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Wednesday, 30 March 2022

The Meaning in the Miracles: Seeing and Believing

Here's the reflection I shared tonight in Bread for the World at St Martin-in-the-Fields as part of our Lent Course on 'The Meaning in the Miracles' by Jeffrey John

At this service we shared a newly commissioned drawing called ‘Blind Jesus (no one belongs here more than you)’ - see below. The drawing has been commissioned by Celia Webster from the artist Alan Stewart with the aim of creating discussion in churches and the wider community including encouraging others to create their own Last Supper images. Both Celia and Alan joined us for the service. Celia is part of the Church of England disabilities steering committee, while Rev Alan Stewart is currently the vicar of two churches in Hertford. He studied Foundation Art at Belfast Art College, then graduated with a degree in Fashion and Textiles from Central St Martins in London and has exhibited in various churches and galleries. This image in charcoal of the Last Supper, to which I refer in the reflection, includes the central character of a visually impaired Jesus, surrounded by twelve people of differing ages, backgrounds and abilities. At the table, an empty chair invites the viewer to find themselves at the table. This Jesus challenges theological and Biblical imagery of blindness as sin or something to be cured. The image is offered as the beginning of a conversation. It asks questions like... What associations do we have with blindness? How does this Jesus ‘see’ me? Why has each figure been chosen? What are their stories? Who else should be at this meal? Is the empty chair for you?:

Tonight, we grapple with two of the more problematic elements of Jesus' miracles. As one whose teenage faith was renewed through the Charismatic movement, with its belief in supernatural healing, while also later becoming father to a daughter who not only has epilepsy but whose character and personality has been shaped through that experience, these are stories with which I grapple personally. In the book, Jeffrey John is crystal clear on one of the issues with which we grapple tonight. In the chapter on ‘The Withered Fig Tree’ he says that the way this story is told in Mark's Gospel 'exemplifies the way the early Church imported into the Gospel an anti-Semitic ideology which had no place in the original teaching of Jesus, and which has spawned a terrible legacy of atrocities perpetrated by Christians on Jews down the ages.’

John says that our response should be to ‘align ourselves consciously with Paul and against the evangelists, in particular, with Paul’s continuing love and respect for the tradition of Israel, his unbreakable conviction that God’s promises stand firm, and his yearning hope that in the end all Israel – the Old and the New – shall be one in God’s salvation.’ Jeffrey John doesn't go as far in regard to disability, but I want to suggest that we should essentially do the same.

The way in which disability is understood and treated within the Gospels and in Jesus' healing miracles is an issue with which we have grappled at St Martin's because of the work of our Disability Advisory Group led by Fiona MacMillan. Much of what I will say tonight is based on my understanding of their work and the issues they have raised, including use of several insightful phrases coined by Fiona.

The issue is highlighted by our title for tonight's session ‘Seeing and Believing’. If seeing is equated with believing then those who do not see, including those who are blind, are excluded from believing. The fact that Jesus heals blind people and speaks about such healing relating to faith seems to reinforce the problem. It is a problem that also applies to deaf people who are viewed in a similar way within these stories. A focus on prayer for supernatural healing also removes agency from disabled people and leads to accusations of a lack of belief on the part of those not healed.

The problem goes deeper still, however, because of an Old Testament belief that the difficulties we encounter in life derive from our sins or those of our ancestors. This is a belief that Jesus explicitly rejects, doing so in relation to the healing of a blind man. Nevertheless, it is an understanding that has found its way into the hymns and liturgy that we commonly use in church, and which alienates and excludes disabled people. As example, think about how you would feel singing these lines from ‘Amazing Grace’ and ‘Just As I Am’, were you to be a blind person yourself:

‘Amazing grace / How sweet the sound / That saved a wretch like me / I once was lost, but now I'm found / Was blind, but now I see’

‘Just as I am, poor, wretched, blind’

While we know that the language of blindness, sight and salvation is intended metaphorically and refers to a sinfulness in which we all share, nevertheless to hear a fundamental aspect of your identity as a blind person equated to wretchedness is deeply galling, disheartening and is ultimately exclusionary.

