Weekly Email – Trinity 22
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Dear friends,
I am pleased to announce a parish trip which will take place in the New Year on 7th February 2025, to see the splendid new exhibition at the British Museum entitled, “Silk Roads.” The exhibition examines the network of trade, travel and intellectual connections that linked East and West through the first Millennium.
“Silk Roads” seeks to show our world has always been a much more connected place than we often imagine. Cross-cultural exchange of various forms is not just crucial to our economic wellbeing, but also contributes to the flourishing of artistic creativity and intellectual discourse.
I am particularly grateful that we have been able to obtain from the British Museum 15 free tickets for this exhibition. They will be apportioned on a “first come; first served” basis. We will meet at the British Museum at 6.00 pm and you can book your place on this trip here on our Eventbrite account. Our visit to the British Museum will finish with the option of dinner at Le Beaujolais restaurant in Soho. The 3 course dinner at Le Beaujolais is £55 per head with parishioners paying for their own drinks.
The exhibition itself is a breathtaking conspectus of the cultural and economic links between a range of regions and periods: early connections between China, Korea and Japan; the nomadic cultures of the Eurasian Steppe; artistic creativity prompting trade between Eastern Africa and the Mediterranean world; right through to archeological discoveries in a far flung island at the very Western reaches of civilisation called Britain.
Amongst this glittering treasure house of artefacts, the influence of Christian culture and the theological debates that characterise its life is complex and fascinating.
We see evidence of early Nestorian life in Asia through evidence of the work of missionaries from Persia in the 700s inscribed on an extraordinary stela found in Chang’an. However, there is also evidence of cultural “cross-pollination” and syncretism. An enigmatic image on display of a bodhisattva-like figure, dating from 800 and found in Dunhuang, has been conjectured to be a Buddhist teacher, a portrait of a Christian cleric, possibly a Nestorian saint, or even a Manichaean image of Christ himself. Layer upon layer of possibility tantalises the viewer as we contemplate the overlapping theological impulses that may have prompted this image’s creation.
The skill and craftsmanship found in Christian Byzantium influences artistic creation with immense power as seen through an array of glorious objects. The Christian architecture of 6th Century Eritraea, for example, shows a flourishing indigenous Christian culture, but one influenced by Byzantium through the stone imported from the Imperial Capital to decorate the interior of the churches found there.
The last sections of the exhibition contemplate the cultural crosscurrents that contribute to the culture of Anglo-Saxon and Carolingian Europe. And yet, even here, the influence of cultures hundreds of miles to the East can be found, for example, in the coinage of Mercian King Offa’s reign – in which he mints coins inscribed with his name, but which mimic the Islamic inscriptions of a Middle Eastern dinar.
This exhibition is a fascinating opportunity both to ponder the extraordinary artistic creativity prompted by a period which, in the West, we often regard mistakenly as the “Dark Ages,” and by cultures and places we know all too little about. It also allows us to explore the role of Christian thought, culture and theology within those streams of interaction and connection. I heartily commend the exhibition to you and hope as many as possible will be able to join us for our parish trip.
Fr Peter
Music sponsorship
We are very grateful to Paul Golding CBE for sponsoring the music last Sunday in memory of his mother. We assure Paul of our prayers.
Every penny we receive in sponsorship makes a huge different to balancing our music budget each year. Many thanks, Paul!
In person formation: Epistle of James
Our next autumn in person formation session takes place this Wednesday, 30th October at 7pm. Our speaker is Fr AKMA Adam, a tutor in New Testament and Greek at the University of Oxford, who also ministers at St Helen’s Parish Church in Abingdon. He will lead us in an introduction to the Epistle of James, a particular area of interest in his studies and writing.
Holy Hour takes place from at 5.30 pm for those who wish to join us, and the evening begins with a light supper after the 6.30 pm Mass
Please register for this event here.
Young Adults Pub Quiz
Our Young Adults group will join the pub quiz which takes places this Tuesday 29th October at 7pm at The King’s Arms, Great Titchfield Street, W1W 7QL. Be in touch with Fr Alan if you’d like to join us for this All Saintstide get-together.
All Saints’ Festival 2024
Eve of All Saints’ Day – Thursday 31st October 2024
6.30 pm: First Solemn Evensong and Benediction
Music: Evening Service in D, George Dyson; Glorious in heaven, Percy Whitlock.
All Saints’ Day – Friday 1st November 2024
6.30 pm: High Mass
Preacher: The Rt Revd Stephen Conway, Bishop of Lincoln.
Music: Missa Sancti Nicolai, Joseph Haydn; O quam gloriosum, Tomas Luis de Victoria.
All Souls’ Day – Saturday 2nd November 2024
12.00 noon: High Mass of Requiem
Preacher: The Revd Reg Bushau.
Music: Requiem, Maurice Duruflé.
6.30 pm Vigil Mass of All Saints’ Festival Sunday
All Saints’ Festival Sunday – Sunday 3rd November 2024
8.30 am: Low Mass
11.00 am: High Mass
Preacher: The Ven Katherine Hedderly, Archdeacon of Charing Cross.
Music: Mass of All Saints, Norman Caplin; Justorum animae, William Byrd.
Followed by a celebratory parish lunch.
5.15 pm: Low Mass
6.00 pm: Solemn Evensong and Benediction, with Te Deum.
