 1997.

689

00:37:51,352 --> 00:37:54,605

So after Uganda, you end up back in the UK and at

690

00:37:54,605 --> 00:37:57,024

some point you become an Anglican vicar

691

00:37:57,149 --> 00:38:00,111

yourself. So now that's a change. So what

692

00:38:00,111 --> 00:38:01,779

happened there? What was the process?

693

00:38:03,197 --> 00:38:04,490

Why did you become a vicar?

694

00:38:04,490 --> 00:38:05,700

Why did I become a vicar?

695

00:38:05,950 --> 00:38:06,158

Yeah.

696

00:38:06,617 --> 00:38:12,540

Well, we had some shining examples of Anglican

697

00:38:12,540 --> 00:38:14,166

ministers in northern Uganda.

698

00:38:14,709 --> 00:38:20,715

They were working for a pittance. Sometimes they

699

00:38:20,715 --> 00:38:22,925

would not be paid. They'd often have to

700

00:38:22,925 --> 00:38:27,763

grow their own food to survive. And they were

701

00:38:27,763 --> 00:38:31,434

godly men and still are as far as I'm aware.

702

00:38:32,059 --> 00:38:33,853

That must have left quite an impression, because

703

00:38:33,853 --> 00:38:35,688

you're describing an environment that

704

00:38:36,355 --> 00:38:38,149

maybe we read about it in books or something, but

705

00:38:38,149 --> 00:38:40,860

those of us living in the West just never

706

00:38:40,985 --> 00:38:43,487

experienced chaos, like what you're describing,

707

00:38:43,487 --> 00:38:44,989

and for someone to live in that environment.

708

00:38:45,865 --> 00:38:48,534

It was the example of the men who

709

00:38:48,534 --> 00:38:52,371

we knew there that made me think,

710

00:38:53,831 --> 00:38:56,625

"Perhaps I should do that when I go back to

711

00:38:56,625 --> 00:38:59,503

England and take up the calling of becoming

712

00:39:00,004 --> 00:39:02,465

a clergyman in the Church of England, which is

713

00:39:02,465 --> 00:39:04,592

what I know of. I know nothing else, really."

714

00:39:04,633 --> 00:39:07,261

Yeah. I'm realizing that's a thread through your

715

00:39:07,261 --> 00:39:09,889

story. The Church of England or the Anglican

716

00:39:09,930 --> 00:39:15,227

Church. Yeah. It's definitely a large impact on

717

00:39:15,227 --> 00:39:17,480

your life and these ministers you knew.

718

00:39:18,105 --> 00:39:20,357

So becoming a vicar, what is that

719

00:39:20,357 --> 00:39:22,568

process like? You go back to school.

720

00:39:23,110 --> 00:39:27,990

You go. First of all, I have to see the Warden of

721

00:39:27,990 --> 00:39:31,577

Ordinance. They are called a prebendary.

722

00:39:32,411 --> 00:39:37,333

I visited a prebendary in the Church of England to

723

00:39:37,333 --> 00:39:38,501

begin with in my diocese.

724

00:39:40,169 --> 00:39:46,258

I told him what I was planning and why I would

725

00:39:46,258 --> 00:39:48,594

like to be ordained and that sort of thing.

726

00:39:49,637 --> 00:39:52,807

I had the experience in Africa. Basically, I

727

00:39:52,807 --> 00:39:55,267

didn't realize there's a bit of a game to test

728

00:39:55,309 --> 00:39:57,978

your calling. He kind of pooh-poohed everything I'd

729

00:39:57,978 --> 00:40:03,526

done. I thought, "Why am I wasting my time?

730

00:40:04,276 --> 00:40:06,612

I should ask the Church in Wales." This is

731

00:40:06,612 --> 00:40:07,530

another Anglican sister

732

00:40:07,530 --> 00:40:08,989

church to the Church of England.

733

00:40:09,990 --> 00:40:11,033

Okay. I didn't know that.

734

00:40:11,700 --> 00:40:15,371

So I said, "You're just wasting my time. Why

735

00:40:15,371 --> 00:40:17,414

should I be trying to

736

00:40:17,414 --> 00:40:18,707

prove to you that I want to...

737

00:40:20,084 --> 00:40:22,962

when you're mocking me?" So I just left off and

738

00:40:22,962 --> 00:40:24,380

then he's running after me and saying,

739

00:40:24,422 --> 00:40:27,591

"No, come back. Come back." I said, "No. I'm

740

00:40:27,591 --> 00:40:30,136

going to go to the Church of Wales now.

741

00:40:30,427 --> 00:40:33,514

I'm not going to bother with this anymore." So I

742

00:40:33,514 --> 00:40:35,766

didn't realize that it was a "test your

743

00:40:35,766 --> 00:40:42,356

vocation to make you grovel." Now, my

744

00:40:42,356 --> 00:40:45,568

brother-in-law who was

745

00:40:45,568 --> 00:40:50,114

already ordained as a deacon

746

00:40:50,447 --> 00:40:53,409

in the Anglican Church told me,

747

00:40:53,409 --> 00:40:55,536

"That's what they do." So he said,

748

00:40:56,328 --> 00:40:57,580

"Next time you go in for an

749

00:40:57,580 --> 00:40:59,790

interview, don't be so quick to walk out."

750

00:41:01,834 --> 00:41:03,502

So you stuck with it though.

751

00:41:03,502 --> 00:41:07,923

So then I went to visit the similar setup because

752

00:41:07,923 --> 00:41:09,758

I'd been going to college in Abberistwyth,

753

00:41:10,634 --> 00:41:12,970

and going to attending an Anglican Church there.

754

00:41:14,054 --> 00:41:17,266

I needed then to work through the

755

00:41:17,308 --> 00:41:20,769

Diocese of St. David's, which was in West Wales.

756

00:41:22,354 --> 00:41:27,109

And so I visited the Warden of Ordnance there,

757

00:41:27,860 --> 00:41:34,450

and I met the bishop who questioned me. And I

758

00:41:34,450 --> 00:41:36,869

went to a panel aboard and

759

00:41:38,412 --> 00:41:41,081

I remember my own doubts being honest with him. I

760

00:41:41,081 --> 00:41:46,128

said, "Well, I am dyslexic. I'm not really

761

00:41:46,795 --> 00:41:49,548

great with those things." And there was some

762

00:41:49,548 --> 00:41:51,675

retired major or something on the board. He said,

763

00:41:52,426 --> 00:41:53,636

"Don't worry about that. You've

764

00:41:53,636 --> 00:41:55,095

got a degree. You'll be fine."

765

00:41:56,472 --> 00:42:02,061

So that was a part of the story. So then you're

766

00:42:02,061 --> 00:42:04,355

then sent to Theological College where your

767

00:42:04,813 --> 00:42:07,816

calling is tested still for three years if you're

768

00:42:07,816 --> 00:42:10,694

under the age of 30. And I was under the age of

769

00:42:10,736 --> 00:42:12,947

30. So I had to do a degree

770

00:42:12,947 --> 00:42:15,241

again. So I went to the...

771

00:42:15,241 --> 00:42:16,325

So you got another degree?

772

00:42:16,325 --> 00:42:18,953

I got another degree in practical theology.

773

00:42:20,329 --> 00:42:22,081

That'd be a four-year degree?

774

00:42:22,289 --> 00:42:25,709

It was a three-year degree. It was basically in

775

00:42:25,709 --> 00:42:28,087

an Anglican college being released into the

776

00:42:28,087 --> 00:42:31,548

university to do the theological side. And some

777

00:42:31,548 --> 00:42:32,424

of it would be in-house

778

00:42:32,424 --> 00:42:34,301

training, and then going out

779

00:42:34,343 --> 00:42:38,430

to preach in different parishes. You'd have an

780

00:42:38,430 --> 00:42:41,642

experience of a wide range of churches in the

781

00:42:41,642 --> 00:42:43,978

Anglican setup. And that was in the city of

782

00:42:43,978 --> 00:42:45,729

Cardiff. So that's where I was based.

783

00:42:46,897 --> 00:42:49,358

And so for three years I was there and it was

784

00:42:49,358 --> 00:42:53,070

a... In the Anglican church, you've got

785

00:42:53,862 --> 00:42:57,241

four groups within it that bicker and fight

786

00:42:57,241 --> 00:42:58,701

amongst each other often enough.

787

00:42:59,285 --> 00:43:00,869

You have the Anglo-Catholics

788

00:43:00,869 --> 00:43:03,038

who are very like Roman Catholics.

789

00:43:04,123 --> 00:43:08,794

They would perhaps have images and statues in

790

00:43:08,794 --> 00:43:10,587

their churches. They would swing incense.

791

00:43:11,338 --> 00:43:14,300

Some Roman Catholics would say, "That was like we

792

00:43:14,300 --> 00:43:16,093

used to be before Vatican II."

793

00:43:16,969 --> 00:43:17,177

Wow.

794

00:43:17,886 --> 00:43:21,807

So quite medieval in their way of doing things.

795

00:43:22,474 --> 00:43:24,977

But amongst them I've met men of great faith.

796

00:43:25,269 --> 00:43:28,689

So I don't want to poohoo them too much. Some of

797

00:43:28,689 --> 00:43:30,357

them are just in it for the theatricals,

798

00:43:30,357 --> 00:43:33,152

which is very sad. So you have that group. Then

799

00:43:33,152 --> 00:43:35,904

you have the liberals, as you do usually in any

800

00:43:35,904 --> 00:43:39,325

denomination. They're often actually aiming to

801

00:43:39,325 --> 00:43:42,244

change culture, the culture that's around them,

802

00:43:42,953 --> 00:43:45,873

as much as they want to change those who are

803

00:43:45,873 --> 00:43:47,833

being ministered to by them.

804

00:43:49,960 --> 00:43:51,628

And you have them in the

805

00:43:51,628 --> 00:43:53,130

Mennonites as well in their setup.

806

00:43:53,422 --> 00:43:57,092

Yes. Then you have the Charismatics. Do I say more?

807

00:43:57,843 --> 00:44:01,764

Okay. I've just never thought of Anglican

808

00:44:01,764 --> 00:44:04,975

Charismatic combination. I don't know why.

809

00:44:05,309 --> 00:44:07,269

I guess that makes sense now as you say it, but

810

00:44:07,269 --> 00:44:08,228

whoa. Okay. That's interesting.

811

00:44:09,605 --> 00:44:12,608

And then you have the evangelicals. Within the

812

00:44:12,608 --> 00:44:14,777

evangelicals and the Charismatics, there's often

813

00:44:15,110 --> 00:44:17,696

hybrids between the two. And likewise, between

814

00:44:17,696 --> 00:44:19,198

the Charismatics and the Anglo-Catholics,

815

00:44:19,281 --> 00:44:21,700

there's hybrids between them too. And maybe the

816

00:44:21,700 --> 00:44:23,535

Charismatics and the Liberal system hybrids,

817

00:44:24,328 --> 00:44:28,582

but generally the evangelicals and theologically

818

00:44:28,582 --> 00:44:31,210

the evangelicals and the Anglo-Catholics will

819

00:44:31,210 --> 00:44:33,670

probably have more in common than the

820

00:44:33,670 --> 00:44:34,672

Charismatics and the

821

00:44:34,672 --> 00:44:37,591

Liberals. So it's a bit of a muddle.

822

00:44:37,591 --> 00:44:38,967

It's a bit of a muddle, but you're born into

823

00:44:38,967 --> 00:44:41,261

that. And our church was

824

00:44:41,261 --> 00:44:44,181

conservative Anglo-Catholic

825

00:44:44,264 --> 00:44:48,352

and the Catholic changing to Liberal Catholic.

826

00:44:50,437 --> 00:44:52,356

Oh, so you're in interesting transition.

827

00:44:52,356 --> 00:44:54,525

I was from an evangelical background and

828

00:44:54,525 --> 00:44:57,152

observing all this going on in the college,

829

00:44:58,195 --> 00:45:01,031

the bickering and the fighting and the meanness

830

00:45:01,031 --> 00:45:05,536

that was going on between the ordinands and the

831

00:45:05,536 --> 00:45:08,247

ordinands and the staff. And it was pretty ugly

832

00:45:08,247 --> 00:45:12,167

stuff, but part of spiritual formation, I'm told.