Jeffrey John is clear that the point of Jesus' miracles is not medical but theological and spiritual. This has the effect of making them about all of us, rather than solely about those who were healed. John also argues that we are all blind or deaf before God opens us to his presence. However, while this universalises the stories, it also reinforces the equation between blindness or deafness and sin.

A different understanding of healing can emerge from these stories if we begin, as Jeffrey John does, with the understanding that the purpose of Jesus' healing ministry was to restore those who had been excluded to worship and to community. That is why the healing miracles often end with those healed going to see the authorities of the day in order to be readmitted to society. John notes that the healing miracles cover most of the excluded groups from Jesus’ time.

Healings were the way – the only way at that time - to return those who had been excluded to worship and community. Today, however, the social model of disability is based on the understanding that society disadvantages disabled people; that society is not set up to support the needs of disabled people and, therefore, it is society, not disabled people, that need to change. If we remove the barriers in society that exclude disabled people we can achieve the end that Jesus intended, which is the Messianic banquet in which everyone is included. That banquet is symbolised for us by the Eucharist.

Believing is not primarily about seeing supernatural healings that prove the existence of God but instead about seeing a vision of communion and community in the Eucharist, a place where all can come and where all are valued, where people can get in and join in.

A key part of that inclusion is that everyone has insight and understanding. Everyone has perceptions of God to share. As a result, physical blindness is not a barrier to knowing God or to sharing aspects of that relationship with others. The writings and experience of John Hull, a theologian who was blind, clearly show this to be true. In his ‘Open Letter from a Blind Disciple to a Sighted Saviour,’ he notes that it is not necessary to the witness of faith, regarding the way our ignorance, sin and disobedience prevent us from responding to the love of God made known in Jesus Christ, that that witness ‘should be cast into the form of the metaphor of blindness.’ That it was is surely, he suggests, ‘a case where the metaphor kills but the spirit gives life.’ He argues that it is necessary that all those who are spoken to by the Bible, including blind people, ‘should have an opportunity to reply, and thus the conversation which is within the Bible can enter into conversation with us today, and through offering a voice and a hearing to everyone, we can create a community of genuine free speech.’ There should be ‘a proliferation of many meanings until everyone's meanings are gathered in.’ ‘This is the way that the Bible becomes truly ecumenical, truly catholic.’

Alan Stewart's marvellous drawing of the Last Supper gives us just such an ecumenical or catholic image through its depiction of a diverse group of disciples surrounding a blind Jesus at the Last Supper. This is an image of many who have experienced barriers to inclusion getting in and joining in with the recognition that experiences of exclusion are central to a faith that sees Jesus become the scapegoat for humanity in order to remove the barriers to encounter with God that we had previously erected. The Jesus who does that bears on his body the marks of his Passion, carrying those signs and experiences into an eternity of unity and communion. His experience of being scapegoated and excluded becomes revelatory and is the route by which all can return to community.

In the same way, the experience of disabled people must become central, as in this image, not through the eradication of disability by means of supernatural healing, but by the eradication of all barriers to communion so that the insights of all can be received for the benefit and building up of the whole people of God. When one is excluded, the body of Christ is not whole and currently many remain excluded. To reverse that situation, we need to see the vision of communion that Jesus institutes through the Eucharist, that he shares in parables of the Messianic banquet, and which will become our experience in eternity in order that we begin to live that future now.

That is the vision that we need to see in order to believe, because belief is not primarily intellectual or propositional, instead it is about practice and demonstration – living God’s future now. It is a vision in which those who are blind or deaf or otherwise disabled have a valued place as those who, like Jesus, have come through exclusion to join in at the table. That is the vision that Alan Stewart sets out so compellingly for us in his Last Supper image. See and believe.




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June Boyce-Tillman - We Shall Go Out.

The conversation was God

Here's the reflection I shared during today's Choral Eucharist at St Martin-in-the-Fields:

Jesus said to them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, the Son can do nothing on his own, but only what he sees the Father doing; for whatever the Father does, the Son does likewise. The Father loves the Son and shows him all that he himself is doing; and he will show him greater works than these, so that you will be astonished.” (John 5. 17-30)

“God wants to communicate with humanity, and … Jesus represents the essence of that desire to talk,” says Mike Riddell. As God’s Son, Jesus was in a constant conversation with both God the Father and with God the Spirit. In these verses and others, the Son claims that he hears from the Father and speaks just what the Father has taught him (John 8: 26 – 29). He also claims that his relationship with the Father is not just one way, rather the Father also always hears the Son (John 11: 41 & 42).

