In our Gospel for Candlemas we meet a cast of characters we can recognise and relate to.
Mary the new mother
Joseph the father and husband
Simeon the strange but wise old man
Anna the effervescent and welcoming old woman
All brought into our focus by a 40 day old baby who is also our God and King. Each of these characters is given hope and new life in their encounter with the Christ-child. Simeon defies all he knows about the great and mighty messiah and recognises him in the babe in arms Anna bounces with joy and shares the hope of the new belonging for all encompassed by this babe, held in his mother's arms.
There is a glorious interlinking between these people in the snapshot of the temple. The give and receive from each other regardless of prescribed societal and religious norms. And herein lies a joy and a lesson for us as 'church'. We need each other. We are less than the Church without each other. Young and Old, Male and Female, gay and straight, able and less able bodied, healthy and sick, happy and miserable black, white and all the colours in between. Only together are we Church, are we the Body of Christ.
Tuesday 5 February 2013
Sunday 27 January 2013
Fourth Sunday of Epiphany
‘The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.’ Isaiah 61.1-2
The search for community, as longed for by Nehemiah in our first reading this morning, and lived for by the first followers of Jesus, is rooted in the person of Jesus.
In our Gospel we turn to Jesus in his home town reading from the prophet Isaiah. Jesus has just returned from the desert following his baptism which marks the beginning of his public ministry.
In the gospel of Luke this is the first thing that Jesus does in his ministry – before he calls his disciples as recorded by St Mark and St Matthew and before he performs Miracles and wonders as recorded by St John.
Luke records Jesus declaring what his ministry is going to be about, a manifoesto is revealed if you like. The words of Jesus reveal what will be found at the heart of his ministry and work in Galilee.
It is interesting that this declaration of intent is not about teaching us a better spirituality, but about doing God’s justice, and creating God’s community? The Christian body that Paul is pleading for, in our second reading from his first Epistle to the Corintihians, will be recognisable by the way it treats others. To be the body of Christ, we have to do as Jesus did.
As we hear these words of Jesus we should ask ourselves in what way does our life together reflect the “manifesto” of Jesus declared in the synagogue of Nazareth?
In what ways do we as a community, as a congregation, as individual members of the body of Christ:
Bring good news to the poor?
Proclaim release to those held captive?
Give sight to the blind?
Set the oppressed free?
And proclaim a year of the Lords favour?
Friday 25 January 2013
The Conversion of St Paul
Today is the feast on which the Church commemorates what has traditionally been called the 'conversion' of St Paul. You can read about in it the book of Acts.
Recent New Testament scholarship has looked again at Paul, and questioned some of the settled ways of understanding him. You can listen to a good take on the conversion of Paul at the NT Pod here.
We pray today for all churches dedicated to St Paul, and especially for our own cathedral.
Today, Lord, we celebrate the conversion of Saint Paul,
your chosen vessel for carrying your name to the whole world.
Help us to make our way towards you by following in his footsteps,
and by witnessing to your truth before the men and women of our day.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.
Sunday 20 January 2013
The Wedding At Cana
Walking up to preach at St John's this morning was an interesting experience. It was much a case of skating as walking. The streets of West Hendon were pretty much deserted: just me in my cassock and the odd person heading to Sainsbury to panic-buy. I thought that, whatever hymns we'd chosen to sing this Sunday, we should have included 'See Amid the Winter's Snow'.
That wasn't the most inappropriate thought, since there is a real sense in which today's gospel reading both looks back to Christmas and develops the message of Christmas.
At the daytime Mass on Christmas Day we read the familiar verses from the beginning of John's gospel, which had their climax in those words that epitomise the message of Christmas: "The Word was made flesh and lived among us". The Word of God, God himself, without for one second ceasing to be God - with all that this involves - lived a human life, like ours.
But, we might ask, why? Why did the Word become flesh?
As we read on in John's gospel we find, in the first part of that gospel (known as the Book of Signs), the reasons that the Word was made flesh laid out for us in symbolic form, through a series of 'signs' worked by Jesus. And the first sign Jesus works is at a wedding in Cana, Galilee. He changes water into wine.