833

00:45:13,127 --> 00:45:17,089

Wow. Yeah, because that's interesting to me

834

00:45:17,089 --> 00:45:18,215

because what you're describing,

835

00:45:18,715 --> 00:45:20,676

so many different churches denominations go

836

00:45:20,676 --> 00:45:22,928

through that process where you have this old,

837

00:45:23,137 --> 00:45:25,139

traditional old conservatives way of doing it,

838

00:45:25,139 --> 00:45:28,434

and then it's changing and being updated or going

839

00:45:28,434 --> 00:45:31,103

more liberal in certain ways. That causes all

840

00:45:31,103 --> 00:45:33,230

kinds of, yeah, like you said, bickering.

841

00:45:33,564 --> 00:45:36,108

Yeah, it certainly does. It's quite emotional,

842

00:45:36,108 --> 00:45:37,609

emotionally charged atmosphere.

843

00:45:38,152 --> 00:45:40,904

So once you complete your three years there and

844

00:45:40,904 --> 00:45:43,073

you say you were preaching some in different

845

00:45:43,073 --> 00:45:44,450

parishes, things like that, so you're getting

846

00:45:44,450 --> 00:45:48,036

some experience, at that point then, are you now

847

00:45:48,328 --> 00:45:49,621

officially a vicar or do

848

00:45:49,621 --> 00:45:50,122

you have to go through more?

849

00:45:50,122 --> 00:45:50,998

It doesn't happen so simply.

850

00:45:50,998 --> 00:45:52,332

There's some more hoops to get through.

851

00:45:54,084 --> 00:46:00,215

You are then assigned to a placement, a

852

00:46:00,215 --> 00:46:05,387

teaching, a parish where you are ordained deacon.

853

00:46:05,929 --> 00:46:10,392

And so as a deacon, you can preach and you help

854

00:46:10,392 --> 00:46:12,561

with communion, but you cannot administer

855

00:46:12,811 --> 00:46:16,440

communion to the congregation. You have to wait a

856

00:46:16,440 --> 00:46:18,901

year and then after a year you're priested,

857

00:46:19,443 --> 00:46:20,652

and then you can give communion.

858

00:46:21,278 --> 00:46:22,404

You said "priested." I'm not

859

00:46:22,404 --> 00:46:24,114

familiar with that term. What is that?

860

00:46:24,573 --> 00:46:31,371

That would mean that you undergo a ceremony and you

861

00:46:31,371 --> 00:46:33,582

become, and you're given a charge

862

00:46:34,249 --> 00:46:38,462

by the bishop and hands are laid upon you

863

00:46:38,462 --> 00:46:42,674

and you make a vow of obedience

864

00:46:42,674 --> 00:46:51,433

to the 39 articles of the Anglican faith.

865

00:46:51,433 --> 00:46:55,229

You then are allowed to conduct a communion service

866

00:46:55,354 --> 00:47:00,859

after being a year of a deacon and observing it

867

00:47:00,859 --> 00:47:04,655

happen, but hands off you're not able to do it

868

00:47:04,655 --> 00:47:10,494

yet. Now you continue being a curate in your

869

00:47:10,494 --> 00:47:13,330

position, so you've now been ordained,

870

00:47:13,789 --> 00:47:15,666

you can take communion, you can go to old

871

00:47:15,666 --> 00:47:17,251

people's homes and give people communion,

872

00:47:17,751 --> 00:47:19,545

you can visit the sick and give them communion.

873

00:47:20,295 --> 00:47:22,297

You have the power. Some would say "you're a magic

874

00:47:22,548 --> 00:47:27,094

man now." No, I'm being a bit facetious, but

875

00:47:27,094 --> 00:47:31,390

you're suddenly empowered.

876

00:47:32,641 --> 00:47:35,269

Yeah, interesting. Now would you be called a

877

00:47:35,269 --> 00:47:36,436

priest at this time? Is

878

00:47:36,436 --> 00:47:37,229

that the wrong terminology?

879

00:47:37,563 --> 00:47:39,231

No, it's the right idea to use that, but

880

00:47:39,231 --> 00:47:40,607

generally if you're from an

881

00:47:40,607 --> 00:47:42,609

Anglican evangelical background,

882

00:47:43,151 --> 00:47:46,780

you generally prefer to use the term minister. A

883

00:47:46,780 --> 00:47:49,449

priest often is, and you

884

00:47:49,449 --> 00:47:49,658

might be called reverend,

885

00:47:49,700 --> 00:47:52,578

whereas if you're from the Anglo-Catholic

886

00:47:52,578 --> 00:47:53,662

tradition in the Anglican

887

00:47:53,662 --> 00:47:55,706

Church, you like to be known as

888

00:47:55,706 --> 00:47:58,667

father. So you could have chosen a number of

889

00:47:58,667 --> 00:47:59,835

different title options here. If I wanted to,

890

00:48:00,002 --> 00:48:03,255

I could have been a reverend father. Which one

891

00:48:03,255 --> 00:48:04,548

did you choose? I was reverend.

892

00:48:04,881 --> 00:48:10,387

Okay, so this is a process, but this is really

893

00:48:10,387 --> 00:48:13,098

interesting because I'm not familiar with this.

894

00:48:13,890 --> 00:48:15,642

Of course, being an American, not much

895

00:48:15,642 --> 00:48:17,519

interaction with Church of England. So you

896

00:48:17,894 --> 00:48:22,316

go through this process and you're now a priest

897

00:48:22,316 --> 00:48:23,358

or a reverend or a father

898

00:48:23,358 --> 00:48:24,901

or a vicar or whichever term

899

00:48:24,901 --> 00:48:28,238

I guess we want to pull in here. So what's that

900

00:48:28,238 --> 00:48:30,490

like now? That becomes your life.

901

00:48:30,490 --> 00:48:34,369

Well then you're suddenly there and I was, I have

902

00:48:34,369 --> 00:48:36,413

to say I was probably rather naive.

903

00:48:38,874 --> 00:48:41,710

I realized I was now managing decline. Oh, that's

904

00:48:41,710 --> 00:48:43,670

gotta feel not fun at all.

905

00:48:43,920 --> 00:48:46,465

And it wasn't great, but I was doing my best to

906

00:48:46,465 --> 00:48:48,050

preach the gospel in that situation.

907

00:48:50,135 --> 00:48:57,809

And the inertia was tremendous. And I began to

908

00:48:58,977 --> 00:49:01,813

rattle cages by speaking of the need to be born

909

00:49:01,813 --> 00:49:06,485

again in my sermons and sometimes in the

910

00:49:06,485 --> 00:49:12,449

parish magazine. That was something that ignited

911

00:49:12,449 --> 00:49:16,161

an interest because someone who read an article

912

00:49:16,161 --> 00:49:19,373

I'd written in the parish magazine was a Baptist

913

00:49:19,373 --> 00:49:24,127

minister from a nearby town and he'd somehow read

914

00:49:24,127 --> 00:49:27,547

what I'd said and he understood the reaction that

915

00:49:27,547 --> 00:49:28,507

I'd got, which was pretty

916

00:49:28,507 --> 00:49:31,051

bad. I think my training

917

00:49:31,134 --> 00:49:35,722

vicar was a bit irritated with that. There was

918

00:49:35,722 --> 00:49:39,976

someone lodging with the hairdresser up the road

919

00:49:39,976 --> 00:49:43,146

in the terraced houses we lived in, in Pembroke

920

00:49:43,146 --> 00:49:47,567

in South Wales by the name of Brendan. Brendan,

921

00:49:47,567 --> 00:49:50,779

if you're out there, God bless you. I have to say

922

00:49:50,779 --> 00:49:52,614

you used a sledgehammer to crack a nut,

923

00:49:52,656 --> 00:49:56,410

but you got your point across. And your point

924

00:49:56,410 --> 00:50:00,872

was, Brendan, that as a born again man,

925

00:50:01,415 --> 00:50:05,711

I was in the wrong place. Some would argue

926

00:50:05,711 --> 00:50:06,586

against that. Someone

927

00:50:06,586 --> 00:50:07,587

would say you were in the right

928

00:50:07,587 --> 00:50:10,632

place, you, because you're in it to win it. That

929

00:50:10,632 --> 00:50:12,759

was what my evangelical

930

00:50:12,759 --> 00:50:15,053

Anglican brethren would say,

931

00:50:15,429 --> 00:50:21,810

"Hew your in the church to win it."

932

00:50:21,810 --> 00:50:25,522

They wouldn't be saying the same thing now with what's happened

933

00:50:25,522 --> 00:50:30,318

to the church. But anyway, this man Brendan

934

00:50:30,318 --> 00:50:33,363

basically metaphorically took me by the scruff

935

00:50:33,363 --> 00:50:38,368

of the neck and he told me in no uncertain terms

936

00:50:38,368 --> 00:50:42,706

that I was absolutely wasting my time

937

00:50:43,707 --> 00:50:51,131

administering in a church that was simply a

938

00:50:51,131 --> 00:50:52,132

daughter of the whore of

939

00:50:52,132 --> 00:50:56,595

Babylon. That was his reaction.

940

00:50:57,262 --> 00:51:03,268

Now that's Plymouth Brethren speak. But he had a

941

00:51:03,268 --> 00:51:06,438

reason for that because he had actually become

942

00:51:06,480 --> 00:51:10,692

a Christian from a Catholic background and he was

943

00:51:10,692 --> 00:51:14,404

originally Irish, interesting enough, and his

944

00:51:14,821 --> 00:51:17,949

mother had been so annoyed by him becoming a

945

00:51:17,949 --> 00:51:21,828

Christian that she had ordered his brothers to

946

00:51:21,995 --> 00:51:26,583

beat him black and blue and there was no love

947

00:51:26,583 --> 00:51:29,169

lost. So he was a man who

948

00:51:29,169 --> 00:51:30,796

was wounded and bleeding, I believe,

949

00:51:31,046 --> 00:51:34,591

from that traumatic experience of him becoming

950

00:51:34,591 --> 00:51:38,804

born again and being rejected by his family.

951

00:51:39,679 --> 00:51:42,057

So the Plymouth Brethren was all to him. But in

952

00:51:42,057 --> 00:51:43,266

the conversation he had,

953

00:51:44,351 --> 00:51:48,855

he mentioned the suffering of the Anabaptists in

954

00:51:48,855 --> 00:51:51,107

Europe under the Catholic Church.

955

00:51:52,108 --> 00:51:52,734

Well now that's

956

00:51:52,734 --> 00:51:56,071

interesting. Why did he bring that up?

957

00:51:56,822 --> 00:51:59,157

Because if that was his background and the

958

00:51:59,157 --> 00:52:03,161

background of his upbringing had been Catholic

959

00:52:03,453 --> 00:52:06,832

and he had suffered and come out of Catholic and

960

00:52:06,832 --> 00:52:08,291

going into the Plymouth Brethren.

961

00:52:08,500 --> 00:52:12,629

I understand now. Yeah. Oh yeah. Okay. So he

962

00:52:12,629 --> 00:52:13,839

could empathize with

963

00:52:13,839 --> 00:52:15,632

suffering for what it had been,

964

00:52:15,632 --> 00:52:19,177

the cost of his faith moving out of that. But

965

00:52:19,177 --> 00:52:21,847

with the mention of Anabaptists in Europe,

966

00:52:22,806 --> 00:52:27,185

a light bulb came on in my mind and I began to

967

00:52:27,185 --> 00:52:29,396

remember our time in

968

00:52:29,396 --> 00:52:31,231

Canada, which was about eight

969

00:52:31,231 --> 00:52:34,568

or nine years before. I thought they were

970

00:52:34,568 --> 00:52:36,653

Mennonites. They're

971

00:52:36,653 --> 00:52:39,322

Anabaptists. That got me thinking,

972

00:52:39,322 --> 00:52:41,658

do they exist in England? Do they exist in Wales?

973

00:52:42,284 --> 00:52:43,910

Are they around? Are Anabaptists there?

