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Showing posts with label s. muggeridge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label s. muggeridge. Show all posts

Friday, 8 December 2017

Parish Carols, Midnight Mass & New Beginnings


Carol Service and Blessing of the Crib

Our Parish Carol Service at St Stephen Walbrook will take place next Wednesday 13th December at 6.00pm. It will have well-known carols to sing, traditional readings, the Blessing of the Christmas Crib and St Stephen’s Voices will be accompanied by the renowned Willis organ. The service will last under an hour, be led by myself, with the Christmas message being given by Revd Sally Muggeridge. It will be followed by mince pies and mulled wine and you are all most welcome to this very popular service, but please arrive in good time if you want a seat with a view.

Christmas Eve Mass

On Christmas Eve at 11.30pm, we will be celebrating the arrival of Christmas with a sung Eucharist, celebrated by Revd Sally Muggeridge and the preacher will be myself. St Stephen’s Voices will lead the music and the organist will be Dr Andrew Earis. The service, to which all are welcome, will be followed by mince pies and hot drinks.

Fresh challenges

These two Christmas services will also mark the moving on to different pastures of both myself and Revd Sally Muggeridge.

Sally completes two years of her curacy this Christmas and will be moving from the Diocese of London to her home Diocese of Canterbury to, in time, be licensed in the parish where she lives. We have been very fortunate to have enjoyed Sally’s assistance and ministry at St Stephen Walbrook during this time and can be particularly grateful for the links she has established with the City and with businesses locally. I have greatly appreciated having her here as a colleague and I am sure we will all wish her well for the future.

In relation to my own situation, as Associate Vicar at St Martin-in-the-Fields, our partner church, I have been instrumental in creating and establishing HeartEdge, a new network of churches for those working at the heart of culture, community and commerce and with those at the margins and on the edge. In 2018 I will be developing this and other partnerships further and so will be moving full-time to St Martin-in-the-Fields to focus on this important work.

The Archdeacon for the Two Cities, in writing to the PCC with news of this development, noted that the three years I have been at St Stephen Walbrook have seen ‘significant change and growth’ including Start:Stop, our popular ten-minute Tuesday morning reflections, being just one among several examples of a key initiative that has created ‘a new pattern of missional engagement at Walbrook.’ Others include the uplifting ‘Discover and Explore’ series of services on Mondays, which have featured different themes accompanied by the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields. Archdeacon Rosemary also stated that the partnership with St Martin-in-the-Fields ‘remains strong and will continue to grow’ and the fact ‘that Walbrook can look confidently to the future is a sign of all that has been achieved.’

Our Christmas services will therefore provide an opportunity for both Sally and I to say goodbye to you all before moving on to these fresh challenges. Both Sally and I wish you all a Peaceful and Joyous Christmas.

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The Choir of Somerville College, Oxford - Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence.

Monday, 6 November 2017

Discover & explore: The Temple of Mithras & St Stephen Walbrook





‪Philip Dawson writes that: 'Discover & Explore at St Stephen Walbrook is a beautifully crafted service drawing together fantastic music, sacred & secular readings and intelligent reflection and takes place on Mondays at 1.10pm‬':

'"Discover and Explore" this Monday lunchtime explored the discovery of the Temple of Mithras on the site opposite the church in 1954, which attracted huge public interest at the time. The service was led by Reverend Sally Muggeridge. The opening responses set the theme of "darkness to light" - a perfect link to the past; Mithras first appears as a God of Light in India before moving through Persia to Rome (via Alexander the Great).‬

Mithras was associated with righteousness, truth & integrity. The Romans found this warlike, strict & just god appealing‪. The choral scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields sang Beati quorum via "Blessed are the undefiled in the way, who walk in the law of the Lord." The first reading was an account of the discovery & the public interest: 'To see property developers turn pale whisper "Temple of Mithras" - a fact satirised in a Punch Cartoon.

The choral scholars stood at the entrance of the church to sing Bruckner's Locus Iste, the gradual for the dedication of a church. ‬The bible reading (Acts 26.12-18) continued the theme of darkness to light; Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus‪. The choir then sang Telemann's setting of Ein Feste Burg; Luthers famous battle cry for the Reformation - a choice of music with layers of meaning not only in terms of today's subject - a Roman temple which became the site of a church but also the recent Reformation anniversary.

In prayer Reverend Sally referenced the Mithraic "Daily Salute to the Sun" and we prayed for all affected by the shooting at First Baptist Church in Texas. We finished with Joachim Neander's famous hymn "Praise to the Lord". Neander having given his name to another famous archaeological discovery‬.'

The next Discover & explore service is on Monday 13 November when we will explore St Augustine of Canterbury - see https://ssw.churchsuite.co.uk/events/hr1qa6pc.

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Anton Bruckner - Locus Iste.

Thursday, 26 October 2017

plus+ presentations: Women on Company Boards


As part of further developing the relationships St Stephen Walbrook has with the business community in the City of London, we have begun a new series of events to explore the place of faith in the world of business. This new ongoing series of events is entitled ‘plus+ presentations’, as the series is one part of the way in which St Stephen seeks to add value to the City.

The format for ‘plus+ presentations’ is:

  • 6.15pm: Evening Prayer (optional)
  • 6.30pm: plus+ presentation
  • 7.00pm: Drinks reception & networking
  • 7.30pm: Close

As part of her talk on campaigns to see more women on company boards, Sally Muggeridge highlighted the examples of two remarkable woman. The first was Revd Paula Vennells. Sally said that "Paula happens to be Chief Executive of the Post Office and is an ordained self-supporting minister like myself. Prior to her present role Paula, like myself, had had a long business career, starting with Unilever in 1981. I listened to Paula speak last week as to how she manages to work at the heart of two national institutions that shape and support us in our communities all over the UK. Paula also has three Parishes in Bedford!"

