Mortimer Benefice
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Welcome
If you would like to speak with a priest in complete confidence telephone the Vicar, Fr. Paul Chaplin – 01189 331718
Click here to read the Vicar's letter 4th November 2020.
Weekly Newsletter
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View the latest weekly newsletter below.
Weekly Newsletter 29th to 6th November 2020
The Sunday Link 29th November 2020
The Benefice will be live-streaming the forthcoming services
at St. John’s, Mortimer via Zoom
Sunday 22ndNovember at 10 am
The Feast of Christ the King
Sunday 29thNovember at 6 pm
The Advent Procession
Sunday 20thDecember at 4 pm
The Carol Service – Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols
Thursday 24thDecember at 5 pm
Christingle
Thursday 24thDecember at 11.30 pm
Midnight Mass
Friday 25th December at 10 am
Christmas Day
19/10/2020
17/10/2020
Please join to celebrate and give thanks
at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth
Parish Eucharist
on Sunday 18th October 2020
at 10.00 am when our preacher will be Julian Tucker who is an experienced
teacher of Biblical theology and a Reader in the Church of England.
At St John’s Church, Mortimer, &
online at ZOOM https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
If you have
zoom difficulties please contact the tech. team at 01189333136
The Tribute Money
Peter Paul Rubens
Prayer Thought Matthew 22: 15-22: Christians believe that earthly rulers and
political regimes are called to be good stewards who reveal something of God’s
beneficent power. But they only hold their power for a day. Whereas our
ultimate concern should be with the eternal power of God’s love and his good
plan for humankind and all creation.
All this we are reminded of, give
thanks for, and celebrate when we come together - in ‘one heart and mind’ - to
worship, to hear the guiding scriptures, and to pray.
While we serve the needs of our society
and those of our families and friends, and our own needs too, we must allow
nothing to compromise our commitment to love and serve God and his ‘kingdom’
above all else. This means, of course, that there are times when Christians have a duty boldly to insist
that, while the ‘Caesars’ of this world - little and large - may be owed their
due, we won’t stand by and watch silently if they exclude or step on any of
God’s vulnerable ones or undermine his good purposes and loving plan for his
people and creation. God bless
12/10/2020
The Annual Service of Thanksgiving and Prayer for all departed loved ones.
Dear Friends,
The Annual Service of Thanksgiving and
Prayer for all departed loved ones.
The 2020 Requiem for All Souls
7.30
pm Monday 2nd November 2020
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
We warmly invite you to join online at this annual
service when we remember with thankfulness, love and prayer all our loved ones
- family members and friends - whose lives have blessed us and who have died
and gone before us into the light of God’s nearer presence.
You will understand that this year the invitation is to
join with us online at Zoom and that, due to Coronavirus, we are not able to
invite you to attend personally at St John’s church.
If you need any help getting online then please don’t
hesitate to contact the tech. team who will be happy to help: 01189333136.
Everybody is welcome to join online. We send special
invitations to those from our Parishes who have been bereaved during the last
twelve months or so. And if you would like your departed loved ones to be
remembered with thanksgiving and prayer, and their names to be read at the
altar, please e mail or telephone the office or fill in the names and return
the slip to the office.
If, at any time, you would like to talk to one of the
clergy then please do not hesitate to telephone.
I do very much hope that you will be able to join online
for this for this very special service of prayer and thanksgiving
God Bless,
Vicar: Fr Paul Chaplin
09/10/2020
Sunday 11th October 2020 at 10.00 am - St Johns, Mortimer
Please join to celebrate and give thanks at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth
Parish Harvest Thanksgiving Eucharist
on Sunday 11th October 2020
at 10.00 am
at St John’s Church, Mortimer,
& online at ZOOM https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
If you have
zoom difficulties please contact the tech. team at 01189333136
The Corn Harvest
in Provence
Vincent van Gogh
Prayer Thought: Harvest
Thanksgiving is a time to give thanks for the
beautiful gifts of creation and to acknowledge our dependency on this Earth and
on God for his grace and guidance as we pray that we may be better stewards of
his gifts.
Harvest is also a time to give thanks for the expertise and hard
work of all those who produce and supply our food both locally and globally and
to acknowledge our mutual dependency on one another.
The ‘giving’ part of ‘thanksgiving’ requires us to learn
‘stewardship’ and just how to share generously the gifts of the harvest.