974

00:52:44,619 --> 00:52:46,079

The early days of the internet, type it in

975

00:52:46,079 --> 00:52:49,749

Anabaptists and what pops up, there's the

976

00:52:50,166 --> 00:52:53,712

Anabaptist network in London, Wood Green

977

00:52:53,712 --> 00:52:57,090

Mennonite Church and the Bruderhof pop up.

978

00:52:58,049 --> 00:53:00,510

I didn't have a number for the Bruderhof, so I

979

00:53:00,510 --> 00:53:06,016

contacted the Wood Green Mennonites and

980

00:53:07,058 --> 00:53:09,561

said, "Could I have a number for the Bruderhof

981

00:53:09,561 --> 00:53:11,813

because you might have as your both Anabaptists?"

982

00:53:12,814 --> 00:53:15,942

They somewhat reluctantly passed it on. Anyways,

983

00:53:17,861 --> 00:53:19,696

they did. Thank you. And so

984

00:53:21,197 --> 00:53:23,491

in the great scheme of things, but I have to say

985

00:53:23,491 --> 00:53:28,121

at the time, the neighboring Baptist minister

986

00:53:28,121 --> 00:53:32,417

had given me this book to read. And I don't know

987

00:53:32,417 --> 00:53:34,669

if you've come across this one. I've heard of it,

988

00:53:34,794 --> 00:53:37,964

but I'm not... How do you pronounce their name?

989

00:53:38,882 --> 00:53:41,426

The Broadbent. The Pilgrim

990

00:53:41,426 --> 00:53:43,511

Church by E.H. Broadbent.

991

00:53:45,722 --> 00:53:50,185

This would have been produced by the... But I

992

00:53:50,185 --> 00:53:52,520

think the man was Plymouth Brethren. He's passed

993

00:53:52,520 --> 00:53:58,068

away now. But in the 1930s and 20s, he did a lot

994

00:53:58,068 --> 00:54:00,153

of traveling throughout Europe and Asia,

995

00:54:00,278 --> 00:54:06,409

making contact with surviving churches from

996

00:54:06,409 --> 00:54:11,623

historical links and in the States as well,

997

00:54:12,415 --> 00:54:14,960

Mennonites and Amish. So he spoke about the

998

00:54:14,960 --> 00:54:19,506

continuation of the Pilgrim Church from the

999

00:54:19,506 --> 00:54:22,676

Acts of the Apostles through history. So that

Speaker:

00:54:22,676 --> 00:54:27,013

book opened my eyes to the existence of a

Speaker:

00:54:28,014 --> 00:54:34,854

non-sacramental form of Christianity that existed

Speaker:

00:54:34,854 --> 00:54:37,607

from the time of the Apostles.

Speaker:

00:54:39,025 --> 00:54:42,320

And that was a really encouraging read. And to

Speaker:

00:54:42,320 --> 00:54:44,406

anyone who's on a journey like me,

Speaker:

00:54:44,823 --> 00:54:53,289

do read it. That was very helpful. That led me to

Speaker:

00:54:53,289 --> 00:54:59,254

a point where I actually, for the first time,

Speaker:

00:54:59,254 --> 00:55:05,051

resigned from the Anglican Church. I was probably

Speaker:

00:55:05,051 --> 00:55:07,429

a little bit early in doing that.

Speaker:

00:55:08,013 --> 00:55:09,347

But you had been a vicar

Speaker:

00:55:09,347 --> 00:55:10,390

for how long before you did?

Speaker:

00:55:10,890 --> 00:55:15,145

I had been a curate and that was someone who was

Speaker:

00:55:15,145 --> 00:55:17,480

a priest in training, put it that way,

Speaker:

00:55:18,106 --> 00:55:21,526

doing practical work. So I was resigning. But

Speaker:

00:55:21,526 --> 00:55:24,863

that led me to a point

Speaker:

00:55:24,863 --> 00:55:27,240

of, "Okay, so I've resigned.

Speaker:

00:55:27,949 --> 00:55:30,910

Where do I go now?" "Yeah, where did you go?"

Speaker:

00:55:30,910 --> 00:55:33,288

"Where do I go now?" We'd already visited the

Speaker:

00:55:33,288 --> 00:55:37,125

Bruderhof. And my dear wife had made it very

Speaker:

00:55:37,125 --> 00:55:39,794

plain to me that our family would have suffered

Speaker:

00:55:40,086 --> 00:55:44,424

greatly if we'd gone to the Bruderhof because

Speaker:

00:55:44,424 --> 00:55:47,218

community is valued at a higher standing

Speaker:

00:55:47,594 --> 00:55:50,889

than family. So our family would be restructured

Speaker:

00:55:50,889 --> 00:55:53,808

in a way that would have been too painful for us.

Speaker:

00:55:54,392 --> 00:55:59,773

But what we did do at that point was to decide

Speaker:

00:55:59,773 --> 00:56:02,400

that we would home-educate because we realized

Speaker:

00:56:02,442 --> 00:56:05,945

that there was a change in the culture of...

Speaker:

00:56:07,363 --> 00:56:08,448

because as we were

Speaker:

00:56:08,448 --> 00:56:09,783

getting more spiritually aware,

Speaker:

00:56:10,033 --> 00:56:12,744

I suppose, we were realizing that there was a

Speaker:

00:56:12,744 --> 00:56:15,955

change in the culture of Wales,

Speaker:

00:56:16,915 --> 00:56:19,959

that it was drifting away from its Christian

Speaker:

00:56:19,959 --> 00:56:23,046

foundations and becoming

Speaker:

00:56:23,379 --> 00:56:28,259

steadily more pagan and secularized. And this was

Speaker:

00:56:28,259 --> 00:56:31,846

coming through to us in the state school

Speaker:

00:56:31,888 --> 00:56:34,891

that our children were going to. My ---- view

Speaker:

00:56:34,891 --> 00:56:38,144

somewhat naively was that I thought that

Speaker:

00:56:38,353 --> 00:56:44,567

education should lift children above the level

Speaker:

00:56:44,567 --> 00:56:46,069

that their parents achieved.

Speaker:

00:56:47,529 --> 00:56:51,741

And that's something I hope that our school is

Speaker:

00:56:51,741 --> 00:56:53,118

doing here in Dunwall East,

Speaker:

00:56:54,702 --> 00:56:58,456

lifting children above to where their parents

Speaker:

00:56:58,456 --> 00:56:59,916

have achieved to go beyond,

Speaker:

00:56:59,916 --> 00:57:04,212

in a positive way, to the point which their

Speaker:

00:57:04,212 --> 00:57:07,757

parents have. Anyway, I could see that in some

Speaker:

00:57:07,757 --> 00:57:14,139

ways the schools were failing. How in their own

Speaker:

00:57:14,139 --> 00:57:16,474

views, they were probably doing just fine,

Speaker:

00:57:17,600 --> 00:57:21,229

managing difficult situations and compromising

Speaker:

00:57:21,229 --> 00:57:23,523

where they had to and that sort of thing.

Speaker:

00:57:23,565 --> 00:57:26,609

But it led me to be in a position where I was

Speaker:

00:57:26,609 --> 00:57:32,866

still the curate, but taking devotions in these

Speaker:

00:57:32,866 --> 00:57:35,493

schools and my children had been taken out of

Speaker:

00:57:35,493 --> 00:57:37,996

them. So we were

Speaker:

00:57:37,996 --> 00:57:40,206

home-educating and the Bruderhof had

Speaker:

00:57:40,206 --> 00:57:42,959

helped us see that there was another way of doing

Speaker:

00:57:42,959 --> 00:57:45,044

things. So that was

Speaker:

00:57:45,044 --> 00:57:47,255

great. And there was an option

Speaker:

00:57:47,297 --> 00:57:51,342

to home-educate thanks to the work of Winston

Speaker:

00:57:51,342 --> 00:57:56,848

Churchill, who when he was a student, he had a

Speaker:

00:57:56,848 --> 00:57:58,725

horrible time in the boarding school he was sent

Speaker:

00:57:58,725 --> 00:58:00,810

to. And he would have

Speaker:

00:58:00,810 --> 00:58:02,604

much rather had a home tutor

Speaker:

00:58:02,729 --> 00:58:08,109

in his home and he didn't like school. And he

Speaker:

00:58:08,109 --> 00:58:11,988

made a provision in the Education Act of 1945

Speaker:

00:58:13,198 --> 00:58:16,534

that there would be an education at school or

Speaker:

00:58:16,534 --> 00:58:19,245

otherwise. So within law...

Speaker:

00:58:20,663 --> 00:58:22,540

That's on British law right now.

Speaker:

00:58:22,540 --> 00:58:24,709

Yeah, in British law now. So there's a freedom to

Speaker:

00:58:24,709 --> 00:58:26,794

home-educate in Britain.

Speaker:

00:58:27,170 --> 00:58:29,464

I did not know that about Winston Churchill, but

Speaker:

00:58:29,464 --> 00:58:31,549

that doesn't actually entirely surprise me,

Speaker:

00:58:31,758 --> 00:58:32,550

now that I think about it.

Speaker:

00:58:32,550 --> 00:58:37,138

He was quite insightful. And he said of

Speaker:

00:58:37,138 --> 00:58:38,848

education, "The sad thing

Speaker:

00:58:38,848 --> 00:58:40,308

is about education in Britain

Speaker:

00:58:40,934 --> 00:58:45,104

is its main design is just to create workers for

Speaker:

00:58:45,104 --> 00:58:47,398

our factories and soldiers for our empire."

Speaker:

00:58:49,525 --> 00:58:49,692

Ow.

Speaker:

00:58:51,611 --> 00:58:52,320

That's brutal.

Speaker:

00:58:52,612 --> 00:58:55,240

That is brutal. I mean, that's what... And we

Speaker:

00:58:55,240 --> 00:58:55,907

thought, "Well, education

Speaker:

00:58:55,907 --> 00:58:56,908

should be more than that."

Speaker:

00:58:58,618 --> 00:59:01,079

So that's an interesting piece of the story

Speaker:

00:59:01,079 --> 00:59:04,791

because it feels like oftentimes home schooling

Speaker:

00:59:05,208 --> 00:59:08,795

or home education or whatever is usually part of

Speaker:

00:59:08,795 --> 00:59:11,798

the story for people that are going down paths

Speaker:

00:59:11,798 --> 00:59:15,051

similar to what you've went down. And that's, I

Speaker:

00:59:15,051 --> 00:59:17,887

think, an important piece because of how valuable

Speaker:

00:59:18,263 --> 00:59:20,390

or important I should say education can be, what

Speaker:

00:59:20,390 --> 00:59:21,849

an influence that can be on children.

Speaker:

00:59:23,643 --> 00:59:26,271

At this point, you've resigned from

Speaker:

00:59:26,271 --> 00:59:28,106

your position in the Anglican Church.

Speaker:

00:59:28,648 --> 00:59:31,401

You're doing some exploring, I guess, testing

Speaker:

00:59:31,401 --> 00:59:33,820

options. You're going down the path of home

Speaker:

00:59:33,861 --> 00:59:38,283

education. Where do you choose to go from there

Speaker:

00:59:38,283 --> 00:59:40,326

as far as church goes? This must have

Speaker:

00:59:40,326 --> 00:59:41,619

been a pretty lonely time.

Speaker:

00:59:42,412 --> 00:59:45,081

Well, having resigned, I was given a month to

Speaker:

00:59:45,081 --> 00:59:48,459

think about it. And on the last day of the month,

Speaker:

00:59:49,669 --> 00:59:52,672

I went to my bishop and said, "I think I made a

Speaker:

00:59:52,672 --> 00:59:55,383

mistake. I can't see where I'm going to go."

