Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief
Showing posts with label advent oasis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label advent oasis. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 November 2021

Advent Oasis










Today's Advent Oasis at St Martin-in-the-Fields began with demonstration of materials and Lectio Divina on The Visitation (Luke 1:39-45). At the end of the workshop we gathered to share the work we made inspired by words and phrases from The Visitation story.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Steve Bell - O Come, O Come Emmanuel.

Sunday, 1 December 2019

Advent Sunday: Home Starts Here






Images above from the Advent Art Oasis at St Martin-in-the-Fields this afternoon and the CTiW Advent Service organised and hosted by St James Piccadilly.

Here is my sermon from the Advent Sunday Eucharist at St Martin's:

‘It's coming home, it’s coming home, it's coming...
Football's coming home.’

The England football song 'Three Lions', which was written by David Baddiel, Frank Skinner and Ian Broudie and was first released in 1996 for that year's European Championships, perfectly captures the sense of hope and longing mixed with realism that comes with supporting a national side which has won the major trophy once and come close on other occasions without quite repeating that pinnacle moment. Those of us who sing it when England qualify for the World Cup or European Championship, sing with a sense that this could be the moment of triumph revisited, but probably won't be.

Advent seems to contain that same mix of hope and unfulfilled longing. The word ‘Advent’ is derived from the Latin word adventus, meaning ‘coming’. Advent has traditionally been observed as a time of preparation for both the celebration of the first coming of Jesus at Christmas and as a time of prayer for the return of Jesus at the Second Coming. It is this second aspect to Advent which results in passages like today’s Gospel (Matthew 24.36-44) taken from Jesus’ end times sermon featuring heavily in the readings during this season. Advent asks us to reflect on the nature of Jesus’ first and second comings and on how we are to live in the time in between. But Christ’s second coming seems a long time delayed and we wonder, as with the England team winning another trophy, whether that day will ever come.

Our Gospel reading seems to suggest that even the realisation of our hopes for Christ's return can involve a similar sense of hope fulfilled and hopes dashed. It has often been understood as describing what will happen to believers and non-believers when Christ returns and has been used as an evangelistic appeal with the aim of scaring us into salvation. As a teenager, for example, I listened repeatedly to a haunting song by Larry Norman based on today’s Gospel reading. It is called ‘I wish we’d all been ready’ and the second verse includes these lines:

‘A man and wife asleep in bed
She hears a noise and turns her head he's gone
I wish we’d all been ready
Two men walking up a hill
One disappears and ones left standing still
I wish we’d all been ready
There's no time to change your mind
The son has come and you've been left behind’

These images, based directly on our Gospel reading, of people being suddenly separated are taken from a block of teaching given by Jesus during his final week in Jerusalem that have become known as his eschatological sermon. In my view, Jesus’ eschatological sermon was not actually about the end of the world but rather about the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem which occurred in AD70. The destruction of the Temple by the Romans was a time of sudden exile and separation, persecution and loss, as graphically described in today's Gospel reading and as it affected the majority of Jesus’ disciples. There was a sudden attack that resulted in some who were in Jerusalem at the time dying and others separating and fleeing the city; just the kind of events which are described in today’s Gospel reading.

In other words it is a passage that describes the kind of sudden crisis that can cause separation and loss. That is the kind of experience which can often lead to people losing their homes and being separated from those they love. The kind of experiences that we are highlighting through this year's BBC Radio 4 Christmas Appeal with St Martin-in-the-Fields with its theme of Home Starts Here. We are saying that Home Starts Here, with the work of The Connection at St Martin's in supporting those who are rough sleeping or the Vicar's Relief Fund with those vulnerably housed, because, for many of those helped, home has originally been lost through a crisis like the loss of work or a divorce or the onset of illness. Sudden crises that cause separation and loss and can often, in these days, lead to people being on the streets.

For Phil the crisis was losing his home because of the drug dealing that he was allowing to go on in that home. He got on the first train leaving Hull and found himself in London. He came out of Kings Cross and stood outside and cried his eyes out for an hour, thinking ‘What have I done here? What can I do?’

