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Showing posts with label small. Show all posts
Showing posts with label small. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 July 2024

God's transformation of our small offerings

Here's the sermon that I shared in the 8.00 am service at St Mary Magdalene Great Burstead:

They '... brought barley loaves and fish to Jesus ... Barley loaves ... were one third of the price of the wheat variety; it was the bread of the poor. And then there were the two small fish. The Greek word used for these fish in John’s gospel is “osparion”, which meant they were certainly not fresh fish from the Sea of Galilee. “Osparion” were either small dried or pickled fish ... [They] may have generously offered all he had but that offering was meagre in the extreme. Little wonder that Andrew should say despairingly to Jesus: “But, what are they among so many”?

Yet, Jesus willingly took what was offered and, far from commenting on the poor offering set before him, he gave thanks over the loaves and fish. And, as Jesus gave thanks a transformation took place and there was enough for all to be fed and ... to be satisfied. With the transforming grace of Jesus even our poorest offerings can become something extraordinary.' (Mark 8.1-9)

'Tom Wright … says ... that all God calls us to do is to bring what we have to Jesus in prayer. We tell Him what we need. We then let Jesus bring the two together and make it enough for all! As that marvellous prayer puts it, the Lord Jesus truly can ‘transform the poverty of our riches by the fullness of his Grace’.'

It is easy for us to think that big is best and that what we have and are is too little to make an impact but this story says otherwise. Jesus takes and uses the little that is offered. Small is beautiful, as E. F. Schumacher once reminded us, and our small actions or contribution, when combined with those of others, can then have a big effect. The butterfly effect which is found in Chaos Theory and the multiplier effect in economics both show, on the basis of research, that small changes and small contributions can have significant effects.

Hattie May Wiatt was a young girl in Philadelphia in the 1880s who began saving towards the building of a church which could accommodate the large number of children going to Sunday School in those days. Hattie May died young and after her death the pastor of the church, Rev. Russell Conwell was given the 57 cents that she had saved. He used these to begin a fundraising campaign which resulted in the building of a church, a University and a Hospital.

Jesus’ Parable of the Mustard Seed is another illustration of this truth. In this brief parable a small action, the sowing of a small seed, leads to the growth of a large plant. Jesus says that, in a similar way, the kingdom of God has small beginnings but grows to become something much larger.

We also see this illustrated in Jesus’ life, death and resurrection. Here is a man who was born in an obscure village, the child of a peasant woman. He grew up in another village. He worked in a carpenter shop until He was thirty. Then for three years He was an itinerant preacher. While still a young man, the tide of popular opinion turned against him. He was nailed upon a cross between two thieves. Long centuries have come and gone but all the armies that ever marched, all the navies that were ever built; all the parliaments that ever sat and all the kings and queens that ever reigned, put together, have not affected the life of human beings upon this earth as powerfully as has that one solitary life. Jesus’ life, death and resurrection is the ultimate expression of a small action with a big impact.

What this means is that the contribution you can make to St Mary Magdalene is needed, however small it may seem to you, and in whatever way you can make that contribution. The mission and ministry of this church is the combined effect of the contributions that each of us make. God has given you resources, time and talents, so I encourage you to reflect prayerfully on all that you can and do give back to him in order that together you can combine your individual offerings to make a bigger impact for him here.

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Robert Randolph and the Family Band - Have Mercy.

Sunday, 4 February 2024

The creative, defining, loving Word of God


Today was the second ecumenical exchange that has been organised recently between St Andrew's Wickford and Christ Church Wickford with Revd Moses Agyam and I taking each others services. Revd Moses led the All-age Eucharist at St Andrew's I led the 10.30 am service at Christ Church (see below).

Here's the sermon that I preached at Christ Church:

Abracadabra, Open Sesame. If you’ve hired a children’s entertainer who did magic then you’re likely to have heard those words recently. They’ve been reduced to fun phrases for children but they represent our long-term belief in the power of words. If you’ve watched the climax of the BBC TV drama Merlin, then you’ll have seen Merlin, Morgana and Mordred muttering spells in an ancient tongue before their eyes flash and magic occurs.

Words have power. That’s what human beings believed in the past. We tend now to associate that thought with fantasy and yet it is an indication of the huge power that words actually carry. Each of us each day of our lives use words to make things happen and, while it may not be magic, it is powerful nonetheless.

The Bible teaches us much about the power of speech. Words are creative. In the beginning, God spoke the universe into being. God said, ‘Let there be …’ and life itself came into existence. Words also describe and define what has been made. In the Genesis account of creation, God divides light from dark and names light as ‘Day’ and dark as ‘Night’. Similarly he separates land from water and names the land as ‘Earth’ and the water as ‘Sea’. One of the first things he teaches human beings to do is to name what they see around them.

The creative, defining speech of God is wise. In Proverbs 8 we are told that God created Wisdom as the first of his works and that Wisdom speaks excellent words. God’s words, we are told, always accomplish what he purposes. When he sends them out into the world they never return to him void.

Yet, as Simon Small reminds us in his book ‘From the Bottom of the Pond’: “Thoughts and words are merely descriptions of reality. They can be wonderful, beautiful pointers to truth; they can evoke the experience of truth; and they can mirror the light of truth. Thoughts and words are necessary to help us open to the experience of truth. But they can never be truth itself. Thoughts and words, at best, can only be alarm clocks that wake us up to what was always present.” Words can be helpful or unhelpful, but they are not ultimately the reality or truth which they describe.

In the Prologue to John’s Gospel (John 1. 1 – 14), Jesus is described as being God’s Word to human beings; he is in himself the message that God wants to communicate to us. This Word is a real person, not simply a description of God or a statement of the truth about God. What this means is that the truth about God is found in a relationship with Jesus and not in a set of statements or beliefs about him. Truth is not a prescription that we can swallow but a relationship in which we live.

When Jesus is described to us in the Prologue to John’s Gospel as being the Word of God, we can see then that John is bringing all these thoughts about speech and words into play. When he writes that Jesus is God’s Word, he means that Jesus is the creativity, the definition and the wisdom of God; all wrapped up and revealed in human form and flesh.

