On Friday 20th September Trevor Potter will be reading poetry at a cheese and wine evening at St Matthias vicarage. This event will start at 7:30pm, and will last for about ninety minutes. It should be fun and will raise funds for our boiler!
Donations of five pounds per person will be invited. Please let Fr Simon know if you're thinking of coming.
Friday, 6 September 2013
Tuesday, 3 September 2013
Prayer and Fasting for Syria - 7th September
Prayer with fasting is a scriptural way of commending a situation to God, and of uniting ourselves in solidarity with those who are suffering. Fasting, in the Christian tradition, is understood as 'eating considerably less food' - not starving ourselves, but eating less, and more simply. Perhaps we could donate the money we save to the DEC Appeal for Syria.
We pray for those damaged by the fighting in Syria.
To the wounded and injured:
Come Lord Jesus.
To the terrified who are living in shock:
Come Lord Jesus
To the hungry and homeless, refugee and exile:
Come Lord Jesus
To those bringing humanitarian aid:
Give protection Lord Jesus
To those administering medical assistance:
Give protection Lord Jesus.
To those offering counsel and care:
Give protection Lord Jesus.
For all making the sacrifice of love:
Give the strength of your Spirit
and the joy of your comfort.
We pray in the hope you have given us.
Amen.
Monday, 2 September 2013
Back to Church Sunday at St Matthias
In yesterday's gospel we heard about invitations to banquets. This month at St Matthias we are going to invite people to our banquet, the Mass!
We are taking part in Back to Church Sunday on 29th September. Everybody who was at Mass yesterday was given an invitation to hand out to somebody they know - perhaps a family member, friend, or workmate - who might appreciate being welcomed to church.
If you were given one of these invitations, please have a think over the next few days about who you will invite and then fill in and pass on the invitation. Over the coming weeks, pray for the person you have invited.
If you are a St Matthias regular, but were not at Mass yesterday, please ask one of the clergy for a invitation to pass on.
And if you are someone who is interested in the Christian faith, or who used to come to church but don't any longer - why not take this opportunity to come along to a local church in Colindale? You will be very welcome at our 11am Mass on 29th September. This includes singing, takes about an hour, and is followed by refreshments.
Wednesday, 28 August 2013
St Augustine
Today is the feast of St Augustine of Hippo, one of the most famous converts to Christianity and one of the greatest Christian thinkers. You can read a version of his Confessions on-line here.
"Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new, late have I loved you! You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched for you. In my unloveliness I plunged into the lovely things which you created. You were with me, but I was not with you. Created things kept me from you; yet if they had not been in you they would have not been at all. You called, you shouted, and you broke through my deafness. You flashed, you shone, and you dispelled my blindness. You breathed your fragrance on me; I drew in breath and now I pant for you. I have tasted you, now I hunger and thirst for more. You touched me, and I burned for your peace."
From the Confessions
Monday, 26 August 2013
Trinity 13 - breaking the rules and crossing the line
Just this
week I was walking the dog and got into an interesting debate about Islam and
Christianity with two young men. There were many questions beginning with who
created the dog man or God? and why Christians eat pork and why Christians did
not worship on the Sabbath.! Todays Gospel story of course is one of many that
could be sighted in an explanation that Jesus came to challenge a religious
system , to break the very rules and customs that had kept the chosen people
chosen. Followers of Jesus came to understand that obedience to the law alone would
not be sufficient for salvation.
In this
incident Jesus is doing what every Rabbi has done since, attend shul where he
worshiped and taught. On this occasion he then crossed the line by reaching out
and healing a woman doubled over. Of course Jesus is not the only one to break
the rules, to cross the line. In this story the woman who has no name also
broke the rules by walking in to an all male environment where she was not
wanted or welcome. Sometimes it is necessary to break the rules to do the right
thing.
I came
across this story told by Billy Graham’s
long time songleader George Beverly Shea, who tells a story about one of
Graham's classmates at Wheaton College:
Mr.
