Autumn brambles photographed by my friend, Gill Henwood
In the clouds atop Grizedale Forest ridge, among the russet chestnut bracken and old gold grasses, a bright scarlet bramble runner. Startling in the soft misty mizzle.
Sometimes murky weather shows up astonishing beauty. Sometimes, in sad times, in times of uncertainty, the power of beauty in God’s creation calls out:
Yesterday, at church in Fakenham, we sang the hymn, For the healing of the Nations, by Fred Kaan. The second line begins, ‘Lord we pray’, a reminder that hymns are musical prayers which begin life as prayer/poems. As such they are an important part of our devotional resource, whether they be as hymns, psalms, anthems of chants. This prayer by Fred Kaan speaks deeply to our human condition which cries out for healing of our brokenness in so many ways.
For the healing of the nations, Lord, we pray with one accord, for a just and equal sharing of the things that earth affords. To a life of love in action help us rise and pledge our word.
Lead us forward into freedom, from despair your world release, that, redeemed from war and hatred, all may come and go in peace. Show us how through care and goodness fear will die and hope increase.
All that kills abundant living, let it from the earth be banned: pride of status, race or schooling, dogmas that obscure your plan. In our common quest for justice may we hallow brief life’s span.
You, Creator God, have written your great name on humankind; for our growing in your likeness bring the life of Christ to mind; that by our response and service earth its destiny may find.
Fred Kaan
Fred Kaan was uniquely placed to offer this poetic insight of a world in need of healing. As a child of the occupation of the Netherlands, he experienced first-hand the horrors of Nazism, His parents were part of the Resistance in Holland and they also sheltered a young Jewish woman who was kept safe for over two years. Fred was doubtless shaped by a global conflict which was also experienced personally. He was filled with a passion for social justice, global peace and a reconciliation between people. When he discovered Christ, this strong desire met the explosive love of the Gospel. His faith was expressed in Christian ministry and a spirituality that found expression in prayer/poems which could be sung powerfully as hymns or quietly as Gospel -based prayers as part of personal devotion. It is offered here as a pinprick of soul-light for our praying. After all, for many, the best action for human justice, freedom and the outpouring of love, is through prayer. Action flows from prayer because it changes us.
To a life of love in action help us rise and pledge our word.
[Mr G]
***for more on Fred Kaan see my blog entry June 29th 2023
View from the ruins of Dunstanburgh Castle. Photo by Gill Henwood
“Much to ponder”
Light on sea, sparkling Dancing in the sun floodlight. Light starburst through Ancient windows Blazing on the warm weathered stones. People walking, all ages Carrying infants, or usually sticks Pilgrims to our past, wondering Who was here, in savage beauty Raging storms with Threatening invaders.
Now all is peaceful, open, safe Every age comes to ponder In awe. One day, Peace will come again to Ukraine, To Gaza, to lands of conflict Violence and hatred.
One day. Much to ponder.
[Gill Henwood] inspired by a visit to Dunstanburgh Castle, Northumbria.
Dunstanburgh from the shoreline (Photo. Gill Henwood)
A Pondering on BIBLE SUNDAY, by my friend, The Revd. Becs Challis.
So, it’s Bible Sunday, this is a time where we pay special attention to and give thanks for the Bible in our lives as disciples…. I’ll be honest, for me I find this easier said than done….
First, the bible that I am currently paying most attention to is the NIV study bible (a big large hardback book) and I’m paying attention not because I am referencing it but because it’s just the right size as a laptop stand on my desk.
Secondly, rather than simply give thanks in my inner thoughts, I want to add “but did it really have to be SO long and SO complicated (not only to read but also to understand) And I’m not being flippant I am just recognizing my human condition and the fact that actually the bible if I think about it as a “book”, for me is the source of a lot of shame. And I am going to hedge my bets that I am not totally alone in sometimes slipping into thinking things along these lines?
