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Lent Pilgrimage 3: Becoming Present

The Rev Dr Stephen Wigley reflects on how people can become more attentive to God's presence around them, in a live service from Gresford Methodist Church, Wrexham.

Whether our journey takes us out onto the road or deep into reflection, how do we discern God's voice speaking to us?
The Rev. Dr. Stephen Wigley, Chair of the Wales Synod of the Methodist Church, reflects on how we can become more attentive to God's presence around us. The Rev. Richard Sharples leads the live service from Gresford Methodist Church, Wrexham which includes SS. Wesley's 'Lead Me, Lord', 'The Gift of Life' by John Rutter, and 'Take This Moment' by John Bell and Graham Maule, sung by The Sirenian Singers, directed by Jean Stanley-Jones. Accompanist: Christopher Enston.
Producer: Karen Walker.

40 minutes

The Rev. Dr. Stephen Wigley

The Rev. Dr. Stephen Wigley

Rev. Dr. Stephen Wigley is a Methodist minister and has been Chair of the Wales Synod of the Methodist Church since2007, havingstudied at Oxford and Birmingham and thenserved in churches in Swansea, Aberystwyth and Cardiff. His interests are in historical and ecumenical theology and he has written books on Karl Barth and Hans Urs von Balthasar. He is married to Jenny, a priest in the Church in Wales, and they have two grown up sons, Andrew and Crash. Stephen is a regular contributor to religious programmes on 鶹Լ Radio Wales and Radio 4.

Lent Pilgrimage

Lent Pilgrimage

During Lent Radio 4’s Sunday Worship and Daily Service as well asSunday Breakfast on 鶹Լ local radioare taking the idea of Pilgrimage as inspiration. A link to resources for individuals and groups from Churches Together in Britain and Ireland can be found below.

Script:

Please note:

This script cannot exactly reflect the transmission, as it was prepared before the service was broadcast. It may include editorial notes prepared by the producer, and minor spelling and other errors that were corrected before the radio broadcast.

It may contain gaps to be filled in at the time so that prayers may reflect the needs of the world, and changes may also be made at the last minute for timing reasons, or to reflect current events.

OPENING ANNO FROM R4

鶹Լ Radio 4. And now we go live to Gresford Methodist Church in Wrexham for Sunday Worship. Continuing our Lenten theme of Pilgrimage, the service is led by the Rev’d Richard Sharples and the preacher the Rev’d Dr. Stephen Wigley, Chair of the Wales Synod of the Methodist Church. The service begins with S.S. Wesley’s Introit ‘Lead me, Lord, in thy righteousness’.

ITEM 1 Choir Introit Lead me, Lord

ITEM 2 Excerpt from Brother Lawrence’s ‘The Practice of Presence of God’

“The most holy and necessary practice in our spiritual life is the presence of God. That means finding constant pleasure in his divine company, speaking humbly and lovingly with him in all seasons, at every moment without limiting the conversation in any way…

I know a person who for forty years has practised the presence of God… My friend says that by dwelling in the presence of God he has established such a sweet communion with the Lord that his spirit abides, without much effort, in the restful peace of God. In this centre of rest, he is filled with a faith that equips him to handle anything that comes into his life.”

ITEM 3 INTRO & WELCOMESTEPHEN WIGLEY

Good morning and welcome to Gresford Methodist Church. Those words are taken from the writings of Brother Lawrence, a Carmelite lay brother who lived over 300 years ago. They draw on his experience of learning to discern the presence of God ‘in all seasons, at every moment’ – and most famously when working in the kitchens of his community. He calls this the ‘practice of the presence of God’.

His words lead us into the theme of our service this morning which, as part of the Churches Together in Britain & Ireland’s Lent series on Pilgrimage, materials for which can be found online, is all about ‘becoming present’; that is learning to be attentive to our situation and surroundings, and discovering in and through them the presence of God among us.

One of the things about going on pilgrimage is that in the presence of new surroundings our senses are heightened and we become more attuned to the sights and sounds around us. But as we shall also reflect, this doesn’t relate just to physical journeys to a new place; it can also be a spiritual journey, taking the time to revisit places which are already known to us, but viewing them with new eyes and seeing them afresh, as if for the first time.

