The more you want God, the more he comes real to you.
Abide in me as I abide in you Jesus says in John 15 so that my joy may be in you.
I find there’s a battle for attention inside of me between myself and Jesus Christ - and when I’m looking away from myself to the Lord it’s a joy. Elsewhere in the Bible it says ‘in the Lord’s presence there is fullness of joy’.
There’s no greater aid to evangelism than joy: quiet, infectious joy, expressed in a smile.
God is beyond words. In Jesus Christ God comes to live in us by his Spirit. Reading his word, receiving Holy Communion, engaging with fellow believers - all these reinforce what Paul calls in Colossians 1:27 Christ in me, the hope of glory.
The Saints are famous for their smiles - I remember Mother Teresa’s infectious smile on TV to this day - smiles that are an overflowing from the heart where Christ is dwelling.
I want to be a Saint - don’t you? I mean, there’ll be nothing sadder ultimately than to miss the mark when it comes to unending friendship with God!
It's not what we have been or are that matters so much as what we would be.
Would you be a friend of God? The more you want God, the more he’ll make himself real to you.
Abide in me as I abide in you Jesus says so that my joy may be in you.
So be it, Lord Jesus - your joy be my strength this day!
https://www.premierchristianradio.com/Shows/Weekday/Inspirational-Breakfast
Monday, 9 October 2017
Tuesday, 25 July 2017
Thought on St James broadcast on Premier Radio 25th July 2017
Friendship is central to Christianity.
St James, whose Feast we keep today, was a
close friend of Jesus. After they first set eyes on one another by Lake Galilee
Jesus and James kept close. He's there with Peter and John at key moments in
the Gospel like the Lord's Transfiguration and his Agony in Gethsemane Garden.
James witnessed his Lord's resurrection. Anointed by the Holy Spirit at
Pentecost he became the first Apostle to die for Jesus.
Such was their friendship.
I want to take a leaf out of James's book for
I too am a friend of Jesus. I want to
give time to him, to be with him, to know the power of his resurrection, the
anointing of his Spirit, and, if needs be, give everything for him.
I want to bring other friends into friendship
with Jesus.
It was different for James. He knew Jesus in the flesh. We know Jesus in the Spirit. He lights our spirits
through the words of Scripture. The gift Jesus gave James of his body and blood
at the Last Supper is ours day by day at the eucharist. By the Holy Spirit we
keep friendship with Jesus who is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow.
James wasn't a perfect friend of Jesus and
nor am I. He was proud and ambitious for himself and so am I. He was lazy,
sleeping when Jesus had asked him to pray, and I'm like that too
Jesus, though, proved faithful Friend to
James - as he does to all who look into his Face and gain sight, day by day, of
his faithful, radiant goodness.
I'm
Canon John Twisleton living in Haywards Heath, West Sussex
Saturday, 4 March 2017
Horsted Keynes Rector Giles Moore illuminates village life in 17th Century Sussex
One of the privileges of being Rector of Horsted Keynes has been involvement
with St Giles rich history in partnership with Ann Govas, David & Sally
Lamb, Hylda Rawlings, Caroline Rich (St Giles Archivist) and the late Bob Sellens. Highlights over my 8
years have been Ann Govas’s publications, the Macmillan evening (2012),
Archbishop Robert Leighton commemoration (2015) and publication of my own History of St Giles Church, Horsted Keynes (2015).
On 1st December 2016 we packed the Giles Moore
Room in the Martindale to engage there appropriately with our 44th
Rector Giles Moore who served here 1655-1679. It was tremendous to have with us
98 year old Hylda Rawlings, founder and now President of Danehill Parish
Historical Society. Hylda spoke both about Giles Moore and her close friend
Ruth Bird (1899-1987) who edited his Journal for publication by Sussex Record
Society in 1971. Previously part of Moore’s Day Book featured in Rector Frank Eardley’s
parish history of 1939. It was Rector Mark Hill-Tout (1984-1989) who persuaded
Ruth to make ‘a complete, correct and scholarly transcription of the Day Book’.
To Ruth Bird’s sorrow and that of many other people a large chunk of the Day
Book dealing with Moore’s visits to local farms was omitted in the published
Journal. Though valuable as part of Horsted Keynes history it was deemed of
less interest to general readers. Perhaps that omission will be remedied some
time soon.
Of the Day Book former villager and Land of Hope and Glory author Arthur Benson writes: ‘There can be
few volumes in England which give so minute an account of the life of a country
parson in the seventeenth century…an interesting commentary on the conditions
of social life then prevailing. The Rev. Giles (or Aegidius) was obviously a
convinced Royalist, though, like the Vicar of Bray, he subordinated his
principles to his livelihood. He was certainly a man of peace as we see him in
his day-book, a considerable student, and interested in agricultural
operations’.
