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Friday, 30 April 2021

Living God's Future Now - May 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
May

Inspired to Follow: Sunday 2 May, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-art-and-the-bible-story-tickets-148401610211. ‘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. Session 16: The Resurrection. Text: Luke 24:25-35. Image: ‘The Supper at Emmaus’, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, 1601, NG172.

Public Health and Church Engagement post pandemic: Wednesday 5 May 10:30-12:00 GMT, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/public-health-and-church-engagement-post-pandemic-tickets-148896518495. In this series of workshops, The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine CEO of The Guild of Health and St Raphael will be exploring the potential of the church and people of faith to be agents of healing in our post pandemic world. By exploring the roots of the links between faith and health, theologies of healing and good practice she will encourage and empower participants to understand the role of the church alongside science, medicine and public health. Workshop 1 explores the potential for the healing ministry, and looks in particular at the history of healing in the Christian church and the biblical background for healing as a missionary activity. The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine is passionately committed to health, healing and Christian living. She is a cancer survivor, Anglican priest, theologian and scientist with a strong interest in communication and teaching. She has a doctorate in Physics from Imperial College London and an MA in Theology from the University of Oxford. She is particularly keen to bring the study of science into conversations about Christian healing. She is the author of Introducing Science and Religion: A path through polemic (SPCK, 2014), Th-e Limits of Science? (CSP, 2017) and Cancer: A Pilgrim Companion (SPCK, 2017). She lives in Lichfield with her husband and two young children.

Navigating the Dark; a conversation between an artist and a theologian - Thursday 6 May, 19:00-20:00 (GMT), Zoom - 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.

The Peckard Lecture 2021 by the Revd Dr Sam Wells: Online, Thursday 6 May 2021 19:30 - 21:00. Sam Wells, who is widely known as a preacher, pastor, writer, broadcaster and theologian will speak under the title 'Act Justly: Church, Kingdom and Civil Society'. The unevenness of the suffering caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the climate change emergency and the Black Lives Matter movement will be among the topics he explores. This is the inaugural Peckard Lecture, starting what we hope will be an annual series of talks taking up the theme of the Church in contemporary society. It was a subject close to the heart of Peter Peckard, the 18th century Dean of Peterborough and influential anti-slavery campaigner. Sam Wells is the Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields, London. He will discuss what the church’s aspirations might be for society, and how it might seek to bring those about, in corporate mission and individual discipleship. The talk lasts approximately 60 minutes and is followed by questions. Tickets are £7 per viewing - https://www.ticketisland.co.uk/ticketi_slevent_cal3Full?bi=PeterboroughCathedral&slctd=05-06-2021#pos_tag. A Zoom link to the talk on date you choose will be sent to ticket holders just before the event.

Inspired to Follow: Sunday 9 May, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-art-and-the-bible-story-tickets-148401610211. ‘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. Session 17: The Ascension. Text: Acts 1:1-12. Image: ‘The Incredulity of Saint Thomas’, Giovanni Battista Cima da Conegliano, about.1502-4, NG816.

God will not be mocked: Monday 10 May, 6.00 pm, Zoom. Register at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/god-will-not-be-mocked-st-brides-public-theology-lecture-with-heartedge-tickets-152186396609?aff=ebdssbeac. Next St Brides Liverpool theology lecture in association with HeartEdge with Fergus Butler-Gallie. All welcome, free online event. What being creatures who laugh might mean for our view of God, of the follies of humanity and the particular charisms of the C of E.

Art, Scripture and Contemporary Issues: Tuesday 11 May, 14:00-15:00, BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/art-scripture-and-contemporary-issues-tickets-149131206453. In a short series, curators for the Visual Commentary on Scripture will speak about their experience of curating for VCS in order to assist in understanding more deeply the value and potential uses to which the VCS exhibitions can be put by churches. In this session Deborah Lewer will speak about her experience of curating an exhibition on Proverbs 11 exploring why she made the choices and decisions she did in relation to both text and images. Proverbs 11 is part of the oldest collection of proverbs in the book. It opens with a statement about the righteousness of true and accurate measures: Yahweh abhors a ‘false balance’ and delights in ‘an accurate weight’. Balance, uprightness, constancy, steadfastness, and diligence are characteristic of the ordered worldview of the proverbs. When their equilibrium is upset—by wickedness, crookedness, cruelty, avarice, folly, and violence—the ensuing consequences are both just and inevitable. This session will demonstrate a central premise of the VCS’s approach i.e. that the ‘world(s)’ of experience and action that the Scriptures describe can speak meaningfully to the ‘world(s)’ that present-day interpreters of the Scriptures continue to inhabit; and that the ‘world(s)’ to which art has responded in every epoch can speak meaningfully to both. Debbie is Senior Lecturer in History of Art at the University of Glasgow. In addition to her specialism in 20th-century German art, she is interested in relationships between visual art, faith and theology. She works extensively as a retreat leader and with churches, clergy and ordinands to open up the potential of a wide spectrum of visual art in worship, theological reflection and in pastoral contexts.

