Tag: George Appleton

Tidy up

Fallen trees, Barnsley Wood, Harlow

Declutter your life for Christmas.

Earlier this week, I read a fascinating article in the Guardian Newspaper, about decluttering your home for Christmas.
The premise is that over the Christmas period many people need more space in their homes to accommodate guests – family, friends, even strangers. For some, more space will be needed to store food, even presents in various stages of wrapping.

The writer of the article, Vicky Silverthorn,  is a professional adviser about how to go about decluttering and the article is packed with advice. For example, look into your food cupboards and start to eat what is still in date; If you can’t use it, foodbanks are desperate for donations.
The advice includes what to do with children’s toys that are no longer required. “Always involve the children in making choices after carefully explaining why you are doing this.” suggests Vicky; other advice includes how to donate unwanted stuff to Charity Shops, though not electrical goods; or perhaps to neighbours. Recycling is one option for some items or even selling on Ebay, Etsy etc and donating the proceeds to charity. There is a suggestion, too, that when giving presents to others, “Encourage the gift of experiences rather than stuff,” says Silverthorn. i.e, theatre, restaurant, cinema tokens or days out to special places.

Behind the advice is, of course, about how to tidy your life and the way you live. Christmas is, to use the well-oiled slogan, a time ‘for giving’ more than a time for ‘getting’. Maybe some act of de-cluttering will foster a more generous and orderly life.
So that got me thinking.
What about spiritual de-cluttering? Not of our homes, but of ourselves.

I’ve jotted down a few things to get the ball rolling.
One of the first things I’d like to throw out is prejudice. That really does clutter up generosity and acceptance of people who are different to oneself;  Judgement follows quickly behind this. We are so quick to pass opinion on matters we often know little about.  For example, the way people use social media to denigrate others often using the most intemperate language (not to mention atrocious spelling!). Another thing to get rid of are fixed, rigid beliefs, not least when it comes to using and often abusing Scripture. The Bible can prove and disprove almost everything.
I remember a group of young people on a vocation conference writing an advert for Bible Reading. …. “Murder, rape, pillage, violence, treachery, vandalism, stealing , drug addiction…..it’s all in the Bible – Don’t Save it for Sunday!
Great fun but it hit the mark.
Don’t throw away the Bible, of course but decide to read and use it intelligently.

A huge thing to get rid of is Negativity. It lurks in corners and piles up like stacks of old newspapers. In fact most newspapers pedal negativity along with television. My physiotherapist said to me yesterday that if I wanted to release stress (declutter it from my person) then stop watching the BBC News. A wise thought!So many things clutter up or spirit such as Gossiping about others and with others. Sometimes gossiping can be holy as an exchange for the purposes of prayer for example but we all know the truth! A long time ago, I heard broadcaster Brian Redhead talk about a group of women slaves in Antioch. On their day off they went to the races and there they had a jolly good gossip ~ about Jesus and the Good News of the Gospel! Gossiping about God (not, please, the Church!) is a wonderful way of giving your spirit a chance to soar, not least because it’s so positive.

Many things in our hearts and souls  need to be binned – unkindness, ridicule of others, bearing grudges, self-centredness, sin, the wrong sort of pride, putting off phoning people or replying to emails.
Don’t forget to look in the cupboard of Good Intentions!  That’s where you’ll find the things you meant to do but which are very close to their sell-by date. Things like spending quality time with people, including loved ones and visiting people who would love to see you ~ and don’t forget, that includes God.
Remember, too, that being with God needs you to be quiet with yourself.

It is not a sin to spend what might seem selfish ~ time for yourself. Spiritual batteries need re-charging, otherwise you will be running on ‘empty’ and then, eventually you might not move at all. That’s known as Spiritual Inertia, which the Psalmists call, the sickness that destroyeth in the noon-day.

You get the idea? De-clutter your soul of everything that gets in the way of the Holy Spirit, who, if you make room, will sweep in with renewed gifts that you can give to others ~ love and kindness, friendship and care and generosity; openness and non-judgemental acceptance;   and just finding space for God, for others and for yourself. The good thing is that you can fill your soul with all these things – and more-and it will never feel cluttered because you will give out from what you receive. It’s called the grace of God and, to use a lovely idea from Archbishop Stephen Cottrell, it is all pre-loved by God. We can be sure of that.

…and that’s a great present to find under the tree of your de-cluttered soul.