The other example she quoted was that of Liza Strong, the group head of organisational talent and diversity at Royal Mail saying that: "Liza had put a whole new meaning into diversity when she asked a transgender champion to speak on a panel at an event for female employees, alongside the business’s CEO and a range of distinguished authors and experts. Liza said that she wondered if the organisation was ready, but she told me people loved it and Liza was the one who got all the questions afterwards. Other key signals were Royal Mail taking part in the Pride Festival in London for the first time, together with a Post Box at Mount Pleasant sorting office in the Capital being painted in rainbow colours."

Sally noted that Royal Mail has also pioneered balanced shortlisting, where any shortlist for frontline roles must have an equal gender split. To some, she said, these might seem small changes but from little actions, larger ones emerge, and it helps change the ethos of the workplace. 

The overall message has been that ‘Our CEO believes that employing more women will change the culture.’

The programme of plus+ presentations going forward is as follows:
Each plus+ presentation is preceded by Evening Prayer at 6.15pm.

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Karen Peris - First Days In The City.

Friday, 29 September 2017

Discover & explore: Paul in Rome




The new group of Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields sang for the first time at St Stephen Walbrook last Monday in the first of our new series of Discover & explore services. They sang 'May the grace of Christ our Saviour' – Caesar, 'I know that my redeemer liveth' – Jeffrey-Gray, How lovely are the messengers from ‘St Paul’ – Mendelssohn and Amen from ‘Lo, the full final sacrifice’ – Finzi.

The theme for this series of Discover & explore services is 'Rome, London & Christianity'. The series features as part of the 'Londinium' season organised by the City of London. At this opening service in the series Revd Sally Muggeridge spoke about the experiences and martyrdom of St Paul in Rome.

On Monday 1st October at 1.10pm the series continues with 'St Peter in Rome' when the Choral Scholars will sing 'Tu es Petrus' – Maurice Durufle, 'James and Andrew, Peter and John' – arr. Stephen Jackson, 'Will you come and follow me' – arr. James Whitbourn and 'A Prayer of St Patrick' – Rutter.

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Gerald Finzi - Lo, The Final Sacrifice.

Thursday, 28 September 2017

plus+ presentations: adding value to the City


As part of further developing the relationships St Stephen Walbrook has with the business community in the City of London, we have begun a new series of events to explore the place of faith in the world of business.

This new ongoing series of events is entitled ‘plus+ presentations’, as the series is one part of the way in which St Stephen seeks to add value to the City.

The inaugural plus+ presentation was given by Douglas Board, founder of Maslow’s Attic, on 21 September. Douglas, who is a senior visiting fellow at Cass and also writes on management, faith, society and humour, as well as careers, share practical, intellectual and spiritual reflections on flourishing at work in a presentation entitled ‘In an open plan office, can anyone hear you scream?’

Douglas began by referencing a sense of loneliness versus connectivity as characteristic of digital age and workplaces. Managers have become attuned to giving pseudo-recognition but there are not often "authentic" connections between people as work. There is a sense of "investing in people" but the reality is usually different. This is often due to leaders lacking emotional intelligence. Loneliness in the workplace is a poverty of recognition. Genuine/authentic connections are needed, not the round-robin "well done" one-liner emails etc. Is there a role for church here? Listening, supporting? Outside of the politics of workplace and away from familiarity at home? He suggested the example of authentic listening as developed by Samaritans, as pioneered at St stephen Walbrook. Douglas talked about our "real" hierarchy of needs, not with individual/self at the peak - but relationships with each other: (Peak) Recognition (Mid Tier) Respect (Foundation Tier) Unconditional Love. What can we do to overcome the issues he addressed? More face to face contact, less reliance on email. More time to get to know people. Create space to talk.
The format for ‘plus+ presentations’ is:

  • 6.15pm: Evening Prayer (optional)
  • 6.30pm: plus+ presentation
  • 7.00pm: Drinks reception & networking
  • 7.30pm: Close

Going forward, we plan to run the plus+ presentations on the third Thursday of each month, although the remaining 2017 dates will be 19th October; 9th November:


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Peteris Vasks - Lord, Open Our Eyes.

Tuesday, 19 September 2017

plus+ presentations: adding value to the City of London




As part of further developing the relationships St Stephen Walbrook has with the business community in the City of London, we plan to begin a new series of events in the autumn to explore the place of faith in the world of business.

This new ongoing series of events is entitled ‘plus+ presentations’, as the series is one part of the way in which St Stephen seeks to add value to the City.

The inaugural plus+ presentation will be given by Douglas Board, founder of Maslow’s Attic, on 21 September (6.30pm). Douglas is a senior visiting fellow at Cass and also writes on management, faith, society and humour, as well as careers. Previously, he was consultant, director and then deputy chairman of Saxton Bampfylde, a top 10 UK search firm.

Douglas will share practical, intellectual and spiritual reflections on flourishing at work in a presentation entitled ‘In an open plan office, can anyone hear you scream?’

The format for ‘plus+ presentations’ is:
  • 6.15pm: Evening Prayer (optional) 
  • 6.30pm: plus+ presentation 
  • 7.00pm: Drinks reception & networking 
  • 7.30pm: Close 
Going forward, we plan to run the plus+ presentations on the third Thursday of each month, although the remaining 2017 dates will be 19th October; 9th November.

On 19th October Revd Sally Muggeridge, Curate at St Stephen Walbrook, will speak from personal experience about campaigns to increase the numbers of women on Boards.

On 9th November Barbara Ridpath, Director of St Paul's Institute, will speak on Transitions: how to make life-changing career changes by choice or necessity.

On 18 January 2018, our presenter will be Professor Richard Higginson (Director of Faith in Business, Ridley Hall Cambridge) speaking about Christian entrepreneurs living out their faith.

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Deacon Blue - Wages Day.

Wednesday, 29 March 2017

Music at St Stephen Walbrook - not to be missed!

 

One of the great joys of being at St Stephen Walbrook is the quality of music that can be enjoyed. The next few days, however, are of particular note.