There are a thousand things to be said about the eleven verses of the Fourth Gospel which describe Jesus' transformation of water into wine. They are rich in symbolism - almost the entire Christian gospel is summed up in those verses. The water is placed in jars used for a Jewish ritual of purication ritual and then transformed - here we have a sign of the rich fulfilment of the Old Covenant, God's promises to the Jewish people (John's gospel, in the first chapter, has spoken of Moses, and promised 'grace upon grace'). And wine itself is an image used frequently in the Old Testament of the abundant life God promises his people. The transformation of water into wine happens 'on the third day' - looking forward to the ultimate transformation (of death into life) which will take place on a subsequent third day. Jesus, rather rudely to modern ears, calls Our Lady 'woman' and talks of his 'hour'. Jesus will next call his Mother 'woman' on the Cross, when his 'hour' has come.
There are a million sermons that could be preached on today's gospel. I chose to preach about the fact that this miraculous transformation of water into wine takes place at a wedding. Again and again in the New Testament - as we were reminded in today's Old Testament reading - God's passionate love for his People is described in terms of a desire for marriage. God, like an eager young suitor, wants nothing more than to be bound to God's People forever in love. And at the end of the New Testament, in the book of Revelation - written by someone in the same tradition as the author of John's gospel but (and I'm sorry to the people of St John's for deflating the heritage of our patron) as certainly as one can ever be about these things, not written by the same person - Heaven is described as the marriage feast of the Lamb. Our God is a God of love. And just as the best symbol human beings have come up with for love is marriage, one of the best symbols we can come up with for the love God has for us is marriage. God marries his people. And Christ is the one in whom God marries his people.
At Cana there is a wedding. Not, on the face of it, Jesus' wedding. Yet Jesus makes it his own. In the story he becomes the focus of attention. So much so that when the steward talks to the bridegroom at the end of the passage and says "you have saved the best until last" it is, at best, ambiguous whether he is talking to the literal bridegroom or to Jesus. The author of the Fourth Gospel knows what they are doing. Here we have the fist Sign of the Word made flesh. And the God who has promised repeatedly in the Old Testament to marry his people has made good on that promise. Here, in this man, we have a marriage feast the like of which we could not have imagined.
The gospel begins and ends with love. The first of Jesus' signs is about love. His death is about love. His resurrection is about love. And, more incredibly, it is about love for the likes of me, and the likes of you. And that love is the reason the Word became flesh.
Friday 18 January 2013
Week of Prayer for Christian Unity
Today is the first day of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.
We read in John's gospel of Jesus praying for his disciples, "that all may be one". We are encouraged this week to make this prayer our own.
Christian unity is not simply a sentimental affair - 'it would be nice if we could all get along'. Still less is it an organisational convenience - 'with so many different types of church, we're spreading our resources too thinly'. No, the visible unity of the Church is an immediate consequence of the nature of the Church itself, and its relationship to God's Kingdom. God wills to restore all things in Christ; God wills to bring into unity the human family divided by sin. The unity of the Church is a sign, an anticipation, of this oneness. To be united is a fundamental part of the calling of baptised people.
It's a calling that it is very easy to lose sight of in our contemporary situation. Christians disagree amongst ourselves about so much, and in this context it is difficult sometimes to believe that we could ever be one. Menawhile our consumer culture leads easily into the temptation to think that division amongst Christians is somehow a 'good thing' - different types of churches cater for different types of people; I can have a church that is exactly right for me, just as I can find the car, the phone, the i-Player play list, that reflects me as an individual. On this view, for example, the Anglican 'brand' might be seen as catering for a certain type of person, the Roman Catholic brand yet another, and so on for the Pentecostalists, Methodists, Orthodox...
Against this, we are called by the gospel to work for unity, not to lose sight of the vision of the Church as imaging the reconciliation of God's Kingdom. More than that, we must pray for unity. Because unity is not ultimately something we bring about. It is a gift - nothing other than the gift of the Spirit, the bond of love between the Father and the Son.
We read in John's gospel of Jesus praying for his disciples, "that all may be one". We are encouraged this week to make this prayer our own.
Christian unity is not simply a sentimental affair - 'it would be nice if we could all get along'. Still less is it an organisational convenience - 'with so many different types of church, we're spreading our resources too thinly'. No, the visible unity of the Church is an immediate consequence of the nature of the Church itself, and its relationship to God's Kingdom. God wills to restore all things in Christ; God wills to bring into unity the human family divided by sin. The unity of the Church is a sign, an anticipation, of this oneness. To be united is a fundamental part of the calling of baptised people.