Jesus’ creativity is seen in the new way of being human that he reveals to us. In him, the divine and the human come together enabling us to see all that human beings can potentially be; all that we can potentially become. In him we see the best of humanity because in him we see God fully expressed. The Prologue to John’s Gospel says that: “No one has ever seen God. The only Son, who is the same as God and is at the Father’s side, he has made him known.”

God is love and, in Jesus, we see pure love expressed without reserve and without self-seeking: the way of compassion instead of the way of domination; the way of self-sacrifice instead of the way of selfishness; the way of powerlessness instead of the way of power; and the way of giving instead of the way of grasping.

Therefore to follow in his way is to experience divinity in our lives; to move towards the divine. When we see him call his disciples to follow him that is what occurs; they leave their old way of life behind in order to begin to experience a new and divine way of being human. As the Prologue to John’s Gospel puts it, God himself becomes their Father.

In doing so, he is also the Word of God which describes and defines us. The Prologue to John’s Gospel explains Jesus’ ability to define us in terms of light and darkness. Elsewhere in John’s Gospel Jesus says to Nicodemus (John 3. 19 - 21): “This is how the judgement works: the light has come into the world, but people love the darkness rather than the light, because their deeds are evil. Those who do evil things hate the light and will not come to the light, because they do not want their evil deeds to be shown up. But those who do what is true come to the light in order that the light may show that what they did was in obedience to God.”

In other words, the light of Christ is all about comparisons and transparency. Jesus, through his life and death, shows us the depth of love of which human beings are really capable and, on the basis of that comparison, we come up well short and are in real need of change. In the light of Jesus’ self-sacrifice, we see our inherent selfishness and recognise our need for change.

The light of Christ is also about transparency. God sees all and Jesus, in his ministry, was able to shine a light on the deepest recesses of the human heart. The Samaritan woman said of him: “Come see the man who told me everything I have ever done” (John 4. 29). With Jesus, nothing is hidden, everything is transparent; therefore we need to change if we are to truly live in the light of his presence.

In 1 John 5. 20 we read that “the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we know the true God.” He is, therefore, also the wise Word of God because, through him, we understand and know the true God as he truly is. Not only that but we see and know ourselves realistically as well.

Ultimately, the Word that God speaks to us in and through Jesus is ‘Love’. In 1 John 4. 9 – 10 we read, “God showed his love for us by sending his only Son into the world, so that we might have life through him. This is what love is: it is not that we have loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the means by which our sins are forgiven.”

Jesus came into our world as the Word of God to live a life of self-sacrificial love as a human being. He shows us what true love looks like and he shows us that human beings are capable of true love even when most of the evidence around us seems to point towards the opposite conclusion. But he did not come solely as an example or a description of love. He is love itself, the reality of love, and, therefore, as we come into relationship with him we come into a true relationship with love. This why he came, that we might receive him; that we might receive love. He is then in us and in him. Love in us and we in love.

In the beginning Love already existed; Love was with God, and Love was God. From the very beginning Love was with God. Through him God made all things; not one thing in all creation was made without him. Love was the source of life, and this life brought light to people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has never put it out.

“God is love. And God showed his love for us by sending his only Son into the world, so that we might have life through him. This is what love is: it is not that we have loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the means by which our sins are forgiven.

Dear friends, if this is how God loved us, then we should love one another. No one has ever seen God, but if we love one another, God lives in union with us, and his love is made perfect in us. (1 John 4. 8 – 12).




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Parchment - Son Of God.

Sunday, 1 October 2023

Paying attention: Consider the lilies

Here's the sermon that I shared at St Mary’s Runwell this morning for their Harvest Festival:

In our reading today we heard Jesus tell us that we should look at the flowers of the field. Stop and notice. In his painting called Consider the Lilies, Stanley Spencer depicts Jesus as mountainous in comparison with the daisies (not lilies) that he contemplates. Archbishop Stephen Cottrell has noted that this Jesus is playful, "huge and humble", godlike. Mark Oakley writes that ‘Whereas lilies call for attention, in church or posh hallways, daisies are overlooked, or considered problematic in our neat lawns. Jesus relishes their beauty, and, at the same time, challenges the sad fact about human beings that "when it comes to the present moment, we're not present".’ 

Cottrell then cleverly refers us to the words of Nadine Stair: ‘If I had my life to live over . . . I'd relax, I would limber up. I would be sillier than I have been. . . I would do more walking and looking. . . I would pick more daisies.’

Simon Small writes that we find it difficult to do this because: ‘Our minds find paying full attention to now very difficult. This is because our minds live in time. Our thoughts are preoccupied with past and future, and the present moment is missed.’ But, he says: ‘To pay profound attention to reality is prayer, because to enter the depths of this moment is to encounter God. There is always only now. It is the only place that God can be found.’

This is very much what Jesus seems to be saying to us through his teaching on worry and anxiety as found in today’s Gospel reading (Matthew 6. 24 -34). When we are preoccupied with what might happen in the future, we are not living fully in the present and may well misunderstand or misinterpret what is actually going on. Jesus encourages us to live fully in the present because, as Simon Small says, that is where we encounter God.

When we genuinely encounter God in the here and now, we know that his love and forgiveness surround us and that his Spirit fills us. As Jesus prayed in John 17, he is in us and we are in him. When we know this in our hearts in the here and now, we can relax because whatever happens to us, we are accepted, forgiven, loved and gifted by the God who created all things and who will bring all things to their rightful end. We are held in the palm of his hands and, therefore, as Julian of Norwich put it, “all shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well”.

Jesus says that the more we live in the present and the more we encounter God’s love in the here and now, the less we will be anxious or worried. Prayer is able to help us do both things and therefore helps us to reduce our sense of anxiety or worry. Not because we have listed all our worries to God and believe that he will solve them all for us, but instead because, through prayer, we encounter more of God’s love and, as a result, trust that he will be with us whatever comes our way.

Harvest provides a wonderful opportunity for us to do this in relation to the natural world around us including the birds of the air and the lilies of the field. Harvest provides an ‘opportunity to reflect and give thanks for all the good things in our lives, especially the way in which the earth produces food for us to eat, to give thanks for all those who work to produce food and drink for us to enjoy, to say sorry for the times we are not grateful, that we don’t notice God’s work in the world, that we don’t look after the things God has given us.’ ‘We live in a different time from our ancestors where the harvest and bringing the harvest in would have dominated everyone’s lives’ but today we probably hardly notice it. What we can do, however, is pay attention to what is around us, whether in our gardens and parks or in our homes and town.