Similarly, he says that the Spirit will not speak on his own but only what he hears (John 16: 13). The Spirit is sent, like the Son, by the Father, but comes in the name of the Son to remind the disciples of everything that the Son said to them (John 14: 26 & 27). This interplay or dialogue within the Godhead between Father, Son and Spirit can be summed up in the words of John 3. 34-35: “For the one whom God has sent speaks the words of God; to him God gives the Spirit without limit. The Father loves the Son and has placed everything in his hands.”

Stephen Verney calls this interplay between Father, Son and Spirit, which he believes we are called to enter, ‘the Dance of Love.’ He writes: ‘“I can do nothing”, [Jesus] said, “except what I see the Father doing”. If he lays aside his teaching robes and washes the feet of the learners … it is because he sees his Father doing it. God, the Father Almighty, the maker of heaven and earth, is like that; he too lays aside his dignity and status as a teacher. He does not try to force his objective truth into our thick heads, but he gives himself to us in acts of humble service; he laughs with us and weeps with us, and he invites us to know him in our hearts through an interaction and an interplay between us. It is this knowledge that Jesus has received from the Father, and in the to and fro of this relationship he and the Father are one. They need each other. That is the pattern of how things potentially are in the universe, and of how God means them to be.’

The beginning of John’s Gospel can be read as saying that this kind of conversation, dialogue and partnership with God is actually what life is all about: “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 human beings, shining in the darkness, a darkness which neither understood nor quenched its creativity …

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.” (John 1: 1-14 revisited)

God wants us to be in conversation, in dialogue, in debate, with him so that we can find him for ourselves, find ourselves in him, and embody his characteristics and interests in ourselves. The philosopher, Martin Buber, has argued that “God is not met by turning away from the world or by making God into an object of contemplation, a “being” whose existence can be proved and whose attributes can be demonstrated.” Instead, we can know God only in dialogue with him and this dialogue goes on moment by moment in each new situation as we respond with our whole being to the unforeseen and the unique.

Our dialogue with God interrogates the very nature of what we are, and how we understand our identity, as it is from the art of conversation that truth emerges and our identity is constructed. It is through this conversation that the Father loves us, showing us all that he is doing. Truth emerging and identity constructed are the greater works which he shows to us through this conversation and which astonish us.

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Johannes Brahms - Missa Canonica.

Tuesday, 29 March 2022

Artlyst: Damien Hirst The Visceral Reality Of Death

My latest review for Artlyst is of Damien Hirst: Natural History at Gagosian Brittania Street:

'God Alone Knows, Our Father Who Art In Heaven, and The Incomplete Truth have been grouped to form a crucifixion tableau with the dove of the Spirit above the central crucified sheep while a shorn sheep clutching a rosary and the Book of Common Prayer between its hooves kneels in the place of the grieving Mary or John at the foot of the cross. Exhibited separately, these are works that have sometimes been called profane and which can be understood in relation to themes other than the strictly religious ... Grouped together, as is the case here, these works exhibit a greatly increased sense of the hope that Christians see in the violent sacrificial death of God. Hirst once said, to Sean O’Hagan, the afterlife is a ‘phenomenal idea’. However, for me, it is the poignancy of expression on these crucified creatures that reminds of the once-for-all nature of Christ’s sacrifice, the sense that our violent actions and intentions are shown to be self-defeating – a literal dead-end – because by scapegoating and crucifying the Son of God there is nowhere else that our violent natures can possibly take us.'