Tonight, the Italian classical pianist Claudio Crismani is in concert at 7.00pm. On this his second visit to St Stephen Walbrook, Claudio will play a selection of works by Bartok and Chopin on a Fazioli piano. Free admission with a retiring collection in aid of St Stephen Walbrook. For the full programme and a biography click here.

On Thursday at 12.45pm St Stephen's Voices will lead worship at our regular lunchtime Eucharist. The celebrant and preacher will be The Revd Sally Muggeridge.

Then, on Friday, we will enjoy not one, but two, Organ Recitals with the second being given by The Rt Hon The Lord Mayor, Alderman Dr Andrew Parmley.

At 12.30pm, as part of our regular programme of Friday lunchtime Organ Recitals, David Chan will perform a programme including pieces by Bach, Langlais, Wesley and Widor, among others. David Ho-Yi Chan is a young composer, conductor and organist born in Hong Kong whose music seeks to enrich the beauty of simplicity. Click here for more about David and his recital.

At 5.30pm, as the fourth in our new series of Free Music Recitals on the last Friday of the month (St Stephen's Serenades), The Lord Mayor will perform a programme which includes:
  • Prelude and Fugue in F minor, BWV 534 Johann Sebastian Bach 1685-1750
  • Voluntary III in C William Boyce 1711–1779
  • Toccatina Pietro Yon 1886–1943
  • Carillon-Sortie Henri Mulet 1878–1967
  • Psalm Prelude, Set 1, No 1 Herbert Howells 1892–1983
  • Sortie in E Louis-James-Alfred Lefébure-Wely 1817- 1869
As with all our events, all are most welcome. More information about The Lord Mayor's recital can be found by clicking here.

Those visiting will also be able to view 'Crucifixions: Francis Bacon' which ends on Friday when we close at 4.00pm. Catalogues for the exhibition are available, priced £10, with a donation coming to St Stephen Walbrook. Exhibition information can be found by clicking here.

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Claudio Crismani plays Franz Liszt, Csardas Macabre 2.

Monday, 27 March 2017

Discover & explore: Lanning Roper




Today's Discover & explore service at St Stephen Walbrook, explored the theme of gardening through the life and work of Lanning Roper. The service was led by Sally Muggeridge and featured the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields singing Jesus Christ the apple tree by Elizabeth Poston, To Daffodils (from Flower Songs) by Benjamin Britten, There is a flower by John Rutter and Little Elegy by Stephen Paulus. At the end of the service we all went to view the memorial inscription for Lanning Roper in the courtyard garden.

The next Discover & explore service is on Monday 3 April at 1.10pm when, together with the Choral Scholars, I will explore the theme of art through the life and work of Patrick Heron.

In today's service we heard the following passage by Lanning Roper from On Gardens and Gardening (1969):

"As a landscape consultant, I have advised on gardens in various parts of the world, on soils ranging from rocky slopes, to acid peaty bogs, and rich fertile valleys. Some are large country gardens, others small back gardens in urban areas, and I have also advised on the planting of town squares, as well as on hospital gardens and housing estates.

Rose gardens, mixed borders, formal parterres, paved herb-gardens and shrub and woodland gardens have all absorbed my interest in turn. I have made it a rule to select personally the plants for my designs, and whenever possible I supervise the planting and often do a great deal of it myself. In this way I get to know the problems and the merits of the soil with which I work and keep in touch with new plants.

As a garden designer, I experience some of the same emotions as a nanny. Having made a garden, I always want to follow its development to maturity. If I plant an avenue of oaks or chestnuts, the well-being of each individual tree is my concern, as well as the avenue as a whole. The excitement of creating and planning for the future is both stimulating and very satisfying."

Sally Muggeridge also mentioned Mies van der Rohe's unrealised Mansion House Square project, which would have featured a planting scheme by Roper, and which is currently being explored in Circling the Square, an exhibition at RIBA. Commissioned by architectural patron and developer Lord Peter Palumbo, Mies van der Rohe designed his proposal for Mansion House Square at the very end of his career, between 1962 and his death in 1969. After a protracted planning process, the scheme was finally rejected in 1985.

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OMD - Architecture & Morality.

Friday, 17 March 2017

Mental Health Matters



A Lord Mayor’s Big Curry Lunch 10th Anniversary Satellite Event In Aid of ABF The Soldiers Charity (registered charity No1146420) 6pm for 6.30pm on Thursday 30 March 2017 St Stephen Walbrook, City of London, EC4N 4BN.

Mental ill health touches every one of us in one way or another. Whether personally, professionally or through friends and family. One in six UK adults experienced episodes related to a common mental disorder in the past week. The damage that can be caused from out-of-control stress, anxiety, eating disorders, OCD, panic attacks, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or depression - a by no means an exhaustive list - is never too far away from us.

Following the recent launch of the first Institute of Directors Mental Health Strategy, IoD City is proud to bring together leading authorities and the pioneers of workplace mental health programmes to share their experience, insights and wellbeing guidance with our members and guests. St Stephen Walbrook, our host venue for the evening, is also the birthplace of Samaritans, the charity set up by Chad Varah over sixty years ago to provide listening and emotional support for people in distress.

Our Speakers:

Felicity Varah Harding is an ambassador for Samaritans and the daughter of their founder, Prebendary Dr Chad Varah CH, CBE. She has a long and varied career in social and therapeutic work and has performed various roles within the voluntary and charitable sectors - including with Voluntary Service Overseas in Anguilla, a non-executive role for National Victim Support and trustee and later Chair of Vision Aid Overseas. Felicity is a member of the Court of Assistants of the Worshipful Company of Spectacle Makers and will become Master of the Company in 2017/18.

The Reverend Sally Muggeridge is curate of St Stephen Walbrook. A former Chief Executive of the Industry and Parliament Trust, she has skills and professional recognition in both marketing and human resource development. Sally has worked at Board level in several major international plcs
including British Telecom, Cable and Wireless, Pearson and Total. She served as Master of the Worshipful Company of Marketors in 2013/14 and is Chaplain to the Lady Masters Association.

