Sunday 30 November 2008


After the Sunday hospital visit I was in church for the 4pm Vespers which was well attended. Rob Smith gave us an excellent reflection, here it is:

Some words from the thirty fifth chapter of the prophet Isaiah: ‘They shall see the Glory of the Lord, the majesty of our God. Strengthen the weak hands, and make firm the feeble knees. Say to those who are of a fearful heart, ‘Be strong, fear not!’ Behold your God will come with vengeance, and with recompense. He will come and save you’.
Each year as we enter the season of Advent, we are reminded and invited to WAIT. Sometimes this can be hard –like waiting for an urgent letter to arrive through the post, or waiting for exam results. But there is another kind of waiting. I’m sure that we can all remember a time when we were young and promised a special treat on a certain day, and how time seemed to drag waiting for this day to arrive. This waiting is a time of expectation, a time to prepare for a great event. This is the Spirit of Advent. It is a time of expectation, of anticipation, of preparation, of longing.
The focus of the entire Advent season, as we all well know, is preparation for our yearly commemoration of the birth of Jesus on that first Christmas night. It is a time for remembering his continuing presence with us in the sacraments. It is also a time for looking forward to his triumphal return at the end of time.
The readings that we heard at Mass this morning and those for the forthcoming week urge us to remember and prepare for Jesus’ Second Coming. We heard St Paul reminding both the Corinthian Church, and us, of the need to have faith and hope until this happens. He advises the community in Corinth to try and heal the divisions that had quickly because the time of Jesus’ return might be sooner than they had first thought.
Jesus’ words in St. Mark’s Gospel provide a stark warning: ‘Beware, keep alert; for you do not know when the time will come’. Jesus goes on to explain this harsh notice in the parable of the man who puts his servants and doorkeeper on guard while he is away on a long journey. Each servant had his own work to do while the master was away, but the doorkeeper’s role was not simply the usual task of keeping out unwanted guests. He was commanded to ‘stay awake’, because the time of day or night when the master returns is unknown.
St Mark has Jesus directing this parable at the disciples. They are the ones who must stay awake until the Second Coming. It may seem to be an impossible task to be vigilant at all times, but the intention here is not for this task to be a burden. It is intended to prompt us, his followers of today, to ask the question: are we ready to greet Christ when he comes? Are we like the doorkeeper, or are we more like the servants going about their daily business?
All of us should be honest and admit that we do struggle with our faith at times in our everyday life. We get distracted from following Christ by the pressures of daily living, of the modern commercial world, of work, and, as a result, we let things pass us by. There are times when we simply ‘fall asleep’ and get overtaken by the things that we should have guarded against, rather much like a group of bridesmaids described the parable told in St Matthew’s Gospel. The bridegroom was late in coming, and all of the bridesmaids had fallen asleep. When the cry went up ‘the bridegroom is here!’ the five of them that had taken extra oil were able to go out immediately, greet him and escort him to the wedding celebration. The others, who were not prepared, were shut out in the darkness.
We, too, must be like the doorkeeper or the wise bridesmaids that were prepared. We, like them, know what we are supposed to do to participate in the wedding feast. We, too, must have our lamps ready to greet the bridegroom.
This first week of Advent offers each of us another chance to get ready. It offers us the opportunity to reflect on the events of the previous year, which has been a year of special grace for us at St. Johns, and build on them. It gives us the chance to plan for the future, to renew our commitment to following Christ, to prayer and supporting each other in our Church community, to truly trim our spiritual lamps, so to speak.
So, as we wait for Christ to come again, let us pray with joy for the advent of God's kingdom of peace and truth, in the hope that we too might, in the words of St Cyril of Jerusalem ‘run out with the angels to meet the Master, crying out in adoration ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord’’. Amen.