My other pieces for Artlyst are:

Interviews -
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Sunday, 27 March 2022

A covenant of fruitfulness


Here's my last Sunday sermon for St Martin-in-the-Fields in my current role, for this morning's Mothering Sunday Eucharist: 

'Anna Tymchenko was scared. She had been in labour for hours, but her hometown was being bombed and her apartment was shaking. She and her husband were trapped with no electricity, running water or doctor. The small town of Bucha, 18 miles from Kyiv, had come under relentless bombardment since the start of the war. Twenty-one-year-old Anna, along with her husband and brother, had previously taken refuge in the basement of their block of flats. But when the electricity was cut off and the heating stopped working, the basement was plunged into darkness, and it was bitterly cold. Anna's husband Volodymyr was torn between remaining in Bucha or trying to flee. When they did finally try to escape by car, they had to turn back when they heard that a column of Russian military vehicles was heading their way.

They then decided to stay in the apartment and when Anna went into labour late on 7 March, she called her neighbours for help. Anna's neighbours had to deliver the baby themselves. Only one of them – Irina - had had any medical expertise. "When the baby's head came out, we got scared," Viktoria, one of the neighbours, said. "She was blue and we didn't know what to do. Then Irina gently turned the baby's head and she came out. She didn't cry at first … but then she cried and we all cheered." Volodymyr cried tears of relief for baby Alisa, who was born on 8 March - International Women's Day.'

The natural cycle of birth, with its inherent generativity and creativity, continues, even in the extreme circumstances of war, through the resilience of all involved in this story. Today is a day for celebrating both the vital role of mothers and the wider village needed through which we nurture and bring up children, the fruit of our fertility and creativity as humans.

The experience of childbearing and of childbirth is one that is used through the Bible as a metaphor for the creativity and generativity of God, who is also endlessly creative and fertile even in the most difficult of circumstances. In Isaiah 42:14 God is pictured as a woman in labour crying out, gasping and panting, as new things spring forth in our world. In Deuteronomy 32:18 we read of Israel as the people that God brought to birth, while in Isaiah 49:15 God is compared to a nursing mother and then in Psalm 131:2 to a mother who has weaned her child.

I have been at St Martin’s for seven years and today is the last sermon I will preach here on a Sunday, at least in my current role. In that time St Martin’s has seen God bring many new things to birth in and through us and so, on this day when we celebrate the ongoing generativity of God, Mother Church, human beings, and, especially, mothers themselves, I want to reflect on three things that have come to birth over that seven year period; one in me, one in this church, and one in the wider church.

So, beginning with myself, one of many blessings for me personally in being at St Martin’s over this period of time has been the involvement that I have had with the disability work that happens here through the Disability Advisory Group led by Fiona MacMillan. That includes the annual conference on Disability and Church organised through a partnership between St Martin’s and Inclusive Church and hosted, in more recent years, by HeartEdge. Although I had previous experience of being with disabled people in addressing access issues through my time as civil servant, I nevertheless found I had a huge amount to learn through being at St Martin’s. What has come to birth in me in this time is a greater understanding - not simply of access as joining in not just getting in - but of disability at the heart of God and as a key to understanding the nature of God and the incarnation.

God experiences brokenness on the cross, a brokenness that leaves physical scars on his body, but then, in the words of Donald Eadie, a disabled Methodist minister, his “world cracked open and life broke through.” It wasn’t just Jesus’ world that cracked open in that moment but ours as well, because as we follow him into that experience of brokenness leading to new life we also share in that same experience. Singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen encourages us to forget our ‘perfect offerings’ because there is ‘a crack in everything’ and ‘that's how the light gets in’. Jesus, the Disabled God, reveals the necessity of brokenness in order that life and light can be received and experienced.

Then, in regard to this church, another new thing to have come to birth in this time has been our artists’ and craftspeople’s group. This group is what its prosaic name describes: a group for any artists or craftspeople in the St Martin’s community. There are many such in our community but there wasn’t originally a forum in which the gifts of those people could be engaged and, more than that, the important programme of art commissions from artists outside the community had created a perception that the gifts of those within the community weren’t valued.

The artists’ and craftspeople’s group organizes a range of participatory activities and opportunities to make and create. These are open to participants of all abilities. There have been periodic opportunities for participants to show their work, including a monthly drawing group, art workshops in Advent and Lent, a monthly rota for displaying work, and an annual group exhibition. Significant creative energy has been released within our community as a result. Those with established creative gifts have been affirmed and those beginning to explore their gifts have been encouraged. Many have been blessed by the displays, exhibitions and installations that have resulted. God is the ultimate creator and this new creative energy that has been set free within St Martin’s is an expression of the image of God in our community.

