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Showing posts with label recycling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycling. Show all posts

Friday, 31 January 2020

Foyer Display - Ruth Hutchinson




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. One of the initiatives from this group is a changing display of work by the group members or artists linked to the group. Each month a different artist shows examples of their work, so, if you are able, do return to see the changing display.

Ruth Hutchinson came to England from Jamaica in 1959 to train as a nurse. Now in her active retirement she enjoys lots of artistic pursuits including her art and her poetry. She does lots of poetry with local groups. She is also a longstanding active member of the congregation at St Martin-in-the-Fields, one of the welcoming stewards’ team and a co-leader of The Archers. Her passion for the arts was ignited when she re-trained as a nursery nurse but really grew when she studied art after retiring in 2001.

Ruth writes: ‘The Tie Suit was inspired by “my Dave.” When he died I found it difficult to part with his ties. I added to the collection by gathering more ties from charity shops to first create my tie skirt which was a hit at parties and then create the Tie waistcoat Shirt.

Sometimes we can find it hard to part with our loved ones. By reusing we can creatively create something new out of something sad and at the same time protect our environment.’

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Julie Miller - All My Tears.

Tuesday, 11 April 2017

Growing bread which is broken for the world

Here is the sermon I preached for this evening's Eucharist at St Martin-in-the-Fields:

A few years ago researchers at the University of Warwick devised a novel way to recycle discarded mobile telephones - bury them and watch them transform into the flower of your choice. They designed a mobile phone case made of biodegradable polymer which broke down on the compost heap into a pile of soil nutrients. And then, because the engineers included a tiny transparent window in the case in which they embedded a seed, the final touch was that the case flowers.

The seed lay dormant in its plastic window until the phone cover got dug into the ground. The phone cover then broke down allowing the seed to germinate and, as the flower grows‚ to get additional nutrients from the biodegrading phone cover.

This story reminded me of Jesus’ words from our Gospel reading: “a grain of wheat remains no more than a single grain unless it is dropped into the ground and dies. If it does die, then it produces many grains.” (John 12. 20 - 36)

Just like the mobile phone case which is hard but biodegradable and which contains a seed, “a grain of wheat has a hard, glossy husk within which its life is contained. But if it falls into the ground, then its husk softens and rots and breaks open, and from inside the seed the power of its life begins to push outwards, and the pattern of its life begins to unfold. Roots go down into the soil, and a shoot comes up into the light where it grows stronger and taller and produces an ear of corn.”

Jesus equates that picture of the hard outer husk which has to rot to release the life inside to our choice in life to be either people who love our own lives or people who hate, lose or give away our lives. Those of us who love our own lives reinforce our hard, outer husk. We put up barriers between ourselves and others in order to protect and enjoy what we have for ourselves.

Jesus says that when we live life selfishly, protecting ourselves and what we have, then we have actually lost the essence of life itself. We are dead to the world, its peoples and its wonders because we engage with what is other not for its own sake but only for our sake. When we cannot appreciate other people and God’s creation except in terms of what we can get for ourselves then we are dead to the world and all that is in it. Not only are we dead to the world and all that is in it but we are sterile as well. If we live just for ourselves; if we give nothing away to others but keep all for ourselves; then everything we have dies with us and what we have had is lost forever.

But says Jesus, if we are like the grain of wheat that dies, then we will know what it is like to really come alive and really live. If we allow our protective shell to rot and be removed; if we are focused not on ourselves but on others; if we disregard our own life in this world and follow Jesus in serving others; then we gain, then we come alive, then we see a single grain of wheat multiply and produce many grains.

Stephen Verney points out that when a single grain of wheat produces an ear of corn “there are forty seeds where before there was only one. Next year if those forty seeds are all planted in good soil they will produce sixteen hundred seeds – in the third year sixty-four thousand – in the fourth year over two and a half million – and in the fifth year over a hundred million.” “Gradually out of one little seed,” he says, “there appears a harvest, which men and women reap and grind into flour and bake into bread. So it is that one seed has within it the capacity to feed a multitude of people – if it only first falls into the ground and dies.”

“And so it is,” Verney continues, “that Jesus offers bread to the whole world … He offers himself, his life, to come alive in hundreds and then in thousands and then in millions of others. But first he must die, and if his followers are going to pass on the life then they too will have to learn the pattern of life through death.”

