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Showing posts with label bible society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bible society. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 November 2014

Remembrance Sunday: Are you ready?

Here is my Remembrance Sunday sermon using materials prepared by the Bible Society for the 100th Anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War:

Some 65 million men were mobilized across Europe during WW1. Nearly a third of them – 21 million – were wounded. Another 8.5 million were killed. And 7.7 million were taken as prisoners of war. That means that over half of all soldiers that went to the war were killed, wounded or captured.

It was considered vital that each man could read the Bible to search for comfort, understanding or simply a link with home. So every one of the 5.7 million British soldiers, sailors and airmen who joined up were given a copy of the New Testament with the rest of their kit. Between August 1914 and August 1918 Bible Society distributed more than 9 million copies of Scripture in over 80 languages to members of the Armed Forces and prisoners of war on all sides.

It managed this despite immense challenges. There were supply shortages. The cost of paper had risen and it was rationed. There were submarine blockades and merchant ships carrying the Bibles were sunk. There was also an emotional toll. Former Bible Society colleagues suddenly found themselves fighting on opposing sides. Bible salesmen throughout Europe (known as colporteurs) were conscripted, or volunteered into their respective armies.

Despite all the difficulties, Bibles and New Testaments continued to find their way into the hands of the millions that wanted them. Bible Society printed New Testaments in khaki, stamped with a cross, for distribution via the Red Cross among the sick and wounded as well as prisoners of war. Nationality was no bar to receiving Scriptures. We know that Germans, Austrians, French, British and more all received the Bible and found comfort in it, thanks to first-hand reports. The response from soldiers in the trenches was shared with Bible Society supporters. Here is just one of those stories:

It’s not surprising that Pte Wilf Kreibich’s tattered, khaki New Testament which he had with him during the whole of WW1 falls open at Matthew 14: the feeding of the 5,000. For Pte Kreibich, a clerk from Manchester, was involved in his very own version of the biblical miracle.

Wilf joined the Armed Service Corps at the age of 23, in 1914. By 1918, he and his colleagues were responsible for feeding some 3 million men and 500,000 horses. Every month they dealt with 67,500,000lbs of meat and some 90,000,000lbs of bread. A photograph taken at the ASC station in Rouen shows Wilf with more than 100 comrades, where they were in charge of feeding the sick and wounded as well as sending supplies, reinforcements and fresh horses to the front. His New Testament is daubed with spots of wax from where he read the Scriptures by candlelight at night.

An ‘easy-going, affable’ man, Wilf had a great sense of humour. Though he was at Ypres and Arras, he barely spoke of the war later in life. But he did refer to shooting dead three Germans who attacked his unit, and taking part in a Christmas Day football match between England and Germany. Nonetheless, according to his son Gerry (80), Wilf leant on his faith during those four tough years. ‘He was a person who took things in his stride,’ he says. ‘But it must have meant a lot to him to have his Bible with him. It must have been a comfort to him. I like to think of him being bolstered by this when he was in the trenches and behind the lines.’

Wilf was the eldest of five children and had a lifelong love of children. On his return from the war he became Sunday School superintendent at St Mary’s church in Cadishead in Manchester. But his wartime Bible speaks of his compassion for children, as he underlined Mark 10.14, where Jesus says, ‘Let the little children come to me and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these’. His wartime diary also reveals this care. In an entry entitled ‘an afternoon off’ Wilf describes playing ball with the local French children. ‘Those playing ball consider that their cup of happiness is full to the brim if they can get a Tommy to play with,’ he wrote. ‘Several French people have told me that they are very much amused at the way the English soldiers take to the kiddies.’

Only one other verse is underlined in Wilf’s much-used New Testament. And it was a verse that he clung to: Ephesians 6.10-17 – putting on the armour of God.

The day before Wilf set off for France in 1914, he wrote to his future wife Gladys to say ‘goodbye’ and that he hoped ‘to be home by Christmas’. It was four more Christmases before Wilf was safely home and he carried his New Testament with him every day of those four years separated from the people he loved.