Pope Francis has written on the connection between care for our common home and paying attention in his encyclical Laudato Si. There, he wrote: ‘Those who enjoy more and live better each moment are those who have given up dipping here and there, always on the look-out for what they do not have. They experience what it means to appreciate each person and each thing, learning familiarity with the simplest things and how to enjoy them. So they are able to shed their unsatisfied needs, reducing their obsessiveness and weariness. Even living on little they can live a lot, above all when they cultivate other pleasures and find satisfaction in fraternal encounters, in service, in developing their gifts, in music and art, in contact with nature and in prayer.’ (Laudato Si 223)

He continues, saying, ‘No one can cultivate a sober and satisfying life without being at peace with him or herself…. Inner peace is closely related to care for ecology and for the common good because, lived out authentically, it is reflected in a balanced lifestyle together with a capacity for wonder which takes us to a deeper understanding of life. Nature is filled with words of love, but how can we listen to them amid constant noise, interminable and nerve-wracking distractions, or the cult of appearances.’ (Laudato Si 225)

He concludes, drawing on today’s Gospel reading, that: ‘We are speaking of an attitude of heart, one which approaches life with serene attentiveness, which is capable of being fully present to someone…which accepts each moment as a gift from God to be lived to the full. Jesus taught us this attitude when he invited us to contemplate the lilies of the field and the birds of the air…. He was completely present to everyone and to everything and in this way he showed us the way to overcome that unhealthy anxiety which makes us superficial, aggressive and compulsive consumers.’ (Laudato Si 226)

Pope Francis quotes Patriarch Bartholomew as saying that we should look for solutions to the climate emergency in a change of humanity: ‘He asks us to replace consumption with sacrifice, greed with generosity, wastefulness with a spirit of sharing, an asceticism which “entails learning to give, and not simply to give up. It is a way of loving, of moving gradually away from what I want to what God’s world needs. It is liberation from fear, greed and compulsion”. Bartholomew says that, ‘As Christians, we are also called “to accept the world as a sacrament of communion, as a way of sharing with God and our neighbours on a global scale. It is our humble conviction that the divine and the human meet in the slightest detail in the seamless garment of God’s creation, in the last speck of dust of our planet”.’ 

Such an attitude begins with our looking closely, attentively, at the world around us as Jesus encourages us to do in today’s Gospel reading and as Stanley Spencer shows him doing in ‘Consider the Lilies’. This Harvest, may we increasingly do the same.












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Barclay James Harvest - Hymn.

Friday, 29 January 2021

Seeing is Receiving: The art of contemplation (6)

5. Sources

Chelmsford Cathedral is familiar territory for me, being the Cathedral where I was ordained as a deacon. Since then I have attended many Diocesan services, organised exhibitions and events, and have also spoken in the Cathedral on several occasions. It was also where I began my sabbatical art pilgrimage, when attending a service to celebrate the centenary of Chelmsford Diocese. Despite its familiarity, this Cathedral continues to surprise and entrance. Examining the sources and connections of its art only deepens the encounter.

The dedications of the Cathedral are to St Mary the Virgin, St Peter, and St Cedd. These dedications feature in much of the work commissioned. Cedd is the subject of Mark Cazalet's engraved glass window in St Cedd's Chapel, commissioned for the centenary of Cathedral and Diocese. He also has a bit part in Cazalet's Tree of Life located in a blank window space within the North Transept and mimicking the mullions and tracery of the original window. The image of a single tree has been a recurring theme in Cazalet's work, influenced by the sense of place found within the English Romantic landscape tradition. Cazalet's image of an Essex oak as Tree of Life uses symmetry to explore the theme with one side showing the Tree dying back and the other bursting into life.

Cazalet and Peter Eugene Ball were two names that I knew I would encounter again and again on my pilgrimage as they have been among those contemporary artists most frequently commissioned by the Church in the UK. Ball is a sculptor who works with found objects, predominantly wood, which he then embellishes with beaten metals such as gold leaf. His Christ in Glory located high above the Nave with its outstretched arms is a welcoming image. On a smaller scale and possessed of a still serenity are his cross and candlesticks for the Mildmay Chapel and his Mother and Child in St Cedd's Chapel.

Earlier commissions were no less significant however. Georg Ehrlich's sculpture The Bombed Child in St Peter's Chapel and his relief Christ the Healer are particularly affecting. The commissioning by the Church in the UK of work from artists who were refugees from the Nazi's would prove to be another recurring feature of my pilgrimage. Former Dean, The Very Revd Peter Judd, said of The Bombed Child: ‘A mother holds her dead child across her lap, and the suffering and dignity of her bearing don’t need any words to describe them – that is communicated to anyone who looks at her.’[i]

John Hutton's Great West Screen at Coventry Cathedral is one of the most notable works of religious art of the 20th century in Britain. Here his etched window is an image of St Peter. Elsewhere in the Diocese Hutton's work can also be found at St Erkenwald's Barking and St George's Barkingside. The work of Thomas Bayliss Huxley-Jones also features elsewhere within the Diocese. His Woman of Samaria at St Peter's Aldborough Hatch and the Christ figure above the South Porch of St. Martin Le Tours church, Basildon are both fibreglass figures. At the Cathedral, Huxley-Jones' work includes a Christus in St Cedd's Chapel, a carving of St Peter on the south-east corner of the South Transept and 16 stone carvings representing the history and concerns of Essex, Chelmsford, and the Church.

The number and variety of commissions which feature within this Cathedral mean that even in a packed service, such as that celebrating the centenary, when each worshipper will only see from their specific place within the space a very small proportion of the artworks within the building, they will, nevertheless, be able to view something of significance and depth to enhance their experience of worship. Among the range and variety of works to be seen - which include, among others, work in bronze, glass, steel, textiles, and wood - are finally a significant collection of contemporary icons followed the dedications of the Cathedral, with the addition of Jesus. These were created by orthodox nuns from the Community of St John the Baptist at Tolleshunt Knights in Essex. The Cathedral’s commissions have therefore also served to support the revival of traditional iconography which as the iconographer Aidan Hart has argued is a characteristic of twentieth century church commissions.

