Subject: News from the University Church of St Mary the Virgin

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The Green Dream Team 

When Charlotte asked if I would help set up an Eco Group I didn’t realize that it would be the start of a journey. It may yet not be one of many physical miles but it is opening up new territories. I have been to the top of the tower and into the bowels of the boiler room with the green auditor who came to survey the church. I have wandered amongst the ivy-clad tombstones of Holywell Cemetery where badgers and foxes roam. I have meandered through the pages of the Internet seeking reusable coffee cups.
It may be that this is the starting point of a pilgrimage, a journey to a sacred place. That sacred place is Earth, where we are all privileged to be custodians. The mission statement of the ‘Green Team’ reads:
‘We have a green goal: for SMV to play its part in renewing the face of the Earth by using resources responsibly, creatively and unselfishly. As individuals and as a church we will model care for the planet by cutting down our environmental footprint and seeking ways to promote environmental conscience in our city’ (with thanks to Mary Lean for this.)
Documentaries frighten us with images of the plastic filled bellies of dead sea birds, news reports tell of unprecedented thunder and lightening in the Arctic and newspapers promulgate politicians’ climate change denials. We must continue to be horrified by the wrecking of our planet.
Mahabharat, the epic Sanskrit text contains the passage:
‘Remember that we must only take from Nature that which is necessary. If human beings forget this principle and begin to abuse their power over nature, future generations of humanity will pay the price’. Many Hindus begin the day with a prayer apologising to the Earth ‘ for stepping upon you with my feet’ .
Christianity has its own saintly champion of the natural world in St. Francis of Assisi, who recognised the importance spiritual odysseys ‘the journey is essential to the dream’.
If pilgrimages are about strengthening faith that faith should challenge pilgrims to consider their every action and its effect on the environment. As Pope Francis writes in his encyclical letter
‘Enlighten our minds to preserve all endangered species so that we may continue to appreciate all of Your creations.’

Let us be good stewards not wreckers -Tread Lightly.

Tess Blenkinsop 
The Week Ahead 

This Sunday

Sunday 22 September   Harvest Festival
10.30 All - Age Harvest Eucharist - Nave
Preacher: The Revd Charlotte Bannister-Parker

15.30 Evening Prayer (said)  - Chancel

Weekday Services

Monday 
9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 

Tuesday 
9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 
18.40 Parochial Church Council - Old Library

Wednesday  Lancelot Andrewes
9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 
19.30  Deanery Synod - Nave

Thursday  Wilson Carlile
9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 

Friday  Vincent de Paul
9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 

Saturday 

Next Sunday

Sunday 29 September  St Michael and all Angels (Michaelmas)

10.30  Choral Eucharist
Preacher: The Revd Laurence Price  - Nave
15.30  Organ Vespers  - Chancel
Newman Exhibition

John Henry Newman, who was Vicar of St. Mary's from 1828-1843, will be canonized in Rome on Sunday 13 October.  There is an exhibition about his life in the De Brome Chapel. 

Alongside a number of events in Oxford, there will be an ecumenical celebration of Choral Evensong in St Mary's on Thursday 17 October at 17.30.  The Most Revd Bernard Longley, Archbishop of Birmingham, will be preaching.  Please make a note in your diary.  Everyone is welcome. 

Harvest Collection

Many thanks to all those who have contributed to the collection for the Gatehouse today.  If you were not aware of the collection taking place this morning, it is still not too late and we would be happy to receive any donations delivered to the Parish Office by 17.00 on Monday.  The Gatehouse is a drop-in centre for the homeless and vulnerably housed.  We are collecting non-perishable items such as Bovril, Marmite, jam, honey, chocolate spread, peanut butter, salad cream, mayonnaise, tomato ketchup, brown sauce, tinned ham, tinned tuna, teabags, instant coffee, hot chocolate, Cup-a-soup, cake (shop bought and sealed) toiletries and sanitary products. 
Shared Humanity: Beyond our differing cultures and beliefs 

On Wednesday 9 October at 7.30pm, Letlapa Mphahlele, who commanded the Azanian People’s Liberation Army under apartheid in South Africa, will be speaking on the theme of shared humanity and to raise awareness of the rise of xenophobia in South Africa and around the world. Once wholly committed to violence, he now sees the whole of humanity as ‘my people’.

Tickets cost £5 or £3 concession. More information from oxford@iofc.org

St Mary's Church, High Street, OX1 4BJ, Oxford, United Kingdom
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