Yet this is actually the one day when many churches will be praying and giving thanks for the bible, so it’s worth us really understanding what we mean when we say that we are paying attention to and giving thanks for, the Bible. So let’s use this time to take away any barriers we may have to connecting with God when we are thinking, praying or blowing the dust off and potentially even reading the bible!
So what is it, that we are actually giving thanks for, and can we put words to the impact that that has had on our lives and those around us? We’re told in 2 Timothy (3:14-4:5) that all scripture is inspired by God, all of it. – The passages we love, the passages we’ve read over and over again, the verses we can recite and the bit’s we’re less familiar with, those sections we skim over or the ones we’ve never read, those passages that we can’t quite reconcile with our view of God, and those ones that have been interpreted differently and used as weapons against us or those we love…. All of them every word is inspired by God. The bible is God breathed; all 66 books all 700 thousand plus words are inspired words of God. It is the most sold book (not necessarily most read) but most controversial books in the world. Yet it’s not a book at all, it’s an invitation into relationship with Jesus, it’s admittedly a very large, dense, wordy invitation. But it is an invitation all the same…
This is an invitation of hope:
an invitation to us here in church.
an invitation to those who we know aren’t here today
an invitation to those who ‘have never’ and ‘will never’ come here….
an invitation to the whole human race, the whole world, to all of us grace gifted misfits[1] that in some way don’t think we are good enough
But what do we do, how do we access this invitation?
Well in Paul’s letter to Timothy there’s a sense of urgency, whatever you do, do something because the Bible is invitation into relationship with Jesus, it is not something to put off for a rainy day.
“Hold fast to what you have learned.” It might be just one word or one phrase but hold onto it. However, right at the heart of this instruction, it isn’t about gripping tightly with fists closed. Instead, it’s a reminder to hold on with an openness, with a heart ready to receive, a mind willing to explore. The Bible, or “scripture” for Paul, is not a cage meant to confine us. It’s Jesus as light within us, illuminating dark corners, showing us paths of justice, mercy and peace.
The bible, this invitation, is not just to know Jesus, but to be known. This is wisdom for salvation, Paul says – not salvation only in some distant, other-worldly sense, but salvation that reaches into the here and now, into our living, breathing lives on the good days and on those that are more challenging. The Bible when we let it breathe, has the power to show us how to live in rhythm with God’s grace, in sync with God’s love. – This invitation instead of us reading it, allows us to be read and in turn, to be known.
The interesting thing about invitations is that they generally come with an RSVP, it’s not good enough to just receive the invitation of the Bible we have to respond as well:
In John’s Gospel (5:36b-end) Jesus says: You study the Scriptures diligently because you think that in them you have eternal life. These are the very Scriptures that testify about me, yet you refuse to come to me to have life.
The RSVP to the invitation we have all been given is not found in echo chambers and divisions, or in those voices that are heard louder and more confidently than the rest, it’s not found in words that flatter rather than challenge… The response, the real response to us receiving the gift of the Bible, the inspired word of God, is to take it in with each breath we take , each pause, each silence each chaotic unplanned moment, each waking minute of every day move closer to Jesus.
And as with all invitations, they generally always come with a +1 For Timothy, and for us the invitation to be in relationship with Jesus is not about how much you’ve read or whether you can quote it word for word, it is about how you respond in the ordinariness of your life. How you embody the Good news in all you say and do. It’s about living life in a way that others can see Jesus through and in you. So if you do nothing else, just find a way that works for you to connect and engage with the Bible and let God’s inspired breath become part of all of us. This invitation is to a dynamic relationship, one with a God that is very much alive, not a relic of the past covered in dust, but rather, a living breathing divinely inspired word unfolding all around us, calling us to new depths of love and wisdom and inviting us to be shaped, transformed and in turn transform others.
(based on a sermon preached at St. Mary-at-Latton, Harlow. on Sunday October 27th 2024.
[Becs Challis, Programme Manager Mission & Ministry, Diocese of Chelmsford