Let us pray for God’s grace and guidance that we may honour him,
all humankind and all creation through becoming better stewards of the harvest.
And that’s how our lives start to yield the fruits of the harvest of the
Spirit, which are love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness and self-control (cf. Galatians 5: 22, 23). God bless.
02/10/2020
Please join to celebrate and give thanks
at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth
Parish Eucharist
on Sunday 4th October 2020 at 10.00 am
at St John’s Church, Mortimer,
& online at ZOOM https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
If you have
zoom difficulties please contact the tech. team at 01189333136
Vineyards with a View of Auvers - Vincent van Gogh
Prayer Thought: Every
one of us has a part of God’s vineyard set before us - a part of the Kingdom of
God to tend: our families, our communities, our work, our church, our
environment are all parts of God’s vineyard. God does not exclude anyone from
service in the vineyard, but we may exclude ourselves by walking away or
failing to work conscientiously in that part of the vineyard we have been given
to tend.
In this Sunday’s parable we are meant to see ourselves as the
tenants provided by God with everything we need to make the vineyard bear
fruit. As God calls us to be good stewards of his vineyard so he also gives us
the freedom to run it as we choose, but we need to remember it is still God’s
and not ours. If we are to be good stewards we need to be sensitive to what God
asks of us and be ready to seek his guidance and help. This is what prayer is
about - coming to know the ‘mind of God’ about our lives.
We are all called by God to produce good fruit in that part of
the vineyard in which we have been placed. In this time of pandemic what fruits
will we produce for the Lord and how will we do that? How will we use the gifts
he has given us to tend and help those in greatest need?
29/09/2020
Air Vice Marshal Barry Hamilton Newton CB, CVO, OBE.
1st April 1932 - 25th August 2020.
It’s quite
often said that the secret of a good life is to die young as late as possible.
Air Marshal Barry Newton had a good life, he lived it well, and he took his
leave for the next as late as possible. I've known Barry only for the last
quarter century or so and there are many others, of course, so much better
qualified to write about him as a nationally distinguished figure, as a much
respected colleague and a lifelong friend, but, as his village priest, I am
honoured to be asked to say a few simple words about this faithful and
supportive parishioner and friend whose manifest gifts, whose love of life and
whose care for others, was an inspiration and mainstay to so many of us. His
passion for life, for doing all things well and his integrity shone through and
was always so apparent - perhaps especially whenever he was encouraging the
young to see how they could take their part, do something good and worthwhile, go
that extra mile for the benefit of the whole community and just make this funny
old world of ours a slightly better place.
He had a
profound respect for what is just and honourable and a deep sense of duty to
the common good. He knew the human condition well enough and empathised with
the rest of us who have feet of clay. He judged others generously. He cared for
people in a sensitive and unfussy way. And all this care and integrity shone
through. Others could see that it was part of the warp and weave of the man;
who he was. Surely that and diligence and sheer hard work helped to make him an
outstanding leader. He saw leadership in terms of service and of care and
selflessness. He shared his many credits with humility. And he helped others
shoulder responsibility with honour. He encouraged those around him to see
that, whilst failures are part of life, nevertheless, we should never allow
ourselves to be defined by our failures, but see how learning from setbacks can
strengthen us and make us better people.
He was a man
who loved his country - from the beauty of the Blackdown Hills, to the
character of the British people, to the service of the crown. He was a patriot.
He taught others that public service is good and noble and necessary; and that
one can and should serve with integrity and hold true to those values which are
eternal. He believed strongly that serving others enriches the giver’s soul and
that it is important to give back to the country and to the community which has
nurtured us. He also had a great sense of humour and was great fun. He could
tease to make a point, but never unkindly, and he loved to laugh.
It struck me
that Barry was always happiest when he had a mission; he loved to be occupied.
And yet he was never too busy to share his love of life with those around him.
In fact he loved having people of all sorts around him. Those horizons he saw
as a gifted young Royal Air Force pilot were bright and hopeful. And he
continually broadened those horizons. And that hopefulness remained with him.
He was, at heart, a genuinely hopeful and optimistic man. And that hopeful
spirit inspired others to believe that all sorts of things were possible for
them too. To the last his life was instructive.
