ALMOST SPELLING ‘HOLY’

WRITING ABOUT stained glass fragments “blown apart in wars” and haphazardly reassembled later, the priest poet David Scott, in the second stanza of his A Window in Ely Cathedral, tells of

A leering bit of face with twisted lips,
a bit of beard, and letters almost spelling ‘holy’,
a sheaf of corn, a leaf, and then the sun dips,
lighting Mary in her simple glory.

Piecing Together
A Window in Ely Cathedral,

stanza 2 of 3, page 29

In the economy of God there’s something afoot. I can feel it in my bones. The downtrodden, the dispossessed, the shattered, the fragmented and the forgotten, wherever they are in the world, are raising their voices. They cry for the reconciliation, resurrection and restoration of a humane humanity – for people of every race and nation, and of every creed (or lack thereof), or “class”, or colour. Too much has been blown apart by wars and for too long. But days wear on, the sun dips in her course, illuminating that which speaks of life’s real glory, and is thereby truly holy.

This is exciting. This is the stuff of the reign of the Source of all of our lives, to whom we have prayed, and with whom we have yearned, in every time and place, in every political and religious tradition, for so very long. Whether we’re speaking of ordinary Libyans standing up to be counted, intent on “occupying” their own entitlement to a bit of their own space as human beings; whether we’re speaking of Occupy New York, or Occupy London, or occupy-a-space-in-the-queue for fresh air, or clean water, or a bowl of rice, something is most assuredly afoot. The sun dips, lighting Mary in her simple glory, and because at evensong we’re rather quieter than usual we may hear her softly say and pray

he hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts. He hath put down the mighty from their seat: and hath exalted the humble and meek

Come Christ-Mass this year the stable and the tent will not be featured only in hand-picked and glossy Christmas cards. Tents and stables are being raised up alongside cathedrals and churches. Tents and stables are being raised up in our dreams and in our slowly-awakening hearts. Here are opportunities to catch real glimpses for the possibilities of life’s glory, opportunities that are thereby truly holy. Some amongst us, nonetheless, will not look any more kindly upon such fragmented opportunities than they would ever have looked upon the teenage mother in the stable of Bethlehem.

But something of and from the divine is afoot. The leering bit of face with twisted lips, a bit of beard, and letters almost spelling ‘holy’, must give way to the sun’s dipping

lighting Mary in her simple glory.

MAXIMILIAN’S BAPTISM

THE FULL HOUSE for the joy-filled Baptism of Maximilian this morning gives me (another) opportunity to head up this post with my very favourite account, by a simply wonderful narrator, of Jesus’ Baptism! But more than that, it’s always such a joy when our House for the Church is full of people come to celebrate the goodness of God and the richness of the gifts we revel in. And there’s no greater gift to a family than that of an infant. Nor, perhaps, any greater responsibility laid upon older shoulders. Bringing infants to Baptism in and into the House of the Lord provides glorious opportunity for all of us to reflect upon the giftedness and gratuitousness of our lives, upon our hopes and our aspirations, what – in co-creating with, and in, and surrounded by God – we want to make of our world, our humanity, our society, our church – for Maximilian, for ourselves, and for God.

“I baptise with water”, said John the Baptist. One who will come after me will baptise with Holy Spirit. And so it came to pass. Today and every day humankind is baptised “new every morning” by the Spirit of Divine Grace and Love. Perhaps that’s why Maximilian and his wonderful parents were smiling so much in our sacramental celebration of the fact this morning. Perhaps that’s why people had travelled from far and wide to celebrate the gift and the treasure. Yes! – wherever and whenever humankind is “baptised” in the Spirit of God we can rest assured that the Source of our Life continues to turn the world upside down. “Whoever has seen (this human) me has seen the Father” said the anointed Jesus to Philip. And this morning he might have said “whoever has seen Maximilian has seen the Father”. What a joy, what a commission, what a responsibility – this living of the Life and Love of God in and through each one of us, dear created people.

