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

Christian Aid Week


by the Revd Dr William Lamb


This is Christian Aid Week and colleagues in Christian Aid are campaigning this year on the climate emergency. It is one of the greatest injustices we face: ’This climate crisis hurts us all. But people living in poverty fight the worst of it every day. From drought to flooding, climate change robs people of control over their lives.’


Antonio Guterres, the United Nations Secretary General, has said that 2021 is ’the make or break year’ for climate action. We see it in the extreme weather conditions. This is no longer something impacting far away places that we can safely ignore. It affects all of us - and it affects the most vulnerable and the poorest people in our world even more. 


In six months, the UN Climate Change Conference will take place in Glasgow. This will be an opportunity for governments and other agencies to commit to securing global net zero in carbon emissions by the middle of the century. Some complain - rightly - that these targets are not ambitious enough. Nevertheless, protecting the environment and mobilising business and capital to finance these changes will be essential. How can we be passionate advocates for this change to take place?


Of course, the real transformation lies not simply in the way governments address these structural injustices. We can also play a part, whether it be taking trouble over recycling, turning off the lights, thinking carefully about the impact of our diet, as well as our conservation of energy and other resources. You may also want to think about supporting the work of Christian Aid. The transformation needs to be personal if it is to be real. 


Here are some words of blessing from Christian Aid:


May God bless us with wonder at creation’s glory.
May God bless us with fury at creation’s spoiling. 

May God bless us with courage at this critical hour. 

And may the blessing of God, 

Father, Son and Holy Spirit, 

rest upon us and on all creation,
this day and for the future to come.
Amen.


Church Opening

This coming Monday, in the light of government guidance, the church will be open to visitors from 9.30am-5.00pm Monday - Saturday and from 12noon-5.00pm on Sundays. The tower will reopen and visitors will be able to book tickets in advance online. Although the internal ropes and one-way system is no longer in place, visitors will need to come in via the High Street entrance and leave the building via Radcliffe Square. Please respect this convention as it will help to make the building safe for everybody. We are looking forward so much to welcoming you back to St Mary’s.

Sunday 16 May: The Seventh Sunday of Easter


Sunday Services

There will be two services on Sunday 9 May.


8.30am - Holy Eucharist in the Chancel

Those attending this service no longer need to register in advance. On arrival, please confirm your attendance by giving your contact details to the stewards.


10.30am - Sung Eucharist in the Nave

Register Here

This service is livestreamed.


On the day of the service, please remember to arrive in good time to ensure everyone gets seated in a safe and organised manner before the beginning of the service. It is a legal requirement to wear a mask when attending our services, unless you are exempt.


Registration for services on Sunday 23 May:


8.30am - Holy Eucharist in the Chancel

Those attending this service no longer need to register in advance. On arrival, please confirm your attendance by giving your contact details to the stewards.


10.30am - Sung Eucharist in the Nave

Register Here

Online Worship:


Every Sunday, we livestream the 10.30am service on our YouTube channel. We also publish a recording of it on our website around 1pm.


Please subscribe to our social media channels to ensure you see the videos in your newsfeed and you are alerted to all our other online events coming in Hilary term.

Notices


Four-Dimensional Eucharist - Bampton Lectures 2021

The Revd Canon Dr Jessica Martin is delivering the Bampton Lectures this year. She will be thinking about the eucharist both as sacrament and as ritual theatre, and asking some unusual questions of it. She will be considering its physicality in a time of increasing online presence, the abiding Christian tension between presence and absence it already contains, and its efficacy in a modern culture which veers unstably between scepticism and enchantment. Please visit the Bampton Lectures page on the website to book a place for 18th May (in person and livestreamed on our YouTube channel).


Poetry Hour

Join us for an hour of the consolation and insight given by writing and reading of poetry. Wednesday evenings at 5.30pm on 5th May, 19th May, 2nd June and 16th June.

This week we are reading poems by Gerald Manley Hopkins and experimenting with sound.


Bible Study:

Thursdays 29 April - 17 June, 12.45pm - 1.30pm

In the course of Trinity Term, we will be exploring the Book of Genesis through the resources provided by the Visual Commentary on Scripture. Genesis is one of the foundational texts not just for Christian tradition but for Western culture. It continues to animate and excite our understanding of what it means to be human. It informs our understanding of creation, but also speaks of the rich tapestry of human living, with all its joys as well as its sorrows, our hopes as well as our fears. Each passage below has a link to different elements of the Visual Commentary on Scripture. Each exhibition consists of three images, the relevant passage from Luke, and a theological reflection. In our sessions, we shall draw on these resources and explore the way in which a variety of different artists have drawn inspiration from Luke's narrative.

29 April          Genesis 3.22-24 Expulsion and Exile

6 May             Genesis 4.3-16 Cain and Abel

13 May           Genesis 8.1-19 Out of the Ark

20 May           Genesis 18 The Hospitality of Abraham

27 May           Genesis 19.1-19 Lot's Wife

3 June           Genesis 22.1-5 The Journey to Moriah

10 June         Genesis 28.10-22 Jacob's Ladder

17 June         Genesis 32.22-32 Jacob Wrestling the Angel 


Poetry Hour and Bible Study take place on Zoom. Please email ana-maria.niculcea@universitychurch.ox.ac.uk to sign up to the mailing list for our online events.


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