Entries categorized as prayer

Friday round-up: trousers, liturgy, heathens and prayers.

On July 2, 2010 / By maggi dawn / 7 Comments
I’ve had a ferociously hard-working week with no time to blog, so here’s a round up of thoughts, tweets and random odds and ends from the week. Yesterday morning I tweeted a story about everyone’s worst nightmare: the Lord Mayor of Leicester was speaking to a large crowd, including loads of schoolchildren, when his trousers fell More...

Rogation Day: ask and ye shall receive

On May 10, 2010 / By maggi dawn / 1 Comment
Today, tomorrow and Wednesday are the three days of the Minor Rogation – the three days before Ascension Day, which always falls on the Thursday 40 days after Easter. The word “Rogation” comes from the Latin rogare (to ask), and traditionally yesterday’s gospel reading would have been from John 16: “Ask and ye shall receive”. More...

Angels and Announcements

On November 15, 2009 / By maggi dawn / 1 Comment
I’m going to lead a quiet day tomorrow in Ely, based on themes from my Advent book, Beginnings and Endings (and What Happens in Between): Daily Bible Readings from Advent to Epiphany More...

Slow Spirituality

On October 19, 2009 / By maggi dawn / No Comments
I blogged about the Slow movement a while back.  It's not about being slow, or dull, or lazy; it's about choosing your pace – knowing what to do at speed and when to stop and smell the flowers. This year I came across Ian Stackhouse's book, The Day Is Yours, which is about "Slow Spirituality in More...

we could pray, couldn’t we?

On February 21, 2005 / By maggi dawn / 41 Comments
Faced with a completely insoluble problem at the weekend (I was ill, my son was desperate to go flying kites, it was snowing, he was bored and needed to run around…) my son put it to me that we could pray, couldn’t we? “God can fix it. We ought to ask him.” I viewed my son More...

Disturb us, Lord

On January 26, 2005 / By maggi dawn / 13 Comments
I’m always on the hunt for good prayers to use at Choral Evensong. Choral Evensong, for the uninitiated, is probably the best bit of the Book of Common Prayer – with the very tiniest of tweaks at the beginning it stands as a beautiful and perfectly relevant early evening service any day of the year. More...