everyday miracles
“…the church has been criticizing itself for too long, and it ought to start celebrating its unsung and remarkable achievements. The trouble is that the faults of the church are so obvious – the gap between its ideals and the reality is so glaring. But the other trouble is that most of us do not More...
Dirge Without Music
I am not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard ground.
So it is, and so it will be, for so it has been, time out of mind:
Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely. Crowned
With lilies and with laurel they go; but I am not resigned.
Lovers and thinkers, into the More...
Black Friday: Buy Nothing Day
It must be around ten years ago that I came across the idea of Buy Nothing Day. It started in Mexico, but took off when it moved to the USA as a response to the conspicuous consumerism of Black Friday. Then the trend spread, and the last Saturday of November was identified as a huge More...
a good bishop
I enjoyed reading a heart-warming story from Rev’d Jean earlier today. The popular caricature of a Bishop is of a man in late middle age, buried in bureaucracy, and far removed from the spontaneity and imagination one would hope for in a spiritual leader. The media loves to perpetuate, and exaggerate, the stereotype. But there More...
Sydney Smith on depression
I just read my friend Kester’s blog on “walking the black dog” and spotted in the comments the Reverend Sydney Smith’s much-quoted letter to Lady Georgiana Morpeth.
The Reverend Sydney Smith was a nineteenth century Anglican clergyman (more or less contemporary with Coleridge), and renowned as a man of sparkling wit. He had entertained the More...
Dr Who
My son and I watch Dr Who quite a lot – and now we live in America he thinks it’s a great way of making sure we don’t lose our accents. Love this hilarious take-off of Victoria Wood’s classic song:
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The Incarnate One
Edwin Muir is a poet I return to again and again. He has a way of nailing something about religious truth in just a few words – making the reader think, “of course, why didn’t I think of that?”. It takes genius to write something that sounds so obvious once it’s said out loud, yet More...
Liturgy: the work of God
I’m not sure how long I’ll keep running with this series, but as I’m teaching liturgy all the time at the moment, it’s possible this one could run and run. Earlier this week I gave some practical ideas (part i and part ii) on how to draft liturgy. Then a couple of days ago I More...
Liturgy is NOT “the work of the people”
I mentioned earlier (here and here) that there is a current trend to define liturgy as “the work of the people”. I think this little phrase has gone viral partly because even among traditions that have never embraced the idea of “liturgy”, the rediscovery of ancient liturgy by the alternative, emerging and non-liturgical traditions has More...
Liturgical Language (ii)
Following on from yesterday’s comments, there was one more thing I wanted to add. I hinted at it already by saying, “Attend to the fact that liturgy is spoken, not written language.” The broader point is that we too easily slip into thinking that liturgy is what’s written in the book or on the screen. It’s More...



