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Showing posts with label ecumenism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ecumenism. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 March 2023

Resurrection and new life in the midst of adversity and hardship





Rev Moses Agyam and I had an ecumenical exchange in Wickford this morning. Moses led the service at St Andrew's and I led at Christ Church. Here's the sermon that I preached at Christ Church today:

Imagine a bed surrounded by the debris of a week’s illness, soiled sheets and slashed pillows, pills and vodka bottles, used condoms and tissues. This is My Bed an installation by Tracy Emin which was first exhibited in 1999. You’ll probably remember reading about it in the press at the time as it prompted the usual “call that art, my two-year old could have done better” kind of articles.

A bed is a powerful symbol of birth and death, sex and intimacy but this controversial installation was perhaps an image of our culture’s sickness and dis-ease surrounded by the remnants of those things through which we seek a cure; sex, alcohol, drugs, tears, aggression. And the bed, like many lives, was empty. The morning after the cure that never came.

Our Old Testament reading from Ezekiel 37. 1-10 suggested something very similar about the people of Israel. Ezekiel saw a valley of dry bones and God said to him that the people of Israel were like those bones, dried up without any hope and with no future.

Sometimes our lives feel like these two pictures - dried up, no future, diseased, empty, dead. Our relationships may have broken down, we may have been abused, we may be anxious, stressed or worried, our work might be under threat or have ended. For all these reasons and many others, we can feel as though our lives have closed down becoming barren or dry or dead.

Our communities and culture can feel like that too. Many years ago now, at the end of the 1970’s, The Sex Pistols sang about there being no future in England’s dreaming. And many people still think that our society is changing for the worse. When I had a holiday in Spain several years ago I stayed on a street that was mainly occupied by British people who had left because they didn’t like the changes that they saw in British society. Such people think of Britain as being diseased and dead with no future for them.

Being in the Church it is also easy to feel the same. We are regularly told in the press that the Church is in decline and my Church, the Church of England, is currently dealing with major conflicts that threaten to pull it apart. Again, it is easy to feel as though the Church is washed up, dried out and dying.

Whatever we think of those issues and views, the God that we worship is in the resurrection business. And that is where we need to be too. In Ezekiel God promised that he would put his breath into the people of Israel and bring them back to life and in our Gospel reading (John 11. 1-45) Jesus said that he is the resurrection and the life and demonstrated this by bringing Lazarus back to life. Jesus was the fulfilment of God’s promise to Ezekiel that he would bring the people of Israel back to life. In Jesus, Israel lived life as God had intended and fulfilled Israel’s mission of bringing light to the rest of the world. In this way, Jesus resurrected a society and culture transforming the entire world as he did so.

He calls us to follow in his footsteps by looking for the places where our society and culture is dried up or dying and working for its transformation and resurrection. I saw several examples of that happening in my time at St Martin-in-the-Fields, particularly in our response to the pandemic.

Here’s how the Vicar of St Martin’s – Sam Wells - described our experience in the book that we wrote about that period of time (Finding Abundance in Scarcity: Steps Towards Church Transformation - A HeartEdge Handbook):

“St Martin-in-the-Fields is a complex organization. It has a large congregation, by UK standards, and a significant public ministry, involving a good deal of broadcasting. It has a trading subsidiary (two cafés, a shop, and around 175 commercial concerts annually). It has a development trust, and two homeless charities, one local, one national.

The pandemic asphyxiated its commercial activity, at a stroke deleting two-thirds of the congregation’s income. At the time of writing, we’ve had to shed three-quarters of our commercial and ministry staff. It’s been a devastating, depleting and distressing experience. Yet online, the congregation, its public ministry, and its music have found a reach, purpose, and dynamism like never before. All is made new. The musicians have recorded music, weekly, for 4,000 churches across the land. HeartEdge seminars have become a hub for innovation and evaluation. A new enquirers’ course has drawn participation from people far and wide, a good many of whom were already inhibited by chronic illness before ‘shield’ became an intransitive verb. The national homeless charity has never been more in demand, or attracted more support, fervidly working to help people find secure accommodation …

our Nazareth Community, made up of people from all classes, including those who sleep outside, seeking the heart of God through shared practices centred on silent prayer [has] grown to 81 people, with … additional … online companions. It models the way we seek to see the assets in everyone, rather than regarding some as needy and casting others as benefactors.

It’s been as if we’re in a cartoon: on one side surrounded by footfall figures, government directives, church guidelines, protective equipment, and spreadsheets of redundancy calculations, earnestly trying to be humane, transparent, and compassionate as we cast staff out into a wilderness of high unemployment and considerable health anxiety; on the other side surprised by joy, with people coming to faith, hundreds of thousands downloading choral offerings, asylum seekers stepping up to leadership roles, donors tendering generous gifts, and the church reopening in July for tentative public worship, only to close again in November and open again in December.

Don’t tell anyone, but beautiful things have been happening – too many to recount. Keep it quiet, but it’s also been a complete nightmare, in which plans made and an institution crafted over generations has been torn apart in ways a raging inferno couldn’t achieve … And yet, like a ram in a thicket, something has been provided, or has emerged, or suddenly changed.”

This happened because at the beginning of the pandemic we realised that “It was in its most bewildered hour that Israel in exile found who God truly was.” As a result, we saw that this was “our chance to discover what God being with us really means.” “None of us would for a moment have wished this crisis on anybody, let alone the whole world. But our faith teaches us that we only get to see resurrection through crucifixion; that we see God most clearly in our darkest hour.” What we found was “beauty, truth and goodness in times of adversity, hardship and distress.”