It’s a cliché,
but it could not be truer that Barry and Lavinia were made for each other. They
had 57 years of good married life together and they were a great team. They
travelled much and adjusted to new surroundings quickly. It must have helped
that they were kind and neighbourly. They had lots of parties and loved to
entertain and they were always warm and welcoming.
Barry stayed
young at heart and aged well and as he aged he taught those around him to age
well too through finding confidence to serve the community and do their extra
bit for others. He grew old with dignity and with kindness. In quieter moments
Barry would share news of Melanie and Charles and Sally and James and Max and
one could see that his family meant more than all this world to him. And when
the good Lord finally called him he was ready; he was thankful for his
blessings and he look forward with hope in the promise of what lies ahead.
In a time
without Coronavirus Covid 19 St Mary's church, Stratfield Mortimer, would have
been packed full for his funeral with people from all walks of life coming to
give thanks for and honour a man who served his country and community with
distinction and was a true and loyal friend to so many. He nurtured so many
friendships. How many were blessed to receive those handwritten notes which,
whether wishing happiness, sympathizing or thanking, were always encouraging.
He had a great capacity to give of himself for others and many would be happy
and honoured to attest to his influence upon their lives and to his
mentorship.
Barry Hamilton
Newton was an officer, an Air Marshal, of formidable accomplishment, and a
gentleman who executed all the many duties of his life with care and
responsibility, with dignity and honour. But, first and foremost, because it
would please him, we give thanks for and commend to God a man who loved his
wife and a father who loved his children and grandchildren.
He leaves his
community, his country and this world better than he found it. We are going to
miss him very much, but we have been blessed to know and love him and we are
consoled to know that he is reunited with Lavinia and all those he has loved
and not seen a while.
Until, please
God, we meet again.
Paul Chaplin
The Reverend Paul
Chaplin MA, Vicar
25/09/2020
Please join to celebrate and give thanks
at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth
Parish Eucharist
on Sunday 27th September 2020
at 10.00 am
at St John’s Church, Mortimer,
& online at ZOOM https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
If you have
zoom difficulties please contact the tech. team at 01189333136
Prayer Thought: Jesus’ parable about two sons who don’t do what they say
reveals surprises about the most unlikely people who actually do God’s will and
serve others and thereby go ahead of the rest into God’s kingdom. St Paul
encourages us to look to Christ as our model of humility and service and, like
Jesus, look to the needs and interests of others above our own. St Paul urges
us to look to find the nourishment we need in the broken bread and shared cup
which gives strength to respond to Christ’s call and to offer our lives for the
sake of our needy world.
Reflections
on this week’s Gospel passage…
At
the end of this week’s Gospel is a story to which every child, and everyone who
ever was a child, and all parents can relate. How often when children are asked
by their parents to do chores do we hear in their response echoes of the same
inner and outer conflict expressed in Jesus’ parable of the two sons and their
father. It’s the conflict between obedience and rebellion; it’s the conflict
between recognizing what needs to be done and yet resenting authority; resenting
not being autonomous and completely free to do whatever I choose and when I
choose; and to do things my own way. It’s the conflict which arises in us when
we hear a voice calling to us beyond our own inner voice and recognize that if
we are to do wholeheartedly what we are being called to do then that will,
inevitably, constrain and shape our own inner desires and our will.
The
key to this passage is Jesus’ question - ‘Which of the two did the will of the
Father?’ Jesus addresses what the sons actually did and not what
they said. He cracks open the disparity between what is said and
what is done.
Jesus
wants us to focus on what we do. His parable is a call to integrity. It is,
quite bluntly, a parable about ‘putting our money where our mouth is.’ This
week’s parable challenges us to ask ourselves: do our words match our
convictions; do our deeds match our words? God bless
19/09/2020
Sunday 20th September 2020
Please join to celebrate and give thanks
at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth
Parish Eucharist
on Sunday 20th September 2020
at 10.00 am
at St John’s Church, Mortimer,
& online at ZOOM https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
If you have
zoom difficulties please contact the tech. team at 01189333136
For
a rap version of the parable of the workers in the vineyard
see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLouA3KytUQ
The Red Vineyard at Arles
Vincent van Gogh
God’s Generous Goodness and the
Workers in the Vineyard - My Ways are Not Your Ways cf Isaiah 55:8.