DIVINE PARENT,
Mother and Father, Sister and Brother of us all,
in company with Jesus,
in the power of your Spirit,
with prophets, priests and royal leaders,
and with every woman, man and child
upon the face of the earth,
we bless you for the gift of life and of abundance.
And as we bless you we also ask
your blessing for ourselves that we may be
inspired, strengthened and encouraged daily
to share that life and that abundance
throughout the world.

HOW CAN I SERVE?

FRANK BENNETT IS OUR CHIEF SIDESPERSON. He arrived in Church the other day and greeted me, as he very frequently does, with the words “what can I do?”. Frank’s entire life as a churchman arises from the fundamental question he asks of God. “How can I serve?”. And this morning he will have celebrated the fact that his wife was serving the gathered Church in the office of Reader, his daughter (our former Young Church leader) and son-in-law were away in Cambridge (at Ely Cathedral) spending time with other friends engaged in ministry, before Paul begins training for the priesthood at Mirfield in September.

One of Frank’s grandsons served alongside him as a sidesperson today. Another grandson read the Epistle. When I thanked one of these grandsons for the encouragement he and his brothers are providing for their parents, at what is a time of upheaval in their family life, his reply was “Thanks. But it’s time we stepped out of our comfort zones isn’t it? And with Dad you can see the call written on his face”. I honour Grandfather Frank and his whole family.

One of the signs of spiritual maturity in the life of any church is a steadily growing number of vocations to ministry – in its many and varied forms. Tonight I heard the Reverend Gill Newton – our local Methodist Superintendent Minister – tell a large gathering that “we Methodists believe in the ministry of the whole people of God.” It was good to hear the murmurs of approval and assent, for we Anglicans do, too. So it’s an especial joy when we see the fruits of God’s call in our very midst.

I’ve mentioned already that Paul Deakin’s off to Mirfield in September. Verger John Baker will, in the same month, be licensed as a pastoral assistant. Ralph Luxon and Sue Taylor are getting stuck into new ministries in the office of churchwarden. Yvonne Hope and Jill Elston have just completed a marvellous first year as Young Church leaders (aided warmly by a very substantial team of willing voluntary ministries). Bob Munn is serving a term as Chairman of our Diocesan Advisory Committee. Graham Knight, our Treasurer, asks how the ministry he offers might be of service to others beyond St Michael’s. PCC Secretary Ann Walker is interested in furthering the work of prayer and meditation. Tracy Ward has just been accepted on the Diocesan Foundations for Ministry Course, following in Verger John’s footsteps. Tricia Munn is overseeing Growth Action Planning. Administrator Janet Ketteringham continues to undergird and sustain all of our ministries every day of the week. Bryan Goodwin clipped the fearsomely difficult and unfriendly holly hedge at the vicarage. Dianne Goodwin acts as unpaid assistant verger. David and Maureen Want tend the church gardens assisted by a large team of helpers. Joanna Yeates folds pew sheets – every week of the year. Sexton John Hanlon will turn his hand to pretty much anything … the list of ministries numbers over 200 volunteers at St Michael’s alone so it rarely seems appropriate to single out particular individuals. And yet it also seems important to try to describe what’s happening sometimes.

Rachael Hunt, baptised only two years ago, already has an established pastoral ministry among us, at the age of just 17, with a special and hugely appreciated concern for older members of the church family particularly – and every member and non-members more generally. Rachael, who hopes to read Theology at University and eventually to become a priest, is well known in our local churches as she has a keen interest in ecumenism and in fostering respect and understanding between different religious traditions. Rachael invited me to hear her first ever sermon this morning. Delivered with only scant reference to her notes, I was spellbound. Rachael will be preaching for the benefit of all of us, as will ordinand Paul, in September.

