Ok

By continuing your visit to this site, you accept the use of cookies. These ensure the smooth running of our services. Learn more.

A Skinny Fairtrade Latte in the Food Court of Life

  • Seasonal Beauty

    This week has been, and continues to be, very full, with early starts and late finishes.  It has also been a week when winter began fully take its grip, although, unlike last year, as yet no snow in these parts.  Since completing my Race for Refugees in September, I have continued walking the three miles or so each from central Manchester to the vicar school, meaning that two or three days a week I am guaranteed to get nine or ten miles of walking (this week fitted around nine or ten hours of working!).  At the moment, it is just about light when I reach college, and yesterday was a lovely (if shepherd/sailor worrying) sky.

    Making or taking time to pause, to admire something of the natural world is a good thing, a chance to re-centre and find a bit of equilibrium amidst the hurl-burly of academic, pastoral, professional and trustee responsibilities.

  • A Hymn for Advent... or Just for Hope... Isaiah 11: 1 - 10

    Searching for Hymns for Advent 2 (my next preach) I came access this beautiful hymn based in Isaiah 11: 1 - 10 which can be sung to 'Jerusalem' or 'Ye Banks and Braes' (I found a gorgeous version recorded by someone called Josh Garrels but I can't persuade YouTube to let me share it here... maybe try your favourite music streaming service!)

    O day of peace that dimly shines
    through all our hopes and prayers and dreams,
    guide us to justice, truth, and love,
    delivered from our selfish schemes.
    May swords of hate fall from our hands,
    our hearts from envy find release,
    till by God's grace our warring world
    shall see Christ's promised reign of peace.

    Then shall the wolf dwell with the lamb,
    nor shall the fierce devour the small;
    as beasts and cattle calmly graze,
    a little child shall lead them all.
    Then enemies shall learn to love,
    all creatures find their true accord;
    the hope of peace shall be fulfilled,
    for all the earth shall know the Lord.

    Carl P Daw, Jr (born 1944) © 1982 Hope Publishing Company.

     

  • What is Ministry... What is Mission...

    Theology, Ministry & Mission... that's what we teach academically at vicar school, alongside and incorporating ministerial formation for a number of traditions.  But just what do we mean by those words?

    Yesterday was a day that seemed to capture something of the essence as it really was a bit of everything...

    I preached on the Lectionary readings of Isaiah 65: 17 - 25 and 2 Thessalonians 3: 6 - 13 about the God of hope who rejoices in all that God has made, about the vision of a new or renewed creation characterised by flourishing for all life... and about the need for us to get stuck in and help bring it to pass.

    As part of the service we prayed with and for two people we've been supporting to differing degrees in the asylum process, one moving elsewhere to dispersal accommodation (which they are pleased about), one staying put in permanent accommodation (which they are delighted with).  We are also just starting to get to know another who has been dispersed here.

    We had a fire drill - and with real good humour everyone cleared the building and assembled in under two minutes.  We learned how we could do this even better another time.

    We are lunch together - delicious veggie and meaty stews with pickles, followed by apple sponge and cream. And as part of this raised money for Home Mission.

    In coming weeks, we will hold a toy service, gathering gifts for people trapped in poverty; we will host a radio Stoke Christmas Coffee Morning; we will hold our first Community Carol Festival; we will make Advent wreaths as an act of worship, we will sing carols by candlelight, and we will hold a Christingle Service - and more besides.

    This is mission.  This is ministry... Messy, unpredictable, costly and courageous.  And the God who dreams of a renewed creation abso-bloomin'-lutely loves it! 

     

  • Poppies of Many Colours

    Today, as I do when I am not preaching on a 'second Sunday' I was helping with out Messy Sunday School - we use Messy Church (and other) resources and adapt them for out context.  Today the children had opportunity to make poppies from play-doh and from paper, among other activities designed to help them engage with Remembrance.

    We learned about the meanings of different colours of poppies, and why people might choose to wear them.  I learned something new too - as black poppies weren't something I could recall hearing about before...these recall the lives of African, and African heritage people whose lives were lost in wars.

    Today I stumbled across this tweet from RBL about poppies which seems helpful...

    rbl twitter post.jpg

     

  • Remembering...

    We live in a world marred by violence... whether that is drone strikes in Ukraine, bulldozers in Gaza, shootings in north Amrican high schools, stabbing on trains or high streets in the UK, or domestic violence hidden behind closed doors.

    We live in a world where peace, however we describe it, is in short supply.

    And so I think it is important to remember... not to glorify (the Great War poets debunked that myth long ago) not to celebrate 'us' beating 'them' (because 'they' are, after all, 'us') but with sobriety and sadness to keep in mind both the devastation of war and the hope of peace.

    This year, my 'Poppy Scotland' poppy came from Edinburgh, my 'RBL' poppy from Crewe railway station (where they seemed to have uncovered a stash of poppies with plastic stems), the 'Peace Pledge Union' is an old one, stored away each year.

    I remember and honour conscripts and volunteers who served and serve in the armed forces
    I remember and honour those whose consciences meant and mean refusal to serve in armed forces
    I remember and honour the animals - horses, dogs, pigeons and cats - who found and find themselves conscripted for military service

    I remember - and choose never to forget - both the potential for human inhumanity and the hoped for promise of eternal peace.