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Showing posts with label st stephen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label st stephen. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 April 2024

Testimony in the courtroom of life

Here's the sermon I shared at St Andrew's Wickford this morning:

Saint Stephen was the first Christian martyr, and was stoned to death (Acts 7. 54-60). Saul (the future Saint Paul) guards the clothes of those who stone Saint Stephen outside the city. In the Acts of the Apostles, Stephen is described as one of the seven deacons whose job it is to care for the widows in the early Church in Jerusalem. His eloquent speech before the Sanhedrin, in which he shows the great sweep of Jewish history as leading to the birth of Jesus, the long-expected Messiah, and his impassioned plea that all might hear the good news of Jesus, leads to his inevitable martyrdom by being stoned to death. 

As the author of Acts, Luke's description of Stephen bears direct parallels to that of Christ: for example, being filled with the Holy Spirit; seeing the Son of God as the right hand of God, as Jesus promised he would be; commending his spirit to Jesus, as Jesus commended his to the Father; kneeling as Jesus did in Gethsemane and asking forgiveness for his persecutors. Witnessing to Jesus by acting like Jesus in every way is thus seen by Luke as of the essence of the Christian life.

The Greek word "martus" signifies a "witness". It is in this sense that the term first appears in Christian literature; the Apostles were "witnesses" of all that they had observed in the public life of Christ. The Apostles, from the beginning as the story of St Stephen makes clear, faced grave dangers, until eventually almost all suffered death for their convictions. Thus, within the lifetime of the Apostles, the term martus came to be used in the sense of a witness who at any time might be called upon to deny what he testified to, under penalty of death. From this stage the transition was easy to the ordinary meaning of the term, as used ever since in Christian literature: a martyr, or witness of Christ, as a person who suffers death rather than deny his faith.

There continue to be Christians who experience persecution or martyrdom today and we must pray for and support our brothers and sisters in the persecuted Church. It is, probably, unlikely that we will share with St Stephen in this experience, even so, we can still share with St Stephen in the other meaning of martus; that of being a witness who gives testimony. The missiologist Lesslie Newbigin has explained that testimony is what is given by a witness in a trial. A witness makes his or her statement as part of a trial in which the truth is at stake and where the question, ‘What is the truth?’ is what is being argued. Newbigin has argued that this is what is “at the heart of the biblical vision of the human situation that the believer is a witness who gives his testimony in a trial.”

Where is the trial? It is all around us, it is life itself? In all situations we encounter, there is challenge to our faith and there is a need for us to testify in words and actions to our belief in Christ. Whenever people act as though human beings are entirely self-relient, there is a challenge to our faith. Whenever people argue that suffering and disasters mean that there cannot be a good God, we are on the witness stand. Whenever people claim that scientific advances or psychological insights can explain away belief in God, we are in the courtroom. Whenever a response of love is called for, our witness is at stake.

What is the content of our testimony? Witnesses are those who have seen or experienced a particular event or sign or happening and who then tell the story of what they have seen or heard as testimony to others. That is what Jesus called us to do before he ascended to the Father; to tell our stories of encountering him to others. So, we don’t have to understand or be able to explain the key doctrines of the Christian faith. We don’t have to be able to tell people the two ways to live or to have memorized the sinner’s prayer or to have tracts to be able to hand out in order to be witnesses to Jesus. All we need to do is to tell our story; to say this is how Jesus made himself real to me and this is the difference that it has made.

Malcolm Guite sums up these thoughts as follows:

Witness for Jesus, man of fruitful blood,
Your martyrdom begins and stands for all.
They saw the stones, you saw the face of God,
And sowed a seed that blossomed in St. Paul.
When Saul departed breathing threats and slaughter
He had to pass through that Damascus gate
Where he had held the coats and heard the laughter
As Christ, alive in you, forgave his hate,
And showed him the same light you saw from heaven
And taught him, through his blindness, how to see;
Christ did not ask ‘Why were you stoning Stephen?’
But ‘Saul, why are you persecuting me?’
Each martyr after you adds to his story,
As clouds of witness shine through clouds of glory. ()

Prayer: Gracious Father, who gave the first martyr Stephen grace to pray for those who took up stones against him: grant that in all our sufferings for the truth we may learn to love even our enemies and to seek forgiveness for those who desire our hurt, looking up to heaven to him who was crucified for us, Jesus Christ, our Mediator and Advocate, who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

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Malcolm Guite and Rob Groves - Angels Unawares.