When he came to The Connection two years ago, he was already scaling down his drug dependency and has managed with medical help to come off drugs. With help from The Connection he now has a flat in west London. He says, “It’s a studio. In a big house. Apart from sharing the kitchen I’ve got my own room, my own shower, toilet, sink, fridge, microwave, all that sort of stuff. Having your own key to your door, you can close it, lock it, that’s it. It’s your own place. No-one’s telling you ‘you’ve got to get up at 7 o’clock. You’ve got to be out by half past 7. You can’t go in till this time…’ Having that independence makes you feel good in itself. Anything where you’ve got your own door beats living on the street, sofa surfing. You can’t beat having your own door just to close it and shut the world off." For Phil, home started here at The Connection. The work of The Connection and of the Vicar's Relief Fund means that there can be hope in the middle of such experiences; that home can start here, that we can come home.

Similarly, the message of Advent is that we are not alone in such times. Advent prepares us to celebrate Christ's first coming into our world. The incarnation involves God, in the baby Jesus, coming into our world and moving into our neighbourhood to be God with us as he makes his home with us. But, as we reflected earlier, our experience of hope and of opportunities to genuinely come home is mixed. Like England fans singing 'Three Lions' there is a mix of optimism and realism. The work of The Connection means that for people like Phil home can start here, but we know, through our annual service for those who died homeless in London, that others don't make it in the same way and therefore we seek to remember them and honour their passing.

The message of Advent though, is not so much that we find a new home but more that Christ comes to us and makes his home with us. This means that, as an old children's song perhaps rather simplistically puts it, with Jesus in the boat we can smile in the storm as we go sailing home. The disciples experienced separation and loss when Christ died and when he ascended but he then came again when his Spirit filled them on the day of Pentecost and made his home within them. Home for God started anew at Pentecost when he moved into our neighbourhood to live there permanently.

Now, with the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins, we can say that Christ plays in a thousand places and faces, so that we can greet him when we meet him and bless when we understand. This is the light in our darkness for which we are praying through our Advent meditations. It is the calm in the storm that the disciples experienced on the Sea of Galilee and it is what took the disciples through the separation, loss and exile that they experienced following the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem in AD70. Because Christ was with them, because he had made his home in them, they could take the good news of his love and presence with them to the far corners of the Roman Empire.

Home starts here; both through the support that the appeal provides to those who are homeless or vulnerably housed and through our Advent reflections on Christ's coming to make his home with us.

The 17th century German mystic, Angelus Silesius, warns us:

Though Christ a thousand times
In Bethlehem be born
If he’s not born in thee,
Thou art still forlorn.

If Christ is not born in you as you listen and sing this Advent, our time together will be pleasant but not life changing. But, if Christ is born in you, then the whole story will be transformed. It will become your story. You will be able to say:

Christ born in a stable
is born in me.
Christ accepted by shepherds
accepts me.
Christ receiving the wise men
receives me.
Christ revealed to the nations
be revealed in me.
Christ dwelling in Nazareth
You dwell in me.

Let us pray: Wilderness God, your Son was a displaced person in Bethlehem, a refugee in Egypt, and had nowhere to lay his head in Galilee. Bless all who have nowhere to lay their head today, who find themselves strangers on earth, pilgrims to they know not where, facing rejection, closed doors, suspicion, and fear. Give them companions in their distress, hope in their wandering, and safe lodging at their journey’s end. And make us a people of grace, wisdom, and hospitality, who know that our true identity is to be lost, until we find our eternal home in you. Amen.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir - Go Tell It On The Mountain.

Saturday, 30 November 2019

Advent - St Martin-in-the-Fields & Churches Together in Westminster




I will be preaching on Advent in the 10.00am Eucharist at St Martin-in-the-Fields tomorrow. Then I'll be leading the second in our Inspired to Follow Advent Course.

