Friday, 16 December 2016
New website live and will grow
The new website for All Saints Church is now live as a Christmas "mini-site". The new full site will launch in early January. The site has been designed by Morse-Brown Design of Birmingham, who have done work for many other church organisations including the Diocese of Oxford and the Church of England centrally.
The site reflects the clean and contemporary style which is the hallmark of Morse-Brown's design house. It is currently carrying important Christmas-themed information, as well as other vital pages, including our activities for Families and Young Children .
All Saints Rector Canon David Hodgson said: "Having been one of the earliest churches in our area to embrace the web, launching our first website in 1998, we have known for some years now that we were falling behind in terms of the quality and design of our website. Now Morse-Brown have produced for us a website which is visually appealing , easy to navigate and search, and will provide an excellent portal into the life of our church community for local residents, especially those now moving into the area as the population of the parish grows."
Church filled by Messiah concert
Christingle service hailed a success
A banner at The Christingle Service |
Jacqui Headland,who co-ordinated the catering for the tea afterwards in the Cornerstone said: " This year was our most successful Christingle Tea with a 50% increase in the numbers who came across and enjoyed the tea after the
service. Thank you to everyone you donated child friendly food which was enjoyed by everyone who attended."
An encouraging sign after the Christingle Service |
Saturday, 3 December 2016
Daily Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 7: 3rd December
St Bartholomew's Hospital London |
Daily Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 7: 3rd December
from Canon David Hodgson
My reflection for each day in Advent celebrates examples of action in the world inspired by hope and the desire to bring closer God's kingdom of love, peace and justice. These examples are set within a reflection on a piece of Scripture the Church provides for reading daily.
One of the Scripture texts set for today highlights the centrality of healing at the foundation of the Christian hope and vision for the world.
"Then Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, and proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and curing every disease and every sickness." Matthew 9:35
It is striking in this text to see the words "all" and "every"; reflecting the universality of concern which is at the core of the love of neighbour in the Christian vision. No community is to be excluded from access to peace and justice; no condition or illness is to be regarded as beyond the reach of healing and care.
The impetus within the Christian faith and community towards healing and care found expression in the growth of European civilization through the establishment of hospitals and homes for the poor and vulnerable. Many of the great hospitals today for example can trace their origins back to a religious foundation; in some cases, e.g. St Bartholomew's in London, over 800 years.
Today that motivation to bring healing and care to all those in pain and distress in every condition is shared across many spiritual and secular traditions and has been embedded in our society in large-scale organisations such as the NHS , the hospitals and health centres across the country, staffed by professionals who have dedicated years of study and training to employ the best knowledge and resources to the task. In an advanced welfare economy like ours the numbers of people and the amount of resources engaged in healthcare in all its aspects is almost beyond any one person's capacity to comprehend. Instead, it is in those caring one-to-one encounters between the patient and the healer when the signs are revealed which give hope that there is a kingdom where love holds sway.
Friday, 2 December 2016
Daily Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 6: 2nd December
Daily Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 6: 2nd December
From Canon David Hodgson
In today's short reflection I simply juxtapose a piece from the sayings of Jesus about God's kingdom and the story of the development of one of the largest philanthropic welfare organisations in the world, the Edhi Foundation of Pakistan
"‘The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in his field; it is the smallest of all the seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.’ Matthew 13:31-32
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Sattar_Edhi
From Canon David Hodgson
In today's short reflection I simply juxtapose a piece from the sayings of Jesus about God's kingdom and the story of the development of one of the largest philanthropic welfare organisations in the world, the Edhi Foundation of Pakistan
"‘The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in his field; it is the smallest of all the seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.’ Matthew 13:31-32
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Sattar_Edhi
Daily reflection for Advent 2016. Day 5: 1st December
Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 5: 1st December
from Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints Wokingham
This Advent daily reflection for 1st December is published a day late because yesterday I spent 9 hours on the road travelling to Yorkshire and back to meet our three-day-old grandson , who is a beautiful boy; as indeed is his two- and-a-half- year old brother. The journey was definitively worth it of course!
1st December is many things. For meteorologists it is the first day of the winter season. It is popularly seen as the beginning of the Christmas festivities. For consistency, Advent calendars start on this date. And it is World AIDS Day. I've chosen instead to notice one of the major item of news in Britain on 1st December this year.. It is the call by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, NICE, to local government to do more to reduce air pollution, which is linked to more than 25,000 deaths a year in England and Wales. This news reminded me of the huge corporate scandal about this time last year when it was revealed Volkswagen had cheated emissions tests for many of their vehicles especially in the United States, allowing diesel engines to discharge nitrogen oxide pollutants up to 40 times above what is allowed.
One of the Bible readings set by the Church of England for 1st December (Matthew 7: 24 -27) contains a parable of Jesus, popular with children in churches where it is captured in a fun action song known as "The Wide Man built his house upon the rock". He is compared with the foolish man who built his house upon the sand. I could make a link with environmental protection issues in this story since it is the rain and flooding which reveals the foolishness of the builder upon sand when his house is destroyed. But the spiritual message to which Matthew's text links this story is the more general one, contained within these words which preface the story:
"Everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock." Matthew 7: 24
The words in question are in fact the golden rule which appears in some form in the teachings of many of the world's faiths and spiritual teachers:
"So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets." Matthew 7:12
The story of the wise and foolish builders is an illustration of the final consequence , which is disaster, of ignoring the gap between what is said and what is done, the discrepancy between saying the right thing and doing it; between looking good and doing good. It is part of the Christian hope at Advent that the coming of God's kingdom of love, peace and justice does involve the unmasking of this gap and its closing - that practice, especially action impacting on others, will be brought into line with values. It is the burden of much of the writings of the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures; the work of the prophetic figures such as Isaiah, and Jesus in his role as a prophet, to call out that gap and to "speak truth to power".