Advent I

Happy New Year! As we start afresh in our exploration of the Mystery of Christ I wish all readers of this blog every blessing in the common discipleship that we have. Walking in the footsteps of Christ is a journey of joy and courage, Christianity is not for the fainthearted. With the grace of God and in prayer we enter into deeper levels of intimacy with Christ. This will enable us to prepare our hearts to be both a manger and a throne for him to dwell and reign.
Advent here has not brought any good weather, it is a grey and dull day however the liturgy gave it the necessary colour and the community spirit was not dampened at all.
Early Mass is always a quiet and reflective liturgy, I enjoyed the conversations afterwards. For this Mass a wonderfully embroidered fiddleback chasuble was used, its use restricted only for the Advent season, I hope to post a picture of it shortly for those out there who like to see these beautiful objects.
After Lauds there was some time available for prayer and the rest taken with getting ready for the sung Mass. Two of the Sunday School members came up to light our first Advent Candle. The Advent hymns are really powerful and I think all of us enjoyed singing our recessional hymn: Lo! He comes with clouds discending.
This was followed by that equally holy time of coffee which brings together all of us. Once again I enjoyed the conversations and the two stalls we had, one selling Christmas cards for the a charity and the other laiden with goodies prepared by the Servers for their appeal.
This afternoon at 4pm we shall have Advent Vespers with reflection by Mr Rob Smith, to which many are looking forward.
Although this blog will be one year old on Wednesday it was on Advent I that it was launched. I hope that those kind enough of you to have followed it have enjoyed sharing the whole of the Chritian Year with us and I hope and pray that, under God, we may continue to share our life as a parish with you during this new Liturgical Year. We count on your prayers.
Below is a picture of the new carpet at the Walsingham Altar, the generous offer of a loyal member of St John. Thank you. Also a picture of the All Souls altar with another carpet for it.

Friday 28 November 2008

During the “busyness” of the day, Sacred Space offers an oasis of peace and stillness. Now that Advent is upon us it is this stillness that we ought to instil within us. We seem to fill Advent with hectic preparations for all sorts of things, some good, others not. Those without God run after material things or ideas in order to fulfil their own lives, for many it is always about the next thing, whatever smoke and cloud that is. It seems that this has infected many Christians across denominations. Why is it that so many followers of Jesus can not be still and have to pursue illusions that can never fulfil? Why is it that only a handful come to church to sit in stillness? Why is it that some Christians who come once a week for Mass can not recollect themselves in silence and stillness before Mass? Maybe Advent is the time to take stock and ponder on stillness and seek the presence of God in the centre of our being. Today I prayed that all followers of this blog will experience a holy and exciting Advent in the stillness of the Presence of God – and this is what I really wish you.
After Lauds and Mass (Mass was of the Feria but I constantly thought of St Catherine Laboure` and a wonderful priest who has written to me this morning telling me that he celebrated Mass in the place where this holy nun received the apparition of the Miraculous Medal) Fr Mark went to do the home communions and a funeral, Carol was busy printing the splendid Parish Magazine (available here) and after a couple of Pastoral conversations I went to do the hospital round first with the usual cheerful and dedicated staff and then the patients. Every time I climb the hill back home I am always thankful for what I receive from these visits and hope that I am reciprocating at least a small fraction of what they give me.
After Sacred Space and Benediction the churchwardens came armed with a new carpet for the Walsingham Altar which looks rather splendid and will be a comfortable area for the Jolly Tots to assemble for their trips to church (photos tomorrow).
It is such a joy and blessing to serve God as a priest in His Church and to continue the action of His Son in washing feet. There is nothing better! However ministry is genuine when it comes from that inner and central stillness that flows from the Tabernacle and the Altar. This Advent, priests and people, let us be still!

Forward in Faith @ Rochester


On this blog you will see this poster several times till the 30th January to serve as a reminder of an event you should not miss if you are local and if not to please keep in your prayers. More details here.

Thursday 27 November 2008

Today is the feast day of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal. On the 27th November 1830, in Rue du Bac in Paris, Our Lady asked St Catherine Laboure, a nun living in the spiritual tradition of St Vincent de Paul, to strike a holy medal. Our Lady herself told her how the medal had to be. More details about the apparitions and medal can be found here.
I always have a stock of these medals to give out to patients at the hospital, children, families and when I visit. This is a great devotion showing filial love towards our heavenly Mother and following her own request. I recommend it. One can acquire medals from here.

