Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief

Saturday, 28 March 2026

International Times: Letting go of the hatred that poisons our world

My latest review for International Times is on Joseph Arthur's recent gig in London:

'Highlights from a stellar set included ‘No Weapon’, based on the freedom that is found through forgiveness – ‘faith is hard but the only solution in a world full of spiritual pollution’; ‘Nobody’s War’ – ‘Nobody here wants your war’ and ‘More money, more death, more greed, makes the children bleed’; as well as the raucous singing of a Ho’oponopono mantra together with the crowd during the encore – ‘I love you, I’m sorry, Please forgive me, And thank you’.'

For more on Joseph Arthur see here.

My earlier pieces for IT are: an interview with the artist Alexander de Cadenet; an interview with artist, poet, priest Spencer Reece, an interview with the poet Chris Emery, an interview with Jago Cooper, Director of the the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, a profile of singer-songwriter Bill Fay, plus reviews of: Threads of LIfe and Heart to HeartU2's 'Days of Ash', Mumford and Sons' 'Prizefighter' and Moby's 'Future Quiet'; 'Collected Poems' by Kevin Crossley-Holland; 'Lux' by RosalĂ­a; 'Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere'; 'Great Art Explained' by James Payne; 'Down River: In Search of David Ackles' by Mark Brend; 'Headwater' by Rev Simpkins; 'The Invisibility of Religion in Contemporary Art' by Jonathan A. Anderson; 'Breaking Lines' at the Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, albums by Deacon Blue, Mumford and Sons, and Andrew Rumsey, also by Joy Oladokun and Michael Kiwanaku; 'Nolan's Africa' by Andrew Turley; Mavis Staples in concert at Union Chapel; T Bone Burnett's 'The Other Side' and Peter Case live in Leytonstone; Helaine Blumenfeld's 'Together' exhibition, 'What Is and Might Be and then Otherwise' by David Miller; 'Giacometti in Paris' by Michael Peppiatt, the first Pissabed Prophet album; and 'Religion and Contemporary Art: A Curious Accord', a book which derives from a 2017 symposium organised by the Association of Scholars of Christianity in the History of Art.

Several of my short stories have been published by IT including three about Nicola Ravenscroft's EarthAngel sculptures (then called mudcubs), which we exhibited at St Andrew's Wickford in 2022. The first story in the series is 'The Mudcubs and the O Zone holes'. The second is 'The Mudcubs and the Clean-Up King', and the third is 'The mudcubs and the Wall'. My other short stories to have been published by International Times are 'The Black Rain', a story about the impact of violence in our media, 'The New Dark Ages', a story about principles and understandings that are gradually fading away from our modern societies, and 'The curious glasses', a story based on the butterfly effect.

IT have also published several of my poems, including 'The ABC of creativity', which covers attention, beginning and creation, and 'The Edge of Chaos', a state of existence poem. Also published have been three poems from my 'Five Trios' series. 'Barking' is about St Margaret’s Barking and Barking Abbey and draws on my time as a curate at St Margaret's. 'Bradwell' is a celebration of the history of the Chapel of St Peter-on-the-Wall, the Othona Community, and of pilgrimage to those places. Broomfield in Essex became a village of artists following the arrival of Revd John Rutherford in 1930. His daughter, the artist Rosemary Rutherford, also moved with them and made the vicarage a base for her artwork including paintings and stained glass. Then, Gwynneth Holt and Thomas Bayliss Huxley-Jones moved to Broomfield in 1949 where they shared a large studio in their garden and both achieved high personal success. 'Broomfield' reviews their stories, work, legacy and motivations.

To read my poems published by Stride, click here, here, here, here, here, and here. My poems published in Amethyst Review are: 'Runwell', 'Are/Are Not', 'Attend, attend' and 'Maritain, Green, Beckett and Anderson in conversation down through the ages'.

I am among those whose poetry has been included in Thin Places & Sacred Spaces, a recent anthology from Amethyst Press. I also had a poem included in All Shall Be Well: Poems for Julian of Norwich, the first Amethyst Press anthology of new poems.

'Five Trios' is a series of poems on thin places and sacred spaces in the Diocese of Chelmsford. The five poems in the series are:
These poems have been published by Amethyst Review and International Times.