All this indicates the care with which the many commissions here at Chelmsford have been undertaken and realised, with commissions often relating to specific sources found in the life or heritage of the Cathedral. As is often the case, specific individuals have played a key role in taking these commissions forward appropriately and sensitively. At Chelmsford that role was particularly played by Peter Judd, who in an earlier role as the Vicar of St Mary’s Iffley, oversaw the installation of a Nativity window by John Piper which was later counter-balanced by Roger Wagner’s The Flowering Tree. A similar concern with balance can be seen at Chelmsford, in particular in the decision to commission Cazalet’s engraved St Cedd window in St Cedd’s Chapel as a counter-balance to Hutton’s engraved St Peter window in St Peter’s Chapel.

Commissioning several works from the same artists and positioning these at different locations within the space also indicates an awareness of the differing ways in which visitors and worshippers use and respond to the space. Artworks integrated within the life and architecture of a church are not viewed in the same way as works within the white cube of a gallery space and this needs to be understood and handled with sensitivity during the commissioning process. The result, as here, can be a sense of overall integrity and harmony within a space which holds great variety and diversity. Where this occurs, the whole and its constituent parts image something of the Trinitarian belief – the one and the many - which is at the heart of Christianity.

Slowing down to sustain silent looking by immersing ourselves in the world created by the work will in time also lead us outwards once again to consider the relationship of the work to the artist and the world in which s/he brought it to birth. There are four facets of any artwork – the artwork itself as an artefact, the ideas and influences of the artist, the relationship that the artwork has with its historical and art historical context, and our own response and that of others to the artwork. Each of these can shape our overall response to the artwork, often in ways that we don’t expect or realize.

It is particularly helpful for contemplation to consider the sources - ideas and influences - of the artist, as, when God created human beings, we were said to be made in his image. As a result, something of the maker shows up in the thing which has been made. By knowing something about the artist, we may be able to see and contemplate more in the artwork than we otherwise would. St Paul says the same thing about God in his letter to the Romans when he says that ever since the creation of the world God’s eternal power and divine nature, invisible though they are, have been understood and seen through the things he has made (Romans 1.19—20).

Corita Kent begins her discussion of the value in knowing sources with a dictionary definition:

‘SOURCE: from the Latin surgere, “to spring up, to lift.” The beginning of a stream of water or the like; a spring, a fountain. The origin; the first or ultimate cause. A person, book, or document that supplies information. A source is a point of departure.’[ii]

For the artist everything and anything can be a source. Sources, Kent suggests, free us ‘to depart from something rather than from nothing or everything.’[iii] This ‘relieves us of thinking we have to make something new or great’ by enabling us to work with what is at hand while seeking to use the source as a reference and not as something to duplicate.

Kent encourages artists to do two important things in relation to their sources. The first is to ‘use and build on the ideas of others.’ She notes that T. S. Eliot says that a minor poet borrows, a great poet steals. ‘Borrowing implies that the source really keeps possession,’ while stealing ‘implies that the source has become the property of the thief.’[iv] However, when we know we are building on the ideas of others, ‘it is good to take responsibility and say thank you for the use of the material.’ So, when you can, ‘salute your source, otherwise, without heart or conscience, the work might become plagiarism.’[v]

Our primary sources are the Word of God; principally Jesus, but also creation and the Bible. Richard Carter commends holy listening, attentiveness to the Word made flesh as essential to a rule of life. He writes: ‘You will return to the same stories again and again always with new questions as you bring your life to the Scriptures and the Scriptures to life’:

‘Like Jesus, we need to listen, to question, to discover for ourselves and to return to the Scriptures again and again. We seek openness to the Word of God, spaciousness in us so that we allow the Scriptures to dwell in us and ourselves to dwell in Scripture. The Word made flesh. An obedience to God’s Spirit within us.’[vi]

Our sources are our points of departure; the place from which prayer or contemplation begins. We need a starting point for any journey, whether geographical or within the mind or heart. In the same way that Kent encourages artists to see everything and anything as a potential source, so the mystics prompt us to see that God works in and through the ordinary and every day, through the people and things around us. As Daniel Siedell noted in the quote that sparked this book and enquiry, we therefore need to be paying attention and looking out for signs of his activity and presence. We need to be listening for the Holy Spirit to prompt us to look at some ordinary thing or ordinary person in order to see the face of God.

In the film American Beauty, Ricky shows Jane a blurry video of a plastic bag blowing in the wind among autumn leaves. As they watch he explains that ‘this bag was, like, dancing with me. Like a little kid begging me to play with it. . . . And that’s the day I knew there was this entire life behind things, and this incredibly benevolent force, that wanted me to know there was no reason to be afraid. Ever.’ ‘Sometimes,’ he says, ‘there’s so much beauty in the world I feel like I can’t take it, like my heart’s going to cave in.’[vii] To encounter God as that incredibly benevolent force that wants us to know that there is no reason to ever feel afraid, we need to pay attention to the beauty of the ordinary, overlooked things in life, like a plastic bag being blown by the wind. As Saint Augustine said, ‘How many common things are trodden underfoot which, if examined carefully, awaken our astonishment.’[viii]

Jean Pierre de Caussade was a French Jesuit priest and writer known for Abandonment to Divine Providence and his work with Nuns of the Visitation in Nancy, France. De Caussade coined a phrase to describe what we have just been talking about. He called it 'The Sacrament of the Present Moment,' which:

‘refers to God's coming to us at each moment, as really and truly as God is present in the Sacraments of the Church ... In other words, in each moment of our lives God is present under the signs of what is ordinary and mundane. Only those who are spiritually aware and alert discover God's presence in what can seem like nothing at all. This keeps us from thinking and behaving as if only grand deeds and high flown sentiments are 'Godly'. Rather, God is equally present in the small things of life as in the great. God is there in life's daily routine, in dull moments, in dry prayers ... There is nothing that happens to us in which God cannot be found. What we need are the eyes of faith to discern God as God comes at each moment - truly present, truly living, truly attentive to the needs of each one.’[ix]

Similarly, Simon Small has written that: ‘To pay profound attention to reality is prayer, because to enter the depths of this moment is to encounter God. There is always only now. It is the only place that God can be found.’ So, contemplative prayer is ‘the art of paying attention to what is.’[x]

As a member of the Carmelite Order in France during the 17th Century, Brother Lawrence spent most of his life in the kitchen or mending shoes, but became a great spiritual guide. He saw God in the mundane tasks he carried out in the priory kitchen. Daily life for him was an ongoing conversation with God. He wrote, ‘we need only to recognize God intimately present with us, to address ourselves to Him every moment.’

