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

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Climate Change: New Podcast Series

I started thinking seriously about Climate Change 15 years ago. I had young children; my friends and I felt it was imperative to do something. We set up groups exchanging information about how to lower our emissions, we bought solar panels (with generous government grants), vowed we would fly only once a year, and try to avoid long haul altogether. Various books came out around then by local writers - notably, George Monbiot’s ‘Heat', and Chris Goodall’s ‘How to Live a Low Carbon Life’ (which I helped research). Both won prizes, both were slowly shunted out of sight in the book shops. My BBC radio play, The Kingnorth Six, and a Guardian blog about climate conscience also gradually fell out of favour. So now here we are - our teenagers are out on the streets, pleading for us to do something, urgently; I myself have joined amazingly joyful and creative XR demonstrations in London; our Government and scientists have declared an emergency. More and more people now feel the reality of major, devastating destruction of the ecosystem that sustains us. This series of podcasts is an attempt to face that reality - engaging the expertise of people who have being thinking about Climate Change for longer than I have, I want to investigate this ‘emergency’ as a spiritual one. In the deepest part of ourselves, what Christians call our souls, what is it that has brought us here, and how can we go forward?

The first podcast was recorded in November 2019 with IPCC author and Professor of Geophysics at Oxford University, Myles Allen. He sets out the IPCC analysis of where we have come to over the past thirty years, and the huge effort necessary if we are to limit warming to a level where life on earth can continue. He refuses to despair and insists there are ambitious solutions ahead, especially in the hands of the younger generation whose task it has become to clean up our mess.

You can listen here:  Climate Change and Spirituality Podcast

Julia Hollander
The Week Ahead

Sunday 
10.30  Choral Eucharist - Nave
12.00  Sunday Forum  - Old Library
15.30  Choral Evensong - Chancel 

Weekday Services

Monday  
09.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist  - Chancel
18.15  Choral Evening Prayer - Worcester College

Tuesday  Thomas Aquinas 1274 
09.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel
18.00  Book Club - Keepers

Wednesday  
09.00   Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15   Eucharist - Chancel
17.30  Poetry Workshop - Old Library 

Thursday  Charles I  King and Martyr 1649
09.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel
12.45  Lunchtime Bible Study - Old Library
19.30  Theology Cafe - Vaults and Garden 

Friday  John Bosco 1888
09.00  Morning Prayer - Chancel
12.15  Eucharist - Chancel
18.30  Choral Evensong - The Queen's College

Saturday  
15.30  German Lutheran Service - Chancel
18.00  Choral Evensong - New College

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


Next Sunday

Sunday 2 February   Candlemas   
 
10.30  Choral Eucharist - Nave
           Preacher:  The Rev'd Dr Simon Thorn  
12.00  Sunday Forum:  The Lord's Prayer  
15.30  Said Evening Prayer

SUNDAY FORUM: THE LORD’S PRAYER

On Sunday 26th, at 12 noon in the Old Library, the Revd Donald Reece will introduce the second of four sessions on the life of prayer. Exploring the phrase, ‘Thy Kingdom Come’, we will think about the significance of intercessory prayer.

THEOLOGY CAFÉ: BETWEEN JUDAISM AND CHRISTIANITY: SHARING SCRIPTURES

Join us for a session in the Vaults Café on Thursday 30 January at 7.30pm. Professor Hindy Najman, Oriel College, and Dr Will Lamb, University Church, will be in conversation about the scriptures shared by Jews and Christians.

How can our shared inheritance of faith help us to promote understanding, to challenge prejudice, and enable us to encounter the divine mystery?

Each term the Theology Café seeks to open up theological discussion and debate. Input is provided by a leading theologian. The Café is open for hot and cold drinks, with some nibbles provided.

Termcard

Welcome to a new term! To see our full term card, click the link below or look at our website.

https://www.universitychurch.ox.ac.uk/content/hilary-term-2020 

Bookclub

Tuesdays 21 January - 10 March
6 - 7pm
Keepers, 73 High Street, Oxford

Raymond Carver called Anton Chekhov ‘the greatest short story writer who has ever lived’. Elusive and subtle, spare and unadorned, the stories in this collection are among Chekhov's most poignant and lyrical.

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

28 January - On the Road
4 February- Fish Love
11 February- The Black Monk
18 February- Rothschild’s Violin
25 February - The Bishop
3 March - About Love
10 March - The Lady with the little dog

For more details, contact Ana-Maria at ana-maria.niculcea@universitychurch.ox.ac.uk 

THE ADVENTURES OF KING DAVID

The Bible Study takes place at 12.45pm in the Old Library on Thursdays during term. We will be exploring the fascinating, if sometimes controversial, figure of King David, and looking at Psalm 151 (copies provided). Hot drinks provided. You are welcome to bring a packed lunch.  

POETRY WORKSHOP

Join us in the Old Library at 17.30 on Wednesday for an exploration of the poetry written in response to climate change and for writing exercises challenging how we might respond to climate change through poetry. Tea and biscuits are provided.

Entrance via the Vaults & Garden Cafe

Wednesday 29th January

Wednesday 12th February

Wednesday 26th February

Wednesday 11th March 
Art of Modern Conversation
In the ever-shifting patterns of our online selves, where we move between the real and the unreal and where truth becomes a political and social commodity, is the art of conversation lost? This series explores how our patterns of engagement are changing and how all the minutiae of conversations, the things we say and the things we leave unsaid are affected by virtual environments. Join us in the Old Library from 19:30-21:00 to find out more. Entrance through Radcliffe Square.

5 Feb Hard Conversations in a Divided World
Dr Bethany Sollereder
12 Feb Artificial Intelligence for Good
Dr Mariarosario Taddeo
19 Feb Is Our Online Self Less Human?
The Revd Canon Bruce Kinsey & The Revd Dr Melanie Marshall

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