In the case of Brother Lawrence it was all about coming to discover the presence of God in the everyday and the ordinary, and there’s something of that same sense in our opening hymn by Charles Wesley, ‘Forth in thy name, O Lord, I go, my daily labour to pursue.’ After which the minister of this church, the Revd. Richard Sharples, will lead us in prayer.

ITEM 4 Hymn ‘Forth in thy name O Lord I go’ (Choir)

ITEM 5 Link & Reading from Psalm 63.1-8. Richard Sharples & Reader 1

RICHARD As we come into worship, the Psalmist reminds us of the soul’s longing for God.

RICHARD O God, you are my God, eagerly I seek you,

my soul thirsts for you;

my flesh faints for you,

as in a dry and weary land where there is no water.

READER So I have looked upon you in the sanctuary,

beholding your power and glory.

RICHARD Because your steadfast love is better than life,

my lips will praise you.

READER So I will bless you as long as I live;

I will lift up my hands and call on your name.

RICHARD My soul is satisfied as with a rich feast

and my mouth praises you with joyful lips

READER When I think of you on my bed,

and meditate on you in the watches of the night

RICHARD For you have been my help,

and in the shadow of your wings I sing for joy.

READER My soul clings to you;

your right hand upholds me.

ITEM 6 PRAYERS RICHARD SHARPLES

Let us pray,

Eternal God,

Giver of life and creator of all,

The one in whom we live and move and have our being,

We come to worship you,

To sing your praises, to hear your word,

And to know your presence among us.

Yet we know that

You do not wait for us to come to you,

For heaven cannot hold you,

Nor can earth sustain;

You are with us in all times and in all places,

In the paths our lives take,

In the events that come upon us on the way,

And in the life of your Son our Saviour, Jesus Christ.

Help us to look out for his face,

Teach us to listen for his voice,

And forgive us when we fail

To be attentive to his presence among us,

Or to recognise your divine image

In the face of friend or stranger.

And when we do not know how to pray as we ought,

Send your Holy Spirit to intercede for us;

To forgive us our faults and our failings,

To draw us closer to one another and to you,

To strengthen us in our fellowship with the saints,

And to lead us deeper into the mind of Christ.

For we ask this prayer in the name of Jesus,

Who taught us, when we pray, to say;

ITEM 7 Lord’s Prayer

Our Father,

Who art in heaven,

Hallowed be thy name;

Thy kingdom come, thy will be done,

On earth as it is in heaven.

Give us this day our daily bread,

And forgive us our trespasses

As we forgive those who trespass against us.

And lead us not into temptation,

But deliver us from evil,

For thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory,

Forever and ever, Amen.

ITEM 8 LINK & READING from Isaiah 55.1-9STEPHEN WIGLEY & Reader 2

(SW) Our Old Testament reading comes from the prophet Isaiah chapter 55, and speaks of the presence of God’s word to nourish and sustain us.

(𲹻2)

Ho, everyone who thirsts,

come to the waters;

and you that have no money,

come, buy and eat!

Come, buy wine and milk

without money and without price.

2 Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread,

and your labour for that which does not satisfy?

Listen carefully to me, and eat what is good,

and delight yourselves in richfood.

3 Incline your ear, and come to me;

listen, so that you may live.

6 Seek the LORD while he may befound,

call upon him while he is near;

7 Let the wicked forsake their way,

and the unrighteous their thoughts;

Let them return to the LORD, that he may have mercy on them,

and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.

8 For my thoughts are not your thoughts,

nor are your ways my ways, says the LORD.

9 For as the heavens are higher than the earth,

so are my ways higher than yourways

and my thoughts than your thoughts.

ITEM 9 LINK STEPHEN

John Rutter’s anthem, sung for us by the Sirenian Singers,reminds us of The Gift of Each Day.

ITEM 10 CHOIR The gift of each day .

ITEM 11 Link & Reading STEPHEN WIGLEY & Reader 3

(SW) Our reading from Luke’s Gospel chapter 10 tells the story of two sisters who seek to welcome Jesus into their home, and how they respond differently to his presence among them.