The image I've chosen today is a portrait of Soren Kierkegaard (1813 – 1855), the Danish philosopher. From a position of sympathy towards the faith he challenged Christians and churches over complacency and accommodation to self-seeking values; and in particular, over the gap between the corporate power of the church and actual Christian practice. He stressed the importance of personal responsibility and accountability. He observed that almost all of us prefer the idea of love to the reality of it. We prefer to choose to whom we shall show love and care - our family, friends those like us and those we like - rather than be under the obligation to treat every person equally in respect of care and consideration. Without this tendency there would be no room for a gap to open between the ideal of love of neighbour and its practice.
Today there are many organisations in civil society - some with explicit reference to Christian values - which exist to hold governments and corporate bodies, to account by shining a light on the gap between stated values and actual practice. Often this is done by careful scientific research to highlight the facts of the case. This was the situation in the VW scandal. It was work by scientists commissioned by the International Council on Green Transportation which revealed the discrepancies in emissions.
Increasingly shareholders are pressing corporations to close the gap between values and practice. One of the oldest and most effective shareholder advocacy bodies is the Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility in the USA. It enables shareholders to call "the world's most powerful companies to address their impacts on the world's most vulnerable communities." Rooted in faith bodies who are concerned to ensure ethical investment, today ICCR's membership has grown to include many other shareholders and institutional investors who recognise the ethical dimension to financial decisions. There is a similar organisation in the United Kingdom, the Ecumenical Council for Corporate Responsibility (ECCR), which I served as a board member and chair for a few years in the 1990's. ECCR " undertakes research, advocacy and dialogue to encourage companies to meet the highest standards of corporate responsibility and transparency". Less well-known and more difficult to portray, nonetheless bodies like ICCR and ECCR are further examples of action in the world inspired by hope and the desire to bring closer God's kingdom of love, peace and justice.
from Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints Wokingham
This Advent daily reflection for 1st December is published a day late because yesterday I spent 9 hours on the road travelling to Yorkshire and back to meet our three-day-old grandson , who is a beautiful boy; as indeed is his two- and-a-half- year old brother. The journey was definitively worth it of course!
1st December is many things. For meteorologists it is the first day of the winter season. It is popularly seen as the beginning of the Christmas festivities. For consistency, Advent calendars start on this date. And it is World AIDS Day. I've chosen instead to notice one of the major item of news in Britain on 1st December this year.. It is the call by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, NICE, to local government to do more to reduce air pollution, which is linked to more than 25,000 deaths a year in England and Wales. This news reminded me of the huge corporate scandal about this time last year when it was revealed Volkswagen had cheated emissions tests for many of their vehicles especially in the United States, allowing diesel engines to discharge nitrogen oxide pollutants up to 40 times above what is allowed.
One of the Bible readings set by the Church of England for 1st December (Matthew 7: 24 -27) contains a parable of Jesus, popular with children in churches where it is captured in a fun action song known as "The Wide Man built his house upon the rock". He is compared with the foolish man who built his house upon the sand. I could make a link with environmental protection issues in this story since it is the rain and flooding which reveals the foolishness of the builder upon sand when his house is destroyed. But the spiritual message to which Matthew's text links this story is the more general one, contained within these words which preface the story:
"Everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock." Matthew 7: 24
The words in question are in fact the golden rule which appears in some form in the teachings of many of the world's faiths and spiritual teachers:
"So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets." Matthew 7:12
The story of the wise and foolish builders is an illustration of the final consequence , which is disaster, of ignoring the gap between what is said and what is done, the discrepancy between saying the right thing and doing it; between looking good and doing good. It is part of the Christian hope at Advent that the coming of God's kingdom of love, peace and justice does involve the unmasking of this gap and its closing - that practice, especially action impacting on others, will be brought into line with values. It is the burden of much of the writings of the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures; the work of the prophetic figures such as Isaiah, and Jesus in his role as a prophet, to call out that gap and to "speak truth to power".
The image I've chosen today is a portrait of Soren Kierkegaard (1813 – 1855), the Danish philosopher. From a position of sympathy towards the faith he challenged Christians and churches over complacency and accommodation to self-seeking values; and in particular, over the gap between the corporate power of the church and actual Christian practice. He stressed the importance of personal responsibility and accountability. He observed that almost all of us prefer the idea of love to the reality of it. We prefer to choose to whom we shall show love and care - our family, friends those like us and those we like - rather than be under the obligation to treat every person equally in respect of care and consideration. Without this tendency there would be no room for a gap to open between the ideal of love of neighbour and its practice.
Today there are many organisations in civil society - some with explicit reference to Christian values - which exist to hold governments and corporate bodies, to account by shining a light on the gap between stated values and actual practice. Often this is done by careful scientific research to highlight the facts of the case. This was the situation in the VW scandal. It was work by scientists commissioned by the International Council on Green Transportation which revealed the discrepancies in emissions.
Increasingly shareholders are pressing corporations to close the gap between values and practice. One of the oldest and most effective shareholder advocacy bodies is the Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility in the USA. It enables shareholders to call "the world's most powerful companies to address their impacts on the world's most vulnerable communities." Rooted in faith bodies who are concerned to ensure ethical investment, today ICCR's membership has grown to include many other shareholders and institutional investors who recognise the ethical dimension to financial decisions. There is a similar organisation in the United Kingdom, the Ecumenical Council for Corporate Responsibility (ECCR), which I served as a board member and chair for a few years in the 1990's. ECCR " undertakes research, advocacy and dialogue to encourage companies to meet the highest standards of corporate responsibility and transparency". Less well-known and more difficult to portray, nonetheless bodies like ICCR and ECCR are further examples of action in the world inspired by hope and the desire to bring closer God's kingdom of love, peace and justice.