Thirdly, the new thing that has come to birth in the wider church with which I have primarily been involved is HeartEdge. HeartEdge is an international, ecumenical movement galvanising churches to be at the heart of their communities whilst being with those on the edge. Its 1,500+ partners can be found on four different continents, but its growth was seeded here, and its development has been supported from here.

What is new about HeartEdge is not primarily its network of partners, but the new language being coined that is transforming discourse within the Church around mission. HeartEdge is expanding the imagination of a church captivated by scarcity and enabling churches to receive the abundance that God is continually sharing and thereby become fully alive. HeartEdge seeks to transform church and society through the 4 Cs of commerce, culture, compassion and congregational life which, through their interdependence, provide a model of what a renewed society might look like. The 4 Cs, as they inter-connect, create a new model of mission that sustains itself, is open to the gifts of strangers, and exhibits the life of faith.

God is the one who says: “Do not remember the former things, or consider the things of old. I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert … I give water in the wilderness, rivers in the desert, to give drink to my chosen people, the people whom I formed for myself so that they might declare my praise” (Isaiah 43.18-21). Then, in Jesus, God becomes the new thing that is brought to birth by Mary, the God-bearer and Mother of our Lord. God becomes both creator and created, the nurturer and the nurtured, the sower and the seed, the chicken and the egg.

It should come as no surprise then, that God longs to create communities that are fruitful and generative. Here at St Martin’s, we have a history of seeding new initiatives that are cultural, compassionate or commercial including St Martin’s School of Art, the Social Care Unit that has now become The Connection at St Martin-in-the-Fields, the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, St Martin-in-the-Fields Limited, Liberty, Shelter, Amnesty International, and The Big Issue.

As a result, it should also come as no surprise that in more recent years, in addition to HeartEdge, we have seen the creation of the Frontline Network, the Nazareth Community, the Companions of Nazareth, and the Being With Courses. God has created here a community that is consistently fruitful, creative and generative even in times of difficulty and challenge, as has also been the case during the pandemic. We called the book about our ministry during the pandemic ‘Finding Abundance in Scarcity’ because that was our experience as we looked together for the opportunities to find God’s abundance in the midst of the pandemic’s scarcity.

Our experience in that regard has been similar to that of Anna and Volodymyr in Bucha; that there is no let up in the flow of abundant creativity from God especially in times of trial and difficulty. It has been a privilege and pleasure for me to be a part of this community for the past seven years to learn more of God’s abundant goodness and to be, with you, a midwife in bringing some of these new initiatives to birth. Just as Anna and Volodymyr needed their neighbours to bring Alisa into the world, so HeartEdge, the Disability Advisory Group, the artists’ and craftspeople’s group, the Frontline Network, the Nazareth Community, the Companions of Nazareth, and the Being With Courses need the village that is this community to continue to nurture what has been brought to birth here.

On the day I was licensed here, Sam Wells said we were ‘looking to establish a covenant of fruitfulness with partners and friends all around the country and beyond.’ He said: ‘We could settle for enhancing our resources, developing our programmes, and deepening our common life. Those are all fine and demanding things, and most churches in the country would be overjoyed to have such an aspiration. But we’re being called beyond that. We’re being called to share our message and to influence the wider church and world. And right now the way we’re seeking to do that is by making mutually-enriching partnerships and working with other institutions to help them better realise their vocations. Why? Because we believe that’s God’s way. God in Christ didn’t shout from afar or keep a light hidden on a hill far away. God in Christ made relationships one by one, some close and constant, some occasional and passing, and came alongside people of all kinds, opening up their hearts, setting their souls on fire, and lifting from them the burden of oppression or pain or guilt. That’s what a covenant of fruitfulness looks like.’

