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p.s.

Welcome to p.s. the fortnightly e-mail and web discussion forum from the Centre for Contemporary Christianity in Ireland.

In line with the Centre's aims, it seeks to "provide informed, credible and practical comment and analysis, rooted in biblical reflection and theological thought" on contemporary matters of broad public concern in Ireland.

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Christian fellowship and tree hugging

The first day of January may mark the official beginning of the yearly cycle but for many of us the real start of the calendar year is in September, as the summer evenings darken, the temperature drops and the leaves on the trees start to turn from green to brown. It all goes back to our schooldays, when each autumn marked the move to new classrooms, new subjects, new teachers and a fresh academic start. For those of us who are parents, that September watershed is once again relived, as we watch our children don school uniforms after the long and lazy summer break.

Ecclesiastical life also seems to manifest that kind of transition. The last of the summer holidaymakers come homewards, students prepare to head off for another year at university and the lull in regular events throughout July and August is replaced by the weekly schedule of church activities. The place of worship that I attend is not untypical in having a number of 'home groups' which meet on a fortnightly basis for Bible study, prayer and fellowship. Mid-September marks the start of my home group's 'winter season' and it is always good to meet with friends last talked to back in June, when plans were being made for holidays, as we stood around a barbeque in a secluded garden. Each summer, all kinds of changes happen and this year three new babies have arrived on our home group scene.

One of the innovations that we have made in recent years is to conduct most of our prayer sessions in single-sex groupings, even though the Bible study itself is undertaken as a whole group. At first, this seemed to me like a bad idea. I have always hated the idea of ritualised 'bonding' with other men ever since I resolutely refused to participate in schoolboy rugby with its macho camaraderie and laddish humour. And I have always steered clear of special Christian events for men, wary of being offered some 'lowest common denominator' generalisations about a spirituality that is, supposedly, appropriate for my male gender. However, over the last two years I have been forced to change my mind.

I think that my male colleagues and I in our fellowship group have actually found the single-sex prayer sessions to be valuable because of the things that we major in on as men. I notice in particular that we talk quite a lot about work - about its deep significance in our lives, its debateable role as a measure of personal worth, the pressures of combining workplace values with our Christian commitment and the difficulty of letting go of work at the end of the day in order to focus on family relationships instead. I think that we also talk quite freely about issues of personal health and wellbeing, both physical and psychological, and gain benefit from sharing similar problems. There is also great benefit to be gained from experiencing the wide range of ages in the group as we come to understand the journey that each of us is making through life as a man. Perhaps most significantly of all, it feels good for men to be empathising with one another, sustaining one another at the emotional level and engaging in prayer for each other. In that regard we are maybe catching up with women, who, within our culture, have been so much more able and willing to 'share and care.'

And so, as the new season of church life for 2007/08 gets under way in countless communities across the land, I salute all those men who have decided - without turning their backs monastically on the female gender - to use Christian fellowship with their fellow-males as a chance to grow and develop during the winter that lies ahead. I will continue to look out for just one men's group, which has taken the task to its ultimate conclusion and left the confines of Bible study behind them - in order to hug some trees in the nearest park!

Philip Orr

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