Wednesday, 30 November 2016
Daily Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 4: 30th November. St Andrew's Day
Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 4: 30th November. St Andrew's Day.
from The Rev'd Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints Church Wokingham
My reflection for each day in Advent will celebrate examples of action in the world inspired by hope and the desire to bring closer God's kingdom of love, peace and justice. These examples are set within a reflection on a piece of Scripture the Church provides for reading daily.
Today the Christian Church celebrates Saint Andrew. Best known in the British Isles as patron saint of Scotland, Andrew, the Galilean fisherman, is identified in gospel accounts as the first follower of Jesus Christ; the brother of Saint Peter, and the one who brought Peter to meet Christ, according to the gospel of John. Andrew is regarded by Christians as the first example of an evangelist, because he went to share the good news with others when he came to believe that Jesus was the Chosen One sent by God to save the world.
As well as the stories about Andrew in the four gospels the Church also provides a text from the prophet Isaiah to be read on St Andrew's Day which contains the following verse:
How beautiful upon the mountains
are the feet of the messenger who announces peace,
who brings good news,
who announces salvation,
who says to Zion, ‘Your God reigns.’ Is. 52:7
This verse has become well-known in many Christian churches after it was included in a worship song which was particularly popular in the last quarter of the 20th century. The verse has its origins in a long ago time in which news of distant events , such as battle victories or the fall of enemy kings, was transmitted by messengers running between the cities of the ancient world across deserts, plain and mountains.
In a world of global communication there is no shortage of bad news. Even what is regarded with ecstatic joy as good news by some, is received as devastatingly bad news by others, as illustrated in the recent election of Donald Trump to be the next President of the United States. Instances of news which is good for everyone are known to be rare. So claims for such examples of universally good news are, not unreasonably, received by many people with caution, or even outrightly rejected. Hidden agendas, ulterior motives and dissimulation are suspected.
Christian preachers and evangelists are especially prone to be regarded with this kind of suspicion. What has been described as the "long institutional nightmare" (John Kent, 1987) of the Church, the abuse of the good news of Christ for the purposes of political and psychological power, overshadows Christian preaching and interferes with how it is received.
And yet there are examples though history of Christian evangelists, announcers of good news, who,whilst unequivocally located within a Christian vision of the world, have been able to be heard and to deliver a message of good news for everyone which has inspired hope and motivated action by many; producing a profound and universally acknowledged change for good in the world. In this way they have witnessed to the truth and proximity of God's kingdom of love, peace and justice.
Amongst the living examples of such a true heir to Saint Andrew is Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Tutu, now in his mid-eighties, has been a fearless voice of the voiceless and unstinting in his advocacy of compassion, non-violence, and justice for the oppressed. He has not always been popular, especially among those who benefit from an oppressive status quo. Yet the universally good news of Tutu's message has caused him to be showered with hundreds of honours by both secular and religious bodies. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, being cited for his ""role as a unifying leader figure in the campaign to resolve the problem of apartheid in South Africa". He received the Templeton Prize for Religion in 2013 for " "his life-long work in advancing spiritual principles such as love and forgiveness". Last year he was made a Companion of Honour by HM the Queen.
In 2006 on the occasion of Tutu's 75th birthday the General Secretary of the World Council of Churches, Rev'd Samual Kobia, wrote in his letter of congratulations to Tutu:
“You have challenged and pushed us never to adjust to the powers that are, but always to discern the signs of God's coming kingdom and to act accordingly…Through your work with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, you gave this fractured and broken world a model for overcoming the wounds of past evils and for creating space for healing and reconciliation.”
Thank God for Desmond Tutu, a true bringer of good news for all.
from The Rev'd Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints Church Wokingham
My reflection for each day in Advent will celebrate examples of action in the world inspired by hope and the desire to bring closer God's kingdom of love, peace and justice. These examples are set within a reflection on a piece of Scripture the Church provides for reading daily.
Today the Christian Church celebrates Saint Andrew. Best known in the British Isles as patron saint of Scotland, Andrew, the Galilean fisherman, is identified in gospel accounts as the first follower of Jesus Christ; the brother of Saint Peter, and the one who brought Peter to meet Christ, according to the gospel of John. Andrew is regarded by Christians as the first example of an evangelist, because he went to share the good news with others when he came to believe that Jesus was the Chosen One sent by God to save the world.
As well as the stories about Andrew in the four gospels the Church also provides a text from the prophet Isaiah to be read on St Andrew's Day which contains the following verse:
How beautiful upon the mountains
are the feet of the messenger who announces peace,
who brings good news,
who announces salvation,
who says to Zion, ‘Your God reigns.’ Is. 52:7
This verse has become well-known in many Christian churches after it was included in a worship song which was particularly popular in the last quarter of the 20th century. The verse has its origins in a long ago time in which news of distant events , such as battle victories or the fall of enemy kings, was transmitted by messengers running between the cities of the ancient world across deserts, plain and mountains.
In a world of global communication there is no shortage of bad news. Even what is regarded with ecstatic joy as good news by some, is received as devastatingly bad news by others, as illustrated in the recent election of Donald Trump to be the next President of the United States. Instances of news which is good for everyone are known to be rare. So claims for such examples of universally good news are, not unreasonably, received by many people with caution, or even outrightly rejected. Hidden agendas, ulterior motives and dissimulation are suspected.
Christian preachers and evangelists are especially prone to be regarded with this kind of suspicion. What has been described as the "long institutional nightmare" (John Kent, 1987) of the Church, the abuse of the good news of Christ for the purposes of political and psychological power, overshadows Christian preaching and interferes with how it is received.
And yet there are examples though history of Christian evangelists, announcers of good news, who,whilst unequivocally located within a Christian vision of the world, have been able to be heard and to deliver a message of good news for everyone which has inspired hope and motivated action by many; producing a profound and universally acknowledged change for good in the world. In this way they have witnessed to the truth and proximity of God's kingdom of love, peace and justice.