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Joseph Arthur - In The Sun.

Friday, 27 March 2026

Unveiled, Exhibition, Quiet Day and other events











Unveiled is a regular Friday night arts and performance event
at St Andrew’s Church, 7.00 – 9.00 pm
11 London Road, Wickford, Essex SS12 0AN

See below and above for our Summer programme
and http://wickfordandrunwellparish.org.uk/whats-on.html
for more information

Exhibitions, open mic nights, performances, talks and more!

Unveiled – a wide range of artist and performers from Essex and wider, including Open Mic nights (come and have a go!).

Unveiled – view our hidden painting by acclaimed artist David Folley, plus a range of other exhibitions.

Summer Programme 2026

11 April (7.00 pm) – Poetry reading. Spencer Reece is Rector of St Paul’s Episcopal Church, Wickford, Rhode Island. Hear this internationally acclaimed poet read poems from his future collection Farewell Symphony.

24 April (7.00 pm) – Exhibition viewing evening. View our new exhibition ‘Light in the Darkness’ and hear artist Tracey Walker speak about her work.

8 May (7.30 pm) – An Evening with the Brandy Hole Sea Shantymen. An evening of sea shanties. All welcome! Includes an auction of art and music items.

22 May (7.00 pm) – Showing of ‘Voices Beyond the Wall: 12 Love Poems from the Murder Capital of the World’. An award-winning film on Fr Spencer Reece’s project teaching poetry to abandoned girls at the Our Little Roses orphanage in San Pedro Sula, Honduras.

5 June (7.30 pm) – Open Mic Night organised with John Rogers. Everybody is welcome to come along and play, read, sing or just spectate. See you there for a great evening of live performance!

19 June (7.00 pm) – An evening with the Ladygate Scribblers. Hear poetry and prose from a long-established Wickford-based writers’ group.

3 July (7.30 pm) – Tim Almond in concert. Around the World in 60 minutes... a musical journey meeting people from Ecuador to the Philippines, inspired by three decades work and travel in Africa, Asia and South America.

17 July (7.00 pm) – Art talk: Churches and cultural programming. Jonathan Evens speaks about a range of ways in which churches can engage with culture.

These events do not require tickets (just turn up on the night). There will be a retiring collection to cover artist and church costs. See http://wickfordandrunwellparish.org.uk/whats-on.html for fuller information.


Also find above details of the next art exhibition to be held at St Andrew's Church in Wickford. ‘Light in the Darkness’ is an exhibition by Tracey Walker from 8 April – 17 July 2026.

Tracey Walker

From a traditional art background, through a long career in commercial art, Tracey now finds freedom in her artistic practice, allowing her to express her joyful, spiritual creativity.

She loves to explore themes of light, faith and hope in her paintings, using colour, form and texture to evoke emotions and create atmospheres, drawing the onlookers into a bright and beautiful world.

She is passionate about encouraging people to explore their own creativity through a variety of art groups and workshops.

A member of Chelsea Arts Club and Artists at the Meadows, she exhibits and sells her work throughout the UK and internationally.

www.tawalker.com
IG: tawalker_art
FB: Tracey Walker Art


We are also fortunate to have a visit in this period from internationally known and prize-winning poet Spencer Reece. Fr Spencer is Rector of St Paul’s Episcopal Church in Wickford, Rhode Island, and an internationally acclaimed poet. His project teaching poetry to abandoned girls at the Our Little Roses orphanage in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, was made into an award-winning film, Voices Beyond the Wall: 12 Love Poems from the Murder Capital of the World. His dream, prayer, and ultimate goal for his time with St. Paul’s Church is to continue the ongoing work of the parish in spreading Jesus’ radical love. “Let kindness be our legacy,” he has said.

http://wickfordandrunwellparish.org.uk/
https://www.stpaulswickford.org/
https://www.spencerreece.org/

Meet Fr Spencer at:

8 April – Midweek Eucharist, 10.30 am, St Andrew’s Wickford

8 April – Bread for the World Service, 6.30 pm, St Martin-in-the-Fields, London (Fr Spencer will share a reflection on the road to Emmaus)