Moore first preached in St Giles on 1st February
1655 a few years after the execution of King Charles 1 (1649) and lived through
the Restoration of King Charles II (1660). His Royalist tendencies come out in
Latin quotes in his Journal which he thought Cromwell’s men wouldn’t be able to
read! He was married to Susan, formerly a widow. They had no children but took
into their home Giles’ infant niece Martha nicknamed ‘Matt’ who often rode
pillion behind him on his horse. It took three or four days to ride to London.
Goods ordered there were delivered by Pony Pack to ‘The Red Lion’, Danehill now
called ‘The White House’ on the east side of the A275 in the centre of Danehill
Village. Hylda, who lives just down the
road, pictured Rector Giles with Matt sitting behind him, riding down the steep
hill to Danehill from Horsted Keynes to collect goods delivered from London at
‘The Red Lion’.
In my History of St Giles I
provide this selection from the Day Book: ‘On 10th March 1658 Moore writes ‘dyed my servant John Dawes
whom I buryed… next to the Ewe tree’. The funeral cost £2. Several yew trees
remain in the churchyard today. On 7th February 1660, he records
just less than £2 for his arrest of William Field and ‘carrying him to the
Jayle’. On 3rd November 1660, following the Restoration of the
Church of England he ‘bought at London a Common Prayer Booke’. On 14th
May 1663, he paid about £2 at the Tiger in Lindfield ‘for a dinner for 12
persons’. On 21st April 1669,
he bought ‘a Levitical sillke girdle’ and later pays 3s (15p) ‘for making a
cassack’. On 24th July 1667, he bought a bible commentary, accounts
of the burning of London and coronation of Pope Clement costing just over £1.
‘Winter 1674 was the Hedge adjoining to the Churchyard newly cut’ for 7s 6d or
37p. On 25th July 1679, he pays 6d (2p) ‘To Ned Waters for shaving
my head’.
Moore’s Journal ends ‘would that I
had kept a strict account of my daily shortcomings even as I kept an account of
my expenses’. The parish register records, ‘Mr Giles Moore, minister of this
parish, was buryed the 3d of October, 1679’. May he rest in the peace of Christ
- with all my predecessors!
Friday, 30 December 2016
Harold Macmillan 30 years on
On 5th January 1987 Horsted
Keynes saw an unprecedented scene as former villager, church member and Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan was laid to rest by the Bishop following his death at
Birch Grove 29th December 1986.
Having a serving Prime Minister in the
congregation certainly impacted St Giles and the village, as when Macmillan hosted
President Kennedy at Birch Grove in 1963. It’s said planes to and from Gatwick got
diverted when he was in residence. They certainly showed respect for his office
of Prime Minister at Horsted Keynes station, everyone waiting until he’d got
off to be met by the chauffeur. The fact he’d then give folk a lift to the
village shows he’d got respect for us too. His
Tory rival Butler saw these two sides of him as ‘the soft heart for and the
strong determination to help the underdog, and the social habit to associate
happily with the overdog’.
Macmillan’s career peaked as Britain
entered a more egalitarian era marked by the advent of television and satire
like That Was The Week That Was. The
aristocratic sound and mannerisms of Macmillan, well remembered as lesson
reader here, and his chosen successor, Lord Hume, were easy prey for the new
media whose lack of deference grew the more so after the Profumo scandal.
Thirty years after his death we have another
church going Prime Minister of similar churchmanship holding to the Catechism definition
of the Church of England as ‘the ancient church of this land, catholic and
reformed’. Tempted in his youth towards Roman Catholicism Macmillan resisted,
probably steered back by his mother’s Protestant heritage. A robust spiritual life was kindled through
his friendship with one time tutor, Ronnie later Monsignor Knox. He kept his
Lenten fast and held to Sunday obligation sometimes attending twice.
Great men and women are usually people
who have suffered. In this way their humanity appeals through the braving of
fear. Macmillan’s courage was forged in the trenches of the First World War and
a near death experience in the Second World War. The courage he possessed made
him his own man. He stood alone in cabinet when he told the aged Churchill his
days as Prime Minister needed to end. Macmillan even dared to suggest to Pope
Pius XII he would serve Christian unity by recognising the orders of Anglican
priests – to be received by silence! Nearer to home when he attended St Giles
Church Council he would allegedly stand at 9pm declaring the meeting was over
to the Rector’s chagrin! The late Dorothy
Baxter recalled him telling her off for giggling in the choir. In Macmillan’s
last years the parish priest, Fr Mark Hill Tout was called upon to minister and
converse with him. He evidenced a thoughtful Christianity true to the faith of
the church through the ages.