John Binns is a Non-Executive Director with the City Mental Health Alliance and Vice Chair and Trustee of Mind. A former Partner with Deloitte, he is now nationally and internationally recognised as an independent advisor to high perfromance organisations and individuals on mental health, wellbeing, and personal resilience. John is a qualified CBT coach.

Colonel (Retd) Simon Diggins OBE served for over 36 years in the British Army from 1978 to 2014 after which he was a Director of Strategy and Campaign Consulting before joining the NHS in 2016. He is currently a Children and Adolescent Mental Health Services Manager at South London and Maudsley NHS Trust. Simon will be speaking on the work of the London Veterans Service. This
is a free NHS Mental Service for all ex-service members of the British Armed Forces living in or
registered with a GP in London. The Service also supports veterans who have served in the Reserved Forces.

Net proceeds from the event will be donated to The Lord Mayor’s Big Curry Lunch 2017 in aid of ABF The Soldiers Charity. Ticket price per person is £30 (inclusive of VAT of £5.00) for members and £36 (inclusive of VAT of £6.00) for non-members. Dress code is business wear. Bookings may be made via the IoD website www.iod.com/city.

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Pēteris Vasks - Klātbūtne ('Presence').

Monday, 6 March 2017

Discover & explore: Robert Stuart de Courcy Laffan (Sport)



Today's Discover & explore service at St Stephen Walbrook, explored the theme of sport through the life of Robert Stuart de Courcy Laffan. The service featured the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields singing Come, my way, my truth, my life by Vaughan Williams, Be thou my vision by Chilcott, Forever by Chris Tomlin and Go forth into the world in peace by Rutter. 

The next Discover & explore service is on Monday 6 March at 1.10pm when, together with the Choral Scholars, Sally Muggeridge will explore the theme of charity through the life of Chad Varah.

Today's reflection was adapted from ‘Research Notes: A Noble Ally and Olympic Disciple: The Reverend Robert S. de Courcy Laffan, Coubertin’s ‘Man’ in England’ by Steve Bailey, Director of Sports, Winchester College, and published in OLYMPIKA: The International Journal of Olympic Studies Volume VI – 1997:

'In 1892, at a jubilee of the French Union of Athletic Sports Societies, Baron Pierre de Coubertin introduced the idea of a modern Olympics. His idea was fairly vague, and it seems that even Coubertin himself did not have a clear idea what form such games would take. Two years later, Coubertin organized a meeting which brought together 79 delegates from 12 countries to discuss how to revive the Olympic games. The meeting established the first International Olympic Committee, and the basic framework of having the games every four years, with the first to take place in Greece, was decided upon.'

'At the Le Havre Congress of the International Olympic Committee in 1897 Robert Stuart de Courcy Laffan represented the Headmasters’ Conference - the association of headmasters of the English Public Schools. Laffan was an unlikely “Olympic” emissary; as neither a physical educator nor an exceptional athlete but he … brought … to Le Havre a message of the true commitment for the value of organised physical activity …

When Laffan spoke … the effect of this newly found ally led [Baron Pierre de] Coubertin to be “... convinced that a new collaborator of the most invaluable quality had come down from the heavens to help us.” … the friendship that developed between Coubertin and Laffan was to be “profound and stable … In his presentation Laffan spoke of the broader value of sporting activity. He said that it was through physical exercise that man came to know himself better, and that this in turn would lead to the establishment of the Brotherhood of Man.

The endorsement of both the spiritual and physical benefits of sport were much appreciated by the audience. He presented a different slant on the potential contained within the concept of Olympism: a more overtly philanthropic aim which would have been recognised by the audience as highly palatable to their respective supporters at home.

Robert Laffan was made a Member of the International Olympic Committee in 1897 and, following the first visit of the IOC to London in 1904, he was central to the founding of the British Olympic Association a year later. He acted as Honorary Secretary to the BOA from 1905 until his death in 1927. Robert Laffan dedicated his life to the Olympic Movement, blending his work seamlessly with his strong religious faith … He became Rector of St. Stephen’s, Walbrook in 1899, and was able to balance his service between the needs of his parishioners and the struggle to ensure that the Olympic message was made more widely known.

Laffan was not a figurehead or helmsman … but he was an extraordinary workhorse. It was said of Laffan that he possessed a “silver tongue” - what we might commonly call today “the gift of gab.” The inscription on the 300 year old clock presented to Laffan by his co-workers on the British Olympic Council after the London Games thanked him for the “...kindly, tactful and wholehearted
manner” in which he had carried out every duty. He is said to have served “nobly and disinterestedly.”

To Laffan there was significant spiritual meaning in this timely arrival of new opportunity … Robert Laffan attributed many qualities to the Olympic Movement as the vehicle for the improvement of mankind’s ability to live and work together. Sometimes unrealistic in his claims for what is now such an important world phenomenon, Laffan provided great inspiration for others in the early days by devoting all his enthusiasm and working capacity to help pave the way for the future. In his view the Olympic Movement existed to achieve: . . .the perfect physical development of a new humanity; the spreading all over the world of a spirit of sport - that is the spirit of the truest chivalry; and the drawing together of all the nations of the earth in the bonds of peace and mutual amity.

To Laffan the Olympic Movement was everything: It is to me a privilege in itself to have been allowed to do something for what I consider one of the greatest concerns on earth, the cause which has as its supreme ideal ‘Peace on earth and goodwill towards men’.'

The Declaration on Sport and the Christian Life produced by Sport and Christianity argues that: Sport has its basis in a divinely-given impulse to play and deserves a rightful place in Christian living. People play sport primarily for the love of the game, the thrill of competition, and the sense of community that comes from participation. When played and watched in faithfulness to God sport occupies a legitimate place as part of the created world and helps express our relationship to God and to one another.

