Showing posts with label Christ Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christ Church. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 August 2019

25 August




Sunday 25th August 2019 marks the 150th Anniversary of the laying of the Christ Church Lavender Bay Foundation Stone. This is the church where I will be getting married at in two weeks’ time. The day began by re-enacting the steamer journey taken by clergy, government representatives, and community members on the 25th August 1869, who crossed the harbour from the Sydney side to Lavender Bay, then ascended the newly constructed steps up to the site of the new church building. However, I did not join the ferry journey because I get motion sickness on boats. I brought my friend along to join their celebration service.  



Although this is a day of celebration for Christ Church Lavender Bay, this was a day of lamentations in Taiwan 29 years ago, where the biggest boat disaster in Taiwan’s history occurred in the Sun Moon Lake.

Nicknamed the “heart of Taiwan”, the Sun Moon Lake is located at the geographic centre of Taiwan.

George Candidius (Chinese: 干治士; pinyin: Gān Zhìshì) (1597, Kirchardt, Palatinate – 30 April 1647, Batavia, Dutch East Indies), also recorded as Georgius Candidius, was a Dutch Reformed Church missionary to Dutch Formosa from 1627 to 1637. He was the first missionary to be stationed on the island. Sun-Moon Lake in central Taiwan was named Lake Candidius in his honour and is referred to thus in older English writings, although this name was not adopted by the local inhabitants and later fell into disuse.

Lalu island is a small island in Sun Moon Lake. The island used to be much bigger, separating the lake into a part shaped like crescent moon and another part shaped like a round sun. When the island was still bigger, people used to live on it. Two events decreased the size of the island. First, construction of a dam in the 1930s raised the water level in the lake and thereby flooded almost the entire the island. In 1999 the island shrank again during the 921 earthquake which also destroyed the pavilion.

The indigenous people believed the island to be the resting place of their ancestors' spirits and called the island "wulalaluwan". "Lalu" is the abbreviation of this name. It means "the holy island in the heart". It used to house an "old man under the moon" temple, which was relocated after the 921 earthquake because the island was sinking to the point where people cannot board the island to worship this idol.

Regarding the boat disaster on 25August, 1990, it was an overloaded and unlicensed pleasure boat chartered by the Shell Oil Co. and carrying 88 vacationers. The boat capsized right after they worshipped the “old man under the moon.” More about that incident here:

My father’s first long distance trip was the Sun Moon Lake. My grandfather took him there when he was 4 years old. Relatives said he was especially unsettled that day and cried nonstop. I’ve been to the Sun Moon Lake twice in 2015: One time was when my paternal grandmother passed away and I went back to Taiwan and didn’t know where to go. The second time was a round island tour with my maternal grandma, and the Sun Moon Lake happened to be the first attraction site of the tour. During that round island tour, I also did a marching prayer. Four years have passed in a flash and the Taiwan presidential election is coming up again.

In 2017 Christmas break, I visited Taiwan and our family hired a van and van driver to take us to Yi-Lan. The driver mentioned that he was in the Sun Moon Lake for work during the time of the boat disaster. People were celebrating the birthday of a god that that time, and they had a big fast in that whole region. All the hotels had gone vegan, except the hotel where the Shell employees lived! This form of idol worship still happens once in a while at the Sun Moon Lake region, with the most recent one being in 2017.

In 1990, a seven year old kid was stuck in that boat cabin for three hours. Just before the water filled the whole cabin, his father prayed with him, and the kid suddenly got flushed out of a hole in the boat and got saved in a miraculous fashion. I will be getting married to that person in two weeks’ time.

The Sun Moon Lake Church of Christ, a church built by Chiang Kai-Shek for his personal use, which subsequently became a tourist attraction spot, have just commenced Sunday services in August 2019. Now a functional church with active worship and prayers, it is hoped that tourists will encounter the presence of God at the Sun Moon Lake.




Food for thought:




Friday, 6 July 2018

Israel 2018 Day 2, 5July




Room of the last supper.









David’s Tomb.







Christ Church: the oldest Protestant church in the Middle East, and takes the Middle Eastern cultural context into account when they evangelise. The founders of this Anglican church were very humble and said they are the branches of the Olive tree (Romans 11). They even avoid using crosses: Jews hate to see the cross anywhere, even those on the ambulance, and many say that if they see the cross when they’re sick, they’d get sicker. So the ambulances in Israel has David’s star as its symbol. The Jews hate the symbol of the cross so much they write it with an inverted T.










Tower of David museum: getting to know Israel’s history.








Hurva Synagogue: where the Orthodox Jews gather.




















The Temple Institute: They’re so keen about the rebuilding of the third temple that they even made a video showing how the third temple will look like.







Roman Street archaeological site: We looked at the Madaba Map (replica). I took a photo with the a painting of the Roman street on the left hand side, with the camel licking my hand (in 2015 I took the photo on the right hand side with the donkey licking my hand).







This is the day when I realised that although it was hot when I visited in Israel during September, it gets way hotter in July! And my skin became so dry it started getting bumpy and peeling!