Prayer Thought: The parable we hear this Sunday teaches us that, whilst we may persist
in judging by worldly standards, God’s ways are not the ways of this world. And
if we want our judgements to be right by God we must learn to pray for guidance
and grace to see people as he sees them and to judge others as generously as he
judges. Ultimately, God always rewards according to his judgement and not ours.
We can never fully understand the ‘mind’ of God who sees goodness where we may
see none and who showers blessings where we may see none deserved. Yet, even
with our limited vision, we can be sure that he is near and that he will hear
every one of us whenever we call to him for guidance and grace to see the truth
and to be generous.
The Parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard
Rembrandt van Rijn
Rembrandt’s painting of Jesus’ parable - found only in St
Matthew’s Gospel - shows the landowner paying his workers at the end of the
day. The weak evening light illuminates the table where the landowner’s wife
sits with the account book open. Two workers question the landowner whilst the
others to the right talk among themselves. The landowner has hired workers
throughout the day and paid them all the same wage, whether they worked all day
or only an hour. The workers who worked all day are angry. The focus of
Rembrandt’s painting is the two workers questioning their pay. Perhaps the
small scale of this painting - 12 x 16 inches? - helps to make us feel as if we
are peering into their darkened room. Rembrandt was, of course, a master of
using darkness to draw the viewer into the narrative and here he uses his
masterful technique to draw us into Jesus’ teaching about generosity.
17/09/2020
What do we make of Jesus’ teaching?
Perhaps most would agree that Jesus’ teaching has changed the world. Yet his sayings can sometimes seem cryptic and hard for us to understand.
Yet when we explore the images and figures of speech that Jesus
used we find that really they are all ways of expressing and evoking the same
self-giving love of God. Of course, for Christians this self-giving love is
manifested supremely in Jesus’ own life.
Jesus’ images and figures of speech communicate ‘spiritual’
truths often not in a literal but in a poetic way. They encourage us to take
our own moral decisions with sensitivity and care for others and for the whole
of creation. They show that God’s love will never abandon anyone and that that
love extends to everyone without exception. And they promise a fulfilment of
that hope for justice and peace and wholeness that surpasses anything we might
imagine or describe.
When we put aside literalist, judgemental and divisive
presentations of Jesus’ teachings what remains is the gospel/good news of
divine love - a love stronger than death and the only power that can and will
redeem us all and our disordered world. God bless.
12/09/2020
Please join to celebrate and give thanks at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth Parish Eucharist for Sunday 13th Sept. 2020
Please join to celebrate and give thanks
at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth
Sunday Eucharist for 13th
September 2020 at 10.00 am at St John’s Church, Mortimer
and online at Zoom https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
If you have
zoom difficulties please contact the tech team at 01189333136
The Return of the Prodigal Son
Rembrandt’s ‘Prodigal Son’ is, perhaps, his final word, his
spiritual last testament. In this masterpiece he summons all his powers to set
before the world Jesus’ message of God’s mercy and forgiveness. The aged
artist’s power of realism is not diminished by his years but increased by his
insight and spiritual awareness. This prodigal son has wasted, ruined and
alienated himself and now, sunk to the condition of a swineherd, he returns to
his father’s house. His father hurries to meet and receive his long-lost son
with utmost tenderness and fatherly love. As the repentant sinner leans against
his father's breast and the old father bends over his son his features manifest
that divine love which illuminates the darkness of self-centredness and fear
and all that leaves us alienated from God, each other, ourselves and all
creation. Rembrandt reveals though the father’s face and gestures that mercy
and forgiveness which is of God and which reconciles and makes whole.
Prayer Thought: Jesus reveals how God forgives. We do not
earn this forgiveness - it is God’s free gift to us. The only condition is that
we must forgive in the same way - ‘forgive us our trespasses,as we forgive those who trespass against
us’ - not with strings attached, not once only, but unconditionally, freely
and always.
To forgive is to set a prisoner free
and to realize the prisoner was you.
Reflections on this Sunday’s Gospel
reading - 13th September 2020 -
Matthew 18: 21 - 35.
When, after years of injustice, democracy
dawned in South Africa the Archbishop of Cape Town, Desmond Tutu, revived the
idea of ubuntu, which, at heart, is the idea that a person is only a person - a
‘self’ - through other persons - that we only become fully human through
relationship with others.