Public Health and Church Engagement post pandemic: Wednesday 12 May 10:30-12:00 GMT, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/public-health-and-church-engagement-post-pandemic-tickets-148896518495. In this series of workshops, The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine CEO of The Guild of Health and St Raphael will be exploring the potential of the church and people of faith to be agents of healing in our post pandemic world. By exploring the roots of the links between faith and health, theologies of healing and good practice she will encourage and empower participants to understand the role of the church alongside science, medicine and public health. Workshop 2 develops a theology of healing by exploring the question, 'What is healing?'. We will look at the approaches to healing taken by medicine, psychology and the New Age movement and raise our confidence in the potential of Christian healing today. The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine is passionately committed to health, healing and Christian living. She is a cancer survivor, Anglican priest, theologian and scientist with a strong interest in communication and teaching. She has a doctorate in Physics from Imperial College London and an MA in Theology from the University of Oxford. She is particularly keen to bring the study of science into conversations about Christian healing. She is the author of Introducing Science and Religion: A path through polemic (SPCK, 2014), The Limits of Science? (CSP, 2017) and Cancer: A Pilgrim Companion (SPCK, 2017). She lives in Lichfield with her husband and two young children.

Art, Scripture and Contemporary Issues: Thursday 13 May, 14:00-15:00, BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/art-scripture-contemporary-issues-tickets-149683719033. In a short series, curators for the Visual Commentary on Scripture will speak about their experience of curating for VCS in order to assist in understanding more deeply the value and potential uses to which the VCS exhibitions can be put by churches. In this session Caleb Froehlich will speak about his experience of curating the Cities of Refuge exhibition exploring why he made the choices and decisions he did in relation to both text and images. Numbers 35, Joshua 20, and Deuteronomy 4:41–43 record the appointment of six Levitical cities as ‘cities of refuge’ to ensure that if there was an accidental killing, the accused killer could flee to one of these cities and be protected from the menace of the ‘avenger of blood’. This session will consider the provisions of the biblical cities of refuge from the perspective of sanctuary-seekers. The session will demonstrate a central premise of the VCS’s approach i.e. that the ‘world(s)’ of experience and action that the Scriptures describe can speak meaningfully to the ‘world(s)’ that present-day interpreters of the Scriptures continue to inhabit; and that the ‘world(s)’ to which art has responded in every epoch can speak meaningfully to both. Caleb Froehlich is a researcher for the St Andrews Encyclopaedia of Theology and an editor for De Gruyter’s Encyclopedia of the Bible and its Reception. He holds a PhD in Religion, Art, and Culture from the University of St Andrews and has two principal areas of research: the intersection between religion and popular culture (with a focus on twentieth and twenty-first century religious history) and culturally engaged theology (with a focus on art and media as spiritual, religious, and/or theological in potentia).

Living God's Future Now conversation - Stephen Cottrell: Thursday 13 May, 18:10 – 19:10 BST. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/living-gods-future-now-conversation-stephen-cottrell-tickets-146418863763. ‘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 6.10 pm (GMT) on Thursday 13 May 2021, Sam Wells and Stephen Cottrell will be in conversation to discuss how to improvise on the kingdom. The Most Reverend and Right Honourable Stephen Cottrell is the 98th Archbishop of York. In 2001, he was called to become Canon Pastor of Peterborough Cathedral and three years later was consecrated as Bishop of Reading. He became Bishop of Chelmsford in 2010 and served there until 2020 when he became the Archbishop of York. Author of more than 20 books, including ‘Dear England: Finding Hope, Taking Heart and Changing the World.’ A founding member of the Church of England’s College of Evangelists, he has also chaired a group of bishops with an interest in the media and is one of the authors of the Church of England’s Pilgrim course, a major teaching and discipleship resource. He also chairs the Board of Church Army.

Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up Season 4: Ableism, Faith & Church – Friday 14 May, 16:30-18:00 BST, Zoom. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/shut-in-shut-out-shut-up-ableism-faith-church-tickets-152921752077. Ableism is discrimination and social prejudice against disabled people. Like racism and sexism, it classifies entire groups of people as 'less than'. In this groundbreaking 4th series of Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up we explore the context, culture and practice of ableism in faith and church. Since 2012 the Living Edge conference has held space for disabled and neurodivergent people to gather, to resource each other and the church. These HeartEdge Shut In Shut Out Shut Up series shares some of this experience, providing new space to ask challenging questions. Come and join the conversation with Fiona MacMillan and Ann Memmott and Dr Naomi Lawson Jacobs (Context). Fiona MacMillan (she/her) is a disability advocate, practitioner, speaker and writer. Fiona chairs the Disability Advisory Group at St Martin in the Fields and is a trustee of Inclusive Church. She leads the planning team for their annual disability conference, now in its 10th year.

Inspired to Follow: Sunday 16 May, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-art-and-the-bible-story-tickets-148401610211. ‘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. Session 18: Pentecost. Text: Acts 2:1-39 (extracts). Image: ‘Pentecost’, Giotto and Workshop, about.1310-18, NG5360.

Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up Season 4: Ableism, Faith & Church – Friday 21 May, 16:30-18:00 BST, Zoom. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/shut-in-shut-out-shut-up-ableism-faith-church-tickets-152921752077. Ableism is discrimination and social prejudice against disabled people. Like racism and sexism, it classifies entire groups of people as 'less than'. In this groundbreaking 4th series of Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up we explore the context, culture and practice of ableism in faith and church. Since 2012 the Living Edge conference has held space for disabled and neurodivergent people to gather, to resource each other and the church. These HeartEdge Shut In Shut Out Shut Up series shares some of this experience, providing new space to ask challenging questions. Come and join the conversation with Fiona MacMillan and Krysia Waldock and Rev Dr Jane Wallman-Girdlestone (Culture). Fiona MacMillan (she/her) is a disability advocate, practitioner, speaker and writer. Fiona chairs the Disability Advisory Group at St Martin in the Fields and is a trustee of Inclusive Church. She leads the planning team for their annual disability conference, now in its 10th year.

Inspired to Follow: Sunday 23 May, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-art-and-the-bible-story-tickets-148401610211. ‘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. Session 19: Death of Stephen. Text: Acts 6:8 – 7:60 (extracts). Image: ‘The Martyrdom of Saint Stephen’, Possibly by Antonio Carracci, about1610, NG77.

Art, Scripture and Contemporary Issues: Tuesday 25 May, 14:00-15:00, BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/art-scripture-contemporary-issues-tickets-148748287131. In a short series, curators for the Visual Commentary on Scripture will speak about their experience of curating for VCS in order to assist in understanding more deeply the value and potential uses to which the VCS exhibitions can be put by churches. In this session Susanna Snyder will speak about her experience of curating the Ruth 3-4 exhibition exploring why she made the choices and decisions she did in relation to both text and images. The brevity of the book of Ruth belies its significance. It offers an answer to some of the most important questions the people of Israel grapple with throughout the Old Testament. How are we to respond to refugees and migrants? How should we understand and inhabit boundaries? This session will demonstrate a central premise of the VCS’s approach i.e. that the ‘world(s)’ of experience and action that the Scriptures describe can speak meaningfully to the ‘world(s)’ that present-day interpreters of the Scriptures continue to inhabit; and that the ‘world(s)’ to which art has responded in every epoch can speak meaningfully to both. Susanna Snyder is Lecturer in Ethics and Theology at Ripon College, Cuddesdon, and an Associate of the Centre for Theology and Modern European Thought, University of Oxford.