9 April – ‘The Broken Altar’, a talk on George Herbert, 7.00 pm, St Andrew’s Lower Bemerton (Fr Spencer is giving this talk at the invitation of the George Herbert in Bemerton group - https://www.georgeherbert.org.uk/about/ghb_group.html)

10 April – Unveiled: Poetry Reading, 7.00 pm, St Andrew’s Wickford

11 April – Quiet Day: Poetry & Prayer, 10.30 am - 3.30 pm, St Mary’s Runwell (Fr Spencer will share poems and reflections on George Herbert)

12 April – Eucharist, 9.30 am, St Mary’s Runwell and Eucharist, 11.00 am, St Catherine’s Wickford (Fr Spencer will preach at both of these services); 4.00 pm, Showing of Voices Beyond the Wall, St Andrew’s Wickford

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Poetry Holds Us Together with Spencer Reece.

Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Case Study: Churches and cultural programming









The connections nurtured between contemporary art, spirituality and faith by churches are often of a one-off or temporary nature – an exhibition, an installation, a residency – rather than a sustained programme integrated into other aspects of that church’s mission and ministry. Where such programmes do exist, they tend to be in larger churches or cathedrals, where greater resources can be found, than in local parish churches.

In over 20 years of ordained ministry in the Church of England, I have sought to build longer-term programmes in each of the four parishes where I have ministered. In each parish, I have used a different combination of cultural programming in each Parish because of the different contexts and the range of resource available to me. Along the way, I also encountered and used the 4 Cs model of mission (culture, compassion, commerce, congregation) that provides an effective means to review and create integrated approaches to mission and ministry which include cultural programmes.

In this case study, I briefly review the programmes set up in each Parish, including several with smaller congregations and available resources, and draw out key learning from each initiative.

Regeneration initiatives

My curacy was served at St Margaret’s church in Barking, East London, which was set alongside the ruins of Barking Abbey at the cultural end of the town in a deprived multicultural borough undergoing regeneration. The key initiative here was to engage with the public arts programme of the local authority which was accompanying the wider regeneration initiatives within the borough.

Three different projects included: an art workshop for young people creating designs for vitreous enamels by Dale Devereux Barker located in Barking Town Centre (Making Barking Brilliant); interviews of older church members for a film (RE:Generation) by Michael Cousin that was premiered at the church alongside an exhibition of archive and contemporary photographs showing change and continuity in the area; and film of the church environment and congregation members that was projected onto its clear glass windows by visual jockeys SDNA (Abbey Happy), as part of a wider projection installation (Love and Light) which highlighted the key heritage buildings in the town.

These engagements were made possible because the local authority needed community groups able to provide access to hard-to-reach communities in the area. Churches in the UK are often a key gathering place for a diverse range of the local community, both for worship and because facilities are hired out to other community groups. As a result, we were able to offer the local authority access to a diverse range of people in the local community, including those they found harder to engage in the Arts. The benefits for our congregation included involvement in an interesting range of Arts activities which drew specifically on the diversity of our congregation and the sustainability over time of our ministry.

Other cultural initiatives which also connected to the diversity and heritage of our church included: commission - a painting by Alan Stewart of a black Christ offering breakfast to a multicultural group of disciples (Early in the Morning) to counter-balance the images of white Biblical figures and saints found elsewhere within the building; concerts – utilising the talents of those in the congregation and community including South African concert pianist Manuel Villet, Nigerian juju singer Jide Chord, and Nigerian oboist Althea Ifeka; exhibition – loans to ‘George Jack (1855 - 1931) Architect & Designer-Craftsman’, an exhibition at the William Morris Gallery; gifts - an art book made by George Emmerson, a local artist, depicting the church and its environs and an icon of ‘Christ blessing the children’ by Kjellaug Nordsjö, a Scandinavian iconographer, from our Swedish partner church for our Youth Chapel; and Workshops – workshops for young people in Fashion and Graffiti art, as part of the SOULINTHECITY mission, included creation of a mural by graffiti artist AKS that included the words ‘one’, ‘heart’, ‘soul’, ‘unity’, ‘community’ and ‘together’.