(Rd3) Now as they went on their way, he entered a certain village, where a woman named Martha welcomed him into her home. 39She had a sister named Mary, who sat at the Lord’sfeet and listened to what he was saying. 40But Martha was distracted by her many tasks; so she came to him and asked, ‘Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to do all thework by myself? Tell her then to help me.’ 41But the Lord answered her, ‘Martha, Martha, you are worried and distracted by many things; 42there is need of only one thing.* Mary haschosen the better part, which will not be taken away from her.’ (Luke 10.38-42)

ITEM 12 ADDRESS STEPHEN WIGLEY

We began our service with Brother Lawrence practising the presence of God in the kitchen. Now I want you to imagine another scene. There’s a distinguished guest coming to town with some of his friends; and two women, two sisters indeed, are getting ready to welcome him into their home – but in very different ways.

As Luke tells it, Martha is busy about the house doing the jobs one might expect of a hostess while Mary simply sits by Jesus’ feet and listens to what he is saying. This annoys Martha sufficiently to take it up with Jesus, asking that he tell her sister to give her some help about the house. But Jesus’ response is quite different; “Martha, you are distracted by many things; there is only one thing needful. Mary chosen the better part which will not be taken away from her.”

It’s a short but complex story encompassing all kinds of themes, but at its heart is the question of presence. Which of the sisters was really paying attention to the presence of Jesus among them? And that takes us right to the heart of our theme this morning, ‘Becoming present’. For it’s all about learning what it means to be attentive to God’s presence among us, and not to be distracted by all those other things we think we need to do.

Now this may seem quite a long way from the idea of pilgrimage, of making a journey designed to help bring us closer to God. After all in this story it’s Jesus who is on the road while Martha and Mary welcome him into their home. But journeys, and indeed pilgrimages, take a variety of different forms, and if we read further into the Gospel stories, we will discover that both Mary and Martha have a significant spiritual journey still to make.

For in John’s Gospel, Martha and Mary are the sisters of Jesus’ friend, Lazarus. When Lazarus is taken seriously ill, they ask Jesus to come to visit him and are dismayed when he delays. By the time Jesus finally arrives, their brother is dead and Martha and Mary in turn reproach Jesus for not coming earlier. Then Jesus goes to the tomb, asks for the stone to be rolled away and calls Lazarus to come out – and he does, still wrapped in his grave-clothes.

John’s account uses this story to point towards Jesus’ own death and resurrection. But for Martha and Mary it’s also a significant stage in their discipleship and journey of faith. For in facing their brother’s illness and death, they have learnt what it means to trust in Jesus as ‘the Resurrection and the Life’. And for Mary that journey has another step still to go; for when Jesus next comes to visit their home at Bethany, while Martha is serving at table, Mary no longer simply sits at Jesus’ feet, but anoints them with perfume and wipes them with her hair.

Mary’s journey doesn’t take her, so far as we know in the Gospels, beyond her home in Bethany. Yet in listening, paying attention, being herself fully present at this moment in the presence of Jesus, she has started on a path that will transform her whole life and faith. It’s a spiritual journey which will take in a lifetime of experience, and lead her to see all those things which she thought familiar in a new and fresh light.

Mary’s journey starts with ‘the one thing needful’ – being present in the company of Jesus. It reminds me of the time when our boys were growing up and everything was such a rush to get them off to school in the morning. It was tempting to wish that all it could be over and done with to allow us some peace and quiet; but slowly I came to realise that in the details of this daily routine precious time and moments were being shared in a different kind of ‘quality time’.

Being attentive to the presence of God can help us pay attention to the things we often overlook and this same theme is also found in our Old Testament reading.

All this isn’t to deny there is a value in the physical journey and experience of pilgrimage. It can be the experience of being in different settings which opens up our senses to new sights and sounds, to a fresh understanding of what it means to be held in the knowledge and love of God. My colleague Richard will shortly share his reflections of walking one of the ancient pilgrim trails across Wales to Bardsey Island, and how that experience led him and his companions into a deeper sense of the presence of God.

