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Wednesday 31 March 2021

Living God's Future Now - April 2021

'Living God’s Future Now’ is our mini online festival of theology, ideas and practice.

We’ve developed this in response to the pandemic and our changing world. The church is changing too, and - as we improvise and experiment - we can learn and support each other.

This is 'Living God’s Future Now’ - talks, workshops and discussion - hosted by HeartEdge. Created to equip, encourage and energise churches - from leaders to volunteers and enquirers - at the heart and on the edge.

The focal event in ‘Living God’s Future Now’ is a monthly conversation where Sam Wells explores what it means to improvise on God’s kingdom with a leading theologian or practitioner.

The online programme includes:
  • Regular weekly workshops: Biblical Studies (Mondays fortnightly), Sermon Preparation (Tuesdays) and Community of Practitioners (Wednesdays)
  • One-off workshops on topics relevant to lockdown such as ‘Growing online communities’ and ‘Grief, Loss & Remembering’
  • Monthly HeartEdge dialogue featuring Sam Wells in conversation with a noted theologian or practitioner
Find earlier Living God’s Future Now sessions at https://www.facebook.com/pg/theHeartEdge/videos/?ref=page_internal.

Regular – Weekly or Fortnightly

Tuesdays: Sermon Preparation Workshop, 16:30 (GMT), livestreamed at https://www.facebook.com/theHeartEdge/. Please note there will be no Sermon Preparation workshop on Tuesday 6 April.

Wednesdays: Community of Practitioners workshop, 16:30 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Email jonathan.evens@smitf.org to register.

Fortnightly on Mondays: Biblical Studies class, 19:30-21:00 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Register in advance: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMrcOmgrTgsHt2ceY7LepLhQYqQxS1G1ix9. 2021 dates - Gospels & Acts:
  • 12 Apr: Lecture 07 Matthew
  • 26 Apr: Lecture 08 Matthew

April

Stations of the Cross: Thursday 1 April 2021, 16:00 – 17:30 BST. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/stations-of-the-cross-tickets-147886712137. Monuments to the Future, Global, 2021, is an exhibition that uses art and reflection to explore the way in which, for people of all faiths and none, the Stations of the Cross speak into issues of injustice. The exhibition takes viewers on a virtual journey around the world. Each station responds to a monument or memorial, reflecting a tumultuous year in which fresh memorials sprung up to grieve the dead and historic monuments to prejudice were toppled and dismantled. In this workshop Revd Dr Catriona Laing, Dr Aaron Rosen and guest artists featured in the exhibition will reflect on the relevance of the Stations of the Cross, the way in which they speak into issues of injustice and the virtues of the physical experience of the first four years versus this year’s online experience. Revd Dr Catriona Laing’s call to the priesthood was influenced by her desire to join those building the Kingdom of God with the poor and marginalized. Her academic interests, which stem from a childhood spent in the Middle East, are in the area of Muslim Christian relations and specifically the role of prayer in deepening inter-faith relations. Before coming to Brussels, she worked in parishes in London and Washington D.C.. In addition to serving St Martha & St Mary’s Anglican Church Leuven, Catriona is Associate Chaplain at Holy Trinity with a particular remit to encourage the chaplaincy’s social justice ministry. Dr. Aaron Rosen is Professor of Religion & Visual Culture and Director of the Henry Luce III Center for the Arts & Religion at Wesley Theological Seminary. As director of the Luce Center, he overseas research, teaching, and outreach, as well as exhibitions at the seminary's Dadian Gallery. He is also Visiting Professor at King’s College London, where he was previously Senior Lecturer in Sacred Traditions & the Arts and Deputy Director of the Center for the Arts and the Sacred.

Living God's Future Now conversation - Maggi Dawn: Thursday 8 April, 18:00 – 19:00 BST. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/living-gods-future-now-conversation-maggi-dawn-tickets-146404655265. ‘Living God’s Future Now’ describes a series of online seminars, discussions and presentations hosted by HeartEdge. They are designed to equip, encourage and energise church leaders, laypeople and enquirers alike, in areas such as preaching, growing a church, shifting online, deepening spirituality in a congregation and responding to social need. The focal event in 'Living God's future now' is a monthly conversation in which Sam Wells explores what it means to improvise on God’s kingdom with a leading theologian or practitioner. Earlier conversations were with Walter Brueggemann, John McKnight, Chine McDonald, +Rachel Treweek, Stanley Hauerwas, Barbara Brown Taylor, Kelly Brown Douglas, Steve Chalke, Presiding Bishop Michael Curry, Sarah Coakley, and Jonathan Tran. At 6.00 pm (GMT) on Thursday 8 April 2021, Sam Wells and Maggi Dawn will be in conversation to discuss how to improvise on the kingdom. The Rev’d Professor Maggi Dawn is Principal, St Mary’s College, Durham University and Professor of Theology, Department of Theology and Religion. Maggi’s first career was in the music industry as a songwriter, guitarist and singer. She recorded five albums under her own name, and was a session player in numerous other bands. Maggi studied Theology at the University of Cambridge in the 1990s, where her PhD research explored S. T. Coleridge’s theological language. Her ongoing research interests are the role of voice and form in the creation of theological meaning, and the role of the arts in theology and liturgy. She began her career in academia as college Chaplain and teaching fellow at the University of Cambridge. She has five books in publication, one of which was quoted in Parliament in 2012 to launch a Private Members Bill. Before coming to Durham she spent eight years as Associate Dean, and Associate Professor of Theology and Literature, at Yale Divinity School and the Institute of Sacred Music.

