Asian Theological Academy

In June 2017, the St Augustine’s Foundation generously donated £10,000 towards the Asian Theological Academy (ATA) to enable the training of clergy and laity. Thanks to the support of the Foundation, the ATA were able to successfully run the Refresher Course in 2017, which was held in Colombo, Sri Lanka.

The Refresher Course was initially to run for three weeks from 21st August to 8th September 2017 in Columbo, Sri Lanka. However, to ensure that as many participants as possible were still able to attend the course, it was condensed into 15 days and held from the 21st August to the 5th of September when participants departed. The ATA were delighted to welcome 16 participants onto the Refresher Course from across Asia.  

To engage the participants, the programme was divided into bible studies, seminars and group discussions under the main theme of ‘Creating Communities of Resistance and Hope’. Part of the course involved exposure visits to marginalised communities so that participants could see first-hand the issues that affect their lives, and how the church can empower them and bring about positive change. This year participants were taken to visit ‘families of the disappeared’ in Killinochchi; widows and disabled soldiers in South Hambantota; and urban evictions in Colombo Port City. Please see the full timetable for the Refresher Course attached.

The feedback on the course content was positive with participants summing it up as ‘inspiring’, ‘enlightening’, ‘challenging’, ‘empowering’, ‘enriching’ and ‘stimulating’. A couple of our participants, Lubna and Father Andrew, shared their experience of the course with us and the impact that it had made.   

A more detailed report can be downloaded here.

Study Pilgrimage to Jerusalem

The Church of England Ministry Experience Scheme (CEMES) is a national Church of England programme encouraging young people under the age of 30 to take a year working in a parish or chaplaincy to explore whether they have a vocation to ordained or other forms of Christian ministry. The Foundation contributed towards bursaries for six interns from the Diocese of Europe to participate in a six day pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

Interns came from Bruges, Brussels, La Cote (near Geneva) Leuven, Lyon, and Vienna. Accompanied by some of the mentors on the scheme, as well as a few older friends, the young people had the opportunity to explore and reflect on several dimensions of what it may mean to call this land holy: the sites – most especially the Holy Sepulchre – which commemorate fundamental events in the life of Jesus Christ; the importance and difficulties of ongoing Christian presence in the land; the complicated and sometimes competitive interreligious dimensions; the political and social realities in Israel and Palestine today.  The group was honoured to be received by His Beatitude Patriarch Theophilos, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, as well as by Archbishop Suheil Dawani, the Anglican Archbishop in Jerusalem. They participated in the Sunday Eucharist at St George’s Anglican Cathedral, Jerusalem.   They were blessed with the adaptable welcome given to them by the community at St Peter in Gallicantu, their base in Jerusalem and were also grateful for the generous Sabbath evening hospitality shown to them by members of the Kol Ha-Neshema synagogue in West Jerusalem. Undergirded by common prayer and worship the pilgrimage also provided an opportunity for community building among the group of interns, who because of the special nature of the Diocese in Europe are quite widely spread. None of those who participated will forget the special quality of the two Eucharists they celebrated as a group – held in God’s love in front of the tranquillity of Dalmanutha by the Sea of Galilee, and the painful sweetness of preparing to depart from Jerusalem. 

The pilgrimage took place due to the vision and hard work of the Director of Ordinands for the Diocese in Europe, the Revd Canon William Gulliford. ‘I know what impact the opportunity to visit Jerusalem as a young man made to me, and how it affected the path of my own ministry. I wanted these young people to have a similar privilege. It is an important way that the church can invest in the future, and I am really grateful to the trusts and organisations who generously gave grants to make this possible ’, said Fr William.

The interns offered the following reflections:

‘I found the peace of Galilee fantastic, but Jerusalem somehow made me feel closer to Christ, precisely because he came for reconciliation, and in Jerusalem you can see how much reconciliation is needed.’ 

‘We explored the multiple dimensions and many sides of stories, and we learned that nothing is as simple as it might seem. Perhaps that was partly exemplified for me by the need to go through a metal detector before one could access some of the holy sites.’

‘I will never forget listening to Julius singing the Magnificat in the Church of St Anne and Ubi Caritas in the Crusader Church of Abu Ghosh.’

‘Somehow we experienced the joys and sorrows of ecumenism. In the Holy Sepulchre we witnessed several different Christian churches living together under one roof, but certainly they were not actively working for the unity of the Christian household.’

‘I came to understand something about holy places. Sometimes a site can be rather dubious historically, but be made holy by the prayers and experiences of the pilgrims who have visited it over the centuries.’

‘I find myself looking at the Bible in new and different ways.’

‘The messiness of the incarnation has become more real for me.’

‘The words of Patriarch Theophilos – that living and working in this land requires a willingness to participate in the divine kenosis – made a deep impression upon me.’

‘Our experiences in this land have made me reflect on the importance of human rights.’

The more detailed report submitted by Dr Clare Amos, CEMES mentor, can be read here.

The Bible in the Life of the Church

In 2012 and 2014, the Foundation made two grants to the Anglican Communion Office to take forward a project entitled ‘The Bible in the Life of the Church’ and to disseminate resources for the wider Communion.

“The joy and challenge of being Anglican is that we engage with faith and Scripture in different ways. This can be both exciting and enriching but also difficult and confusing.  Bible in the Life of the Church or BILC seeks to offer signposts of understanding as we journey together.” The Archbishop of Canterbury commented that “I see this project as utterly foundational for our life together: I can hardly stress that enough.”

The Bible in the Life of the Church (BILC) is work that has been going on across the Anglican Communion since 2009. Its purpose is to help us engage more deeply with the Bible. To help us to do this BILC has gathered together a tool-box of educational resources. The contents of the tool-box come from all over the Anglican Communion and are designed to help everyone from provinces, dioceses, congregations, small groups and individuals to deepen our understanding of the Bible. The common element that runs through all the resources in the tool-box is that they seek to help those using them to be conscious of the processes they use to understand and apply what they read.

Stephen Lyon

St Augustine Foundation
CAPA Theologian-in-Residence

Professor Jesse Mugamba, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, University of Nairobi, has been appointed by CAPA as their new Theologian-in-Residence.

The post has been funded by the St Augustine Foundation for a period of three years and builds on existing work which has served to build the capacity of theological education among the Anglican Provinces of Africa.

St Augustine Foundation