This is a wonderful example of what Jesus meant when he spoke about the importance of being ready in the Parable of the Young Women (Matthew 25. 1 - 13). What Jesus was doing through this story was to try to get his disciples ready for a coming crisis (an attack on Jerusalem which would destroy its temple in AD70) so that they would respond appropriately. In this story, the coming crisis equates to the unexpectedly late arrival of the bridegroom and only half of those waiting for that event are ready when the moment finally arrives. Half of the women thought ahead, realised that they may well have to wait some time and brought with them sufficient supplies of oil so that when they bridegroom did finally arrive, much later than planned, they had all they needed to be ready for his arrival, unlike the other five who had to go to buy more oil and then were too late for the wedding feast. Jesus wanted his disciples to be like the wise women; he was emphasising to them the vital importance of being ready and prepared for what was to come.

How prepared are we, I wonder, for the crises that we face in our day and time and are we ready to use them as opportunities to share and show the good news of Jesus? That is ultimately, the challenge of this story for us. We can, in a sense, lay this story like a template across the crises that we remember and face and use it to assess whether we are more like the wise or foolish women in our response. As in the story, the question is, how will we respond to the crises we face? Will our response be wise or foolish? Will we be prepared or unprepared for the crises that are to come? For us, as Christians, the question of how we respond is also a question of how prepared we are to share the good news of Jesus in the face of the crises that we face now and those still to come. What have we to say as Christians about conflicts and crises that face us within our world? Jesus’ call is clear we are to be ready to face the crisis and prepared to share his good news. As we look back today to honour those who have made the ultimate sacrifice, Jesus’ question needs to echo and re-echo in our lives and world; are we ready?

How does this work out in practice? Let’s close by hearing the thoughts of two war poets. Although he grew up in the village of Good Easter, near Chelmsford, Cyril Mead was conscripted into an Irish regiment, the Royal Enniskillen Fusiliers. He fought in France, Macedonia, Palestine and Egypt. Before the war, his son-in-law, Anthony Hasler, recalls a man whose ‘faith meant a lot to him’. ‘His faith was everything to him,’ says Anthony (82). ‘He was active in the village church and was the organist and also the secretary there. His faith sustained him through the war without any doubt at all.’ Cyril wrote poems that he sent to his sister, Sissy. Many express his faith. In one about the Bible, written while he was in Satliki, Greece, Cyril claims the Bible has ‘pearls of precious worth’:

‘Oh may I read with open eyes
And with sincere desire
That God may bless me and bestow on me His Spirit’s fire’.

For Cyril, reading and applying the Bible led him to the place where, in a poem called A Trusting Soldier’s Prayer, he could write:

‘When death sweeps o’er the battle field
I pray thou wilt thy servant shield’
Or if sore wounded I should fall
Thy grace will strength me through all
Oh Lord to thy servant give grace
That bravely he may danger face

But if to me the call should come
I’ll have a hearty welcome home
Where war and turmoil all are past.

This poem tells us that he was ready; ready for war, ready for Jesus, and ready for his own death, were that to come.

Siegfried Sassoon was another, more famous, war poet. He joined the Sussex Yeomanry on the day that war broke out but a severely broken arm from a riding accident kept him out of action until 1915. Then he was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Welsh Fusiliers. His extraordinary courage, particularly on night raids, gained him the nickname ‘Mad Jack’ from his colleagues, and won him the Military Cross. He survived the war, dying at the age of 80.

Sassoon began by writing war poetry reminiscent of Rupert Brooke; he mingled with such war poets as Robert Graves and Edmund Blunden; he spoke out publicly against the war (and yet returned to it); he influenced and mentored the then unknown Wilfred Owen; he spent thirty years reflecting on the war through his memoirs; and at last he found peace in his religious faith.

He, too, was ready as we can sense in his poem entitled ‘Absolution’:

The anguish of the earth absolves our eyes
Till beauty shines in all that we can see.
War is our scourge; yet war has made us wise,
And, fighting for our freedom, we are free.

Horror of wounds and anger at the foe,
And loss of things desired; all these must pass.
We are the happy legion, for we know
Time’s but a golden wind that shakes the grass.

There was an hour when we were loth to part
From life we longed to share no less than others.
Now, having claimed this heritage of heart,
What need we more, my comrades and my brothers?

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Siegfried Sassoon - Aftermath.

Sunday, 24 August 2014

Mission Weekend follow-up: Lyfe Course


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Vivky Beeching - Needing You.