As a result, ‘The time of action does not differ from that of prayer. I possess God as peacefully in the bustle of my kitchen, where sometimes several people are asking me for different things at the same time, as I do upon my knees before the Holy Sacrament.’

‘It is not needful to have great things to do. I turn my little omelette in the pan for the love of God. When it is finished, if I have nothing to do, I prostrate myself on the ground and worship my God, who gave me the grace to make it, after which I arise happier than a king. When I can do nothing else, it is enough to have picked up a straw for the love of God.’

‘We ought not to be weary of doing little things for the love of God, who regards not the greatness of the work, but the love with which it is performed.’[xi]

This sort of spirituality - the sense of the presence of God in all things, and the possibility of honouring God in every action, as the source of spirituality - is also found in our hymn books. We sing:

‘Teach me, my God and King,
In all things thee to see,
And what I do in any thing,
To do it as for thee:’

George Herbert’s hymn, originally a poem called ‘The Elixir,’ ends with these words:

‘A servant with this clause
Makes drudgery divine:
Who sweeps a room, as for thy laws,
Makes that and the action fine.

This is the famous stone
That turneth all to gold:
For that which God doth touch and own
Cannot for less be told.’[xii]

If we practise the presence of God in the sacrament of the present moment, as Brother Lawrence and Jean Pierre de Caussade teach us, then we will become able to see signs of God’s activity and presence all around us and this will become the source of our prayer and creativity.

In the same way, all art is created in a particular time and place – its present moment - being in relationship with that contemporary context whilst also relating in some way to its art historical context. One Lent I was involved in the first showing of a digital installation by Michael Takeo Magruder called Lamentation for the Forsaken. In this piece the artist evokes the memory of Syrians who have passed away in the present conflict by weaving their names and images into a contemporary Shroud of Turin. That installation couldn’t be understood without reference to the then current refugee crisis or to past depictions of Christ, especially the Turin Shroud itself. We understand each other and artworks more by observing how we react and respond to events around us and to our histories and heritage. The artwork also became a focus for awareness and prayer as we explored the sources that had led to its creation. This is also why contemplation of the sources which inspired the artist has value, both for us and for others with whom we share our reflections.

Explore

View https://imago-arts.org/betty-spackman-a-creature-chronicle/ and https://static1.squarespace.com/static/59b04904e5dd5b7fad3953e1/t/5e5d785310cf69734cf6d2a2/1583183958600/CC+PROGRAM+BOOKLET.pdf to see a project using its sources as the basis for its form.

Betty Spackman has a background in animation and, having taught visual storytelling for many years, has underpinned her interest in narrative as an important part of a work entitled A Creature Chronicle. This installation combines the stories of both science and religion using well known art works as mediators and commentators to explore ethical concerns in both fields regarding transgenics and the development of post humanism. These stories and images are her sources. Presenting itself as a non-linear multi-layered storyboard the work functions as a catalyst for dialogue - a physical presence to be walked around and sat inside, with visual stories to be ‘read’ or discovered, contemplated, and discussed.

The basic structure of A Creature Chronicle is a 24ft in diameter circle of panels painted on both interior and exterior surfaces. As an architectural space it references a fire pit, a cave, a chapel, a hut. It is a place of contemplation and conversation. The circle is a universal symbol appearing in all world religions and science and is used in this work as a design element loaded with multiple complex symbolisms that repeat and spin their overlapping meanings.

Spackman’s intent was that combining the narratives of faith and art and science, even as fragmented visual quotes (these being her sources), would be a way to break the linear lines of ‘telling’ and give space for the various narratives to connect, conflate even. Her hope was that collaging the image stories from faith and art and science might help others see how they may have some common ground and allow conversations to be more than binary and argumentative. She wanted to invite contemplation and conversation by being hospitable in bringing many different voices (or sources) together on equal terms. The collage and the circular, double sided ‘storyboard’ encouraged this equitability as one can ‘read’ from any direction in any order even though there is a rough chronology implied.[xiii]

Spackman has said: ‘I place the Superman logo beside a human uterus and the story of Superman and the story of human birth create meaning by being in proximity. Why do we want to be super, to be heroes? Why is the goal of transhumanism to augment us, to rebirth us into super humans? What is the role of the woman, of reproduction? Who decides how birth of a new being will happen? And the plot thickens and becomes more and more complex. If I say ‘uterus’ one of my friends will tell her story of having a hysterectomy and someone else will tell a story of an abortion and someone else will tell a story of cloning and so on. The stories are always multiple and complex. Some are true and beautiful and some are not.’[xiv]

A Creature Chronicle is about ‘how we tell our stories of the origin and evolution of life’ but is also a chronicle of Spackman’s ‘own process of discerning ways of seeing and believing through the kaleidoscope of images’ she has collected over the course of her life:

‘I collage the fragments of my wonder and my wandering with various selected symbols from faith and science – ‘glued’ together and in part interpreted by fragments of well-known artworks. They are a disclosure of my curiosity as well as my convictions, simultaneously constant and evolving. It is a very personal story in that regard and I am cognizant of my choices being filtered through my own limited experiences, and therefore, aware of their limitations …

I believe … that there is a source and significance to life, although as an artist and writer I know how complicated it is to try and use either words or images to express or explain what we think or experience or discover. The scientist and theologian both try to define what life is about, the artist perhaps stands between them, sometimes mediating, sometimes ignoring them both. None of us speaks very clearly. Yet sometimes, through the babble of our various languages and our inadequate symbolic diagrams, we manage to communicate something – even if it is just our questions. But in comparing notes we might find there is more to be in awe of than to argue about. I hope so.’[xv]

In this way, and, perhaps, more than at any other time in human history, Spackman believes, the arts can play the role of mediators, interpreters, and inquisitors – as well as comforters, and healers - providing places of hospitality and humility where the big questions of life can be examined freely and safely. This is her achievement in A Creature Chronicle, made possible by collaging together a multiplicity of sources from the arts, religion and science.