If we are to be Jesus’ followers then we must follow him in the way of life through death which is the way of letting go and receiving back. Then we will share Jesus’ work and he will come alive in us as the seed comes alive in next year’s harvest and we will “be reaped, and ground into flour and baked in the oven, and become the bread which is broken for the world.”

Seeds are a good symbol of the way in which the good news of Jesus is shared. Our words and actions can be seeds in the lives of people who have yet to come to know Jesus for themselves as we share something of ourselves and our faith with them. “Our calling is to live and share the gospel of God’s love revealed in Jesus Christ. We have good news for a hurting world – words of comfort; words of life. To help someone else experience the love of God is indeed an act of loving service, in a world where many people ‘live lives of quiet desperation’.”

Through our words and actions we can be like seeds in the lives of those in our family, our community, our networks and our work. To be a seed we have to become open and give that thing that is of most value in our lives to others; the life of Christ. Whether it is by practical actions or by giving a reason for the faith we have in us; we become seeds when we share the love of Christ where we are.

So, what seeds will we plant in the life of others during this coming week? What seeds can we plant in the lives of family, friends, neighbours, colleagues? Will we, in fact, live our lives as seeds giving ourselves and the love of Christ away to others each day of every week and thereby seeing the grain of wheat become an ear of corn and the corn become the bread broken for the life of the world.

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Michael W Smith - Seed To Sow.

Thursday, 3 April 2014

Enterprise Club, Environmental Businesses and Paint Project

Here is the latest from Ros Southern regarding the Seven Kings & Newbury Park Sophia Hub:

"We are delighted to announce that we have set up a partnership with Forest Recycling Project (Waltham Forest) to support new enterprises in Redbridge using reclaimed materials.  Funded by Redbridge Council we have 7000 litres of free recycled paint for a business to distribute to community groups plus many more possibilities.


At the enterprise club on Tuesday - from 2 - 3.45pm we will be joined by Brian Kelly of Forest Recycling Project, Toni Dipple of Organic Ilford, Keith Young of Recycles (recycled bikes) and quite a few more environmental businesses and schemes.  This will be useful for all start -ups as we will be drawing out tips and learning from these businesses.  For more information click on this link: http://sophiahubs7k.wordpress.com/2014/04/03/enterprise-club-on-8th-april-exploring-green-enterprises/.

Please do help us by passing on this information and letting people know about our enterprise network and club.

For an update on the time bank click here: http://sophiahubs7k.wordpress.com/time-bank/.

I hope to see many of you on Tuesday.  Feel free to arrive anytime from 1.30 and stay to 4.30 and beyond.  Bring your laptops - we have wifi!"

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Michael Nesmith - Life, The Unsuspecting Captive.

Sunday, 15 November 2009

Meditation on a green plastic milk bottle top

I wrote the following meditation for today's All-Age service at St Johns Seven Kings which has been planned by our Peace & Justice committee and which focuses on the Countdown to Copenhagen:

Each of you was given, as you arrived, a green plastic milk bottle top. Please hold it in your hand now and spend a moment looking at it.

It is a familiar everyday object; one that we see most days but do not think about. We handle it when we remove it in order to pour out our milk and then replace it to help in keeping the milk fresh. When the milk bottle is empty then we throw it away.

The world's annual consumption of plastic materials has increased from around 5 million tonnes in the 1950s to nearly 100 million tonnes today, which means that we use 20 times as much plastic today than we did 50 years ago. All plastics, including these bottle tops, but also many of the materials used to make the clothes we are wearing and the carpet we are walking on, plus hundreds of the other products we take for granted, are made from petrochemicals and a main ingredient in petrochemicals is oil. Our increased use of plastics uses up the world’s limited supplies of oil more quickly.

It is estimated that only 7% of plastic waste is recycled at present, so 93% of an increasing number of plastic items, including our bottle tops, currently go to landfill. These bottle-tops are a symbol of waste, a sign of our throw-away society. How many do we throw away each week, each month, each year?

Bottle-tops are hard to recycle because there are only a few companies that genuinely recycle them and only a few charities that genuinely collect them. We will have to go out of our way if we are to recycle bottle-tops, just as we also have to go out of our way if we are to recycle items that are not on our Council’s list for collection in our recycling boxes.

It is easy to recycle the paper, tins and plastic and glass bottles that the Council will collect from our homes but more difficult to recycle the cardboard, printer cartridges, bottle tops and other items that will only be recycled if we take them to the recycling centre. Will we do the easy thing or the harder thing when it comes to recycling?