In the shadow of your wings: Musical Bible study on the Psalms – Thursday 15 April, 4.30 pm (BST), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/in-the-shadow-of-your-wings-tickets-145553260721. A unique ecumenical event that combines three new musical interpretations of Psalm 57 with small-group discussion. An interactive online event Presented by Deus Ex Musica in which participants watch pre-recorded live performances of three brand-new vocal settings of a beloved psalm, each of which has been set to music by a composer representing a different Christian tradition. This workshop will look at three settings of Psalm 57. After viewing each set of performances, participants engage in moderated small-group discussions. Since each psalm is set to music by more than one composer, participants hear how different musical responses to the same text bring to life various dimensions of each psalm. This provides a unique and memorable way for participants to experience the depth and beauty of Scripture in ways that promote both learning and discipleship. It also provides a rare opportunity for Christians of all stripes to gather in fellowship and dialogue about something we all agree on: the power and importance of the Bible. No musical experience or expertise is required by any participants. Deus Ex Musica is an ecumenical organization comprised of musicians, educators, and pastors, and scholars, that promotes the use of sacred music as a resource for learning and spiritual growth. www.deus-ex-musica.com. Info and headshots about each composer may be found here. https://www.deus-ex-musica.com/isw-boston-2019.

St Martin-in-the-Fields and HeartEdge Theology Reading Group: Sunday 18 April, 18:00 (BST), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/st-martin-in-the-fields-and-heartedge-theology-reading-group-tickets-136190231649. Explore and discuss Dante’s The Divine Comedy with Revd Dr Sam Wells, St-Martin-in-the-Fields congregation and HeartEdge partners. Join this journey through Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. The greatest single work of Western literature???

Building for the Future: A Zoom conference, for all interested parties, to consider strategies for churches and church buildings – Monday 19 April, 15:00 – 16:30 (BST). Some of the questions that many churches have been wrestling with during the pandemic have concerned the implications for the way in which our buildings play a part, for better or for worse, in God’s mission and in local communities and neighbourhoods. The URC Buildings Forum has existed for several years with a focus on these questions and this online conference is intended to be the first of a series that will focus on different aspects of exploring the use of our buildings and capital assets. The General Secretary, John Bradbury, will give a keynote address to guide our thinking about the purposeful and creative use of our premises; the HeartEdge movement, begun by St Martin-in-the-Fields, will share a little about the ways in which they can support you in the use of your buildings, and there will be at least one story of a creative idea that is being put into practice. It will also be an opportunity for conversation in breakout rooms and importantly will be a listening exercise to hear the questions that you have, the challenges that particular churches face and hopefully something of positive ideas and news. This will assist us in planning further conferences. This online event is open to everyone, whether or not you’ve been part of the Forum previously. The meeting will be recorded in speaker view so only those providing input will be recorded. To register please email mission@urc.org.uk with ‘Building for the Future’ in the subject line, by April 16th. Along with your name and email address, please tell us which church you belong to or are representing, if appropriate. Login details will be sent a few days before the meeting.

Wizards, Muggle Crust and the Human Purpose of Business – Thursday 22 April, 19:00 (BST), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/wizards-muggle-crust-and-the-human-purpose-of-business-tickets-146820156039. In our lifetimes the purpose of business is being reformed. The idea that this was, exclusively, to make shareholders wealthier is dying (slowly). In relation to the climate emergency, boardrooms have the language (eg net zero) but need more action. But on the human and social side purpose of business our language is lacking (argues Douglas Board). After Grenfell and similar events we react with outrage: but what can guide us beforehand, capturing the positives of commerce as well as its problems? A thinker and writer on leadership and a coach, Douglas will draw on his book ‘Elites: can you rise to the top without losing your soul?’ to propose that the human purpose of business is to create places (organisations, systems, communities) of extraordinary achievement in which ordinary lives matter. With: Jo Hill, a regulatory director and member of the Gambling Commission; Monisha Shah, a media professional whose current appointments include the Committee on Standards in Public Life; Professor David Grayson CBE, an international thought leader and campaigner on responsible business; Richard Goold, CEO of organisation consultancy Wondrous; and Rev Dr Sam Wells, Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields.

Theology Group: Sunday, 25 April 2021, 18:00 – 19:00 BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/theology-group-tickets-146164063649. The St Martin-in-the-Fields and HeartEdge Theology Group provides a monthly opportunity to reflect theologically on issues of today and questions of forever with Sam Wells. Each month Sam responds to questions from a member of the congregation of St Martin-in-the-Fields who also chairs the session and encourages your comments and questions.

Back in the Building, Still Online! Monday 26 April, 14:00 – 15:30 BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/back-in-the-building-still-online-tickets-148637251019. How can we keep it manageable and build community as we return to our buildings but try not to abandon our online connections? With: Eve Powers, Digital Communications Officer in the Diocese of Manchester; Bill Braviner, Parish Priest of Stockton St Peter & Elton St John, in the Diocese of Durham; Kim Lafferty, Team Vicar in Farnworth, Kearsley and Stoneclough; Cath Duce, Assistant Vicar for Partnership Development working with HeartEdge in London; and Andy Salmon, North West Coordinator for HeartEdge and Rector of Sacred Trinity Church in Salford.