It's a calling that it is very easy to lose sight of in our contemporary situation. Christians disagree amongst ourselves about so much, and in this context it is difficult sometimes to believe that we could ever be one. Menawhile our consumer culture leads easily into the temptation to think that division amongst Christians is somehow a 'good thing' - different types of churches cater for different types of people; I can have a church that is exactly right for me, just as I can find the car, the phone, the i-Player play list, that reflects me as an individual. On this view, for example, the Anglican 'brand' might be seen as catering for a certain type of person, the Roman Catholic brand yet another, and so on for the Pentecostalists, Methodists, Orthodox...
Against this, we are called by the gospel to work for unity, not to lose sight of the vision of the Church as imaging the reconciliation of God's Kingdom. More than that, we must pray for unity. Because unity is not ultimately something we bring about. It is a gift - nothing other than the gift of the Spirit, the bond of love between the Father and the Son.
A Prayer for Unity
Heavenly Father,
you have called us in the Body of your Son Jesus Christ
to continue his work of reconciliation
and reveal you to the world.
Forgive us the sins which tear us apart;
give us the courage to overcome our fears
and to seek that unity which is your gift and your will;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
Amen
you have called us in the Body of your Son Jesus Christ
to continue his work of reconciliation
and reveal you to the world.
Forgive us the sins which tear us apart;
give us the courage to overcome our fears
and to seek that unity which is your gift and your will;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
Amen
Tuesday 15 January 2013
Baptism of Christ
“
He will baptise with the Holy Spirit and Fire”
It's
interesting that both the worst that can happen to human beings - hell - and
the best that can happen to human beings - the Holy Spirit - have historically
been described in terms of fire.
All
those medieval pictures of Hell show raging fires, apparently totally out of
control. Yet those raging fires never actually burn people to a frazzle. Nobody
in hell seems to be permitted the relief of unconsciousness. It seems they must
go on and on, continuously suffering the agonies of death by fire, but without
actually enjoying the blessed release of dying.
Yet
in the Bible, fires which don't burn seem to be an indication not of the
absence of God, but of his presence.
When
Moses stood before the burning bush, the remarkable aspect of the bush was that
although it was alight, nothing was being burned.
When the Apostles received the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost, there's no
indication that the flames which appeared over their heads either scorched
their scalps or even singed a single hair.
In
today's gospel passage written in Luke's unmistakably elaborate and
story-telling style, John the Baptist says: "I baptise you with water, but
he who is mightier than I is coming…he will baptise you with the Holy Spirit
and with fire."
We're
given a glimpse in the book of Acts of the wild, untamable potential of God
himself, for which the symbol of fire does seem entirely appropriate. We're
given a glimpse in Acts, of the God of the Old Testament, who was so dangerous
that people had to be shielded from his presence, lest a slight accidental
contamination by God might destroy them (cf. Ex. 19:21f).
Occasionally
in the Hebnew scriptures we see the wild
destruction of God break out, apparently uncontrollably, such as in the days of
King David, when Uzzah put out a hand to steady the ark of the covenant and
prevent it from falling off its cart, and was instantly struck dead for his
pains (2 Sam. 6:6f).
And
then of course there is the terrible destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, for the abuse of hospitality displayed by the people of those cities, by God
raining fire from heaven upon the city. (Genesis 19)
In
each case, however abhorrent to our modern mind, there is a connection between
Gods wrath, Gods fiery temper and the sin and guilt of the people.
Rather
like our own attitude to the terrible forces for destruction that a single
flame can cause, our shock is caused by our failure to take fire seriously, our
failure to heed the warnings on the packet.
We
read of one time when the disciples of Jesus, having faced rejection from a
town wished Jesus to call down fire from heaven to destroy them, but he
refused, saying instead for them to move on to the next village.
There
is a danger to us if we fail to take seriously the need to make a choice, a
danger that we do not take seriously the judgement of God for our lives and as
result get our fingers burnt as it were. Baptism is about making a choice.
And
so the warnings remain, there are consequences for our actions but in all of
this God has been much more active in helping and supporting his people, than
in destroying them. And this is not just because we have the example and the
words of Jesus to act as a counter measure to the ferocity and violence of the
Old Testament. For in the Hebrew scriptures we have that wonderful passage from
Isaiah which was read to us today:
This
is what the LORD says - he who created you, ... he who formed you, … "Fear
not, for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine. When
you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the
rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will
not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze. For I am the LORD, your God,
… you are precious and honoured in my sight, and .. I love you. Do not be
afraid, for I am with you… Bring my sons from afar and my daughters from the
ends of the earth - everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my
glory, whom I formed and made."