As part of our Advent preparations, we are running a new Inspired to Follow course exploring Advent Characters:
  • 24 November - Elizabeth & Mary, Luke 1:35-49 / ‘The Visitation of the Virgin to Saint Elizabeth,’ Workshop of Goossen van der Weyden, about 1516.
  • 1 December - Joseph, Matthew 1:18-25 & 2:13-15 / ‘‘The Dream of Saint Joseph,’ Philippe de Champaigne, 1642-3.
  • 15 December - Zechariah & Elizabeth, Luke 1:57-71 / ‘The Naming of Saint John the Baptist,’ Barent Fabritius, probably 1650-5.
  • 22 December – Herod, Matthew 2:1-12 & 16-17 / ‘The Massacre of the Innocents with Herod,’ Gerolamo Mocetto, about 1500-25
Like earlier Inspired to Follow sessions, these use fine art paintings from the National Gallery, along with Biblical story, theological reflection and conversation with others, as a way to explore big questions that we all wrestle with. ‘Inspired to Follow: Art and the Bible Story’ is a free resource produced by St Martin-in-the-Fields in partnership with the National Gallery. The course uses fine art paintings in the National Gallery’s collection, along with a Biblical text and a short theological reflection. To access this free resource register your details here

Following the viewing of art in Inspired to Follow, we will be making art in an Advent Oasis (Sunday 1 December, 1.30-4.00pm, George Richards & Austen Williams Rooms).



This ‘Oasis’ time will include quiet scripture reflection, prayer and practical art. Art materials will be available for you to explore, play with colour and be creative through collage, painting, drawing or writing. All are very welcome.

The artists and craftspeople's group who are organising the Advent Oasis have also contributed images to the Advent Meditations booklet for St Martin's entitled Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord. This is a booklet to guide our meditations through the Advent season and is available from the Stewards on Sundays or from the Vergers during the week for a suggested donation of £3.00.

Our Advent Carol Service begins at 5.00pm when, in words and music we explore our Advent theme with the Choir of St Martin-in-the-Fields. The preacher is Revd Sally Hitchiner.

Churches Together in Westminster hold their Advent Service at 6.00pm at St James Piccadilly. The Light Shines in the Darkness has readings and music for Advent with Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir providing uplifting and inspirational songs. All followed by wine and refreshments.

Then we have Sacred Space for Advent at 7:00 pm at St Martin's. This is a reflective service using chants from the TaizĂ© community focusing on the themes for Advent.

See Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir again at St Martin's on Sunday, 8 December at 6:30pm for
THE NIGHT WATCHMEN'S NATIVITY: HOW THE OUTSIDERS WERE WELCOMED IN. It's the Nativity story with a difference! And it's not just the catchy uplifting songs by Stevie Wonder and Jackie Wilson. It's the untold story of the outsiders at the heart of the Nativity: the low wage workers and rough sleepers watching the sheep, the Bethlehem night watchmen, the people God chose to reveal Jesus’s birth. The kind of people God finds it easier to talk with! The Night Watchmen's Nativity sees the birth of Christ through the eyes of the marginalised, using a mix of known and original contemporary gospel songs, secular as well as sacred, interspersed with spoken word and “sung scripture”.

Join Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir at St Martin-in-the-Fields on Sunday 8th December 2019 at 6.30 pm for the premiere of The Night Watchmen’s Nativity. The event is free and everyone is welcome to attend!

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir - Oh Come Emmanuel.

Sunday, 3 December 2017

Advent Oasis







 











The artists and craftspeoples group at St Martin-in-the-Fields organised an excellent Advent Oasis today. This was an ‘Oasis’ time of quiet scripture reflection (Isaiah 40. 1 - 11), prayer and practical art. Art materials were available to explore, play with colour and be creative through collage, painting, drawing or writing. 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Red Mountain Music - Come Thou Long-Expected Jesus.

Advent & Christmas services & events


Advent begins today. The artists and craftspeoples group at St Martin-in-the-Fields is organising an Advent Oasis today from 2-4 pm in the George Richards & Austen Williams Rooms. This will be another ‘Oasis’ time of quiet scripture reflection, prayer and practical art. Art materials will be available for you to explore, play with colour and be creative through collage, painting, drawing or writing. All are very welcome.

