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God’s handiwork – all around us and in us PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 09 October 2008 07:57

After a very wet summer, it’s rather good to be enjoying some mild weather in September as I write this article. It comes as something of a relief after all the rain and offers an opportunity for gardeners (and farmers – albeit on a different scale) to get outside and catch up on a few jobs before the evenings close in. It is just lovely to enjoy all sorts of things growing at this time of year, and the bird song and fresh, damp Autumnal air. It gives us a chance to wonder at just how amazing nature is and how incredibly complex and beautiful each leaf, each flower, each plant is. The more we look the more we notice and admire. I get so inspired but this is not to pretend I’m Percy Thrower or Alan Titchmarsh.

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 20 November 2008 14:08
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Letter from the Vicar PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 10 September 2008 14:51
LETTER FROM THE VICAR

 

Back to School?

 

When I was a child, Sunday evenings were always pretty glum affairs. For some reason the stress levels seemed to rise as preparations were made for going back to school. We really were one of those households where pencils were sharpened and a compulsory hair wash was a feature of bathtime. Perhaps it was something to do with being one of four children and part of the way that my mother could manage to get everything (and everyone) ready and organised. But I used to hate it! It didn’t mean that I didn’t like going to school – I did. But I didn’t like the preparations. And the end of the summer holidays was even worse. A trip to the shoe shops of Street in Somerset to the factory outlets for four pairs of school shoes, four pairs of black plimsolls and then on to somewhere else for shirts, trousers, pullovers and everything else that we’d outgrown in the past six weeks. So my heart goes out to the children of the village as they wend their way back to school after a long and lazy summer break. It can feel hard.

 

But all of this will soon be forgotten in the excitement of new classrooms, new teachers, feeling a little older, the opportunities and experiences of busy school life and a new term. The Junior School and the Infant and Nursery School both had Ofsted inspections in the summer term and both came through with flying colours. And there is St Luke’s School also. We’re so fortunate to have such great schools here in our village and the opportunities for our young people to learn and to grow and mature.

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 20 November 2008 14:08
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Time for Recreation PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 06 August 2008 08:23

LETTER FROM THE VICAR

July and August are the months of high Summer when the year tips over into its second half. Usually it is a time for holidays, relaxation and hopefully some much needed personal space. And so Summer can be an opportunity to uncover our constant need for recreation: using the word in its best meaning of renewal.

The longing to be made new runs deep within us and is a primary motivation for both worship and prayer. But, if we face the truth, worship and prayer often become frayed at the edges because too often they are crowded into a weekly timetable which is overloaded with other concerns and priorities. Perhaps summertime can provide time, space and renewed energy to do some thoughtful sifting and sorting out.

One glorious summer day, a few years ago, I went to Mells in Somerset to visit the place where the famous poet Siegfried Sassoon is buried. Those familiar with Sassoon will remember how in conversation he usually veered from one extreme to another. He could be virtually tongue-tied with unfinished sentences hanging in the air and such stilted hesitation that no one really understood what he was saying. On other occasions he could be so talkative that no one else could get a word in edgeways! Doctor Rivers, who nursed him after he was invalided out during the war, said of him, “he had a penchant for monologue rather than dialogue”.

The phrase stuck with me. Sometimes it is something similar which frustrates our worship and our prayers. Either we stumble and mutter to little consequence or we say far too much and finish up getting nowhere. During the long days of summer, it might be worth sitting quietly for a while to ask ourselves which happens more frequently to us, especially in prayer - monologue or dialogue? Certainly for worship and prayer to be fulfilling and satisfying we have to train ourselves to move away from monologue and into a deeper and deeper appreciation of dialogue. It can be hard discipline when a daily hazard for every Christian is to settle for talking to ourselves instead of waiting on God and the perennial temptation for the Church is to become self obsessed instead of being open to the movement of the Spirit.

Last Updated on Thursday, 20 November 2008 14:09
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