Friday, 4 August 2017

August/September Newsletter



Rector’s Reflection
“What you are is a gift from God, what you become is your gift to God”
Hans Urs von Balthasar
We all remember the parable of the talents (Matthew25:14 -30) where the servants are given the ‘talents’ according to their ability and entrusted with them with varying results.
This is an amazing parable and it speaks deeply to us all. For as the 20th Century Swiss theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar puts it we are all born with our own special gifts, freely given, but it is what we do with them with our lives that really counts. What we become, how we use our lives is in other words, our gift to God.

As human beings we are formed by what we do in our lives, to ourselves and to others, it is the actions we take, the decisions we make that ultimately are what we become, and what we do over the years slowly creates the person, body and soul.

What we do in our lives really matters, the innocent child can become a saint or a monster, it all depends on so many factors, some we can influence, some we cannot. But we can all choose, we can choose the path of faith, hope and love or we can walk away. When we choose to follow that path, when we choose to use the gifts we have been given in service to our creator we return fully to God the gift we have been given.

The gift of life is a special one, precious and unique to each individual born on the earth, I am currently thinking a lot about new life and how we celebrate the birth of future generations as I prepare to Baptize Granddaughters Elizabeth Rose in September and Millie Skye after Iain and Charlotte’s Wedding in December, I always end my baptismal sermons with these words, which I hope offer encouragement for who and what they will become.

“May you shine as a beacon of hope and love to your life’s end”

I pray that we all can shine as lights in our world today as we give thanks for the gift of life and offer all we have become to each other and to our loving, life affirming God.





Wednesday, 14 June 2017

Colours of the Wind



From our current Newsletter Rector’s Reflection – Colours of the Wind
 You can own the earth and still
All you'll own is earth until
You can paint with all the colours of the wind
I wonder how many of you remember where these words come from, and yes they are from that Disney movie ‘Pocahontas’. Our girls loved this film when they were little and leant to sing the song and its one that has always stuck in my mind too, because to me its speaks of the need to be open to ‘colours of the wind’ to the colours of the mighty rushing wind that blew through the lives of Jesus’ disciples that first Pentecost, that will blow through our lives if only we let them.
It seems to me that intentional or not the song picks up on so much that is wrong in our world today, when the endless pursuit of growth, of possessions, seems to make us unhappier by the year. When the noise of life dims the colours, the message the Holy Spirit can bring to us all.
Pentecost presents us with an opportunity to pause, to consider how we are living each day. Are we relying on the power of God’s Spirit? Are we an open channel for the Spirit’s gifts? Are we attentive to the guidance of the Holy Spirit? Is the fruit of the Spirit (love, joy, peace, etc.) growing in our lives? Most Christians, including me,(I hope) try to live as if we are always aware of the calling of the Spirit, but is this true? how often are we unable to hear its call, to feel its gentle breeze, to see its glowing colours. We are limited by our fear, our fear of seeing more that the mundane the ordinary, and by our tendency to be distracted from God’s work in us. Pentecost offers a chance to confess our failure to live by the Spirit and to ask the Lord to fill us afresh with his power.
For the Holy Spirit can bring freshness and colour to our lives, no matter how tired and weary we maybe, so as we move from the season of Easter to Pentecost and into the long summer and autumn of ordinary time may we seek, not just to be open to the ‘colours of the wind’ of the spirit, but to use them to paint and make our lives and the lives of those around us and those we pray for more beautiful than they have ever been.
With every blessing
Liz

Tuesday, 31 January 2017

Sunday's Sermon



Justice & Mercy (The Beatitudes) 29th January 2017

On a warm spring day many years ago I sat with a colleague drinking coffee and discussing their goals, how to fund them and what the results would be. I was reminded of that this morning as I listened to the news and tried to square the ever-growing circle of today’s readings with the reality of the world today.
Our subject was Nuclear Power, my colleague was an activist (please ask detailed questions later) and want to ban weapons and power and saw that as an achievable goal. I pointed out that the Pandora’s box was opened when the bomb fell on Hiroshima and you couldn’t put it back, that the goal of trying to save the planet from nuclear destruction was a good one but be aware this is not a goal you are going to achieve. At this point they turned to me and said, ‘well then what is the point? If I felt I wasn’t going to succeed I wouldn’t do it!”
Ah, do you ever feel like that, when you declare your faith i.e. “nothing ever changes , what is the point?” I think we all do, especially when we see those professing the name of Christ utter words Of Franklin Graham ( son of Billy) who has stated that ‘ the ban of Syrian refugees is not a bible issue.
“Jesus' command to love and welcome the stranger did not mean the US should welcome more refugees.
"It's not a biblical command for the country to let everyone in who wants to come, that's not a Bible issue," he said.”
How ironic then that our readings from Micah and Matthew todays M & M’s should be so diametrically opposed to that view. And what does the Lord require of you  ‘do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with your god’ And the beatitudes:
Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
“Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.
“Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.
“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.
“Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.
“Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.
“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

It does render you speechless doesn’t it that for all the insistence on the Bible on the most important parts like the passage from Micah, the rights of the aliens in your land and their treatment, the beatitudes the commandments, love God & Neighbour, the Lord’s prayer which people parrot out of their mouths every Sunday it hasn’t changed anything

I spotted a great cartoon on Facebook this morning ; it goes like this:

Jesus is teaching the crowd and says ‘Love you enemies, do good to those who hate you’
a shout from the crowd ‘ But Jesus what about if they’re Muslim’
Jesus answers ‘OK, let me start over from the beginning, let me know where I lost you!’

‘Let me know where I lost you’ – In the fear of the other perhaps, in the need to take rather than to give, in the desire for greatness, in the inability to see life as a gift that all must equally share. And this mind set is infections, I have this postcard on my desk it says in Gaelic & English;

‘One snotty nose can infect a whole Church'

AKA, one idea can infect the whole be it congregation, community or nation. For once an idea takes root in a person in a group, in a nation it can spread, it can overturn all in its path, it can become an infection. This week saw Holocaust Memorial Day a day we remember the 6 million Jews and others murdered in the Gas Chambers, we also remember the victims of other genocidal acts and it seems we still do not learn, that ideas good and bad can become infections that spread.

I apologise for being depressing this morning and I don’t really want to be, because I do believe that even the smallest act of kindness, or mercy of peacemaking can help to change things. But it takes action, the action of all who disagree with the teachings of hate and bigotry and vengeance and I could go on. You will of heard this quote sometimes attributed to Edmund Burke

“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.”

So doing nothing is not an option, keeping silent is not an option, tutting about it quietly and accepting the status quo is not an option, coming to church on Sunday and declare the faith of Jesus and the ignoring responsibility for the rest of the week is not an option.

Such actions or lack of action leads to an emptiness of hope, of love, of compassion, which in the end leads to becoming part of the very evil  you despise. If you take nothing else away from this morning remember not my words but the words of Micah ‘

‘what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness,
and to walk humbly with your God?’

and the words of our Lord Jesus Christ himself, which can help to mitigate evil and emptiness and aid our troubled world, one of the Beatitudes

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled”  Amen

Trinity Sunday 2020

An excellent semon today from our Ordinand -in -Training Rachael. The Southwark Trinity – After Rublev by Meg Roe (megroe.com) ...