Wonderings

I wonder what the sources for your personality, beliefs and practices are. I wonder what it is or who it is that has formed you.

I wonder how you discovered the sources for the personality, beliefs and practices of someone significant for you.

I wonder what your favourite piece of art - dance, drama, film, music, visual art etc. - is. I wonder how much you know about its creation, how you came by that information and how it enhances your appreciation.

Prayer

God of pilgrimage, lead me on a journey back in time to know myself more deeply through the people, places, experiences and ideas that have shaped me. As I map my pilgrimage, open my eyes to the ways you have created, led and formed me. Amen.

Spiritual exercise

Draw a map of the places that have formed you (however you wish to define formation). If there is the opportunity revisit those places and pray there about all that happened to you in that place. However, as will be the case for most of us, if that is not possible make that pilgrimage of prayer in your mind using anything that you have to hand to remind you of those places.

Art activity

See what interests you about sources from the information available in the National Gallery’s Art & Religion strand - https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/research/about-research/art-and-religion.

Read this interview with Betty Spackman - https://www.artlyst.com/features/betty-spackman-posthumanism-debates-interview-revd-jonathan-evens/.



Click here for the other parts of 'Seeing is Receiving'. See also 'And a little child shall lead them' which explores similar themes.


[i] https://www.marconi-veterans.com/?p=807

[ii] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.40

[iii] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.47

[iv] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.51

[v] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.58

[vi] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.98

[vii] A. Ball, American Beauty screenplay, 1999 - http://www.screenplaydb.com/film/scripts/American%20Beauty.pdf

[viii] St Augustine, ‘Letter 137’, Selected Letters translated by J. G. Cunningham, Logos Virtual Library - https://www.logoslibrary.org/augustine/letters/137.html

[ix] Elizabeth Ruth Obbard, Life in God's NOW, New City, 2012

[x] Simon Small, From the Bottom of the Pond, O Books, 2007

[xi] Brother Lawrence, The Practice of the Presence of God, Hodder & Stoughton, 2009

[xii] G. Herbert, ‘The Elixir’ in The Temple, Penguin Classics, 2017

[xiii] B. Spackman, A Creature Chronicle. Considering Creation. Faith and Fable. Fact and Fiction.,Piquant, 2019

[xiv] https://www.artlyst.com/features/betty-spackman-posthumanism-debates-interview-revd-jonathan-evens/

[xv] B. Spackman, A Creature Chronicle. Considering Creation. Faith and Fable. Fact and Fiction.,Piquant, 2019

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Paul Field - Hollow Hotel.

Friday, 1 December 2017

Thought for the Week: Small Action Big Difference

Here is my Thought for the Week for the Parish Newsletter at St Martin-in-the-Fields:

Brother Lawrence said that ‘We ought not to be weary of doing little things for the love of God, who regards not the greatness of the work, but the love with which it is performed.' This could be a motto for this year's BBC Radio 4 Christmas Appeal which uses the slogan 'Small Action Big Difference'. Jesus taught that truth when he told the Parable of the Mustard Seed, where a small action - the sowing of a small seed - led to the growth of a large plant.

We see it illustrated, too, in Jesus' incarnation which, as Dr James Allan Francis reflected in a sermon preached in 1926 was one solitary life which nevertheless had a massive impact: 'Here is a man who was born in an obscure village, the child of a peasant woman. He grew up in another village. He worked in a carpenter shop until He was thirty. Then for three years He was an itinerant preacher. While still a young man, the tide of popular opinion turned against him. He was nailed upon a cross between two thieves. Long centuries have come and gone but all the armies that ever marched, all the navies that were ever built; all the parliaments that ever sat and all the kings that ever reigned, put together, have not affected the life of humans upon this earth as powerfully as has that one solitary life.'

As we begin Advent we would do well to reflect that the nativity we are preparing to celebrate is the ultimate expression of a small action with a big impact. As we support the 2017 Christmas Appeal let us, like Brother Lawrence, learn to value small actions recognising that, by doing so, we are following in the footsteps and the teachings of Christ.

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Will Todd - No More Sorrow.

Wednesday, 29 November 2017

Start:Stop - Small Action Big Difference


Bible reading

‘He put before them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in his field; it is the smallest of all the seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.”’ (Matthew 13: 31 & 32)

Meditation

This year’s BBC Radio 4 Christmas Appeal for St Martin-in-the-Fields uses the slogan ‘Small Action Big Difference’. This reminded me of the statement made by Brother Lawrence that ‘We ought not to be weary of doing little things for the love of God, who regards not the greatness of the work, but the love with which it is performed.'

The Parable of the Mustard Seed is an illustration of this truth. In this brief parable a small action, the sowing of a small seed, leads to the growth of a large plant. Jesus says that, in a similar way, the kingdom of God has small beginnings but grows to become something much larger. As a result, we should, like Brother Lawrence says, in no wise despise small actions.

We see this illustrated in Jesus’ life, death and resurrection. Here is a man who was born in an obscure village, the child of a peasant woman. He grew up in another village. He worked in a carpenter shop until He was thirty. Then for three years He was an itinerant preacher. While still a young man, the tide of popular opinion turned against him. He was nailed upon a cross between two thieves. Long centuries have come and gone but all the armies that ever marched, all the navies that were ever built; all the parliaments that ever sat and all the kings and queens that ever reigned, put together, have not affected the life of human beings upon this earth as powerfully as has that one solitary life. Jesus’ life, death and resurrection is the ultimate expression of a small action with a big impact.

We could respond to this by thinking what small thing can I do today that will have a big effect but the reality is that we are rarely able to accurately predict future effects. Instead, we can learn, like Brother Lawrence, to value small, mundane actions in the knowledge that, if well done for the love of God, these actions can have significantly larger impacts.

Prayer

Lord God, enable us not to be weary of doing little things for love of You, recognising that you regard not the greatness of the work, but the love with which it is performed. Please take and use the little that we offer and multiply it to your praise and glory.

As we do small things for love of you multiply the impact of our actions.