These initiatives drew people from outside our congregations to the church while encouraging people of all ages within our congregation to see themselves as affirmed and valued through the imagery and activities of the church.

Art trails and festivals

My first incumbency was at St John’s Church in Seven Kings, East London, in a multicultural suburban residential area. The key initiative here was to connect artists and churches to maximise the impact of existing and new art.

Churches locally, and more widely in the Episcopal Area, had interesting examples of art which had been previously commissioned but which were not publicised or viewed to any great extent. St John’s had a recently installed East Window by Derek Hunt, as well as other stained glass by the Kempe and Whitefriars Studios. To create wider awareness, encourage visits, and organise additional activities (such as art workshops, exhibitions, guided tours, open days, and sponsored walks), art trails were created firstly for the local churches and then for the Episcopal Area. Leaflets and website pages for the trails described the artworks able to be viewed at each church on the trail, together with contact/opening information and maps showing locations. We drew on a combination of paid and volunteer researchers to find the artworks that were included and to write about them and the artists who made them.

The basis for the Art trails was that people would be unlikely to travel to view one or two artworks in one church but would be more likely to travel if they could see a range of interesting artworks in different churches in the course of a day’s or half day’s visit. This proved to be the case with people attended the organised activities linked to the trails or visiting on an individual basis and, over time, visiting all the churches on the trails.

I was also involved in linking churches together to create Art Festivals that opened church buildings for a range of Arts events and drew people from outside church congregations to those events. The fundamental insight for this initiative was that, if each church in a defined locality organised one or two Arts initiatives in a defined time period, an Arts Festival would be created without any one church having to do a large amount of organisation. If those events could also be organised within the time period of an annual locally run Arts Festival, so much the better in terms of marketing, publicity, and community awareness.

At this time, I was also involved in setting up and running an artist’s collective called commission4mission, the members of which were artists interested in undertaking commissions for churches. Their work was publicised through newsletters, exhibitions, and art talks. 13 commissions were undertaken over an 11-year period and exhibitions held at locations including Chelmsford Cathedral, Coventry Cathedral, Norwich Cathedral, St Martin-in-the-Fields, and Methodist Central Hall Westminster.

Asset-based community development commends looking for resources in the local area and this is particularly important and effective for smaller churches with more limited resources. Identifying how churches can work together and who and what is available outside the church congregation in the wider community can be key to setting up effective and wide-ranging cultural programmes. My experience in Seven Kings clearly demonstrated the value of these approaches.

Participatory initiatives and the 4 C’s

St Martin-in-the-Fields is a large, significant church located at the heart of the UK’s capital city, with a history of innovation in regard to the 4 Cs of culture, compassion, commerce, and congregation. I joined the clergy team at St Martin’s in order to develop their wider partnerships with other churches by setting up and running a network of churches called HeartEdge, which sought to share the 4 Cs as an encouragement to churches to be at the heart of their local communities while being with those on the edge and facing marginalisation. Within the St Martin’s congregation, I also had a role in working with artists and craftspeople.

St Martin’s has a reputation as a church that has effectively and creatively commissioned contemporary artists, such as Shirazeh Houshiary (East Window), to create new work for the church building and its environs. However, through meeting many artists in the congregation after my arrival, it became apparent that the major programme of aspirational commissioning of artists from outside the congregation had left artists in the congregation feeling under-valued. What was needed, as a balance, was a participatory programme led by the congregation’s artists. Following consultation with artists and craftspeople themselves, a programme including a monthly drawing group, seasonal contemplative art workshops, a monthly display of work by the artists on a rota basis, and an annual exhibition was introduced and generated significant energy and involvement from artists and craftspeople whilst adding significantly to the contemplative and educative offerings available to the congregation as a whole.

A community art initiative led by the artist Anna Sikorska provides an excellent example of participatory art that helped the congregation and community at St Martin-in-the-Fields reflect on themes of light seen through fallibility and flaws as inspired by 2 Corinthians 4.6-12. Sikorska’s installation was set in the Light Well of St Martin’s during November and December 2017 and was the culmination of a community art project in which individuals from across St Martin’s – church congregation, Chinese community, clergy, staff and members of the International Group – gathered together over time and tables of clay to carefully form the porcelain lanterns which filled the Light Well for the installation. Each of these porcelain lanterns was filled with light from a simple string of light bulbs.