I believe that each of us can have similar experiences of resurrection and new life in the midst of adversity and hardship. So, together with my colleagues and congregations, I’m seeking to apply the lessons I learnt at St Martin’s in the missional activity we’re getting started here in the Wickford and Runwell Team Ministry. I believe that, as churches in this area, and elsewhere, we all need to be asking ourselves how God wants to use us to bring new life to those parts of our society and culture that are dying.

Raising Lazarus from death was a sign of what would happen after Jesus’ own death on the cross. By rising from death himself, Jesus conquered death for all people enabling us to enter in to eternal life after our physical death. This is good news for us to share with other people around us wherever we are - in our families and among our friends, neighbours and work colleagues. Think for a moment about the people and places where you can share the good news of life after death through our Lord Jesus.

Jesus also resurrected lives before physical death came. Look for a moment at John 11 with me. In the first section of that chapter from verses 1 to 16 we see the disciples struggling to understand what Jesus is saying and doing. He is wanting them to see how God is at work in Lazarus’ illness and death. They keep looking only at their physical and material circumstances - if Jesus goes back to Judea then he will be killed, if Lazarus is asleep then he will get better, and so on. Jesus wants them to see that God can work even through death and in verse 16 he draws out of them the commitment to go with him even though they may die with him. Then in verses 17 to 27, Jesus helps Martha to move beyond her theoretical belief in the resurrection to a belief that Jesus himself is the promised Messiah. Finally, in verses 38 to 45, he helps all those present to move beyond their focus on physical realities to believe in God’s ability to do the supernatural.

Throughout, Jesus is challenging all the people he encounters to move beyond their comfort zones, to step out in faith, to encounter and trust God in new ways. He wants to do the same with each one of us. Wherever our lives have got stuck, have become dried up or closed down or have died he wants to challenge and encourage us to move out of our comfort zones and to encounter him and other people in new and risky ways. He wants us to come alive to God, to the world, to other people and to life itself in new ways.

Jesus is in the resurrection business. Whether it is transforming society, sharing the good news of eternal life or encouraging us to step out in faith, Jesus wants to bring us to life. How will you respond to Jesus this morning? Is there an area of your life that he can bring back to life or will you commit yourself to join in sharing the good news of eternal life with others and transforming society where you are?

As you think about that challenge let us pray together briefly, using the words of a song by Evanescence:

Lord Jesus, we are frozen inside without your touch, without your love. You are the life among the dead, so wake us up inside. Call our names and save us from the dark. Bid our blood to run before we come undone, save us from the nothing we’ve become. Bring us to life. Amen.

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Evanescence - Bring Me To Life.

Monday, 24 May 2021

CTiW Pentecost Service


Churches Together in Westminster held their annual CTiW Service of the Word for Pentecost yesterday which this year was very kindly being hosted by St Mary le Strand church.

For the benefit of those watching the recording, a service sheet is available on the CTiW website (http://ctiw.london/2021/ctiw-service-of-the-word-for-pentecost/) or from CTiW.net@gmail.com and you may also wish to have a candle ready to light during the service. We are grateful to Canon Peter Babington, Priest-in-Charge and the people of St Mary le Strand for hosting this service.

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Taizé - virtual choir : Veni Sancte Spiritus.

Tuesday, 11 May 2021

Churches Together in Westminster: Pentecost Service


Churches Together in Westminster are pleased to invite you to our annual CTiW Service of the Word for Pentecost which this year is very kindly being hosted by St Mary le Strand church at 6pm on Sunday, 23 May 2021.

All are very welcome to join us either in person (please wear a mask and follow guidance to ensure social distancing) or via Livestream link https://youtu.be/Nq5CmXeJDYw

For the benefit of those watching from home, a service sheet will be available on the CTiW website (http://ctiw.london/2021/ctiw-service-of-the-word-for-pentecost/) or from CTiW.net@gmail.com and you may also wish to have a candle ready to light during the service. We are grateful to Canon Peter Babington, Priest-in-Charge and the people of St Mary le Strand for hosting this service.

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Come, O Holy Spirit, come.

Friday, 29 May 2020

Pentecost Sunday: Service, Oasis, Mass & Concert





We have an epic Pentecost Sunday lined up:

Pentecost Sunday Service

On the Day of Pentecost the message of Christ's love was heard in the languages of all those present. Our service for Pentecost Sunday (31 May) will reflect the global partnerships of St Martin-in-the-Fields through contributions from and prayers for our Global Neighbours and HeartEdge partners. The service is shared by our Chinese and English speaking congregations and will be led by Revd Harry Ching. Our preacher will be The Very Revd Obed Xolani Dlwati, The Dean of St Mary’s Cathedral Johannesburg.

There will be contributions from our Chinese congregations, Global Neighbours committee, HeartEdge partners, and the Youth Pilgrimage group from St Mary's Cathedral. The service includes photographs of our Global Neighbours from Church of Ceylon, Fikelela HIV/Aids Project, Patashala School, SENEthiopa, Sisters of Melanesia, St Mary's Cathedral, Tariro, and Tree of Life.

If you wish, have a candle ready to light at the end of this service. For translations of the various languages used, please follow the Order of Service.

Pentecost Oasis

Another ‘Oasis’ time of quiet scripture reflection, prayer and practical art in our homes. The Oasis encourages us to explore, play with colour and be creative through collage, painting, drawing or writing.

CTiW: Ecumenical Pentecost Mass

Churches Together in Westminster are pleased to announce that instead an ecumenical Pentecost Mass will be livestreamed from Farm Street Church of the Immaculate Conception at 6pm on Sunday, 31st May 2020. It is hoped that the service will include recorded music by Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir, and the choirs of Farm Street and All Saints, Margaret Street. All are very welcome from whatever Christian tradition or none, to celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost and to pray for our country and world at this time of crisis.

The link for the livestream is https://www.farmstreet.org.uk/livestream.