HeartEdge/CEEP transatlantic conversation – Art & the Church calendar: Monday 26 April, 20:00 (GMT). See https://www.ceepnetwork.org/webinar-resources/ for more information. This webinar explores ways of engaging artists with churches/congregations using the Church calendar. What might inspire artists in engaging with the patterns that underpin the life of many churches and how might engaging with artists open up understandings of faith in new ways for congregations? Examples of the kind of projects we will explore include initiatives using the visual arts in dialogue with scripture or exhibitions/installations in particular seasons such as Advent or Lent. Fundamentally, though, this webinar seeks explore a range of ideas and approaches and to hear about the benefits both for artists and congregations. Panellists include: Janet Broderick - Rector, All Saints Beverly Hills; Beverly Hills, California; Paul-Gordon Chandler - Bishop, Diocese of Wyoming; Jackson Hole, Wyoming (moderator); Catriona Laing - Chaplain, St. Martha & St. Mary’s Anglican Church Leuven; Associate Chaplain, Holy Trinity Brussels; Brussels, Belgium; Ben Quash - Professor, Christianity and the Arts & Director, Center for Arts and the Sacred, King’s College London; Director, Visual Commentary on Scripture Project; London, United Kingdom; and Aaron Rosen - Professor, Religion and Visual Culture; Director, Henry Luce III Cener for the Arts and Religion, Wesley Theological Seminary; Co-founder, Stations of the Cross Public Art Project; Washington, D.C.

Anglicans in Europe Post-Brexit and the Pandemic: Bishops in Dialogue - Tuesday, 27 April, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/anglicans-in-europe-post-brexit-and-the-pandemic-bishops-in-dialogue-tickets-139455213297. Exploring issues and challenges facing the Anglican Churches in Britain and Ireland, post-Brexit and in the light of the Covid-19 pandemic, and what the Church’s role now looks like in contributing to God’s reconciling work in the world, in this new context. Alastair McKay (facilitating), Executive Director, Reconciliation Initiatives; Sam Wells, Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields; Guli Francis-Dehqani, Bishop of Chelmsford, Church of England; June Osborne, Bishop of Llandaff, Church in Wales; Andrew Swift, Bishop of Brechin, Scottish Episcopal Church; and Patricia Storey, Bishop of Meath & Kildare, Church of Ireland.

Introducing the Visual Commentary on Scripture: Thursday 29 April, 14:00 (BST), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/introducing-the-visual-commentary-on-scripture-tickets-148377347641. The Visual Commentary on Scripture, TheVCS.org, is the first online project to introduce visitors to the entirety of Christian Scripture in the company of art and artists. Celebrated with a launch event in November 2018 at Tate Modern, TheVCS.org seeks to connect the worlds of art and religion as a ground-breaking resource for scholars, educators, churches and interested readers looking for insightful, original explorations of art and the Bible. In this talk, Canon Ben Quash, the project’s director, will share some of the challenges and discoveries he has encountered so far in this ambitious undertaking. Ben Quash came to King’s College London as its first Professor of Christianity and the Arts in 2007. Prior to that, he was a Fellow of Fitzwilliam College and then of Peterhouse, Cambridge, and lecturer in the Faculty of Divinity in the University of Cambridge. He is fascinated by how the arts can renew people’s engagement with the Bible and Christian tradition, and is directing a major 7-year project to create an online Visual Commentary on Scripture. He runs an MA in Christianity and the Arts in association with the National Gallery, London, and broadcasts frequently on BBC radio. He is a Trustee of Art and Christianity Enquiry, and Canon Theologian of both Coventry and Bradford Cathedrals. His publications include Abiding: The Archbishop of Canterbury’s Lent Book 2013 (Bloomsbury, 2012) and Found Theology: History, Imagination and the Holy Spirit (T&T Clark, 2014), and he has written catalogue essays for exhibitions at Ben Uri Gallery, London, the Inigo Rooms in Somerset House, and the Vatican Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2015.













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Natalie Bergman - Home At Last.

Life through Death: Lent Course reflection based on ‘Water into Wine’

Here is the reflection I shared tonight for the Lent Course at St Martin-in-the-Fields based on ‘Water into Wine’ by Stephen Verney:

Jesus and Pilate / head-to-head / in a clash of cultures. / Pilate is / angular, aggressive, threatening / representing / the oppressive, controlling / Empire of dominating power, / with its strength in numbers / and weaponry, / which can crucify / but cannot / set free. / Jesus is / curves and crosses, / love and sacrifice, / representing the kingdom of God; / a kingdom of love, / service and self-sacrifice / birthing men and women / into the freedom / to love one another. (Jonathan Evens ©)

Stephen Verney began ‘Water into Wine,’ by talking about ‘ano’ and ‘kato’ the Greek words for up and down. He suggests that when these words are used in John’s Gospel, Jesus is speaking about two different levels or orders to reality. What he meant by this are different patterns of society, each with a different centre or ruling power. In the first, ‘the ruling principle is the dictator ME, my ego-centric ego, and the pattern of society is people competing with, manipulating and trying to control each other.’ In the second, ‘the ruling principle is the Spirit of Love, and the pattern of society is one of compassion – people giving to each other what they really are, and accepting what others are, recognising their differences, and sharing their vulnerability.’ These two orders or patterns for society are at war with each other and we are caught up in the struggle that results. Choosing our side in this struggle is a key question for us as human beings, the question being ‘so urgent that our survival depends on finding the answer.’ Verney writes that: ‘we can see in our world order the terrible consequences of our ego-centricity. We have projected it into our institutions, where it has swollen up into a positive force of evil. We are all imprisoned together, in a system of competing nation states, on the edge of a catastrophe which could destroy all life on our planet.’ He was writing in the 1980s but could have been describing today’s populism and nationalism.

These two orders confront each other in the moment with which we have just begun, the encounter between Jesus and Pilate. Verney writes: ‘The authority given from above, from the order of ano, is the authority to set people free, and it flows through powerlessness. Pilate has not got this authority; his empire is … from here, based on power, and it can crucify people but it does not know how to set them free. Jesus has this authority; his kingdom is … from above, and through his powerlessness flows the compassion which can transform men and women, so that they are born again into the freedom to love one another.’