Speaker:

00:59:56,467 --> 01:00:00,346

And he said, "Well, we'll see if we can find a

Speaker:

01:00:00,346 --> 01:00:03,141

square peg for you to go into rather than a round

Speaker:

01:00:03,224 --> 01:00:08,688

hole." But at the moment, you need to spend some

Speaker:

01:00:08,688 --> 01:00:14,277

time out. So I spent four months outside of the

Speaker:

01:00:14,277 --> 01:00:19,115

Anglican Church. And I worked for a government

Speaker:

01:00:19,115 --> 01:00:22,243

agency finding people jobs on the telephone,

Speaker:

01:00:23,661 --> 01:00:26,998

which was an insight into how some people live,

Speaker:

01:00:26,998 --> 01:00:30,376

which is a telephone operator. And

Speaker:

01:00:30,418 --> 01:00:34,297

it was an interesting time to be out of the

Speaker:

01:00:34,297 --> 01:00:37,258

church. So I came back in

Speaker:

01:00:37,258 --> 01:00:40,511

and I was then sent for further

Speaker:

01:00:42,972 --> 01:00:46,225

parish training, I suppose, as a curate in an

Speaker:

01:00:46,225 --> 01:00:49,687

evangelical parish in a town called Aberaeron

Speaker:

01:00:50,563 --> 01:00:54,817

on the coast of Wales, further north than

Speaker:

01:00:54,817 --> 01:00:58,529

Pembroke. And there, I

Speaker:

01:00:58,529 --> 01:00:59,947

found a different situation

Speaker:

01:01:01,240 --> 01:01:05,411

but one that was somewhat... at face value, it

Speaker:

01:01:05,411 --> 01:01:09,916

was a great relief. But I still had that feeling

Speaker:

01:01:10,500 --> 01:01:14,170

that there was something better. And inside, I

Speaker:

01:01:14,170 --> 01:01:19,258

was an Anabaptist still, though I had come back

Speaker:

01:01:19,258 --> 01:01:23,304

into the Anglican Church. And I remember someone

Speaker:

01:01:23,304 --> 01:01:26,307

saying to me, "Oh, it's good. It's really good

Speaker:

01:01:26,349 --> 01:01:34,607

to come back to Mother Church." So I would have

Speaker:

01:01:34,607 --> 01:01:36,192

gone somewhere else had

Speaker:

01:01:36,192 --> 01:01:37,443

there been somewhere else.

Speaker:

01:01:38,027 --> 01:01:39,987

So that's, I think, an important piece there,

Speaker:

01:01:39,987 --> 01:01:40,905

right? Because there was this,

Speaker:

01:01:41,989 --> 01:01:45,410

"You don't know where else to go." That had to

Speaker:

01:01:45,410 --> 01:01:48,413

not have felt good. Did that feel, I mean,

Speaker:

01:01:48,413 --> 01:01:50,873

almost like you're trapped. We don't know where

Speaker:

01:01:50,873 --> 01:01:52,583

to go. Not trapped, but

Speaker:

01:01:52,583 --> 01:01:53,501

we don't know where to go.

Speaker:

01:01:54,168 --> 01:01:59,132

Or stuck. Having said that, there was Wood Green

Speaker:

01:01:59,132 --> 01:02:01,467

Mennonite Church in London.

Speaker:

01:02:02,468 --> 01:02:04,470

Are they still... But they're not there anymore.

Speaker:

01:02:05,054 --> 01:02:07,849

No. But they did exist. So I kind of...

Speaker:

01:02:08,307 --> 01:02:12,186

They sent some of the mailings to me and I saw

Speaker:

01:02:12,186 --> 01:02:13,729

the books that they were encouraging.

Speaker:

01:02:14,689 --> 01:02:18,484

I thought, "Wow, they're more liberal than many

Speaker:

01:02:18,484 --> 01:02:19,235

of the liberals in the

Speaker:

01:02:19,235 --> 01:02:20,486

Anglican Church that I know."

Speaker:

01:02:20,987 --> 01:02:24,574

Oh, no. And I thought, "I can't go there." And

Speaker:

01:02:24,574 --> 01:02:27,493

the Bruderhof, "I can't work with the Bruderhof.

Speaker:

01:02:28,119 --> 01:02:29,704

What am I going to do? Where am I going to go?"

Speaker:

01:02:29,996 --> 01:02:32,415

So I was in an evangelical parish in

Speaker:

01:02:32,665 --> 01:02:36,711

Aberaeron and I moved there in about November. It

Speaker:

01:02:36,711 --> 01:02:40,298

was during my second son's birthday and we moved

Speaker:

01:02:40,631 --> 01:02:46,721

in November 1994. I knew eventually at some point

Speaker:

01:02:46,721 --> 01:02:49,765

I would no longer be a curate and I would

Speaker:

01:02:50,057 --> 01:02:54,479

become a rector/ vicar of a parish and no

Speaker:

01:02:54,479 --> 01:02:57,982

longer be number two, but number one

Speaker:

01:02:58,149 --> 01:03:07,158

and where the decisions were made. So I knew this

Speaker:

01:03:07,158 --> 01:03:10,244

time was coming and I was wondering,

Speaker:

01:03:10,953 --> 01:03:13,789

"What do I do in a decline?" I feel the church is

Speaker:

01:03:13,789 --> 01:03:16,209

declining. I know that there's movements on the

Speaker:

01:03:16,250 --> 01:03:21,214

way. They're going to make it a very difficult

Speaker:

01:03:21,214 --> 01:03:25,092

place to work. It began with the blessing of

Speaker:

01:03:25,092 --> 01:03:27,553

same-sex marriages and I knew it would go

Speaker:

01:03:27,553 --> 01:03:29,889

further. What year did that happen?

Speaker:

01:03:31,307 --> 01:03:35,061

It actually happened after I left. Okay. But you

Speaker:

01:03:35,061 --> 01:03:36,437

saw that that was coming.

Speaker:

01:03:36,812 --> 01:03:41,025

I saw it was happening and someone close to me,

Speaker:

01:03:41,400 --> 01:03:43,277

who I was very disappointed in,

Speaker:

01:03:44,237 --> 01:03:46,489

actually took part in the ceremony doing that

Speaker:

01:03:46,489 --> 01:03:48,324

with the knowledge of his bishop,

Speaker:

01:03:49,367 --> 01:03:52,620

but it was just done for a pastoral reason. I

Speaker:

01:03:52,620 --> 01:03:54,080

think of the same-sex relationship.

Speaker:

01:03:56,666 --> 01:04:06,676

It really saddened me and in a way propelled me

Speaker:

01:04:06,676 --> 01:04:09,262

to seek for something else. I thought,

Speaker:

01:04:10,096 --> 01:04:12,890

"This is going in a bad way. I can see the

Speaker:

01:04:12,890 --> 01:04:14,850

writing on the wall. If

Speaker:

01:04:14,850 --> 01:04:16,102

these things are happening and

Speaker:

01:04:16,102 --> 01:04:18,938

they're being tolerated, then sooner or later

Speaker:

01:04:18,938 --> 01:04:19,814

they're going to be the norm."

Speaker:

01:04:22,149 --> 01:04:26,195

And Jeanette will remember, I was on my knees by the

Speaker:

01:04:26,195 --> 01:04:30,741

bed for many, many, many nights just wrestling

Speaker:

01:04:30,825 --> 01:04:37,039

with the Lord, wondering what to do. You see, as

Speaker:

01:04:37,039 --> 01:04:38,332

an Anglican vicar at the time,

Speaker:

01:04:39,000 --> 01:04:44,547

I would be required to remarry divorcees, to

Speaker:

01:04:44,547 --> 01:04:49,010

baptize infants who had no clue about what they

Speaker:

01:04:49,010 --> 01:04:51,971

were entering and whether they would ever enter

Speaker:

01:04:51,971 --> 01:04:55,182

it anyway. Many times a baptism service or a

Speaker:

01:04:55,224 --> 01:04:58,477

"Christening," as it's called, would be no more

Speaker:

01:04:58,477 --> 01:05:01,564

than an excuse to get drunk by the families

Speaker:

01:05:01,564 --> 01:05:04,108

participating and have some photographs taken

Speaker:

01:05:04,108 --> 01:05:07,528

with the baby in the Christening garb that had

Speaker:

01:05:07,528 --> 01:05:12,366

been passed down the generations. There was a lot

Speaker:

01:05:12,366 --> 01:05:19,582

of feeling of deep pain and concern.

Speaker:

01:05:19,999 --> 01:05:22,668

Through the homeschooling

Speaker:

01:05:22,668 --> 01:05:26,130

channels that we had came a leaflet about

Speaker:

01:05:29,383 --> 01:05:32,595

an Anabaptist conference that was going to be held in

Speaker:

01:05:32,595 --> 01:05:36,182

Oxford by the Nationwide Mennonite Church.

Speaker:

01:05:37,058 --> 01:05:38,976

Now, they didn't have a presence in the UK, but

Speaker:

01:05:38,976 --> 01:05:41,896

they were seeing what the interests would be.

Speaker:

01:05:42,647 --> 01:05:47,443

And so I thought, "Well, let's go and find out."

Speaker:

01:05:47,443 --> 01:05:48,694

I phoned first of all and said,

Speaker:

01:05:49,236 --> 01:05:51,656

"What do you believe in? What are your standing?

Speaker:

01:05:51,947 --> 01:05:54,742

What do you stand for the Bible? What do you

Speaker:

01:05:54,742 --> 01:05:58,204

stand for?" As he spoke, I thought, "Well, I

Speaker:

01:05:58,204 --> 01:06:00,039

could have truck with these people. I could

Speaker:

01:06:00,790 --> 01:06:03,084

find out more about them because at least it

Speaker:

01:06:03,084 --> 01:06:05,044

sounds more like the Anabaptists that I've read

Speaker:

01:06:05,044 --> 01:06:08,255

of in history than the guys I'd heard of in

Speaker:

01:06:08,255 --> 01:06:13,386

London." So we went along to the conference.

Speaker:

01:06:14,512 --> 01:06:20,685

And at the conference, we encountered a lot of

Speaker:

01:06:20,685 --> 01:06:23,145

other homeschooling families who were having

Speaker:

01:06:23,145 --> 01:06:27,066

similar ideas. And there were even some people

Speaker:

01:06:27,066 --> 01:06:31,654

from Ireland there. Now, Jeanette met Barbara

Speaker:

01:06:31,779 --> 01:06:36,867

and Dan Yoder who are based here. And in my

Speaker:

01:06:36,867 --> 01:06:38,452

speaking, I never actually spoke to them,

Speaker:

01:06:39,370 --> 01:06:45,418

but they had a church up and running. And as I

Speaker:

01:06:45,418 --> 01:06:46,711

went through life in the parish,

Speaker:

01:06:47,753 --> 01:06:50,756

being the number one from where the buck stops,

Speaker:

01:06:50,756 --> 01:06:55,177

so to speak, I was now in charge of the parish.

Speaker:

01:06:55,219 --> 01:07:00,015

And I had my struggles. I wanted to see what was

Speaker:

01:07:00,015 --> 01:07:01,809

happening in the churches

Speaker:

01:07:01,809 --> 01:07:04,854

before I got inducted to

Speaker:

01:07:04,854 --> 01:07:09,150

become the rector of the three churches they had

Speaker:

01:07:09,150 --> 01:07:13,863

given me in that group of parishes. And so I just

Speaker:

01:07:13,863 --> 01:07:17,867

went along in ordinary clothes to sit in the

Speaker:

01:07:17,867 --> 01:07:20,870

congregation to see what was going on the week

Speaker:

01:07:21,370 --> 01:07:27,501

before I was due to be inducted. And at one of

Speaker:

01:07:27,501 --> 01:07:29,336

the churches, I was approached by two men

Speaker:

01:07:29,545 --> 01:07:33,924

at the end of the service and they said, "We hope

Speaker:

01:07:33,924 --> 01:07:36,802

you don't mind. We're in a partnership."

Speaker:

01:07:38,387 --> 01:07:44,143

And I thought, "Oh, oh." And I was thinking about

Speaker:

01:07:44,143 --> 01:07:45,686

what sort of partnership is that.