Keep Our Doors Open concert


Then at 7pm comes our first online concert from St Martin's! We’ll be streaming a special #KeepOurDoorsOpen concert at the St Martin's facebook page and everyone is welcome from the comfort of their own home (no ticket required!).

Enjoy a glittering programme of music and chat from some good friends. Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Revd Dr Sam Wells will begin the evening’s festivities. We'll be hearing from some of our own St Martin's Music musicians throughout the evening: St Martin's Voices, the Choral Scholars and Gabriella Nobel. our Choral Conducting Fellow.

Alongside the music, award-winning journalist and BBC broadcaster Julian Worricker will be chatting with some familiar faces. Interspersing the music will be interviews with some special friends of St Martin's: Hugh Dennis, Miko Giedroyc (Founder, Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir), Clarence Hunt (Choir Director, Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir) and Mel Giedroyc.

Join the event page here: https://www.facebook.com/events/735191230353644/. To find out more and to support our appeal, go to www.smitf.org.

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Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir - The Prayer.

Monday, 25 May 2020

CTiW: Livestreamed Ecumenical Pentecost Mass


As current COVID-19 restrictions do not allow us to hold our usual live CTiW Pentecost Service, Churches Together in Westminster are pleased to announce that instead an ecumenical Pentecost Mass will be livestreamed from Farm Street Church of the Immaculate Conception at 6pm on Sunday, 31st May 2020. It is hoped that the service will include recorded music by Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir, and the choirs of Farm Street and All Saints, Margaret Street.

All are very welcome from whatever Christian tradition or none, to celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost and to pray for our country and world at this time of crisis.

A poster is above, and the link for the livestream is https://www.farmstreet.org.uk/livestream.

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Soul Sanctuary Gospel Choir - The Prayer.

Monday, 4 May 2020

The light of the knowledge of the glory of God in clay jars





Here's my reflection for today's lunchtime Eucharist for St Martin-in-the-Fields:

This day is set aside to remember all who witnessed to their Christian faith during the conflicts in church and state in England, which lasted from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries but were at their most intense in the sixteenth century. Though the reform movement was aimed chiefly at the Papacy, many Christian men and women of holiness suffered for their allegiance to what they believed to be the truth of the gospel. As the movement grew in strength, it suffered its own internecine struggles, with one group determined that they were the keepers of truth and that all others were therefore at least in a state of ignorance and at worst heretical. In the twentieth century, ecumenical links drew the churches closer to each other in faith and worship and all now recognise both the good and evil that evolved from the Reformation Era.

This description of the Feast Day for the English Saints & Martyrs of the Reformation Era is very revealing. It makes it clear that, although these martyrs died for their beliefs, internal conflict within the Church is not what God intended for his people and that relating to our brothers and sisters in Christ on the basis that we hold the truth of Christianity in ways that others don’t is a far from adequate basis for real relationship in a body of people called by their Lord to be united. The final sentence about the ecumenical movement indicates a better way forward which is that of relationship on the basis of our shared fallibilities, failings and lack of understanding.

That is the message of 2 Corinthians 4. 5-12, a passage that we have come to know and love at St Martin’s through the work of the Disability Advisory Group and through the Light the Well community art project which resulted in an installation in the Light Well.

The artist Anna Sikorska worked with us on the installation which was set in the Light Well of St Martin-in-the-Fields during November and December 2017. It was the culmination of a community art project in which individuals from across St Martin’s – Church congregation, Chinese community, clergy, staff, clients from the Connection and members of our International Group – gathered together over time and over tables of clay to carefully form the porcelain lanterns which then filled the Light Well.

The lanterns were glazed ceramic globes whose size, surface decoration and character differed, although the base material - and overall look - was consistent white ceramic, roughly made. In the Light Well these lanterns were joined together with cord covering the stone floor in a random constellation. The cord also connected a light bulb within each lantern, so each one shines from within. Each lantern glowed when lit from within because of the translucency of porcelain.

Porcelain, like all clay, is malleable when wet and able to be moulded and shaped but, once formed and fired, is firm but fragile at one and the same time. Porcelain, however, unlike most other clays, is also translucent meaning that light can be seen through it. It glows with a transparency individual to itself. All these aspects of porcelain are factors in verses from 2 Corinthians 4: 6-12 which say that ‘God … has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ’ and that ‘we have this treasure in clay jars, so that it may be made clear that this extraordinary power belongs to God and does not come from us.’

If the clay jar, the container of the light, were to be perfectly formed, then the light inside would not be seen from the outside. The light of Christ would effectively be hidden. People would look at our perfect life and not Christ, because they would only see us. Instead, St Paul says, because we are not perfect and have difficulties and flaws we are like cracked clay jars, meaning that it is then clear that where we act or speak with love and compassion, this is because of Christ in us, rather than being something which is innate to us or simply our decision alone. He used this image of light in containers seen through cracks, or thin translucent clay, to assure the Corinthian Christians that they had the light of God in their lives, despite the fallibility and frailty of those lives.

The cracked translucent lanterns of this installation lit from within are a visible realisation of St Paul’s image of light in clay jars. By linking the lanterns together, this installation also highlights another aspect of this passage. Paul writes that ‘We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed; always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be made visible in our bodies.’ Paul writes of us in the plural. We are afflicted, but not crushed. We are perplexed, but not driven to despair. It is as we come together to engage with affliction, perplexity, forsakenness, and being struck down that we carry in our body the death of Jesus and show the life of Jesus. It is as we come together, linked, like the lanterns, by the light of Christ that we become the Body of Christ.