Laffan, however, dreamed of a greater purpose for the Olympic Movement. One that was re-articulated by Pope Francis in 2016 when he said: Sports make it possible to build a culture of encounter among everyone for a world of peace. I dream of sports as the practice of human dignity, turned into a vehicle of fraternity. That sports may be an opportunity for friendly encounters between people and contribute to peace in the world.

Intercessions:

Eternal God, giver of joy and source of all strength, we pray for those who prepare for sporting competition. For competitors in training, their loved ones and the many thousands who support them. In a world where many are rejected and abused, we pray for a spirit of tolerance and acceptance, of humility and respect at all sporting events and for the health and safety of all. May we at the last be led towards the love of Christ who is more than gold, today and for ever. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

God our Creator, we pray for the Olympic and Paralympic Games and for all sporting events around our world. Almighty God, you created humanity in your image and delight in our talent, skill and flair: give us grace to celebrate the achievements of our fellow men and women. Give determination and equity to competitors, gratitude and charm to winners, grace and mercy to those who do not come first, and thankfulness and admiration to observers; that in all our best efforts your creation may be glorified. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

God, our Protector, whose Son travelled as a refugee and walked the streets of Jerusalem as a pilgrim, we pray for all who travel to sporting events around the world: for competitors and coaches, cleaners and caterers; for umpires and judges, city guides and security guards; for audiences and volunteers. Grant them safe travel and journeys filled with enriching encounter. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

The Blessing

God give you the strength to run with perseverence the race marked out for you, fixing your eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of our faith; and the blessing of God almighty, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, be among you and remain with you always. Amen.

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New Order (Feat. John Barnes) - World In Motion.

Thursday, 23 February 2017

Bank Churches Lent Course




Is money wealth? Bank Churches Lent Course
Join us we discuss the Archbishop of Canterbury's Lent Book 2017
Every Tuesday in March
6pm (45mins)
Hosted by: Bank Churches at St Margaret, Lothbury, EC2R 7HH

07/03 - Session 1: What we see we value (Jeremy Crossley)

14/03 - Session 2: What we measure controls us (David Parrott)

21/03 - Session 3: What we receive we treat as ours (George Bush)

28/03 - Session 4: What we master brings us joy (Sally Muggeridge)

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Writz - Luxury.

Tuesday, 21 February 2017

HeartEdge launches on 8 February 2017 at St Stephen Walbrook



HeartEdge is a network of initiated by St Martin-in-the-Fields for churches working at the heart of culture, community and commerce with those at the margins and on the edge. HeartEdge aims to build association, learning, development and resource.

February 8 saw the launch of HeartEdge with a day exploring mission by sharing ideas, uncovering solutions and finding support held at St Stephen Walbrook, London and hosted by Revd Dr Sam Wells. 80+ attendees heard a wide range of contributions from Jonathan Evens (Priest for Partnership Development, St Martin-in-the-Fields and St Stephen Walbrook), Jessica Foster (Curate, St Peter's Hall Green Birmingham), Ruth Gouldbornne (Minister at Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church), James Hutchings (Team Rector, Holy Trinity Exmouth), Ali Lyon (Consultant and member of St Martin-in-the-Fields), Rosemarie Mallett (Rector of St John’s Angell Town, Brixton), Sally Muggeridge (Curate, St Stephen Walbrook), Andy Turner (Project Co-ordinator, HeartEdge), Dan Tyndall (Vicar of St Mary Redcliffe, Bristol), Tim Vreugdenhil (Pastor of CityKirk Amsterdam), and Lucy Winkett (Rector, St James’s Church, Piccadilly).

Following the event Sam Wells said, 'I was so delighted to see so many energised and engaged faces at the HeartEdge launch as we spoke about structures, configurations, approaches, insights – but most of all of renewal of vocation, vision and common exploration. That left me full of hope for the emergence of HeartEdge – a movement as yet of many different words but one purposeful spirit. I hope you will sign up and encourage others to do so.'

HeartEdge supports churches in blending their mission around four key areas:
  • Congregation – Inclusive approaches to liturgy, worship and day-to-day communal life
  • Community – models of outreach serving local need and addressing social justice
  • Culture – art, music and ideas to re-imagine the Christian narrative for the present moment
  • Commerce – Commercial activities that generate finance, creatively extending and enhancing mission and ministry through social enterprise
HeartEdge works with its members in finding their stories, sharing resources and connecting effectively with others developing their church and community. We create spaces where members give from their experience and take from others – an exchange that’s often inspiring, always compelling, and mutually useful for all participants. We want HeartEdge to be an essential resource and a valuable community, as members develop their church and neighbourhood.

When churches join HeartEdge they receive:
  • Connections: Access to all kinds of useful contacts and connections to help their church develop cultural, commercial and community activity
  • Information: Grow knowledge and insight to help in their work via the lived experience of others
  • Visits: Opportunity to meet those most relevant to them in situ, gaining understanding of their work and experience
  • Mentors: Via phone calls and meetings, appropriate learning and support from others
  • Events: Programmed with bespoke content useful for their context
  • Publications: An emerging range of resources based on approaches to ministry used by HeartEdge members
  • Projects: Support and resources to begin specific social justice initiatives
  • Emails and Online: a monthly email with links to useful resources
HeartEdge is fuelled by its members. Members are people and churches who are makers and takers – people and churches that both give to the network and take from it.

For more information contact Revd Jonathan Evens, Associate Vicar for Partnerships on 020 7766 1127 or jonathan.evens@smitf.org or visit www.smitf.org/church/worship/partnerships/.

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Arvo Pärt - The Woman with the Alabaster Box.

