We wish you a very happy and blessed Christmas!
Life & reflections from the Parishes of St. Cuthbert, Benfieldside and St. John, Castleside - in the Diocese of Durham
Wednesday, 25 December 2013
Christmas at St. Cuthbert's
We wish you a very happy and blessed Christmas!
Monday, 23 December 2013
Getting ready for Christmas
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We're making final preparations in both churches for the celebration of Christmas. I've just left Rainbows, Brownies and Guides who are making massive numbers of Christingles for use at St. Cuthbert's Christmas Eve Carol Service - 6p.m. 24th December. It's followed by 11.30p.m. Midnight Mass - and a 9.30a.m. Eucharist for Christmas Morning.
St. John's, Castleside had a well-attended Carol Service (again with Christingles) yesterday evening. Celebrate Christmas there with a Vigil Mass at 8p.m. on Christmas Eve. and a 10a.m. Eucharist for Christmas morning.
Thursday, 5 December 2013
He became poor that we may be rich…
These
are words of a gentle meditation from the Iona Community which we’ve used to
begin our Christmas Midnight Mass. And once they’re sung - and we’ve followed
them with “Once in royal David’s city” - we begin the liturgy itself:
And Christmas shows us how that can be. The love of God, reaching down to us. God’s Son taking human flesh to touch and heal us. We need the opportunities to acknowledge what we are before God: what we lack; what we might be with his help. And he doesn’t leave us simply to struggle with that knowledge. In Jesus he meets us in our need.
This is the "View from the Vicarage" in our current Parish Magazine - click to read it online. You can also find our Parish Christmas Card in print-it-yourself format - with details of Christmas services.
Welcome all wonders in one sight!
Eternity shut in a span.
Summer in winter, day in night,
heaven in earth and God in man.
Great little one whose all-embracing
birth
brings earth to heaven, stoops heaven
to earth.
They’re
words of beauty which express the deepest truth. So much else about the
traditional celebration of Christmas resonates in our hearts from lullabies
like the “Rocking Carol” and “Away in a Manger” to the raucous cheerfulness of
“God rest ye merry, gentlemen.”
But
there is the celebration of Advent beforehand - and it can introduce a note
which jars or trips us up. I’m always challenged by the appearance of John the
Baptist in his way of proclaiming Christ’s coming. The hymn “On Jordan’s bank
the Baptist’s cry” is not at all Christmassy - this year I’ve been pulled up
short by this verse:
Stretch forth thine hand, to heal our
sore,
And make us rise to fall no more;
Once more upon thy people shine,
And fill the world with love divine.
The
“sore” is the frailty of our human condition. It obviously troubles some hymn
book compilers who give a different rendering of this verse. It’s the wound
which saps our energy and leaves us failing in our endeavours. It’s something
more than “sin” - itself a misunderstood concept. “Our sore” needs to be
acknowledged if it is to be healed: ”Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy
on me, a sinner,” asks the Jesus Prayer. It’s knowing what we are that we can
find the grace to become what we might be.
And Christmas shows us how that can be. The love of God, reaching down to us. God’s Son taking human flesh to touch and heal us. We need the opportunities to acknowledge what we are before God: what we lack; what we might be with his help. And he doesn’t leave us simply to struggle with that knowledge. In Jesus he meets us in our need.
This is the "View from the Vicarage" in our current Parish Magazine - click to read it online. You can also find our Parish Christmas Card in print-it-yourself format - with details of Christmas services.
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