These verses picture us as fragile clay or porcelain containers. We all, as individuals, have the light of Christ within which can be seen by others as a result of our fragile nature; either the lines of stress in our lives or the thinness of our skin. Each of us are like cracked or translucent clay jars because of our flaws and vulnerabilities. It is through these lines of stress – the suffering, rejection and scorn with which we engage - that the light of Christ is seen. It is as we join together in living for the sake of others – linked together as the lanterns were linked in the Light the Well installation – that we become the Body of Christ and reveal him most fully in the world. In this way, this installation shows us what it means to be the Body of Christ – the Church – in the world today. When we come together as fragile individuals glowing with the light of Christ in and through our fallibilities, we are the Church as it is intended to be.

Prayers

Lord Jesus, in your face we see the light of the knowledge of the glory of God. Your light in our lives is like a flame inside a cracked clay jar, with your light seen through the lines of stress and tension that characterise our lives. As flawed people in a fragile world, we recognise that there is a crack in everything. We recognise, too, that it is through the cracks in our existence that your light gets in and shines out. We share in the vulnerability and suffering that was your experience of death in order that your life is also seen as being our strength in weakness. May we not be crushed, driven to despair, forsaken or destroyed, but in the stresses and tensions of our lives know your power loving and sustaining us. May we no longer strive after perfect offerings and pray instead that every heart to love with come, but as a refugee. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Lord Jesus, in this wilderness before the promised land, we pray for all who are dispossessed and homeless. In their wilderness wanderings may they seek rest not only in a material land of promise but also in the one who left all he had to serve humanity, die and be raised to glory. In the tension of the now and the not yet, we pray for all who have asked for healing or release and to whom it has not been granted. In the depths of their loss may they encounter one whose preaching released long dead imprisoned souls. In these times between times, may we fully utilise the gifts of your Spirit - gifts of community and relationship, gifts of forgiveness and life-giving – to imagine new possibilities in the midst of the old problems of our world. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Lord Jesus, who in suffering and then death was made nothing, we bring to you those who are experiencing loss through suffering and bereavement. We ask that nothing and no-one will trivialise their loss and that in the heart of their loss they will experience rebirth and resurrection. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Lord Jesus, through your rising from the grave, you broke the power of the grave, you broke the power of death and condemned death itself to die. As we celebrate this great triumph may we also make it a model for our living. Help us to identify in our lives all that should rightly die - redundant relationships, tired habits, fruitless longings. Resurrect in our lives faith, hope and love as surely as you raised Jesus Christ from the grave. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.
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U2 & Daniel Lanois - Falling At Your Feet.

Saturday, 2 November 2019

HeartEdge Mailer | October 2019

HeartEdge is an international ecumenical movement.
  • We are churches and other organisations growing commercial and cultural activity, compassionate response to need and congregational life.
  • We are sharing, connecting, finding support and developing, at the heart and on the edge.
  • Churches join, identify gaps in their resource and find new ways of being.
  • We focus on 4 areas - commercial activity, congregations, cultural engagement and compassion.
Join us! Details here.

Each month we collect and email stories and ideas, related to our focus: commercial activity, congregations, cultural engagement and compassion. Useful, inspiring, practical - it's a resource.

This month:
  • Ken Robinson on compassion, Miranda Threlfall-Holmes on St Margaret of Antioch, Katherine Venn on direct action and Brian McLaren on preaching.
  • Putting a community shop and Post Office in your church, tips on using video and setting up a music venue, and art when no-one is watching.
  • Winter night shelters, Russell Brand plus the Beyoncé Mass.
  • Plus Jonathan Evens updates on the development of HeartEdge.
Read the October Mailer here.

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Brittany Howard - 13th Century Metal.

Friday, 28 June 2019

HeartEdge Mailer | June 2019

HeartEdge Mailer | June 2019

HeartEdge is an international ecumenical movement. 

We are churches and organisations developing mission.
We focus on 4 areas - commercial activity, congregation, cultural engagement and compassion.
Join us here!

Each month we email stories, web links and news related to our focus: commercial activity, congregations, cultural engagement and compassion. Useful, inspiring, practical - a resource to take from!

This month:
  • Boaz Life and well-being, plus Dementia Cafe's and responses to autism.
  • Church buildings as places of safety and church gardens as sanctuary.
  • Learning from the Commercial - loads of churches & projects to inspire!
  • Rituals, poetry & installations in church - examples & resources.
  • Plus Jessica Foster on questions of vulnerability & leadership.
Read the Mailer here.

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Blessid Union of Souls - I Believe.

Saturday, 22 June 2019

HeartEdge Introductory Days










The latest HeartEdge Introductory Day was held at Jesmond URC in Newcastle on 11 June and drew together an engaged group from across the denominations. 

Sam Wells began the day by speaking about going beyond the benefactor and steward in the way we fund churches. Then we heard about local initiatives exemplifying the 4 Cs: Faith in Our Community CAFÉ Together in Easington Colliery run a community lunch once a week with cookery classes, summer activities and a pop-up restaurant also happening regularly; Forget Me Knot organise a community pantomime with the URC church and community in Roker; St Michael's in Byker work with youth and community to rebuild the church and its activities; and Churches’ Key Project in South Tyneside provide young people with accommodation, mediation with family members and life skills to help them find their way. 

Jonathan Evens described HeartEdge as a ‘movement for renewal fuelled by its members’. After a wonderful lunch provided by Social Chef, we heard from Sunderland University Chaplain Chris Howson on healing communities in the midst of Brexit. The afternoon was spent in workshops including how to … run a community lunch, develop enterprise, engage your community at Christmas and nurture good mental health. Speakers were from community projects across the region and gave participants a more in-depth look at how to set up these kinds of projects and what challenges and rewards they give us. The day closed with some Theological reflections from Fr. Chris Hughes and Sam Wells. 

