Invitation to the Loaf Mass

Hay Bales in Norfolk. photo by Julia Sheffield

LAMMAS

On August 1st, a quaint feast was celebrated in some parts of the Church. This is particularly so in some rural areas. The feast is known as Lammas.
That’s a shortened form of Loaf Mass. It is the day when, in former times, the first loaf baked with the first corn of the harvest, was presented to God as an offering of first fruits as a sign of dependence upon God for daily bread. The words in italics come from Common Worship Times & Seasons, which restores this feast as an Anglican  Agricultural festival.

Its origins stretch back into Old Testament times when, as we read in Deuteronomy 26 , the people were bidden to present the first-fruits of the harvest. You shall take some of the first of all the fruit of the ground, which you harvest from the land that the lord your God is giving you, and you shall put it in a basket and go to the place that the Lord your God will choose as a dwelling for his name. (Deut 26:2). The priest took the basket and placed it on the altar as an offering from the people.

At the heart of the Lammas feast there is thanksgiving for the food that God provides and thanksgiving for Jesus as our Bread of Life. The offering of the new loaf is both a giving back to God something of what he has given us and a request for a blessing on our daily life so that we too may be part of the rich harvest which Christ gleans for His Father. It is easy to take God for granted and, divorced as many of us now are from the source of our food, it is easy to lose the connection we have with the earth. Lammas is a way of re-affirming our dependence on God and an opportunity to give thanks.

There is an added poignancy about this at present. Our farmers are up against it for three reasons. One is that the weather and the drought we are experiencing in Britain makes it difficult to grow and then bring in the harvest. Secondly, post-Brexit it is difficult to hire workers from other countries to help pick fruit and other produce. The third is, of course global warming.
These are also making life difficult for our farmers and they are in need of our prayers because we tend to take our food for granted. The war in the Ukraine and the cost of living crisis post pandemic add to the complications.
So, it may that Lammas may not be much of a celebration this year.

Perhaps a little known fact will also not be truth this time.
It may not be a fact – it could just be a legend or even wishful thinking. Did you know that, after Lammas Day, corn in the field grows just as fast during the night as it does during the day? Don’t know whether it’s true or why it might happen. Answers on a postcard (what?) or an email!

In Christian understanding, there is a special link between the bread we eat and Jesus who called himself the ‘Bread of Life’ He tells his followers  that he feeds us for eternal life. The connection is easily made with the bread of the Eucharist under the form of which Jesus comes to us as our spiritual journey through life towards the gift of eternal life which he promises to us.

When you eat your daily bread, pause for a moment and thank God for his gracious provision of all that you need to sustain life on earth—and if it is your custom to receive the bread of the Eucharist (Holy Communion), thank Jesus for his gift of eternal life and for feeding your soul for the journey you are making to God.
For it is a gift. We come to it because of Jesus inviting us to the feast. We are gathered around his table because he wants to share this divine food with us.

What bothers me at the moment is that sometimes the Eucharist isn’t seen as a joyful gathering which Jesus calls us to share but rather as a means of showing displeasure with others and making a kind of quasi-political stance.

Andrew Nunn, the present Dean of Southwark, writing in his excellent blog at the weekend, lamented that the Eucharist is being weaponised  by certain parties at the current Lambeth Conference. They don’t like some of  the churches stance on Sexuality and things associated with same-sex relationships. So they absented themselves from the Conference Eucharist as a protest.

They regard themselves as traditionalists, by which I think they probably mean they stand firmly in the faith as they understand it. Literalists are helpful in keeping us close to the tradition of the church handed down from the early fathers and mothers. But this does not allow for what St John Henry Newman spoke of as the development of doctrine. The doctrine of who God is and what he longs for his people, doesn’t change. But our understanding must and the reason why was given by Pope Francis as he talked to journalists on the way back from Canada at the weekend.
He said :
Many call themselves Traditionalists but they are not, they just go backwards and that’s a sin
A Church that does not evolve is a church that goes backwards.
Tradition is the living faith of the dead. Instead their attitude is the dead faith of the living.

Whenever we are tempted to make a protest by withdrawing from the Communion with the Lord and those he calls to be His Companions (literally ‘bread-sharers’), we do need to keep reminding ourselves that it is Jesus who invites us to the table where he feeds us without judgement and always in love.

For whatever reason those leaders at the Lambeth Conference do not follow up this invitation from Jesus, they are not just making a stance against Gay bishops and their partners. Nor are they just taking a stance against supporters of LGBTQI+ in the Church. They are also refusing Christ’s invitation to join their fellow sinners around the Holy Table. They are turning their backs on the gift Jesus brings to all who hold out their hands and humbly receive him as the ‘Living Bread’.

Little children, when they don’t get their own way, have a tendency to sulk or stamp their feet or shout against those who thwart them. It can be an ugly thing to see. That should never be the way of mature Christian leaders.
Luckily for all of us, Christ goes on reaching out to all, because the grace of the sacrament doesn’t depend on us. It depends only on God how he chooses to deal with us, naughty or good and usually a mixture of both. He doesn’t dwell on our wrongfulness but only on his gift of loving grace which ultimately will win all our hearts to him and so open all our lives to repentance.

[Mr G]

Camino Communion

This poem, by my friend Piers Northam, takes its inspiration from a Pilgrimage to the Shrine of St James in Santiago de Compostela. The poem is written at the beginning of the Anglican Lambeth Conference. The Conference gathers Bishops and others from member churches of the Anglican Communion. It is a diverse group with differing opinions on many issues. It can be viewed as a ‘scattered family’ which gets together to celebrate a fellowship which is best described as Koinonia – a fellowship with each other brought together by the Holy Spirit and held by that same Spirit in a Communion with each other.

