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

What brings us together


Every Trinity term I read some of the classics of political thought with first year students. It’s a chance to think about what makes a society flourish, about how diverse human beings can come together to live in peace, freedom and stability – and how difficult that can be. Each year we find new emphases, but one recurring theme is the need for members of any society genuinely to see themselves as part of it, to feel involved in the community’s shared life, and to learn to understand the views and needs of others. We talk about how the texts we are reading are rhetorical, designed to shape their readers’ thinking, character and imagination; and how symbols and images can be just as important as words.


I often think about what this might mean for us as a church, and especially this year in our changed circumstances. Like every community, we need structures and bonds to hold us together and help us to see each other as valued members of the whole. Our services and liturgy help us to place ourselves within the bigger story of God’s creation and redemption of all the world and to see ourselves as part of the Body of Christ - something we were reminded of on Thursday on the Feast of Corpus Christi. Meanwhile this week, we’ve been confronted by the ongoing scandal of racial injustice across the world, by the structures and divisions that dehumanize or exploit, by the barriers in our communities that prevent people from realizing their true potential. These times challenge us to find new ways of being together, across every line that divides us; they demand us to extend the boundaries of our imagination, to open ourselves to what is unfamiliar. And perhaps in strangeness and in our unsettling we can find fresh resources to see each other in the light of God’s love, and to work together for the flourishing of all.


Dr Sarah Mortimer

Reopening for Private Prayer


In line with revised Government guidance on places of worship, the University Church will reopen for personal prayer only from Monday 22 June 2020. We are delighted to welcome you back. The church will be open from 10.00am - 12noon each day and will be staffed by volunteers.  Only access to a prayer area in the Chancel will be permitted for now and a range of measures including a one-way route, distanced seating, hand sanitiser stations and enhanced cleaning regimes will be in place to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our worshippers and staff. No services of communal worship will take place but our online worship will continue. The University Church will not yet reopen for visitors. We hope to be able to reopen the shop, tower and cafe at some point in the future when government guidance allows.


We hope to clean the church thoroughly in preparation for reopening on Wednesday 17 June between 10.00am - 2.00pm. If you are able to help with this by offering an hour or two, please contact us by email at vicar@universitychurch.ox.ac.uk. We also need some offers of help from volunteers to help keep the church open from 22 June until 6 July. If you are able to help during this period, we would be delighted to hear from you.


The Revd Dr William Lamb

The First Sunday after Trinity Podcast


At St Mary’s today we mark the First Sunday after Trinity with a University Sermon. The podcast is introduced by the Revd Canon Dr Judith Maltby and the gospel reading is read by Professor Jane Shaw, Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal of Harris Manchester College. We welcome as our preacher Professor Helen King, Professor Emerita, The Open University. 


Welcome and Opening Prayer The Revd Canon Dr Judith Maltby
Hymn Love Divine, All Loves Excelling
Reading Matthew 7.21-29 (Professor Jane Shaw)
Organ Interlude
Sermon Professor Helen King
Anthem Harris, Faire is the Heaven
Prayers Laura Roberts and Anna Dill
Blessing The Vicar
Organ Voluntary Rheinberger, Monologue no. 2 (Opus 162)


You can listen to the podcast here or by clicking the link below.

You can also listen to it on Spotify, Google Play or iTunes.


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Read more about what's happening at the University Church in the week ahead by visiting our Notices page below.

Notices


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