All of these wonderful people, and many more, seen and unseen, upfront and quietly in the background, leading public prayer and praying at home, have a passion for Gospel. Good News for a world in need of good news in a million different situations. (Eleven and a half million starving situations in East Africa). And as I pray for them, each and every day, I thank God for the miracle in our midst of a host of “angels and archangels”, on earth as it is in heaven, who are responding to the Divine call with the hallowed words “How Can I Serve?”. God is good and no word that comes from the Divine mouth ever returns to its Source unused or unheard. The Church today is not the same as it was. The Church today is not the Church it will be. But tonight I offer heartfelt thanks to God for the Church – and the many-membered Body of Christ that constitutes the Church – that is.

How Can I Serve? …

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ASLEEP OR AWAKE

EXPLORING GOD’S MERCY tonight in a lovely little Churches Together group at Woodford. I’m always as happy as a sandboy in that kind of small, open, prayerful, discussion group environment. The group itself was the best illustration of The Song of Calm – Psalm 107.23-34 which was the bedrock of our explorations. “Then they rejoiced because they were at rest. And he brought them to the safe harbour they longed for.” And once again a group of relative strangers became deeper friends. God has a habit, it seems, of drawing people together as one. And as I drove home something Meister Eckhart said, around 700 years ago, circled across space and time into my heart and mind:

Earth cannot get away from heaven: let the earth drop down or rise upward, heaven still penetrates it, imbuing it with strength and making it fruitful, whether it will or no. That is how God treats man: when he thinks to escape God, he runs into God’s bosom, for every hideout is open to him. God begets his own Son in you whether you like it or not, whether you sleep or wake – still God is at work. That man is not aware of it is the fault of his [spiritual] tongue, which is smeared with the scum of creatures, in which there is none of the salt of God’s love. If we had God’s love in us, we could taste God in all his works and we would accept anything as from God and finish his work along with him. In sameness [of intent] we are his only begotten Son.

Meister Eckhart (c.1260-1327)
Dominican friar and German mystic

Exploration of God’s mercy tonight revealed again for me that, awake or asleep, we are brought to the safe harbour we long for. That, indeed, is Mercy.

LIGHT BEARERS

TO PADIHAM NAZARETH UNITARIAN CHAPEL this afternoon for the Induction of their new Minister, Jeff Gould. Absolutely freezing cold when we stepped out of the car, and a wonderfully embracing warmth of welcome as soon as we stepped over the threshold of the Chapel. Thank you, Nazareth, for your generous hospitality. Jeff’s a fortunate man – I know he’ll be well fed! And Nazareth is fortunate to have a new, wise and open hearted man of God to share in ministry alongside. How very good it was to be present in company with such a large ecumenical presence and to meet friends old and new – many of us giving an account of how it seemed we’d known Jeff “almost forever”.

I came away with lots of food for thought and thanksgiving, and two things in particular: the first connected me immediately with a meeting of Greater Manchester Churches Together held, 15 or so years ago, in the strikingly simple, and for that all the more beautiful, Cross Street Unitarian Chapel right in the heart of Manchester City Centre. It was good to meet Jane Barraclough the present-day Minister of Cross Street today. It’s a wonderful oasis. And I sat at lunch that day with Christopher Mayfield, then Bishop of Manchester, and one of the most gracious and calming bishops I’ve ever known – an oasis himself, I thought at the time. But what I remember about that occasion most clearly was not the content of the business meeting, nor the rather splendid lunch, but the wonderfully quiet Act of Worship that preceded it. And the Unitarian chalice light, that wonderfully poignant moment when

We light this candle as a symbol of our faith
By its light, may our vision be illumined;
By its warmth, may our fellowship be encouraged;
And by its flame, may our yearnings for peace, justice
And the life of the spirit be enkindled.