The Light the Well installation set in the Light Well can be viewed until 14 December and has been made by the hands of people at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Individuals from across our shared life – Church congregation, Chinese community, clergy, staff, clients from the Connection and members of our International Group – have, over some time, gathered together over tables of clay and carefully formed the pieces which fill the Light Well. Each porcelain ‘lantern’ is filled with light from a simple string of lamps.

The Advent Carol Service at St Martin-in-the-Fields at 5.00pm explores in words and music our theme for Advent Let Every Heart Prepare. With the Choir of St Martin-in the-Fields. Our preacher is the Revd Dr Sam Wells and doors open at 4.15pm. During Advent there will be no Evening Prayer, Monday Choral Evensong or Bread for the World. There will be no ticketing for capacity Christmas services: Nine Lessons and Carols, Gospel Carols, Community Carols and Parish Carols. Doors open 45 mins before the services start and as the church is often full we encourage you to arrive in plenty of time to be certain of a seat. We look forward to welcoming all of our visitors over this Advent and Christmas season. The full list of services at St Martin-in-the-Fields for Advent and Christmas is here.

We are also pleased to announce that our Sacred Moments series will become daily throughout Advent. Each day there will be a short reflection from the Revd Dr Sam Wells and guests, followed by a carol sung by one of our choirs. The series, in partnership with Premier Christian Radio, runs from Advent Sunday to Christmas Eve, will be broadcast on the Premier breakfast and lunchtime shows, as well as being released through the usual St Martin’s Soundcloud and iTunes channels. In addition, this year’s Service of Nine Lessons and Carols will be recorded for broadcast on Premier Christian Radio at 9pm on Christmas Eve.

At St Stephen Walbrook, we are part of the Bank Churches group whose Advent Service will this year be held at St Vedast-alias-Foster on Tuesday 5 December at 1.00pm. All are most welcome at this service which includes Advent Carols and Readings.

During Advent the Walbrook Art Society organise lectures at St Stephen. The Advent lectures for 2017 will be given by Dharshan Thenuwara and are as follows:
  • Wednesday 29 November – St Luke in art (Bible in art series: Lecture 2).
  • Wednesday 6 December - Arthur Liberty Centenary Lecture Part 2: Arts & Crafts and Japanese influence.
  • Wednesday 13 December - Richard Dadd Anniversary Lecture.
  • Wednesday 20th December - Edgar Degas Centenary Lecture.
All Advent lectures are at St Stephen Walbrook between 1.00pm and 2.00pm. Refreshments are available before and after. All are welcome. Cost - £5.00 each. No pre-booking required for these lectures.

This year we are hosting Carol Services or concerts for: Arthur J. Gallagher, BlackRock, Cancer Research UK, Christ's Hospital Old Blues, CMS, Columbia Threadneedle, Fight for Sight, Michael Varah Memorial Fund, Worshipful Company of Gardeners, and Worshipful Company of Information Technologists. Click on the following links to purchase tickets the Fight for Sight Christmas Carol Concert or MVMF Carols by Candlelight.

Our 'Carols for All and Blessing of the Crib’ by Candlelight will be held on Wednesday 13 December at 6.00pm. This is a traditional candlelit Carol Service that is a great occasion when neighbouring businesses and friends of St Stephen Walbrook come together to celebrate Christmas. Music will be led by the St Stephen's Voices and there will be much-loved carols to sing. Mince pies and mulled wine follow this service.

Then on Christmas Eve at Midnight Mass there is the opportunity to Join us for the first Communion of Christmas where St Stephen’s Voices will again lead us. The service will be followed by mince pies and hot drinks.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Lichfield Cathedral Choir - Lo He Comes With Clouds Descending.

Saturday, 18 November 2017

Light the Well project: SALT installation extension




Anna Sikorska's SALT installation set in the Light Well of St Martin-in-the-Fields is the culmination of the Light the Well community art project and its stay at St Martin's has been extended until 14 December. The installation features in the current edition of Church Times as a photo story.