That’s what we have seen and heard and experienced over the past seven years. That’s what God has brought to birth and to which we have been midwives. It’s what we can pray for the people of Ukraine and for Anna, Vlodymyr and their neighbours as they bring up Alisa in the midst of war. It’s also what we can celebrate together this Mothering Sunday as we celebrate the ongoing generativity of Mother God, Mother Church, human beings, and, especially, mothers themselves. It’s what we continue to be called to nurture, grow and develop both here at St Martin’s and also for me, shortly, in the Wickford and Runwell Team Ministry. I go to become one of the partners and friends that you have around the country and beyond, so this Covenant of Fruitfulness will remain a bond between us, a covenant in which we continue to share even as I leave the role I have had among you here. So, let us commit to pray for fruitfulness and new life, creativity and generativity, to characterise all our contacts, friendships and partnerships as we go from this place today. Amen.

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Saturday, 26 March 2022

humbler church Bigger God w/c Sunday 27th March 2022




 Welcome to our exciting HeartEdge programme for 2022. We hope you will be able to join us, whether at online events or at our in-person events around the world. You can find all our events on our website — and if you're a HeartEdge partner, you can upload your own events through the members' area.

Last year, we launched Living God's Future Now, an online festival of theology and practice. We hosted workshops, webinars, spaces to gather and share ideas, lecture series, and more. This year, we're continuing our programming with a new theme — humbler church, Bigger God.

HeartEdge is fundamentally about a recognition of the activity of the Holy Spirit beyond and outside the church, and about a church that flourishes when it seeks to catch up with what the Spirit is already doing in the world. There was a time when church meant a group that believed it could control access to God – access that only happened in its language on its terms. But God is bigger than that, and the church needs to be humbler than that. Kingdom churches anticipate the way things are with God forever – a culture of creativity, mercy, discovery and grace – and are grateful for the ways God renews the church through those it has despised, rejected, or ignored.

We hope this reflects the lessons we've learnt from the past year: still trying to live God's future now, re-imagining our faith and our calling as a Church in a changing world. Thank you for joining us for the journey — we can't wait to see what this year brings.

Church History course: 19.45 (GMT) Monday 28 March- Christendom; love it or hate it, you need to deal with it. This course provides an introduction to and an overview of church history. If we are to see a humbler Church and a bigger God, we need to deal with the history of the Church to understand where we are now, and why? Ruth Gouldbourne has been a Baptist minister for more than 30 years, ministering in churches in Bedford, London and Cheadle Hulme, as well as being a tutor at Bristol Baptist College. An Associate Fellow of Spurgeon's College, she is also Senior Research Fellow of IBTSC Amsterdam, and a Research Fellow of Bristol Baptist College. Register here.

Sermon Preparation with Sally Hitchiner and Sam Wells: 16:30 (GMT) Tuesday 29 March, livestreamed here. Sam Wells and Sally Hitchiner discuss Sunday's readings and offer practical tips on preaching.

Community of Practitioners workshop: 16:00 (GMT) Wednesday 30 March, Zoom meeting. Email jonathan.evens@smitf.org to register. This is a space for practitioners, lay and ordained, to reflect on theology and practice. Each week, we alternate between 'Wonderings' and discussion of a work of theology. Book to be read is ‘Improvisation’ by Sam Wells. 'Wonderings' help us to reflect and pray on what has stood out for each of us in the last week. Newcomers are very welcome.

Faith in the time of the ‘new normal’: Session three - Same boat or same storm?: 31st March 7:15pm. Register here. A series of Lenten conversations hosted by The Queen’s Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education. This series aims to help congregations and house groups reflect on how Christians may understand the changes we’ve been through as a society, and the new ‘place’ we may be entering. It will draw on and introduce participants to resources from the tradition and offer them some tools for reflection to carry forward towards Easter. Sessions will take place on Thursday evenings during Lent and will be streamed live from the Queen's chapel to groups gathered online. Resources will be provided for the weeks where there are no hosted sessions.

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St Martin's Voices - Gloria.

New Director of HeartEdge


I'm very pleased to see this excellent appointment and will be excited to see how HeartEdge grows and develops under Heather's leadership:

'St Martin-in-the-Fields is delighted to announce the appointment of Revd Heather Cracknell as Director of HeartEdge. Heather comes to us from three years as Head of Development for Fresh Expressions at Church House Westminster. She will begin her new role in June.