Speaker:

01:07:46,562 --> 01:07:57,072

So I went and had a visit with them before my

Speaker:

01:07:57,072 --> 01:08:00,242

induction and said, "You spoke of being

Speaker:

01:08:00,242 --> 01:08:02,870

in a partnership. What sort of partnership are

Speaker:

01:08:02,870 --> 01:08:06,290

you in? And is it a business partnership or

Speaker:

01:08:06,290 --> 01:08:07,666

something else?" And they said, "Oh, it's

Speaker:

01:08:07,666 --> 01:08:09,919

actually a civil

Speaker:

01:08:09,919 --> 01:08:11,921

partnership." Oh, I said, "That's a

Speaker:

01:08:12,880 --> 01:08:16,217

difficult one. There's a difficult one for me. I

Speaker:

01:08:16,217 --> 01:08:19,386

will have a problem with that. Let me explain.

Speaker:

01:08:20,221 --> 01:08:23,099

I'll be as clear as I can. I'm not going to drive

Speaker:

01:08:23,099 --> 01:08:26,811

you away. I'd love it if you continued to come to

Speaker:

01:08:26,811 --> 01:08:29,230

the church, but what I can't do is to give you

Speaker:

01:08:29,230 --> 01:08:31,982

communion because in your

Speaker:

01:08:31,982 --> 01:08:33,275

current state, that would

Speaker:

01:08:33,275 --> 01:08:40,866

be causing you harm." And to begin with, they

Speaker:

01:08:40,866 --> 01:08:43,452

said, "Well, where do you get that from?" And I

Speaker:

01:08:43,994 --> 01:08:45,746

flicked into the Bible and showed them the

Speaker:

01:08:45,746 --> 01:08:48,457

passages that were relevant to that topic.

Speaker:

01:08:49,166 --> 01:08:50,960

And so I thought, "Oh, they understand. They've

Speaker:

01:08:50,960 --> 01:08:52,545

taken it well." But then there was a letter

Speaker:

01:08:52,545 --> 01:08:55,005

to the bishop and letters going back and

Speaker:

01:08:55,005 --> 01:08:59,844

forth. And then the harvest service happened

Speaker:

01:08:59,927 --> 01:09:01,262

where they were going to be playing. One was

Speaker:

01:09:01,262 --> 01:09:02,096

playing the organ and the

Speaker:

01:09:02,096 --> 01:09:03,514

other one was going to be

Speaker:

01:09:04,807 --> 01:09:09,603

doing a reading. And one of them played the organ

Speaker:

01:09:09,603 --> 01:09:12,273

very badly and the other one refused to do the

Speaker:

01:09:12,273 --> 01:09:13,691

reading and walked out of the church. And that

Speaker:

01:09:13,691 --> 01:09:15,818

was the last that we saw

Speaker:

01:09:15,818 --> 01:09:18,028

of them. But it wasn't the

Speaker:

01:09:18,028 --> 01:09:21,866

last of the letters going back and forth. It

Speaker:

01:09:21,866 --> 01:09:24,368

wasn't the main church, but the church,

Speaker:

01:09:25,035 --> 01:09:29,081

it was the second biggest church in the group.

Speaker:

01:09:30,291 --> 01:09:33,586

And the parishioners wanted me to explain what

Speaker:

01:09:33,586 --> 01:09:36,422

had gone on, why I'd taken the stand I had taken.

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01:09:36,797 --> 01:09:41,260

So there I was in my black cassock with a table

Speaker:

01:09:41,260 --> 01:09:43,721

in the church and the church group assembled

Speaker:

01:09:43,721 --> 01:09:47,016

around me, having taken advice from a senior

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01:09:47,933 --> 01:09:51,228

evangelical clergyman to explain to them the

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01:09:51,228 --> 01:09:59,778

history around the church's view on same-sex

Speaker:

01:09:59,778 --> 01:10:03,449

relationships and the biblical view, the

Speaker:

01:10:03,449 --> 01:10:06,201

traditional view, the line that was taken

Speaker:

01:10:06,869 --> 01:10:10,748

historically hadn't just changed. And their view

Speaker:

01:10:10,748 --> 01:10:12,249

was you must change with the times and

Speaker:

01:10:12,249 --> 01:10:16,587

it'll be okay. So the couple actually went to a

Speaker:

01:10:16,587 --> 01:10:19,381

neighboring church down the road where they made

Speaker:

01:10:19,381 --> 01:10:23,510

a home for themselves. Sadly, one of them passed

Speaker:

01:10:23,510 --> 01:10:27,389

away and the rumor went round that I had refused

Speaker:

01:10:27,389 --> 01:10:31,185

to bury them. So there are lies and there are sad

Speaker:

01:10:31,185 --> 01:10:34,104

things that go on. But throughout this

Speaker:

01:10:34,980 --> 01:10:38,025

difficult time, brothers and

Speaker:

01:10:38,025 --> 01:10:41,445

sisters from the Mennonite church, from

Speaker:

01:10:43,781 --> 01:10:47,242

the Nationwide Mennonite church visited and encouraged me

Speaker:

01:10:47,242 --> 01:10:50,871

in this time. So I have a lot of respect for the

Speaker:

01:10:50,871 --> 01:10:54,750

nationwide Mennonite church in their outreach and

Speaker:

01:10:54,750 --> 01:10:57,753

we make it a practice to visit their conference

Speaker:

01:10:57,753 --> 01:11:02,883

annually in the UK each year to support them in

Speaker:

01:11:02,883 --> 01:11:08,222

their work in the UK. At this time, as well,

Speaker:

01:11:08,806 --> 01:11:16,730

was a shift in my thinking as regarding the age

Speaker:

01:11:16,730 --> 01:11:19,566

of the earth and what the

Speaker:

01:11:19,566 --> 01:11:22,277

Bible says and the order

Speaker:

01:11:22,277 --> 01:11:27,574

of creation and the trustworthy of the scriptures

Speaker:

01:11:27,574 --> 01:11:30,452

from the very beginning. I should have mentioned

Speaker:

01:11:30,577 --> 01:11:33,998

this earlier because that would have... we've shot forward

Speaker:

01:11:33,998 --> 01:11:37,960

a bit. But it became more

Speaker:

01:11:37,960 --> 01:11:39,545

and more clear to me that

Speaker:

01:11:40,129 --> 01:11:43,882

if I could trust through organizations like

Speaker:

01:11:43,882 --> 01:11:47,594

Answers in Genesis and the Creation Ministries

Speaker:

01:11:47,594 --> 01:11:50,472

International and their view and their scientific

Speaker:

01:11:50,472 --> 01:11:57,646

proof and evidence that the world is much younger

Speaker:

01:11:58,397 --> 01:12:02,526

and the Bible story fits much more easily in that

Speaker:

01:12:02,526 --> 01:12:07,156

young earth situation. If I'm to trust that,

Speaker:

01:12:07,156 --> 01:12:11,243

and I did, then the words of Jesus in the New

Speaker:

01:12:11,243 --> 01:12:15,998

Testament, which back up the creation model,

Speaker:

01:12:16,457 --> 01:12:20,419

need to have special attention to them. So I was

Speaker:

01:12:20,419 --> 01:12:23,255

now looking at the New Testament through the eyes

Speaker:

01:12:23,297 --> 01:12:25,382

of someone who'd been convinced of the validity

Speaker:

01:12:25,382 --> 01:12:30,721

of the old with a completely new set of eyes.

Speaker:

01:12:31,513 --> 01:12:34,308

I was looking at the commands of Jesus, the Son

Speaker:

01:12:34,308 --> 01:12:38,228

of God, in a way that I'd

Speaker:

01:12:38,228 --> 01:12:39,271

never really looked at it

Speaker:

01:12:39,271 --> 01:12:41,398

before. I'd looked at it as a sort of… I'd

Speaker:

01:12:41,398 --> 01:12:42,232

looked at scripture in a

Speaker:

01:12:42,232 --> 01:12:45,027

flat way. It was all sort of one

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01:12:45,027 --> 01:12:48,238

and you kind of blended the commandments together

Speaker:

01:12:48,238 --> 01:12:52,409

and what Jesus said was sometimes trumped by the

Speaker:

01:12:52,409 --> 01:13:00,542

commandments and the law. But then when I seen

Speaker:

01:13:00,542 --> 01:13:05,297

how the Old Testament could be trusted,

Speaker:

01:13:06,340 --> 01:13:08,425

I thought, "Well, now let's look at the New with

Speaker:

01:13:08,425 --> 01:13:12,888

fresh eyes." So in a way, my contact with

Speaker:

01:13:13,305 --> 01:13:15,182

would probably generally be more mainstream

Speaker:

01:13:15,182 --> 01:13:19,978

Protestant in their line with creationist views,

Speaker:

01:13:20,729 --> 01:13:25,025

open my eyes to Anabaptism in a very fresh way.

Speaker:

01:13:26,193 --> 01:13:30,906

So the teaching on the two kingdoms

Speaker:

01:13:31,990 --> 01:13:37,704

became more of the bedrock of my faith now. And I

Speaker:

01:13:37,704 --> 01:13:39,957

could see that the mingling of the church,

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01:13:40,499 --> 01:13:41,792

the Anglican church with the

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01:13:41,792 --> 01:13:46,547

world was something that was toxic.

Speaker:

01:13:46,588 --> 01:13:49,716

When you… It sounds like you were right in the

Speaker:

01:13:49,716 --> 01:13:51,969

mix of all of that. You know that

Speaker:

01:13:53,679 --> 01:13:56,306

managing decline is something you said and then

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01:13:56,306 --> 01:13:57,850

these other changes and

Speaker:

01:13:57,850 --> 01:13:58,892

shifts that were happening

Speaker:

01:13:58,892 --> 01:14:00,477

and how the church was approaching things, "Oh,

Speaker:

01:14:00,477 --> 01:14:01,353

we need to change with the

Speaker:

01:14:01,353 --> 01:14:03,313

times," things like that.

Speaker:

01:14:03,313 --> 01:14:06,150

And you're right in the middle of that. And you

Speaker:

01:14:06,150 --> 01:14:08,569

mentioned two kingdoms, which is a foundational

Speaker:

01:14:08,569 --> 01:14:11,655

piece for the Anabaptist worldview. How did you

Speaker:

01:14:11,655 --> 01:14:13,448

hear about that for the first time? Was it like

Speaker:

01:14:13,532 --> 01:14:14,992

you read the Sermon on the Mount and you're

Speaker:

01:14:14,992 --> 01:14:16,743

looking at it with different eyes now and saying,

Speaker:

01:14:16,743 --> 01:14:19,705

"Oh, wait a minute," or do you read a book about

Speaker:

01:14:19,705 --> 01:14:21,707

it? How did you encounter that teaching?

Speaker:

01:14:21,707 --> 01:14:26,086

It would have been a very helpful book that was

Speaker:

01:14:26,086 --> 01:14:30,591

passed on to me by a Nationwide brother,

Speaker:

01:14:30,591 --> 01:14:33,844

now brothers, but they did say at the front that

Speaker:

01:14:33,844 --> 01:14:36,972

they didn't believe everything that David Bercot

Speaker:

01:14:37,514 --> 01:14:40,934

spoke of in the book. They weren't completely on

Speaker:

01:14:40,934 --> 01:14:42,603

board with him, but there's an overall framework

Speaker:

01:14:42,769 --> 01:14:46,231

of what this book spoke of, The Kingdom that

Speaker:

01:14:46,231 --> 01:14:47,191

Turned the World Upside Down.

Speaker:

01:14:47,191 --> 01:14:49,109

And the way Christ's

Speaker:

01:14:49,109 --> 01:14:54,448

teachings do that to a human life and even to a

Speaker:

01:14:54,448 --> 01:14:58,535

society, if the society allows that, are immense.

Speaker:

01:14:59,203 --> 01:15:02,456

And the idea of the two kingdoms became very

Speaker:

01:15:02,456 --> 01:15:05,542

apparent in the reading of this book and opened

Speaker:

01:15:05,626 --> 01:15:08,378

my eyes up and made Scripture much more clearer

Speaker:

01:15:08,378 --> 01:15:13,008

and plainer in my understanding of it. So yeah,

Speaker:

01:15:13,008 --> 01:15:17,387

that was another influential book in my walk.

Speaker:

01:15:20,140 --> 01:15:25,562

Another book and film that I would recommend.

Speaker:

01:15:28,315 --> 01:15:31,026

Our church doesn't encourage film watching, but I

Speaker:

01:15:31,026 --> 01:15:31,902

wasn't in it at the time.

