Tuesday, 28 August 2018

Start:Stop - Restless Hearts : St Augustine & Anton Bruckner



Start:Stop offers the chance for busy commuters to Start their day by Stopping to reflect for ten minutes. Starting every quarter hour between 7.45am and 9.15am on Tuesday mornings at St Stephen Walbrook, in the heart of the City of London, we invite people to drop in for as long as they can to hear a sequence of bible readings, reflections and prayers or simply to sit and reflect. For more information visit our website. This reflection is from Tuesday 28th August 2018.

Wednesday, 22 August 2018

BOOK REVIEW : Liturgy on the Edge edited by Reverend Sam Wells



There is something captivating about seeing glimpses “behind the scenes.” I know it’s a bit geeky but I always found it quite exciting when I came across sermons and preachers notes when tidying up the church and seeing how different they were! Bishop Richard’s sermons were perfectly typed in largeish print, double spaced with page numbers and arranged on the page so that there were no awkward page turns halfway through a paragraph. Fr Peter Delaney, the former Archdeacon of London, underlines his typed script in red pen to show emphasis and dynamics - like an actor or voice artist (perhaps an echo of his previous work in the film industry in Hollywood?) Fr Luke, the current Archdeacon, hand writes “word maps” on the order of service - with key words to remind him what to say - I have seen him adapting these right up to the start of the service - but he still delivers a flawless sermon, without reading word for word from a script. Impressive! 

This latest book from St Martin in the Fields is perfect for anyone, like me, who loves having a nose behind the scenes to find out how things were done. But “Liturgy on the Edge” does much more than that. Through succinct commentaries by members of the clergy, music staff, PCC and members of the congregation, the book makes clear the connection between what was done and why - surely something all those involved in “doing liturgy” should be asking, all the time?

Saturday, 11 August 2018

Anton Bruckner & Augustinian Spirituality

The Berlin Philharmonic with Simon Rattle at the Royal Festival Hall, 30 May 2018. Photograph: Monika Rittershaus

Brahms called him a "country pumpkin," the Viennese music critic Eduard Hanslick defined his work as a sequence of "empty and dull patches that stretch to unsparing lengths”; his Mass in F was declared unsingable - (he had to pay the Vienna Philharmonic eight months of his own salary to perform it) - but the composer Anton Bruckner persevered. He said:

"They want me to write in a different way. I could, but I must not. Out of thousands I was given this talent by God, only I. Sometime I will have to give an account of myself. How would the Father in Heaven judge me if I followed others and not Him?"

Is such self-assuredness evidence of a vain, self-conceited man - or someone with complete faith in God's providence? Whatever your view, one must admire Bruckner's unswerving sense of vocation!

Sermon - All will be thrown down

A sermon given during the Sung Eucharist at St George’s Bloomsbury on Sunday 17th November 2024 (Second before Advent) based on the text of ...