I was deeply moved by the act and by the sign. And that same sign opened today’s Induction Service. How thankful I am for an image that invites me, and all who share in the act, to remember our human calling to be ‘chalices’, to be bearers of light. Glorious singing, including a stirring rendition of Mozart’s gorgeous Exsultate, Jubilate, an inviting sermon from retired Methodist minister Roger Stubbings, and much else besides led us to a final prayer of dedication and to the second chief memory I brought back to Bramhall with me – J G Whittier’s

He whom the Master loved has truly spoken:
The holier worship, which God deigns to bless,
Restores the lost, binds up the spirit broken,
And feeds the widow and the parentless.
O loving soul, fold to thy heart thy neighbour;
Where pity dwells the peace of God is there;
To worship rightly is to love each other;
Each smile a hymn, each kindly deed a prayer.

Follow with reverent steps the great example
Of him whose holy work was doing good:
So shall the wide earth seem our Father’s temple,
Each loving life a psalm of gratitude.
Then shall all shackles fall; the stormy clangour
Of wild war-music oe’r the earth shall cease;
Love shall tread out the baleful fire of anger,
And in its ashes plant the tree of peace.

(sung to Irish – “Danny Boy”)

And finally to the extinguishing of the chalice:

Though we extinguish the light of this candle,
Our faith burns on.
Our vision remains bright;
Our fellowship warm;
And our yearning for peace, justice
And the life of the spirit, constant.
So be it until we meet again.

An evening commitment meant that I was unable to sit down with the 250 or so other guests who were to be treated to a sumptuous tea. But I’m glad to post this note to register great gratitude and thankfulness for The Reverend Jeffrey Lane Gould, and for a taste of Padiham’s lovely hospitality … until we meet again.

WHAT’S IT (SAYING) TO ME?

click photo to enlarge

I’VE BEEN PONDERING the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. I don’t want to let it go again just yet, don’t want simply to consign it to next January, Sunday’s having come and gone, and having made a happy visit to “someone else’s church”, because the question, the important question that such a week begs is to do with what kind of “life in all its fullness” do we think we’re looking for? What might the Divine will for unity be? What’s the ‘theme for 2011′ really asking us to see? -

One in the apostles’ teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread and prayer. Acts 2 : 42-47

- what kind of teaching were the apostles one in? What kind of fellowship? What’s the breaking of bread about? What kind of prayer? Why does anybody care? What has any of this got to say to me, about me? Because it must be first about something that matters to, that speaks to me, before I can hope to know, to feel in another human soul, any kind of real unity. And yet I do know and I do feel real unity between me and many another human person who calls me beyond my “I” to a life-enhancing “We”. And not all of them by a long chalk walk the spiritual paths that the Church would always recognise as Christianity.

And I’m becoming more and more sure that a great deal of that knowing and a great deal of that feeling emanates from my quietly growing ability to “let it be”. The repenting, the metanoia, the turning around to look at life – and at this and that – from a different angle keeps confronting me with “let it be”.

The apostles’ teaching encourages us to follow in The Way of Jesus whose life was an essay in being free from anxious thought about anything. “Behold the birds of the air and the lilies of the field which neither reap nor spin, yet your heavenly Father cares for them”. The fellowship the apostles shared arose from their attendance at the same school of life. The bread they broke and shared spoke of hospitality given and received by a whole humankind that simply wouldn’t be alive without it! And then there was the poetry of their prayer. That which lay within them, “in there”, that every human being on earth is – one might almost say – pre-programmed to need to share. For ever and ever Amen. Even unto martyrdom if necessary.

Where’s our unity? How shall we love God and one another more beautifully? Over thirty years ago Brother Roger Schütz of Taizé and many hundreds of young pilgrims from every part of the globe sowed a seed that’s still alive in me. A seed that has flourished and been nurtured and watered through years of ensuing worship. And the gentle breeze of the Spirit that now wafts through her leaves and branches whispers “let it be” … that’s how you’ll come to know life in all its fullness, that’s where you’ll find your real self … “let it be” … that’s where you’ll find real unity.