These cracked translucent lanterns lit from within were a visible realisation of St Paul’s image of light in clay jars. By linking the lanterns together, this installation also showed that it is as we come together, linked, like the lanterns, by the light of Christ that we become the Body of Christ. This installation and community art project enabled reflection on the understanding that there are fractures and flaws running through each of our lives and these imperfections actually enable the light of Christ within to be seen more clearly. Our vulnerabilities are, therefore, the most precious aspect of our lives; of more significance than a confident pride in ourselves that will not acknowledge weakness.

Having observed such initiatives in practice and the ways in which they brought energy to the congregation, Revd Dr Sam Wells, Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields suggested the following threefold approach to use of the Arts by churches:

‘A congregation may encourage art on three levels. One is the participatory: a local church may host an artists’ and craftspeoples’ group; it may take participants of all abilities; there’s no reason why it can’t host members of all faiths and none; perhaps each month a member of the group may be invited to exhibit their work in a valued and visible place, and be given the opportunity to write or speak about it. Another is the aspirational: a competition might be held for an artefact to be placed permanently in the church building, tenders invited, donors sought, publicity encouraged, visitors attracted. Similar approaches might apply for temporary art installations. A third level is the commercial. A church building might be a suitable venue for a display and sale of artworks; yet another host of new faces drawn in, conversations triggered, relationships made; and the church perhaps taking a 20% cut of all piece sold. In a short time a secluded, secretive space may be opened out to become a centre of community activity, energy, and creativity.’[i]

In these ways, the participatory initiatives at St Martin’s brought new energy to congregational life while also providing an example of the 4 Cs in practice and enabled the identification of new models within the culture strand.

A cultural and heritage centre

My current Parish is that of Wickford and Runwell within the Diocese of Chelmsford and in the southern part of the county of Essex. Wickford is an expanding market town in rural Essex and Runwell is a village on the northern edge of the town which development is now incorporating into the town itself. The rapid growth of Wickford means that it has not fully embraced its new identity and does not have all of the facilities in its town centre that would be expected in a town of its current size.

Through use of the 4 Cs model of mission to review missional activity within the Parish and opportunities latent within the community, we identified that Wickford did not have a cultural and heritage in the town centre, that the only public buildings which could house such a centre were the churches, and that St Andrew’s Church was of a sufficient size and suitability to be developed as a cultural and heritage centre, while also remaining as a church.

We began exploring this possibility by sharing the idea with creatives locally and then by setting up an initial programme of culture and heritage. This involves regular art exhibitions and heritage displays combined with a fortnightly arts and performance evening that has included art talks, concerts, dance performances, exhibition viewings, heritage talks, open mic nights, and readings of poetry and prose. We have also organised concerts and workshops outside of this basic programme, including working with schools to hold art workshops for pupils based on our exhibitions.

We have worked with local artists and groups, while also bringing in creatives from further afield. In this way, we are seeking to be both aspirational and participatory in our practice. Our programming has supported local creatives in developing their careers and practice whilst also bringing people into our building who would not have attended our services.

More recently we obtained government funding for a feasibility study to explore how best to scale up the development of St Andrew’s as a cultural and heritage centre. The feasibility study involved considerable community consultation combined with assessment of government arts funding and options for the structuring of the project’s governance. Following the recommendations of this study we are setting up an Advisory Group formed of local creatives, expanding our partnerships including working with the local Business Improvement District on a community cinema initiative, and formulating plans for a grassroots music venue initiative.

This supports our wider vision of connecting effectively with the wider community by increasing the range of entry points to the building and congregation while improving the sustainability of both through commercial hire of our spaces.

Learning lessons

My engagement with congregations and the wider community through the Arts in the context of faith has involved community engagement, partnership working, creation of inclusive images, explorations of current social issues, attractional events, and pilgrimage style trails. These have drawn new groups to churches and have enabled other agencies to engage with diverse congregations. Art trails, in particular, have provided a marvellous way to encourage visitors to engage with the diversity of art found in many churches, and open to all the spirituality inherent in such art.