Sunday, 22 May 2016

Inspired to Follow: The Martyrdom of St Stephen

Here is my reflection from today's "Inspired to Follow: Art and the Bible Story" at St Martin-in-the-Fields, using ‘The Martyrdom of St Stephen’, possibly by Antonio Carracci, c.1610 (Location: National Gallery: not on display, see http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/possibly-by-antonio-carracci-the-martyrdom-of-saint-stephen):

Saint Stephen was the first Christian martyr, and was stoned to death. Saul (the future Saint Paul) guards the clothes of those who stone Saint Stephen outside the city. In the Acts of the Apostles, Stephen is described as one of the seven deacons whose job it is to care for the widows in the early Church in Jerusalem. His eloquent speech before the Sanhedrin, in which he shows the great sweep of Jewish history as leading to the birth of Jesus, the long-expected Messiah, and his impassioned plea that all might hear the good news of Jesus, leads to his inevitable martyrdom by being stoned to death. As the author of Acts, Luke's description of Stephen bears direct parallels to that of Christ: for example, the passion; being filled with the Holy Spirit; seeing the Son of God as the right hand of God, as Jesus promised he would be; commending his spirit to Jesus, as Jesus commended his to the Father; kneeling as Jesus did in Gethsemane and asking forgiveness for his persecutors. Witnessing to Jesus by acting like Jesus in every way is thus seen by Luke as of the essence of the Christian life.

If this painting is definitely by Antonio Carracci, a date of about 1610 would seem likely. Carracci was born in Venice. His father Agostino Carracci was an artist. His godfather was Tintoretto. He began his art studies early and proved an apt scholar. He was taught first by his father, then his uncle Annibale, and he also assisted Guido Reni. So, he was part of a well-connected family of artists and this shows itself in his work; both in the fluency of his technique (which was much admired among his contemporaries) and in his maintenance of the Carracci style. He developed a deep affection for his uncle Annibale, with whom he went to Rome, where most of his work was done. In 1609, when his uncle and teacher, Annibale, died, he showed his devotion by burying him with great solemnity near the tomb of Raphael. In Rome, Cardinal Tonti employed the talented youth to decorate his chapel, and on its completion he was commissioned to paint the chapel of St. Charles Borromeo, and a fresco in one of the rooms of the pope's palace at Monte Cavallo. Unlike the martyr he depicts, his was an uneventful career (yet one in which through his art he was a witness to Christ).

The Greek word "martus" signifies a "witness". It is in this sense that the term first appears in Christian literature; the Apostles were "witnesses" of all that they had observed in the public life of Christ. The Apostles, from the beginning as the story of St Stephen makes clear, faced grave dangers, until eventually almost all suffered death for their convictions. Thus, within the lifetime of the Apostles, the term martus came to be used in the sense of a witness who at any time might be called upon to deny what he testified to, under penalty of death. From this stage the transition was easy to the ordinary meaning of the term, as used ever since in Christian literature: a martyr, or witness of Christ, as a person who suffers death rather than deny his faith.

There continue to be Christians who experience persecution or martyrdom today and we must pray for and support our brothers and sisters in the persecuted Church. It is, probably, unlikely that we will share with St Stephen in this experience, even so, we can still share with St Stephen in the other meaning of martus; that of being a witness who gives testimony. The missiologist Lesslie Newbigin has explained that testimony is what is given by a witness in a trial. A witness makes his or her statement as part of a trial in which the truth is at stake and where the question, ‘What is the truth?’ is what is being argued. Newbigin has argued that this is what is “at the heart of the biblical vision of the human situation that the believer is a witness who gives his testimony in a trial.”

Where is the trial? It is all around us, it is life itself? In all situations we encounter, there is challenge to our faith and there is a need for us to testify in words and actions to our belief in Christ. Whenever people act as though human beings are entirely self-relient, there is a challenge to our faith. Whenever people argue that suffering and disasters mean that there cannot be a good God, we are on the witness stand. Whenever people claim that scientific advances or psychological insights can explain away belief in God, we are in the courtroom. Whenever a response of love is called for, our witness is at stake.

What is the content of our testimony? Witnesses are those who have seen or experienced a particular event or sign or happening and who then tell the story of what they have seen or heard as testimony to others. That is what Jesus called us to do before he ascended to the Father; to tell our stories of encountering him to others. So, we don’t have to understand or be able to explain the key doctrines of the Christian faith. We don’t have to be able to tell people the two ways to live or to have memorized the sinner’s prayer or to have tracts to be able to hand out in order to be witnesses to Jesus. All we need to do is to tell our story; to say this is how Jesus made himself real to me and this is the difference that it has made.