Heather was ordained as Norwich Diocese’s first pioneer minister, and has served in traditional and new church settings. Her experience of new housing, outer estate parish, suburban and city centre ministry allowed her to equip churches across Norfolk to engage in mission as a diocesan Mission Enabler. After this she joined the national church team to establish an initiative helping churches start new missional projects, and advising dioceses on how to develop a ‘mixed ecology’ approach.

She lives in Norwich with her family and enjoys writing, paddle-boarding as well as wild swimming in rivers and the sea. For obvious reasons her level of enjoyment supporting her local football team hasn’t been quite as high this past season.

HeartEdge was founded in 2017. It is an international, ecumenical movement for the renewal of church and society. It seeks to advocate the 4Cs – commerce, culture, compassion and congregational life. With 1500 members, it is a presence on four continents. Its founder director, Revd Jonathan Evens, who has built up the movement to international recognition, departs St Martin’s at Easter to become Team Rector of Wickford and Runwell in the Diocese of Chelmsford.

Heather says, ‘I’m excited to be joining HeartEdge and building on the excellent work Jonathan and the team have been doing. HeartEdge is connecting with great churches and organisations and I know we will be able to learn together how to be the church God is calling us to be in these unprecedented times. We will need courage to try new things, humility to learn from what doesn’t work, generosity to share what does and curiosity to notice what the Holy Spirit is doing in our world. I can’t wait to get stuck in.’

Sam Wells, Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields says, ‘Heather brings an ideal range of skills, experience, imagination and vision to this role. It is one of the principles of HeartEdge that God gives the church everything it needs. I look forward to enjoying how Heather brings the HeartEdge movement and the church as a whole to moments of joy as we realise the truth of that conviction. This is a happy day for HeartEdge and everyone who looks to it for inspiration and encouragement.’

Bishop Tim Thornton, Chair of HeartEdge, says, ‘I am very pleased to welcome Heather to this new role with HeartEdge. She brings gifts of leadership and enthusiasm and a very impressive knowledge of pioneering ministry across a number of denominations. She is completely in alignment with the values of HeartEdge, and I look forward to being challenged and encouraged by her and working with her as part of the team taking HeartEdge forward.’"

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Mark Hollis - A New Jerusalem.

Windows on the world (372)

 


London, 2022

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Anton Bruckner - Os Justi.


Expository Times: An Interpretive Dialogue Between Art and Scripture

My latest book review has been published by The Expository Times. The review called An Interpretive Dialogue Between Art and Scripture is of J. Cheryl Exum's Art as Biblical Commentary: Visual Criticism from Hagar the Wife of Abraham to Mary the Mother of Jesus (Bloomsbury T & T Clark, 2019). 

In this book Exum asks what works of art can teach us about the biblical text. 'Visual criticism' is her term for an approach that addresses this question by focusing on the narrativity of images-reading them as if, like texts, they have a story to tell-and asking what light an image's 'story' can shed on the biblical narrator's story.

My other book reviews are:
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Friday, 25 March 2022

Satisfied by Mother God

Here's the Mothering Sunday piece I've prepared for this week's newsletter at St Martin-in-the-Fields:

One of the loveliest of the Psalms is 131, in which Israel is pictured as a weaned child resting in the arms of God, its mother.

This Psalm is special for three reasons. The first, is its humility and lack of pretension. Instead of being portrayed as a great nation, Israel self-identifies as a dependent child reliant on God for all its sustenance and security. ‘My heart is not lifted up, my eyes are not raised too high; I do not occupy myself with things too great and too marvellous for me.’ The Psalm recognises that the depths of God’s being and the complexities of life are such that, ultimately, we will not have all the answers to life, the universe and everything; so, must rest in trust.

Second, in the literature of a primarily Patriarchal society it is a source of wonder that God is sometimes imaged as female. This is one of those instances – there are others – and provides a basis for understanding God as both beyond gender yet able to be imaged through gender. It also acts as a challenge or encouragement to go beyond the relatively small number of occasions in which the Bible images God in this way by exploring this under-developed way of imaging God further. Mothering Sunday being an appropriate occasion to be reminded of the benefits of doing so.