Feedback after the event included:
  • ‘The day at Jesmond URC was a wonderful time of learning, sharing and fellowship with a real and obvious enthusiasm from both speakers and participants for getting involved in the community.’
  • ‘What an interesting and lively day at Jesmond yesterday. I'm so glad to have been there. There's plenty to consider prayerfully and challenges to broaden what being church is about.’
  • ‘I especially liked the view of church as Congregation, Compassion, Culture and Commerce emphasising that a church was not solely spirituality.’
The next HeartEdge Introductory Day is on Thursday 27 June at St Thomas' Derby. Working across Derby, Nottingham and the surrounding area? Urban, suburban or rural? We would love you to join this practical one-day intensive introduction to HeartEdge with Sam Wells and guests. We're ecumenical and open to all. The day will explore approaches to mission, do theology, develop ideas and help build on the community of practice in Derby. Book in here.

In addition to Sam Wells, the programme also includes: Paul Morris (St Peter’s Derby), Christopher Harrison (St Peter’s Nottingham), Joseph Chivayo (Derby City of Sanctuary), Simon Cartwright (St Thomas'), Michael Gladwell (Derby Language School), Beth Honey (Derwent Oak), Pat McMenemy & Courtney Smith (Women of Faith Nottingham) and Julian Penfold (St James Riddings).

To register for a free ticket click here.

The day will explore approaches to mission, do theology, develop ideas and help build on the community of practice in Derby and Nottingham. We'll do this by referring to:
  • Congregation: Liturgy, worship & new congregations
  • Commerce: Being entrepreneurial, growing income via enterprise
  • Compassion: Grow participation to address social need
  • Culture: Art, music connecting with communities
We'll start with refreshments from 10am and a programme from 10.30am.
  • Programme will include panel discussion and practical ‘how to’ session.
  • Lots of opportunity to build networks, make connections, with time to meet over lunch & refreshments.
Practical, inspiring with lots to celebrate and take away - we hope you can join us.

HeartEdge is a growing ecumenical network of churches and other organisations, in the UK and overseas, initiated by St Martin-in-the-Fields. Joining HeartEdge is easy - find out more here.

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Lifehouse - Everything.

Wednesday, 19 December 2018

HeartEdge: December Mailer

HeartEdge is an international ecumenical movement of churches and other organisations developing mission focused on commercial activity, congregations, cultural engagement and compassion.

Our monthly Mailer is a "smorgasbord of ideas, inspiration and resource focused around HeartEdge 4 C's."

This month:
  • "If the cafés are open on Christmas Day, then the churches should surely be. And we should not be celebrating a sort of 'Narnia' Christmas, fantasizing about the good old days, whenever they were. We are celebrating Christmas this year in a world at war, full of uncertainty, inequality and injustice." Lucy Winkett on being open for Christmas.
  • Plus - a Christmas group work resource, a look at community meals, and the Library of Things
  • Also - Henri Nouwen, 'Spirit Level' authors Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett on social status, Simon Sinek on power dynamics, 2019 trends and Chine McDonald on identity politics.
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Gungor feat. All Sons & Daughters - Oh Light.

Saturday, 1 September 2018

HeartEdge Mailer | August 2018

HeartEdge Mailer | August 2018

"I open it, I read it.
Every time, useful."
Craig - Bradford

HeartEdge is an international ecumenical movement, passionate about nurturing Kingdom communities via four C’s - congregations, cultural engagement, commercial activity and compassion.

This month:
  • Winnie Varghese on borders, Charlotte Regan and 'Drug Runner', Liz Edman and Alison Webster on seeing, Jonathan Wittenbergon bread. 
  • The Daily Bread Cooperative and co-ops, Broderick Greer on intersectionality, Doug Gay on preaching, Miranda Threlfall-Homeson welcome and Anthony Reddie on race and Christian Britain.
  • Also poetry from Anthony Wilson, inspiration from Music Matters and Great Sacred Music, and Annie Lamott on the habit of practice.
  • Plus an extract from Alison Websters new book.
Read the Mailer here.

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Duke Special - Shining Light.

Thursday, 17 May 2018

HeartEdge Mailer | May 2018


HeartEdge Mailer | May 2018

HeartEdge is a growing international ecumenical network, passionate about nurturing Kingdom communities via four C’s - congregations, culture, commercial activity and compassion.

Each month we bring you commercial work, cultural activity, community and congregational development. Inspiration, ideas and resource!