Wednesday 26 November 2008

Mass wasJustify Full at school today. Fr Mark led us to reflect about Christ the King and what kind of king he is. The well behaved children responded with enthusiasm and the serving team done us proud. Jackie led the singing and one of the pupils led the intercessions. We were joined by some members of our congregation and Jez volunteered to be our photographer.
Fr Mark will be burying (or rather cremating) the dead today while I am engaged in different pastoral work.
This evening the School Governing Body will meet for some in service training and the servers will come to the office to do some more work on their fund raising scheme.
I think today about the excellent contacts we have with the children in the Parish: a successful Sunday school, two schools, Jolly Tots, First Words and Scouts. That is almost 250 children per week! Keep us in your prayers as we consolidate this ministry!


Practising the reading

The start of Mass

The Gospel

The SermonThe prayers
The Consecration

The Final Blessing

Tuesday 25 November 2008

Saint Catherine of Alexandria, Virgin & Martyr


St Catherine of Alexandria, Virgin and Martyr is the saint we venerate today. St Catherine is a much loved saint all round the world and her courage is an inspiration to so many. Guarding her Virginity in the context of a hedonistic world cost Catherine her life amidst the most horrific tortures, but for Catherine her virginity was the gift to Christ, she was a flower securely planted in the Mystic garden and she did what she could to ensure that no one stepped on the sacred ground reserved to her Master and Joy. Catherine triumphed and today we share in her costly victory. This image above was created in the early years of the 20th century and shows the mystic marriage between Christ and Catherine. Our Lady is both witness and enabler, the whole company of heaven rejoice in the triumph of purity and the passer by is invited to enter into the whole movement and grow in intimacy with Christ. May her intercession and example inspire us in our Christian discipleship.
I pray to her to bless and preserve the innocence of the children I have been working with yesterday, as usual they are a joy and delight. In one school we looked at one of the parables and wrote down our prayers, in another school we looked at Baptism and its meaning in the journey of faith, the first lesson in a series that will reflect on the Sacraments.
Today Fr Mark will lead Collective Worship in school. As you see we are working hard with our schools communicating to our young ones the Christian narrative, becoming aware of the fertile ground and possibilities in some of them, praying that some parents will move to bring them our way more and more. But even before that together with Jackie, our Pastoral Assistant, we are working with pre school children and their parents and also sowing the seed there. Please, wherever you are, do support our work by your prayers.

Monday 24 November 2008

Liturgical Incultaration

Liturgical inculturation is not something that came about with the reform led by Archbishop Bugnini, although many times some commentators seem to ascribe it to him. Here is a clip (biretta tip to Orbis Catholicus) of the ancient Eritrean Orthodox liturgy that took place yesterday in Rome. The Western Liturgy following the pattern of Rome is based on noble simplicity. For us this liturgy seems so very different to all other things we are used to, even different from the Greek (Byzantine) liturgy. However this is an ancient liturgy through which God is glorified and we his people sanctified.
All peoples: praise the Lord, the King!


As I prepare for the day when we celebrate the Martyrs of Vietnam and see that all the lesson plans for RE in schools are ready, I continue to reflect on Christ our King and pray that his Kingdom may come – Adveniat regnum tuum!
I also reflect that being King is being Sovereign Lord, and as I think of children I think about Him as Lord of Life, and I think about the many other children I could have met today but they were not allowed to share the fellowship of other children and the school as they were aborted! This brings in a cloud of sadness especially as I remember a story I have heard from a mother of a Down syndrome beautiful and happy child. When this mother was pregnant and the usual tests done, on finding out that this child would have Down syndrome (testing the yet to be - how much like the Nazi regime!) she was offered more support if she went for an abortion (or as the trendy seculars now call it - termination) then, as she did, if she kept the child. Is this right? Should this happen in our developed country where everything seems to be protected except babies. And it is in this puzzlement that I will look at Christ the King today, maybe similar to the puzzlement of the Martyrs of Vietnam, and I will look around the children I will teach today and pray for those others who could have been there.