Music: Service in C, C. V. Stanford; The fair chivalry, Robert Ashfield; O Salutaris, Bortniansky, arr Norman Caplin; Tantum ergo, Harwood, arr Norman Caplin; Te Deum in G, Herbert Sumsion.
All Saints’ Festival Parish lunch
We are appealing for food for the parish lunch which will take place after the Festival Sunday High Mass on Sunday 3rd November. Please be in touch with Kate Hodgetts if you are able to bring something. We are specifically asking for “finger food” – i.e. buffet food that can be eaten without a knife and fork (i.e. canapés, sandwiches, sausage rolls, small quiches, mini pork pies, cakes etc) so as to keep washing up to a minimum.
Parish walking Group
Our next parish rambling day will take place on Saturday 16th November. Weather permitting, we’ll take a circular route from Guildford towards the Surrey Hills, taking in Albury, Shere and Blackheath. We’ll aim for the 09.35 train from Waterloo. All welcome.
Zoom Theology
Our next Zoom seminar will take place on Saturday 9th November at 7.00 pm and will focus on the theology of Soren Kierkegaard.
We’ll be joined from America by Fr Jeffrey Hanson who will introduce us to aspects of this compelling Danish philosopher’s thought. Fr Hanson is an academic philosopher and has researched and published widely on Kierkegaard.
We are pleased that this seminar is being advertised in both our parish and also in the parish of St Mary the Virgin Times Square. We are hoping it will be attended by parishioners of both churches as a shared teaching event.
Advent Silent Retreat
A silent pre-Christmas retreat will take place at the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham from Friday 6th – Sunday 8th December 2024. The weekend involves arriving on Friday afternoon, and then keeping silence from Friday evening until Sunday morning. The cost of this pilgrimage is £250. This covers the cost of accommodation, meals and travel from Kings Lynn. Pilgrims simply have to pay for their train ticket to Kings Lynn.
To reserve a place, sign up via Eventbrite here.
Attendance last Sunday
The Friends of All Saints’ Margaret Street:
27th – Christopher Naylor, Brian Newman, Barry Newsome, Elaine Norman, Richard North, Fr. Paul Ockford
28th – Fr. Peter and Anna Oesterby-Joergensen, Daniel Oliver, Fr. Barry Orford, Nicholas Page, Samantha Parker, Malcolm Parr, Bhaven Patel, Alma Pearson, Gladys Pearson
29th – Pat Philips, Dr Colin Podmore, Nick and Cecilia Powell, Susan Prain, Vasileios Psomas, Simon Rainey, Heikki Repo
30th – The Sisters of All Saints
31st – Friends of All Saints’ in need
1st – Carlos Remotti-Breton, Dr Steve Rice, John Rick, Fr. Peter Roberts, Hilary Rodger
2nd – Greg Round, Jamie Rundle, Mary Sherred, James Shrimpton
3rd – Ingrid Slaughter, Naomi Slippe, Vaughan Snook, Harvey Solomon-Brady
The sick:
Theresa & Augustina Baier, Stewart Buckingham, Fr John Burniston, Bishop Christopher Chessun, David Craig, Tony Hawkins, Fr Stephen Heard, Fr Harry Hodgetts, Arthur Johnson, Katherine Lee, Elizabeth Lyon, James Rodger, Jan Smith, Fr Peter Strange, Christine Vaughn-Lillie.
The faithful departed:
John Donvan, Pauline Ellis, Caroline Gibbons, Graham Morgan Pr, Graham Norman, Andrew Wagstaff Pr, David Weller
Those whose anniversaries of death fall at this time:
25th – Reginald Thompson
26th – Gwendoline Freeman, Joseph Harding
27th – Keith Bevan
28th – Dorothy Gartside, William Lloyd Webber, Phyllis Richards, John Gaskell Pr, David Trendell
29th – Sister Dorothy Hilda
30th – Tharu Tharakan, John Todd
31st – Marian Ross, Frank Leeman, Dilys Thomas
1st – Bernard Dawson, Jane Pollard, Cecil Mead, Carol Searles, Janet Reid
2nd – Harold Wilson Pr
3rd – Gilbert Pickering
Service times this week
Saturday 26th October – S. Chad
12.00 noon Low Mass
6.00 pm Confessions
6.30 pm Vigil Mass
Sunday 27th October – TRINITY XXII
8.30 am Low Mass
11.00 am High Mass
5.15 pm Low Mass
6.00 pm Evensong and Benediction
Monday 28th October – Ss. Simon and Jude, Apostles
12.00 noon Mass
6.30 pm Mass
Tuesday 29th October – Feria
12.00 noon Mass
6.30 pm Mass
Wednesday 30th October – Feria
12.00 noon Mass
5.30 pm Holy Hour
6.30 pm Mass
Thursday 31st October – Vigil of All Saints
12.00 noon Mass
6.30 pm First Evensong of All Saints’
Friday 1st November – ALL SAINTS’ DAY
12.00 noon Mass
6.30 pm High Mass
Saturday 2nd November – ALL SOULS’ DAY
12.00 noon High Mass of Requiem
6.00 pm Confessions
6.30 pm Vigil Mass
Sunday 3rd November – ALL SAINTS’ SUNDAY
8.30 am Low Mass
11.00 am High Mass
5.15 pm Low Mass
6.00 pm Evensong and Benediction with Te Deum