Saturday, 22 March 2014

Lyfe-long discipleship


Interesting session on Christian Nurture today at St John's Seven Kings which was led by Rob Hare, the lyfe and Bible Engagement Manager at the Bible Society.

Lyfe was developed with Renovaré (founded by Richard J Foster, author of Celebration of Discipline) to help people discover a deeper life with God through Scripture and spiritual practices. Lyfe provides small group sessions, events and other useful resources to help people discover a deeper life with God. Lyfe helps people to grow holistically and to experience a transforming relationship with God through Scripture and spiritual practices that have inspired and sustained Christians throughout the centuries. Information about lyfe small group sessions, retreats and conferences can be found at www.lyfe.org.uk.

As well as Rob Hare's thoughts on discipleship and sampling of a lyfe session, Vernon Ross helped us reflect on discipleship as both the goal of and the foundation for mission and ministry.

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David Grant - Life.  

Saturday, 30 November 2013

St John's Christmas Leaflet


Does Christmas start with telly ads in October?
Does Christmas start with the office party?
Does Christmas start with a fight on Eastenders?

No! Christmas starts with Christ.

The Christmas story has been around for a long time, but today it's being forgotten. Just 12 per cent of adults know the nativity story, and more than one-third of children don’t know whose birthday it is. Meanwhile, 51 per cent of people now say the birth of Jesus is irrelevant to their Christmas.

Together we can reverse the trend. Some of the UK’s leading Christian groups, including the Church of England, the Evangelical Alliance and Bible Society, are coming together because they believe Christmas is worth saving. Christmas Starts with Christ is a campaign aimed at helping churches to make Christ and the amazing story of his birth the focus of the nation’s favourite time of year.

The campaign kicks off on December 1st this year with the first-ever nationwide Christmas Starts Sunday, at the beginning of Advent.  The campaign features posters in festive green and red which focus strongly on the message they want to get across, that Christmas starts with Christ.  There are three posters. They ask people to think about when Christmas starts. Is it with the traditional fight on Eastenders? Is it when Christmas ads appear in October? Or is it at the office party? There is also a radio ad and three extra posters, using the same design, which churches can customise for free.

Francis Goodwin of ChurchAds.net, which is coordinating this campaign, says: ‘Christmas is a time when Christians shine light in their communities. But the good news is being lost. We can’t sit back and let that happen. We’re passionate about bringing the church together to remind everyone of the true meaning of Christmas.’

Steve Clifford, General Director of the Evangelical Alliance says, “I’m excited by this campaign, which really seeks to show that the Church is good news for the nation in every season; not least of all at Christmas when we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, our saviour. The world needs to know that’s why we do what we do.”

Arun Arora, Director of Communications, Church of England says, “Churches do a huge amount to carry the Christmas story into their local communities, through word and deed. Christmas Starts With Christ uses a common logo to ‘join the dots’ of these activities and project a powerful message to our nation that the reason for the season is the birth of Jesus.”

This Christmas let us project that same powerful message as we invite others to church and send Christmas greetings by post, email or social media. The reason for the season is Jesus – Christmas starts with Christ!

Advent & Christmas at St John's Seven Kings -
November/December 2013

 
November  

Saturday 30th   10.30am          Christmas Bazaar – Refreshments, handicrafts, cakes, raffles, preserves, toiletries, games & toys for children, Christmas gifts and many other stalls. Visit Santa in his grotto.

December  
 
Sunday 1st         
10.00am        Advent Reflections Service - poems,  readings and songs
 6.30pm         Advent Service - Seven Kings Fellowship of Churches

Saturday 7th       6.00pm          Tamil Carol Service

Sunday 15th    
10.00am          All-age Christingle Service - a colourful service of music & light (collection for The Children’s Society)
6.30pm          Service of Nine Lessons and Carols at St Peter’s Aldborough Hatch - traditional carols and readings

Tuesday 17th     7.00pm          Carol Singing around the Parish - wrap up warm. Collecting for Haven
House Hospice.

Sunday 22nd      6.30pm          Service of Nine Lessons and Carols by candlelight  - traditional carols and readings

Christmas Eve (Tuesday 24th)
5.00pm        All-age Nativity Service - dressing up & tree lighting - fun for all. Bring a present to
leave under the tree for children helped by Barnados. Collection to Haven House Hospice.
11.30pm     First Holy Communion of Christmas

Christmas Day (Wednesday 25th)
 
8.00am         Holy Communion - Book of Common Prayer
10.00am       Christmas All-age Holy Communion - children, bring a gift you have received to show others

New Years Eve (Tuesday 31st)
11.30pm       Watchnight Service - welcoming the New Year in prayer and reflection
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Red Mountain Music - Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus.
 