Third, the Psalm opens up for us a particular avenue to rest, reflection and silence. In this Psalm the baby feeds on God so fully that it is satiated and satisfied and in that experience rests in silence. How often do we feed on the milk of God – her presence, her words, her actions – to the extent that we can, in that moment, take no more and lie still, trusting, satisfied, in the everlasting arms that always hold us whatever the great and marvellous things that surround us.

I wonder whether that is an experience of God you would like to enjoy this Mothering Sunday.

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Wednesday, 23 March 2022

Artlyst - Ali Cherri: Artist in Residence National Gallery

My latest review for Artlyst is of Ali Cherri's If you prick us, do we not bleed? installation at the National Gallery:

'His installations, therefore, open up a conversation about the Gallery’s Collection, which, by spanning five centuries of Western European painting, includes a large proportion of paintings that treat specifically Christian themes and subject matter. Three of the five damaged paintings are among that group within the Collection, whilst those surrounding Cherri’s vitrines in the Sainsbury wing are predominantly so. At the centre of the Christian faith and its images is the violence of the crucifixion, alongside that inflicted on martyrs following in the footsteps of Christ. In the context of this exhibition, then, there is a discussion to be had about the depiction of violence within the Collection and within Christianity, together with explorations of the extent to which Christ’s passion seeks to unmask systems of violence and the extent to which the Church has been complicit in such systems.'

My other pieces for Artlyst are:

Interviews -
Articles -
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Leonard Cohen - Who By Fire.

Seeing the gifts God is giving

Here's the reflection I shared in today's Choral Eucharist at St Martin-in-the-Fields:

In today’s Old Testament reading (Exodus 17.1-7), we're with the People of Israel after the Exodus in the midst of the wilderness where there is no water. The sun is beating down and we're dehydrating. We're also complaining - quite understandably, because the situation is dire, and it looks as though we're likely to die. We want to go back to Egypt because, although we were slaves there, ill-treated and exploited, at least we knew where our food and drink was coming from.

But at the point when all seems lost and hope is exhausted, God reveals the hidden spring of water within this wilderness landscape. As a result, it looks as though God was somewhat late in arriving on the scene. The singer songwriter Sam Phillips writes that:

'Help is coming, help is coming
One day late, one day late
After you've given up and all is gone
Help is coming one day late'

She continues:

'Try to understand, you try to fix your broken hands
But remember that there always has been good
Like stars you don't see in the day sky
Wait till night

Life has kept me down
I've been growing under ground
Now I'm coming up and when time opens the earth
You'll see love has been moving all around us, making waves

So help is coming, help is coming
One day late, one day late
After you've given up and all is gone
Help is coming one day late'

In her song, help, goodness, life and hope are all around but hidden or overlooked, as was the vital spring of water in the wilderness. Maybe, the issue is not one of God turning later than we expect but instead that how we perceive things needs to change in order that we start to see what is in fact already there.

As Christians, we don’t have to look far for a mission statement for the church. ‘I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.’ (John 10.10) Living abundant life. That’s what the Father intends, the Son embodies, the Spirit facilitates. God is a God of abundance who is continually giving us all we need even in the midst of scarcity and trouble; perhaps, especially, in the midst of scarcity and trouble.

Our problem is that we don’t always recognise and receive the gifts that God is giving. In order to see what God is giving us, our mindset needs to change from a deficit mindset which sees problems to an asset mindset which looks for resources. The Israelites had a deficit mindset as they were focused on the problems they were experiencing and that was what led them to complain. It meant they weren’t looking around them to see what assets there were where they were. When we develop a habit of looking for assets, we then begin looking at our situation widely and broadly and notice what is ordinarily hidden to us by being on the edge.

I wonder whether the experience of the Israelites in undercovering the hidden spring of water in the wilderness is not somewhat similar to the experience many of us have had in the pandemic; of help, of goodness, of life, of hope being there in plain sight within our local communities but only seen, appreciated and valued when we were forced to stop and look and reflect. Community like never before. Kindness at its proper level. These were some of the discoveries of the first lockdown. Qualities that were always there within our communities but only revived and received in the adversity of the pandemic.

Let’s make that love normal by praying for eyes to see and ears to hear, that we might receive all that God, in his abundance, wishes to give us; receiving those gifts in the form in which they are given to us. Amen.

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Sam Phillips - One Day Late.