Sometimes, because of its diversity, there is disagreement and some heart-searching as a compromise is sought. Sometimes because of our separate cultures, it isn’t always possible to agree, at least not at present. The member churches seek to listen and keep talking and praying together under God’s guidance until a new understanding is reached.

Another way of seeing things is as a Pilgrimage to God’s Kingdom which we approach from differing directions – as with the Camino where pilgrims walk from many different places. Conversations, prayers and walking together produces many experiences as we share in the common adventure. Finally each of these ‘ways’ converge. The Camino symbol, tracing the cockle shell (emblem of St. James the fisherman) shows us the paths converging to the same point.

Piers reflects on this as he thinks of what is the nature of the Anglican Communion. There are parallels to be discovered between the Camino and the Anglican Communion. Might it, therefore, be possible to see a positive way forward, not just for Anglicans, but also for Christians of all denominations. Could we be even more brave and see some way forward for inter-faith friendship.

The Anglican mystic and teacher of prayer, Evelyn Underhill, had a belief that our differing views and beliefs are as Chapels in the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit. It is both a lovely and dynamic thought !

More photos of Mamma Fox

Mamma Fox, more photos from Lynn Hurry

feeding time
together with mummy
mummy says we must pray a lot
All creatures of our God and King !

Blessed are you, Lord God,
maker of all living creatures.

Thank you for the fish of the sea,
the birds of the air,

and the animals on the land.
You inspired St Francis to call them all
His sisters and brothers.

We thank you that you bless all creation
and especially the foxes of Latton.

May the spirit of Mamma Fox live on in her cubs.
By the power of your love,
enable them to live according to your love.

May we always praise you for all your beauty 
reflected in your creation.

Blessed are You, O Lord our God!

Amen

Mamma Fox

photoshop of Mamma by Lynn

Mamma Fox

Some followers of this blog will be familiar with photos of the ‘Latton Foxes’ which we have published from time to time. The antics of last year’s fox cubs was particularly fun.
The foxes live in the garden of Latton Vicarage and they have received regular care from Vicar Lynn – who also took the photographs.
She has kept them well fed with ‘Mamma Fox’ being the go between as you carried the food from the Vicarage to the far end of the garden. It’s a great take-away service! The foxes are especially fond of eggs, some chicken (shop bought, not the product of scavenging) and jam sandwiches.

Sadly, Mama fox has disappeared and after over 12 days of absence we have to presume that she has died, maybe as a victim of a road accident.

Lynn says that she arrived in the garden as a cub in 2017.
She has lived in our garden since then and has had 4 sets of cubs here in the last 4 years. Her 4 cubs from this years’  litter are still living here and we are taking good care of them. They are getting very big now!
We miss her so much. She was here snoozing in the afternoons and loved to have a raw egg and some other bits from us.

Not everyone loves foxes but those who have been following their antics have come to see the Latton Foxes as rather special. Through the photos people have built up quite a following both on this blog, other postings and the church facebook page.

Mamma Fox in particular gave us a picture of motherhood which was both delightful and salutary. Almost the last photo that I have posted of her was when she was washing one of her cubs with a tenderness that was rather beautiful.
Of course, we can simply say that  she was just doing her duty and in both animal and human kingdom, care and protection of the young is what we creatures do.

I agree but there was something more about Mamma. Something which St. Francis would understand as would  the Desert and Celtic saints of earlier times.
It could easily be called, Spiritual.

I was reading something about this recently.

What do foxes mean spiritually?
According to the Celtic religious belief, the fox is an animal that serves as a spirit guide and can assist you to find your way through the afterlife
As a spirit animal, the fox reveals itself during times of great and unpredictable change. With its heightened sense of awareness, the fox compels you to turn up your own senses, gather the information you need, and act swiftly on your decision. The fox symbolizes mental responsiveness.

That not only tells us something  about our present time of turmoil in the world but also about how the fox can teach us to respond.

St. Francis points to animals’ roles as reflections of God’s love, the inherent value they possess, the interconnectedness humans have with all of God’s creatures and humankind’s misunderstanding of “dominion” as described in the Book of Genesis.

“Be­cause all creatures are connected, each must be cherished with love and respect, for all of us as living creatures are dependent on one another,” Francis wrote, later adding that God giving humans dominion over the Earth doesn’t justify “absolute domination over other creatures.”

This was a view echoed by his namesake, Pope Francis in his encyclical  Laudato Si’ (Praise him)  At one point, the pope lamented development projects that do not consider the impact on biodiversity, “as if the loss of species or animals and plant groups were of little importance.”

In Laudato Si’, Pope Francis states, “The ultimate purpose of other creatures is not to be found in us. Rather, all creatures are moving forward with us and through us towards a common point of arrival, which is God, in that transcendent fullness where the risen Christ embraces and illumines all things.”

“Eternal life will be a shared experience of awe, in which each creature, resplendently transfigured, will take its rightful place (Laudato Si)

Pope Francis also said that he couldn’t envisage heaven without animals and birds.
Creation belongs to God and it would be very arrogant of us to believe that we have sole rights to be there. Or even soul rights! How boring that would be for God!

Mamma’s family are still with us. One of her daughters from last year appears to be stepping up but we will miss her and hope that she is in God’s hands.We thank God for creating Mamma Fox who brought us such joy and thank you to Lynn who shared that joy with us.

‘Even birds and animals have much they could teach you;
ask the creatures of earth and sea for their wisdom.
All of them know that the Lord’s hand made them.
It is God who directs the lives of his creatures;
everyone’s life is in his power’.

Job 12:7-10

Mamma Fox, rest in peace

[Mr G, Lynn and others]