Public Health and Church Engagement post pandemic: Wednesday 26 May 10:30-12:00 GMT, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/public-health-and-church-engagement-post-pandemic-tickets-148896518495. In this series of workshops, The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine CEO of The Guild of Health and St Raphael will be exploring the potential of the church and people of faith to be agents of healing in our post pandemic world. By exploring the roots of the links between faith and health, theologies of healing and good practice she will encourage and empower participants to understand the role of the church alongside science, medicine and public health. Workshop 3 explores best practice in the healing ministry, including how to pray for healing, the healing sacraments, and how to create an healing atmosphere. We will explore different approaches, and look at some diverse experience of healing. The Healthy Healing Hub project will be introduced, and begin to explore the question of how God is calling you to respond to what has been explored in this course. The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine is passionately committed to health, healing and Christian living. She is a cancer survivor, Anglican priest, theologian and scientist with a strong interest in communication and teaching. She has a doctorate in Physics from Imperial College London and an MA in Theology from the University of Oxford. She is particularly keen to bring the study of science into conversations about Christian healing. She is the author of Introducing Science and Religion: A path through polemic (SPCK, 2014), The Limits of Science? (CSP, 2017) and Cancer: A Pilgrim Companion (SPCK, 2017). She lives in Lichfield with her husband and two young children.

Being With Neighbours Internationally: Thursday 27 May 2021, 14:00 – 15:30 BST, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/being-with-neighbours-internationally-tickets-144394244071. Covid has forced the world into isolation through restrictions on international travel. This situation has led churches to reimagine how best to use their digital capacity to build relationships overseas in more ecological and sustainable ways. Historically, churches across denominations have had international links. Often these have flourished under particular church leadership or personal relationships and when these people move on, such initial links limp along without much direction because ground-to-ground relationships are too difficult to maintain. Links have also at times gravitated towards clergy to clergy jollies rather than embracing the full potential of discipleship and fellowship opportunities for the whole congregation. Where technology is available, new relationships are possible. This workshop shares practical examples of how to be with neighbours internationally in a way that leads to mutual flourishing for the whole congregation. We will hear stories from US, UK, Africa, Europe and beyond to inspire our ministries. Partners will join from both sides of a dialogue to enrich our sharing together. Bring your own stories too. We will end with a short liturgy of thanksgiving.

Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up Season 4: Ableism, Faith & Church – Friday 28 May, 16:30-18:00 BST, Zoom. Register for a Zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/shut-in-shut-out-shut-up-ableism-faith-church-tickets-152921752077. Ableism is discrimination and social prejudice against disabled people. Like racism and sexism, it classifies entire groups of people as 'less than'. In this groundbreaking 4th series of Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up we explore the context, culture and practice of ableism in faith and church. Since 2012 the Living Edge conference has held space for disabled and neurodivergent people to gather, to resource each other and the church. These HeartEdge Shut In Shut Out Shut Up series shares some of this experience, providing new space to ask challenging questions. Come and join the conversation with Fiona MacMillan and Rev Dr Hannah Lewis and Dr Rachel Holdforth (Practice). Fiona MacMillan (she/her) is a disability advocate, practitioner, speaker and writer. Fiona chairs the Disability Advisory Group at St Martin in the Fields and is a trustee of Inclusive Church. She leads the planning team for their annual disability conference, now in its 10th year.

Inspired to Follow: Sunday 30 May, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-art-and-the-bible-story-tickets-148401610211. ‘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. 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.

See www.heartedge.org to join HeartEdge and for more information.

Are we missing something? Be in touch with your ideas for development.

Want to run an online workshop or series with HeartEdge? Don't keep it too yourself. Be in touch and let's plan.

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Revolutionary Army of the Infant Jesus - Songs Of Yearning.

Living God's Future Now - w/c 2 May 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 2 May 2021

Sunday

Inspired to Follow
Zoom
Sunday 2 May, 14:00 (BST)
Register here.
‘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. Session 16: The Resurrection. Text: Luke 24:25-35. Image: ‘The Supper at Emmaus’, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, 1601, NG172.

Tuesday

Sermon Prep Sally Hitchiner and Sam Wells
Livestream
Tuesday 04 May 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

Public Health and Church Engagement post pandemic
Zoom
Wednesday 5 May 10:30-12:00 BST
Reg here.
In this series of workshops, The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine CEO of The Guild of Health and St Raphael will be exploring the potential of the church and people of faith to be agents of healing in our post pandemic world. By exploring the roots of the links between faith and health, theologies of healing and good practice she will encourage and empower participants to understand the role of the church alongside science, medicine and public health. Workshop 1 explores the potential for the healing ministry, and looks in particular at the history of healing in the Christian church and the biblical background for healing as a missionary activity. The Revd. Dr. Gillian Straine is passionately committed to health, healing and Christian living. She is a cancer survivor, Anglican priest, theologian and scientist with a strong interest in communication and teaching. She has a doctorate in Physics from Imperial College London and an MA in Theology from the University of Oxford. She is particularly keen to bring the study of science into conversations about Christian healing. She is the author of Introducing Science and Religion: A path through polemic (SPCK, 2014), The Limits of Science? (CSP, 2017) and Cancer: A Pilgrim Companion (SPCK, 2017). She lives in Lichfield with her husband and two young children.