Saturday, 24 December 2011

What can I do for you?

The story of Santa Claus begins with a man called Nicholas, who was born during the third century in the village of Patara. At the time the area was Greek and is now on the southern coast of Turkey.
His wealthy parents, who raised him to be a devout Christian, died in an epidemic while Nicholas was still young. Obeying Jesus' words to "sell what you own and give the money to the poor," Nicholas used his whole inheritance to assist the needy, the sick, and the suffering. He dedicated his life to serving God and was made Bishop of Myra while still a young man. Bishop Nicholas became known throughout the land for his generosity to those in need, his love for children, and his concern for sailors and ships.
Through the centuries many stories have been told of St. Nicholas' life and deeds. These help us understand his extraordinary character and why he is so beloved and revered as protector and helper of those in need.
One story tells of a poor man with three daughters. In those days a young woman's father had to offer prospective husbands something of value — a dowry. The larger the dowry, the better the chance that a young woman would find a good husband. Without a dowry, a woman was unlikely to marry. This poor man's daughters, without dowries, were therefore destined to be sold into slavery. Mysteriously, on three different occasions, a bag of gold appeared in their home providing the needed dowries. The bags of gold, tossed through an open window, are said to have landed in stockings or shoes left before the fire to dry. This has led to the custom of children hanging stockings or putting out shoes, eagerly awaiting gifts from Saint Nicholas or Santa Claus, as we call him today.
Sometimes the true meaning of Christmas gets hidden by all the festivities. How many of us, for instance, remembered when we saw Father Christmas at stores and bazaars and schools or while we were hanging up our stocking that he is actually a follower of Jesus. How many of us remembered that he is originally St Nicholas who gave away all he had because Jesus had first given him all he had? Jesus gave himself to us by coming into our world as a baby and growing up to die on the cross as our Saviour. This is what is at the heart of Christmas and so we need to remember that Christmas is about giving to others instead of getting for ourselves.
This year, unusually, a Christmas advert has captured this truth in exactly this way. I’m thinking of the John Lewis advert with a little boy and a present. The background music to the ad – ‘Please, please, please, let me get what I want’ a song written by the Smiths – leads us to believe the boy is desperate to open his presents on Christmas morning but the ‘catch in the throat’ moment that is the ad’s punchline is that he’s actually desperate to give his parents their present from him. So, while, like all ad’s, this ad wants us to buy the company’s products, it is also reminding us that the real joy of Christmas is found in giving rather than getting.  

This Christmas, Bible Society is asking everyone to take part in a new campaign called: ‘What can I do for you?’ To celebrate the birth of Christ, they are asking everyone to take a moment of their time, on 25th December, to offer help – however large or small - to one other person by asking them this simple question and then fulfilling their request.
The answer may be: “peel the potatoes” or “call me more” – it really doesn’t matter. It just means that, for a few moments or more, on the 25th of December, people are given the chance to experience what Jesus meant when he said: “It is more blessed to give than to receive”.

Of course, there’s no need to only ask that question of others on Christmas Day and there are lots of initiatives and groups that can help us. Here are just two others:
If you’d like ideas and reminders regularly about ways of giving to others and living more generously then you could join a group like Generous which is building a global community of people who believe in changing the world for good … one step at a time. Generous is about imagining a different way of living, about innovating, trying new things, believing that things can be better, simpler, more beautiful. Every action unknown to everyone else - from unplugging appliances to dumping bottled water, from sharing your car journey to buying Fair Trade - incrementally shifts history in favour of the planet and its people. The more people who go Generous, the greater their impact.