Wednesday, 8 February 2017

Launch of HeartEdge























Programme:

10.00: Registration and refreshments
10.30: Welcome: Jonathan Evens
10.35: At the heart and on the edge Sam Wells
11.15: Coffee, tea and pastry
11.35: What Works For Us? Ali Lyon and Sam Wells
  1. Jessica Foster Curate St Peters Hall Green Birmingham 
  2. Lucy Winkett Rector St James’s Church, Piccadilly 
  3. Dan Tyndall Vicar of St Mary Redcliffe, Bristol 
  4. James Hutchings Team Rector Holy Trinity Exmouth 
12.45: Lunch: by Unity Kitchen - Part of the Camden Society
1.35: What Works For Me? Andy Turner
What does your church bring to HeartEdge? What are you looking for? What are your stories, tactics, tips, assets, and asks?
2.20: What Works For Us? Ali Lyon and Andy Turner
  1. Rosemarie Mallett Youth Wardens 
  2. Sally Muggeridge Start:Stop 
  3. Ruth Gouldbornne Welcome and hospitality 
  4. Tim Vreugdenhil ‘Ask The Pastor’ and Stand-up Theology
3.00: What Works Together? Jonathan Evens
3.15: Concluding thoughts Sam Wells
3.30 End

In my welcome I said:

Welcome to St Stephen Walbrook for the launch of HeartEdge. St Stephen Walbrook is a Wren masterpiece which became the launchpad for Samaritans. That compassionate project led to a greater sense of the congregation as community, which in turn resulted in the reordering of the building around this circular altar by Henry Moore. As a result, the visual arts, as well as music, have central to our cultural offer here. For the past three years we have worked in partnership with St Martin-in-the-Fields in order to use their focus on congregation, compassion, culture and commerce to grow our mission in the City of London and improve our financial sustainability. Our partnership is an example of how sharing in mission together can benefit all churches involved and has then helped to shape the process by which HeartEdge has come into being. In launching HeartEdge here we want to make a clear statement that HeartEdge, while initiated by St Martin-in-the-Fields, is a network for and of its member churches.

In a moment Sam Wells, the Vicar of St Martin's, will give a contextual and theological grounding to HeartEdge and then we will hear from a range of churches interested in HeartEdge whose stories of ministry and whose models of mission gives examples of what can be shared, learnt and grown through HeartEdge. In between the two panel sessions, where we will hear from those churches, there will be the opportunity for all of us to share something of our context and what we could contribute to and take from the network. We hope this programme will provide a real taste of what being a member of HeartEdge will be like.

Before we hear from Sam let us pray ... God of hope, in Jesus you made heaven visible to earth and earth visible to heaven: make your Church, and each church represented here today, a community at the heart of your kingdom alongside those on the edge of society, that each day we may seek your glory, and embody your grace; through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Then in outlining the HeartEdge offer I said:

As curate and then incumbent in two of the East London boroughs which are part of the Diocese of Chelmsford I used the 4C’s in mission and ministry without being aware of that neat way of categorizing what it was I was doing. In my curacy in Barking we increased our halls income with a compassionate project that delivered ESOL classes primarily to those of other faiths through a partnership with the local FE College, whilst also involving the church congregation in the local authority’s programme of public art. Then as an incumbent in Seven Kings, we again used halls income as our commercial activity while bringing local artists into the building for exhibitions and concerts and commissioning some to create work for a community garden. Our compassionate activities involved campaigning work with resident’s associations and the formation of a social enterprise start-up service. All of these provided ways of involving our diverse congregation in service to their community as well as drawing new people into the congregation.

It was only when I took on this role that I realised that those things could be categorised and understood using the 4C’s and that realisation is, for me, a key part of my motivation in HeartEdge as I realised that the 4C’s make sense not just in a City Centre location like St Martin’s but also in the very different challenges faced when ministering in East London. On that basis I think it is true to say that adapted to your context they have relevance wherever your church is located and I hope that the range of contributors to today’s event has also served to demonstrate the same point.

Our intent for HeartEdge is that the network brings together a large number of very different churches – churches which differ in size, context, tradition, denomination and locations – but which can have shared conversations because they use, or have the aspiration to use, the 4C’s in mission and ministry. We hope that today has provided an experience of what it is like to take part in this kind of shared conversation and that it has suggested to you already some of the benefits that accrue from having these conversations.

We envisage four primary elements to those conversations within HeartEdge. First, a series of regional events with similarities to today’s launch but to which other elements and partners could also be added. As today, these would be opportunities to bring a range of churches together to:
  • begin conversations that could expand the network into other parts of the country; 
  • begin linking up churches in ways which provide support, advice and encouragement on the basis of similar approaches to mission and ministry regardless of geographical location; and 
  • celebrate the benefits of partnership working and the network that is HeartEdge. 
We also plan to use what we are calling in the Membership Pack, the snapshot – a series of questions about your church and its context that we ask each HeartEdge member to complete – to match churches with particular forms of experience to other churches in need of just that kind of experience. In essence, a form of peer-to-peer mentoring.

We plan to offer consultancy days to individual churches. For these we would gather a small hand-picked team of people from member churches to visit your church for a day and spend the morning seeing and hearing about your ministry, your buildings and your context, before using the afternoon to share stories of relevant experience and thoughtshower ideas and approaches which may be of use within your context. During the consultation period that we have used to shape HeartEdge, our friends at St Mary’s Hitchin offered us the opportunity to trial this approach with a team from Bloomsbury Baptist, CityKerk Amsterdam and St Martin’s. The exercise proved mutually beneficial for all involved.

Additionally, we anticipate that many HeartEdge members will have developed their own models for specific aspects of mission and ministry which can be shared, adapted and replicated in other churches. As examples, we’ve heard today about Youth Wardens, Start:Stop, International Groups, Ask the Pastor and Stand-Up Theology. We envisage that these and many other models can be disseminated within HeartEdge through workshops and/or resource materials.

We hope this brief overview of the main activities envisaged for HeartEdge in its initial phase highlights the real benefits available to churches which join the network. Yet to get the most benefit from what HeartEdge offers, involvement has to involve giving as well as taking. We note in the Membership Pack that generosity is central to HeartEdge and central to the network becoming a really useful resource. That is because there is no limit to what a real community of hope can do when one member’s generosity enables other members to generate new stories across their communities. In HeartEdge we believe that by focussing on and beginning with one another’s assets, not our deficits, we can go on to do unbelievable things together.