Community of Practitioners workshop
Zoom
Wednesday 05 May 16:00-17:00 BST
Email Jonathan Evens here to take part. This is open to all, including ordinands and lay leaders. Church leaders join in community, share and reflect together on their recent experiences in the form of wonderings with one of the HeartEdge team.

Thursday

Navigating the Dark; a conversation between an artist and a theologian
Zoom
Thursday 06 May, 19:00-20:00 (BST)
Reg here.
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.

The Peckard Lecture 2021 by the Revd Dr Sam Wells
Online
Thursday 06 May, 19:30-21:00 (BST)
Book your ticket for £7.00 here.
Sam Wells, who is widely known as a preacher, pastor, writer, broadcaster and theologian will speak under the title 'Act Justly: Church, Kingdom and Civil Society'. The unevenness of the suffering caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the climate change emergency and the Black Lives Matter movement will be among the topics he explores. This is the inaugural Peckard Lecture, starting what we hope will be an annual series of talks taking up the theme of the Church in contemporary society. It was a subject close to the heart of Peter Peckard, the 18th century Dean of Peterborough and influential anti-slavery campaigner. Sam Wells is the Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields, London. He will discuss what the church’s aspirations might be for society, and how it might seek to bring those about, in corporate mission and individual discipleship. The talk lasts approximately 60 minutes and is followed by questions. A Zoom link to the talk on date you choose will be sent to ticket holders just before the event.

Coming Up

Mission Summer School - 12 – 16 July 2021
Zoom
12-16 July 2021
For more details and to reg click here
An opportunity to engage more deeply with the theology of mission and to explore how it relates to your own practice.Input structured around the four Cs of Commerce, Culture, Congregation and Compassion. A mix of teaching and conversation with leading scholars and practitioners including the Revd Dr Sam Wells, Professor Anthony Reddie, Dr Cathy Ross, and Revd Heather Cracknell, among others. Workshops to engage with the themes and issues presented. Encounters with churches, organisations and projects (HeartEdge and Fresh Expressions) to get a hands-on feel for how it works out in practice.

For more information please have a look at this video of Sam Wells telling us more, here.

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Thought for the Week: Respair

I’ve written the Thought for the Week at St Martin-in-the-Fields this week:

Our HeartEdge friends at St John’s Waterloo have their annual Arts Festival in May and June before closing for a major restoration, their first since 1951. The Waterloo Festival celebrates the 70th anniversary of the Festival of Britain, a “return of hope”, for which St John’s, badly damaged by a war-time bomb, was restored and made the official Festival Church. Now, as then, out of a period of crisis and loss comes a fresh determination to make the world a better place.

The Festival is called Respair, the return of hope after a period of despair, a word that fell out of use many centuries ago but one they are reviving as we celebrate the brighter future that vaccines will bring and the rebirth of real-life creativity and shared experience.

Among the stories of hope being shared is that of Jewish émigré artists who used Christian iconography, worked for the Church and contributed to cultural life in post-war Britain. Hans Feibusch, for one, arrived in the UK in the 1930’s and received church commissions which enabled him to survive and thrive. He painted two magnificent murals at St John’s and came to be responsible for more murals in Church of England churches than any other artist in its entire history.

This is a story of effective interfaith dialogue and enjoyment of others' creativity. It is a story where the Church is at the heart of welcome and hospitality combined with awareness of the immense contribution that refugees make to the culture and economy of the countries to which they travel. If it becomes a story we can reinhabit as a nation, then we will know respair.

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Leonard Cohen - It Seemed The Better Way.

Tuesday, 27 April 2021

HeartEdge Mailer - April 2021

Check out April's great HeartEdge Mailer here - https://us18.campaign-archive.com/?u=3c49876c902f5b7ddcf73b9e3&id=5bffdc4a03

Lots of ideas, info, events and an extract from Martyn Percy's latest book.

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Prince - The Cross.

Sunday, 25 April 2021

Artlyst - George Gittoes: Equal parts artist and warrior

My latest article for Artlyst is a preview of 'George Gittoes: on being there' at Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre. Australian artist and documentary filmmaker, George Gittoes is an artist willing to create in the face of chaos and potential destruction:

'George Gittoes: on being there gives privileged access to his process through his personal visual diaries, field drawings, photography and film. Through these forms, we experience an amazing human journey that holds out the hopeful power of creativity in the face of prejudice and fear. This is a magnificent visual record of how Gittoes not only survives but creates in the face of forces that would seek to repress the human imagination.

