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

Thursday, 2 February 2023

Faith and doubt of John Betjeman

At a funeral this week, I spoke briefly about the 'honest doubt' in the poetry of John Betjeman:

In ‘Summoned by Bells’ Betjeman wrote of how he would “ride for miles / To far-off churches” and, of how one of them so worked on him that his life was changed so that he was inspired to cycle around Cornwall in “quest of mystical experience.” In ‘Before the Anaesthetic’, Betjeman puts us inside the mind of a man waiting for an operation while hearing the bells of St Giles Church ring. The man realizes that, although he has attended church, he has not really known God and, therefore, prays, “Now, lest this ‘I’ should cease to be, / Come, real Lord, come quick to me.”

Betjeman himself wrote: “I have no memory of a blinding light striking me at the corner of a street, or of a fit of the shudders while people knelt around me in prayer. I cannot point to a date, time and place and say, ‘That was when I was converted’. I cling to the sacraments and live for the day, have many moments of doubt when the only thing that buoys me up is the thought that I would sooner the Incarnation were true than that it were not. This, at its lowest ebb, is my faith; but frequent confession and communion have proved to me, unwilling though I sometimes am to believe, that prayer works, that Christ is God, and that He is present in the Sacraments.”

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

John Betjeman - Christmas.

Thursday, 8 July 2021

'Art in Worship' and 'The Secret Chord'

Art in Worship is a lecture I have recorded which explores approaches to and understanding of the relationship between art and faith. The lecture highlights different facets to this relationship from the fourth century to the present demonstrating ways in which the intimate linkage which exists between the visual arts and Christianity was forged and sustained. Within this story, I explore the sacramental nature of art in worship over the years.

'The Secret Chord', my co-authored book with Peter Banks, is now available from the online shop at St Martin-in-the-Fields. The book asks is there really a 'Secret Chord' that would both please the Lord and nearly everybody else as described in Leonard Cohen's popular song 'Hallelujah'? The book is an accessible exploration of artistic dilemmas from a range of different perspectives which seeks to draw the reader into a place of appreciation for what makes a moment in a 'performance' timeless and special.

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

John Rutter - Five Meditations for orchestra, arranged from sacred choral works.