Sunday 23 November 2008

Christ the Universal King

Christ the King is a feast day of hope. No wonder it originated in a big way during the persecutions in Mexico. Recall Blessed Miguel Agustin Pro, Priest and member of the Society of Jesus. Facing the firing squad, his only crime being a Catholic priest, he outstretched his arm and said: Viva Cristo Rey! – Long live Christ the King. Those last words of Fr Pro where stronger than the round of fired bullets, they etched themselves into the consciousness of the Church throughout the world and the feast of Christ the King established. For those who are in a minority, marginalised or persecuted the feast of Christ the Universal King brings hope. It speaks to us, at a deeper level, about eschatology, about working to bring the reign of Faith in this world – a kingdom of justice, mercy and peace. On a lighter level it encourages the persecuted and marginalised as they cast their eyes upon their unconquerable leader. It brings us face to face with the sweet Christ the real and only King whom we can only approach on our knees, a symbolic posture that shows the inward reality of humility, nothingness and total abandon in his hands. Is it not sad when one meets Christians who are not willing to kneel in front of Christ and not because of dodgy knees or frailty? Poor disillusioned Christians!
We kneel in front of our King as we acknowledge our nothingness – that is our starting point. We kneel in front of Christ to respond to His invitation to work for His kingdom. We kneel in front of Christ in faith accepting the mysterious will of God. We kneel in front of Christ with empty hands and in silence just looking at Him and He at us. We kneel in front of Him accepting His teaching in its totality without questions but in total love. We kneel embracing Him and He embracing us – the long lost sheep that thirsts for Him. Is there any better hope then this. During this week let our background prayer be: Thy Kingdom come ! Adveniat Regnum tuum! And let us do that meekly kneeling upon our knees. May His Kingdom come in our hearts and in His Church.

Christus Rex!

This afternoon FiF Rochester had a Christ the King Festival at St Barnabas Beckenham. The preacher was Canon Paul Miller. After the sermon there was a procecession with the Most Blessed, litany of the Sacred Heart, Consecration to Christ the King and Benediction. The evening ended with refreshments in the Parish Hall. Well done Fr Simon for a wonderful celebration!

Christus Vincit! Christus Regnant! Christus Imperat!







It snowed during early Mass and it had a little bearing on the attendance for the Sung Mass.
Today we welcomed Canon Michael Shields SSC former Parish Priest of St John's. After Mass we had a procession of the Most Blessed Sacrament and Benediction. After Mass people had time to catch up with Fr Michael. It was great to enjoy Fr Michael's ministry and during this week we shall do well if we reflect on the words that he shared with us.

Saturday 22 November 2008

Christus Vincit! Christus Regnant! Christus Imperat!

It seems that the Forward in Faith celebrations for Christ the King have been a great success. Thanks be to God! Here are some photographs of the event taken by Mr Craig Aburn and here reproduced by his permission. Biretta tip to Craig!

St Cecilia V & M

Our intention today is for our choir as we celebrate the feast day of this Virgin & Martyr patron of Musicians.Sadly, I could not get to Gordon Square today, but my prayers are with Bishop John and his faithful as they assemble to celebrate Christ, the Universal King.
We look forward to welcome Canon Michael Shields SSC as our celebrant and preacher tomorrow as we too join with the Universal Church to celebrate our King and the end of this liturgical Year.

Christus Vincit! Christus Regnant! Christus Imperat!

Friday 21 November 2008

The Presentation of the BVM in the Temple

I was taught how to serve Mass on the altar which is beneath this reredos (reproduced above). It depicts the festivity of today, the mystery of the presentation of Mary in the Temple.
This day is dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary as many years ago a church built next to the remains of the temple in Jerusalem was dedicated and named after her. This church is no more. But what we celebrate today is an event that is found in the apocryphal gospel of James (written about AD 150). There we find the story that when Mary was three years old her parents: Joachim and Anna, took her to the temple to receive her education as a boarding student, which education she kept receiving till she was twelve when she was betrothed to Joseph. Why celebrate a feast of Mary’s time in the temple?
I understand this feast like this: Mary lived very close to the Holy of Holies the place where the chosen people of God believed was the presence of God. Mary grew up near this presence. There she waited on God in silence, by listening to those who taught her. There she developed the skills of discipleship – how could she ever ponder in her heart the mysteries of the Lord if she was not already trained to do so. There, in her hidden years in the temple she opened her heart to God and He took delight and saw that she was ready to fulfil His will in her life. All this happens in the silence of the Temple school and at the same time the normality of every day life at a school.
In the normality of life God delights in us too if we offer to dwell in the silence of His Temple, that temple not made by hands, his Son Jesus Christ. And Mary, again, shows us the way.

