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A Skinny Fairtrade Latte in the Food Court of Life

  • WPCU 2026 - Taize Style

    Yesterday afternoon, a very dark, dreich one at that, around fifty of us gathered for a Taize style service for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.  It was lovely... gentle, low lighting, harmonies and cantor for the chants, and the opportunity to light candles as a symbol of unity.  By the time the service ended, and I was able to snatch a photo, the candles had almost burned down, a flaming  mass of candle wax that could equally have symbolised Pentecost.  It was a lovely occasion, and really did offer light in the darkness.

    Here is one of the Prayers from the CTBI material that accompanies the week...

    Lord Jesus Christ,
    You bring us together in all our diversity,
    as family and church.
    In the face of so many situations on earth,
    where hope has given way to despair
    and hearts are wounded and emptied by disappointment,
    renew our strength and unify us.
    Help us to share Your hope wherever we find ourselves.
    You are the true Light,
    who casts out the darkness of sin,
    despair and brokenness,
    who shines into our hearts, releasing
    the joy and the true hope of Your eternal love for all.
    Amen.   

  • Thinking About Leading Worship... A Workshop

    A full day, with eight participants and me facilitating as we scratched the surface of thinking about leading public worship.  A great group of people, some of whom have lots of worship leading experience, and others for whom it is all new.  Some good conversations and gracious engagement.  Someone said that they had found it useful, and I'll take that... if someone felt a bit more confident or encouraged in what they already do, that's a 'win' in my book.

    It's been a crazily busy couple of weeks (hence absence of blogging) and it's unlikely to let up in the next little while.  Today was a good - if fairly long and very full day... and one that feels as if it was time well spent.

  • Young at heart...

    Snow doesn't last long in these parts, and after a full day at the desk yesterday and a lot of Admin this morning, it was time for a little light relief... it's self-evident I didn't take any art courses when I was younger, but I had fun.

     

  • Epiphany...

    Epiphany, a word that seems to have emerged, in liturgical use anyway, in the early fourteenth century, and which has its roots in the Greek epi = 'upon' and phanenein = 'to show'.  For most of us in the west, it is associated with the arrival of the Magi, traditionally portrayed as three kings, often, though not always, white European, and sometimes as one white, one black and one oriental in appearance.  Courtesy of Sunday's worship leader, and the Methodist website, we were reminded that the festival was originally concerned not with the magi, but with Jesus' Baptism (think of the descent of the spirit as a dove) and of the miracle of water in to wine (the first 'sign' in the Johannine account).  This does help explain why, to this day, the Lectionary has a decidedly muddled chronology at this time of year, with Holy Innocents before the arrival of the magi, and the Baptism of Christ before the presentation of the infant in the Temple... two (or more) different things are being explored and expressed.  I have, in years past, noted that the word 'phantom' shares the same etymology as 'epiphany' and the descent of the 'Holy Ghost' as a dove sits well with that.

    This year, though, what struck me most was a conversation with a child aged about seven that took place on Sunday...  Since we closed our Sunday School, we have had an influx of African-heritage and African-American heritage children who are an absolute delight.  On Sunday they were colouring in pictures of the magi (mainly portrayed as kings on camels) and what struck me was how, without pausing, each child coloured their magi with white skin.  'Do you think they might have looked like you?' I asked the child... they shook their head.  'Do you think they looked like me?' I asked... they nodded vigorously.  That saddened me. 'I am sure at least one looked like you,' I commented, 'with lovely brown eyes and beautiful brown skin.'  The child looked doubtful, but a younger sibling smiled  brightly.

    The point, so we often claim, of Epiphany, is the revelation of Christ to the gentiles - to the foreigners, the people who weren't Jewish, the people who didn't look like 'us', believe like 'us', think like 'us'.  The very word 'magi' linked to the more familiar 'magic' or 'magician' may infer an eastern mystical, or so-called pagan, worldview... coming from the east they may well have been Persian, might have practiced what we know as Zoroastrianism, and certainly weren't 'Christian' (had the term existed back then, which it didn't).  In this story the unexpected truth is that people who are 'not remotely like us' are included in the story.  Which leaves me pondering how our portrayals of the magi - as kings, as male, as white - exclude, and who might discover themselves included if our images were more diverse? Our worship leader had worked hard to select images that weren't all white and western; this is in no way a criticism of that, rather a reminder to self to be alert to unintentional/unconscious biases that perpetuate white privilege/superiority. 

    (Image copied from here)

  • Snow in Cheshire...

    It snowed yesterday... and overnight apparently... enough to close one of the arterial roads not far from where I live.  In my garden, there is enough snow on the tiny solar-powered lights to create an illusion of Narnia, at least if I share a close-up without a wider context.

    This morning, I received a supermarket delivery, the driver very apologetic to be running late, but also very cheery and helpful.  Another delivery brought a new all-weather coat (timely, the one I've worn for the last eight years is literally falling apart), the person was equally cheery.

    Both cats have been out to explore this strange, white, vista, with Sophie, wisely, rapidly coming back into the warm, whilst Sasha sniffed out the periphery of the garden, even though it meant getting cold wet paws.

    And I have 'worked from home', getting a decent amount of admin type stuff done, and catching up my emails.

    One news website says this is the worst snow for fifteen years in Scotland... I have no idea if this is so, but I do remember the snow from fifteen years ago, the walking on ice to get to the cancer hospital, the joy of sticking my bald head out of the window to cool down when hot flushes were too horrendous...

    I like snow... I was born into snow (1962/63 winter)... I learned to drive on ice and snow (1983/84 winter)... and, if nothing else, it reminds me that I am still here, still well, and able to enjoy life in all its fullness.

    Not an erudite post, just random ramblings on a snowy Monday at the start of 2026!