Category: Uncategorized

The place where the Sun rises

photo: Gill Anderson.

This wonderful photo of a sunrise was sent to me this week by my friend, Gill Anderson.

With so much of our news shrouded in darkness, horror and misery, there  is something very joyful in this photo. It exhilarates and somehow, it reassures. Despite all the uncertainty we can take some comfort that the morning sun has, in the words of the writer of the biblical book, Ecclesiastes, ‘hurried to the place where it rises. (Eccles 1:5).

Its rays reflecting on the stillness of the waves, penetrate the darkness. The sky is full of promise, hope and expectation.
Pondering over the view, I have a sense that God is reminding us that in the words of the Prologue in the Gospel account of St. John (1:14), all Life is both a gift and intention of God – without him, nothing came into being, and what has come into being is life. This is a life which fills all people, though as we are seeing, that is not immediately obvious in so many different parts of our world. But St John insists it is so. Real life has come into being in Jesus, God’s divine Son, who is pure Light. For us, wandering around in darkness, St John tells us, The light shines in the darkness and the darkness did not overcome it.
As I looked at the light coming over the land in the photo, I just thought, we really do have to hold on to that.
Many of the media photos and news events show us graphically, places and people overwhelmed with the darkness of destruction – naming Gaza and Ukraine as just two places among so many. It’s so easy to become depressed and despairing when just a few men (it’s always men!) act against so many billions of people. Why are we letting this happen?

However, there is a way forward and hope tells me that despite all the suffering and pain, death and the spiritual destruction of innocent children, there will be justice and there will at some point be peace. There will be love again. This is my hope and the subject of so many of my prayers.

I must now reveal something very important about this photo.
My friend Gill Anderson took it, as I say, from her bedroom window. She was looking at the water which is actually, the Sea of Galilee.
She , her husband and fellow travellers were on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. It became somewhat thwarted but they still managed to see some of the important sites held dear by Christians. She saw the Sea of Galilee but was unable to sit in a boat upon it which was a plan. Instead she was soon to travel to Jordan and relative safety and then home.
She did not then fully know that, not that many miles away, a very different dawn was enfolding. Hamas had worked its evil and the Israeli Defence Force had retaliated. We are still in the midst of that deep darkness which engulfs the Holy Land and also Gaza.

But there, at Lake Galilee, there was a sense of history too, and of association with what we Christians see as the heart of our Salvation.
For Galilee played a huge and significant part in both Old Testament and New Testament times. It was by its shores that Jesus chose his first disciples, four fisherman who fished in the waters there. By its shores, Jesus healed many people. He fed 5,000 on the foothills near the water. There, also, he cooked breakfast for his disciples after the Resurrection.  He was intimate with its moods especially when he stilled a storm which threatened his followers, whilst he, at home with every element, had a little sleep.
Most of all, he often prayed there.

Galilee was the backdrop for so much that became our Christian understanding of Salvation, eternal love and new life.
Might it become therefore a place where, drawing inspiration from this sunrise, we dare to place our hopes, our desires, our prayers, into a new dawn which will rise in the hearts of all those engaged in war, violence, deceit and meting out suffering on others. I believe we must pray for a better way of life for all as we work together to bring a new light, symbolized by this photo, to a broken and desperate world. The Light of Love.
In the words of the Prophet Isaiah, speaking not that far from Galilee:
The book of the Prophet Isaiah Chapter 9: verse 1 & 2.

But there will be no gloom for those who were in anguish.
In the former time he brought into contempt the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali,
but in the latter time he will make glorious the way of the sea, the land beyond the Jordan,
Galilee of the nations.
The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light;
those who lived in a land of deep darkness—
   on them light has shined

[Mr G. 1st November]

The Scripture quotations contained herein are from The New Revised Standard Version of the
Bible, Anglicized Edition, copyright © 1989, 1995 by the Division of Christian Education of the
National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America,
and are used by permission. All rights reserved.

Desmond Tutu speaks about Peace.

An extract from Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s Address when he received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984

“Unless we work assiduously so that all of God’s children, our brothers and sisters, members of our one human family, all will enjoy basic human rights, the right to a fulfilled life, the right of movement, of work, the freedom to be fully human, with a humanity measured by nothing less than the humanity of Jesus Christ Himself, then we are on the road inexorably to self-destruction, we are not far from global suicide; and yet it could be so different.

When will we learn that human beings are of infinite value because they have been created in the image of God, and that it is a blasphemy to treat them as if they were less than this and to do so ultimately recoils on those who do this? In dehumanizing others, they are themselves dehumanized. Perhaps oppression dehumanizes the oppressor as much as, if not more than, the oppressed. They need each other to become truly free, to become human. We can be human only in fellowship, in community, in koinonia, in peace.

Let us work to be peacemakers, those given a wonderful share in Our Lord’s ministry of reconciliation. If we want peace, so we have been told, let us work for justice. Let us beat our swords into ploughshares.

God calls us to be fellow workers with Him, so that we can extend His Kingdom of Shalom, of justice, of goodness, of compassion, of caring, of sharing, of laughter, joy and reconciliation, so that the kingdoms of this world will become the Kingdom of our God and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever. Amen.”

“Hope is being able to see that there is light
despite all of the darkness.”
Desmond Tutu

Art changes people’s minds and people change the world

Shamsia Hassani : “Art changes people’s minds and people change the world.” (Shamsia)

The photographs in this blog are from a remarkable artist who, through painting, outdoor wall murals and paintings. challenge the people of violence who are ruining countries, destroying the lives of innocent people, caring nothing for the natural world and threatening civilizations.