Should you wish to become part of a new growth movement for the broad church there are two contributions to make initially. The first is to complete and return the tear off slip at the back of the Membership Pack. Doing so involves deciding how much you wish to or can afford to give to HeartEdge as an annual membership donation. We have suggested a range of donation from £50 to £500 per annum but trust you to decide on the appropriate amount for your church. We have reached this point with a combination of allocated time and seedcorn funding from St Martins which has enabled Andy Turner and I to undertake the consultation, plan the launch and, with the Development Trust at St Martin’s, begin fundraising to support the next phase in the development of HeartEdge, but we also need your membership donations in order to build the core team able to deliver the range of initiatives I have just outlined. Once you return your membership application form with your annual donation, you are then a HeartEdge member.

The second contribution we ask you to make initially is the information about your church and context contained in the Snapshot section of the Membership Pack. The snapshot summarises:

1. Work you’re doing
2. Your experience developing cultural, community or commercial activity
3. The assets you’ve identified
4. The obstacles and challenges you face
5. The resources you need
6. Your hopes and fears

The snapshot is a way for you and HeartEdge to understand the journey your church is on and the directions in which you want to head. By joining the network you’ll meet others who share your interests, opportunities, hopes and fears. The snapshot will help you find the support, resources and solutions that you need. The more information you can provide – the more we can put you in touch with the best people and resources.

We ask you to complete this and send it to us within three months of joining. The earlier the better though, as this is the information that will increasingly enable us to match one church with another in order that peer-to-peer mentoring can begin. Once we have this information we can also begin having discussions with you in relation to the value for you of consultancy days, workshops and other related resources.

Joining HeartEdge is a simple as completing the tear-off slip and returning it to us but for HeartEdge to really come alive and genuinely become a new growth movement for the broad church it must become a movement actively fuelled by its members – actively fuelled by people like you - people and churches that both take from the network and give back to it. By doing so, we will find our way to becoming abundant communities that open space for generosity and cooperation. We very much hope that that is a vision to inspire, and one of which you will want to be a part.

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Karl Jenkins - I'll Make Music.

Tuesday, 17 January 2017

Discover & explore: Sir Christopher Wren (Architecture)



Yesterday's Discover & explore service at St Stephen Walbrook, led by Revd Sally Muggeridge, explored architecture and the achievements of Sir Christopher Wren. The service featured the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields singing Blessed is the man by Stainer, Cantate domino by Monteverdi, Locus iste by Bruckner and Nolo mortem peccatoris by Morley.

Next week's Discover & explore service is on Monday 23 January at 1.10pm when I, together with the Choral Scholars, will explore the theme of preaching through the teachings of the Puritan cleric, Thomas Watson.

Sally introduced yesterday's service by saying:

'It is perhaps understandable that buildings, and indeed cities, play a prominent role in the Bible. Indeed they play an important part in human development. Long before the industrial revolution, the invention of the internal combustion and jet engine, the motor car, the airplane and space travel building was the principal focus of man’s creativity. And not just two thousand years ago at the time of Jesus Christ, but right back in the book of Genesis we read ‘come let us make bricks and burn them thoroughly’. Even today a badly baked brick has no durability and strength. And buildings by their nature need careful planning, and must adhere to certain principles to ensure the safety of their occupants, and they must resist the extremes and variations of weather. So architecture, the planning and specification of buildings, is perhaps as old as man’s wish to build. But we also know we cannot look to any building, however majestic, for permanence. Buildings are by nature, like us, transitory, here today and gone tomorrow. In the search for true permanence and stability, in wishing to build Jerusalem in England’s green and pleasant land, we must look to God.'

The Service included a bible reading from 1 Kings 6:

Now it came about in the four hundred and eightieth year after the sons of Israel came out of the land of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon's reign over Israel, in the month of Ziv which is the second month, that he began to build the house of the LORD. The porch in front of the nave of the house was twenty cubits in length, corresponding to the width of the house, and its depth along the front of the house was ten cubits. Now these are the foundations which Solomon laid for building the house of God. The length in cubits, according to the old standard was sixty cubits, and the width twenty cubits. The width of the entrance was ten cubits and the sides of the entrance were five cubits on each side. And he measured the length of the nave, forty cubits, and the width, twenty cubits. And the house which King Solomon built for the LORD, the length thereof was three score cubits, and the breadth thereof twenty cubits, and the height thereof thirty cubits.

and the following extract from the acceptance speech of Thom Mayne as winner of the PritzkerPrize for Architecture:

'Architecture is a way of seeing, thinking and questioning our world and our place in it. It requires a natural inquisitiveness, an openess in our observations, and a will to act in affirmation. Like life, it is evolutionary, adapting, transforming, growing out of, but not enslaved by an over-investment in history.

The City is the most profound creation of humanity, continuously changing, evolving, mysterious and therefore in important ways unknowable - in its lack of fixity; in the unthinkable number of its random interactions, exchanges, encounters… in the sheer magnitude of the variety of intelligences. Here rests the potential of a true creativity where serendipity and spontaneous combustion take place. Our cities are the location of continuous regeneration, places of infinite possibilities, demanding from us an attitude of expansiveness. Yet we seem to find ourselves in this twenty-first century, infused by fear, immobilised by the complexity of the realities that come with living in the present… the now ... insisting instead on seeing our diverse society through a simplistic lens ... resistive to reality, demanding uniformity in the face of diversity.

And the refuge, as it has always been within these cycles, is in nostalgia—a desire for an illusion of order, consistency and safety, qualities we last enjoyed in childhood. But this is temporary. I’ve felt the intoxication that happens when an entire generation decides to stop looking backward for its direction. One needs to look to artists to remind us that we are all moving forward, empowered and able. I’m chasing an architecture that engages and demands inquiry. Architecture is not passive, not decorative. It is essential, it affects us directly and profoundly—it has the potential to impact behaviour and the quality of our everyday life.'