Amongst the living examples of such a true heir to Saint Andrew is Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Tutu, now in his mid-eighties, has been a fearless voice of the voiceless and unstinting in his advocacy of compassion, non-violence, and justice for the oppressed. He has not always been popular, especially among those who benefit from an oppressive status quo. Yet the universally good news of Tutu's message has caused him to be showered with hundreds of honours by both secular and religious bodies. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, being cited for his ""role as a unifying leader figure in the campaign to resolve the problem of apartheid in South Africa". He received the Templeton Prize for Religion in 2013 for " "his life-long work in advancing spiritual principles such as love and forgiveness". Last year he was made a Companion of Honour by HM the Queen.
In 2006 on the occasion of Tutu's 75th birthday the General Secretary of the World Council of Churches, Rev'd Samual Kobia, wrote in his letter of congratulations to Tutu:
“You have challenged and pushed us never to adjust to the powers that are, but always to discern the signs of God's coming kingdom and to act accordingly…Through your work with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, you gave this fractured and broken world a model for overcoming the wounds of past evils and for creating space for healing and reconciliation.”
Thank God for Desmond Tutu, a true bringer of good news for all.
Tuesday, 29 November 2016
Daily Reflections for Advent 2016. Day 3: 29th November
Monday, 28 November 2016
Daily reflections for Advent 2016. Day 2: 28th November
Reflection for Advent 2016. Day 2 : 28th November 2016
from Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints Wokingham
My reflection for each day in Advent will celebrate examples of action in the world inspired by hope and the desire to bring closer God's kingdom of love, peace and justice. These examples are set within a reflection on a piece of Scripture the Church provides for reading daily.
In one of the Scriptures given to be read today the prophet Isaiah praises God for deliverance from oppression in these verses:
"For you have been a refuge to the poor,
a refuge to the needy in their distress,
a shelter from the rainstorm and a shade from the heat."
Isaiah 25: 4
Poets and songsters protesting poverty and oppression continue to fasten on the image of torrential rain as a metaphor for the overwhelming and incapacitating impact of enforced poverty on people's lives. There's Bob Dylan's 1960's classic "It's a Hard rain's gonna fall" and there's this year's new album from Kate Tempest "Let Them Eat Chaos" which depicts the crisis overtaking the isolated lives of seven residents of a south London street, all of them awake and disoriented at 4.18am.
Poverty and a growing gap in life opportunities between the poorest and the wealthiest has become a shameful blight on some of the most economically advanced societies in the world. The United Kingdom ranks among the worst of the developed economies for income inequality. Welfare and social security systems have been disfigured and become a punitive shock therapy forcing the most vulnerable into an illusory and unsustainable self-sufficiency. Millions of working people, let alone those dependent on inadequate and capriciously-administered "welfare" benefits, are being forced to seek the help of charities to make ends meet.
Faced with neighbours and people down their street reduced to the crisis point of making the impossible choice between heating or eating; volunteers in thousands of communities across the UK have come together to set up food banks. These are staffed often by people who may never have done anything like this in their lives before; out of compassion and simple decency acting to feed people. Food banks in modern Britain are a sign of the failure of economic policy in the last 20 years. Yet they are a refuge to the needy in their distress; a shelter from the economic storm. They are also a sign that God's kingdom of love and justice is always near.
The food bank in Wokingham, the town where I serve as an Anglican priest, is sustained by the voluntary work and the generous donations of many people of all faiths and none. Yet it was an initiated with skill and in hope by founders motivated by a compassion rooted in their Christian faith and supported by an alliance of the local Christian churches.
(Opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own)
Daily Reflections for Advent 2016 Day 1: 27th November
From Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints Wokingham
Today is the first day of the Christian season of Advent. This is a time when the mode of prayer and reflection in the Christian Church is one of hopeful longing. We are looking forward to the fulfilment of God's promised kingdom of peace and justice, when love will hold sway in the world. Advent brings focus to the quintessential Christian prayer "Thy kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven".
Christian hope in Advent springs up from the tension between, on the one hand our confidence in the unassailable victory of love, completed by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ , and on the other hand , the sorrow and pain of a world which is not yet transformed into God's kingdom. This hope-filled tension moves Christian action to change the world for the better, to shine light into dark places, to work for justice, and to love those who suffer. Christian prayer and effort to bring God's kingdom nearer is not driven by fear of the consequences of failure, but inspired by joyful confidence that love endures and will always be the last word.
My blog for each day in Advent will celebrate examples of action in the world inspired by hope and the desire to bring closer God's kingdom of love, peace and justice. These examples will be set within a reflection on a verse from the piece of Scripture the Church provides for reading that day.
Today, in a reading from the prophet Isaiah we find these well-known words:
" they shall beat their swords into ploughshares,
and their spears into pruning-hooks;
nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more." (Isaiah 2: 4b)
Hope that the nations of the world may learn to forswear war is perhaps as old as war itself. Today there are many hope-filled examples of people and organisations committed to finding ways to help us learn how to make peace and transform conflict. One of these I came upon by accident earlier this year whilst visiting Sweden. On holiday in the southern part of the country Lorraine and I spotted a road sign to Hammarskjold's Backakra. We were delighted to discover what had been the farm of Dag Hammarskjold, former Secretary -General of the United Nations. Set in 30 hectare of open fields by the Baltic coast the house at Backakra has been used as a museum and a retreat. The tranquil grounds include a meditation area which has at its centre a stone inscribed with the word PAX - peace.
