HM Queen Elizabeth II (1926-2022)
Notices Gavin Williams Notices Gavin Williams

HM Queen Elizabeth II (1926-2022)

Following the death of HM Queen, messages of condolence may be left on this page and from Sunday 11 September a book of condolence will be opened in church. Further details of services and when church will be open for private prayer will be announced shortly.

May she rest in peace and rise in glory.

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HM Queen (1926-2022)
Notices Gavin Williams Notices Gavin Williams

HM Queen (1926-2022)

Following the death of HM Queen this afternoon, church will be opened this evening for private prayer and the lighting of candles between 8.30 and 9pm.

May she rest in peace and rise in glory.

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 Twelfth Sunday after Trinity (Parish Eucharist and Baptism)
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Twelfth Sunday after Trinity (Parish Eucharist and Baptism)

This Sunday we celebrate a baptism and the welcoming of a new member to our church and to the family of God. When considering our Gospel reading Luke: 14:25-33, it is important then to look at the use of “love vs hate” in the gospel. It is meant to indicate what happens when we choose one path over another: if you follow one master you are unable to follow another. When we become part of the family of God, that family takes priority. We can no longer consider just the needs of our own household, our own aged parents, our own vulnerable little ones; our concern necessarily expands to all aged parents and all vulnerable little ones. Love is no longer privatised, it is set free to embrace those God embraces. Jesus then goes on to tell the story of a man building a tower and a king going to war; neither have the resources to finish the job. We will never have the resources to love the entire world, no matter, God is a God of abundance, when we take our place in the economy of God’s love we receive much more than we are able to give.

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Eleventh Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Eleventh Sunday after Trinity

Both of today’s readings give us a lecture on table manners. Proverbs 25:6-7 reminds us to be humble and not assume a status greater than we have. But it still holds out the hope that our humility will be rewarded. It looks as though Jesus, in Luke 14:1, 7-14, is just repeating this advice, but then he begins to talk about reciprocity. Human relations are built on the idea of reciprocity: I give to you and you will, in turn, give back to me; I invite you to dinner, you invite me to dinner. Instead Jesus tells us to give without expecting reciprocity: none of us are capable of reciprocating what God offers us. In the kingdom of God none of us are hosts, we are all guests. We are invited to share that divine hospitality without favour.

Image copyright: Jan Richardson, The Painted Prayerbook

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Tenth Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Tenth Sunday after Trinity

In today’s gospel, Luke 13:10-17, Jesus heals a woman who has been bent over and bowed down. The faith community are not happy with him because he healed her on the Sabbath. The Sabbath, Isaiah 58:9b-14 reminds us, is a day in which to delight in the Lord and the freedom we have received. For Christ, freedom is something we share: I cannot be truly free if you are not also free; injustice anywhere threatens justice everywhere. Christ points out, as Isaiah does, that we are often responsible for the burdens of others, and invites us all to be agents who share in the unbinding of others.

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Bereavement Support Training
Notices Gavin Williams Notices Gavin Williams

Bereavement Support Training

Cruse Bereavement Support are offering courses to train volunteer bereavement support counsellors.

An information session will be held on Wednesday 7 September at 6.00pm for anyone interested in finding out more.

Would-be volunteers will need to attend five, day-long Saturday training sessions in October and November.

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Petitions to support Afghan Refugees
Notices, Refugees Gavin Williams Notices, Refugees Gavin Williams

Petitions to support Afghan Refugees

As the first anniversary of the Taliban assuming power in Afghanistan and the evacuation of the US/UK missions there passes, we have been asked to support two petitions relating to the provision of safe routes to the UK for Afghanis who have not been able to leave Afghanistan but are at serious risk.

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Ninth Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Ninth Sunday after Trinity

No easy summer reading for us this week. The prophet, Jeremiah (Jeremiah 23:23-29), and Jesus, (Luke 12:49-56), both promise us fire and division. This is not Christ, the bringer of peace, that we are used to. This feels like a much more Old Testament Christ, sending down the fire of punishment. The conflict that Jesus warns of is not, however, a punishment; he is merely describing the reality of a world in which some have power and prosperity and some do not. In such a world crisis (the baptism of fire which Jesus speaks of) reveals already existing divisions. Sadly, it often takes the fire of race riots to reveal the divisions of racism. It takes the crisis of refugees risking their lives on small boats and washing up on our shores to reveal the injustice of our immigration policies. The fire offered in this morning’s readings is a fire that reveals injustice, that offers us a chance to burn down existing inequalities. Yes, it is fire that destroys but also a fire that transforms.

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Eighth Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Eighth Sunday after Trinity

Is enough ever enough?

In this week’s texts Abraham has been promised everything (Genesis 15:1-6), and Jesus’ followers have been promised the kingdom (Luke 12:32-40). But still they are behaving as if they do not have enough.They are acting out of a fear of scarcity.

In the midst of a cost of living crisis it is easy to do the same. But the advice given by God is “stop counting, start living”. The image of the thief in the night may seem like scaremongering, but it is really the opposite. Like the parable of the rich fool in last week’s gospel, its message is that all we need is right here before us.

Fear makes us look inward. To look outward we require both hope and trust.

Do we believe that life is about more than mere security? Can we risk behaving as if a different life is possible?

