Day 1
I left Livingstone on Tuesday, 15 September 2015 for the 2
hour flight to Jo’burg and the further 12h to Hong Kong. Arriving at 1300h on
Wednesday I shared the courtesy bus to our hotel and conference centre in the
New Territories with a bishop from South India and a Reverend from Singapore,
both heading to the same conference . My
first visit to Asia they asked? This was not the real Asia I was told!
We were bussed along the North Lantau Expressway, winding
through the overdeveloped coastal strip with its beaches and harbours, its
glass, steel and concrete towering skyscrapers, offices and flats, like
vertical streets, with their backs to the still surprisingly green and steep
hills. We crossed two modern suspension bridges with the hazy built-up areas of
Kowloon and Hong Kong Island in the distance to the right. We arrived at the Gold
Coast Hotel in the New Territories, half an hour later. While waiting for the
room I went down to the beach, famous for its school of white dolphins, and
strolled passed the ubiquitous beach-side cafes, up-market and seafood
restaurants and the moored luxury yachts at the marina.
I next crossed the road and walked through the open gates to
the famous Crossroads Foundation, a Christian organisation, with its shabby
refugee flats, fair-trade centre and cafe and other income-generating projects
to help drug-addicts and other needy and disadvantaged people in Hong Kong and
elsewhere in the world . A stark contrast to the gated community opposite, to
which the hotel, beach and residences all belong, there is also an adobe-style
shopping piazza with international gourmet restaurants, luxury boutiques and a
well-stocked supermarket.
At 19h we were invited to an 8 course welcoming banquet with
a wide range of Chinese delicacies seafood, chicken, fish, noodles and rice
finishing with a mango cream pudding and all washed down with regularly
topped-up cups of Chinese tea.
Next morning I met up with the Synod Bishop who had arrived
earlier for a Council for World Mission Conference for Church leaders. Before the first session, John Proctor led
the devotion on the promise, reality and fulfilment of the Holy Spirit. At
Table 5 we had Bishop Bernard Siai from PNG, Lian Kip from Myanmar, Wayne
Matheson from NZ, Bishop Michael Roy from Bangladesh, Roshanna Gillis from
Guyana and Reupena and Dione Alo from American Samoa. Our prayers went with
Reupena and Dione as they left early to return for Reupena’s sister’s funeral.
We were welcomed to Hong Kong by the Rev Lee Chin Chee an 83
year old senior missionary she encouraged us to persevere, refuse not, fear not
and embrace hope and go the tired, the miserable and helpless, especially
locally and engage and work with them.
Rev Wayne Hawkins delivered a presentation on Partners in
Mission, a variety of approaches with short, medium and long-term placements as
forms of mutual accompaniments. CWM hoped to open an online data base
advertising opportunities and then match people to them. This would share
expertise and deepen and expand network
and be a new expression of Church not just mission maintenance, but working
ecumenically where possible and also with the possibility of responding to
crisis
The Keynote Speech
was given by Professor Vuyani
Vellem that Mission was the anticipation and provisional realisation of God’s
reign, refusing the status quo and being transformed by the Holy Spirit.
Mission is a partnership, he said,
offering the economy of life to the living dead. The theology of liberation is
found at the cross of Christ in the squalor of the zinc-roofed forests, amongst
the stranger and foreigner, those excluded from high walls and gates,
travelling along the Jericho Road.
Africa helps show us what it is to be human and to share
God’s resources as is stated by the Accra Confession. Equality is not the same
as justice but equity is. Not all theology is life, real life is life in
abundance, as God promises, through Jesus Christ and not a living death as the
world gives. The Prosperity Gospel and World Bank Dogma that sees congregants
as clients and the bottom line as profit are modern heresies.
Mission is one mission to one world and a redistribution
of the resources is necessary to do it; a contribution to the ministry of
working together and not a hand-out. Manyar gave NZ a gift in response to the
Christchurch earthquake. This came from the bottom-up prompted by the Holy
Spirit and given from the heart.
Succession planning and capacity building is the
responsibility of the receiving church
in consultation with the PIM. The Capacity Development Fund was
available to help facilitate this.
The session closed with Celine Hoiore from Tahiti leading
the evening prayers. She compared our fellowship, cooperation and partnership to the successful
paddling of a Pacific canoe and we were taught a paddling song, used to keep
time and steer and paddle together
The African region then met to discuss how they could be
more effective in speaking with one voice
and coordinating working for common causes at various CWM fora.
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