Acts of Kindness is a project by artist Michael Landy celebrating everyday generosity and compassion on the Tube. Landy’s project invites us to notice acts of kindness however simple and small. The artist explains, ‘Sometimes we tend to assume that you have to be superhuman to be kind, rather than just an ordinary person.’ So, to unsettle that idea, Acts of Kindness catches those little exchanges that are almost too fleeting and mundane to be noticed or remembered. Landy has invited passengers and staff to help by sending stories of kindness that have been seen or that people have been part of on London Underground and he has chosen a selection of the stories to place in Central line stations and trains. Acts of kindness between strangers undermine the idea that we should compete and always strive to be independent. Instead, they’re an acknowledgement of our shared humanity. Landy says, ‘That’s what “kindness” means – we’re kin, we’re of one kind.’
Rachel Rounds, Senior Press Secretary at Bible Society, has said: “The act of giving of ourselves reminds us that we are part of a wider community; it reminds us of the practical outworking of the two greatest commandments - to love God first and then our neighbour. Somewhere in the midst of all the noise, that still small voice may ask us all: What matters most to you?’”
May we all hear that still, small voice this Christmas whether it’s through St Nicholas, the John Lewis ad, ‘What can I do for you?’, generous, Acts of Kindness, or the Christmas story itself.

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Valdemar - What Can I Do For You.

Sunday, 2 October 2011

Patronal Festival (2)













On display at St John's Seven Kings this Sunday were the winning entries in our Images of Hope Art Competition for the Year of the Bible 2011. Bishop David, the Bishop of Barking, presented the Art Competition prizes - bibles given by the Bible Society - during our Patronal Festival service to the winners; Nancy Palumbo, Katrina Rugundu and Hannah Sayers. This competition, based on materials from the Bible Society, invited children and young people to illustrate a Bible story of hope and brings communities together as they think about hope and its meaning. Katrina illustrated Noah and the Ark, while Nancy and Hannah both illustrated Moses parting the Red Sea.

The Patronal Festival Service also included a prayer of dedication for our congregation, bringing our Stewardship month to a conclusion, Dr Winston Solomon was licensed as an Authorised Local Preacher, and we sang the St John's Centenary hymn, which was composed by church member, Lester Amann. Bishop David said that each person who follows Christ can be a preacher of the Gospel sharing the message that Jesus is the light of the world.

At the end of the Patronal Festival service, Bishop David dedicated newly commissioned mosaics which have been installed at St John's Seven Kings this week and which complete the work we have done, with the support and funding of the Area 5 and 7 committees, London over the Border, and Living Street's Fitter for Walking project, to create a community garden at the church. The mosaics will feature in both the local Church art trail

and the art trail for the Barking Episcopal Area. Both mosaics were created by artists from commission4mission.

Graffiti Love, installed on the east wall of the church, has been created by Viki Isherwood-Metzler, who learnt the art of mosaic in Ravenna, Italy and worked until 2001 as a mosaic maker in Zurich, Switzerland from where she comes. Since 2002 she has lived and worked in London and undertakes all kinds of commissioned mosaic work in marble, glass, ceramics, terracotta and pebble stones. Graffiti Love is made with smalti glass and the image comes from a series of mosaics utilising words with graffiti stylings.

The Trinity sculpture, in the remembrance area of the community garden, was designed by the community garden planning group and incorporates a mosaic by Sergiy Shkanov. Shkanov is a professional artist working in the fields of stained glass, murals, mosaics, painting, graphic arts, and book illustration. He is a tutor of Fine Arts, has participated in group shows across Europe since 1987, and holds numerous personal exhibitions in the United Kingdom. He undertakes art commissions for private and corporate clients. The Trinity sculpture includes three granite shapes representing the three persons of the Trinity set within the circles and triangles of Shkanov's mosaic which represents lines of exchange and connection within and between the godhead.

In the evening choir members from more than eight local churches joined with the St John's choir for a special choral celebration of anthems, hymns and readings entitled Sing Glory! The programme for the evening included Stanford's settings of the Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis among other anthems together with a selection of rousing hymns.
We have been blessed throughout our Patronal Festival by the artistic and musical gifts that God gives to his people. Bishop David encouraged each of us to be someone who shares the light of Christ with others and we have seen that happening in practice during our Patronal Festival through the Art Competition paintings, our new mosaics, the choir members who sang so well, Lester Amann's Centenary hymn, Bishop David's preaching and prayers together with his affirmation of the preaching ministry of Dr Winston Solomon.

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Sir Charles Villiers Stanford - The Magnificat in B flat.