So, with this section of the book and the Gospel we have reached the events which enable us to be born again into the freedom to love one another. The crucifixion and resurrection are those climatic events. Verney says that ‘John is telling us what really happened on that third day after the crucifixion of Jesus… It is not simply a physical event… Nor is it simply a spiritual or psychological event… John has been preparing us to see that it is more than either of these; it is an event born out of the marriage of heaven and earth. “On the third day there was a marriage”, he had written at the beginning of his story, and as he described to us a wedding feast… he was pointing us to another third day and to another marriage which would happen in eternity – and “eternity” does not mean out of time and space, it means NOW, in the depths of each present moment, and in every place where the eyes of men and women are opened to see. This new age of eternal life began on the third day after the death of Jesus in a garden not far from Golgotha, about six o’clock on a Sunday morning, and it continues in our experience…’

So, what is this new age and how does it begin through Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection? Verney locates the new age in the I AM sayings of Jesus and what they reveal of his relationship with God. Earlier in the book Verney explained that, ‘When Jesus says I AM he is affirming his humanity – the whole of himself, from the crown of his head to the soles of his feet. He accepts what he is … He is totally self-conscious.’ Yet, ‘At the same time he is using the name of God: I AM. So, ‘The heart of the consciousness of Jesus is I AM, God/human being. Human being/God. In his consciousness … earth and heaven, flesh and Spirit become one as they interact with each other.”’ In Jesus there is a marriage of heaven and earth – a bringing together of ano and kato, up and down, water and wine - and we are called, by Jesus, to become part of that marriage. The marriage of heaven and earth reflects an even more astonishing union that Verney calls ‘The Dance of Love’.

He notes that ‘Jesus said again and again – and here is the very centre of his teaching – that [the] energy of resurrection is “the Father who sent me”. He knew … in his own self-consciousness, that resurrection was the Love of the Father flowing through him… He can only say “I AM the resurrection”, because this energy which raises from death into life is the to and fro of Love between himself and the Father NOW. It is a dialogue, or exchange, in which he lets go everything and receives back everything; for that is what he sees the Father doing, and that is the Truth of how things really are. Into that reality Jesus calls his friends, and creates around himself a new world order.’ Jesus does only what he sees the Father doing and the Father reveals to Jesus everything that he is doing. In that dance of love between them, says Jesus, “I and the Father are one.” The Son cries, “Abba! Father!” and the Father cries “my beloved Son”, and the love which leaps between them is Holy Spirit – the Spirit of God, God himself, for God is Spirit and God is Love.”

There is a relationship of love at the heart of the Godhead where love is constantly shared and exchanged and we are invited into that relationship of love. Jesus described this when he said that he is in the Father and the Father in him. He then extended that same relationship to others too - I am in you and you are in me. Becoming part of the Dance of Love through the marriage of heaven and earth is the new age into which we are born again through the death and resurrection of Jesus. To be born again in this way is to be raised from a consciousness which is really death into a quality of life which is eternal. Verney says that ‘It was in this paradoxical way that the disciples saw [Jesus] for forty days after his death… they had to let go the ego that wants to look at him and comprehend, and open their minds and their imaginations to receive the energy of resurrection flowing through them. They had to get up, and go out, and do the truth in order to know it… then they would come to know in their hearts that the real Jesus really comes to them in real people and through real events, and that he is having a conversation with them now through what happens in the present moment.’ Jesus ‘does not try to force his objective truth into our thick heads, he says, but … invites us to know him in our hearts through an interaction and an interplay between us.’ Jesus provided a vivid example of this while he hung in agony on the cross. Verney says of the moment when Jesus gives Mary, his mother, and John, the beloved disciple, one to the other: ‘Mary gives to Christ, and John becomes Christ; these are the two realities which have to be woven together into the life of the new age. We give birth to Christ as we see and set him free in each other. We become Christ as we receive his Spirit from each other into the private depths of ourselves.’

All this happened within the exchange or conversation or dance of love within the Trinity and it is this that enables us, as Verney does in ‘Water into Wine’ ‘to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time’. That is why he ends the book with his discussion of the Prologue to John’s Gospel. I want to do the same thing but in a different way by reading a translation of the Prologue based on translating ‘logos’ as conversation, not word, and then to end with a meditation on resurrection. ‘It all arose out of a conversation, conversation within God, in fact the conversation was God. So, God started the discussion, and everything came out of this, and nothing happened without consultation. This was the life, life that was the light of humanity, shining in the darkness, a darkness which neither understood nor quenched its creativity. John, a man sent by God, came to remind people about the nature of the light so that they would observe. He was not the subject under discussion, but the bearer of an invitation to join in. The subject of the conversation, the original light, came into the world, the world that had arisen out of his willingness to converse. He fleshed out the words but the world did not understand. He came to those who knew the language, but they did not respond. Those who did became a new creation (his children), they read the signs and responded. These children were born out of sharing in the creative activity of God. They heard the conversation still going on, here, now, and took part, discovering a new way of being people. To be invited to share in a conversation about the nature of life, was for them, a glorious opportunity not to be missed. (Clive Scott © http://cornerstonemk.blogspot.com/2009/04/in-2001-i-was-listening-to-radio-4.html)

The one who invites us into that conversation is I AM, the one in whom the orders of up and down, earth and heaven, flesh and Spirit are reconciled. So I end with a reflection on Jesus’ I AM sayings, written by my friend Revd Alan Stewart