Jesus,
the human expression of God, has brought this concern and love of God to its
ultimate fruition. At his own baptism, Jesus was anointed with the Holy Spirit,
but the image of the Holy Spirit wasn't fire, but a gentle dove. During Jesus'
life, the Holy Spirit was mainly manifest not so much through fire, but more
through a loving concern for all people. So in Jesus the fire was controlled
and put to use. The 'light of the world' is more of a gentle candle flame,
which has the potential to burst into fire and burn, but which is mostly
restrained and warm and loving.
And
perhaps that's what we should expect not only of God, but of ourselves.
We
should not be afraid of allowing the spark of the God within to be fanned into
a flame, provided we then allow God to take control and channel that flame
where he will.
When
we do receive the gift of his Spirit, when the spark of God is fanned into a
living and burning flame in our lives it releases great energy, warmth and
light for the work of the Church in brining about the longed for and promised
Kingdom.
Tuesday 8 January 2013
Sunday 6th January - Epiphany
Epiphany Chalk
It is customary, especially in Central Europe, for the faithful to bless their houses
at the Epiphany with blessed chalk. They write over their front door:
20 + C + M + B + 13. Obviously, the digits,
which appear at the beginning and end of the line, designate the new year.
‘CMB’ stands for the traditional names of the Magi (Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar)
and also signifies the Latin prayer Christus Mansionem Benedicat or
‘May Christ bless this dwelling!’
The inscription is made above the front door or porch,
so that all who enter and depart the home
may enjoy God’s blessing.
It also provides a very public witness to the Faith.
In any case, these initials over our doorway serve to remind
us of who the Magi saw in that
manger and
how they saw Him. They remind us to adore Him as they did.
Here is the prayer that was used to bless the chalk:
O Lord God, bless this chalk that it may be used for the salvation of the human race.
Through the invocation of Thy most Holy Name grant that whoever shall take of
this chalk and write with it upon the doors of his house the names of Thy saints,
Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar, may through their merits and intercession
receive health of body and protection of soul. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Sunday 30 December 2012
Thought for Christmas 1
In our Gospel reading today we find Jesus at 12 exploring and discovering who is. Just as many of us were doing at 12.
During the 40 days of Christmas our reflections in liturgy have us leaping about from Jesus teaching in the Temple at 12 on Christmas 1 to His Naming and Circumcision on the 1st January at 8 days old. The flight to Egypt is remembered on the 28th December during Holy Innocents and we return to Bethlehem on the 6th January for the visit of the Magi. During the Sundays after Christmas we follow Jesus growing up and beginning his ministry in Galilee and then he return to the Babe being presented at the temple.
This is great for an understanding of the mission and nature of Jesus, but it does mean that we miss the narrative of Jesus growing up. We don't remember a crucified baby or believe that God beamed down at aged 30. We believe in a God who was born, grew up, was part of a family and work out who he is.
God shared in our humanity, all of it - even the messy and uncomfortable bits, so we might share in His divinity.
During the 40 days of Christmas our reflections in liturgy have us leaping about from Jesus teaching in the Temple at 12 on Christmas 1 to His Naming and Circumcision on the 1st January at 8 days old. The flight to Egypt is remembered on the 28th December during Holy Innocents and we return to Bethlehem on the 6th January for the visit of the Magi. During the Sundays after Christmas we follow Jesus growing up and beginning his ministry in Galilee and then he return to the Babe being presented at the temple.
This is great for an understanding of the mission and nature of Jesus, but it does mean that we miss the narrative of Jesus growing up. We don't remember a crucified baby or believe that God beamed down at aged 30. We believe in a God who was born, grew up, was part of a family and work out who he is.
God shared in our humanity, all of it - even the messy and uncomfortable bits, so we might share in His divinity.
Friday 28 December 2012
Holy Innocents
Matthew's gospel tells us the story of the Holy Innocents, which we commemorate today. Herod slaughtered the young children of Bethlehem, whilst Mary and Joseph take the child Jesus to safety in Egypt, Joseph having been warned in a dream of Herod's intentions.
For the first readers of this gospel, the passage would be rich in resonances. Just as the People of Israel, sometimes referred to in the Old Testament as 'God's son', had been led to safety in Egypt, after a massacre of the firstborn from which God's chosen one Moses had been spared, so too Jesus, the Son of God and chosen Messiah, is taken to Egypt and kept safe from slaughter. Jesus 'sums up' the history of Israel, God's history of saving his people; he fulfils and completes it. Just to make the point more forcefully, Matthew mentions that all of this happens in response to someone called Joseph having a dream. This should sound familiar.
