Easter Day Festival Mass
Our Festival Easter Mass starts at 10.30am. Here we bless the Easter garden and renew our baptismal vows: we die with Christ and are raised by him into new life.
Our readings for both services recount the resurrection and a God who can transform death and failure to new life and hope. This is ultimate power and yet it is shown in vulnerability: God never coerces us, never exerts power over us and so we remain free to respond. In Acts 10. 34-43 Peter responds with confidence, joyfully proclaiming the resurrection. Yet in Mark 12:1-8 the first witnesses of the empty tomb stay silent, for they are afraid. The angel at the tomb offers the possibility of a new beginning, calling the disciples to return again to Galilee. The choice is ours: will we risk following Christ who has gone ahead of us, or we will we hang back, fearful of the new life offered?
Maundy Thursday
Today we commemorate Jesus’ last supper with his disciples before his death. Our beautiful evening service at 8pm includes feet washing and ends with the stripping of the altar and silent candlelit prayer.
Our Old Testament reading, Exodus 12:1-4, 11-14, recalls the first Passover when God’s people were protected by the blood of the sacrificial lamb. In all the other gospels Jesus dies on the eve of the Passover but in John’s gospel, 13:1-17, 31b – 35, Jesus dies on the Passover, he is the sacrificial lamb who gives his life for us. Teaching us that God’s justice comes not by violence but by vulnerability. Before his death, he kneels to wash his disciples feet, asking us to do the same for one another, to learn both how to serve and be served.
Ash Wednesday Evening Service 8pm
A service to mark Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent.
This week we mark the start of Lent with our Ash Wednesday service at 8pm. At this service we receive the sign of cross in ashes on our foreheads, a sign of turning away from all that keeps us from God and turning towards our true God-given identity as God’s people.
Lent, the time of preparation for Holy Week and Easter, is a time for reflection, prayer, study, fasting and charity. The 40 days of Lent echo the 40 days Christ spent in the wilderness exploring his identity and his calling. We too use this time to rediscover who we are and what we were made for. Our readings both explore repentance, not merely an act of confession of sins but a reorientation, a commitment to our true identity as children of God and a rediscovery of our calling to justice, mercy and love. Joel 2:1-2, 12-17 calls the whole people to time of fasting and mourning but more importantly to “return to the Lord with all your hearts”. In our gospel, Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21, Jesus eschews the outward signs of piety, encouraging a true change of heart. We are reminded that our identity is grounded not in the things of the world but in God and that it is here, in the “treasures stored up in heaven”, that our hearts will find fulfilment.
This image shows last year’s palm crosses being burnt to make the ash for this year's service.
Lent soup!
Come and join us for a simple soup lunch on Saturdays in Lent. Starting 17th February, we’ll be serving from 12noon – 2pm and raising money for the Bishop of Southwark’s lent appeal.
Maundy Thursday
Today, we commemorate Jesus’ last supper with his disciples before his death. Our beautiful evening service at 8pm includes feet washing and ends with the stripping of the altar and silent candlelit prayer.
Our Old Testament reading, Exodus 12:1-4, 11-14, recalls the first Passover when God’s people were protected by the blood of the sacrificial lamb. In all the other gospels Jesus dies on the eve of the Passover but in John’s gospel, 13:1-17, 31b – 35, Jesus dies on the Passover, he is the sacrificial lamb who gives his life for us. Teaching us that God’s justice comes not by violence but by vulnerability. Before his death, he kneels to wash his disciples feet, asking us to do the same for one another, to learn both how to serve and be served.
Palm Sunday
Today marks the beginning of Passiontide: a week of following Christ’s last days on earth. This is a time when we reflect upon the difference between our expectations of ourselves, the world and God; and on God’s expectations for us: always surprising, always unexpected, creating possibilities we never dared hope for.
In the Liturgy of the Palms, Matthew 21.1-11, Jesus’ followers are expecting Jesus to enter Jerusalem like a conquering hero but instead he enters on a donkey.