I am the ground beneath you, / the earth from which you rise. / I am the arms that hold you / through the loneliness, / the terror and the lies. / I am the spring that thaws your winter, / the sun that warms your skin, / the light bleeding into your disappointment. /I am your horizon. / I am the song that speaks for you, / the symphony you’re born into, / the dance that carries you, /the breast you lean into. / I am the click in your head, / the language making sense, / the perspective in your chaos, / your mother tongue, your present tense. / I am the strength to reach beyond yourself, / the courage just to be yourself, / the grace which helps you forgive yourself, / the dreams you harbour inside yourself. / I am your roots, your history, / your future and your mystery. / I am the lifter of your head, / the eyes that simply say, “It will be okay”. / I am your vindication, / your celebration, / your consolation, / your destination. / I am the stirring of the waters, / the waker of your sleep. / The shout that calls, / “Lazarus, arise!” / The mud I spread into your eyes. / I am the one who writes in sand / as stones fall from your enemies hands. / I am the footwasher who bathes / your wounds, your pride. / The one who sits with you / through the cold watches of the night. / I am the father who watches your desertion. / The smile that greets you on your returning, / the hands that bless you, the clothes that dress you, / the words that free you, the embrace that heals you. / I am the bread that meets your hunger, / the living water for your thirst, / who was and is and is to come. / The last, the in between, the first. / I am / the resurrection / and the life. / Whoever comes to me, / though they die, / yet shall they live. (Alan Stewart ©)

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Brian Kennedy - Forgiveness.

Monday 29 March 2021

Visual Arts and HeartEdge

 





HeartEdge is programming some excellent sessions on the visual arts over the next few weeks:

Stations of the Cross

Thu, 1 April 2021, 16:00 – 17:30 BST. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/stations-of-the-cross-tickets-147886712137.

Monuments to the Future, Global, 2021, is an exhibition that uses art and reflection to explore the way in which, for people of all faiths and none, the Stations of the Cross speak into issues of injustice.

The exhibition takes viewers on a virtual journey around the world. Each station responds to a monument or memorial, reflecting a tumultuous year in which fresh memorials sprung up to grieve the dead and historic monuments to prejudice were toppled and dismantled.

In this workshop Revd Dr Catriona Laing, Dr Aaron Rosen and guest artists featured in the exhibition will reflect on the relevance of the Stations of the Cross, the way in which they speak into issues of injustice and the virtues of the physical experience of the first four years versus this year’s online experience.

Revd Dr Catriona Laing’s call to the priesthood was influenced by her desire to join those building the Kingdom of God with the poor and marginalized. Her academic interests, which stem from a childhood spent in the Middle East, are in the area of Muslim Christian relations and specifically the role of prayer in deepening inter-faith relations. Before coming to Brussels, she worked in parishes in London and Washington D.C.. In addition to serving St Martha & St Mary’s Anglican Church Leuven, Catriona is Associate Chaplain at Holy Trinity with a particular remit to encourage the chaplaincy’s social justice ministry.

Dr. Aaron Rosen is Professor of Religion & Visual Culture and Director of the Henry Luce III Center for the Arts & Religion at Wesley Theological Seminary. As director of the Luce Center, he overseas research, teaching, and outreach, as well as exhibitions at the seminary's Dadian Gallery. He is also Visiting Professor at King’s College London, where he was previously Senior Lecturer in Sacred Traditions & the Arts and Deputy Director of the Center for the Arts and the Sacred.


Introducing the Visual Commentary on Scripture

Thu, 29 April 2021, 14:00 – 15:30 BST. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/introducing-the-visual-commentary-on-scripture-tickets-148377347641.

The Visual Commentary on Scripture, TheVCS.org, is the first online project to introduce visitors to the entirety of Christian Scripture in the company of art and artists.

Celebrated with a launch event in November 2018 at Tate Modern, TheVCS.org seeks to connect the worlds of art and religion as a ground-breaking resource for scholars, educators, churches and interested readers looking for insightful, original explorations of art and the Bible.

In this talk, Canon Ben Quash, the project’s director, will share some of the challenges and discoveries he has encountered so far in this ambitious undertaking.

Ben Quash came to King’s College London as its first Professor of Christianity and the Arts in 2007. Prior to that, he was a Fellow of Fitzwilliam College and then of Peterhouse, Cambridge, and lecturer in the Faculty of Divinity in the University of Cambridge. He is fascinated by how the arts can renew people’s engagement with the Bible and Christian tradition, and is directing a major 7-year project to create an online Visual Commentary on Scripture. He runs an MA in Christianity and the Arts in association with the National Gallery, London, and broadcasts frequently on BBC radio. He is a Trustee of Art and Christianity Enquiry, and Canon Theologian of both Coventry and Bradford Cathedrals.

His publications include Abiding: The Archbishop of Canterbury’s Lent Book 2013 (Bloomsbury, 2012) and Found Theology: History, Imagination and the Holy Spirit (T&T Clark, 2014), and he has written catalogue essays for exhibitions at Ben Uri Gallery, London, the Inigo Rooms in Somerset House, and the Vatican Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2015.


Inspired to Follow: Art and the Bible Story

‘Inspired to Follow: Art and the Bible Story’ helps people explore the Christian faith, using paintings and Biblical story as the starting points. The course uses fine art paintings in the National Gallery’s collection as a springboard for exploring questions of faith.

Register for a Zoom invitation at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-art-and-the-bible-story-tickets-148401610211.

Sunday 2 May, Session 16: The Resurrection. Text: Luke 24:25-35. Image: ‘The Supper at Emmaus’, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, 1601, NG172.

Sunday 9 May, Session 17: The Ascension. Text: Acts 1:1-12. Image: ‘The Incredulity of Saint Thomas’, Giovanni Battista Cima da Conegliano, about.1502-4, NG816.

Sunday 16 May, Session 18: Pentecost. Text: Acts 2:1-39 (extracts). Image: ‘Pentecost’, Giotto and Workshop, about.1310-18, NG5360.