Cultural programming needs to be organised with the input and ideas of creatives. It needs to engage with the wider ministry initiatives and topics of the church whilst also being open to what God is doing amongst the community of creatives more widely. Identifying how churches can work together and who and what is available outside the church congregation in the wider community is key to setting up effective and wide-ranging cultural programmes. In this respect, partnership working with others such as other churches, the local authority, national and local Trusts or grant funders, Arts groups, and others, is vital.

As each context is different, time must be spent initially in community/congregational consultation and through use of frameworks such as the 4 Cs to identify the opportunities that exist within the Parish. Such consultation will also often identify several creatives willing to become involved in the development of new initiatives. In his writing on culture, Sam Wells has used the metaphor of churches as estuary space; a metaphor that derives from the artist Makoto Fujimura and which describes ‘a transitional place where cross-fertilisation can take place and creativity can thrive amid diverse conversation partners’.[ii] This, even more than the bringing to church of new people who might not otherwise attend, is where the true missional activity stimulated by culture takes place. The Arts open up conversations about fundamental aspects of life and belief.

A visitor to an exhibition I organised noted that the exhibition was extraordinarily broad-minded, human and thought-provoking and that churches are extraordinary places for such exhibitions to be held. It is the thought-provoking nature of these interactions which open the already religious to the wonder of art and the non-religious to the possibility of faith.

As such, while each of the examples included in this case study is different due to the differing contexts of each Parish, taken together they demonstrate the value of including culture within a balanced approach to mission as advocated by the 4 Cs model of mission.


Further information:
Books:

S. Wells, ‘A Future That's Bigger Than The Past: Towards the renewal of the Church’, Canterbury Press, 2019

S. Wells ed., ‘Finding Abundance in Scarcity: Steps Towards Church Transformation A HeartEdge Handbook’, Canterbury Press, 2021

References:

[i] S. Wells, ‘A Future That's Bigger Than The Past: Towards the renewal of the Church’, Canterbury Press, 2019, pp.66-67.

[ii] Ibid, p.66.

Images:
  • Graffiti artist AKS with the SOULINTHECITY mural in Barking
  • 'Early in the Morning' by Alan Stewart in the Youth Chapel at St Margaret's Barking
  • Cover of Art Trail leaflet for the Barking Episcopal Area
  • Installation view of Anna Sikorska's 'Light the Well' project at St Martin-in-the-Fields
  • Installation view of Anna Sikorska's 'Light the Well' project at St Martin-in-the-Fields
  • Concert by Rev Simpkins & the Phantom Notes at St Andrew's Wickford
  • Performance by Infusion Physical Theatre at St Andrew's Wickford. Exhibition by Runwell Art Club
  • Exhibition viewing evening at St Andrew's Wickford for 'Adventures in Joy' by Max Blake
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Rev Simpkins - John Henry's Prayer.

A moment in which eternity touches time

Here's the reflection that I shared at St Andrew's Wickford this morning:

Malcolm Guite writes that ‘the Annunciation, the visit of Gabriel to the blessed virgin Mary, is that mysterious moment of awareness, assent and transformation in which eternity touches time.’ As we reflect on this mystery, through meditations and poems I have written, let us think ‘about vision, what we allow ourselves to be aware of, and also about freedom, the way all things turn on our discernment and freedom.’


Angelic announcement of peace and goodwill
come in the form of the child found
by night workers, swaddled and lying in a manger.
His mother ponders these things -
annunciation, nativity, incarnation - in her heart.


Bethlehem begins.
Here, human hands hold God for the first time.
Here, God is fed from a human breast for the first time.
Here, God is struck on the back,
takes his first breath, utters his first cry.
Here, heaven and earth are rejoined.
Here, humanity is taken into the Godhead.
Here, God becomes vulnerable.
Here, God experiences created life.
Here, God enters his creation.
Here, God moves into our neighbourhood,
Becomes one with human beings.

In a place of forced migration,
Where no room could be found
For a pregnant woman
whose baby was not the child of her betrothed,
In less than ideal circumstances
Here begins peace on earth
Goodwill to all.
Salvation is birthed and named
The King of the Jews is sought and found,
The Messiah is recognised and praised.

