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“Brilliant Incandescence" This weekend, with the Oxford Light Festival, we celebrate light and its capacity to spark us into imagining and dreaming. All sorts of events are planned - from the lantern parade to Zooniverse, a global exercise in galaxy mapping. The highlight from my point of view is that, on Saturday, Luxmuralis are bringing to St Mary’s ‘Space: God, the universe and everything’, a light show intended to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Moon Landing. From 5.30pm, we will welcome everyone to come and experience the church in an entirely new way, hopefully to be amazed by the stunning projections designed by Peter Walker. While the moon landing was a tad before my time, space exploration has exercised a strong pull throughout my life, influencing my reading, my trekkie fan hood and not least, my faith. One of my favourite short stories is ‘Nightfall’ by Isaac Asimov, inspired by a quote by Ralph Waldo Emerson: ‘If the stars should appear one night in a thousand years, how would men believe and adore, and preserve for many generations the remembrance of the city of God!’ The answer in the story is that humanity will go mad when confronted with the reality of light and its divine implications. Darkness in its fullness, is comforting and contracts the whole of the universe within us. But life is made possible by light, by the precarious relationship of physics and chemistry between our planet and our star. The vacuum of space makes us appreciate the presence of light all the more and inspires in us a feeling of awe and the nearness of the divine. It is scary and beautiful. Its scariness can provoke a sense of doubt. It takes courage to turn towards the light. What defines and makes light such a compelling human experience is the absence of it, those edges of darkness just waiting to intrude and invade, kept at bay by the flickering flame of hope. Perhaps, it is in this brilliant incandescence, in a pitch black universe that God is most discernible.
Ana-Maria Niculcea Communications, Learning & Outreach Officer
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The Week Ahead
This Sunday: 17 November The Second Sunday before Advent
Sunday 10.30 Choral Eucharist 15.30 Choral Evensong - Chancel
Weekday Services
Monday 9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel 12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 18.00 Choral Evensong - Christ Church Tuesday St Hilda of Whitby 9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel 12.15 Eucharist - Chancel
18.00 Book Club - Keepers
Wednesday St Edmund 9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel 12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 17.30 Poetry Workshop - Old Library
Thursday 9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel 12.15 Eucharist - Chancel
12.45 Lunchtime Bible Study - Old Library 19.30 Theology Cafe - Vaults
Friday St Cecilia 9.00 Morning Prayer - Chancel 12.15 Eucharist - Chancel 18.15 Choral Evensong - Exeter College Saturday St Clement
18.15 Choral Evensong - New College
For full listings of weekly evening services across the University, see our website. Next Sunday Sunday 24 November - Christ the King
10.30 Choral Eucharist - Nave
Preacher: The Revd Alan Ramsey 12.00 Parish Lunch - Old Library 15.30 Organ Vespers - Chancel
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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. |
| | 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.
19 November - Lauren M, Why Do the Heathen Rage?
26 November - Laura Roberts, Revelation
3 December - Revd Canon Robert Wright, Judgment Day
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| | The Infant - A Jazz Suite for Christmas Tim Boniface Quartet Saturday 30 November, 7.30pm
Following the success of THE EIGHT WORDS (2016), The Tim Boniface Quarter present THE INFANT. A deep, moving and joyful jazz suite based on the characters in Luke’s Christmas story, performed by this dynamic exciting UK based jazz quartet. Alongside Tim Boniface on saxophones, THE INFANT features the exceptional Phil Merriman (piano) Ed Babar (bass) and Jon Ormston (drums). During the first hour the band will play the jazz suite, and after an intermission they will play some Christmas favourites/ There will be a complimentary drink during the intermission. All proceeds from this performance will benefit Oxford Winter Night Shelter. “I’ve had a such a blast listening to Tim Boniface’s The Infant. The playing is full of energy when required, gorgeously intimate at other points, and always bursting with invention and passion. Beautiful and uplifting.” Will Todd “Tuneful, sincere and exciting. And it swings! …Fine music. Good new of great joy for all the people, indeed!” Brian Case www.timboniface.co.uk Tickets (£12/£6, including a complimentary drink) available below from the Tickets Oxford website or by phoning 01865 305 305.
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| | Poetry Evening Thursday 28 November, 7.30pm.
Come along to the Vaults Cafe for a relaxed evening of lively poetry, music and good wine. Poets from the Wednesday evening workshops will read a range of energetic new poems, with musical interludes from Rob Howarth and Hugh Conway-Morris.
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| | 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. |
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