Monday, 26 September 2011

Patronal Festival

Next Sunday is the Patronal Festival at St John's Seven Kings. We will be displaying the winning entries in our Images of Hope Art Competition in the church from Sunday and beyond. Bishop David, the Bishop of Barking, will present the Art Competition prizes - bibles given by the Bible Society - during our 10.00am Festival Service.
 
Bishop David will be preaching and presiding at the 10.00am Festival Service, which will also include the following prayer of dedication for our congregation, bringing Stewardship month to a conclusion:
 
God has created me
to do him some definite service:
he has committed some work to me
which he has not committed to another.
I have my mission –
I may never know it in this life,
but I shall be told it in the next.
Somehow I am necessary for his purposes:
as necessary in my place
as an Archangel in his.
I have a part in this great work;
I am a link in a chain,
a bond of connection between persons.
He has not created me for nothing.
I shall do good, I shall do his work;
I shall be an angel of peace,
a preacher of truth in my own place.
Deign to fulfil your high purposes in me.
I am here to serve you, to be yours,
to be your instrument.
 
St John's member, Dr Winston Solomon will be licensed as an Authorised Local Preacher during this service and we will be singing the St John's Centenary hymn, which was composed by church member, Lester Amann. 
 
In the evening, at 6.30pm, choirs from various local churches will join us for a choral celebration entitled Sing Glory!
 
These will be two very special services, and all who wish to join us, as we celebrate our Patronal Festival together, will be very welcome.

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John Rutter - The Lord Bless You and Keep You.

Monday, 1 August 2011

Bible Year 2011



To express its confidence in the Bible the Church of England is using 2011 - the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible – as Bible Year, to promote biblical literacy within the Church and society as a whole. At St John's Seven Kings, we are focussing our Bible Year initiatives in October, the month when Bible Sunday is held.

Our Images of Hope art competition challenges local schools, church and our wider community to illustrate their Bible story of hope. This competition, based on materials from the Bible Society, invites people to illustrate a Bible story of hope and brings communities together as they think about hope and its meaning. The closing date is 23rd September and the competition is open to children and young people in the following categories: Under 7s; 7-11s; 11-19. All entries to the competition will be exhibited at St John's Seven Kings on Saturday 1st and Sunday 2nd October, our Patronal Festival, with a prizegiving ceremony held on 1st September at 2.30pm.

Most Christians know Bible stories, but few Christians know or understand the story of the Bible! The Bible is not written in chronological order; many of the historical details that we need to fully understand the story are not given to us, assumed rather than included; and, whether we realise it or not, we're part of a story that has yet to be completed ... These are all themes that will be explored in HISstory; a two hour overview of salvation history from creation to the advent of Jesus which will be led by Rev. Paul Harcourt, Area Dean of Redbridge and Vicar of All Saints Woodford Wells, at St John's Seven Kings on Sunday 16th October, beginning at 6.30pm.

Then on Bible Sunday itself we are encouraging our congregation to Give A Bible by buying a version of the Bible to give away to someone else. As part of this initiative, some of our congregation are buying Bibles to be given to our local Primary School, Downshall, for use in their Religious Studies lessons. All the Bibles to be given away will be brought to church on Bible Sunday to be blessed before they are given away to others.

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Mark Heard - Well-Worn Pages.

Friday, 23 July 2010

Coathanger crucifixion

The following comes from the Bible Society's Newswatch service:

"A 9-foot sculpture of the crucifixion, made from 3,000 coathangers, was briefly on show outside St Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh on Wednesday. David Mach, a Scottish artist acclaimed for his massive sculptures created from waste products, is developing four crucifixion figures including a Calvary scene for a major exhibition at the Scottish capital’s City Art Centre next summer. He is also producing up to 120 large-scale collages giving his ‘artist’s version’ of biblical events. Fife-born Mach (54) was spurred to work on the project because it was at Burntisland, Fife that James VI agreed to commission a new Bible in 1601. Although Mach has no personal religious belief, he said, ‘The King James Bible communicated its message so effectively that its language still resonates through our speech.’ The ‘richness’ of ‘biblical imagery is as fine a subject as I could wish for’ he added."

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Regina Spektor - Samson.