[Mr G]

QUIET HEARTS

O Spirit of God,
set at rest the crowded, hurrying, anxious thoughts
within our minds and hearts.
Let the peace and quiet of thy presence
take possession of us.
Help us to rest, to relax,
to become open and receptive to thee.
Thou dost know our inmost spirits,
the hidden unconscious life within us,
the forgotten memories of hurts and fears,
the frustrated desires,
the unresolved tensions and dilemmas.
Cleanse and sweeten the springs of our being,
that freedom, life and love
may flow into both our conscious and hidden life.
Lord, we lie open before thee,
waiting for thy peace,
thy healing,
thy word.

[George Appleton]

Take your Ease

Photo of me taken by ‘uncle’ Andy.

It is two years, in mid-August, since Mr G began his ponderings.
As those who followed the Ponderings at that time will know, it was an idea of mine and I became the Patron.
I lead an especially busy life so I haven’t been able to write to you as much as I would have liked but I have always been around to give Mr. G my wise advice. He has sometimes taken it!
I have been  purr-fully delighted that so many of you now follow the articles, photos and thoughts not only of Mr. G but some of his friend.

Sadly we lost one of our dear friends, Joyce, recently. She brought us such pleasure with her photos and reflections. Mr. G is going to reproduce some of them in the early autumn.
Many of us have enjoyed the antics of the Latton Foxes. For this we thank our Vicar Lynn not only about the foxes but all the menagerie that occupy the Latton Vicarage grounds.
Another regular contributor has been Mr. G’s friend, Gill Henwood. We have been able to catch something of the brooding joy of the Lake District as well as accompanying Gill on her jaunts around Europe. Mr G told me that her trip to Prague around the Christmas season. It was a truly magical experience for him as. Through Gill’s reflections, he revisited some favourite haunts in that great city.
Piers the Poet as we like to call him has contributed a number of wonderful poems and I am sure there is more to come.
Others have added their contributions and this is fulfilling Mr. G’s aim of encouraging people to share the Blog and enrich it with their own take on things.
Thank you for all who have contributed and those who follow. It is much appreciated.

Now Mr G has agreed to take a short break from the Blog but will be back very soon so don’t go too far away. As his patron and really his ‘boss’ I have agreed to pay his usual wages whilst he goes swanning  around I know not where. He says he is doing research for further Blog items. We wait and see!
Meanwhile, I shall have a little rest myself as you see from the photo above.

You must try and do the same.

I offer you this little prayer to help you chill out in the Lord.

Yours purrfully
Pagli-Ji,
A friend to all my ‘servants’

Pausing in solitude

Another offering from my friend, Joyce Smith

In various forms, the saying: A picture is worth a thousand words, holds a truth. One carefully taken photo can hold us spellbound, our hearts touched.
Joyce Smith’s offering here, of a Grey Heron, pausing in solitude among the beauty of autumn colours is one of those photographs.

It stills us and invites us to sit, pause from whatever we are doing or from things that worry or make us anxious. This can move us into a prayer pause. We let God touch our lives and remind us that whatever is occupying our thoughts, God is holding us.
Change the direction of our thoughts and we will know this. The Heron seems to be sure.

All this photo needs is a prayer. Here is one by George Appleton.
It is one of my favourites.

QUIET HEARTS

O Spirit of God,
set at rest the crowded, hurrying, anxious thoughts
within our minds and hearts.
Let the peace and quiet of thy presence
take possession of us.
Help us to rest, to relax,
to become open and receptive to thee.
Thou dost know our imost spirits,
the hidden unconscius life within us,
the forgotten memories of hurts and fears,
the frustrated desires,
the unresolved tensions and dilemmas.
Cleanse and sweeten the springs of our being,
that freedom, life and love
may flow into both our conscious and hidden life.
Lord, we lie open before thee,
waiting for thy peace,
thy healing,
thy word.

[Mr G]  with thanks to Joyce.

P.S. St Bruno was the founder of the religious order known as the Carthusians

Give me a candle of the Spirit

This prayer by George Appleton is inspiring a short series of Advent meditations at St. Mary-at-Latton in Harlow.

The prayers of George Appleton are probably not so well-known these days but deserve to be rediscovered.

He was Archbishop of Perth and of Jerusalem after a varied and long ministry which included Burma during the war and Rector of St. Botolph’s Aldgate. The main thrust of his ministry was Mission but he will be best remembered by many as a ‘shaper of souls’ who, through his writings and particularly, his prayers, touched peoples’ hearts of faith and enriched their spirituality, including mine.