New Matthias website (July 2006)

Screenshot: New St Matthias website

Launched very very qui­etly about a week ago. It’s hardly content-ready but that should hope­fully come over the next week or two. We’re keep­ing busy and hope­fully there’ll be blog thin­gies going even­tu­ally. It’s cur­rently built around Word­Press, which is a choice I made a few months ago [and now… you fin­ish this sen­tence]. The con­tent was tak­ing ages to get per­fect so our staff team decided it’d be best just to launch it and replace the old thing. So now we’ve got an incom­plete new web­site! ;-) But it’s get­ting some­where, praise God for the gifts of tech­nol­ogy for communicating!

The upcom­ing events thing doesn’t have any­thing yet (and should), and will be incred­i­bly inter­est­ing. I think the cal­en­dar sys­tem is prob­a­bly still too counter-intuitive (it’s a Word­Press plu­gin designed to link to blog entries) so I prob­a­bly need to look at other options for that. There’s also a dis­tinct lack of media library aspects that could mean more work when graph­ics or other doc­u­ments need upload­ing, but we can address that in good time. By address, I mean change to a real con­tent man­age­ment sys­tem. Sigh, no-one but myself to blame, really.

Speak­ing of church web­sites, I found one in the Syd­ney Angli­can dio­cese that I actu­ally like! Shock, hor­ror! It belongs to St Peters Church Cooks River (located in St Peters the sub­urb, that is). I’d prob­a­bly make the nav­i­ga­tion square on the cor­ners and if I were to use anti-aliased text make it some­thing leg­i­ble, or just plain HTML nav, but other than that I quite like the feel of the site. The less I say about markup the bet­ter, I think. It’s all done with Dreamweaver tem­plates, which is an awe­some option I’d be tempted to embrace but for the cost which we really can’t afford for the flex­i­bil­ity it doesn’t give com­pared to a multi-user CMS. One other new web­site of note is Moore College’s recent update. Seman­ti­cally beau­ti­ful, solid design, okay CSS imple­men­ta­tion (it… really doesn’t work too well at higher res­o­lu­tions in Opera at least, I can’t be both­ered open­ing another browser right now)

Any­way. Ours is good for the minute. It’s get­ting bet­ter, promise. And we’ll have half-decent cre­atives for it some­time in the hopefully-not-too-distant future once the one or two graphic design­ers in our midst are politely roped into cre­at­ing such things :) I’d love to see more blog con­tent, pub­li­ca­tion of more mate­r­ial we pro­duce inter­nally (most recently is the sheet on “How to choose a good church”, but there are plenty of oth­ers), a high-quality kid’s/youth min­istry sec­tion (not just for youth — Dave Blowes is try­ing hard there with the JAM web­site — but for shar­ing what we’re doing with par­ents and childrens/youth pro­grammes at other churches), greater mul­ti­me­dia stuff (mostly for those who aren’t reg­u­lars at Matthias and want to see what we’re doing, but also for archival pur­poses), elec­tronic giv­ing to make that eas­ier, and online part­ner data­base that would effec­tively be a search­able church direc­tory (secured, obviously).

I’m just pray­ing we don’t slide down the slip­pery path into tech­nol­ogy depen­dence along the way, because it scares me so much. I’m not afraid of us turn­ing into a church that embraces tech­nol­ogy and uses it effec­tively and exten­sively: I’m afraid we’re going to wake up one day and will be play­ing a video that’s all about a pas­sage from scrip­ture instead of actu­ally read­ing the bible itself in a meet­ing. I’m not afraid of the power of media under God: I’m afraid we’ll see the power of media and slowly God could slip from the pic­ture as we think we can evoke a response using it with­out turn­ing to His word.

This is the sin­gle most dif­fi­cult thing for me about being involved with tech­nol­ogy imple­men­ta­tion in an Evan­gel­i­cal church in Syd­ney. We’re new to this stuff. The dif­fi­cult thing is that it hasn’t been done before (except in Pentacostal/‘charismatic’/AoG cir­cles, which are slightly dif­fer­ent — I won’t com­ment fur­ther for fear of say­ing any­thing divi­sive here), and even where it has been it’s not been done holis­ti­cally. Approach­ing media is approach­ing the world’s way of com­mu­ni­cat­ing, which is so decep­tive and shal­low and often ill-informed. The chal­lenges that face us are rel­a­tively new, though their essence is not. We must hold onto what we believe whilst try­ing to com­mu­ni­cate those beliefs as clearly and effec­tively as pos­si­ble — but our com­mu­ni­ca­tion is noth­ing with­out the growth pro­vided by God.

What then is Apol­los? What is Paul? Ser­vants through whom you believed, as the Lord assigned to each. I planted, Apol­los watered, but God gave the growth. So nei­ther he who plants nor he who waters is any­thing, but only God who gives the growth. He who plants and he who waters are one, and each will receive his wages accord­ing to his labor. For we are God’s fel­low work­ers. You are God’s field, God’s building.

1 Corinthi­ans 3:5 – 9

Plant­ing and water­ing can take the form of a DVD or a web­site or a ser­mon in MP3 for­mat as read­ily as it could a book or an evan­ge­lis­tic ser­mon: none of these things are any­thing with­out the growth pro­vided by God.

Something unpredictable…

[Or, mak­ing up for a dis­tinct absence of post­ing for var­i­ous rea­sons not to be dis­cussed but hope­fully rec­ti­fied — the con­tent absence, that is — by this post.]