This month:
  • Corita Kent on rules, Grime & God, and Childish Gambino.
  • Enterprise tips plus Jane Sandwood on bakery & wellbeing.
  • Poverty & Truth, Beatrice Nyariara on legacy, Sarah Coakley on longing.
  • Robert Gelinas on jazz theology, the 'Outside in' church plus 'Incarnational Mission: Being with the World' by Sam Wells.
HeartEdge: News and Events
  • Book launch: 'Who is my Neighbour? The Global & Personal Challenge', Monday 21 May, 7 – 8.30pm, St Martin-in-the-Fields, London: Sam Wells chairs discussion with Rabbi Shulamit Ambalu, Dr Megan Warner, Revd Richard Carter and Sam Ahmad Ziaee, who will tell the story of his journey aged 16 from Afghanistan to the UK. Join here.
  • Workshop: Start : Stop Mission Model, Thursday 24 May, 2 – 4pm, St Martin-in-the-Fields, London: Learn about Start:Stop (10-minute work-based reflections for people on their way to work). HeartEdge's Jonathan Evens on growing a new congregation; engaging with working people; ministering in the workplace; communicating with busy people. Detail here. HeartEdge members - free, non-members - £10. Join here or call 020 7766 1127. 
  • Heart & Voice Uniting: Tuesday 12 June, 2.15 – 7pm, Greenbank Parish Church, Edinburgh. HeartEdge Church & Culture day with: Sam Wells (St Martin-in-the-Fields), Richard Frazer (Greyfriars Kirk), Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Andrew Earis (Director of Music, St Martin-in-the-Fields) and Martin Ritchie (Greenbank Parish Church). Includes Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields, 'Great Sacred Music’, plus 'Sing Joyfully’ concert. Join here.
  • 'At the Heart. On the Edge', Wednesday 13 June, 10am - 3.30pm, Queen's Cross Parish Church, Aberdeen. A HeartEdge day on developing congregation, commercial, compassion and cultural engagement with practitioners with Scott M. Rennie,(Queen's Cross Parish Church), Sam Wells and the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields performing 'Great Sacred Music'. The day includes theology, ideas, solutions and support with a programme developed jointly by Queen's Cross Parish Church and St Martin’s. Lunch provided - join here.
Save the date: 
  • HeartEdge Annual Conference 12 / 13 September
  • HeartEdge day: 13 November, Ness Bank Church Inverness.
  • Greenbelt 2018: Acts of the Imagination, 24 - 27 August, Boughton House, Leicestershire includes Sam Wells, and HeartEdge associates: Join here.
  • Today’s Church - A Call to Social Action: 22 September, St Martin’s Church, Burton Agnes with Alison White, Bishop of Hull and Jonathan Evens. Detail here. Join here or call 01262 490019.
  • HeartEdge Church & Culture: 27 September, St Luke’s Maidenhead with Jonathan Evens.
  • HeartEdge Session: 3 October, Belle Vue Baptist Southend with Sam Wells 
  • SALT Business Network conference 5 October, Westminster Central Hall includes HeartEdge on Start:Stop.
Join HeartEdge here.

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Over The Rhine - All Over Ohio.

Sunday, 22 April 2018

Taizé refound, 40 years on…..



Here's a guest post from Rev Hilary Oakley, Associate Priest, St Mary’s Hitchin:

I first visited Taizé in 1970. I was 16, and the Taizé community was just about to enter its heyday, when tens of thousands of young people came to witness this place of reconciliation and share in its life. I was deeply touched by the worship, in the large concrete Church of the Reconciliation, constructed in 1962. It was not so much the spirituality as the participation of people of different traditions, saying the Lord's Prayer next to me in French, Spanish, German or Dutch, and discovering that I too could use their words to praise God in the multi-lingual chants of the Taizé liturgy. My eyes were open to traditions, people and languages beyond my own, and I began to understand the importance of ecumenism, as well as my responsibilities as a European citizen.

In the second week of Easter, I visited Taizé again, after 40 years. The 1960s concrete church was still the same, but larger, with three waves of wooden extension at the west end. Beyond 60 or so adults, there were around 2,000 young people, many German, whose energy and exuberance brought Taizé alive, as it had done 40 years before. The numbers were smaller than I remembered, but the languages were more extensive, and now included Polish, Bulgarian, Swahili, Chinese, reflecting a wider Europe, greater mobility, and our engagement with a bigger world. It was challenging in a number of sometimes contradictory ways. The perspective was wider, the different traditions less important, the variety greater, the numbers smaller.

I came away wondering just how far as a Christian community we can continue to afford the luxury of division, divergence or mutual suspicion, as we struggle to afford to maintain separate buildings and church infrastructures in parallel. Taizé has nudged me to find a renewed enthusiasm for ecumenism, an energy to enable us to address and overcome those challenges that so constrained the previous generation of ecumenists, and lost us the last 40 years. As Taizé founder, Brother Roger, so simply put it: “Make the unity of the Body of Christ your passionate concern.”

Our country is also hugely divided as politicians struggle to find the Holy Grail of a Brexit that suits everybody. Yet on this biggest of all issues facing our national life, we the church have so little to say. Perhaps we just don't want to rock the boat, a stance so alien to the way of Christ. Perhaps we need to refind our commonality of faith and liturgy with our European friends and neighbours. Perhaps while the politicians argue, we should be building bridges across the Channel, a new European Christianity, an integration, a reconciliation. Perhaps we can find a vision of a future where we can speak together, and speak out, about the issues that concern us all.

I think this is a good time for us to refind Taizé and share its vision with our young people, tomorrow’s church and tomorrow’s world, those in whom we need to be investing now. If you would like to take a group pf young people to Taizé this summer, you can make contact directly with Brother Paolo at brpaolo@taize.fr., or else drop me a note at hilaryoakley@hotmail.com, and I will make the contact for you.

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Taizé - Stay With Me.

Monday, 6 July 2015

The Book of Common Prayer

Here are some reflections prepared recently on the significance of the Book of Common Prayer:

In 12 years of ordained ministry each of the parishes in which I have ministered have made use of the Book of Common Prayer in their patterns of services. At St Stephen Walbrook the Book of Common Prayer is used at our main weekly Eucharist, while in other settings its primary use has been as an early morning Eucharist or for Evensong. In all of these contexts I have greatly appreciated the sense that those attending engage with God through the familiarity of its language reinforced by repetition over the years.

The familiarity of its language, for those brought up with it, has been particularly moving when ministering pastorally to those experiencing dementia. Often these conversations are entirely disconnected from the present or are entirely set in the past because the short-term memory of the individual has declined significantly. However, when we share communion together the individual often comes fully into the present recalling words learnt in their youth in order to repeat them in the here and now as the significance of receiving the body and blood of our Lord is remembered.

So, one reason why I appreciate the Book of Common Prayer is to do with what it means to my parishioners. The BCP is 'generally reckoned a masterpiece of writing, as Thomas Cranmer's use of idiom, cadences, imagery, repetition, contrast and general rhythm made doctrine, devotion, and the sheer use of English both memorable and exemplary. In this way, the language and indeed the whole culture of the BCP came to be a major ingredient in not only the religion of England, but in the thought-forms and speech of a large proportion of English men and women.'