Witness for Jesus, man of fruitful blood,
Your martyrdom begins and stands for all.
They saw the stones, you saw the face of God,
And sowed a seed that blossomed in St. Paul.
When Saul departed breathing threats and slaughter
He had to pass through that Damascus gate
Where he had held the coats and heard the laughter
As Christ, alive in you, forgave his hate,
And showed him the same light you saw from heaven
And taught him, through his blindness, how to see;
Christ did not ask ‘Why were you stoning Stephen?’
But ‘Saul, why are you persecuting me?’
Each martyr after you adds to his story,
As clouds of witness shine through clouds of glory. (Malcolm Guite)

Prayer

Gracious Father,
who gave the first martyr Stephen
grace to pray for those who took up stones against him:
grant that in all our sufferings for the truth
we may learn to love even our enemies
and to seek forgiveness for those who desire our hurt,
looking up to heaven to him who was crucified for us,
Jesus Christ, our Mediator and Advocate,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever. Amen.

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Pēteris Vasks - O Lord Open Our Eyes.

Thursday, 19 May 2016

Joe Machine, Edward Lucie-Smith & Claudio Crismani (2)



 






More images from the wonderful concert given by Claudio Crismani at St Stephen Walbrook last night. Claudio filled the space with marvellous music, which was a visceral and deeply moving experience for those of us fortunate enough to have been there. All those I spoke after the concert were exhilarated by the passion, skill and majesty of his performance.


Our evening was enhanced by Joe Machine's 'The Life & Legend of St Stephen' exhibition, which can be seen at St Stephen Walbrook until 27th May (weekdays 10.00am - 4.00pm, except Wednesdays 11.00am - 3.00pm). These paintings combine Jewish and Christian iconography in a unique interpretation of the story of the first Christian martyr, who is our Patron Saint. Mysticism, humour, symbolism, narrative and stylized patterning are fused to form these ravishing and reflective icons.


Next Wednesday, as part of our exhibition programme, we have a poetry evening arranged by The London Magazine and featuring Steven O’Brien, Joe Machine and Edward Lucie-Smith (Wednesday 25 May beginning at 7.00pm). Joe Machine and Steven O'Brien have collaborated on a soon to be published book, Britannia Stories, exploring twenty myths commonly associated with the British Isles. They worked closely in examining the origins of all the stories, and on determining the relevance of each to the 21st century, with Machine’s paintings influencing O’Brien’s writings, and vice versa.

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Claudio Crismani - Csardas Macabre 2.

Monday, 16 May 2016

Exhibition, service & reception - St Stephen


Clare Paine, London Church Coordinator for Christian Aid, spoke (during Christian Aid Week) in our Discover & explore service at St Stephen Walbrook about St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, in relation to Christian Aid's support for partners who serve their communities and who do so, sometimes, in the face of persecution. As an organisation committed to human dignity, Christian Aid wants to see a reduction in the inequalities people face and create a more inclusive world, so Clare told us about Karla Avelar’s experience of exclusion and violence, which is replicated by so many women and men around the world.

Karla Avelar, a Salvadorian transgender activist who survived rape, attempted murder, kidnap and incarceration in a male prison is now Executive Director of Comcavis Trans, an organisation that fights for the legal rights of El Salvador’s transgender population. Comcavis Trans receives support from FESPAD, which is funded by Christian Aid. Karla's coordination with FESPAD started around four years ago because of the assassination of one of her closest friends, Tania. 

As a result, they wanted to press charges at a national and international level, but didn’t have that expertise in their organisation. FESPAD, along with others, gave the technical expertise to submit a case to the American Human Rights Commission [the case had not previously been recognised by the Salvadorian state]. A report was put together based on the evidence and that was anchored in the tangible reality of what trans women were experiencing. The commission passed a resolution that strongly suggested that the Salvadoran state write and pass an identity law-passage for an anti-discrimination law for the LGBTI population. They also suggested reforms of the penal code to recognise hate crimes. In the longer-term Comcavis Trans want access to justice and the creation of laws and to have the same rights as the heterosexuals in the country.

We also used Malcolm Guite's poem about St Stephen and prayed the following prayers:

O Saviour Christ, in whose way of life lies the secret of all life, and the hopes of all the people, we pray for quiet courage to meet this hour. We did not choose to be born or to live in such an age. But let its problems challenge us, its discoveries exhilarate us, its injustice anger us, its possibilities inspire us, and its vigour renew us, for your Kingdom’s sake. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Crying God, we join our voices with those from around the globe, crying out for the plight of the persecuted minorities in El Salvador, Iraq and many other places. We join our hearts with those displaced from their homes, yet again, crying out for the fear, the terror and the madness to end. We join our hope with those who wait for rescue, crying out for food, for water and for the kingdom of heaven to break into their hell. We join our faith with the faith of all who pray, crying out for the slaughter of innocence to end. We join our tears with yours, crying out for us all to know and live by the things that make for peace. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

O Lord God, your Son Jesus Christ suffered and died for us. In his resurrection he restores life and peace in all creation. Comfort, we pray, all victims of intolerance and those oppressed by their fellow humans. Remember in your kingdom those who have died. Lead the oppressors towards compassion
and give hope to the suffering. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.