Macmillan had many trials, political and
domestic. His life story is one that rises above the trials and part of his
strategy was daily retreating into books and prayer. He possessed a clear sense of divine
providence working through the historical events that propelled his career. To
his Christian sensibilities we owe the appointment of two of the Church of
England’s most famous 20th century clerics, Michael Ramsey and Mervyn
Stockwood. Macmillan lamented the decline
in Christian allegiance and near the end of his life made a call to ‘restore
and strengthen the moral and spiritual as well as the material’ countering his
materialist ‘you’ve never had it so good’ association.
Harold Macmillan’s pragmatism played a signal
role in opening up the United Kingdom’s post-colonial especially in his 1960
prophecy of ‘winds of change’ blowing across Africa made in the face of Dr
Hendrik Verwoerd in the South African Parliament. His grave in our Churchyard was
made a place of pilgrimage for African nationalists. Two of his more
controversial engagements were the 1945 repatriation of Cossacks to their
execution in Russia and the 1956 Suez crisis. Like any successful politician
Macmillan had his ups and downs seizing the ‘glittering prizes offered those
who have stout hearts and sharp swords’ (F.E.Smith).
He was a great wit. Interrupted in a
speech by Khruschev banging his shoe on the table at the United Nations he
looks up and says quietly, ‘Well, I would like it translating if you would.’
Unveiling a bronze of Mrs Thatcher at the Carlton Club he makes an audible
stage whisper, ‘Now I must remember that I am unveiling a bust of Margaret
Thatcher, not Margaret Thatcher’s bust.’
The life and achievements of Harold Macmillan
and his wife Dorothy are part of our heritage at St Giles along with so many
who’ve impacted the world for good and for God.
Friday, 7 October 2016
Thought of the Day on Premier Radio about Praying the Rosary
Today is the Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary.
For many Premier listeners the Rosary will be a hidden
treasure if it is a treasure at all!
Why do I, as a
Bible-believing Christian, pray the Rosary?
I do so because Christians I respect, who love the Lord,
have taught me to pray it. It’s actually such a popular Christian prayer that
it must go on all the time.
The prayer is centred on the joys and sorrows in the life
of Jesus recorded in scripture. Groups of meditations upon these are
constructed out of the basic unit or Decade of: one Our Father, ten Hail Mary’s
and one Glory be to the Father.
As it says in Hebrews about our being surrounded by a
cloud of witnesses, I believe Mary and the Saints are alive and surround us in
prayer all the time. I don’t have a problem with asking their prayer to God
though I realise others do.
The way I pray the Rosary is as I go about my life. If I
see someone joyful I think of the joy of Jesus and say a decade for them. If I
hear of someone in trouble I will think of the crucifixion, and, looking to
Jesus with Mary say the Rosary for them.
The great thing about this traditional prayer is that you
can pray for a length of time on behalf of others to God without needing to
find your own words.
Lord we thank you for
all our aids to prayer and especially for the Rosary. Amen.
Wednesday, 5 October 2016
Thought of the Day on Premier Radio: Love and truth
I wonder how much of an enthusiast you are?
Or how sympathetic you are to those who don’t share your enthusiasm?
Passion for truth, for God, brings enthusiasm and that’s
a great thing.
It’s got its dangers though, as anyone who’s been hosed
down by enthusiasm knows!
A 12th century monk, William of Saint Thierry, must have
known this when he wrote these wise words: Love
of the truth drives us from the world to God, and the truth of love sends us
back from God to the world.
Our souls are fired up with enthusiasm as we contemplate
the truth of God in prayer and worship. That enthusiasm is clothed with love
from above that inspires service of the world.
As we look lovingly and enthusiastically to God’s truth we’re
touched by his love and sympathy for all that is.
I love it when people respond to the message of the
Christian good news but I try to hold sympathy with the people who don’t as
well. They have their reasons - and I
may be one of them!
Enthusiasm and sympathy flow best in the life of God,
Father, Son and Spirit as the Psalmist indicates when he writes love and truth walk in the presence of God
(Psalm 61:7)
Love and truth flow unevenly and partially in our hearts
which is why I invite you to join this prayer
May the love of truth
drive us from the world to you, Lord and the truth of your love send us back
from you to serve the world as you desire. We ask this in Jesus' name. Amen.
Wednesday, 31 August 2016
God is no Thing Rupert Shortt
God is no Thing Rupert Shortt
Coherent Christianity Hurst 2016
£9.99 ISBN 978-1-84904-637-4 122pp
With all
that contends against Christianity intellectually it’s greatly refreshing to
read a book that’s politely ‘yes, and’ in its engagement with opponents of
faith whilst affirmative of the intellectual coherence and authenticity of
Christianity. We owe this to Rupert Shortt, religion editor of the Times
Literary Supplement whose experience of scrutinising writings about religion
comes well into play in his tackling of over hasty verdicts.