Frizen, called Bert by his friends, was a talented and popular singer on
campus, involved with several singing groups . . . . He went on to serve
in the military during World War II and was involved in the famous Battle of
the Bulge . . . . Bert was wounded during one of the attacks and lay on
the battlefield, slipping in and out of consciousness. At one point, with
his eyes closed, he started singing his mother's favorite hymn as best he
could, "Jesus Whispers Peace." When he opened his eyes, he saw a
German soldier standing over him with a drawn bayonet. Bert understood
enough German to know that the soldier was saying to him, "Sing it again;
sing it again." Bert continued the song; "There is a Name to me
most dear, like sweetest music to my ear/And when my heart is troubled, filled
with fear/Jesus whispers peace." Soon he felt himself being gently
lifted up in the arms of the enemy soldier, who carried him to a rock ledge
nearby where the American medics found him a short time later, taking him to
safety.
In the
midst of war, one German soldier broke the rules in the name of love, in the
name of compassion, in the name of Jesus. God calls us to look deep within and
to find the courage and the faith to break the rules in the name of love, in
the name of the love of God which is ours in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Wednesday, 14 August 2013
The Assumption - Mass tomorrow at 7:30pm
The feast of the Assumption of our Lady begins with evening prayer today.
This is one of the great days of the Christian year. We celebrate Mary being taken into glory as a sign of the glory that we all hope for.
We will be celebrating at St Matthias tomorrow with a Sung Mass at 7:30pm. We will have a visiting preacher, Mother Carrie Thompson from Forton, and special music. This will be followed by a party which, weather allowing, will be on the vicarage patio.
Please come, and invite your family and friends.
This is one of the great days of the Christian year. We celebrate Mary being taken into glory as a sign of the glory that we all hope for.
We will be celebrating at St Matthias tomorrow with a Sung Mass at 7:30pm. We will have a visiting preacher, Mother Carrie Thompson from Forton, and special music. This will be followed by a party which, weather allowing, will be on the vicarage patio.
Please come, and invite your family and friends.
Almighty, ever-living God,
you have taken the mother of your Son,
the immaculate Virgin Mary,
body and soul into the glory where you dwell.
Keep our hearts set on heaven
so that, with her, we may share in your glory.
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, 11 August 2013
12th Sunday of Trinity - Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also
“‘Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your
Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions, and give
alms.” Luke 12.32-33
The question of
possessions and the challenge of Jesus’ words to go and sell them were put to Mr Cameron a few days ago in a
question and answer session in Darwen near Blackburn, it was also a challenge
for congregations up and down the country today as Jesus’ words reverberated
around countless churches up and down our land.
When one
reads the gospel it shows that Jesus spoke about two things more than anything
else, the Kingdom of God and money. Interestingly Jesus seldom talked about one
without talking about the other. In his preaching and teaching the two
are intimately intertwined.
The kingdom
of God is like – a man who had two sons and the younger came to him and
demanded half of the inheritance.
The kingdom
of God is like – a vineyard owner who pays everyone the same, no matter how
much or how little they had worked.
The kingdom
of God is like – a master who gives his servants varying amounts of money and
then judges them on how they have managed it.
Jesus knew
what he was saying and he said it very plainly. The already but not yet kingdom
of God has very important practical implications for how we treat our neighbours
and how we treat our money.
In this
Gospel passage, Jesus makes it very clear that the coming kingdom is firmly
rooted in the gospel of grace. The kingdom is not something we achieve or earn.
The kingdom is an unmerited and undeserved grace.
“Do not
be afraid little flock, for it is your Father’s
good pleasure to give you the kingdom.”
Yes, the
kingdom is a gift; it’s free, no strings attached.
But,
receiving the kingdom into our lives is costly.
The kingdom
changes the way we live our lives, it changes the way we define the purpose of
our lives, it changes the things we care about and worry about, it changes the
way we treat our neighbour and yes, it changes the way we manage our money.
“Sell
your possessions and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear
our, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth
destroys. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.”
The
question to ask ourselves is where is our treasure or put another way what is
it that we treasure, and the answer to that question will reveal where our
hearts desire lies.
Accepting the
Kingdom of God and its priorities frees us from our captivity to the here and
now.
Accepting the
Kingdom of God and its priorities frees us from anxiety about worldly success,
the pursuit of all that glitters and leaves us free to embrace the love of God
and neighbour with all our heart mind soul and strength.
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