Gracious Father, who gave the first martyr Stephen grace to pray for those who took up stones against him: grant that in all our sufferings for the truth we may learn to love even our enemies and to seek forgiveness for those who desire our hurt, looking up to heaven to him who was crucified for us, Jesus Christ, our Mediator and Advocate. Merciful Father, accept these prayers for the sake of your Son, our Saviour, Jesus Christ. Amen.

Today's music sung by the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields was: James MacMillan - Factus est Repente; Orlando Gibbons - Lord with what zeal; Edward Elgar - The Spirit of the Lord; and G.P. da Palestrina - Elegerunt Apostoli.

Next week's Discover & explore service is on Monday 23rd May and explores the life and thought of the Venerable Bede.

Later in the evening we explored Joe Machine's interpretation of the life and legend of St Stephen at the Private View for our latest exhibition. Joe Machine's paintings combine Jewish and Christian iconography in a unique interpretation of the story of the first Christian martyr, who is our Patron Saint. Mysticism, humour, symbolism, narrative and stylized patterning are fused to form these ravishing and reflective icons. Other exhibition events include a concert by Claudio Crismani (Wednesday 18th May, 7.00pm) and a Poetry Evening organised by The London Magazine (Wednesday 25th May, 7.00pm).



  
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Orlando Gibbons - Lord with what zeal.

Sunday, 15 May 2016

Exhibition, service, reception, concert & poetry evening





Today we hung Joe Machine's 'The Life & Legend of St Stephen' exhibition, which can be seen at St Stephen Walbrook until 27th May (weekdays 10.00am - 4.00pm, except Wednesdays 11.00am - 3.00pm).

Joe Machine's paintings combine Jewish and Christian iconography in a unique interpretation of the story of the first Christian martyr, who is our Patron Saint. Mysticism, humour, symbolism, narrative and stylized patterning are fused to form these ravishing and reflective icons.


Tomorrow we will explore the life and thought of St Stephen in our Discover & explore service with the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields. This service begins at 1.10pm and the reflection will be given by Clare Paine, London Church Coordinator at Christian Aid, who will speak, during Christian Aid Week, on contemporary persecution in the light of St Stephen's witness.

At 6.30pm tomorrow there will be an exhibition launch reception for Joe Machine's exhibition, to which all are welcome. The reception provides an opportunity to speak to Joe Machine about the exhibition.


On Wednesday, as part of our exhibition programme, the "amazing, daring and magnetic artist" Italian classical pianist Claudio Crismani will play Liszt, Skrjabin and Boulez. The music of Russian composer Alexander Scriabin has always been at the centre of Crismani’s artistic interests. The concert begins at 7.00pm, tickets cost £15.00 (with complimentary glass of wine) and are available via the Box Office at St Martin-in-the-Fields (Tel: 020 7766 1100, Web: www.smitf.org/the-prometheus-project) or on the door.


Finally, in our exhibition programme, we have a poetry evening arranged by The London Magazine and featuring Steven O’Brien, Joe Machine and Edward Lucie-Smith on Wednesday 25 May beginning at 7.00pm. Joe Machine and Steven O'Brien have collaborated on a soon to be published book, Britannia Stories, exploring twenty myths commonly associated with the British Isles. They worked closely in examining the origins of all the stories, and on determining the relevance of each to the 21st century, with Machine’s paintings influencing O’Brien’s writings, and vice versa.

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Michael McDermott - Carry Your Cross.

Tuesday, 26 April 2016

The Life & Legend of St Stephen: Paintings by Joe Machine


Joe Machine will present a significant new series of paintings on the life and legend of St Stephen at St Stephen Walbrook (16 - 27 May 2016).

Artist, poet and writer, Joe Machine, was a founding member of the first Stuckist group in 1999. His work has been raw and autobiographical. As a young man his involvement in crime such as burglary led to periods in youth offenders' prisons. He credits art as his way out of this lifestyle.

"Joe Machine is inspired by transcendence and relationship with God. His mythic figurative paintings with their stylized forms and patterned surfaces link us, as he has stated, to a collective past of symbolism and meaning where lives, like that of St Stephen, were spent in search of the spirit." Revd Jonathan Evens, Priest-in-charge, St Stephen Walbrook

The Life & Legend of St Stephen: Paintings by Joe Machine
Monday 16 – Friday 27 May
St Stephen Walbrook, 39 Walbrook, London EC4N 8BN
10.00am – 4.00pm, Weekdays (11.00am – 3.00pm, Wednesdays)
Tel: 02076269000 Web: www.ststephenwalbrook.net

Exhibition events
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Claudio Crismani - Csardas Macabre 2.