Initially her concerns were focussed on Afghanistan which is the country of her parents. She was born in Iran in 1988 but the family eventually returned to Afghanistan. When the Taliban took over again, because she was in danger, she fled the country. Not only was she a woman of intelligence but the Taliban, against their own promises, have been persecuting and waging battle against all women. The strides the women had taken in emancipation, progression, education and equality have all but been erased.
Shamsia expressed her feelings against the inequalities women face in Afghanistan but she has  widened it to all places in our world where women, and attacks on human rights, have sought to reduce women to lesser beings to men. Nothing new there but the world has, in most places, moved on and the hard fight for the rights of women has brought a new understanding and even sadness and repentance for how they have been treated. Sadly, the battle continues for a deeper understanding.

It is this movement towards cherishing our common humanity that was helped by Shamsia. After attending a graffiti workshop in Kabul, she used what she had learned to good effect. He wall murals were not dissimilar to Banksy. The street art centred on a woman with shut eyes and no mouth. Shamasai said that “many of my paintings have a recurring character but, most importantly she is a human being.  The eyes are closed, she says, because there is nothing good to see in these violent situations
Afghan women had to exist in a male dominant society and the aim of her art was to give women a voice and a face which showed power, ambition, and a strength to achieve goals. She says that the woman in her art work shows us , “a human being who is proud, loud and can bring positive changes to people’s lives.”

One commentator says, “Her art has inspired thousands of women around the world and has given a new hope to female Afghan artists in the country. She has motivated hundreds of Afghans to develop their creativity through her graffiti festival, art classes, and exhibitions in different countries around the world. Her murals are on the walls of Afghanistan, USA, Italy, Germany, Vietnam, Switzerland, Norway and other countries. Sadly the situation in Afghanistan means that much that was achieved has been destroyed by the Taliban.

Shamsia says that, “The character in my paintings sometimes plays different roles such as a combatant or a refugee with no future. At times, she searches for peace, and sometimes she has no identity whatsoever. She also gets lost in her dreams as well as the pain and sorrow, she struggles with the past and the future but is a patriot who loves her homeland and fights hopelessness.” And who longs for Peace.

Given the situations in the Ukraine, The Holy Land, Afghanistan and Sudan, this desire for peace is shared by so many of us.

The photos of her work that I have used come from a large collection of her paintings. They tell their own story and allow us to interpret what they say to us. If you want to see more or discover more about Shamsia there are plenty of articles on the internet. I have been helped in writing this by an interview she gave to ‘Bored Panda’ and information in The Guardian Newspaper. She has her own website and a lot of her work can be looked at on Instagram. I have referenced her before in this blog on 22nd April 2022. This was in connection with art and words that she did as her prayer for the Ukraine.

Below is a poem from St John of the Cross which began my thoughts for this article.

If you Love

You might quiet the
whole world for a second
if you pray.

And if you love, if you
really love,
our guns will
wilt.

Attributed to St. John of the Cross

We Are One With You

O God, we are one with you.
You have made us one with you.
You have taught us that if we are open to one another,
 you dwell in us.
Help us to preserve this openness and to fight for it with all our hearts.
Help us to realize that there can be no understanding
where there is mutual rejection.

O God, in accepting one another wholeheartedly, fully, completely,
we accept you, and we thank you, and we adore you, 
and we love you with our whole being,
because our being is your being, our spirit is rooted in your spirit.
Fill us then with love, and let us be bound together with love
as we go our diverse ways, united in this one spirit
which makes you present in the world,
and which makes you witness to the ultimate reality that is love.

Love has overcome. Love is victorious.

– Thomas Merton (1915-1968)

[Mr G]

Sit Awhile

Photo: Emmanuel Head. This striking structure, built between 1801 and 1810 by Trinity House, is one of the earliest daymarks built in Britain (possibly the earliest one). A daymark is a navigational aid for shipping, and this one stands 35 feet high. A good place to sit awhile. Photo taken by Gill Henwood.

My friend Gill Henwood recently stayed on Lindisfarne (Holy Island), Northumbria. Near the ruins of the Benedictine Monastery, is a cliff top walk along what is known as The Heugh (pronounced ‘Hee-uff’). It is believed that this rock was utilized by the Celtic/Anglo-Saxon monks, as part of the early monastery, built in 635AD when King Oswald, newly reclaiming his father’s kingdom, sent to Iona for a monk to begin the work of bringing the Northumbrian people to the Christian faith. St Aidan set up his monastery on Lindisfarne which becomes an island twice a day. It was near enough to Bamburgh, the King’s castle to allow Aidan free access to the King and yet quiet enough for the young Anglo-Saxon novices to learn the Gospel of Jesus, the prayers, the sacramental life and the lessons of mission.
Because Lindisfarne becomes an Island twice a day, it can welcome tourists and visitors but also it can flow into silence. Both purposes are valid but it is good that sometimes, being still allows the voice of God to enter our hearts, where we are converted by Love for a life of love.

We are invited to Sit Awhile and allow the multi-faceted island re-create us from within.
Gill’s poem below takes its inspiration from this.

Sit Awhile

A place to sit awhile
to listen…

sea splashing as the tide retreats
oystercatchers piping as they fly on the wind
swans overhead in their pair…

to see…
seal heads bob up in the surf
cormorant fishing in the seaweed
ships on the horizon far off
the low silhouette of the Farne Islands.

But nobody here
‘til the causeway opens
and the coaches arrive.

I feel…
wind ruffling my hair
the breeze brushing my cheek
a Presence balming my soul
the Spirit enlivening all.

Lastly …
the gannets skimming the waves.
Stunningly beautiful.

Holy Island,
indeed.

Gill Henwood
October 2023

Northumbrian Gannets