At the core of ubuntu is the idea
of restorative justice; that we need justice - acknowledgement of wrongdoing -
but we also need to forgive each other as we need to be restored to each other
because how we relate to others defines who we are. Forgiveness is at the
core of ubuntu for without it there can be no hope of a right way forward.
In this week’s Gospel reading Peter, as
spokesman for all Christ’s disciples, asks whether we must forgive seven times
- which means always (Ref. Genesis 4.24). Jesus answers with a parable
about a debtor who, having no chance of paying off his debt, was released from
his responsibility. But then he refused to be as merciful to those who were in
his debt. Jesus’ message is how can we, who have received God’s forgiveness,
ever crush another person by refusing to forgive them? And, as nothing can
compare with God’s forgiveness of us, so there is no one we ought not
ultimately be able to forgive. Jesus’ message is that when we do not forgive
our neighbour we alienate ourselves from God. And he repeats this teaching
several times to make the point that when we shut out mercy we show that we
have not understood the love of God (Matthew 5.7, 43-48; 6.12-15). Yet, of
course, what Jesus says can be very difficult for us to accept.
Corrie Ten Boom, a Dutch woman who suffered
at the hands of Nazis in a WW2 concentration camp, gives a simple insight as to
the ‘how?’ She writes of being unable to forget a wrong done to her and tells
of how, even though she had forgiven the person, still she kept remembering the
incident and could not find peace. Finally, she cried out to God for help to
put the problem to rest. She tells of how God’s help came to her in the form of
a kindly Lutheran pastor ‘to whom I confessed my failure after two sleepless
weeks.’ The pastor pointed to the call bell in the church tower which was rung
by pulling on a rope and told how, after the verger or pastor lets go of the
rope the bell keeps on swinging and ringing - slower and slower until there’s a
final soft dong and it stops. The same is true of forgiveness. When we forgive
we take our hand off the rope. But if we’ve been tugging at our grievances for
a long time we shouldn’t be surprised if the old angry thoughts keep coming for
a while.
Perhaps we find it most difficult to forgive
ourselves. There’s story of a priest who carried the burden of a secret
sin he had committed many years before in his youth. He knew that God had
forgiven him, but still he had no peace. In his parish was a woman who loved
God deeply and who, it was said, had visions in which she spoke with Christ and
he with her. The priest, in his scepticism, asked that when next she spoke with
Christ she ask what grievous sin her priest had committed in his youth. A few
days later the priest asked ‘Did Christ visit and did you ask him what sin I
committed those years ago?’ She replied that he had said: 'I don't remember
because what God forgives God forgets.
This Sunday’s Gospel reading gives comfort and hope to sinner and sinned
against - to us all - and teaches us that ‘to forgive is to set a prisoner
free and to realize the prisoner was you.
There’s a humorous story of two brothers who
went to their rabbi to settle a longstanding feud. The rabbi got the two to
reconcile their differences and embrace. As they were about to leave he asked
each one to make a wish for the other in honour of Yom Kippur, the Jewish
New Year. The first brother turned to the other and said, ‘I wish you what you
wish me.’ At that, the second brother threw up his hands and said, ‘See, Rabbi,
he's starting it all up again!’
God bless, Paul
06/09/2020
Reflections on this Sunday’s Gospel reading - 6th September.
Jesus said to his disciples: ‘If your brother does something wrong, go and have it out with him alone, between your two selves. If he listens to you, you have won back your brother. If he does not listen, take one or two others along with you: the evidence of two or three witnesses is required to sustain any charge. But if he refuses to listen to these, report it to the community; and if he refuses to listen to the community, treat him like a pagan or a tax collector.
‘I tell you solemnly, whatever you
bind on earth shall be considered bound in heaven; whatever you loose on earth
shall be considered loosed in heaven.
‘I tell you solemnly once again, if
two of you on earth agree to ask anything at all, it will be granted to you by
my Father in heaven. For where two or three meet in my name, I shall be there
with them.’ Matthew 18:15-20.
In ordinary church life if
parishioners are offended by another parishioner they might sometimes complain
to the parish priest. If parishioners are vexed by the parish priest they might
write to the bishop. If they are displeased by the bishop they might appeal to
the Archbishop of Canterbury. And perhaps if they don’t approve of the
archbishop they appeal to God.
