06 November 2009
When will we ever learn...?
Watching the news last evening, and seeing new crosses being added daily to the memorial garden at Westminster Abbey was profoundly moving. Hearing the parents and grandparents of a young man killed in Afghanistan express their views, some for, some against, yet united in pride for their loved one and grief at his untimely death illustrated the complexity of it all. Preparing for Sunday's worship when some will recall their own familiy members killed a lifetime ago and others have relatives or friwnds on active service, when some are avowed pacifists and others work on defence projects, I find myself asking, as I ask myself each year, when we will ever learn?
(Pictures from British Legion and Poppy Scotland websites)
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05 November 2009
One Bad Pun...
Meet Millie Mole. If you don't understand the awful pun, then you clearly managed to avoid studying chemistry beyond 'O' level/'O' grade/GCSE/standard grade or any other equivalent 15/16+ qualification.
Millie is my new friend and has joined my church where she has already made herself very much at home and is enjoying meeting new people. She speaks very quietly - only I can hear her - but she is very keen to engage in church life. Amazingly she has a good grasp of theology and enough nouse to know when it is better to stay tucked up in my office (such as this Sunday coming) - hopefully she can teach me a thing or two...
Having children and young people in church is WONDERFUL, as is not being the youngest adult! I am really looking forward to this Sunday when the Sunday School will be leading our thoughts on the reason for Remembrance Sunday. Children, especially quite small ones, have an amazing innate ability to sense the 'moment' and can remain still and silent for a whole two minutes, knowing that this is something different.
Millie Mole is fun to work with (though a new challenge in her own right) but having the privilege of sharing with children and young people is a real blessing. I am excited about the opportunities that are opening up to build relationships with them and share in their faith stories.
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Prayers for Grief and Gratitude
Thought I'd post a prayer sequence I used last Sunday evening, in case anyone finds it helpful/useful. The bidding and response (last two lines of each stanza) were 'given' and I wrote the rest around them. Writing them helped me in my own rather dazed state at the time...
When Jesus stood at the grave of his friend Lazarus, he wept because he loved him
In the ache of separation,
In the tears of grief,
The numbness of loss
Reassure us of your promise:
Do not be afraid for I shall be with you
Lighten our path, Lord, show us the way
As Jesus hung on the cross, alone and in agony, his body wracked with pain and his slips parched he had the audacity to ask ‘My God, why?’
In our confusion and questioning
In our denial or disbelief
In our anger and in our emptiness
Reassure us of your promise:
Do not be afraid for I shall be with you
Lighten our path, Lord, show us the way
On meeting Mary in the garden, as she sought to embrace him, Jesus said ‘do not cling on to me’
In our reluctance to let go
In our desire to turn back the clock
In every ‘if only’ that haunts our minds
Reassure us of your promise:
Do not be afraid for I shall be with you
Lighten our path, Lord, show us the way
In an upstairs room where bewildered disciples needed reassurance, Jesus said “peace be with you”
In our remembering of times past
In our celebration of lives lived
In our grief and in our gratitude
Reassure us of your promise:
Do not be afraid for I shall be with you
Lighten our path, Lord, show us the way
A man had a dream in which he glimpsed eternity
There was no more death
No more mourning
No more weeping
No more pain
Lord of life,
You shared our life with all its joy and sorrow
You experienced our death, defeating its power with love
Lead us onwards in the confident hope of your promise:
Do not be afraid for I shall be with you
Lighten our path, Lord, show us the way
This day, and every day, Amen.
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