*******

Yesterday was almost all taken up by meetings. One of which was a preparation meeting for an event organised by Forward in Faith Rochester that is taking place at the end of January 2009. If God wills it this might be a moment of grace and growth.
The stability of the Offices and the Holy Sacrifice hinge the day together and put all other things in perspective. Today after the daily round of morning religion (Mass offered on the altar of Our Lady of Walsingham) is the visit to our local hospital – a ministry that is much at my heart as it takes me very near to our Lord suffering in those people. Then, after a simple lunch, is Sacred Space – that space where the mind and soul rest in silence in front of the Real Presence and all brought to a close by Benediction. Pew sheet and other lists will be printed and admin to be done, a day of joy as we near that great feast of Christ the Universal King.


Sunday 23rd November
Forward in Faith & Church Union Diocese of Rochester

Annual Celebration of the Feast of Christ the King
4.00 pm Procession and Benediction

at St Barnabas Beckenham
Preacher: Canon Paul Miller

Wednesday 19 November 2008

Servers are busy at work producing the Parish Christmas cards which members of the congregation designed. The proceeds of the sales go towards the new servers robes.

The Solemnity of Christ the Universal King
Sunday 23rd November 2008


10am Sung Mass, Procession & Benediction
Celebrant & Preacher: The Revd Canon Michael Shields SSC


Yesterday was spent catching up with some books and preparing things for the PCC and the next edition of the Parish Magazine. The programme for Advent and Christmas was also finalised.
After the 8pm Mass the PCC met to listen to the presentation by Fr Ron Robinson on “Fan the Flame”. Now the members of the PCC are reading the booklet they were given and praying about the whole issue to see if God wills the Fan the Flame week in our Parish, please do keep them in your prayers.
After Mass today we assembled to recite the Litany of St Joseph in front of his shrine, we offered it for all the members of our congregation for whatever needs they may have. Wednesday is the day dedicated to St Joseph and the 19th day is his feast day (in March) when Wednesday happens to be the 19th then special devotions to St Joseph are encouraged.
After devotions I worked with our Parish Administrator until Fr Mark collected me to go to the Deanery Chapter today held in the lovely village of Westerham. The meeting, led by the Vicar of Westerham, considered some statistics about CofE attendance as found in Peter Brierly’s book “Pulling out of the Nosedive”. It is interesting that since 1994 attendance figures have fallen drastically but in this book there are suggestions on how to pull out of this, hence the title. The suggestions can be found to the end of the book (p.253). Anglo-Catholic parishes need not worry as the suggestions he puts are in place and from my little experience I have seen more going on. It is good to see how churches in our tradition are growing.
Back home I had some printing to finish and e-mails to answer and then straight to Office of Readings, Vespers and Salve. The Servers are going to do more printing tonight to meet the heavy demands on their Christmas Cards production.
Reflecting on the Brierly's book mentioned above I reflected on his last suggestion: “Work out a strategy of where you’re going, or where you’d like to be in, say, 5 years’ time?” Looking at mission as a Parish we are forming a vision of where, under God, we would like to be in 5 years time, but if the Cof E only offers us a Code of Practice, the vision of where I am going to be becomes clearer as a Code of Practice will not do.