Gittoes has learned that documenting frontline action is not enough; he wants to use art to bring about change. He wants, as Pattenden writes, ‘to pull us into these narratives and for us to consider what matters most when we talk about what life means and the nature of survival and human thriving.’'

My other pieces for Artlyst are:

Interviews -

Articles -
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Bruce Cockburn - Call It Democracy.

Saturday, 24 April 2021

Windows on the world (324)


Basildon, 2021

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Robert Plant, Alison Krauss - Please Read The Letter.

 

After the Uprising: Wat Tyler Country Park











Wat Tyler Country Park has countryside adventure for everyone including 125 acres of country walks, wildlife spotting, adventure play for kids, a Village Green edged by historic, picturesque thatched cottages, and a marina on Pitsea Creek in atmospheric Essex marshland.

The sculpture trail includes huge crawling creatures, whispering dishes and sound pods to interact with, and art you can sit on to get a different view of the world.

After the uprising was made from 7 sweet chestnut trees in 2006 by Robert Koenig. In 1381 peasants from the Essex marshland villages marched on London to protest against the poll tax. The rebellion was quickly suppressed. Most of the rebels were allowed to go home but the leaders were pursued, captured and executed. The leader of the peasant’s revolt was Wat Tyler. 

In order to represent this mass of humanity marching on London Robert Koenig chose to carve 7 symbolic figures from sweet chestnut trees. Wat Tyler stands proudly at the front of this group, other figures are bound and captive behind him. Sited in this clearing and looking as if they have just emerged from the wooded area behind, the eleven foot carvings convey a sense of the drama of the event and its often overlooked importance in the history of the area.

See my other posts about Robert Koenig's work here, including his Odyssey exhibition at St Martin-in-the-Fields.

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Peter Frampton - Show Me The Way.

Friday, 23 April 2021

Living God's Future Now - w/c 25 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
W/c 25 April 2021

Sunday

St Martin-in-the-Fields and HeartEdge Theology Group
Zoom
Sunday 25 April, 18:00-19:00 (BST)
Register here.
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. This month, it is Ben Sheridan, asking how do we encourage free speech without encouraging hate speech? Why is cancel Culture so polarising?

Monday

Back in the building and still online!
Zoom
Monday 26 April, 14:00 (BST)
Register here.
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, Diocese of Manchester, Bill Braviner, Parish Priest of Stockton St Peter & Elton St John, Kim Lafferty, Team Vicar in Farnworth, Kearsley and Stoneclough, Cath Duce, Assistant Vicar for Partnership Development, HeartEdge, and Andy Salmon, North West Coordinator for HeartEdge and Rector of Sacred Trinity Church in Salford.

Why should the Church care about housing?
Zoom
Monday 26 April, 16:30 (BST)
Register here.
This webinar will explore ways in which all churches can get involved in housing need locally and the theological basis for doing so. With The Rt Revd Dr Graham Tomlin, Bishop of Kensington, Chris Beales, member of the Archbishops’ Commission on Housing, Church & Community, Lynne Cullens, Rector of Stockport and Brinnington and Chair of the National Estate Churches Network. In advance of this webinar Graham Tomlin has written an article explaining why the Church should care about housing, that can be read here.

Biblical Studies
Zoom
Monday 26 April, 19:30 – 21:00 (BST)
Register in advance here.
Join Simon Woodman on two Monday evenings each month for a Biblical Studies class: a lecture followed by discussion, with handouts, looking at the Gospels and Acts.

Art and the Liturgical Year: Bringing the Church Kalendar to Life
Zoom
Monday 26 April, 19:30 – 21:00 (BST)
Register here.
The visual arts have the power to change our perceptions and even transport us to unfamiliar places. Learn how exhibitions and installations can amplify the message of seasons like Advent or Lent and hear how this work benefits both artists and congregations. This workshop is presented by the CEEP Network in partnership with the HeartEdge Network and CARAVAN. Panellists include: Janet Broderick - Rector, All Saints Beverly Hills; Paul-Gordon Chandler - Bishop, Diocese of Wyoming (moderator); Catriona Laing - Chaplain, St. Martha & St. Mary’s Anglican Church Leuven; Ben Quash - Professor, Christianity and the Arts, King’s College London; Aaron Rosen - Professor, Religion and Visual Culture, Henry Luce III Center for the Arts and Religion.

