The Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Caroline Brownlie The Reverend Caroline Brownlie

The Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity

We know it is costly to enter into, tempting to avoid yet another account of what is being suffered in so many parts of the world; tempting to enlist the triumph within Christ’s suffering and so avoid ‘walking in another’s moccasins’.

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The Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis

The Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity

Jesus’s mission, then, was to bring the love of God to the poor, the sick, the maimed, the downtrodden. To reassure the orphan and the widow, the excluded and the vulnerable, that no one was outside God’s love, and that the laws of religion were a human construct obscuring God in favour of maintaining the institution.

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The Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Dr Zachary Guiliano The Reverend Dr Zachary Guiliano

The Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity

How many indeed have received Holy Communion week in and week out for the past year and a half, one of the most difficult periods this parish has gone through? A great many of you. And after eating and drinking, you prayed together Sunday by Sunday: ‘Almighty God, we thank you feeding us with the body and blood of your Son Jesus Christ. Through him, we offer you our souls and bodies to be a living sacrifice. Send us out in the power of your Spirit to live and work to your praise and glory.’

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The Twelth Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Caroline Brownlie The Reverend Caroline Brownlie

The Twelth Sunday after Trinity

In 2007, when I was just retired and luxuriously church-shopping, I walked into St. Benet’s and saw our very rare if not unique central window: was there ever a pull, a message for someone just retired?

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The Eleventh Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis

The Eleventh Sunday after Trinity

So this bread, this simple nourishing meal, this transformation of grain and yeast, this proved and risen and baked food – this is more than a metaphor. The bread of the Eucharist is more than bread, for it conveys Jesus. 

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Patronal Festival                              The Feast of St Benedict
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

Patronal Festival The Feast of St Benedict

When I joined St Bene’t’s, a priest friend came up to me and asked what it was like to be responsible for the most prayed for congregation in England. 

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The Sixth Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

The Sixth Sunday after Trinity

We find ourselves in the position of those 12 disciples sent out by Jesus, with authority over evil spirits, to teach the good news of the kingdom of God. 

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The Fifth Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis

The Fifth Sunday after Trinity

Giving thanks, on the other hand, is a positive action which we do, and we do over and over again, because we have faith in our God from whom all blessings flow. 

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The Fourth Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

The Fourth Sunday after Trinity

Constantly and patiently Job responds to those who ask him to accept these answers. Job will not give up the two things he really knows. That God is good and loves him. 

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The Third Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

The Third Sunday after Trinity

So, what is the kingdom of God like? It is like a field with things growing. You think you are doing all the work, but God gives more that you can imagine. And, what is the kingdom of God like? It is like a mustard seed. Almost insignificant but can become great.

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The Second Sunday after Trinity
The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis The Reverend Canon Richard Ames-Lewis

The Second Sunday after Trinity

What was Jesus like? Imagine meeting him. Imagine his eyes, piercing yet full of love; Imagine his voice, strong and commanding, yet full of compassion; imagine his hands – full of gestures yet full of healing; imagine his stride, as he walked from village to village – a man in a hurry with work to do before the day is out – yet stopping when called by the needy crowd.

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Eco-Church Sunday
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

Eco-Church Sunday

Today we are keeping Eco-Sunday. With the environment and the economy, we are enmeshed in a system we cannot get out of, but which is not working for human flourishing. From a human perspective, we all believe in the sustainable development and equitable sharing of the world’s resources with all God’s creatures.

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The Ramsden Sermon
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

The Ramsden Sermon

Imagine you are asked to watch a short video in which six people-three in white shirts and three in black shirts-pass basketballs around. While you watch, you must keep a silent count of the number of passes made by the people in white shirts. At some point, a gorilla strolls into the middle of the action, faces the camera and thumps its chest, and then leaves, spending nine seconds on screen.

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Trinity Sunday
The Reverend Caroline Brownlie The Reverend Caroline Brownlie

Trinity Sunday

From the Council of Chalcedon: “it is salutary to recall that in ‘spinning out’ some of the most elaborate speculation on the doctrine of the Trinity, Augustine explained that “I have done this, not to presume to describe this mystery, as though I were speaking the mind of God, but so as not to be altogether silent; and I begged forgiveness when my speculation had gone too far!”

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Pentecost
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

Pentecost

We are called to make our lives a translation, in our own time, of Christ. The process of making our lives a translation of Christ precisely is the presence of the Spirit of Christ within us. Not beside us – but as close to us as our own breath.

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The Seventh Sunday of Easter
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

The Seventh Sunday of Easter

Today we are in the in between time, with Christ gone, and the Holy Spirit not yet arrived. This is reflected in the phrases from our Collect: we beseech you, leave us not comfortless, but send your Holy Spirit to strengthen us.

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The Fourth Sunday of Easter
Guest Preacher Guest Preacher

The Fourth Sunday of Easter

On Easter Sunday just before Evensong, in my last Parish in Leicestershire, someone came into Church, whom I knew from one of our outlying villages - there were 16 in the area for which I had responsibility. He was a farmer. .

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Ascension Day
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

Ascension Day

I wonder whether you ever have a sense of being torn between two places. Perhaps somewhere where you have been happy, where you have intense memories.

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The Sixth Sunday of Easter
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

The Sixth Sunday of Easter

Love is the gateway to betrayal, grief, disappointment, just as much as it is the gateway to completion, personhood, eternity. It should not be a surprise that all these things are part of the experience of those who love, of those who are friends of Christ.

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The Fifth Sunday of Easter
The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's The Reverend Dr James Gardom, Interim Priest-in-Charge, St Bene't's

The Fifth Sunday of Easter

In today’s parable Jesus connects the image of the vine with the idea of abiding. (Meno – the same root word as remain). This is important. In John, over and over again Jesus talks about the abiding and mutual indwelling of the Father and the Son.

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