Speaker:

01:15:32,903 --> 01:15:37,324

It's like a documentary, but there's a book as

Speaker:

01:15:37,324 --> 01:15:40,536

well that goes with it. And it's by a man I have met,

Speaker:

01:15:40,536 --> 01:15:44,206

actually, a Myron S. Augsburger, and the book is

Speaker:

01:15:44,206 --> 01:15:45,874

about the life of Michael Sattler,

Speaker:

01:15:46,875 --> 01:15:50,337

called Pilgrim of Flame. And that's a very good

Speaker:

01:15:50,337 --> 01:15:54,508

read. Michael Sattler's life was an inspiration

Speaker:

01:15:54,800 --> 01:16:02,307

to me in the way he lived and died. And in the

Speaker:

01:16:02,307 --> 01:16:05,769

capacity of someone who was ordained within a

Speaker:

01:16:05,894 --> 01:16:09,856

Reformation church, I empathize so much with this

Speaker:

01:16:09,856 --> 01:16:14,903

man. I wasn't suffering the way he was,

Speaker:

01:16:15,279 --> 01:16:18,657

but spiritually I was. It came to a head in a

Speaker:

01:16:18,657 --> 01:16:24,788

way. I began to become braver in my preaching.

Speaker:

01:16:25,539 --> 01:16:29,042

And began to preach more like an Anabaptist from

Speaker:

01:16:29,042 --> 01:16:31,503

the sermon or from the pulpit.

Speaker:

01:16:31,795 --> 01:16:33,422

Did that have interesting results?

Speaker:

01:16:33,714 --> 01:16:40,470

It had profound results. I was in trouble for

Speaker:

01:16:40,470 --> 01:16:42,681

that. From my own congregation,

Speaker:

01:16:44,308 --> 01:16:46,184

rather than... I mean, they probably whispered it

Speaker:

01:16:46,184 --> 01:16:48,353

to those above me. And

Speaker:

01:16:48,353 --> 01:16:49,604

the Anglican Church is very

Speaker:

01:16:49,604 --> 01:16:53,400

hierarchical. You have to remember that. It's not

Speaker:

01:16:53,400 --> 01:16:55,736

a local body of believers, such as the one

Speaker:

01:16:55,944 --> 01:16:58,447

that I'm part of here in Ireland. It is quite

Speaker:

01:16:58,447 --> 01:17:01,325

hierarchical. So what's said is monitored.

Speaker:

01:17:04,828 --> 01:17:07,706

There's a series of sermons that I preached on

Speaker:

01:17:07,706 --> 01:17:10,208

the Beatitudes called God's Manifesto. I seem

Speaker:

01:17:10,208 --> 01:17:12,294

to remember that. So I preached through the

Speaker:

01:17:12,294 --> 01:17:16,798

Beatitudes. And I'm very sad to say, but I did

Speaker:

01:17:16,798 --> 01:17:23,055

make enemies of my congregation. Not all of them,

Speaker:

01:17:24,723 --> 01:17:26,516

quite a few of them who were influential.

Speaker:

01:17:28,477 --> 01:17:36,068

And one day after speaking out at a larger church

Speaker:

01:17:36,068 --> 01:17:38,862

gathering called the synod,

Speaker:

01:17:38,904 --> 01:17:43,909

because we were then told at the particular Synod

Speaker:

01:17:43,909 --> 01:17:46,370

about what we could and couldn't discuss

Speaker:

01:17:46,370 --> 01:17:52,250

anymore in regards women in ministry. We were

Speaker:

01:17:52,250 --> 01:17:54,878

told it was no longer a negotiable or something

Speaker:

01:17:54,878 --> 01:17:59,049

for discussion. It was to be taken as norm now.

Speaker:

01:17:59,758 --> 01:18:00,509

And anyone discussing

Speaker:

01:18:00,509 --> 01:18:02,719

that would not be considered

Speaker:

01:18:02,719 --> 01:18:08,517

to become an ordinand in the up and coming years

Speaker:

01:18:08,517 --> 01:18:11,645

to come. So I just felt that was incredibly

Speaker:

01:18:11,645 --> 01:18:15,941

draconian. Even if I hadn't at the time had any

Speaker:

01:18:15,941 --> 01:18:19,569

strong views on it, for that to be said

Speaker:

01:18:19,569 --> 01:18:27,661

was pretty draconian. So as a result of my

Speaker:

01:18:27,661 --> 01:18:30,956

speaking out against that in the Synod,

Speaker:

01:18:32,582 --> 01:18:37,045

one of the influential people in the church was

Speaker:

01:18:37,045 --> 01:18:42,008

doing the congregational prayers. And I was,

Speaker:

01:18:43,218 --> 01:18:48,598

again, in the front of the church. And I found

Speaker:

01:18:48,598 --> 01:18:50,559

that I was being prayed

Speaker:

01:18:50,559 --> 01:18:54,354

against by my congregation.

Speaker:

01:18:55,814 --> 01:18:57,149

Okay, so that was probably

Speaker:

01:18:57,149 --> 01:18:58,400

a disconcerting experience.

Speaker:

01:18:58,733 --> 01:19:01,153

Yeah, it was disconcerting. And then at that

Speaker:

01:19:01,153 --> 01:19:04,781

point, I realized this was the end of it,

Speaker:

01:19:04,781 --> 01:19:08,869

but it was a curious sensation. I was kneeling at

Speaker:

01:19:08,869 --> 01:19:13,999

the prayer desk in the front of the church,

Speaker:

01:19:14,791 --> 01:19:19,045

as the prayers were being said. And as I was

Speaker:

01:19:19,045 --> 01:19:24,050

praying, I felt that I was being lashed on the

Speaker:

01:19:24,092 --> 01:19:28,805

back as each prayer was prayed, that I was being

Speaker:

01:19:28,805 --> 01:19:32,893

beaten. But the wonderful thing about it was that

Speaker:

01:19:32,893 --> 01:19:37,272

I felt a peace that Christ was with me in that

Speaker:

01:19:37,272 --> 01:19:40,650

time. And I suppose at

Speaker:

01:19:40,650 --> 01:19:43,069

the time, I had been reading

Speaker:

01:19:43,069 --> 01:19:48,116

this book as well. And this book caused action.

Speaker:

01:19:48,366 --> 01:19:51,661

It's called the Anabaptist Vision. And it was

Speaker:

01:19:51,703 --> 01:19:56,333

written many, many years ago, in a very short

Speaker:

01:19:56,333 --> 01:19:58,793

period of time, it was written overnight by a

Speaker:

01:19:58,793 --> 01:20:01,463

man called Harold S. Bender, because he had to

Speaker:

01:20:01,463 --> 01:20:05,550

explain the Anabaptist position to the President

Speaker:

01:20:05,550 --> 01:20:08,678

of America and various military officials as

Speaker:

01:20:08,678 --> 01:20:12,390

regards the stance of non-resistant Christians,

Speaker:

01:20:12,557 --> 01:20:17,729

of the plain variety, the Anabaptist variety. And

Speaker:

01:20:17,729 --> 01:20:22,484

this book encouraged me to act upon my

Speaker:

01:20:22,484 --> 01:20:28,406

convictions. And I phoned up my bishop and handed

Speaker:

01:20:28,406 --> 01:20:30,992

in my resignation. Normally, you have to wait

Speaker:

01:20:30,992 --> 01:20:33,495

three months before you can leave. He allowed me

Speaker:

01:20:33,495 --> 01:20:36,081

to go in two. We then

Speaker:

01:20:36,081 --> 01:20:38,583

came to Ireland. The thought

Speaker:

01:20:38,667 --> 01:20:41,044

was that after six months, there would be a

Speaker:

01:20:41,044 --> 01:20:43,630

church in England to move to,

Speaker:

01:20:43,630 --> 01:20:45,006

and that our time in Ireland

Speaker:

01:20:45,006 --> 01:20:47,425

would be six months of living in an Anabaptist

Speaker:

01:20:47,425 --> 01:20:52,097

community and preparing ourselves for a life in

Speaker:

01:20:52,097 --> 01:20:57,185

the UK, in an Anabaptist community, church. But

Speaker:

01:20:57,185 --> 01:20:59,980

as it was, the Nationwide

Speaker:

01:20:59,980 --> 01:21:01,314

Mennonites took 18 months

Speaker:

01:21:01,481 --> 01:21:04,776

to come. And after 18 months had been and gone,

Speaker:

01:21:05,360 --> 01:21:08,280

our savings was spent. The children had settled,

Speaker:

01:21:09,447 --> 01:21:12,784

and I had five children at the time. They had

Speaker:

01:21:12,784 --> 01:21:15,120

settled in the community here as much as they

Speaker:

01:21:15,120 --> 01:21:19,124

could. And we'd run out of money, and I was

Speaker:

01:21:19,124 --> 01:21:20,792

working. I formed a little

Speaker:

01:21:20,792 --> 01:21:23,128

business. We were baking and

Speaker:

01:21:23,169 --> 01:21:30,552

gardening, and life in Ireland was for us. So six

Speaker:

01:21:30,552 --> 01:21:32,512

months turned into you live here now.

Speaker:

01:21:32,512 --> 01:21:35,432

We live here now. Yeah, six months came and went.

Speaker:

01:21:35,765 --> 01:21:36,641

A year came and went.

Speaker:

01:21:37,350 --> 01:21:38,560

Eighteen months came and went.

Speaker:

01:21:38,768 --> 01:21:41,187

And when we were asked to come over, I had to

Speaker:

01:21:41,187 --> 01:21:41,980

say, "No, I'm afraid.

Speaker:

01:21:42,480 --> 01:21:43,857

We've made our home in Ireland

Speaker:

01:21:44,024 --> 01:21:50,280

now, and we have been blessed. We've been living

Speaker:

01:21:50,280 --> 01:21:55,285

here for nearly 15 years now." I have to say that

Speaker:

01:21:55,702 --> 01:21:57,996

life in an Anabaptist church is not a bed of

Speaker:

01:21:57,996 --> 01:22:02,876

roses. There are times when you'll be frustrated

Speaker:

01:22:03,043 --> 01:22:05,378

and you'll be annoyed with your brothers and

Speaker:

01:22:05,378 --> 01:22:12,552

sisters. But you know deep down that you will

Speaker:

01:22:12,594 --> 01:22:17,807

never find the perfect church in this world. But

Speaker:

01:22:17,807 --> 01:22:21,519

I would say that in the scheme of things,

Speaker:

01:22:22,103 --> 01:22:27,609

I'm not condemning other Christians in the church

Speaker:

01:22:27,609 --> 01:22:29,819

denominations they find themselves in.

Speaker:

01:22:30,695 --> 01:22:35,784

But I find as a Christian, it's more easy to live

Speaker:

01:22:35,784 --> 01:22:40,288

within the structure of scripture

Speaker:

01:22:40,580 --> 01:22:46,294

in an Anabaptist church than I would in a

Speaker:

01:22:46,294 --> 01:22:51,383

Protestant or a Catholic or Orthodox church.

Speaker:

01:22:51,966 --> 01:22:56,179

That would be in my readings and studies. But

Speaker:

01:22:56,179 --> 01:22:58,932

within those denominations and movements,

Speaker:

01:23:00,392 --> 01:23:05,355

there are Christians who I respect highly. So

Speaker:

01:23:05,355 --> 01:23:07,273

it's a strange position to be in,

Speaker:

01:23:08,108 --> 01:23:13,196

but there I am. And the other thing is that I

Speaker:

01:23:13,196 --> 01:23:16,241

wanted salvation for my children.

Speaker:

01:23:17,909 --> 01:23:20,537

And that's something both of us have wanted, both

Speaker:

01:23:20,537 --> 01:23:24,916

Jeanette and myself. That if we have to sacrifice

Speaker:

01:23:24,958 --> 01:23:29,629

something, some comfort, some privilege, some

Speaker:

01:23:29,629 --> 01:23:34,676

entitlement for the sake of our children's faith,

Speaker:

01:23:35,135 --> 01:23:39,639

we will do it. Even if it means leaving the

Speaker:

01:23:39,639 --> 01:23:42,225

safety net of a golden cage.