The spell that its language weaves on parishioners and others also leads me to appreciate the role it has played historically. 'From the 16th century to the 20th, literacy spread, particularly in the 19th century. The King James Bible was found in every literate home, and taught in school, as well as in the Sunday Schools which developed from the latter half of the 1800s. For many, members of the Church of England (one third of the nation at the religious census in 1851), the Book of Common Prayer was the partner of the Bible, being read and learned at home, and very often also carried to church.'

'Cranmer wanted the people of England to be constantly exposed to Holy Scripture in a language they understood, working through the whole of the Bible regularly and the Psalms every month, while following a calendar that rehearsed in every church year the whole story of salvation starting with the Fall and culminating in Christ's unique sacrifice of himself on the Cross and his glorious resurrection, the benefits of which we are not worthy to receive on any merits of ours—"we are not worthy so much as to gather up the crumbs from under Thy table"—but only through the purest grace extended on the basis of Christ's unique status as Lord and Saviour.' This strong emphasis on a lectionary that takes people through the whole Bible is also hugely valuable.

'Cranmer strove to maintain as much continuity with traditional forms of worship as he could, given his commitments to the Reformation. In the ecumenical spirit that characterizes the Book of Common Prayer, he went to the Latin liturgy that the English Catholic Church had used for centuries, in particular, the Sarum Missal, which priests at Salisbury Cathedral had long used to conduct services.

He translated and simplified a good deal of the Sarum Missal. From the monastic services of Matins, Vespers, and Compline he fashioned Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer. He borrowed elements of the liturgy of the Reformed church in Cologne, and adapted a prayer of St. John Chrysostom from the Byzantine rite. He also wrote dozens of new prayers and collects, in a language at once grand and simple, heightened and practical, archaic and timeless.'

As a result, 'theologically, the Book of Common Prayer is both radical and conservative. Its Protestantism can be felt in its emphasis on man’s sinfulness, and on the unearned gift of God’s salvation. Still, it was an eclectic and consoling document, the least revolutionary of the European Protestant liturgies.'

This leads us, I think, to a place where faithfulness to the Book of Common Prayer does not simply mean its continued use with the liturgy of the Church of England but also means addressing similar issues to those addressed by Cranmer – issues of faith literacy, ecumenical dialogue and biblical education – in ways that are both contemporary and which have synergies with Cranmer’s solutions.

St Stephen Walbrook is, I think, an example of the way in which it is possible to combine old and new in the present in ways that have synergy which the past. The central setting of the altar reflects modern understandings of Church and liturgy but its location below and mirroring Sir Christopher Wren’s dome is, in fact, sympathetic to and understanding of Wren’s original design of squares and circles. The result is that when most people first see this space, as a whole, once they have ascended the stairs, they are amazed and delighted, thinking that they have in some small measure had a taste of heaven. What they are responding to is not simply Wren’s original design or Henry Moore’s altar but the integration of the two in the reordering which does not detract from either and instead creates something which is more than the sum of its parts. That was also Cranmer's achievement and we honour him and that achievement best, I think, when we seek to do for our time what he achieved in his.

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John Rutter - The Lord Bless You And Keep You.


Monday, 14 April 2014

Seven Kings Fellowship of Churches Lent Service


Tonight at 8.00pm at Seven Kings United Free Church the Seven Kings Fellowship of Churches will be celebrating and giving thanks for the learning we have done together as part of this year's Lent Course - 'Build on the Rock: Faith, doubt and Jesus'. Our Lent Service will include feedback from each of the three groups that studied the Course.

We have had an excellent Lent Course this year as can be judged by some of the feedback from those who took part:

  • "We had some very deep discussions. Our discussion about death was particularly interesting, thoughtful and deep."
  • "I appreciated thinking about Jesus as 'friend' and 'brother'. This was a new way of thinking. I had to stop and think about what we are really saying when we call Jesus our 'brother'."
  • "Asking why God leads us to pray was thought-provoking and important for me."
  • "You think you're not that good as a Christian but to then hear that we all struggle with doubt, it makes you realise that you're not odd." 

People liked the quotes in the course booklet ("I was surprised that some of those quoted had a Christian faith") and the range of perspectives from those interviewed on the course CD. We also liked working together with people from other churches and hearing different perspectives when discussing topics.

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Bruce Cockburn - The Rose Above The Sky.

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Taize Service @ St John's

This Sunday St John's Seven Kings is hosting a Taize Service for the Redbridge Deanery. The service begins at 6.30pm and a singing rehearsal will be held earlier at 5.45pm. All are welcome.

The service will include an introduction and short film about Taize plus music and prayers. Information will be available about the Deanery Youth Pilgrimage to Taize in 2014 from 2nd to 11th August. This  is being organised by the Redbridge Deanery Youth Link Group as one of the events celebrating the Centenary of the Diocese of Chelmsford.

Taize is an ecumenical community in France where youth and young adults are welcomed in great numbers from all over the world throughout the year to pray, to worship, to study and above all to share their experience of the Christian faith with one another in community.

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Taize - Adoramus te, o Christe.

Friday, 8 February 2013

Congratulations: Steven Saxby

Congratulations to Steven Saxby who has been appointed as Executive Officer to the London Churches Group with effect from 1 March. He will also remain as Priest in Charge of St Barnabas, Walthamstow, a church which is a member of London Citizens, active in the CitySafe campaign and a key member of Walthamstow Migrants Action Group

Steven has a strong record of social action, ecumenical and multi faith engagement that will stand him in good stead in his new role. This includes as Waltham Forest Faith Communities worker (2002-2003) and later line manager for his successors (2003-2007), developing the Faith Forum for Waltham Forest, serving on the Local Strategic Partnership and advising the local authority on faith matters since 2002. He also founded the London Boroughs Faiths Network in 2002, which is still going strong.