In 2016 plans were announced by the estate's owners, the Dag Hammarskjold Backakra Foundation, to renovate the house and turn it into a modern conference centre dedicated to research in peace, conflict and human rights, in the spirit of Dag Hammarskold. Hammarskjold has been described as the best Secretary General the United Nations has had to date He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace posthumously following his mysterious death in a plane crash over the Congo on his way to cease-fire negotiations. There is sufficient evidence for some to believe that the plane was shot down by persons still unknown, to murder Hammarskjold before his intervention could damage certain vested interests in the ongoing conflict.
Hammarskjold's journal of his musings and aphorisms, Markings, was published in 1963 two years after his death; with a preface by his friend the poet W.H. Auden. In the preface Auden quotes a statement of Hammarskjold which characterises his spirituality:
"In our age, the road to holiness necessarily passes through the world of action."
Another of Hammarskjold's sayings has taken flight well beyond its author and is found quoted in many different texts and prayers;
" For all that has been,Thank you. For all that is to come,Yes!"
Saturday, 19 November 2016
New Advent Parish Communion service booklet
A new service booklet for the Advent season will come into use at Sunday Parish Communion and Tuesday services from December 4th. It will replace the existing booklet which has been in use since 2002.
Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints, said;
"The new Advent Parish Communion service booklet is the first in a programme to replace all our service booklets, some of which have been in use since the introduction of Common Worship in 2000.
The new booklet will reflect the changes made to the Parish Communion liturgy earlier this year. The liturgy has been simplified slightly and shortened to give more openness and flexibility. It includes two bible readings instead of three, more flexibility over prayers,and a choice of seasonal creeds instead of using the full Nicene Creed without variation.
The new booklet will have fewer pages than the previous one. We are not yet at the stage of going completely digital with prayer words on screens but no doubt that will become an option when our CC2020 refurbishment is completed. I'm sure the paper option will always be available for those who prefer to use a real page or book!"
Rev'd Anna Harwood, Associate Rector of All Saints said: "There are many beautiful new prayers in Common Worship and this new booklet will help us to use them."
Former curate of All Saints to be Chaplain to Bishop of Oxford
The Reverend Paul Cowan has been appointed the new Chaplain to the new Bishop of Oxford Rt Rev'd Steven Croft. Paul was a curate at All Saints c 2002-5. After a year in the diocesan link diocese of Kimberley and Kuruman he went on to become Vicar of St George Wash Common in Newbury where he has served for 10 years. Paul will be visiting All Saints in the new year ion connection with CC2020 to share his experience of successfully re-furbishing the church at Wash Common.
Associate Rector Anna joins Debbie McGee for Wokingham Foodbank new premises opening ceremony
Debbie McGee accepts a bouquet of flowers from Toby and his brother after she had officially opened the new Wokingham Foodbank premises.
Reverend Anna Harwood, Associate Rector of All Saints Wokingham, was on hand to welcome special guest Debbie McGee for the official opening of Wokingham Foodbank's new premises. Anna is Chair of the Wokingham Foodbank. She led prayers and a bible reading at the ceremony. The new premises are situated in Broad Street Walk, near the Wokingham Main Post Office.
Volunteer handbook for All Saints Church to be launched in new year
With over one hundred people actively involved in a huge range of different roles on behalf of the church All Saints Parochial Church Council has decided to follow the example of other larger churches and produce a Volunteer Handbook.
Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints said:
"We want to ensure we value and support all those who volunteer under the auspices of the church. Our new volunteer handbook will bring lots of information together in one handy booklet. It will include a reminder of our vision and mission as a church and the importance of safety, respect and care for everyone. We hope too that as we share this information and develop our support for volunteers, more people both existing church members and those in the wider community of the town will feel encouraged to join is with the amazing work we are doing as a church community to serve our neighbours and share God's love for all."
The new booklet will be launched in January 2017.
Positive response to churchyard review ongoing
The Rector and church officers at All Saints are conducting on ongoing review of the churchyard burial plots this Autumn in conjunction with the end -of-summer annual maintenance; to ensure that all plots are being properly managed and comply with the burial agreement. A letter has been sent to all families with loved ones buried in the current burial area (known as the historic graves area) informing them of the review and reminding them of the burial agreement regulations.
Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints, said:
"We have churchyard regulations to ensure the safety of all users of the churchyard including churchyard workers; and also to preserve the historic appearance of this particular area of the churchyard as open lawn, which makes it such a calm and peaceful place. All families are informed of these regulations before a loved one is buried and all sign an agreement to state that they will comply. We are finding that families who abide by the regulations may be upset when others do not. Our initial letter was just a gentle reminder to families of the reasons for these regulations and that they had agreed to abide by them.I am pleased to report that we are seeing a positive response to our request."
Good news for All Saints CE Primary and Nursery School
Following its latest OFSTED inspection in September, All Saints CE School is now a "Good" school with an "Outstanding" Early Years setting. Read the full report here
All Saints Church launches new visual identity
All Saint's Church's new visual identity is launched this month on Advent Sunday 27th November at the beginning of a new church year.
Canon David Hodgson, Rector of All Saints writes:
"The concept for the icon is an abstracted leaf motif from the church font. The four leaves of different bright colours reflect our inclusive welcome and holistic approach to Christian faith, and the four priorities of our mission; worship, spiritual growth, youth and community. There is a subtle reference to the cross, the heart of our faith, in the icon's negative space. The abstract leaf veins produce the effect of a burst of light or star when the icon is placed on a white background.; representing the light of Christ generally, and also recalling our now familiar star on the church tower illuminated during December."
The new identity was designed by Morse-Brown Design of Birmingham who have done work for the national Church of England and the Diocese of Oxford.
The final design approved by the Church Council on 1st November was based on the feedback received from over 50 members of the church on several initial options. The company are also designing a new website for All Saints Church set to be launched before Christmas and a new Christmas themed publicity leaflet to be distributed across the parish.
