Saturday, 26 June 2021

Sunday Letter

 

Benefice of St Mary’s Chard, Combe St Nicholas, Wambrook and Whitestaunton

 

Fourth Sunday after Trinity.

 

Hi everyone,

 

On Sunday we shall, some of us, be taking our Rogation walk and praying for good weather!

It will be good to share in prayer and worship whilst walking and talking with plenty to catch up on, giving us a sense of returning to some of the things we enjoy in our life together as brothers and sisters in Christ.

Yesterday I had the pleasure of being in a meeting, for supporting the Corrymeela Community in Northern Ireland, with Hedley Abernethy who is the Head of Programmes working in community in NI. He is gathering and working with people’s stories around the legacy of conflict, and I was particularly struck by his approach as he talked about how they are exploring what people know about life outside of the walls of their community. The project is working with three areas in Belfast City, on the Causeway Coast and the Glens, asking the questions, what do you know about this place, the heritage and the history? Our place, our past, and our perspectives, what makes a place a place? Hedley then went on to talk about how the people are discovering hidden story, lost story and people’s perceptions of the story.

It is the same in any place isn’t it really. It reminded me that the Museum is trying to collect stories from those who have lived here all their lives, to keep alive the story that makes us the people of Chard and the surrounding villages, how we are shaped by that story and history, how hard it is for Chard to shake off some of the old story that still clings. If you have moved in to this area you may have been told as I was, that no one goes out in the evening, or that no one does anything on Saturday afternoons, well that isn’t quite true but the levels of through flow do drop at these times giving the feeling that it is an accurate reflection, and so perpetuating the story.

But some stories are completely set down, to be explored and discussed but not to be changed, like our Gospel reading stories of the woman with the bleeding and Jairus’s daughter they can be interpreted and prayed with to find the meaning for our lives but they stay the same, or do they? When we delve deeper into the what and why of Jesus’s actions and the words and actions of those involved, we find a new discovery of just who we are in relation to the story, where it resonates in our being and interlinks with the events that have unfounded and made each of us who we are. Why does the Gospel writer Mark pick these two moments from what were undoubtably more actions of prayer and healing on that day. They both talk of faith, the woman maybe frightened that she will be rejected approaches silently and touches Jesus knowing that is all that is needed, and she was right, but she is also discovered and on being asked to approach Jesus comes near in fear, but instead of what she believes will happen, she receives love in action. And Jairus a leader of the Synagogue cares more for his daughter than his position in the synagogue and asks for help, he believes his daughter will be healed. It takes the greatest strength of belief on his part especially once he hears she has died, but he goes with Jesus to the house and the is restored. A twelve year old girl and a woman healed, women didn’t have any position in the culture of the time as a rule, but Jesus goes against the grain of culture and action to change the story, that all are able to receive the love of God.

 

Our reading coming from 2 Corinthians 8.1-15, is such a wealth of self-examining and richness. As I read it the words of that beautiful Christmas hymn came into my mind. Thou who wast rich beyond all measure yet for love’s sake becamest poor.   And the second thing that came to mind was balance, the last verse reads: “The one who had much did not have too much, and the one who had little did not have too little”. At the end I have added the beautiful hymn and the story behind why Frank Houghton wrote it.

 

Be Blessed in all you do this week. Rev Georgina.

 

 

 

You can find out more of John and Betty’s story on the internet.

“Thou Who Wast Rich Beyond All Splendour”

This beautiful hymn was written to honour and esteem missionaries John and Betty Stam. In China, 1934, they were taken prisoner by Communist soldiers, along with their three-month-old baby, Helen. John and Betty were marched to their deaths, but miraculously, baby Helen, hidden in a sleeping bag, survived and was discovered five days later. She was still alive.

The deaths of John and Betty Stam electrified the Christian world. Upon hearing of the deaths of John and Betty Stam, Frank Houghton wrote this hymn, which was inspired by 2 Corinthians 8:9: “… that though He was rich, yet for your sake he became poor.”

John and Betty Stam were compelled to give their lives for the truth that would eventually be printed on John’s tombstone: “That Christ may be glorified whether by life or by death. For to me to live is Christ and to die is gain.” (Phil. 1:20-21).

 

 

 

Thou who wast rich beyond all splendour,
All for love’s sake becamest poor;
Thrones for a manger didst surrender,
Sapphire paved courts for stable floor.
Thou who wast rich beyond all splendour,
All for love’s sake becamest poor.
 
Thou who art God beyond all praising,
All for love’s sake becamest man;
Stooping so low, but sinners raising,
Heavenward by Thine eternal plan.
Thou who art God beyond all praising,
All for love’s sake becamest man.
 
Thou who art love beyond all telling,
Savior and King, we worship Thee.
Emmanuel, within us dwelling,
Make us what Thou wouldst have us be.
Thou who art love beyond all telling,
Savior and King, we worship Thee.

– Words: Frank Houghton; Music: French Carol Quelle Est Cette Odeur Agreable © 1934

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