Tuesday 6 June 2017

Pentecost 2017


Whitsun or Pentecost as it is now called in the church. We were in Peterborough and that dawn invasion was a reminder of how the Holy Spirit entered the hearts of those early, disconsolate Christians. Luke tells us that the experience was like an  inburst of wind and fire which changed their lives.

The day before we were in the small, beautiful  Northamptonshire village of Cotterstock. Like Gainford, Cotterstock nestles in a river valley. There the similarity ends. The river Nene (pronounced Nen by the locals) ends its journey in The Wash. Here, it meanders through gently undulating meadows, picturesque Cotswold style villages and ancient market towns.  The poet John Clare would have passed this way as he walked home from the asylum in Northampton to his home in Helpston.

St Andrew's church is a meadow's length away from the river. We were here to see Rita, a brand new treble bell, soon to join her five brothers and sisters in the tower. Rita was cast in memory of Rita Bond, the wife of a former colleague of mine, The Rev'd David Bond. It was a moving experience which brought back happy memories.

The Church had also commissioned a work of art by Bradford artist, Angela Wright, who works in wool. She had installed a stunning work, made entirely from spun wool, which represented the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. Wool dropped from the altar like a waterfall and then spread into the sanctuary and the chancel. It was breathtaking in its simplicity and powerful in its interpretation. (see picture above)

As I began writing this piece, I heard the news of yet another terrorist atrocity, this time in London. That work of art in Cotterstock, reminded me of St Paul's list of the gifts of the Holy Spirit which he gave to the church in Galatia: 'the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.'


Pray for those gifts in our world.

Friday 2 June 2017

Climate change, what now?

Donatld Trump's decision to withdraw from the 2015 Paris agreement on CO2 limits should not have been a surprise to anyone. 'America first' is his motivation but America can only remain  a world leader if it leads the world in tackling the major problems of our generation, among them terrorism, famine, and climate change.

Unbelievably, there are those, Trump among them, who do not accept that our lifestyle is having any effect on the climate. Hurucanes, floods, and rising world temperatures present clear evidence that we are approaching the point of no return. The climate is changing and the effects of this are unpredictable. America is the second largest polluter in the world.

The encouraging aspect of  Trump's decision is that he is being widely condemned across America, and the voices of major industrial companies  combine with many individual states to keep the hope alive that America will be back at the negotiating table. It takes four years for the withdrawal to become operative. We can only hope that President Trump is voted out of office at the next election.

America can then take its rightful place as a world leader, instead of attracting condemnation and ridicule.

35 years as a priest

On Sunday the 1st October I celebrated the 35th anniversary of my ordination as a priest. I also decided that was a good pointmot step do...