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

The Testament of Mary


Today we celebrate the Blessed Virgin Mary.. There are five Mary’s in the University Church, all but one holding the child Jesus in their arms. They’re all different, one looking confidently over the High Street, one gazing in amazement at the babe, the third prostrated in prayer, one in the East and one in the West, looking downward, almost sad. 


In the Orthodox calendar, the 15th August commemorates the Dormition of the Virgin, her silent passing into eternal sleep. Traditionally, she is portrayed as the God-bearer, full of grace, fully accepting her divinely ordained and foretold fate, supporting her extraordinary son in his ministry in the small ways she is allowed. Even in death she is quiet, passing away without ripples, without pain.


I feel like we’ve done her a disservice. She is the archetype of the ideal woman and the inexistent woman, destined to be both remembered and forgotten, her layers of meaning stripped down to essentials, distinct from the divine and from humankind, rarely being allowed a voice of her own. She stands alone, full of grace, eternally gazing at the holiness in her arms. 


One of my favourite books, The Testament of Mary, by Colm Toibin, is inhabited by a different kind of Mary. She is nearing the end of her life, having lost everything she held dear. She is angry. She is both watched closely and dismissed as an old sentimental woman. She tells of the other side of that graceful acceptance, of the intense love for the child she bore, the unbearable pain of watching him be crucified and the anger at not understanding the point of it all, the bewildering violence and betrayal of those who she loved and who loved her son. Toibin’s seemingly diminished and aggrieved Mary seems more relatable, a better role model of accepting what is outside of one’s control but being in charge of that acceptance, making informed and defined choices.


I hope it is not too odd to think of a work of fiction as informing my faith but I do feel like it made my patron saint more human to me, brought her closer and made her real. 

 

O Maid amongst the maidens, turn your face,

For when we glimpse you we are not alone,

O look us out of grief and into grace,

Lift us in love made stronger than our own,

Summon the spring in our worst wilderness,

And make us fruitful in your fruitfulness. (Excerpt from O Virgo Virginum, Malcom Guite)


Ana-Maria Niculcea

Sunday, 16 August 2020: The Feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary


Sunday Services

There will be two services on Sunday 16 August, one at 8.30am and one at 10.30am. 

Those attending must have registered on Eventbrite to ensure that we have your contact details for test and trace, and to ensure that we maintain social distancing.

Please note that following Government & Diocese guidance, from 8 August, face coverings are required by law to be worn in a greater number of public indoor settings, including places of worship. Those who are leading services and those who assist them (for instance by reading, preaching, or leading prayer) do not need to wear a face covering if physical distancing can be maintained. This exemption does not apply to worshippers, who should wear face coverings when attending services. 

Click the link below for Upcoming Services in order to register for Sunday 16 August.

https://www.universitychurch.ox.ac.uk/content/upcoming-services


Registration will be open for services on Sunday 23 August 2020 at 11am on Sunday 16 August.


University Church Online

We will release our video cast around 11.00am. Catering for those who need to shield at home, the video will include a recording of the Eucharist as well as music recorded virtually by the University Church Choir.


You can watch the video cast on our YouTube channel, on Facebook or on our website on Sundays.

You can also listen to it on our Soundcloud.

If you would like to be added to our online events mailing list, please fill in our Keeping in Touch form.

Message from the Green Team:


Dear Friends,


This coming term I shall be facilitating an evening course at SMV on ecology and sustainability  living and christianity. and hope that many of you might be able to join. Members of the SMV Green Team will be supporting  the course  and it will be conducted over 6 evenings in October and November. We hope to have the sessions on zoom as well. Please see attached below is a questionnaire. If you would like to fill out that would be most helpful for the design of the program and even if you can't attend the course. If you would like to return this anonymously that is also absolutely fine. 


Eco-Questionnaire


Any questions please don't hesitate to contact me if you haven queries.


Many many thanks,

Charlotte

The Revd Charlotte Bannister-Parker


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