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

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Extinction Rebellion

My husband, Mike Crosse, was a church member here until he died last December.
In subsequent conversations with Will Lamb, I learnt that many in this church are concerned about the 6th mass extinction and global warming. Will learnt that I was a member of Extinction Rebellion [XR for short] and offered XR the exhibition space to allow us to say why we feel obliged to take Non-Violent Direct Action to ‘wake up’ people to our planet’s plight. Put simply, we’re compelled by the science and government inaction.

Atmospheric carbon dioxide was last at its current level about 3-5 million years ago. We’ve created this problem using fossil fuels that have benefited us in the last 200 years. Sadly, irreversible climate warming feedback loops are starting sooner than the IPCC predicted, and countries are not sticking to the Paris Climate Change agreement of 2015. “Our house is on fire” and we need to get to ’zero carbon’ sooner than we thought.

Noticing changes on a planetary scale is difficult. We forget the warnings that come with coral reefs dying, droughts, floods, typhoons, forest fires or a February heat wave. Years of traditional campaigning on environmental issues has been largely ignored by those in power. To paraphrase John Locke, “When our Government is not looking after its citizens, we have the right to rebel”, to upset the money changers’ tables in the temple, as it were.

Beyond the words ‘climate emergency’, we need action. Changes in lifestyle required to tackle the ‘climate emergency’ feel ‘inconvenient’. Some media and greedy vested interests struggle to tell the truth. Transitioning our economy fairly from fossil-fuel dependent industries to green energy is difficult. But not to do so will cost the earth. Politicians often kick inconvenient truths and difficult actions into the long grass. So XR thinks they need our help with Citizens’ Assemblies, more democracy not less. Oxford City Council has just run its first Citizens’ Assembly. Solutions generated are more likely to be acceptable to all sections of society. Popular buy-in helps politicians act. I enjoy belonging to an XR Art Group. The flags of endangered animals displayed here were made for the recent XR/Oxford Natural History Museum collaboration.

XR hopes the exhibition clarifies the need to pull together across communities as never before and the need for Government help.

Fiona Crosse
The Week Ahead

This Sunday: 3 November  All Saints' Sunday 

Sunday 
10.30  Choral Eucharist 
12.00  Imagining the Future - Old Library
15.30  German Lutheran Service - Chancel
18.00 Choral Evensong - Corpus Christi 

Weekday Services

Monday 
9.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel 
18.00  Choral Evensong - Christ Church 

Tuesday
9.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel 
18.00  Book Club - Keepers

Wednesday William Temple, 1944
9.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel
17.30  Poetry Workshop - Old Library 
19.30  Lecture - Owen Barfield  - Old Library 

Thursday  Willibrord
9.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel 
12.45  Lunchtime Bible Study - Mark - Old Library 

Friday  Saints and Martyrs of England
9.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel 
18.15  Choral Evensong  - Exeter College 

Saturday  Margery Kempe 
14.30  Memorial Service - Nave
18.00  Choral Evensong - Magdalen College   

For full listings of weekly evening services across the University, see our website.

Next Sunday
Sunday 10 November - Remembrance Sunday  

10.30  Choral Eucharist with University sermon - Nave
Preacher:  Professor Ian McFarland
15.30  Requiem Eucharist for All Souls - Chancel
Victoria, Requiem 
Bookclub

Tuesdays 15 October - 4 December
6 - 7pm
Keepers, 73 High Street, Oxford


Flannery O’Connor’s short stories evoke heat and dust, family and feuding, God and grace, where unmitigated violence gives way to spiritual change and the myth of the deep South permeates the fabric of reality.

Each week, someone introduces a discussion on one of the stories.

5 November - Anna Dill, The Lame Shall Enter First

12 November - John Olson, A Temple of the Holy Ghost

19 November - Lauren M, Why Do the Heathen Rage?

26 November - Laura Roberts, Revelation

3 December - Revd Canon Robert Wright,  Judgment Day

For more details, contact Ana-Maria Niculcea (ana-maria.niculcea@universitychurch.ox.ac.uk)
The Other Inklings

While C S Lewis and J R R Tolkien often take centre stage when discussing the theological ideas associated with the literary group known as the Inklings, the contributions of some of their principal conversation partners are often neglected. These thinkers were at the cutting edge of attempts to think anew about the Christian faith in ways that would meet the challenges and insights of contemporary life.

7.30pm in the Old Library. Entrance via the Vaults Cafe.

Wednesday 6 November
Owen Barfield and the Evolution of Human Consciousness - Dr Mark Vernon

Wednesday 13 November
Dorothy L Sayers and the Passionate Intellect - Seona Ford

Space: God, the Universe and Everything! 
Oxford Festival of Light

Saturday 16 November, 5.30pm - 9.30pm, entrance via High Street

We are proud to be hosting a stunning visual spectacle inspired by the Moon landing. Created by the award-winning Luxmuralis artistic collaboration, the exhibition features internal Son-et-Lumiere, artworks, and sound and light installations that transform the internal space of the church.
 
The Oxford Winter Night Shelter 

We are recruiting volunteers for January-March 2020, when once again churches will offer beds to up to 20 rough sleepers a night. Last year 300 people volunteered for evening, night and early morning shifts. Of the guests who made use of the shelters, over half did not return to rough sleeping. To volunteer this year, visit ownsoxford.org.uk, and register for a training/refresher session.
St Mary's Church, High Street, OX1 4BJ, Oxford, United Kingdom
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