It’s a regular route to appeal to
hierarchies to settle differences - thus avoiding personal confrontations.
Often the last thing people actually want do is to actually confront the person
who is offending them. But, this is what Jesus recommends in this Sunday’s
Gospel reading. In fact Jesus insists that if another member of the Church sins
against us then we must take the initiative and point out the fault when the
two of us are alone: and we should not first appeal to some hierarchical
figure. Jesus’ message is that the beginning of forgiveness lies in this personal
confrontation and engagement. In other words, Jesus says our first response, if
offended, should not be to push offenders away, but, instead, to engage, to
have a conversation and to reason with them. And if that doesn’t work the next
step of the process of engagement is to bring others into the reasoning process
and not to rally the troops of like-minded so that we can get our way, but to
get to the truth. Jesus’ message is that our default position is to be one of
loving engagement with the clear aim to get beyond the face of the offending
actions and remarks and to enquire more deeply into the reasons behind the
person’s actions and to seek and to find the truth which, Jesus tells us, sets
free. It involves going the extra mile and not giving in to premature
judgements. Jesus’ message is a challenge to us all, to everyone in the
community, it is the challenge to take responsibility and to exercise real
servant-leadership in trying to discern and get to the truth in resolving
disputes - gracefully and truthfully - for the good and wellbeing of all.
Jesus’ scenario begins in a candid and painful head-to-head
between the person offended and the offender: his message, to repeat, is that
the first step is to seek reconciliation personally and privately, without
appealing to hierarchies. Jesus’ message is that this form of confrontation and
engagement is an essential part of personal forgiveness and reconciliation. He
does say that the ultimate court of appeal is to be the community and that the
community has the power to treat recalcitrant members like tax collectors, but,
of course, that raises the question:- how did Jesus treat tax collectors? This
Gospel message is that the Christian community can never be finished with the
recalcitrant and that the journey to final reconciliation is as long as the
human story.
And our individual vocation in the human story is to be a
faithful disciple of Jesus Christ - the one who is God made visible, the one
who has been and continues to be wronged by our trespasses. Yet, though
humankind turned its back on God, he, nonetheless, assumed the state of his
offenders and suffered and died at their hands. And then he redeemed and raised
those offenders to a status they neither deserved nor could reach without his
help. As today’s picture - Iain McKillop’s painting of the Reconciliation of
Peter – shows, the offended binds himself to the offender in an extraordinary
way - it’s God’s way of reconciliation. This is Jesus’ Gospel message for us to
share today.
You may know the little story about Rabbi Yitzhak? Once, Rabbi
Yitzhak saw a fellow Jew smoking on the Sabbath day, which was something
forbidden. The rabbi asked his fellow Jew whether he had forgotten what day it
was. The man’s response was, ‘No,’ he knew what day it was. The rabbi then
asked him whether he had forgotten that smoking was forbidden on the Sabbath.
Again, the man’s response was ‘No,’ he knew it was forbidden. The rabbi then
asked surely his mind must have been elsewhere when he lit the cigarette, but
the man replied that he knew exactly what he was doing. Rabbi Yitzhak raised
his hands and turned his eyes upwards to heaven and said ‘Sovereign of the
universe, who is like Your people Israel? I give this man every chance, and
still he cannot tell a lie!’ Rabbi Yitzhak was concerned by the waywardness of
one of his own, a fellow Jew, and, even though his behaviour presumably
offended and upset him, still he could find something good in his neighbour and
some common ground to keep him close. God bless
04/09/2020
Sunday Eucharist for 6th September 2020
Please join to celebrate and give thanks at the Mortimer, MWE & Padworth
Sunday Eucharist for 6th
September 2020 at 10.00 am at St John’s Church, Mortimer
and online at Zoom https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6931233940
If you have
difficulties please contact the tech team – Lorna/Louis/James at 01189333136
‘The Reconciliation of
Peter’
by Iain McKillop
‘You see Jesus on the edge of the lake pressing forgiveness into
Peter’s crumpled spirit after Peter had denied Jesus three times. After all
Jesus had endured his wounds have become his signature and he signs himself in
Peter’s flesh. He presses, crunches Peter so hard that you can see the tracery
of fresh red as his wounds begin to open again. ‘By his wounds we are healed.’