Enable us to sow small seeds of Your love through our actions in those we know and in our communities and workplaces. Bring those seeds to fruition and make their growth be greater than the seed which was sown.

As we do small things for love of you multiply the impact of our actions.

Teach us to value the doing of small, mundane actions recognising that You are equally present in the small things of life as in the great. Give us the eyes of faith to discern You as You come to us at each moment of our daily routine - truly present, truly living, truly attentive to the needs of each person.

As we do small things for love of you multiply the impact of our actions.

Blessing

Giving us eyes of faith, being present in the small things of life, bring seeds sown to fruition, multiplying the impact of our actions. May those blessings of almighty God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, rest upon us and remain with us always. Amen.

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Tears for Fears - Sowing The Seeds Of Love.

Tuesday, 4 October 2016

Discover & explore: Time


The music in today's Discover & explore service on the theme of Time at St Stephen Walbrook included: A Prayer of Henry VI, Henry Ley; To Morning, Gabriel Jackson; Even such is time, Bob Chilcott; and Nunc Dimittis, Gustav Holst. The latest group of Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields sang for the first time in this service and will do so for the rest of this series:

• Monday 10th October: Talents
• Monday 17th October: Treasure/Gold
• Monday 24th October: Guidance
• Monday 31st October: Promises (All Souls)
• Monday 7th November: Safety
• Monday 14th November: Money
• Monday 21st November: Security

Here is the reflection I shared:

I wonder which of these rewrites of Psalm 23 is true for you: ‘The clock is my dictator, I shall not rest’ or ‘The Lord is my Pace-setter, I shall not rush’? There are moments in our lives when it seems that we have all the time in the world and other moments when it seems that we have no time at all. We can see this visualised in Kim Poor’s painting The Angel of the Hours where time is vanishing from the clock which the angel holds. Is this an indication that the angel wishes to draw us into the timelessness of eternity or is it, an indication of the speed with which we feel our days go by? The comedian Dave Allen famously said: “You clock in to the clock. You clock out to the clock. You come home to the clock. You eat to the clock, you drink to the clock, you go to bed to the clock… You do that for 40 years of your life, you retire, what do they … give you? A clock!”

The reality, of course, is that time is constant and unchanging; it does not actually lengthen or contract. What changes are the choices that we make as to how we use our time and the feelings we have as a result.

The famous passage from Ecclesiastes that we have just heard read (Ecclesiastes 3. 1 - 15) is often understood as meaning that God orders our time and allots particular events to particular times and seasons. However, it can also be understood in terms of one of those phrases like ‘stuff happens’, ‘life happens’ or ‘shit happens’ which mean simply that what happens happens. The reality it says is that all our lives will contain enough time for births and deaths, tears and laughter, mourning and dancing, conflict and peace to occur. There is time enough in each of our lifetimes for all these things and it is inevitable that we will experience them.

While it is inevitable that the highs and lows of life will occur over the course of our lives, we don’t know when these things will occur or how long our lives themselves will be, and so inevitability is combined with uncertainty. We often respond to this by trying to impose order either by detailed planning on our own part or by asking that God will order our days. When we do so, we can end up preoccupied with the future, instead of experiencing the present.

As we don’t know how much time we have, it is imperative that we must use the time we currently have wisely. We do so by savouring and appreciating the time we have whether that is: time at home - growing together as a family; time at work – completing tasks and supporting colleagues; time at church - in worship, fellowship and prayer; or time alone with God - praying and reading the Bible.

Van Morrison sings that ‘These are the days, the time is now … There's only here, there's only now.’ Similarly, Simon Small has written, ‘There is always only now. It is the only place that God can be found.’ Each moment we are alive is unique and unrepeatable. As songwriter, Victoria Williams, has put it, ‘This moment will never come again / I know it because it has never been before.’ We live in the present and can only encounter God in this moment, in the here and now, today.

Equally, we can only give in the here and now. In Deuteronomy 30. 11 - 20 we read of Moses saying to the Israelites, “today … I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses” and exhorting them to “choose life.” Similarly, in Hebrews 3. 7 - 19, the writer of that letter says, ‘Today, if you hear his [God’s] voice, do not harden your hearts …’ The emphasis of these passages is that now is the moment to encounter God, now is the moment to live, now is the moment to give.

This autumn we are encouraging all those who come to St Stephen to reflect on the various ways in which we can use our time, talents and treasure in God’s service. Each of us has time, talents and treasure which could be given out of gratitude and to help this church. In the Stewardship leaflet we have given you today we list a variety of roles with which we need help here at St Stephen, so I encourage you to reflect on those roles and consider whether you could help us in some way.

How much time have we got? We don’t know, so we must use it all wisely. The past is behind us, the future is yet to come, so now is the only moment in which we can live and move and have our being. This means that now is always the moment in which to encounter God, now is always the moment in which to truly come alive and truly live, now is always the moment in which we can give of ourselves in thanks for all that God has given to us. There's only here, there's only now. This moment is unique and unrepeatable. It will never come again because it has never been before. So, these are the days for encounter, for living and for giving. The time is now.

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Gabriel Jackson - To Morning.

Thursday, 10 March 2016

Small contributions can have significant effects

Here is today's sermon for the Eucharist at St Stephen Walbrook based on John 6. 1 - 14 and collaged together from various sources:

'... the young boy brought barley loaves and fish to Jesus ... Barley loaves ... were one third of the price of the wheat variety; it was the bread of the poor. And then there were the two small fish. The Greek word used for these fish in John’s gospel is “osparion”, which meant they were certainly not fresh fish from the Sea of Galilee. “Osparion” were either small dried or pickled fish ... The young boy may have generously offered all he had but that offering was meagre in the extreme. Little wonder that Andrew should say despairingly to Jesus: “But, what are they among so many”?

Yet, Jesus willingly took what was offered and, far from commenting on the poor offering set before him, he gave thanks over the loaves and fish. And, as Jesus gave thanks a transformation took place and there was enough for all to be fed and, we learn later in the chapter, to be satisfied. With the transforming grace of Jesus even our poorest offerings can become something extraordinary.'

'Bishop Tom Wright in his commentary on St John’s Gospel says ... that all God calls us to do is to bring what we have to Jesus in prayer. We tell Him what we need. We then let Jesus bring the two together and make it enough for all! As that marvellous prayer puts it, the Lord Jesus truly can ‘transform the poverty of our riches by the fullness of his Grace’.'