Speaker:

01:23:43,351 --> 01:23:46,730

And that brings us to today essentially. Yeah.

Speaker:

01:23:47,522 --> 01:23:50,525

Wow. Yeah, what a journey. Like

Speaker:

01:23:51,109 --> 01:23:52,819

one of the things that stands out to me in this

Speaker:

01:23:52,819 --> 01:23:55,363

is how it wasn't just a

Speaker:

01:23:55,363 --> 01:23:56,990

straight linear path. It's

Speaker:

01:23:56,990 --> 01:23:59,117

like you're here, we need to be here, take the

Speaker:

01:23:59,117 --> 01:24:03,580

steps, arrive, here we go. It seems there was

Speaker:

01:24:03,621 --> 01:24:05,707

a lot more to it than that where you're

Speaker:

01:24:05,707 --> 01:24:06,791

exploring, you're learning.

Speaker:

01:24:06,791 --> 01:24:08,501

Could be here a week. Yeah.

Speaker:

01:24:08,877 --> 01:24:12,964

Yeah. And I think it's easy to want to try to

Speaker:

01:24:12,964 --> 01:24:16,050

rush things sometimes. We hear from a lot of

Speaker:

01:24:16,092 --> 01:24:18,344

listeners and it's like, "Okay, great. I'm going

Speaker:

01:24:18,344 --> 01:24:20,096

to go join a Mennonite church and we're just going

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01:24:20,096 --> 01:24:21,598

to do this right now." You're getting to a point

Speaker:

01:24:21,598 --> 01:24:24,058

and I'm looking towards my wife now.

Speaker:

01:24:25,435 --> 01:24:28,104

And I don't know. And part of me is like, "Okay,

Speaker:

01:24:28,104 --> 01:24:29,522

that's great. They're looking for a church to

Speaker:

01:24:29,564 --> 01:24:33,693

join wonderful, but these things do take time." And

Speaker:

01:24:33,693 --> 01:24:35,361

your journey, Emily, was years.

Speaker:

01:24:37,197 --> 01:24:41,618

I would say that it took me seven years to leave

Speaker:

01:24:41,618 --> 01:24:45,246

the Anglican Church and five years before we

Speaker:

01:24:45,246 --> 01:24:50,710

joined this one. So we took a process. It's a

Speaker:

01:24:50,710 --> 01:24:57,050

process. And I would recommend anyone going

Speaker:

01:24:58,092 --> 01:25:01,012

on a pathway like we have gone on to take your

Speaker:

01:25:01,012 --> 01:25:03,890

time. Take your time, but

Speaker:

01:25:03,890 --> 01:25:04,974

don't take too much time.

Speaker:

01:25:05,809 --> 01:25:08,853

I think there was a point in our life. We

Speaker:

01:25:08,853 --> 01:25:11,356

realized the age of our children was rising

Speaker:

01:25:12,148 --> 01:25:15,235

and it's not easy to do something as we have done

Speaker:

01:25:15,235 --> 01:25:19,364

if your children are in their teenage years.

Speaker:

01:25:20,323 --> 01:25:23,701

It's not easy. It's not impossible, but it's not

Speaker:

01:25:23,701 --> 01:25:27,497

easy because their way of thinking will have been

Speaker:

01:25:27,789 --> 01:25:31,209

majorly influenced by the world. Even if it's the

Speaker:

01:25:31,209 --> 01:25:33,711

homeschooling group you're part of,

Speaker:

01:25:34,420 --> 01:25:38,258

it's something that I certainly felt was

Speaker:

01:25:38,258 --> 01:25:42,136

important to mention. Now, I

Speaker:

01:25:42,136 --> 01:25:43,346

mentioned earlier that I had

Speaker:

01:25:43,388 --> 01:25:47,058

come from a military background. Both my father

Speaker:

01:25:47,058 --> 01:25:53,231

and my brother were in the British army. When you

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01:25:53,231 --> 01:25:55,567

come from a background like that, you think

Speaker:

01:25:55,567 --> 01:25:57,819

rather like that. That had

Speaker:

01:25:57,819 --> 01:26:00,029

been a goal of mine at one

Speaker:

01:26:00,029 --> 01:26:02,490

point when I wasn't a Christian to just follow in

Speaker:

01:26:02,490 --> 01:26:04,325

my brother's and my father's footsteps and

Speaker:

01:26:04,325 --> 01:26:09,497

become a soldier. Some of that thinking needed to

Speaker:

01:26:09,497 --> 01:26:15,879

be challenged. A book, if you're coming from

Speaker:

01:26:15,879 --> 01:26:19,090

a military background, because sometimes the idea

Speaker:

01:26:19,090 --> 01:26:21,301

of joining a community like the Anabaptists,

Speaker:

01:26:21,301 --> 01:26:22,594

you think, "Well, they're all wearing uniforms.

Speaker:

01:26:23,094 --> 01:26:25,013

Women are wearing this and men are wearing that."

Speaker:

01:26:25,513 --> 01:26:27,015

It's all tickety-boo. Just because you're wearing

Speaker:

01:26:27,015 --> 01:26:29,517

those same uniforms, you'll get on all right.

Speaker:

01:26:30,310 --> 01:26:35,315

It's not that way. We don't operate like the

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01:26:35,315 --> 01:26:37,025

military. We are on the

Speaker:

01:26:37,025 --> 01:26:38,443

side of the kingdom of God.

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01:26:41,029 --> 01:26:46,534

Prayer and love are our weapons. A wonderful book

Speaker:

01:26:46,534 --> 01:26:51,247

to look at is A Change of Allegiance by Dean

Speaker:

01:26:51,289 --> 01:26:57,629

Taylor. I've met Dean. We had time together in

Speaker:

01:26:57,629 --> 01:27:00,840

Lesbos working with refugees there.

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01:27:02,425 --> 01:27:08,264

Dean is a former US military soldier who managed

Speaker:

01:27:08,264 --> 01:27:12,352

to sign out as a conscientious objector,

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01:27:12,936 --> 01:27:16,314

but he had to go and think deeply. He's now a

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01:27:16,314 --> 01:27:18,691

bishop in an Anabaptist church in the States.

Speaker:

01:27:19,275 --> 01:27:23,529

But in his time in Germany, he was deeply

Speaker:

01:27:23,529 --> 01:27:26,199

challenged about what he was doing and whose

Speaker:

01:27:26,199 --> 01:27:30,912

kingdom he was in in the military. It's a

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01:27:30,912 --> 01:27:34,040

profound book, and it's helped me on my journey

Speaker:

01:27:34,415 --> 01:27:37,877

from the background that I was part of to coming

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01:27:37,877 --> 01:27:44,717

into the Anabaptist world and what I believe is a

Speaker:

01:27:45,677 --> 01:27:50,723

helpful way of living the Christian life. Dean is

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01:27:50,723 --> 01:27:53,726

quite the man. I had the honor to

Speaker:

01:27:53,726 --> 01:27:57,605

interview him a few times. Quite the story, and I

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01:27:57,605 --> 01:28:01,901

think it's stories like that that are very

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01:28:01,901 --> 01:28:04,487

helpful for others because they can find pieces

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01:28:04,487 --> 01:28:08,408

like, "Oh, yeah, that's something I'm struggling

Speaker:

01:28:08,408 --> 01:28:09,993

with," or, "I'm trying to understand that too."

Speaker:

01:28:11,244 --> 01:28:13,287

That's why I'm glad you're willing to share your

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01:28:13,329 --> 01:28:15,707

story too because I don't know who else is

Speaker:

01:28:15,707 --> 01:28:18,167

listening. I know we have Anglicans listen to

Speaker:

01:28:18,167 --> 01:28:20,670

this podcast for sure. We hear from them, and

Speaker:

01:28:20,670 --> 01:28:23,548

they have questions sometimes. "Well, have you

Speaker:

01:28:23,548 --> 01:28:25,633

thought about this or what about this?" I think

Speaker:

01:28:25,633 --> 01:28:29,929

as well. There are some Anabaptists

Speaker:

01:28:30,388 --> 01:28:33,016

who think that grass is greener on the other side

Speaker:

01:28:33,016 --> 01:28:39,605

and think perhaps that Anglicanism is for them,

Speaker:

01:28:40,189 --> 01:28:44,902

and maybe it is for a while. But if you are an

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01:28:44,902 --> 01:28:47,238

Anabaptist and you're thinking about becoming an

Speaker:

01:28:47,238 --> 01:28:51,117

Anglican and you've heard of some good Anglican

Speaker:

01:28:51,117 --> 01:28:54,454

Christians, and there are plenty of good Anglican

Speaker:

01:28:54,454 --> 01:28:57,290

Christians, and some of their teaching is very

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01:28:57,290 --> 01:29:02,253

wonderful, but consider

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01:29:02,253 --> 01:29:05,298

this. You may be satisfied,

Speaker:

01:29:05,882 --> 01:29:10,053

but what will it do to your children, your wife,

Speaker:

01:29:10,720 --> 01:29:13,723

and in the long run your

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01:29:13,723 --> 01:29:16,017

family? Bear that in mind

Speaker:

01:29:16,184 --> 01:29:18,436

if you're considering the leap in another

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01:29:18,436 --> 01:29:21,439

direction from a former Anglican.

Speaker:

01:29:22,523 --> 01:29:27,278

So that's something I wanted to ask you. Who

Speaker:

01:29:27,278 --> 01:29:28,029

knows the different

Speaker:

01:29:28,029 --> 01:29:29,530

journeys everyone is on that's

Speaker:

01:29:29,530 --> 01:29:32,784

listening to this. Maybe they're very satisfied

Speaker:

01:29:32,784 --> 01:29:34,535

with their church situation. They found a good

Speaker:

01:29:34,577 --> 01:29:36,829

community to plug into. But my guess is there's a

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01:29:36,829 --> 01:29:38,498

lot of people who don't have that.

Speaker:

01:29:38,790 --> 01:29:40,333

I can believe that, and they may have had some

Speaker:

01:29:40,333 --> 01:29:43,836

very negative experiences from their church.

Speaker:

01:29:45,296 --> 01:29:51,511

But I would say, don't give up on the Anabaptist

Speaker:

01:29:51,511 --> 01:29:54,722

way of living. And in the States,

Speaker:

01:29:54,722 --> 01:29:56,057

particularly if you're coming from the States,

Speaker:

01:29:56,057 --> 01:29:57,308

you have a lot of options

Speaker:

01:29:57,308 --> 01:30:00,228

to move to, whether it's

Speaker:

01:30:01,062 --> 01:30:04,148

slightly more progressive or slightly more

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01:30:04,148 --> 01:30:06,901

conservative or a degree greater in either

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01:30:06,901 --> 01:30:14,033

direction. But bear in mind that there is a

Speaker:

01:30:14,033 --> 01:30:17,578

temptation if you go too far in a progressive

Speaker:

01:30:17,620 --> 01:30:20,248

direction, then you'll begin to surrender

Speaker:

01:30:20,248 --> 01:30:26,254

biblical standards. And that's a dangerous point.

Speaker:

01:30:26,754 --> 01:30:28,589

But if you go too far in the other direction, you

Speaker:

01:30:28,589 --> 01:30:30,466

can end up entangling

Speaker:

01:30:30,466 --> 01:30:31,926

yourself with man-made rules.

Speaker:

01:30:32,385 --> 01:30:35,680

So yeah, there are some which are helpful, and

Speaker:

01:30:35,680 --> 01:30:39,142

there are some which need to be adapted for a

Speaker:

01:30:39,142 --> 01:30:44,397

changing circumstance. And so it sounds like what

Speaker:

01:30:44,397 --> 01:30:47,483

you're saying, don't be too hasty.

Speaker:

01:30:48,359 --> 01:30:51,237

Don't be too hasty. Yeah, it's a serious thing.

Speaker:

01:30:51,237 --> 01:30:54,323

And you think it through, you know, as I mean,

Speaker:

01:30:54,448 --> 01:30:57,493

in your story, you know, it was some time of

Speaker:

01:30:57,493 --> 01:30:59,245

really wrestling through this.