Tuesday

Bishops in Dialogue: Anglicans Post-Brexit and the Pandemic
Zoom
Tuesday 27 April 14:00 -15:30 BST
Register here.
The Church’s role in contributing to God’s reconciling work in the world, in a new context. 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 Pat Storey, Bishop of Meath & Kildare, Church of Ireland.

Sermon Prep Sally Hitchiner and Sam Wells
Livestream
Tuesday 27 April 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 28 April 16:00-17:00 BST
Email Jonathan Evens here to take part. This is open to all, including ordinands and lay leaders. Church leaders join in community, share and reflect together on their recent experiences in the form of wonderings with one of the HeartEdge team.

Thursday

Introducing the Visual Commentary on Scripture
Zoom
Thursday 29 April, 14:00 (BST)
Reg here
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. 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. Canon Ben Quash, the project’s director, will share some of the challenges and discoveries he has encountered so far in this ambitious undertaking.

Coming Up

Mission Summer School - 12 – 16 July 2021
Zoom
12-16 July 2021
For more details and to reg click here
An opportunity to engage more deeply with the theology of mission and to explore how it relates to your own practice.Input structured around the four Cs of Commerce, Culture, Congregation and Compassion. A mix of teaching and conversation with leading scholars and practitioners including the Revd Dr Sam Wells, Professor Anthony Reddie, Dr Cathy Ross, and Revd Heather Cracknell, among others. Workshops to engage with the themes and issues presented. Encounters with churches, organisations and projects (HeartEdge and Fresh Expressions) to get a hands-on feel for how it works out in practice.

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T Bone Burnett, Jay Bellerose, Keefus Ciancia - Being There.

Exhibitions at St Martin-in-the-Fields

We are very happy to have reopened our Shop and Courtyard Café at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Our outdoor café is celebrating the best of British with delicious new soups, new sandwiches and – you guessed it – a new selection of drinks both hot and cold. Going with the theme of all things new, the St Martin's shop also has something fresh to offer. Whether you are looking for greetings cards, gifts, or something to treat yourself we have you covered. We are open Thursday-Saturday 12pm-6pm and Sunday 11am-5pm.

As the Courtyard Cafe and Shop reopen there are also several excellent exhibitions that can be seen straightaway or very soon:

‘With the Heart of a Child’: A sculpture installation and exhibition by Nicola Ravenscroft

Thursday 15 April 2021
Sunday 25 July 2021



‘With the Heart of a Child’ sees seven life-size bronze children, one from every continent on Earth, simply dressed in soft silk tulle, hesitate in time, leaning forward, hopeful, poised to dive, eyes closed, dreaming into their future, anticipating things unseen.

Nicola Ravenscroft writes that, ‘As an artist, I am visionary, sculptor, mother to many, and grandmother to even more’, she breathes life into life taking ‘clay, dirt and stardust, shaped and twisted torn smoothed and broken lost, found and moulded wax and singing molten bronze through white-hot crucible-refining fire, Earth’s own core breathing life into revealing-truth, a giving-birth to energy.’

The result is this installation of eco-earthling-warrior-mudcubs – children intimately connected to the earth – reminding us of our duty of care to life, to love, to planet Earth.

Nicola has recently been commissioned to create a memorial to honour the bravery of front-line NHS and care workers in the fight against Covid. The project has the backing of Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock and members of the public are currently being asked to propose a fitting name for the memorial. Her work has consistently inspired musicians, including her husband saxophonist Raphael Ravenscroft (‘A little child shall lead them’) and, most recently, Tim Watts, assistant director of music at St. John’s College Cambridge, who is composing a piece in response to bas sculpture reliefs on paper titled ‘Among the Words of Trees’. Examples of work from each of these projects are included in this exhibition in addition to ‘With the Heart of a Child’.


Out of Home Exhibition

Friday 23 April 2021
Saturday 31 July 2021

What would the Covid-19 Pandemic have been like if you had no home?

Out of Home tells a story of Central London, by a group of people – Carly, Darren, Kelly, Craig, Joe, and Andre – for whom that was the case.