It is easy for us to think that big is best and that what we have and are is too little to make an impact but this story says otherwise. Jesus takes and uses the little that the young boy offers. Small is beautiful, as E. F. Schumacher reminded us, and as the images we have been viewing this morning state, our small actions or contribution, combined with those of others, can then have a big effect. The butterfly effect which is found in Chaos Theory and the multiplier effect in economics both show, on the basis of research, that small changes and small contributions can have significant effects.

Hattie May Wiatt was a young girl in Philadelphia in the 1880s who began saving towards the building of a church which could accommodate the large number of children going to Sunday School in those days. Hattie May died young and after her death the pastor of the church, Rev. Russell Conwell was given the 57 cents that she had saved. He used these to begin a fundraising campaign which resulted in the building of a church, a University and a Hospital.

We need the contribution that you can make to St Stephen Walbrook, however small it may seem to you, and in whatever way you can make that contribution. The mission and ministry of this church is the combined effect of the contributions that each of us make. God has given you resources, time and talents, so I encourage you to reflect prayerfully on all that you can and do give back to him in order that together we can combine our individual offerings to make a bigger impact for him.

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The Voices of East Harlem - Little People.

Tuesday, 25 August 2015

Start:Stop - The Sacrament of the Present Moment


Bible reading

"… as the Holy Spirit says, “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion, as on the day of testing in the wilderness, where your ancestors put me to the test, though they had seen my works for forty years. Therefore I was angry with that generation, and I said, ‘They always go astray in their hearts, and they have not known my ways.’ As in my anger I swore, ‘They will not enter my rest.’”

Take care, brothers and sisters, that none of you may have an evil, unbelieving heart that turns away from the living God. But exhort one another every day, as long as it is called “today,” so that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin. For we have become partners of Christ, if only we hold our first confidence firm to the end. As it is said, “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion.” (Hebrews 3. 7 – 15)

Meditation

In Deuteronomy 30 we read of Moses saying to the Israelites, “today … I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses” and exhorting them to “choose life.” Similarly, in our reading from Hebrews we have heard that, “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts …” Later on in Hebrews we read that “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever” but the emphasis here is on today.

One reason for this emphasis is that, as Simon Small has written, “There is always only now. It is the only place that God can be found.” Each moment we are alive is unique and unrepeatable. As songwriter, VictoriaWilliams, has put it: “This moment will never come again / I know it because it has never been before.” We live in the present. Therefore, we can only encounter God in this moment, in the here and now, today.

Jean Pierre de Caussade was a French Jesuit priest and writer known for his work Abandonment to Divine Providence and his work with Nuns of the Visitation in Nancy, France. De Caussade coined a phrase to describe what we have just been talking about. He called it ‘The Sacrament of the Present Moment,' which “refers to God's coming to us at each moment, as really and truly as God is present in the Sacraments of the Church ... In other words, in each moment of our lives God is present under the signs of what is ordinary and mundane. Only those who are spiritually aware and alert discover God's presence in what can seem like nothing at all. This keeps us from thinking and behaving as if only grand deeds and high flown sentiments are 'Godly'. Rather, God is equally present in the small things of life as in the great. God is there in life's daily routine, in dull moments, in dry prayers ... There is nothing that happens to us in which God cannot be found. What we need are the eyes of faith to discern God as God comes at each moment - truly present, truly living, truly attentive to the needs of each one.” (Elizabeth Ruth Obbard, Life in God's NOW, New City, 2012)

Simon Small has noted, however, that “Our minds find paying full attention to now very difficult. This is because our minds live in time. Our thoughts are preoccupied with past and future, and the present moment is missed.” He goes on to say that, ‘To pay profound attention to reality is prayer, because to enter the depths of this moment is to encounter God ... Contemplative prayer is the art of paying attention to what is’ (Simon Small, 'From the Bottom of the Pond', O Books, 2007). In saying this, he echoes de Caussade’s idea of the sacrament of the present moment and the thinking of SimoneWeil who said that, ‘absolute unmixed attention is prayer.’ All these confirm the thought in Hebrews that today is the moment for encounter with God.

Prayer

Lord God, our thoughts are often preoccupied with past and future, meaning that we miss the present moment. Enable us to realise the uniqueness of each passing moment which is unrepeatable. Enable us to live in the sacrament of the present moment by giving absolute unmixed attention to the reality of what is in the here and now. Today, may we hear your voice in the sacrament of the present moment.

Lord God, give us the eyes of faith to discern you as you come at each moment - truly present, truly living, truly attentive to the needs of each one. May we discern you in what is ordinary and mundane, in the small things of life as in the great, in life's daily routine, in dull moments, and in dry prayers. Today, may we hear your voice in the sacrament of the present moment.

Lord God, keep us from thinking and behaving as if only grand deeds and high flown sentiments are 'Godly'. Teach us to value the doing of small, mundane actions recognising that you are equally present in the small things of life as in the great. Enable us to show your love through our actions as we do our common business wholly for the love of you.  Today, may we hear your voice in the sacrament of the present moment.

Blessing

Realising the uniqueness of each passing moment, hearing God’s voice today, living in the present moment, discovering God’s presence in the here and now. May those blessings of God almighty, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, rest upon you and remain with you always. Amen. 

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The Velvet Underground - Sunday Morning.

Saturday, 7 March 2015

Quiet Day: Daily Divine

 









Today I led a Quiet Day at the Retreat House in Pleshey for the Parish of St Andrew's Sandon. Entitled 'Daily Divine,' this Quiet Day explores experiencing God in the events and emotions of the everyday or, as the poet George Herbert put it, ‘Heaven in ordinaire’. During the day thoughts are shared on the idea and reality of having an ongoing conversation with God in which we pray through our emotions and our everyday encounters.

Over the course of the day we used an eclectic range of materials from: David Adam, Brother Lawrence, Ruth Burgess, Alexander Carmichael, Jean Pierre de CaussadeBill Fay, George Herbert, Gerard Manley HopkinsJonathan Sacks, Ray Simpson, Simon Small and Victoria Williams.

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Bill Fay - Cosmic Concerto (Life Is People).