Monday, June 25, 2007

Perfect Circle



This is the time of the summer solstice, the longest day of the year. Its opposite comes at Midwinter, just before Christmas. We follow the wheel of the year, from solstice to solstice. The disc of the sun forms to our eyes a perfect circle - a picture of completion, of wholeness.

This is a season – as much as the winter solstice is – of the victory of the light of God. As the Yuletide marks the fallow fields of winter, so this season marks the ripening for harvest – the harvest of the kingdom of peace, the gathering-in of the followers of the way of the Lord.

At the time of the summer solstice we celebrate the nativity of John the Baptist. John bears witness to the light. He prepares the way of the Lord, proclaims the way of peace. He proclaims the good news of the mercy of God to be embodied in Jesus Christ.

John baptizes the people, symbolizes their farewell to the old life and their welcome into the new way of being.

How are we to live this out? John himself focuses on practical matters. He told soldiers to be content with their pay and not force bribes from the poor. Let the one who has two cloaks, he said, give one to the person who has none at all. And a more radical departure from worldly norms was on its way with Jesus.

Six months before Jesus’ birth, his harbinger John appears. For the peoples of the earth summer has always been a time of anticipation – here it becomes a time of promise. What is ripening?

On the Eve of the Nativity of St John the Baptist, the light of Christ is proclaimed at its zenith, six months before the Savior is born: “He must increase, but I must decrease.” (John 3:30)



Look at the Trinity icon, at the gazes of the three angels going around and around in a circle of hospitality and love. Theirs is a dance, a journey that is always complete, always beginning, always ending, always starting anew – and always welcoming us to join.

The Trinity icon shows us the hospitality of God, giving rest to the traveler & strength to the weary, giving us all food for the journey.

When I was in high school auto shop we had an old advertisement on the wall for Perfect Circle® piston rings. They began & ended at the same place. They were true – that is, they were not wobbly or warped or flawed. They were not, however, complete. To slip the ring onto the piston there is a little gap. You have to start somewhere. Then, when you are in place, you can do your job.

We can begin where we are right now, and we can start today. In this present moment we have the freedom to act, to choose, and to enter the circle. From here we can go on through the circle, go on through the day, the year, through life, to a completion – that brings us back to the true starting point of all circles, the center.

Christ is the center: and yet he who was perfect was broken that we might be made whole. He made a gap through which we can enter – into the endless circle of divine life. It’s a perfect circle. And we are invited to take part.

Feast of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist
Isaiah 40:1-11
Acts 13:14b-26
Luke 1:57-80
Psalm 85 or 85:7-13


Almighty God, by whose providence your servant John the Baptist was wonderfully born, and sent to prepare the way of your Son our Savior by preaching repentance: Make us so to follow his teaching and holy life, that we may truly repent according to his preaching; and, following his example, constantly speak the truth, boldly rebuke vice, and patiently suffer for the truth's sake; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Oxford: Churches urged to ‘care for creation’ and buy local food

While visiting the parish church in Stanton St John, Oxfordshire, I came across the diocesan newspaper, which featured this article:

Churches urged to ‘care for creation’ and buy local food

Date Added: Friday 1st June 2007

Churchgoers in the diocese will be asked to buy local produce and support the farming industry if a motion going to synod gets the go-ahead.

Churches will be asked to use local produce wherever possible, and agree to do all they can to support local farmers, their community and the local economy.

The motion will go before diocesan synod this month and is expected to draw widespread support.

Revd Glyn Evans, diocesan rural officer, said it was designed to encourage churchgoers to think about the origins of the food and services they buy.

Many churches have signed up to the fairtrade pledge and already source their tea, coffee and biscuits from fairtrade co-operatives.

The local food motion will not detract from or clash with that, said Glyn.

‘We want to encourage churches and church members where possible to use local produce alongside fairtrade produce. The two don’t often clash; the typical fairtrade produce – tea, coffee, bananas and sugar – aren't grown locally anyway.’

While sales of fairtrade produce were up 40 per cent last year, just 18 per cent of us choose to buy British produced food.

And that choice is having a dramatic impact on farmers, their families and our landscape.

...

Through the stranglehold which the large food retailers now have on British farming, our dairy industry is in virtual meltdown with the rest of us not very far behind. Unless the buying policies of the retail trade are changed to reflect the cost of production we shall become a nation dependent on others to feed us. ...

British produced food really is on the edge, and perhaps as with so many products that we buy today, it too should have a warning label, ‘buy it or lose it’.

George Fenemore is a member of the Diocesan Farmers Forum, and is on Deddington PCC


"Churches urged to ‘care for creation’ and buy local food"
From the Door, weekly newspaper of the Diocese of Oxford, Church of England
http://www.oxford.anglican.org/page/5069/

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Blogs worth a look

Howard Anderson on Jim Kelsey, at Episcopal Cafe/Daily Episcopalian:

http://www.episcopalcafe.com/daily/bishops/a_voice_that_will_not_be_still.php

Herbert O'Driscoll's nascent blog Patrick's Well:

http://www.herbodriscoll.com/