Sunday 23 May, Session 19: Death of Stephen. Text: Acts 6:8 – 7:60 (extracts). Image: ‘The Martyrdom of Saint Stephen’, Possibly by Antonio Carracci, about1610, NG77.

Sunday 30 May, Session 20: Saint Peter. Text: Acts 10:30-48. Image: ‘Christ appearing to Saint Peter on the Appian Way (Domine, Quo Vadis?)’, Annibale Carracci, 1601-2, NG9.

Sunday 6 June, Session 21: Saint Paul. Text: Acts 9:1-19. Image: ‘The Conversion of Saint Paul’, Karel Dujardin, 1662, NG6296.

Sunday 13 June, Session 22: The New Jerusalem. Text: Revelation 21:1-5, 9-11, 22-27, & 22:1-5. Image: ‘Christ Glorified in the Court of Heaven’; central predella panel, probably by Fra Angelico, about 1423-4, NG663.1.


Navigating the Dark: A conversation between an artist and a theologian

Thu, 6 May 2021, 19:00 – 20:00 BST. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/navigating-the-dark-tickets-148323582829.

Join us as artist Jake Lever is interviewed by Dr Paula Gooder, Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral, London.

Jake Lever is an artist who is interested in the power of visual art to draw us into an encounter with the sacred. He seeks to make work that invites a slowing down, a return to the liminal and the "real". During the pandemic, he has developed a new participatory project, making hundreds of tiny, gilded boats that people have sent by post as tokens of love, gratitude and solidarity to family and friends around the world. Website: www.leverarts.org.

Dr Paula Gooder is a writer and lecturer in Biblical Studies. Her research areas focus on the writings of Paul the Apostle, with a particular focus on 2 Corinthians and on Paul’s understanding of the Body. Her passion is to ignite people’s enthusiasm for reading the Bible today, by presenting the best of biblical scholarship in an accessible and interesting way. She is currently the Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral in London. Website: www.gooder.me.uk.

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Sunday 28 March 2021

Living God's Future Now - w/c 28 March 2021




'Living God’s Future Now’ is our mini online festival of theology, ideas and practice.

We’ve developed this in response to the pandemic and our changing world. The church is changing too, and - as we improvise and experiment - we can learn and support each other.

This is 'Living God’s Future Now’ - talks, workshops and discussion - hosted by HeartEdge. Created to equip, encourage and energise churches - from leaders to volunteers and enquirers - at the heart and on the edge.

The focal event in ‘Living God’s Future Now’ is a monthly conversation where Sam Wells explores what it means to improvise on God’s kingdom with a leading theologian or practitioner.

The online programme includes:
  • Regular weekly workshops: Biblical Studies (Mondays - fortnightly), Sermon Preparation (Tuesdays) and Community of Practitioners (Wednesdays)
  • One-off workshops on topics relevant to lockdown such as ‘Growing online communities’ and ‘Grief, Loss & Remembering’
  • Monthly HeartEdge dialogue featuring Sam Wells in conversation with a noted theologian or practitioner
W/c 28 March 2021

Sunday

Inspired to Follow: ‘Who is my Neighbour? – A journey through Lent’
Zoom
Sunday 28 March, 14:00 (GMT)
Register here.
The course uses fine art paintings in the National Gallery’s collection as a spring board for exploring questions of faith. Session 6 - Being a Neighbour to Those on the Road - Luke 24:25-35 and ‘The Supper at Emmaus’, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, 1601, NG172.

HeartEdge Enrichment Conversation: Lenten Series 2021
Youtube
Sunday 28 March, 3pm GMT/5.00pm SA Time Zone
Livestreamed here.
These conversations explore deeper within the Southern African context, the church renewal opportunities presented by the 4 Cs. Session 6 – Revd Lorenzo Lebrija and Revd Tim Vreugdenhil.

Tuesday

Sermon Prep Sally Hitchiner and Sam Wells
Livestream
Tuesday 30 March 16:30 -17:30 BST
Live streamed on the HeartEdge Facebook page here.
A live preaching workshop focusing on the forthcoming Sunday's lectionary readings in the light of current events and sharing of thoughts on approaches to the passages.

Wednesday

Community of Practitioners Workshop
Zoom
Wednesday 31 March, 16:00-17:00 GMT
Email Jonathan Evens here to take part. Church leaders (lay and ordained) join in community, share and reflect together on their recent experiences in the form of wonderings and book discussions.

Thursday

Stations of the Cross
Zoom
Thursday 1 April, 16:00 (GMT)
Register here
In this workshop Revd Dr Catriona Laing, Dr Aaron Rosen and guest artists will reflect on the relevance of the Stations of the Cross, the way in which they speak into issues of injustice and the virtues of the physical experience of the first four years of the Stations of the Cross public art project versus this year’s online experience.

Don't Miss

Our New Podcast: (G)race
Listen to conversations on God and race - here. (G)race features Azariah France-Williams and Winnie Varghese plus guest! A series of unapologetic conversations about God, faith, belief, ideas - and race, identity and experience. Third episode with writer, director and award-winning film maker, Sharon Lewis.

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Saturday 27 March 2021

Windows on the world (320)


Manchester, 2021

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Nathaniel Rateliff - Redemption.

Wednesday 24 March 2021

Stations of the Cross: Special HeartEdge event for Holy Week

*** Special HeartEdge event for Holy Week ***

Exploring the way in which, for people of all faiths and none, the Stations of the Cross speak into issues of injustice. 

Thu, 1 April 2021, 16:00 – 17:30 BST. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/stations-of-the-cross-tickets-147886712137.