Speaker:

01:31:00,079 --> 01:31:02,707

Yeah. Yeah. I would like to leave any of you

Speaker:

01:31:02,707 --> 01:31:06,169

listeners with these words of Scripture. They

Speaker:

01:31:06,169 --> 01:31:10,089

spoke to me very strongly as I wrestled with God

Speaker:

01:31:10,089 --> 01:31:12,049

over the decisions I'd make in my life.

Speaker:

01:31:12,800 --> 01:31:19,682

And this is taken from the Gospel of Luke. And

Speaker:

01:31:19,682 --> 01:31:24,979

it's chapter 14 and reading from verse 23

Speaker:

01:31:25,605 --> 01:31:29,775

to verse 34. "Now great multitudes went with

Speaker:

01:31:29,775 --> 01:31:32,278

Jesus, and he turned and said to them,

Speaker:

01:31:32,778 --> 01:31:35,573

'If anyone comes to me and does not hate his

Speaker:

01:31:35,573 --> 01:31:37,658

father and mother, wife

Speaker:

01:31:37,658 --> 01:31:39,493

and children, brothers and

Speaker:

01:31:39,535 --> 01:31:44,081

sisters, yes, and his own life also, he cannot be

Speaker:

01:31:44,081 --> 01:31:47,835

my disciple. And whoever does not bear his cross

Speaker:

01:31:48,002 --> 01:31:52,506

and come after me, he cannot be my disciple. For

Speaker:

01:31:52,506 --> 01:31:54,967

which of you, intending to build a tower,

Speaker:

01:31:55,509 --> 01:31:58,596

does not sit down first and count the cost,

Speaker:

01:31:59,388 --> 01:32:01,891

whether he has enough to finish it? Lest,

Speaker:

01:32:02,558 --> 01:32:06,062

after he has laid the foundation and is not able

Speaker:

01:32:06,062 --> 01:32:08,439

to finish, all who see it

Speaker:

01:32:08,439 --> 01:32:09,982

begin to mock him, saying,

Speaker:

01:32:10,483 --> 01:32:12,693

"This man began to build and was not able to

Speaker:

01:32:12,693 --> 01:32:15,196

finish." Or what king, going

Speaker:

01:32:15,196 --> 01:32:16,614

to make war against another

Speaker:

01:32:16,614 --> 01:32:19,367

king, does not sit down first and consider

Speaker:

01:32:19,367 --> 01:32:21,953

whether he is able with ten thousand to meet him,

Speaker:

01:32:22,370 --> 01:32:25,248

who comes against him with twenty thousand, or

Speaker:

01:32:25,248 --> 01:32:28,542

else, while the other is still a great way off,

Speaker:

01:32:28,584 --> 01:32:31,254

he sends a delegation and asks conditions of

Speaker:

01:32:31,254 --> 01:32:33,047

peace. So likewise,

Speaker:

01:32:33,839 --> 01:32:35,591

whoever of you does not forsake

Speaker:

01:32:35,675 --> 01:32:40,304

all that he has, cannot be my disciple. Salt is

Speaker:

01:32:40,304 --> 01:32:43,391

good, but if the salt has lost its flavor,

Speaker:

01:32:44,141 --> 01:32:47,311

how shall it be seasoned? It is neither fit for

Speaker:

01:32:47,311 --> 01:32:48,854

the land nor for the dunghill,

Speaker:

01:32:48,854 --> 01:32:51,190

but men throw it out.

Speaker:

01:32:52,149 --> 01:32:58,447

He who has ears to hear, let him hear.'" Those are

Speaker:

01:32:58,447 --> 01:33:06,289

verses that help me to rather set my face like

Speaker:

01:33:06,289 --> 01:33:13,087

flint and make a move. And I would say, my wife

Speaker:

01:33:13,087 --> 01:33:14,547

isn't next to me at the moment, but she's

Speaker:

01:33:14,588 --> 01:33:17,675

supportively sitting just out of shot from the

Speaker:

01:33:17,675 --> 01:33:24,432

camera. It wasn't easy making the move to come

Speaker:

01:33:24,432 --> 01:33:31,814

away from the Anglican Church. It was a sweet

Speaker:

01:33:31,814 --> 01:33:34,275

setup we had. We had a home. It was our home.

Speaker:

01:33:35,151 --> 01:33:39,113

We had a beautiful Georgian house that we lived

Speaker:

01:33:39,113 --> 01:33:42,325

in. We had a field and we had

Speaker:

01:33:43,284 --> 01:33:44,785

sheep on that field and the

Speaker:

01:33:44,785 --> 01:33:47,121

children would help me tend their hooves.

Speaker:

01:33:49,707 --> 01:33:58,966

We had a life... that was a stressful life, but it

Speaker:

01:33:58,966 --> 01:34:00,426

was a position in society.

Speaker:

01:34:01,761 --> 01:34:07,892

There's a certain pride in it still. You went

Speaker:

01:34:07,892 --> 01:34:09,018

through a lot of giving up,

Speaker:

01:34:09,060 --> 01:34:13,481

a lot of grieving even of things that you had to

Speaker:

01:34:13,481 --> 01:34:17,151

leave behind. It would be easy to package a story

Speaker:

01:34:17,151 --> 01:34:19,153

like this where, "Oh, everything's wonderful

Speaker:

01:34:19,153 --> 01:34:22,656

now. We came through that

Speaker:

01:34:22,656 --> 01:34:24,825

and we landed it where we

Speaker:

01:34:24,825 --> 01:34:28,287

need to be." That's not the full story. Another

Speaker:

01:34:28,287 --> 01:34:31,540

thing is that you may have come from quite

Speaker:

01:34:31,540 --> 01:34:34,293

a pronounced or prominent worldly position and

Speaker:

01:34:34,293 --> 01:34:38,005

coming into an Anabaptist church. You might think

Speaker:

01:34:38,047 --> 01:34:40,841

that you have all the answers and you're the

Speaker:

01:34:40,841 --> 01:34:42,551

bees' knees. You are the

Speaker:

01:34:42,551 --> 01:34:43,594

one who can actually solve

Speaker:

01:34:43,594 --> 01:34:47,390

some of their problems. Maybe they should put you

Speaker:

01:34:47,390 --> 01:34:48,849

in a position of leadership because you've just

Speaker:

01:34:48,849 --> 01:34:52,061

come from a position of leadership, but don't

Speaker:

01:34:52,061 --> 01:34:54,814

think that way. You need to humble yourself

Speaker:

01:34:55,773 --> 01:35:02,655

and learn from them. Just take

Speaker:

01:35:02,655 --> 01:35:07,701

time to find your true position and to

Speaker:

01:35:10,746 --> 01:35:13,874

not rush into a situation, but to humble yourself

Speaker:

01:35:13,874 --> 01:35:18,629

under the brotherhood and not think that you have

Speaker:

01:35:18,671 --> 01:35:23,884

all the answers because when you realize there

Speaker:

01:35:23,884 --> 01:35:27,179

have been a fair number of splits in the

Speaker:

01:35:27,388 --> 01:35:29,932

Anabaptist movements and painful things like

Speaker:

01:35:29,932 --> 01:35:32,393

that, and whilst that's a

Speaker:

01:35:32,393 --> 01:35:34,395

weakness, it's also a strength

Speaker:

01:35:35,354 --> 01:35:39,984

because it has allowed a continuation of the

Speaker:

01:35:39,984 --> 01:35:44,280

original dream of the Anabaptists

Speaker:

01:35:44,822 --> 01:35:50,202

from the time of the radical Reformation. You've

Speaker:

01:35:50,202 --> 01:35:52,121

given us a lot to think about in this

Speaker:

01:35:52,121 --> 01:35:54,123

episode and I think that the piece that sticks

Speaker:

01:35:54,123 --> 01:35:57,793

with me is I was born into the Anabaptist

Speaker:

01:35:59,378 --> 01:36:04,633

churches and that's what I know. It's easy to

Speaker:

01:36:04,633 --> 01:36:06,760

just be okay. That's just kind of what we have.

Speaker:

01:36:06,760 --> 01:36:09,305

You take it for granted, I suppose. For someone

Speaker:

01:36:09,305 --> 01:36:11,432

like yourself who had to go through a much

Speaker:

01:36:12,183 --> 01:36:16,520

longer process, a pretty difficult process, you

Speaker:

01:36:16,520 --> 01:36:19,565

bring a perspective for people like me

Speaker:

01:36:19,690 --> 01:36:22,985

that I think we really need to hear. There is

Speaker:

01:36:22,985 --> 01:36:24,487

value here and don't just quickly,

Speaker:

01:36:24,987 --> 01:36:26,655

as you were saying earlier, don't just quickly

Speaker:

01:36:26,655 --> 01:36:29,909

jump ship and "Ah, we're just kind of done with that."

Speaker:

01:36:30,951 --> 01:36:33,120

I think that that's a really valuable piece that

Speaker:

01:36:33,120 --> 01:36:33,913

we need to keep in mind.

Speaker:

01:36:34,455 --> 01:36:34,663

Yeah.

Speaker:

01:36:35,122 --> 01:36:37,875

Well, Hew, thank you so much for being willing

Speaker:

01:36:37,875 --> 01:36:39,126

to share your story with us today.

Speaker:

01:36:39,168 --> 01:36:41,712

Mm-hmm. Thank you for listening. I hope it's a

Speaker:

01:36:41,712 --> 01:36:43,214

help to someone out there.

Speaker:

01:36:43,464 --> 01:36:44,882

God bless you for listening.

Speaker:

01:36:45,674 --> 01:36:47,760

And I just want to say too, we have a lot of

Speaker:

01:36:47,760 --> 01:36:51,347

listeners, at least over the years, from the UK.

Speaker:

01:36:51,722 --> 01:36:53,307

So hopefully if some of those are listening to

Speaker:

01:36:53,307 --> 01:36:55,059

this, maybe we'll reach out and we can find some

Speaker:

01:36:55,059 --> 01:36:58,687

more people there that have these questions. It

Speaker:

01:36:58,687 --> 01:37:00,147

is possible, you've shown that it is,

Speaker:

01:37:00,648 --> 01:37:02,775

to walk this path. So yeah,

Speaker:

01:37:02,775 --> 01:37:04,151

thank you again for sharing today.

Speaker:

01:37:04,485 --> 01:37:06,987

It's been quite

Speaker:

01:37:06,987 --> 01:37:10,282

soul-searching, but quite cathartic too.

Speaker:

01:37:13,118 --> 01:37:15,287

Yeah. Wow. Well, thanks again.

Speaker:

01:37:15,287 --> 01:37:16,080

Well, thank you very much

Speaker:

01:37:16,080 --> 01:37:17,414

for listening. Thank you.

Speaker:

01:37:18,707 --> 01:37:20,793

Thanks for listening to this episode with Hew.

Speaker:

01:37:21,252 --> 01:37:22,836

If you found this interesting, you should check

Speaker:

01:37:22,836 --> 01:37:25,422

out this episode we did with David Bercot, where

Speaker:

01:37:25,422 --> 01:37:27,591

he describes how he used to be an Anglican priest

Speaker:

01:37:27,675 --> 01:37:30,177

and then explains why he left. And you can find

Speaker:

01:37:30,177 --> 01:37:32,513

that linked in the description down below.

Speaker:

01:37:32,721 --> 01:37:35,099

We also have a whole separate second YouTube

Speaker:

01:37:35,099 --> 01:37:37,768

channel and podcast called Developing As A

Speaker:

01:37:37,768 --> 01:37:40,104

Servant, which is a class that Frank Reed taught

Speaker:

01:37:40,104 --> 01:37:43,315

at SMBI back in 2014. All of that is freely

Speaker:

01:37:43,315 --> 01:37:45,442

available as a podcast and on that YouTube

Speaker:

01:37:45,442 --> 01:37:47,236

channel, which again, you can find in the

Speaker:

01:37:47,236 --> 01:37:49,863

description down below. Thanks again for

Speaker:

01:37:49,863 --> 01:37:51,031

listening and we'll catch

Speaker:

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you in the next episode.