Our bottle tops are green and green is the colour that we associate with the countryside and with environmental care. Our bottle tops can be reminders to us that we can be green, if we do the extra things that make a difference when it comes to recycling or conserving energy or lobbying MPs for Government action on climate change.

Please take your green milk bottle top home as a reminder of actions you want to take as a result of today’s service – like recycling things you currently throw away or switching off appliances that are usually left on stand-by or going to The Wave on 5th December to demonstrate your support for a safe climate future for all. Put the bottle top in your pocket and each time you touch remind yourself of what you have said you will do.

Let us pray ... Lord, we hold these bottle tops and they remind us of our wasteful, throw-away world which is rapidly using up the resources you have given to us. Make us truly sorry for our wasteful actions and turn us into those who conserve the world’s resources and lobby for Governments to stop the waste and stop climate chaos. May we be part of a wave of people around the world seeking and achieving a safe climate future for all. Amen.

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Athlete - Hurricane.

Sunday, 4 October 2009

Patronal Festival










The Patronal Festival weekend at St Johns Seven Kings was held from Friday 2nd - Sunday 4th October and featured a varied and interesting range of events and services.

The weekend got off to a cultured beginning with 'An Evening at the Opera' presented by the Lantern Light Opera Company. The Company performed a selection of Gilbert & Sullivan highlights including songs from ‘The Mikado’, ‘Pirates of Penzance’ and ‘HMS Pinafore’. Their programme featured amusing comic acting combined with excellent vocal performances and was greatly enjoyed by a sizable and appreciative audience.

From culture we moved to the environment as our Saturday coffee morning featured recycling information provided by the Redbridge Recycling Team, a free Takeway of books, ornaments, toys and all those things people never knew they needed, and the viewing of an inspiring documentary film entitled ‘The Power of Community’ based on the experience of the people of Cuba in overcoming their lack of oil. This provided a lesson for us all in adapting our way of life to reduce our dependency on oil and to care for the environment.

More than a hundred people attended the Saturday evening Barn Dance, which included a fish and chips supper. With participation from all who came, this was an event that was enjoyed right across the generations.

Sunday morning saw the return of former Vicar, Revd. Canon Gordon Tarry, who preached an excellent sermon on St John the Evangelist highlighting his imagination, growth in faith, and ability to see the big picture and commending these attributes as ones for us to also practice. An evening Songs of Praise brought the weekend to its conclusion. The St Johns Choir was supplemented by choir members from St Peters Aldborough Hatch and St Laurences Barkingside to sing two anthems and a wide range of hymns selected and introduced by members of the congregation.

We had a wonderful weekend full of variety, interest and challenge. The events that we arranged were supported not only by our congregation but also by the wider community who appreciated the welcome to be found in this place. We are particularly grateful to the Lantern Light Opera Company, Redbridge Recycling Team, and Gordon Tarry for making this weekend special through their contributions. Our Patronal Festival has reminded us of all that is good about St Johns and challenged us to go forward in engaging with local and global issues as a Christian community with the creativity that ultimately comes from God.

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The Mikado - The Flowers of Spring.

Monday, 21 September 2009

Patronal Festival events


Our Patronal Festival weekend at St Johns Seven Kings is happening from Friday 2nd - Sunday 4th October and includes a really varied and interesting range of events and services:
  • An Evening at the Opera with the Lantern Light Opera Company presenting a selection of Gilbert & Sullivan highlights including songs from ‘The Mikado’, ‘Pirates of Penzance’ and ‘HMS Pinafore.’ Friday 2nd October, 7.30pm. Smart dress requested. You will be welcomed with a free glass of wine. Admission free but a collection for Church funds will be taken during the evening.
  • Coffee, cakes, recycling information (from the Redbridge Recycling Team) and a Free Takeway of books, ornaments, toys and all those things you never knew you needed. Please bring your own bags. Saturday 3rd October, 11.00am. Followed at 11.45am by a free viewing of an inspiring documentary film entitled ‘The Power of Community’ based on the experience of the people of Cuba in overcoming their lack of oil. Here is a lesson for us all to adapt our way of life to reduce our dependency on oil and to care for the environment.
  • Barn Dance – Saturday 3rd October, 7.30pm. Fish/Chicken & Chips supper, Tickets £6.00 (from the Parish Office). Bring your own drink.
  • Patronal Festival services – Sunday 4th October, 10am Patronal Festival Holy Communion (Preacher – Gordon Tarry) & 6.30pm Songs of Praise.
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Leo Brouwer - A Day in November.