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Seventh Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Seventh Sunday after Trinity

My word, how miserable are the characters in both our readings today! They are both successful, wealthy men, yet one, Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14, 2:18-23, bemoans the fact that others will benefit from his prosperity, and the other, Luke 12:13-21, the man who has been obsessed with hoarding his bounty, drops dead before enjoying any of it (exactly what the character in Ecclesiastes is afraid of!). The readings are NOT peddling the line that “money is the root of all evil”, but rather asking us what the point of plenty is. What is money for? Are our riches, talents and resources a source of anxiety or are they the way of bringing blessing and life to ourselves and others?

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Organ Scholarship 2022-2023
Notices, Music Nicolas Jenni Notices, Music Nicolas Jenni

Organ Scholarship 2022-2023

Our organ scholarship would be ideal for a young musician with experience of playing the organ looking to further develop their skills with regular practice and exposure to music as part of weekly services, potentially with the ambition of applying for an organ scholarship as part of a higher education application. The successful candidate would be actively involved in Holy Spirit Clapham’s choral tradition, which includes Sunday Eucharists and Choral Evensongs, led by our choir of semi-professional and amateur singers. 

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Sixth Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Sixth Sunday after Trinity

This week’s readings are both about prayer, or more accurately, our relationship with God. In Genesis 18:20-32 Abraham has an extraordinary exchange in which he argues with God about the nature of God’s justice; surely God would not punish the innocent for the actions of the guilty? Whereas in Luke 11:1-13 Jesus teaches his disciples how to pray. It is striking that in both passages the purpose of prayer is seen as advocacy on behalf of others: Abraham negotiating for the life of the inhabitants of Sodom, and in Luke the example of the ideal prayer of someone petitioning a neighbour for help in fulfilling the needs of a visitor. In neither case is the prayer a list of demands or requests. Prayer at heart is a relationship of trust. A relationship which changes us rather than God. If our prayers shape and form us into the likeness of Christ they will change us into a people whose deepest desire is the well-being of those in need.

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Fifth Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Fifth Sunday after Trinity

Today’s readings both concern the role of those who serve, those whose unseen and unsung labours keep the world turning.

Our Old Testament reading, Genesis 18:1-10, is known as the “hospitality of Abraham”, but Abraham does precious little to provide for his guests. It is his elderly wife and unnamed servants who do all the work whilst Abraham is served with his guests. Sarah does not eat or sit with the guests; she does not even enter the tent. In contrast, in Luke 10:38-42, Mary sits at Jesus’ feet alongside the male disciples. What is also significant is that Martha, unlike Sarah, is given a voice. She can raise her concerns about the injustice of her role. 

In our lives we are provoked to ponder who is listening to the voices of those whose essential work is often unseen and unsung? Who is inviting them into the conversation to make decisions about how our world and our future could be shaped?    

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Your pounds, their pennies!
Fundraising, Notices Gavin Williams Fundraising, Notices Gavin Williams

Your pounds, their pennies!

Our church hall (known as the Contact Centre) is 60 years old in 2022, as are its loos.

We need to raise £40,000 so that work can be completed this summer on modern, accessible washrooms with new loos and showers to benefit all users, young and old.

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Fourth Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Fourth Sunday after Trinity

I am guessing that we can all remember at least one sermon on the Good Samaritan, Luke 10:25-37. Maybe it was a school assembly teaching us to be kind, maybe it was Margaret Thatcher’s famous take on how the Samaritan had amassed wealth under a free market economy, which allowed him to be generous with his charity, or even Martin Luther King’s reflection that whilst the Priest and the Levite had thought about what would happen to them if they stopped to help the man in need, only the Samaritan thought about what would happen to the man if he didn’t stop to help him. In my humble opinion all of them missed the point that Jesus is trying to make. The scholar asks Jesus a question: who is my neighbour? He put himself in the story as the subject and the neighbour as the object. Jesus replies: who was a neighbour to the man in need? He makes the scholar the object not the subject. We are the ones in need of a neighbour. We are the ones in danger. This story that Jesus tells is like the parable of the lost sheep: if we are the 99 who do not go in search of the lost sheep, we are the ones who are in fact lost. Our first reading also switches the point of view, Amos 7:7-17: Amos is an Israelite, he is supposed (according to those in power) to prophesy for Israel and against Israel’s enemies: what if, Amos asks, Israel is its own enemy? As ever, both scriptures criticize us for judging and for assuming that we are the ones who have the right to decide who is worthy of inclusion and who is not. It’s a hard lesson but still, as Jesus says: go and do likewise.

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Third Sunday after Trinity
Service, Notices Ruth Thomas Service, Notices Ruth Thomas

Third Sunday after Trinity

It’s a busy day today: we are welcoming a new member of our church family, Harry, who is being baptised today, we are saying farewell to our beloved Nathan as he takes up his new job in Scotland AND we are celebrating Pride. Our reading for today tells the story of the healing of Naaman by the prophet Elisha, 2 Kings 5:1-14.  This is an extraordinary story of a man who had great power, wealth and status who risked becoming a social outcast when he developed leprosy.  Naaman is offered healing but is on the brink of refusing it because it involves wading into the river Jordan; a river which was used by everyone for everything.  Something which offended his dignity. The wonderful thing about becoming part of God’s family is that everyone is included, everyone is invited.  The appalling thing about God’s family is that … everyone is included, everyone is invited!  Sadly, the Church of England still doesn’t reflect the inclusive and all embracing nature of God’s love.  Thankfully this didn’t stop Nathan joining us and working with us to try and reflect that inclusivity here in Clapham, we shall miss him greatly.  Naaman finally accepted the free gift that he was offered and was healed.  Today we commit ourselves to accepting that gift: the gift of a love that values and embraces all God’s people, this is the family into which we welcome Harry with joy.

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