So we celebrate today the fulfilment of God's purposes in Christ. But we also remember that those purposes are worked out in a world that is often tragically violent. Massacres are not a thing of the past. The violence of the powerful remains with us; today's papers carry more bleak news from Syria. Refugees still look for places of safety, and often find themselves unwelcome when they get there - the scapegoating and hostility directed at asylum seekers in this country by sections of the media is disgusting, and is something that those of us who worship a Lord presented in the gospel as himself a refugee are bound by our faith to resist.
So today we give thanks for God's plan of salvation, we pray for victims of violence and for refugees, and commit ourselves anew to working for their liberation.
For the first readers of this gospel, the passage would be rich in resonances. Just as the People of Israel, sometimes referred to in the Old Testament as 'God's son', had been led to safety in Egypt, after a massacre of the firstborn from which God's chosen one Moses had been spared, so too Jesus, the Son of God and chosen Messiah, is taken to Egypt and kept safe from slaughter. Jesus 'sums up' the history of Israel, God's history of saving his people; he fulfils and completes it. Just to make the point more forcefully, Matthew mentions that all of this happens in response to someone called Joseph having a dream. This should sound familiar.
So we celebrate today the fulfilment of God's purposes in Christ. But we also remember that those purposes are worked out in a world that is often tragically violent. Massacres are not a thing of the past. The violence of the powerful remains with us; today's papers carry more bleak news from Syria. Refugees still look for places of safety, and often find themselves unwelcome when they get there - the scapegoating and hostility directed at asylum seekers in this country by sections of the media is disgusting, and is something that those of us who worship a Lord presented in the gospel as himself a refugee are bound by our faith to resist.
So today we give thanks for God's plan of salvation, we pray for victims of violence and for refugees, and commit ourselves anew to working for their liberation.
Heavenly Father, whose children suffered at the hands of Herod, though they had done no wrong: by the suffering of your Son and by the innocence of our lives frustrate all evil designs and establish your reign of justice and peace; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen. | ||||||
Thursday 27 December 2012
Happy St John's Day!
As well as carrying on with our celebrations of Christmas, we keep today the feast of St John the Evangelist. The author of the Fourth Gospel, he is our patron at St John's, so today is a special day for us.
His message that the 'Word was made Flesh' is the Christmas gospel. God became one of us, so that we might have life in its fullness. We need to share that message with those around us.
Almighty God,
who through your apostle John
unlocked for us the hidden treasures of your Word,
grant that we may grasp with fuller understanding
the message he so admirably proclaimed.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.
Wednesday 26 December 2012
On the Feast of Stephen!
Today is the Feast of St Stephen, the first Christian martyr. There is an account of his death in the Acts of the Apostles.
Yesterday we remembered God's gift to us of his Son. Today we are reminded that this gift demands a response from us. In St Stephen we see self-giving love answering God's call in the Word Made Flesh.
Give us grace, Lord, to practise what we worship.
Teach us to love our enemies
as we keep the feast of Saint Stephen,
who prayed even for the men who stoned him to death.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.
Tuesday 25 December 2012
Christmas Sermon from Fr John
He came down to earth from
heaven
Who is God and Lord of
all,
And his shelter was a
stable,
And his cradle was a
stall;
With the poor and mean and
lowly
Lived on earth our Saviour
Holy
There has been much in the public realm recently concerning
communication.
Lord justice
Leveson enquiry has created a fierce debate with those on the side
of the freedom of the press decrying any infringement on their rights to tell
the world what they think the world wants to hear: and those on the side of
people who's privacy has been invaded, usually at a time of heightened personal
crisis or tragedy. It remains to be seen how far this debate will go in
changing the nature of our society and the way in which we stay informed.
This month of December marked the 20th anniversary of the
first txt message sent. Given that I
expect everyone of us in church has sent or received a txt message it seems incredible that it they have only been
around 20 years. Can you imagine your day without a txt, can you sustain your
friendships and express your love and concern or simple delight in another
person without txt? I expect for many of us it would seem inconceivable. From the moment that first text was sent our
world and society changed for ever.
