NEWS from
Spring 2009
www.ridley.cam.ac.uk
From the new Principal: ‘Roots Down...’ I can still remember the college lecture when Ridley Hall’s catchphrase “roots down, walls down” was first coined by its then recently appointed Principal, Graham Cray. I was an ordinand here at the time. Sixteen years later, with “bridges out” in mission added by Graham’s successor, the expanded catchphrase memorably distils something of the genius of Ridley’s distinctive ethos and vocation. This heritage is one I am delighted to be affirming as I begin my time as Principal.
The Principal’s installation
In this edition of News from Ridley, in introducing myself, I would like to say a little about my own “roots down “experience as an evangelical within the Anglican Communion. In subsequent editions I intend to give similar treatment to “walls down” and “bridges out”.
My own evangelical roots were nurtured through continued involvement in Scripture Union youth camps from 1976-2005, first as a teenager and then as a volunteer leader. They were significantly strengthened during my formative years as an undergraduate, especially through involvement in the Oxford Intercollegiate Christian Union (OICCU) and St Aldate’s Church under Canon Michael Green. Appreciation of charismatic renewal within evangelicalism first came in my gap year in Paris, when the church where I was later to serve my curacy played host to the extraordinary missionary from Hong Kong, Jackie Pullinger. “Anglican evangelicals can expect demanding times ahead and the more rooted we are, the better able we will be to rise to them” By the time I came to Ridley as an ordinand, I was ready to sink in my evangelical roots more deeply through opportunities for scholarly engagement in a mission-focused context. It proved an excellent preparation for serving in two large and thriving churches in Paris and the Clifton area of Bristol. Alongside this, my Anglican roots can be traced back to childhood. My family belonged to a village church, where my father, a local farmer, was church warden. I also attended an Anglican independent school where I was confirmed, sang in the choir and became Chapel prefect. Since then I have belonged to a variety of Anglican churches, ranging from flagship city centre churches to an urban priority team ministry on the edge of Toxteth in Liverpool, where I
served as a lay assistant. I already had experience of global Anglicanism prior to ordination, notably through a research project in Nigeria. This however developed exponentially during my six years supporting the Archbishop of Canterbury in Anglican Communion affairs, where it was my privilege to encounter Anglican life in many parts of the world. It was also enhanced through an MPhil in the field of Anglican missiology. All this has left me in no doubt that Ridley Hall is absolutely right to commit itself rigorously and imaginatively to helping Anglican evangelicals sink down roots. Anglican evangelicals can expect demanding times ahead and the more rooted we are, the better able we will be to rise to them. The Revd Canon Andrew Norman, Principal
Also in this issue: PRAYER AND THE PRACTICE OF RESURRECTION Latest news on the September conference, including previews of Eugene Peterson’s address titles
MOULE DAY – JUNE 10TH Programme outline for this year’s Alumni/ae Afternoon and C.F.D. Moule Memorial Lecture
“ALL THAT I EXPERIENCE...” A tribute to the humility and bravery of Mark Autherson, who remains an inspiration to those who knew him
DESIGNING FOR COMMUNITY Looking beyond the ‘shop window’ model: seeing a distinctive role for the website in developing community