Many
believing artists and writers in the UK are advised to conceal their faith if
they want a following. Such is our local scenario in
which secular humanism predominates the world of ideas with a pretended
neutrality. Meanwhile secularism is losing ground worldwide with three quarters
of humanity professing a religious faith, said to be heading for 80% by 2050.
The world over people evidently see in Christianity a vitality and coherence
that is being lost or obscured in our own culture. Reading Shortt provides Christians
a highly to be recommended tonic in his successful reminder of the main lines
of Christianity, acceptance of humbling critique and his trenchant overturning
of facile objections.
‘Christianity
- at its centre, the story of love’s mending of wounded hearts - forms a potent
resource for making sense of our existence. It provides the strongest available
underpinning for values including the sanctity of life, the dignity of the
individual, and human responsibility for the environment. It is the only world
faith apart from Judaism to have weathered the storms of modernity’. This summary
on Christianity is the first brilliant précis of three or four in the book. I
liked this one on the secularist thesis: ‘When Western Christendom was at its
zenith during the Middle Ages, people were overwhelmingly ignorant and
superstitious. Science and other forms of learning wilted. Witches and heretics
were burned at the stake. The achievements of Greece and Rome lay discarded...
The Reformation ... accelerated Christianity’s eclipse. The rebirth of science
was followed by political enlightenment. Western societies reached adulthood;
the theocratic schemes of clerics were kept at bay by the separation of Church
and State. In time, all sensible people will share the outlook of modern men
and women who have ‘come of age’’.
Much of the
book is an engagement with how over simple the latter thesis is, which takes us
repeatedly forward and backward in time, admitting the Church’s failings and
amply illustrating the shortcomings of secularism. I liked the section linked
to the book’s title on how God isn’t actually seen as a thing or any part of reality
in Christian tradition. ‘Herbert McCabe (Catholic Theologian) had a tart
rejoinder to those who imagine that you can add God and the universe together
and make two. ‘Two what?’’ Richard Dawkins is a poor theologian in this sense
since his God or idol is a blown up creature. The answer though to bad theology
isn’t no theology but better theology. We find a good amount of this in ‘God is
no Thing’, as in this succinct answer on God by Rowan Williams to Melvyn Bragg:
‘God is
first and foremost that depth around all things and beyond all things into
which, when I pray, I try to sink. But God is also the activity that comes to me
out of that depth, tells me I’m loved, that opens up a future for me, that
offers transformation I can’t imagine. Very much a mystery but also very much a
presence. Very much a person’.
In another
passage, more geared to encourage mind than heart, Shortt reflects on the
biblically based Magna Carta (1216). That basis has been little noted in the
recent commemoration yet it can be argued that commitment to human rights ‘may
not automatically survive once commitment to the infinite value of every human
life has faded away’. Faith systems, however much they earn criticism, help
preserve such insight. Archbishop John Habgood once warned of society’s being
liable to lose its bearings without ‘a public
frame, a shared faith, which can sharpen vague feelings into prayer and
commitment and action’. This book catalogues impressively commitment from Christians
with these watchwords: ‘the common good, trust, non- discrimination, the
priority of the poor and disadvantaged, and stewardship’.
Rupert
Shortt says ‘yes’ to Darwin in his quasi-religious reverence for creation,
whilst admitting the status of human beings in Christian faith is challenged by
Darwinian theory. The misuse of power by Christians made Darwin a victim, and
has caused harm through the centuries offsetting much good. Christian shame
over the holocaust shows a coming of age that may one day be replicated in an
Islam ashamed over the behaviour of its extremists. The problem for religion
and for secularism is the tendency to bully rather than reason with one
another. God is to be seen as loving intelligence so that ‘love of the truth
drives us from the world to God, and the truth of love sends us back from God
to the world’ (William of Saint Thierry).
Believing in
Christian truth isn’t something cerebral, contrary to those thinking you build
belief or disbelief by argument. For the author it’s not a matter of thinking
your way into a new way of living but living your way into a new way of
thinking. This reminded me of Austin Farrer’s saying that ‘Faith is the act of
the whole man, doubt of a part’. To believe in the resurrection, for example,
is living out the death of the old self so that the Holy Spirit can bring new
life through the agency of faith. To believe in the cross of Christ - and the
book returns to this again and again - is about making sense of suffering by
the assurance ‘not all that happens is determined by God's plan but that all
that happens is encompassed by his love’ (Vanstone).
As quoted
above from the author of this powerful defence of the Church’s faith:
‘Christianity - at its centre, the story of love’s mending of wounded hearts -
forms a potent resource for making sense of our existence’. As former atheist
A.N.Wilson writes on the book cover: ‘This is a case for Faith which will
trouble the doubting with reason’s light’.
Canon John Twisleton Rector of St Giles, Horsted Keynes 23rd August 2016
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