And finally there was the tragic results if a hoax call, Mel Grieg and Michael Christian, the
Australian DJ’s behind the hoax call to King Edward 7th hospital . A harmless bit of fun turning into shocking
loss, a moment of foolishness having far
reaching consequences. For Nurse Jacintha Saldanha it was moment of communication that
changed her life for ever and resulted in the terrible consequences of her
suicide.
At the heart of the Christmas story is the desire of God to
communicate, us his creation his sons and daughters. To send a message, to
reach out, to create a story that still has the power to change peoples lives
and the life of our world.
But God is no hack, or devious reporter determined to use
any means necessary to get his story, his Good News, into the public domain.
God choose to use a seemingly ordinary event, the birth of
a child, to herald an event of world changing proportions.
God choose not to use the wonders of technology, the
ability to instantly connect and convince, but the everyday and ordinary around
us, dreams, stars and lowly shepherds.
God choose to intervene in human history, a decision that
in some people's eyes is as foolish as a hoax call, but one that has far
reaching implications, not for death but for life.
This month gave the world another first – the first Tweet
by the Pope. Indeed I too have joined the tweeting community by following his
example and sent my first tweet two weeks ago.
Some see texting
as destructive to traditional forms of communication, and although it is a view
that I have a great deal of sympathy with, there is some truth in the claim of
those in favour that it is simply another form of communication which has
become part of the fabric of our modern world.
Greg Burke, the
senior media adviser to the Vatican, explained that the @Pontifex Twitter name
was chosen because it means Pope and it also means 'bridge builder'.
Such bridge
building through different avenues is part of the Christian tradition. The
Christmas story celebrates a God who
communicates in diverse and creative ways –A drama which features the worlds of
prophets, angelic visitations, and then supremely, God becoming a human being. “ He came down to earth from heave, Who is
God and Lord of all”
It’s the way of
building a bridge in a way that human beings can receive and understand.
Indeed it is estimated that around 8 trillion txts are sent a year, I wonder
how many of the worlds 7 billion humans will wish another person a happy
Christmas today by sending a txt?
And that would be
an interesting challenge, if you have not already risen to it this Christmas,
when you have a moment why not send a message of no more than 140 characters –
a tweet – to convey all the joy and hope and love that is revealed as we gaze
anew on the child born of Mary.
I will finish as I began
with words of another well known hymn which we will sing togthter at the end of
our service, words that for me
powerfully convey the esense of what our celebration at Christmas is all
about
Hail the heav’n-born
Prince of Peace!
Hail, the Sun of Righteousness!
Light and life to all he
brings
ris’n with healing in his
wings;
mild he lays his glory by,
born that we no more may
die,
born to raise us from the
earth,
born to give us second
birth.
And if you are interested
that is 195 characters- I think?
Happy Christmas!
The words of my favourite carol say it all:
The great God of heaven is come down to earth,
his mother a Virgin and sinless his birth;
the Father eternal his Father alone:
he sleeps in a manger; he reigns on the throne:
Refrain:
Then let us adore him and praise his great love:
to save us poor sinners he came from above.
A Babe on the breast of a Maiden he lies,
yet sits with the Father on high in the skies;
before him their faces the Seraphim hide,
while Joseph stands waiting, unscared, by his side:
Lo! here is Emmanuel, here is the Child,
the Son that was promised to Mary so mild;
whose power and dominion shall ever increase,
the Prince that shall rule o'er a kingdom of peace:
The Wonderful Counselor, boundless in might,
the Father's own image, the beam of his light;
behold him now wearing the likeness of man,
weak, helpless and speechless, in measure a span:
O wonder of wonders, which none can unfold:
the Ancient of days is an hour or two old;
the Maker of all things is made of the earth,
man is worshiped by angels and God comes to birth:
The Word in the bliss of the Godhead remains,
yet in flesh comes to suffer the keenest of pains;
he is that he was and for ever shall be,
but becomes that he was not, for you and for me.
St Matthias, ready for Midnight Mass
Monday 24 December 2012
A Prayer for Christmas Eve
Come, Lord Jesus, come soon.
In this time of your coming,
support and console us who trust in your love.
You live and reign with God the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God for ever and ever.
Amen.
Friday 21 December 2012
Christmas 'card'
I gave up sending Christmas cards a few years ago and so prepare video reflection card each year. Here's this years!
http://bit.ly/UOfJxz
With best wishes to you and your families (whatever shape they take!) for a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Angharad
http://bit.ly/UOfJxz
With best wishes to you and your families (whatever shape they take!) for a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Angharad
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