Monday, 14 June 2010

Mixing Church & Politics



The Bishop of Barking (with Anglican and Ecumenical partners) is to host a seminar for church leaders on encouraging vocations to public life and political office entitled Mixing Church and Politics at Methodist Central Hall, Westminster, SW1H 9NH on Tuesday 20th July from 10am to 2pm. The details of this free seminar are as follows:

10am-10.30am – Registration (entrance free)

THE ISSUE:
10.30am-10.45am - Opening address by Rt Revd David Hawkins, Bishop of Barking
10.45am-11am - "Traditions of Christian engagement with politics", Revd Dr John Perumbalath

THEOLOGICAL INPUT
11am-11.30am - Bible Study with group work - Dave Landrum, Bible Society Parliamentary Officer
11.30am-Noon - “Seeing Politics as a Christian Vocation”, Revd Dr Margaret Joachim

FURTHER REFLECTIONS
Noon-12.30pm - informal reflection over lunch (provided)
12.30pm-1.10pm – Questions to a panel including representatives from the main three political parties (inc Jon Cruddas) plus Jonathan Bartley (of Ekklesia), Caroline Alabi (of Hope not Hate) and Sister Josephine Canny (of London Citizens)

NEXT STEPS
1.10pm - Group discussion and plenary on identifying actions for the future
1.40pm - Closing reflections and devotions led by Bishop David
2pm - Close

To register or for more information, contact: Father Steven Saxby, St Barnabas Vicarage, St Barnabas Rd, E17 8JZ; stevensaxby@btinternet.com; Tel: 020 8520 5323.

"After the past eighteen months confidence in political life in our country has reached an all time
low. The Christian community needs to take responsibility in calling out vocations to public life and supporting politicians in this high Christian calling." Rt Revd David Hawkins, Bishop of Barking.

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Paul Weller - Wake Up The Nation.

Thursday, 4 March 2010

The Arts & Faith Top 100 Films

This comes from Image Update:

"Just in time for this years Oscar awards ceremony, Image has released its 2010 Arts & Faith Top 100 Films list.

Showcasing top films and directors from around the world and spanning cinematic history from a 1927 silent film to films currently in theaters (the Coen Brothers Oscar-nominated A Serious Man), the list is the culmination of years of discussion and debate among the ArtsandFaith.com online community.

Last published in 2008, previous incarnations of the Arts & Faith Top 100 List have been featured in the LA Times, VH1, Christianity Today, and on Jeffrey Wells Hollywood Elsewhere blog. The list has been called an incomparable resource for anyone interested in exploring transcendent themes in the movies.

In his blog post accompanying the Arts & Faith Top 100 Films list, film critic Jeffrey Overstreet (Through a Screen Darkly) defines the list as being characterized both by artistic excellence and a serious wrestling with questions that at the root might be called religious or spiritual.

Overstreet notes that this list will come as a surprise to those who think they know what a religious community might select. Films like The Ten Commandments and The Passion of the Christ did not even make the list, while a host of foreign-language films with subtitles were selected.

Many Christians, Overstreet explains, have become so concerned about the usefulness of art as a tool of ministry and evangelism, theyve forgottenor never known in the first placewhat art really is, and how it works. We hope this list will remind you of the powerful and multifarious ways that film can convey matters of faith, and suspect you may find a new personal favorite among the 100 final selections.

Click here to view the list, here to visit or join the Arts & Faith community, and here to read Jeffrey Overstreets Good Letters blog on the significance of this list."

Which films would be in your Top 10? See Philip Ritchie's Reel Issues post for some other useful film-related resources from the Bible Society.

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Soggy Bottom Boys - I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow.

Friday, 8 August 2008

Former atheist takes Dawkins to task

Following on from yesterday's post about Richard Dawkins comes this from the Bible Society's Newswatch emailing:

"A renowned atheistic philosopher, who stunned his peers four years ago by abandoning atheism, has accused the atheist scientist Richard Dawkins of becoming ‘a secularist bigot’. Prof Anthony Flew, emeritus professor at Reading University, chides Dawkins in a review of The God Delusion. Dawkins’ omission of Albert Einstein’s belief that a divine intelligence must lie behind the complexity of physics leads Flew to accuse Prof Dawkins of ‘insincerity of purpose’. He says Dawkins’ examination of Albert Einstein’s views on religion is selective and designed to support his own position."

Flew's review can be found be clicking here.

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Martyn Joseph - Just Like The Man Said.