Monuments to the Future, Global, 2021, is an exhibition that uses art and reflection to explore the way in which, for people of all faiths and none, the Stations of the Cross speak into issues of injustice.

The exhibition takes viewers on a virtual journey around the world. Each station responds to a monument or memorial, reflecting a tumultuous year in which fresh memorials sprung up to grieve the dead and historic monuments to prejudice were toppled and dismantled.

In this workshop Revd Dr Catriona Laing, Dr Aaron Rosen and guest artists featured in the exhibition will reflect on the relevance of the Stations of the Cross, the way in which they speak into issues of injustice and the virtues of the physical experience of the first four years versus this year’s online experience.

Revd Dr Catriona Laing’s call to the priesthood was influenced by her desire to join those building the Kingdom of God with the poor and marginalized. Her academic interests, which stem from a childhood spent in the Middle East, are in the area of Muslim Christian relations and specifically the role of prayer in deepening inter-faith relations. Before coming to Brussels, she worked in parishes in London and Washington D.C.. In addition to serving St Martha & St Mary’s Anglican Church Leuven, Catriona is Associate Chaplain at Holy Trinity with a particular remit to encourage the chaplaincy’s social justice ministry.

Dr. Aaron Rosen is Professor of Religion & Visual Culture and Director of the Henry Luce III Center for the Arts & Religion at Wesley Theological Seminary. As director of the Luce Center, he overseas research, teaching, and outreach, as well as exhibitions at the seminary's Dadian Gallery. He is also Visiting Professor at King’s College London, where he was previously Senior Lecturer in Sacred Traditions & the Arts and Deputy Director of the Center for the Arts and the Sacred.

Flyer image: Jon Henry, Untitled #55 Little Rock, Arkansas, 2020 © the artist


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St Martin's Voices - Day of Reflection.


Saturday 20 March 2021

Windows on the world (319)

 


Manchester, 2021

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Manchester HeartEdge Carol Service recorded in Sacred Trinity Church.

Why Should the Church Care About Housing?

Around 90% of churches have engaged in some way with meeting needs around food poverty; in contrast, less than 20% have engaged with local housing need and, where they have, such engagement has tended to focus on emergency and crisis intervention to support those who are homeless, rather than approaches which seek to prevent homelessness occurring. Conscious that 8m people are living in substandard, overcrowded or unaffordable accommodation across the country, the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Commission on Housing, Church and Community has called for this to be a major element of the church’s mission in coming years and are encouraging a culture change that sees engaging with housing need as a creative and natural way to engage with our local communities.

In advance of a HeartEdge webinar exploring ways in which all churches can get involved in housing need locally and the theological basis for doing so, The Rt Revd Dr Graham Tomlin, Bishop of Kensington, has written an article for HeartEdge explaining why the Church should care about housing. To read the article please click here and to register for the webinar, to be held on Monday 26 April, click here.


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Hiss Golden Messenger - Sanctuary.

Living God's Future Now: w/c 21 March 2021







'Living God’s Future Now’ is our mini online festival of theology, ideas and practice.

We’ve developed this in response to the pandemic and our changing world. The church is changing too, and - as we improvise and experiment - we can learn and support each other.

This is 'Living God’s Future Now’ - talks, workshops and discussion - hosted by HeartEdge. Created to equip, encourage and energise churches - from leaders to volunteers and enquirers - at the heart and on the edge.

The focal event in ‘Living God’s Future Now’ is a monthly conversation where Sam Wells explores what it means to improvise on God’s kingdom with a leading theologian or practitioner.

The online programme includes:
  • Regular weekly workshops: Biblical Studies (Mondays - fortnightly), Sermon Preparation (Tuesdays) and Community of Practitioners (Wednesdays)
  • One-off workshops on topics relevant to lockdown such as ‘Growing online communities’ and ‘Grief, Loss & Remembering’
  • Monthly HeartEdge dialogue featuring Sam Wells in conversation with a noted theologian or practitioner
W/c 21 March 2021

Inspired to Follow: ‘Who is my Neighbour? – A journey through Lent’ - Sunday 21 March, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - click here to register. The course uses fine art paintings in the National Gallery’s collection as a spring board for exploring questions of faith. Session 5 - Carrying Another’s Load (Simon of Cyrene) - Luke 23:26-33 and ‘Christ carrying the Cross’, Italian, Venetian, about 1500, NG6655.

HeartEdge Enrichment Conversation: Lenten Series 2021 – Sunday 21 March, 17:00 SA Time Zone, live stream via Youtube and other social media platforms. These conversations and series of talks explore deeper within the Southern African context, the church renewal opportunities presented by the 4 Cs. Session 5 – Revd Maphelo Malgas (Congregation).

Creating a New Communion: Tuesday 23 March, 10:00-11:30 (GMT), zoom - click here to register. Exploring how generosity, gratitude, giving and fundraising call us into communion with God and with one another. Inspired by Henri Nouwen and his wonderful book The Spirituality of Fundraising.

Sermon Preparation Workshop: Tuesday 23 March, 16:30 (GMT), livestreamed at the HeartEdge Facebook page. A live Facebook preaching workshop focusing on the forthcoming Sunday's lectionary readings.

Community of Practitioners: Zoom, Wednesday 24 March, 16:00-17:00 (GMT). Email Jonathan Evens at jonathan.evens@smitf.org to take part. Church leaders (lay and ordained) join in community, share and reflect together on their recent experiences in the form of wonderings and book discussions.

Through the heart: A reflective process on change and transformation - Friday 26 March, 14:00-15:30 (GMT), Zoom - click here to register. Through the heart uses the heart as a model for how transformation may work in our own lives. This Zoom-based reflective process looks at different aspects of change and transformation.