Monday 17 November 2008


Lauds and Mass in honour of St Hugh of Lincoln, our intention today was in thanksgiving for our Year of Grace but especially for the splendid day we had yesterday. This was followed by exposition for Sacred Space.
Clare who led the catering team yesterday was around to finalise some work while some of the servers were busy printing their Christmas cards – the look vey nice (see photo above).
I went to school where we had a meeting with our new SIP (School Improvement Partner) to review the Head teacher’s performance. Our new SIP is very good indeed and I am sure she will be a great asset to our school. The meeting went on till lunchtime and I went back to the Vicarage to find the servers still hard at work.
Just before 2 pm I met Roger for some business we had to get sorted in church and immediately after that the Year 6 classes from Sevenoaks Primary School came for their RE lesson. They are very well behaved and took the Gospel stories we discussed vey much to heart – we even had a Gospel procession, I think I have found some budding servers.
Some time to answer the e-mails and messages on the phone and catching up with one of our churchwardens then back to church for Office of Readings, Vespers and Salve which I shared with Frances.
Planning for PCC tomorrow in which we shall start thinking about a “Fan the Flame” programme. Fr Ron Robinson SSC will lead us in this. Please keep us in your prayers.

Sunday 16 November 2008

Biretta tip to the blog of St Stephen's House, Oxford for publishing the sermon that Canon Robin Ward SSC preached here tonight on the occassion of our Sesquicentenary. Here it is:
Evelyn Waugh has a scene in his novel Helena when the heroine, the daughter of a British chief who has become the mother of the first Christian Roman emperor, says goodbye to her son. He is off to found a new capital city to mark the adoption of Christianity: no more Rome for him, he tells her – it’s all falling down and the drains are shocking. Instead, a bright new future in the East: work will start at once on a great Christian capital … a city built round two great new Churches dedicated to – what do you think? – Wisdom and Peace. He tells his mother Helena and Pope Sylvester: you can have your old Rome … with its Peter and Paul and its tunnels full of martyrs. We start with no unpleasant associations; in innocence with Divine Wisdom and Peace. When he has gone Helena says to Sylvester: I don’t like Constantine’s idea of a new Rome. It sounds so empty and clean, like the newly swept house in the gospel that was filled with devils … you can’t just send for Peace and Wisdom, can you? And build houses for them and shut them in. Why, they don’t exist at all except in people, do they? Give me real bones every time.
When Augustine arrived in Canterbury he too wanted the old Rome and not the new. He mapped out a little ecclesiastical city around the capital of the Kentish king which mimicked for the English the sacred geography he had left behind him in Italy, the Limina Apostolorum. And so it is that to this day Canterbury possesses the remains of the great monastery of the apostles Peter and Paul; and at its heart the great cathedral church of Christ, the mother church of all English Christians, which takes its dedication from that of the Lateran basilica in Rome, where Gregory the Great our apostle had his chair in succession to Peter. And from this beginning, the whole of our land has been marked out with parishes and parish churches, bringing a consecration to England which measures it with the sureness of the surveyor’s rod as a Christian realm.
In the novel Helena tells the Pope: Give me real bones every time. The old Romans had a fear of death and of the places where the dead were buried. Shakespeare mentions this in Hamlet, that when Julius Caesar was about to be assassinated The graves stood tenantless, and the sheeted dead/ Did squeak and gibber in the Roman streets. No one was buried in the City: the dead were exiled to the empty countryside, and any incursion by them was an occasion of sheer terror and ill omen. Not so for the Christians: from the moment that the saints were raised and went into the city of Jerusalem to testify to the redemption won by the Lord’s passion, we have exercised the virtue of Hope by keeping our dead near to us. Our altars are built over the relics of the martyrs; and as we come to Mass we are conscious of the faithful departed, whose earthly remains rest close to where the Sacrifice of the New Covenant by which they were fed in life is now offered for their repose.
And at the heart of all this is the House which is the House of Bread: the Church which is Bethlehem because it is the tabernacle of the most High, the risen Christ who makes himself know to his people under the sign of Bread. Human beings cannot build a house and then call for Wisdom and Peace to come and live in them: abstractions aren’t biddable, and when we start to think they are, then the sinful megalomania of vaulting human ambition brings us back inevitably to the dust from which we are made. But by the wonderful condescension of God our loving Father, something far better even than Wisdom and Peace is biddable, for as John Henry Newman teaches us our flesh and blood is refined by a gift higher than grace: God’s Presence and his very self, and Essence all-divine. And that Presence is biddable because by the effective operation of grace and the invocation of the Holy Spirit of God, when the priest speaks in the name of the one he is set apart to represent, the Body and Blood of the Lord become present to be the sacrifice and feast of the people of God.
A sacred sign, marking out this portion of our town and land to be consecrated to the glory of God; a charitable sign, housing the living in easy and loving familiarity with the beloved dead; an awesome sign, in which the presence of the most High abides always in our midst, he who is priest, victim and sacrifice under the sign of heavenly food; this has been the work of St John’s for the last hundred and fifty years. And because she is a sign that points to Jesus Christ, and because the Scriptures tell us that He was to be a sign that is spoken against, St John’s has shared willingly in the sorrow and rejection of her divine Master. For these have been years too of many passing by, of many who have not heeded the call of God’s love made from the Cross and the altar, and of many who have lived in the shadow of this building and never known its life. We cannot hope to be faithful to Jesus unless we follow him in a spirit of reparation and repentance for this neglect, with which we too through our own lukewarmness pierce his divine Heart.
Our faith teaches us that God’s grace perfects nature and does not destroy it, and a Church dedicated to the glory of God should be an image of that divine work in the souls of humankind. It is not simply a convenient building in which the faithful assemble, it is the gate of heaven, and everything about it should point towards divine realities. The care with which we undertake the sacred liturgies which are its life; the beauty of its fabric and the splendour of its decoration; all these things are not simply the fulfilment of a particular aesthetic taste, they are an affirmation of the incarnation, in which God redeems what he assumes and elects what is created in his image to share the divine life. If, as the great theologian S. Irenaeus wrote in those words placed on Archbishop Michael Ramsey’s gravestone The glory of God is a living Man, then the consecration of human art in the divine cult is the most virtuous expression of that life.
The writer to the Hebrews tells us: for here we have no lasting City, but we seek the city which is to come. This Church for the last one hundred and fifty years has pointed beyond itself to a city not yet attained, the City of God. When the great bishop and doctor of the Church Augustine of Hippo wrote his book called The City of God he was witnessing the collapse of all that the world thought permanent: the government of Rome, the established patterns of life and work and learning which had held together a civilization for a thousand years. But in the face of all this adversity, he could end his immense work with a poem of praise for what was to come in the life of heaven: we shall be still and see; we shall see and we shall love; we shall love and we shall praise. We began with the old Rome, city of saints and martyrs, bedrock of the Church by which the faith of Christ was brought to our land, rich with the real bones which belong to the people of faith journeying towards the Father’s House. We end with the heavenly City, the new Jerusalem coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband, to which we look forward with eager longing and expectation, taught by the holiness of this Dedicated House: O grant us life which shall not end/ In our true native land with thee.