Here the dividing wall
Between Jew and Gentile,
Male and female, slave and free,
Begins to be removed.
Here begins salvation, redemption,
Restoration for one and all.
Reconciliation between
the human and divine.


You have come to us wordless Word, flesh of our flesh,
as a small child, with no words but a hungry cry,
the Word that made humanity
crying for a mother’s breast;
gravity making creativity become a child
that can be dropped and left unfed.
This is the greatest of all gifts,
the gift of eternal vulnerable love;
the infinite clings with tiny arms to a mother's neck.
Caress us now with your tiny hands,
embrace us with your tiny arms
and pierce our hearts with your soft, sweet cries.

Let us run to Mary, and, as little children,
cast ourselves into her arms with a perfect confidence.
Let us watch the baby Jesus sweetly sucking
the sweet breasts of his glorious Mother,
laying his hand upon his Mother's bosom,
looking up and smiling at her all joyous and full of rapture,
as she holds him, her Lord,
at once so great and so little, in her arms;
kissing over and over again her little infant.
Blessed is that mouth, blessed are her kisses.
Let us calm and quiet ourselves,
like weaned children with their mother;
like a weaned child, to be content in the God
who desires to gather her children
as, under her wings, a hen gathers her brood.


Guite writes of Mary as: ‘a woman who, like so many others then as now, bore the appalling consequences of decisions made by men of power. She fled with her child as a refugee, she saw her son wrongfully arrested, beaten, and mocked by the occupying military force and then tortured to death on a public cross, in what was intended by the Romans to be shameful humiliation, but has, in fact, become the revelation of the full extent of God’s Love.

So, I find myself drawn again to the compassionate figure of Mary, not just in empathy with her own sufferings, direct and vicarious, but also because I believe that her compassion, the compassion so perfectly sculpted in Michelangelo’s PietĂ , continues in and from heaven: that the compassion of Mary the Mother of God is still a force for good in the world.

As I think of the soldiers who call for her protection or cry out for her pity, on both sides of the war in Ukraine, I, too, yearn towards her, and with her, towards heaven, from this, our exile. I think of her, watching her Son’s torment, still steadfast in agonised love, and I sense her solidarity with all the mothers who are currently compelled to feel such pain.’ As he thinks of her in these ways he sees her ‘ holding up, once more, all the grief-stricken, to be folded in the mantle of her prayer.’
 

Jesus meets his mother

Mother,
you bore me
so that I
can bear the world
on my shoulders.

Mother,
you birthed me
so that I
can give birth
to God’s children.

Mother,
you sheltered me
so that others
can find shelter
under my wing.

Mother,
you carried me
so that I
can carry others
into heaven’s kingdom
on earth.

Mother,
you bore me,
birthed me,
sheltered me,
carried me,
to release me
and give me
in broken pieces
to the world.

Mother,
in a little while
you will not see me
and your heart
will break.

Mother,
in a little while
you will see me
and the shattered
shards of your heart
will be gathered up
and restored.


Jesus is taken down from the cross
And a sword pierced her heart,
as the whip flayed his back,
as the cross made him fall,
as the nails pierced his wrists and feet,
as the spear pierced his side,
as she held the limp, lifeless adult body
she had once held, as a newborn babe, to her breast.


Guite concludes:

Jesus meets his mother

This darker path into the heart of pain
Was also hers whose love enfolded him
In flesh and wove him in her womb. Again
The sword is piercing. She, who cradled him
And gentled and protected her young son,
Must stand and watch the cruelty that mars
Her maiden making. Waves of pain that stun
And sicken pass across his face and hers
As their eyes meet. Now she enfolds the world
He loves in prayer; the mothers of the disappeared
Who know her pain, all bodies bowed and curled
In desperation on this road of tears,
All the grief-stricken in their last despair,
Are folded in the mantle of her prayer.

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Malcolm Guite - Annunciation.

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Joseph Arthur - You’re Not A Ghost Anymore: Faith







Great gig last night by Joseph Arthur at West Hampstead Arts Club, together with Melanie Gabriel and Gonzalo Carrera, which I am reviewing for International Times.