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Locus iste - Anton Bruckner.

Monday, 9 January 2017

Discover & explore - John Dunstable


Today's Discover & explore service at St Stephen Walbrook exploring music and the work of John Dunstaple featured the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields singing Quam pulchra es and Descendi in ortum meum by Dunstable, Ave verum corpus by Byrd and O nata lux by Tallis.

Next week's Discover & explore service is on Monday 16 January at 1.10pm when Revd Sally Muggeridge, together with the Choral Scholars, will explore architecture and the achievements of Sir Christopher Wren.

In today's service I gave the following reflection (which draws on my co-authored book 'The Secret Chord'):

John Dunstaple … was an English composer of polyphonic music of the late medieval era and early Renaissance periods. He was one of the most famous composers active in the early 15th century, a near-contemporary of Leonel Power, and was widely influential, not only in England but on the continent, especially in the developing style of the Burgundian School.’

‘He died on Christmas Eve 1453, as recorded in his epitaph,’ which was here in the church of St Stephen Walbrook in London (until it was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666). ‘This was also his burial place. The epitaph – stating that he had "secret knowledge of the stars" – had been recorded in the early 17th century, and was reinstated in the church in 1904.’ 

That new memorial is by the London Section of the Incorporated Society of Musicians and ‘consists of a Latin inscription above, with simple pilasters and surround, matched with a charming 1900s lunette with three angels playing musical instruments, seated on clouds with little stars behind, at the top, and a wreath and fronds below.’ Its colourful painting on mosaic backing is in an excellent example of the Arts and Crafts style. 

Dunstaple's influence on the continent's musical vocabulary was enormous, particularly considering the relative paucity of his (attributable) works. He was recognized for possessing something never heard before in music of the Burgundian School: la contenance angloise ("the English countenance"), a term used by the poet Martin le Franc.’  This was probably ‘a reference to Dunstaple's stylistic trait of using full triadic harmony, along with a liking for the interval of the third.’ 

Harmonies, and the place of chords as a basis of harmony, give us a significant clue to understanding the power of music. Leonard Cohen's song ‘Hallelujah’ makes the claim that the Biblical King David had found a secret chord which, when played, pleased even God himself. The opening words to Cohen's song are extrapolated from the account in 1 Samuel 16: 14-23 of how King Saul asked for a skillful musician to be found so they could come and play to soothe Saul's troubled soul. It is clear that David was both a competent musician and also a prolific composer. According to the Scriptures, he would go on to curate and compose many of the 150 Psalms found in the Bible which survive in multiple translations as part of religious worship today. What Cohen surmises is that whatever David played, or, most likely, improvised, would have also pleased the Lord and the children of Israel's God, as well as calming down King Saul.

Cohen's romantic hypothesis is that David had actually stumbled across and therefore deliberately employed a particular chord that has this mysterious power. A chord is a group of (typically three or more) notes sounded together, as a basis of harmony. Arthur Sullivan in a song called ‘The Lost Chord’ wrote: ‘It seemed the harmonious echo / From our discordant life. / It linked all perplexèd meanings / Into one perfect peace.’ Music is a performance in which harmonies echoing from our discordant lives link all perplexèd meanings into one perfect peace. Music, in performance, is an unrepeatable moment in in which all things come together enabling us to feel God's pleasure. In this sense the Secret Chord, about which Leonard Cohen writes, is indeed pleasing to the Lord.

As a result of this linking of the echoes from our discordant lives, Cohen’s Hallelujah includes both the sacred and the sinful – the holy and the broken Hallelujah. It doesn’t matter which you heard, he suggests, because a blaze of light is found in every word and he will be able to stand before God – the Lord of Song – presumably at the Last Judgement and simply sing Hallelujah itself because both the holy and the broken are encapsulated in the one word and one chord.

This is to say that distinctions between sacred and secular are false divides as all of life and all music is holy. As David Adam has stated: 'We need to reveal that our God is in all the world and waits to be discovered there – or, to be more exact, the world is in Him, all is in the heart of God.’ Dunstaple, too, provides us with an example of this as, although known primarily a composer of sacred music, is also believed to have written secular music, although no songs in the vernacular can be attributed to him with any degree of certainty.

Ultimately, music is a symbol of the means by which God created, and the musician is a partner with God in the creative process. Therefore we can pray, with the singer-songwriter Bruce Cockburn to be a little of God’s creative breath as it moves over the waters of chaos to bring all things into being. In other words, to see and hear life as God sees and hears it and to articulate something of that vision.

Intercessions:

Bless those who give their time and musical talent in service to You and to Your Church, O Lord, as they sing praises to You, and glorify Your Name. Let their music be a witness to Your majesty and love, and remind us all of Your presence in our lives. Help them to bring the Word of God to others through music, chant and hymn singing. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Lord, may the gifts of our voices and melodies of our instruments move with the work of your Holy Spirit. May we bring light into dark places, restore hope and vision to all who are oppressed, and well-being and health to all those who suffer. Today Lord, we give you our worship. May it be a platform for you, Father God, to touch our lives afresh and build your Church. Bless our music that it might glorify your name. May the talent that you have bestowed upon us be used only to serve you. O God, whose saints and angels delight to worship in heaven. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Creator God, be ever present with your servants who seek through art and music to perfect the praises offered by Your people on earth; and grant to us even now a glimpse of Your beauty, and make us worthy at length to behold it forevermore. We thank you that you hear us, our words in prayer, our silent thoughts and pleas and each note or melody we sing and play. May our praises today connect with heaven and unite our hearts with the sound of eternity. Let our music be a witness to your majesty and love, and may your presence and beauty be found in every note. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

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John Dunstable - Descendi in ortum meum.