This installation set in the Light Well has been made by the hands of people at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Individuals from across our shared life – Church congregation, Chinese community, clergy, staff, clients from the Connection and members of our International Group – have, over some time, gathered together over tables of clay and carefully formed the pieces which fill the Light Well. Each porcelain ‘lantern’ is filled with light from a simple string of lamps. They will sit together in-situ for one week, during which we celebrate the Feast of St Martin and also the 30th anniversaries of St Martin-in-the-Fields Limited and the Bishop Ho Ming Wah Community Centre.

Conversations around the tables when making the lanterns touched on ‘cracked pots’, Jesus’ story of searching for the 100th sheep, the continental tradition of ‘St Martin’s day’ paper lanterns, networks of sea buoys, St Paul describing light inside clay vessels, faces, the fragility of our lives and bodies, ‘broken but not crushed’, and Leonard Cohen: ‘Forget your perfect offering / There is a crack in everything / That’s how the light gets in.’ This installation has been the work of Anna Sikorska, Jonathan Evens, Katja Werne, Jim and Sarah Sikorski and everyone who accepted a lump of porcelain and gave it a form. Thank you.

From the 19th November you are invited to be part of changing the gathered constellation into an expanded field, dispersing the pots/lanterns amongst our community and beyond. You will be able to buy a piece to take away and light a small candle inside. Proceeds to the New Art Studio and Art Refuge UK, both charities working with art therapy in the context of migration and displacement. Each lantern costs £10 (cash only) and must be collected on the morning of Sunday 17 December. To reserve a lantern go to the Box Office.

St Martin-in-the-Fields is home to several commissions and permanent installations by contemporary artists. We also have an exciting programme of temporary exhibitions, as well as a group of artists and craftspeople from the St Martin’s community who show artwork and organise art projects on a temporary basis.

The artists and craftspeoples group is organising an Advent Oasis on Sunday 3 December from 2-4 pm in the George Richards & Austen Williams Rooms. This will be another ‘Oasis’ time of quiet scripture reflection, prayer and practical art. Art materials will be available for you to explore, play with colour and be creative through collage, painting, drawing or writing. All are very welcome – please let Helena Tarrant know if you wish to come – tel: 020 7766 1100 or email: helana.tarrant@smitf.org.

Then in January the group are involved in the organisation of an Art Talk on Chinese Textiles - 6.30pm, Monday 15 January 2018, St Martin's Hall. This talk by Jacqueline Simcox will be on Silks From Imperial China: Ming and Qing dynasty costumes and textiles 1368-1911. Free tickets from https://www.eventbrite.com/e/lecture-chinese-textilestickets-38247649750. It is the first in an occasional series of art talks focusing on aspects of Chinese Art and organised with the Chinese Speaking Congregations of St Martin's.

Jacqueline Simcox, who has written numerous articles on Chinese textiles, will talk about some of the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) textiles and some of the imperial costumes and festivals and show how they changed when the Machu from the north took over the country from 1644-1911 (Qing dynasty).

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

T Bone Burnett - Everything Is Free.

Saturday, 29 October 2016

Hidden St Martin's




Here are details of art activities at St Martin-in-the-Fields for our Patronal Festival and on Advent Sunday:

Hidden St Martin's
From Sunday 13 November, 11.15am - 5.00pm

An exhibition for the Patronal Festival of St Martin-in-the-Fields by artists and craftspeople from the congregation. Reflecting on the theme from a variety of different perspectives using ceramics, drawings, films, paintings, photographs, text and textiles. Display continues in the Foyer until Advent Sunday.


Patronal Festival
Sunday 13 November, 5.00pm

St Martin-in-the-Fields will be celebrating our Patronal Festival, The Art of Being Church, on Sunday 13 November at 5.00pm, marking the 1700th anniversary of the birth of St Martin of Tours, 800 years of there being a church of St Martin on this site, and the climax of our 15-year Arts programme.

Advent Oasis
Sunday 27 November, 2-4 pm, Austin Williams & George Richards rooms.

A time of quiet scripture reflection, prayer & practical art. Art materials will be available for you to explore, play with colour & be creative through collage, painting, drawing or writing. All are very welcome – please let me know by Friday 25th November if you wish to come – t: 020 7766 1127, e: jonathan.evens@smitf.org.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

KD Lang - Bird On A Wire.