What was it that Rachel Mann was “saying” to me over the weekend? And Giles Fraser, too:

I WONDER what it might be like for us religious types to let go of our need to matter, and to embrace our irrelevance. I suspect that we might be more relaxed and a little more attractive. – Rachel Mann

Forget church politics. The wilderness – even an ecumenical one – is an opportunity to discover what is most important: to search out the source of life, and to share that life with others. This is what all baptised Christians are called to do. – Giles Fraser

What might the Divine will for unity be? What’s the ‘theme for 2011′ really asking us to see? And what’s any of it saying to, what’s any of it got to do with me? And (in this year of the AV) with thee?

JOY OF THE KINGDOM

I’M TO PREACH AT ST VINCENT’S R.C. CHURCH tomorrow in the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Isaiah speaks of a people having seen a great light; the psalm, of the Lord’s being our light and our help; Paul’s encouraging the Church in Corinth to be united in belief and practice and to preach Good News; the first disciples respond to Jesus’ call to follow; the Communion Antiphon: “Look up at the Lord with gladness and smile; your face will never be ashamed”; and the Prayer after Communion: “God, all-powerful Father, may the new life you give us increase our love and keep us in the joy of your kingdom.” So I just know it’s going to be a good day. We’re going to be given new life. New every morning. And that’s where and how we’re all truly united. God is good.

COMMUNION SHARED

bramhallurc

Bramhall United Reformed Church

TO BRAMHALL URC THIS MORNING for “pulpit swap” and I sang my heart out. Great hymns, warm, inclusive, welcoming people. One lady told me “my brother’s a Catholic, my sister’s an Anglican priest, I’m a Presbyterian … and this morning was just for me.” A service, of course, for and about God and his Kingdom, (that’s what all worship’s for), and me and thee, and Christ inspired unity. “He has broken down the enmity between us”. Alleluia! “Come away to a deserted place and rest awhile” … in “communion” shared. (see Patches goes to Lambeth). Their pastor’s already a dear friend. And I know I’d like to go out to play with all of  them again. Onwards and upwards!

J’ESPÈRE RETOURNER

THANK YOU SO MUCH to all the wonderful friends and well-wishers who have wished “many happy returns” on my 50th birthday. Happy returns abound in heart and mind. Jonathan Applebee’s train set was a joy when he and I were 10; bowled over by Taizé at 20; youngest Ruth, best birthday gift, at 30; barbecue at Ringway at 40; bacon sandwiches with Jilly and “If you’re happy and you know it” bellowed by our Active Angels at 50. I am happy, and I know it, and I really want to show it.

Brother Roger of Taizé wrote in 2000:

During his visit to Taizé on October 5, 1986, Pope John Paul II recalled the love his predecessor had for our community with words that inspired our gratitude: “I would like to express to you my affection and my trust with these simple words with which Pope John XXIII, who loved you so much, greeted Brother Roger one day: ‘Ah, Taizé, that little springtime!’” And John Paul commented: “My desire is that the Lord may keep you like a springtime that blossoms and that He keep you little, in the joy of the Gospel and the transparency of brotherly love.”

Oh! Taizé was indeed a little springtime for me, thirty years ago. J’espère retourner. But it only takes one visit there to be smitten forever, to recall the bonds of peace and of ecumenical love, to be forever caught up in worship offered by thousands, and God alone the object of it. I recall two young lads who’d fled Amin’s Uganda; a by then very venerable Lord MacLeod (of Iona) reliving his youth; Brother Roger beaming, worship teeming and brimming with loving and communal life. Loads of hot chocolate and Laudate Dominum. Poppy fields. Simple sunshine. Simple word. Simple prayer. Simple diet. Simple meal.

Radio 4s Prayer for the Day today was offered by Craig Gardner

Jesus … asked his friends to remember him with a simple meal. It could’ve turned into a morbid fascination, except that death was not the end for him. New life was born out of that most cruel of events, and in the moment of his resurrection a fresh future was unfolded, one that the church remembers regularly, a time when all tears are wiped away and every hurt is healed: it is a future to remember.

J’espère retourner: to a little springtime that blossoms and that keeps me little, in the joy of the Gospel and the transparency of love. Ecumenical FCA. Fellowship confessing a future to remember. Happy returns.