Wednesday, 16 November 2016
Civic Remembrance Service
Photo from The Wokingham Paper of Remembrance Sunday Parade (Rev'd Anna Harwood, Associate Rector of All Saints and Mayor's Chaplain on left; with Rev'd Dag Bjarnhall, visiting Swedish priest, Rt Hon John Redwood MP in centre)
Once again this year All Saints Church hosted Wokingham's Civic and Ecumenical Remembrance Service with some 400 people in attendance; including the High Sheriff of Berkshire; the High Steward of Wokingham, Lady Elizabeth Godsal MBE; and a contingent of solders from REME. All Saints' Rector, Canon David Hodgson, led the service; Rev'd Anna Harwood, Associate Rector of All Saints and Mayor's Chaplain for this year preached the sermon; Fr David O'Sullivan Parish Priest of Corpus Christi RC Church, led the prayers of intercession. John Redwood MP read the bible lesson, young cadets also took part in readings.The Choir of All Saints Church, conducted by Director of Music Richard Smith, sang the anthem "O for the Wings of a Dove" and also Psalm 121.
Work begins on new paths for Garden of Remembrance
Work has begun in All Saints churchyard on new path surfaces ahead of the creation of the new Garden of Remembrance. The new paths will guarantee easy and disabled access to the new seat to be installed by the Garden of Remembrance and also extend access from the church and the street to the area in the centre of the churchyard currently being used for burials.
Peal of bells for All Saints celebration
All Saints Sunday was celebrated this year with a successful full peal of bells on the Saturday beforehand. The details of the peal may be viewed here http://bb.ringingworld.co.uk/view.php?id=1032257
Sunday, 16 October 2016
CC2020: refurbishing the church for 21st century worship and community activity
All Saints Church's CC2020 architects have now nearly finished turning the brief for CC2020 into plans for the building.
These will be on display in the church during November: there will be an information desk after every service (Sunday and weekday) from 6th to 20th November. Members of the CC2020 team will be on hand to answer your questions and explain why we need these changes.
Anne King CC2020 project leader for All Saints said:
" Come and join us at the drop-in desk any time. There will then be a more formal consultation during January with all the congregation before the PCC meet on February to decide on their preferences."
Changes coming to the way cremated remains interred
Talking about death
A group of people met in The Cornerstone recently to talk about death and dying. It was the second of the Church of England's GraveTalk sessions run by All Saints Church after a Sunday morning service.
Claire Jones, All Saints' GraveTalk facilitator said:
"Our culture puts a taboo around the subject of death. Lots of us avoid the subject and then struggle when we are bereaved or dying. Lots of us have no idea what sort of funeral our loved one would really like. We then have to deal with these decisions when we are most vulnerable. It doesn’t have to be like this if we are more open and start to break down the taboo.
Despite the name, it isn’t about graves and it
isn’t a grave subject either – we have fun!"
Claire Jones, All Saints' GraveTalk facilitator said:
"Our culture puts a taboo around the subject of death. Lots of us avoid the subject and then struggle when we are bereaved or dying. Lots of us have no idea what sort of funeral our loved one would really like. We then have to deal with these decisions when we are most vulnerable. It doesn’t have to be like this if we are more open and start to break down the taboo.
The Church of England has initiated a project called Grave
Talk. It’s ‘a simple way to help people get together and talk about death,
dying and funerals in a relaxed, easy social context’. Tea and cake is an
essential part!
More sessions are planned for 2017 with an evening option to become available.
Talking about God - Partnership for Missional Church
Berkshire Partnership for Missional Church cluster gathering at Bughfield Parish Church 15th October 2016 |
The Partnership for Missional Church (PMC) Steering team at All Saints reports:
"We were advised that to have a good meeting food had to be
involved! With that in mind, the PMC
Steering team organised Space to Talk About God with a bring and share lunch in the Cornerstone in September. The team brought those
present up to speed about what had been happening. During the first PMC year we learned to
listen and also to discover who our partners were (eg schools, other churches). Listening involved interviews, All Saints
timeline and Dwelling in the Word – all trying to discern what God is calling
us to do at All Saints.
A few weeks later more food was involved. The Steering Team (all 4 of us) and members
of the PCC joined with All Saints Boyne Hill to try and discern what God wanted
us to do in our various churches. The
focus had to be outward looking and would probably look very fuzzy. By the end of the session we had a few ideas
of where God was leading us at All Saints (still to be determined).
What happens next?
·
We
are now looking for an adventure leader and team to carry these ‘fuzzy’ ideas
forward. This project will last about 10
months and it doesn’t matter whether it succeeds or fails. All that matters, is that we will be working
together as a church towards something that God is calling us to do.
·
We
need more members to join us on the steering team.
·
We
need a very enthusiastic congregation who will venture with us with the ‘fuzzy’
project."
For more information please speak to either Peter Barrett,
Clive Charlton, John Boylan or Jo Robinson
Flower Guild News
All Saints Flower Guild had an enjoyable and rewarding time on 1st October arranging for Harvest. Assistance was given by over 20 enthusiastic members during Friday and Saturday morning (see below).
Flower Guild Chairman Mrs Hazel Matthews writes:
As we progress through October with some glorious sunshine giving us the gift of beautiful colours, our thoughts turn to All Saints Day, Remembrance, Memorial Sunday and especially Advent with winter foliage arrangements and candles for that beautiful Advent Candlelit Service on Sunday 27th at 6.30.
Now it is time to ask for volunteers for Advent to help with arranging on Saturday 26th November. The list is open and we would love to see you – come and see what we do, try an arrangement, or position candles. All are welcome and you just might get a cup of tea and a bun! To find out more, have a chat to either Sarah Boylan, Hazel Matthews or other Flower Guild members after 9.30 or before 11am service or call on 0118 9786700.
