'I'd been a policeman for 17 years,' says Garry Hamilton, 'a detective
sergeant for 12 or 13 of those years. I'd become very emotionless. I could
go to rapes, murders, serious crimes, and I didn't bat an eyelid. It didn't
concern me. But the Alpha course introduced me to a love for Christ. I
discovered why I had joined the police force in the first place
because I have a compassion for other people. It was a fabulous experience.'
Garry, 38, from Fremantle, Western Australia, has none of the gruff demeanour
you might expect from a long-time detectivefrom the first words
you feel you're connecting with the heart. Yet he openly admits this is
only a recent thing, and tells how God has changed him in his six months
as a Christian.
'I felt very stressed inside me,' he says. 'Some police will have a bit
of a drink, and I suppose they use that as an unwinding toolbut
I found my personal relationships were tense as well. I couldn't do anything
to relax and unwind. It culminated on one occasion when I punched a wall
in my house and actually broke a bone in my hand.
Garry enrolled in Alpha at Perth Christian Life Centre, Canning Vale.
'As I progressed through the Alpha course it dawned on me that I was receiving
the fruits of the Holy Spirit, and it was almost like a weight being lifted
off me. I could feel myself relaxing. I found myself more at peace within
myself. My family relationships have improved tremendously.'
Garry is one of many people world-wide whose lives have been turned around
through Alpha. Since its beginnings in the mid-1970s at a London Anglican
church, Alpha has spread to some 110 countries. In Australia there is
an Alpha national office in Hunters Hill, Sydney, run by national director
Mona Carter.
Non-threatening
'I've been involved in evangelism since I was a teenager,' says Mona.
This, she will allow, is over 30 years. 'I've done open air meetings,
"explosion evangelism," door-knocks
and I've never come
across one evangelistic tool that has gone across the world and the denominations
in a way this haswhich speaks to me that God's got hold of it.'
The essence of the Alpha course is to maintain a non-threatening environment.
Run by local churches, it is aimed at anyone who wants to know more about
Christianity, but is wary of being pressured. The course runs as a group
that meets weeklyusually away from the church in a home or community
centreto learn about and discuss all aspects of Christianity. It
encourages questionsindeed, its now-familiar logo is a man staggering
under the burden of a life-sized question mark.
'I remember one guy saying he just couldn't get over the fact he was able
to do the course without being judged,' says Mona. 'And I think that speaks
heaps. There are people who have grown up in the church who for the first
time have felt they can ask questions. It filled in the gaps where they
haven't felt they could ask questions before.'
The spread of Alpha is all the more remarkable in that it was, until 1993,
confined to one London church: Holy Trinity in Brompton, an Anglican church
known as 'HTB' in the Alpha world. Originally designed as a four-week
orientation course for new Christians in the church, by the early 1990s
it was attracting a significant number of non-Christians. The potential
of this was realised, and the format changed accordingly. In 1993 HTB
invited other churches to a conference explaining the courseand
attracted 1000 ministers from all over the UK. It was the start of what
Time magazine recently called the 'Alpha miracle,' a phenomenon
that now circles the globe.
Nicky Gumbel, who has run Alpha from HTB since 1990, said in a recent
Australian press conference, 'We feel like observers, really, because
we're just watching something astonishing happening.'
Universal appeal
The first question when Alpha goes into a new country, Gumbel says, is
how it should be adapted to that country's needs. The answer that has
come back in almost every case is: don't adapt it at all. 'That has been
what's happened pretty well in each country,' says Gumbel. 'In Zimbabwe?
We'll run it exactly as it is. And again in Moscow they run it in exactly
the same way, they haven't changed it one bit. Same through the denominations.'
So what gives this format its universal appeal? 'I think there are a lot
of people out there who do not go to church and wouldn't call themselves
Christians, but who, at some point in their life
are struggling
with the issue of meaning,' says Gumbel. 'What is the meaning of my life?
What's the purpose? What's the point? What happens when I die?
So
it's obviously in a Christian context, but it's the opportunity to explore
those questions where it's very unpressurised, very low-key
all
we're concerned to do is give people that opportunity. What they make
of it is entirely up to them, and there's no pressure to decide one way
or the other.'
Cherrybrook Baptist Church in Sydney, which Mona Carter attends, was one
of the first churches in Australia to introduce Alpha. Firstly, in 1994,
they trained the church leaders in the Alpha course, and from the start
it had, she says, the touch of God on it; 'Then, because of what was happening
in our church, there were other churches around about that wanted to know
more, and that's really how it spread.'
Unlocking Emotion
In 1982 a weekend away was introduced into the course. It concentrated
on the person and work of the Holy Spirit, and, according to Nicky Gumbel,
it changed the nature of Alpha. Participants agree (see sidebar). For
Garry Hamilton, 'It was a fabulous experience. It just had so much meaning
for me on that weekend away. It was really the high point of the course,
and I think it was that weekend away that really reinforced my coming
to God.'
Garry's wife Jacqui has also accepted Christ and done the course, and
they are bringing up their three children as Christians. In talking about
the time before his salvation, Garry really does seem to be talking about
a former life.
'I mentioned that being a policeman for 17 years I felt hard and cynical,'
he says. 'The Alpha course seemed to reinforce that I have a compassion
for people
Since I stepped through the doors of the church I've
unlocked so much emotion that at times I just can't stop crying, and I've
got absolutely no idea why I've become so emotional. It's not through
any crisis in my life, or hardship. I think when the tears flow, it's
tears of happinessthat's the best way I can describe it. That's
an experience that's blown me away a little bit, and I've had to come
to grips with it because it's just so foreign to me.'
Copyright: Copyright (c) 1996-2005 Michael Fackerell · · Generator: TopicTree 0.8 · Generated: 03 Dec 2008, 06:38 pm AEST · Last modified: 2005-05-22 08:08:02 · 65 ms · Ancient heavenly connection
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