Paul Cashmere writes that: 

'Arthur has announced You’re Not A Ghost Anymore, a sweeping new body of work conceived as a single narrative and revealed in three connected album movements titled Faith, Heart, and Fight. The first instalment, You’re Not A Ghost Anymore: Faith, will be released on Friday, April 2 via Arthur’s own Lonely Astronaut Records, marking his first new solo project since 2019’s Come Back World.

Rather than a conventional album cycle, Arthur has structured the project as a long-form arc written across six years, shaped by personal collapse, recovery and creative renewal. Each chapter reflects a state of being rather than a musical category, with Faith establishing the emotional and spiritual foundation of the wider work.

The album opens with I Wanna Know You, a stark and searching song that sets the tone for what follows. The track is accompanied by an official music video filmed by Arthur himself, captured in a single continuous take while travelling through Europe. The unplanned footage, centred around an image of Jesus Christ mounted on the back of a truck, became a visual extension of the song’s themes of attention, presence and chance encounter.

Arthur’s writing on Faith leans into spiritual inquiry without offering easy conclusions. Across twelve tracks including Hey Satan, Bear Your Own Cross, Thank You Is My Mantra and In The Shadow Of The Cross, he examines belief, doubt, endurance and responsibility with the unfiltered directness that has defined his career since the late 1990s.'

Arthur says:

'The 36-song album I’m releasing over the course of this year, You’re Not a Ghost Anymore, unfolds in three sections:
Faith.
Heart.
Fight.
I could have begun anywhere.
But for me the story starts with faith.
When you’re at the bottom of life, when things feel uncertain, faith is often the only thing left. Not as an ideology. Just as a quiet decision to keep going.
Heart and fight came after that.
This is a reflection on why I chose to begin there.
Where you stumble, there lies your treasure.'

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Joseph Arthur - I Wanna Know You.

Windows on the world (563)


London, 2026

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The Jesus and Mary Chain - God Help Me.

 

Praying the Stations of the Cross















Today, the Basildon Chapter prayed the Stations of the Cross by Valerie Dean, which are temporarily at St Andrew's Wickford during Lent and Holy Week, using a set of meditations and prayers that I wrote and which are entitled The Passion.

Valerie's Stations of the Cross have a very clear and intense focus on details which are evocative of the whole. They have previously been shown at St Martin-in-the-Fields and the Diocesan Offices of the Diocese of Chelmsford.

Valerie Dean returned to England in the summer of 2007 after living for 27 years in Belgium. There, she studied art for six years and had various exhibitions, in and around Brussels. On returning to England, she became involved in the Kent arts scene and exhibited, regularly, in the Francis Iles gallery, in Rochester. She also took part in the Canterbury Arts Festival and exhibitions in Whitstable.

She worked in acrylics and her technique was usually to put materials and colours on canvas or board, to see what emerged. It was a dialogue between the artist and her materials. Because of her background, this often consisted of figures around a religious theme. They just appeared! Very often, people seemed to want to appear in her paintings, a little like the pictures in the fire that she used to see in her childhood. At other times, she found that buildings and places she knew inspired her.

Mark of the Cross and The Passion are collections of images, meditations and prayers by Henry Shelton and myself on The Stations of the Cross. They provide helpful reflections and resources for Lent and Holy Week. These collections can both be found as downloads from theworshipcloud.

Mark of the Cross is a book of 20 poetic meditations on Christ’s journey to the cross and reactions to his resurrection and ascension. The meditations are complemented by a set of semi-abstract watercolours of the Stations of the Cross and the Resurrection created by Henry Shelton.

The Passion: Reflections and Prayers features minimal images with haiku-like poems and prayers that enable us to follow Jesus on his journey to the cross reflecting both on the significance and the pain of that journey as we do so. Henry and I have aimed in these reflections to pare down the images and words to their emotional and theological core. The mark making and imagery is minimal but, we hope, in a way that makes maximum impact.

Jesus dies on the cross

The sun is eclipsed, early nightfall,
darkness covers the surface of the deep,
the Spirit grieves over the waters.
On the formless, empty earth, God is dead.

Through the death of all we hold most dear, may we find life. Amen.

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Mr Mister - Kyrie.