Yes, it is coming, the Christmas Workshop. Open to all, it will take place on Saturday 10th December in the Cornerstone, commencing at 09.30. Two talented members will be demonstrating two options, a) a circular wreath which can be used either as a centrepiece with church candle, or adapted with ribbon as a door hanging, or b) a short oblong arrangement with amaryllis, seasonal foliage and trimmings. Spaces are limited - last booking - Monday 28th November.Forms are at the back of the church, or obtainable by e-mail ha.matthews@ntlworld.com . Cost is £15.00 to include mechanics, materials/flowers and guidance, also refreshments! (cheques payable to All Saints Flower Guild). Do come along and beginners are welcome. The morning is always enjoyable and you will certainly be taking home a very special arrangement, in preparation for Christmas.
Forthcoming Events:
Advent Arranging Saturday 26th November – 9.30am
Christmas Workshop Saturday 10th December - 9.30am – the Cornerstone
Christmas Arranging Thursday 22nd December – 9.30 Flower Guild Communion followed by arranging.
Flower Guild Chairman Mrs Hazel Matthews writes:
As we progress through October with some glorious sunshine giving us the gift of beautiful colours, our thoughts turn to All Saints Day, Remembrance, Memorial Sunday and especially Advent with winter foliage arrangements and candles for that beautiful Advent Candlelit Service on Sunday 27th at 6.30.
Now it is time to ask for volunteers for Advent to help with arranging on Saturday 26th November. The list is open and we would love to see you – come and see what we do, try an arrangement, or position candles. All are welcome and you just might get a cup of tea and a bun! To find out more, have a chat to either Sarah Boylan, Hazel Matthews or other Flower Guild members after 9.30 or before 11am service or call on 0118 9786700.
Yes, it is coming, the Christmas Workshop. Open to all, it will take place on Saturday 10th December in the Cornerstone, commencing at 09.30. Two talented members will be demonstrating two options, a) a circular wreath which can be used either as a centrepiece with church candle, or adapted with ribbon as a door hanging, or b) a short oblong arrangement with amaryllis, seasonal foliage and trimmings. Spaces are limited - last booking - Monday 28th November.Forms are at the back of the church, or obtainable by e-mail ha.matthews@ntlworld.com . Cost is £15.00 to include mechanics, materials/flowers and guidance, also refreshments! (cheques payable to All Saints Flower Guild). Do come along and beginners are welcome. The morning is always enjoyable and you will certainly be taking home a very special arrangement, in preparation for Christmas.
Forthcoming Events:
Advent Arranging Saturday 26th November – 9.30am
Christmas Workshop Saturday 10th December - 9.30am – the Cornerstone
Christmas Arranging Thursday 22nd December – 9.30 Flower Guild Communion followed by arranging.
Tuesday, 11 October 2016
Church community lunch event
Forty-six parishioners of All Saints Wokingham came to lunch in the Cornerstone on Sunday 9th October. The event was hosted by the Home Communion team who prepared everything from the cooked meal, to the invitations and place settings and, of course, the clearing up! Mrs Jo Robinson, co-ordinator of the Pastoral Care Team said: " It was enjoyed by everyone who attended and ‘when are we going to do it again?’ A brilliant success."
Tuesday, 4 October 2016
Creation Time Day 33
A photo and thought for Creation Time Day 33 from Canon David Hodgson
Rivers have shaped the landscape of the earth, carving out valleys and creating floodplains and deltas. They exercise huge influence on human development. Rivers have provided water and fertile soil to support large concentrations of population. They have acted as vital transport channels for the expansion of human settlement into continental interiors and for the movement of people and goods for trade.
In more recent human history the energy of rivers has been harnessed first to drive flour grinding mills and today to generate electricity. This has involved controversial schemes of dams and channel diversions in several area of the world.
Rivers are vital in the hydrological cycle which ensures the drainage of water from the land back into the sea becoming available once again to fall as rain.
This photograph depicts the Orange River near Upington in South Africa. At 1400 miles it is the longest river in South Africa flowing from east to west into the Atlantic Ocean, passing through the arid regions on the southern edge of the Kalahari Desert. Although Upington is the only major settlement through which it flows the river is important to the South African economy for hydroelectricity and irrigation.
As well as their material and economic benefits rivers provide a rich stimulus to the human imagination. Rivers are a symbolic resource for reflection on the paradox in human experience of the co-existence of endless change and constant presence; provoking thought on time and mortality.
"No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man." Heraclitus
Rivers have shaped the landscape of the earth, carving out valleys and creating floodplains and deltas. They exercise huge influence on human development. Rivers have provided water and fertile soil to support large concentrations of population. They have acted as vital transport channels for the expansion of human settlement into continental interiors and for the movement of people and goods for trade.
In more recent human history the energy of rivers has been harnessed first to drive flour grinding mills and today to generate electricity. This has involved controversial schemes of dams and channel diversions in several area of the world.
Rivers are vital in the hydrological cycle which ensures the drainage of water from the land back into the sea becoming available once again to fall as rain.
This photograph depicts the Orange River near Upington in South Africa. At 1400 miles it is the longest river in South Africa flowing from east to west into the Atlantic Ocean, passing through the arid regions on the southern edge of the Kalahari Desert. Although Upington is the only major settlement through which it flows the river is important to the South African economy for hydroelectricity and irrigation.
As well as their material and economic benefits rivers provide a rich stimulus to the human imagination. Rivers are a symbolic resource for reflection on the paradox in human experience of the co-existence of endless change and constant presence; provoking thought on time and mortality.
"No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man." Heraclitus
Sunday, 2 October 2016
Creation Time Day 32
Today's photo and thought for Creation Time from Canon David Hodgson
Creation Time Day 32
No celebration of the creation would be complete without paying homage to the glory of green. Large swathes of the landmass of the Earth appear green because of its vegetation cover. The colour green has come to symbolise nature and the natural in human culture. There is plenty of anecdotal, and some scientific, evidence that spending time with, or even having regular sight of, plants or woodland environments can relieve stress. Green is good.