At the Liturgy of the Passion, Matthew 26.17-27.54, Jesus now reveals the true nature of his leadership: to become the servant of all, a sacrifice for many: a leader who will give instead of taking, who will serve instead of being served, who will bring salvation instead of judgement.
Family Service at 9am for the Fifth Sunday of Lent
On the last Sunday of Lent, before we begin our journey through Christ’s death and resurrection, our readings give us a glimpse of God’s power and God’s promise.
In Ezekiel 37.1-14, the prophet has a vision of a field of dry bones being raised to life by the breath of God’s spirit. In John 11.1-45, Jesus’ final miracle is to raise Lazarus from the dead. These texts, together with the Easter story, are often used to support a belief in life after death: that when we, individually die, our life will continue with God.
They offer us a far more miraculous promise: that we, together, as the whole people of God, may be raised to new life now, in this time, in this place. These promises are not given to individuals but to communities: Ezekiel is told that the field of dry bones represents the people of Israel; Lazarus is not raised in private, it is his community that unbinds him and sets him free.
This is not hope for tomorrow but for today: how will we, as people of God, trust the promise God gives us that we have the power to transform our common life together and bring life to the world?
Mothering Sunday
Today is Mothering Sunday and our readings tell us the story of two mothers: Mary, mother of Christ, John 19.25-27 and Jochebed, mother of Moses, Exodus 2.1-10. Both stories reveal the cost of mothering: the effort it takes to nurture a child and keep them safe from harm, and the heartbreak that ensues when you can no longer protect them from the world.
They also tell us that mothering is for everyone: we all need to be mothered (not just as infants but throughout our lives) and we are all needed as mothers, whoever we are. The beloved disciple at the foot of the cross must now mother Mary in her grief; Pharaoh’s daughter, her foreign slave girls and Miriam, the little Hebrew sister, must work together to provide Moses with the mothering he needs to survive.
He will go on to be Mother to his people, just as Jesus will become Christ, our precious mother.
Third Sunday of Lent
We can all empathise with the people of God in Exodus 17.1-7, falling out and quarrelling when life gets tough.
How can they trust in God, how can they follow God into the future when they are struggling? The answer is found in trusting each other. In our gospel, John 4.5-42, Jesus begins the process of healing a quarrel that has gone on for much longer, that between the Jews and the Samaritans.
He comes to the Samaritan admitting his need of her, he is thirsty. When he offers her something in return, she asks first for this water for herself but soon she is hurrying to share it with the rest of her community.
When life is hard, the challenge for us is to trust, not only in God but in one another.
Lent Talks: Quakers in the 21st Century - Time for a new business model?
Our Lent Talk, Quakers in the 21st Century - Time for a new business model? by Simon Lawson is on Wednesday 15th March at 7.30pm at Church of the Holy Spirit Clapham, Narbonne Avenue, London SW4 9JU (nearest Tube Clapham Common or Clapham South).
Second Sunday of Lent
This week, our readings explore what it means to journey with God.
In Genesis 12:1-4, Abram leaves his home and all that he knows behind; he does not know where he is headed, only that God is leading him. In John 3:1-17, Nicodemus struggles following where Jesus leads; he is bewildered and uncertain. Jesus asks him to let go of all he holds close in order that he may begin again, be reborn, who in their right mind would want to start again?
Journeying with God requires courage, we risk the unknown, not just where we are headed but who we will become in the process.
Lent talks
EcoChurch
Wednesday 8 March, 7.30p.m.
Allison Clark of St. Paul’s, Rectory Grove will talk about the role the church can play in encouraging change to preserve the planet.
Simon Lawson
Wednesday 15 March, 7.30p.m.
Simon is a Quaker and runs his business, Lawsons, on Quaker principles looking to avoid a culture of wilful blindness.
#LiveLent: Embracing Justice
This year, we shall be following the Church of England’s Lent course #LiveLent: Embracing Justice, based on the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Lent Book 2022, Embracing Justice by Isabelle Hamley.
There’s a daily family activities calendar to follow.