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Neil Young - Rockin' In The Free World.
 

Friday, 8 February 2008

Global Day of Prayer

On Friday, 25th January, Global Day of Prayer London 2008 was launched to a packed Westminster Chapel. Hundreds of people from across London and the wider UK prayed, spent time praising and worshiping God and were inspired about the vision for 2008 and the road to Wembley in 2010.

Now that the launch has taken place the countdown has begun to the 11th May event when GDOP hope to gather 30,000 people to Millwall Football Stadium in south London. The day will include worship led by All Souls Orchestra, Graham Kendrick, Psalm Drummers, Godfrey Birtill, Noel Robinson, Geraldine Latty, Dave Bilbrough, Greenjade and many more.

Tickets can be purchased:
  • Online: Book here before Easter and get your tickets at the discounted price of £6.00 adults/£4.00 concessions and children under 16

  • By Phone: Call 08456 528 500. Tickets cost £8.00 adults/£5.00 concessions and children under 16

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Kings X - Over My Head.

Monday, 15 October 2007

All Together Now



This questionnaire comes from the resources for One World Week and is my post for Blog Action Day. This Sunday, at 6.30pm, St John's will host the annual One World Week service for the Seven Kings Fellowship of Churches.

ALL TOGETHER NOW ACTIVITY: Measure your footprint
From children through to business and government, every one of us has an impact on the world.
This impact is called a 'footprint'. The lifestyle choices we all make affect the quality of our
environment. The more resources we use and waste, the larger our footprint. A smaller footprint can make life better for everyone, everywhere. Find out how big your Footprint really is by answering the following questions:
Home
Number of people I live with
a) more than 4 people
b) 1 - 4 people
c) by myself
House size
I live in a:
a) flat
b) semi-detached house
c) detached house
Energy source
My electricity comes from:
a) 'green' electricity or renewable sources
b) some renewable energy
c) all non-renewable sources (oil, gas)
Energy efficiency
My home is:
a) well insulated, double glazed and fitted
with energy saving devices
b) moderately insulated and part double
glazed
c) not insulated and not double glazed
Food
Type of diet
I eat meat or fish:
a) never (vegan or vegetarian)
b) 3-4 times a week
c) at least once a day
Food
I eat processed food:
a) never
b) sometimes
c) mainly
Food waste
On a weekly basis I:
a) compost all of my kitchen waste
b) compost some of my kitchen waste
c) Don't compost kitchen waste
Travel
Main travel mode
I travel mainly by:
a) foot/bicycle
b) public transport
c) car
Air travel
I fly, each year on average:
a) 0 hours
b) 1-10 hours
c) 10 hours +
Distance travelled
I travel each week approximately:
a) 0-50 miles
b) 50-150 miles
c) 150 miles +
Goods, services & waste
Earnings
I earn:
a) less than £20,000 per year
b) £20-40,000 per year
c) more than £40,000 per year
Household waste
I produce on average each week:
a) about 1 bin bag
b) about 2 bin bags
c) about 3 bin bags
Recycling
Each week I:
a) recycle all of my waste(glass, paper,
plastics, metal)
b) recycle some of my waste
c) recycle none of my waste

How big is your footprint? Count up your answers:
a) _____
b) _____
c) _____
Mostly a... Congratulations, as an individual, you are already doing your bit. To achieve a one planet lifestyle, government and business also now need to play their part.
Mostly b... If everyone lived like you we would need around three planets to sustain ourselves.
Mostly c... If everyone lived like you we would need around four or more planets to sustain ourselves
(Reproduced with permission from WWF Scotland)

Small changes you can make NOW. All together they make a BIG difference:
· change your light bulbs to low energy ones
· put on a jumper and turn the thermostat down by 1 degree
· turn off the light when you go out of a room
· turn all appliances off at the wall after use
· only boil enough water for your drink - don't fill the kettle right up
· turn off your mobile phone charger as soon as the phone is charged up
· reduce your water usage: turn off the tap when you clean your teeth; always fill the washing machine; wash the veg in a bowl of water, not under a running tap; take a shower (not a power shower, though!) rather than a bath;
· walk whenever you can (which might be more often than you have been doing!)
· find out when your buses run locally
· find out when your local farmers' market is and buy your local produce there, or discover where your nearest farm shops are - buy local!
For more ideas for individuals and families, try:
Living Lightly - a project of A Rocha UK. (site particularly aimed at Christians)
Friends of the Earth - (general application)
Or go to the: Useful LINKS section in OWW.Resources.

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Check Martyn Joseph's How Did We End Up Here?

Thursday, 11 October 2007

A special invitation


Following the huge blessings of the Global Day of Prayer 2007 at West Ham United FC, we are now moving forward into 2008. and continuing the vision to connect the Church across London and the Nations, to pray and reclaim Pentecost.

In 2008 the vision is to bring the Church together and invite upto 30,000 Christians from across all the denominations, traditions, streams and networks, to Millwall Stadium South London to pray:

“Your kingdom Come, Your will be done
on Earth as in Heaven”

ALL Church Leaders from across London are invited to a special Global Day of Prayer 2008 Leaders Reception on Tuesday 30th October, 6.30pm@ Millwall Conference & Banqueting Centre, Millwall Stadium, Zampa Road , London , SE16

The vision of Millwall Stadium, the journey to Wembley and how churches and organisations can be involved will be shared. Light food and refreshments will be available. RSVP to enquiries@gdoplondon.com.

Bishop David Hawkins, Chair of GDOP London
Jonathon Oloyede, Visionary of GDOP London
Phil Stokes, Chair of Southwark for Jesus