There remains some mystery nonetheless about why plants are green. Yes it is because plant tissue is full of the green pigment chlorophyll. The presence of chlorophyll is vital for photosynthesis which is the process whereby plants absorb energy from sunlight. Chlorophyll absorbs light in the red and blue sections of the spectrum but it reflects green; making plants appear green to the human eye.
The question which I understand has yet to be answered fully to the satisfaction of all scientists is why plants evolved with chlorophyll predominant, since it does not absorb a significant section of the light spectrum, namely the green. Why would plants not maximise absorption of the full range of light from which to convert to energy? There are several theories still under discussion.
If another pigment which absorbed the full light spectrum had evolved in plants all that is now green would appear black to the human eye. Who knows what that would have done to the evolution of vision in humans and other creatures.
Mystery or not, green is worth celebrating: a gift in creation which calms the human spirit.
"Our response to the world is essentially one of wonder, of confronting the mysterious with a sense, not of being small, or insignificant, but of being part of a rich and complex narrative." John Burnside, poet (1955 - )
Creation Time Day 32
No celebration of the creation would be complete without paying homage to the glory of green. Large swathes of the landmass of the Earth appear green because of its vegetation cover. The colour green has come to symbolise nature and the natural in human culture. There is plenty of anecdotal, and some scientific, evidence that spending time with, or even having regular sight of, plants or woodland environments can relieve stress. Green is good.
There remains some mystery nonetheless about why plants are green. Yes it is because plant tissue is full of the green pigment chlorophyll. The presence of chlorophyll is vital for photosynthesis which is the process whereby plants absorb energy from sunlight. Chlorophyll absorbs light in the red and blue sections of the spectrum but it reflects green; making plants appear green to the human eye.
The question which I understand has yet to be answered fully to the satisfaction of all scientists is why plants evolved with chlorophyll predominant, since it does not absorb a significant section of the light spectrum, namely the green. Why would plants not maximise absorption of the full range of light from which to convert to energy? There are several theories still under discussion.
If another pigment which absorbed the full light spectrum had evolved in plants all that is now green would appear black to the human eye. Who knows what that would have done to the evolution of vision in humans and other creatures.
Mystery or not, green is worth celebrating: a gift in creation which calms the human spirit.
"Our response to the world is essentially one of wonder, of confronting the mysterious with a sense, not of being small, or insignificant, but of being part of a rich and complex narrative." John Burnside, poet (1955 - )
Saturday, 1 October 2016
Creation Time Day 31
Today's photo and thought for Creation Time from Canon David Hodgson
Creation Time Day 31
Today's photo of a cardoon approaching the end of the growing season introduces the theme of the seed. The diversity and resilience of plant life on earth is a result of the evolution of the humble seed. It allows for plants to await the right growing conditions before coming to life.
The myriad ways in which human life is dependent upon plants would be impossible without the seed. Today scientists are collecting and banking seeds to prevent species from complete extinction.
The wonder of the seed is recognised in the sayings of many wise teachers in human history. In the Christian gospels the power of the seed to generate abundance of life from tiny beginnings is used by Jesus to illustrate the capacity of faith in God to transform human existence.
‘With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable will we use for it? It is like a mustard seed, which, when sown upon the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth; yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes the greatest of all shrubs, and puts forth large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.’ Mark 4:30 - 32
Creation Time Day 31
Today's photo of a cardoon approaching the end of the growing season introduces the theme of the seed. The diversity and resilience of plant life on earth is a result of the evolution of the humble seed. It allows for plants to await the right growing conditions before coming to life.
The myriad ways in which human life is dependent upon plants would be impossible without the seed. Today scientists are collecting and banking seeds to prevent species from complete extinction.
The wonder of the seed is recognised in the sayings of many wise teachers in human history. In the Christian gospels the power of the seed to generate abundance of life from tiny beginnings is used by Jesus to illustrate the capacity of faith in God to transform human existence.
‘With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable will we use for it? It is like a mustard seed, which, when sown upon the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth; yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes the greatest of all shrubs, and puts forth large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.’ Mark 4:30 - 32
Friday, 30 September 2016
Creation Time Day 30
Today's photo and thought for Creation Time from Canon David Hodgson
Creation Time Day 30
Creation Time Day 30
If England's national tree is the oak then certainly the London plane may lay claim to be the arborial icon of its capital city. The London plane is believed to have been "born" in the city itself in the 17th century, as a natural hybrid of the Oriental plane from South-east Europe and the Western plane or American sycamore. It owes its existence to London's role as a global hub.
Now it represents more than half of the city's trees. The London plane is ideally suited to life as a street tree. The distinctive mottled bark pattern, captured in my photograph from the garden of London's Natural History Museum, indicates its resilience in the face of air pollution. Its ability to shed pieces of bark allow it to be rid of polluting toxins. Whilst the tree may grow to an inconvenient height (over 30m) it readily survives, indeed thrives on, pollarding. It does not require an extensive root system and is not fussy about soil type. It is said that no London plane tree has yet been known to die of natural causes.
The tree's allegorical significance has been noted, among others, by Lia Leendertz writing in The Garden magazine (May 2016, p22): "..for the excellence that can spring from inner-city melting pots." It is also a useful symbol of the importance of human influence on the natural world as we now experience it.
Some scientists have proposed that we have entered a new geological epoch in the history of the Earth. Known as the Anthropocene age, it represents the period in which human activity has become significant for the future of the planet as a whole. In the spirituality of an ecologically-conscious Christian faith humanity may be regarded as "co-creator" with God in the renewing of the Earth.
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