During a time when we were all told to ‘stay at home’, lockdowns have presented unique challenges for homeless people.
Even if selling The Big Issue was allowed, few regular customers were on the streets.
Even if a stranger wanted to give you £5, there have been few strangers on the streets.
And even if you had money, particularly in Central London, there were few places to spend it, and often only in shops where costs were higher.

Over lockdown, Dan Barker & Lucy Wood paid homeless people to take photographs each day, using disposable cameras.

Loose guidelines were agreed with each of the people in the project.
Try to take photographs in the day if possible, when there is light, but if not possible night is fine
Take photographs of things you find interesting, or would like to photograph
For each camera you’ll be paid £20, with ideally a maximum of 1 camera per day, but flexible where it could help
Try to spend less than 1 hour 45 taking photos in any given day, meaning that the work was paid at London Living Wage

Many others ebbed and flowed in and out of the project, some stayed with it throughout. During the project, some have filled a few disposable cameras, some have filled a camera with photographs every day.

This exhibition features the work of six of them: Carly, Darren, Kelly, Craig, Joe, and Andre.

Kelly Francis died during the project, age 39, and this exhibition is also in her memory.

Credits:

The Out of Home exhibition is funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, St Martin-in-the-Fields Trust, and supported by Panos Pictures. The book Out of Home is available at www.outofhome.org.uk. Proceeds from the exhibition go toward the positive works of St Martin-in-the-Fields, and to the photographers.

The Out of Home project was funded and organised by Dan Barker & Lucy Wood. Other kind people offered assistance. Full acknowledgements can be found at www.outofhome.org.uk.

Visit www.panos.co.uk for more information on Panos Pictures

Visit www.outofhome.org.uk for more information on the Out of Home project, to buy prints, or to buy the book, to further support St-Martin-in-the-Fields or the photographers


Adam Dant – The Return of London at St Martin-in-the-Fields Exhibition

Saturday 01 May 2021
Saturday 31 July 2021

We are delighted to announce Adam Dant‘s solo exhibition – The Return of London at the Crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields. A collection of limited edition prints and original drawings including maps that salute London’s Theatres, Lost Rivers and bustling London Squares.

Adam has created a brand new commemorative map to mark the 300th anniversary of the first foundation stone being laid at the Church of St Martin-in-the-Fields.

Unveiled for all to enjoy for the first time at The St-Martin-in-the-Fields Crypt Gallery ‘The Novel Map of the Parish of St Martin in the Fields’ forms the exciting centrepiece for an exhibition of the artist’s lively depictions of London public spaces. Using Dant’s novel map, visitors are encouraged to revive the tradition of ‘beating the bounds’ of The Parish of St-Martin in the Fields, walking its perimeter so to reaffirm their memory of the streets and sights that have lain unvisited through a year of lockdown.

Visitors to the exhibition will also be able to enjoy large scale prints from Dant’s series of depictions of ‘London Squares’ including, on show for the first time, his depiction of the vibrant tumult and turmoil of nearby Leicester Square. The exhibition is the perfect way to celebrate a return to our extraordinary capital after twelve long months and salute St Martin-in-the-Fields’ significant 300th anniversary.

Adam Dant – The Return of London at the Crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 4JH Open daily 12 – 5pm
For further information and images please contact Hobby Limon info@tagfinearts.com
t + 44 (0)20 7688 8446
m + 44 (0)7968 099 945

About artist, Adam Dant:

Adam is an international renowned artist whose large-scale narrative drawings and prints can be found in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum, Tate, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and the Musée d’Art Contemporain de Lyon as well as many leading private collections including that of HRH The Prince of Wales
Adam was the recipient of a prestigious Rome Scholarship in etching and engraving, is a winner of the Jerwood Drawing Prize and in 2015 was appointed by the UK Parliament as official artist of the General Election
Dant’s ‘Maps of London and Beyond’ book was awarded the gold award at the 2018 International Creative Media Awards and First prize in the travel category at the 2019 Catholic Herald book awards
Limited edition prints are published by TAG Fine Arts and available at www.tagfinearts.com

Exhibition details:

‘The Return of London’ exhibition will be on view in the Crypt at St Martin-in-the-Fields, from 12pm to 5pm, from May 1st, and will run throughout Summer at St Martin’s (Entrance via the glass Pavilion on St Martin’s Path)
The church’s famous Courtyard will be open for food and refreshments during exhibition hours
The St Martin’s Shop will be stocked with several new, bespoke ‘beating the bounds’ gifts
Nearest London Underground stations; Charing Cross, Embankment and Leicester Square

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