Until about three weeks ago, I was con­vinced I was going to take a year off between fin­ish­ing school and start­ing uni to work full time. I’d roundly insulted a small web firm a cou­ple of weeks before leav­ing for New Zealand, re-building their site with CSS in about three hours (it wasn’t per­fect, but it was a decent effort) and going into their office to tell them their ver­sion sucked and mine was bet­ter. To date, the web­site in ques­tion hasn’t been ‘fixed’, as it were, but I got a call the day after I returned from New Zealand ask­ing if I was inter­ested in com­ing in for an inter­view. I’ve been work­ing four days a week there since.

Tori came back. We spent some time together, and I kind of realised that putting off Uni­ver­sity for another year wasn’t a bril­liant move, con­trary to what more than a hand­ful of… older peo­ple… had said. The main rea­son is prob­a­bly social (which I don’t ever talk about too much on here, I guess), but finan­cially it’s not… com­pelling… to stay any fur­ther away from the other side of Uni any longer than is nec­ces­sary, because “that side” means a job/career I’m inter­ested in as a longer-term option, hence finan­cial sta­bil­ity more so than in an indus­try I’m per­fectly inter­ested in pro­vided I get to do the things I like — and where I am presently for­tu­nate enough to be in a posi­tion where that’s pretty close to what I’m doing — and indif­fer­ent about it (the indus­try) oth­er­wise. Social/political infor­ma­tion the­ory notwith­stand­ing, because that’s an entirely sep­a­rate ket­tle of fish that relates both to my pre– and post– uni direc­tions. Which are, inci­den­tally, IT/connectivity/accessibility now, and edu­ca­tion later. Some­where in the mid­dle there’ll be (is?) a fusion of the two, which has been bandied about a lit­tle over the last 12 months. I had a very inter­est­ing con­ver­sa­tion RE: some­thing along these lines last night, which will hope­fully evolve into some­thing in the not-too dis­tant future!

So yes, as of Mon­day I’m offi­cially an Arts stu­dent at the Uni­ver­sity of Syd­ney. In a way I feel bad about this because I’d said to work that I was plan­ning on stick­ing around in a near-F/T capac­ity for a year (and at the time I had been), but at the same time this feels so much more… sen­si­ble? Plus every­one was mind-blowingly nice about it, even though I called on Sat­ur­day to say I’d be in late Mon­day because I had to enrol (because of when the offer had come in, and because I’d been putting off say­ing it the week before).

Any­way, in sum­mary: I’m work­ing nearly full time doing web devel­op­ment in an awe­some role where I get to do lots of CSS, semantic-web junk, usabil­ity work, and some occa­sional JavaScript (though mer­ci­fully not too much! Still learn­ing. If any­one else in Aus is inter­ested in get­ting a copy of Jeremy Keith’s allegedly-excellent “DOM Script­ing” book, let me know so we can order a few copies from Ama­zon and get cheaper ship­ping, because no-one in Aus­tralia is stock­ing copies for another month or three!). And as much or as lit­tle server-side work as I want. At the minute I’m unequiv­o­cally say­ing “lit­tle”, but that might change at some point, maybe. I’m going to uni, too. That doesn’t start until March, so I’m going to be work­ing ‘nor­mally’ up until then, and after that feel­ing my way accord­ing to timeta­bles, how much of a life I have, how broke I am, etcetera!

Tied into the whole work thing, my first to-be-promoted-on-TV web­site is going live some­time in the wee hours of Sun­day Mon­day, which is auda­ciously excit­ing. Not in the least because it will hope­fully attract insane amounts of traf­fic, and the CSS-is-good-for-your-bandwidth-costs argu­ment car­ries weight here!! It also fea­tures AJAX, chiefly for usability/bandwidth-saving rea­sons… but also because it’s just damn cool! Any­way, there will be posts, screen­shots, etcetera (prob­a­bly say­ing the same kind of thing I just said, only nam­ing names and with pretty pic­tures!) sched­uled for release here to co-incide with the site’s launch, so… watch this space.

As for Uni? Eng­lish, Phi­los­o­phy, Clas­sics and (Ancient) Greek are cur­rently on the menu. Greek… may be swapped out, pos­si­bly. For Lin­guis­tics or maybe Latin if any­thing, but pos­si­bly not. The rea­son­ing behind it — because I’ve attracted many strange looks as I tell peo­ple I’m plan­ning on study­ing Ancient Greek — is essentially:

  1. Learn­ing another lan­guage (any other lan­guage) helps me under­stand Eng­lish bet­ter. Doing Eng­lish, no-one will ever explain gram­mar and struc­ture of lan­guage to me. It sucks. Admit­tedly, Lin­guis­tics could prove to be use­ful in this depart­ment, too.
  2. Ancient Greek ties in with the Clas­sics courses I’m tak­ing. Don’t ask me to remem­ber what they are, or even look them up, because I don’t have a copy of my pref­er­ences (they took it, because their stu­pid com­put­ers were stu­pidly bro­ken. I’m so glad I’m not study­ing IT!) and it’s not avail­able online yet and I’m just lazy. And try­ing to get this mas­sive post fin­ished so I can get back to hav­ing a life, or something.
  3. The New Tes­ta­ment is writ­ten in Greek. As Kris­ten so elo­quently expressed it last night:

    You can be one of those peo­ple at Bible stud­ies who go “Well, the greek word for that actu­ally means ‘this is ambiguous…’”

    Heh. Marcelo coughed some­thing that sounded sus­pi­ciously like “Moore Col­lege” (a Syd­ney Bible col­lege) when he found out, but that’s not really what I had in mind choos­ing it… maybe, though!

Any­way. The blog has nearly caught up to me. Almost. There’s a bunch of other stuff hap­pen­ing, but this is the glut of stuff I needed to write at some point and had been putting off!