Update 3






Thanks be to God for the blessings and joys he bestowed upon us today.
The Mass was wonderful, our bishop preached a wonderful sermon. The music was excellent and the children's choir made us proud as they sang an anthem for the offertory. The servers knew exactly what to do and the serving was flawless. The bishop blessed the four antimensia that are now on our altars. The church was packed and the sacristy team led by Frances made sure that everything was were it should be and where it is needed.
After Mass we all went down to the hall for our lunch. The bishop blessed the food and the choir led us in singing the grace. We sat for a three course meal which was delicious. So many people helped in setting up the hall, cooking and serving. Graham led the sheet table quiz which amongst others puzzled us by the cockney rhyming slang. Well done table V!
The bishop toasted the church on its birthday, I toasted the bishop and Fr Mark thanked the kitchen staff and toasted the Queen. Whilst the bishop made a pastoral visit to a member of our congregation who was not able to join us, everything was prepared for Vespers and Benediction.
The Leader of the Council and the Mayor honoured us with their presence. Canon Robin Ward SSC gave us a scholarly sermon which was appreciated by all. Vespers was followed by tea and cakes.
It was good to come togtehr as a family, we thank those who came to support us especially the visiting clergy. Thank you for your support.
And now to look and move on, festivities over, on Tuesday the PCC will think about our Parish Mission 2009.