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Natalie Bergman - I Will Praise You.

Thursday 18 March 2021

Artlyst - Arthur Jafa: The Art Of Cutting And Pasting

My latest article for Artlyst is a preview of Arthur Jafa: MAGNUMB at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark: 

"Jafa’s concepts of Black Visual Intonation, Black potention and Black sociality draw significantly on the practices of Black Pentecostal churches while also preceding and paralleling exhibitions such as Enunciated Life and Otherwise / Revival, which are inspired by Ashon T. Crawley’s Blackpentecostal Breath. In a conversation with Isis Pickens on spirituality and contemporary black life, Jafa said that, while he had gone to church with his grandmother as a child growing up in Mississippi, he was not religious as an adult but nevertheless believes in black people believing.

Formed from found footage, akingdoncomethas consists largely of footage from Black American churches, featuring sermons and gospel music and portrays those churches as a hearth of Black American culture – of music, critical thinking, the civil rights movement, and community. The film is ‘a paean to black Christian worship ceremonies, tropes, and rituals’ celebrating ‘how the tribally sanctified spaces in which those forms of worship and spirited performances (take) place, are black pocket-universes of intense energy, eloquence, and illumination.’"

This piece continues my reflections on Black Pentecostal influences in the visual arts, see particularly Blackpentecostal Breath: Spirit-Led Movement Jumps From Music To Visual Art but also my interview with Genesis Tramaine, a piece for Artlyst that covered an exhibition of work by Sister Gertrude Morgan, and my review of We Will Walk: Art and Resistance in the American South for Church Times.

My other pieces for Artlyst are:

Interviews -
Articles -
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Al Green - Glory To His Name.

Sunday 14 March 2021

Living God's Future Now - w/c 14 March 2021











'Living God’s Future Now’ is our mini online festival of theology, ideas and practice.

We’ve developed this in response to the pandemic and our changing world. The church is changing too, and - as we improvise and experiment - we can learn and support each other.

This is 'Living God’s Future Now’ - talks, workshops and discussion - hosted by HeartEdge. Created to equip, encourage and energise churches - from leaders to volunteers and enquirers - at the heart and on the edge.

The focal event in ‘Living God’s Future Now’ is a monthly conversation where Sam Wells explores what it means to improvise on God’s kingdom with a leading theologian or practitioner.

The online programme includes:

  • Regular weekly workshops: Biblical Studies (Mondays - fortnightly), Sermon Preparation (Tuesdays) and Community of Practitioners (Wednesdays)
  • One-off workshops on topics relevant to lockdown such as ‘Growing online communities’ and ‘Grief, Loss & Remembering’
  • Monthly HeartEdge dialogue featuring Sam Wells in conversation with a noted theologian or practitioner

Sunday

Inspired to Follow: ‘Who is my Neighbour? – A journey through Lent’
Zoom
Sunday 14 March, 14:00 (GMT)
Register here.
Session 4 - Standing Up for the Oppressed - Mark 11: 4-12 & 15-19 and ‘Christ driving the Traders from the Temple’, El Greco, about 1600, NG1457.

HeartEdge Enrichment Conversation: Lenten Series 2021
Youtube
Sunday 14 March, 3pm GMT/5.00pm SA Time Zone
Livestreamed here.
These conversations explore deeper within the Southern African context, the church renewal opportunities presented by the 4 Cs. Session 4 – Revd Dr Vicentia Kgabe (Culture).

Theology Group
Zoom
Sunday 14 March, 18:00 (GMT)
Register here.
An opportunity to reflect theologically on issues of today and questions of forever with Sam Wells, responding to questions from Ingrid Philion. The theme this week is exploring the ethics of foetal genetic testing in relation to disability,

Monday

Biblical Studies class
Zoom
Monday 15 March, 19:30-21:00 (GMT)
Register in advance here.
Join Simon Woodman for a lecture followed by discussion, with handouts. Lecture 06 Form, Redaction & Literary Criticism

Tuesday

Creating a New Communion
Zoom
Tuesday 16 March, 10:00-11:30 (GMT)
Book here.
Exploring how generosity, gratitude, giving and fundraising call us into communion with God and with one another.

Reconciling Mission (2): Being White – Taking Responsibility for Addressing White Privilege
Zoom
Tuesday, 16 March, 14:00 (GMT)
Register here.
This webinar seeks to resource participants to hold conversations about race and white privilege inside the church.

Sermon Prep Sally Hitchiner and Sam Wells
Livestream
Tuesday 09 March 16:30 -17:30 BST
Live streamed on the HeartEdge Facebook page here.
A live preaching workshop focusing on the forthcoming Sunday's lectionary readings in the light of current events and sharing of thoughts on approaches to the passages.

Wednesday

Community of Practitioners Workshop
Zoom
Wednesday 17 March, 16:00-17:00 GMT
Email Jonathan Evens here to take part. Church leaders (lay and ordained) join in community, share and reflect together on their recent experiences in the form of wonderings and book discussions.

Thursday

Reset The Debt webinar
Zoom
Thursday 18 March, 14:00-15:30pm BST
Book here.
Join this workshop to explore: How the UK Government can #ResetTheDebt for families swept into debt by Covid-19. Why the biblical principle of Jubilee is the right place to start. How churches can speak with a distinctively Christian voice to call for change.

Don't Miss

Our New Podcast: (G)race

Listen to conversations on God and race - https://anchor.fm/heartedge. (G)race features Azariah France-Williams and Winnie Varghese plus guest! A series of unapologetic conversations about God, faith, belief, ideas - and race, identity and experience. Third episode with writer, director and award-winning film maker, Sharon Lewis.

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Africa's Praise.