But sometimes the longest journey isn’t about miles on a map; rather it’s that journey back into our minds and memories which enables us to see things clearly and discover a truth previously overlooked. It’s the journey which Mary makes as she comes to discover that Jesus is indeed the Resurrection and the Life. It’s that journey which enables us to become fully present in each moment to the God whose presence is ever and all around us. And it leads to the place which T S Eliot describes so beautifully at the end of his Four Quartets:

“We shall not cease from exploration

and the end of all our exploring

will be to arrive where we started

and know the place for the first time.”

ITEM 13 LINK RICHARD SHARPLES

RS) So we commit ourselves to that journey into the presence of God -

- ‘O Jesus I have promised…’

ITEM 14 CHOIR O Jesus, I have promised .

ITEM 15 REFLECTION RICHARD SHARPLES

Last May, along with a group of other pilgrims, I made the journey across North Wales to Bardsey Island, suspended between sea and sky off the tip of the Llyn Peninsula. Bardsey is Wales' Holy Island; reputedly the burial place of thousands of saints, and now the destination of the North Wales Pilgrim Way along which we had walked. The Welsh name is Ynys Enlli, meaning 'the island of currents', for there are many days upon which it is not safe to cross in the small boat which provides a life-line to the island's modest population.

But on that occasion, as so often on our pilgrimage, we were favoured. It was a calm day; for us a Sabbath Day. For God's loving intention is that we find a rhythm within the time that is given to us; a rhythm which keeping Sabbath gives to our lives. We do not thrive if we live lives of 24/7 relentless busyness. There are many ways of building this Sabbath pattern into our lives other than 'keeping Sunday special', and the practice of pilgrimage is one of them.

What I experienced afresh over the course of our 2 week journey, was that pilgrimage is not just a way of walking towards the holy place, but a way of becoming present to the God who is always with us. The experience of rain and wind, bluebell and birdsong, reconnected me with the natural world. A wind-burnt face and aching legs reconnected me with my body. And walking with others, reconnects me with the God who is community, even if, especially if, some of us snored loudly or walked slowly.

So for us that day on Bardsey was a taste of heaven, a glimpse of the Sabbath Rest God has prepared for his people. But it wouldn't have been that way if we had helicoptered in or come only for a day trip. Seeing our lives as pilgrimage, establishing our own Sabbath pattern, helps us to practice the presence of God, so that each moment becomes charged with the glory of God.

ITEM 16 Choir anthem ‘Take this moment’ (Choir) Flute

ITEM 17 Responsive Prayers of Intercession (RS, Readers & Choir)

RS) So, guided by God’s spirit,

We offer up our prayers for the world, for the Church

And for God’s people everywhere.

Choir) Take, oh take me as I am;

Rd1) We pray for your world,

Asking that we may be mindful of its divine creation,

Appreciative of its abundant riches and resources,

And responsible in our stewardship

Of all that is entrusted to us,

For the sake of those in need

And for generations still to come:

Choir) Take, oh take me as I am…

Rd2) We pray for your Church,

Asking that we may be a community

Which is attentive to your presence among us,

Alive to your love and compassion at work

And, in the power of your Spirit,

Active as channels of your peace

Seeking to transform your world:

Choir) Take, oh take me as I am…

Rd 3) We pray for all those who stand in special need at this time,

For all those caught up in conflict and violence,

For those forced to flee seeking shelter and security,

And especially we pray for the success of the cease fire in Syria....

Recognising that in responding to those in need

We are responding to your presence among us.

Choir) Take, oh take me as I am…

RS) We offer all these our prayers as we offer ourselves

In the name of Christ and for the sake of his kingdom, Amen.

ITEM 18 LINK (RS) & HYMN ‘Guide me O thou great Redeemer’

RS) Next Tuesday is St David’s day, when we will celebrate the festival for Wales’ patron saint;so we close our service with that great Welsh hymn which encourages us all to travel Joyfully in the presence of God; ‘Guide me O thou great Jehovah, pilgrim though this barren land.’

ITEM 19 BLESSING STEPHEN WIGLEY

1. May the God of hope

Fill us with all joy and peace in believing,

So that we may abound in hope

By the power of the Holy Spirit;

2. May the peace of God which passes all understanding

Keep our hearts and minds in the knowledge and love of God,

And of his Son, our Saviour Jesus Christ;

3. And may the blessing of God,

The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit,

Rest upon us and remain with us

Now and for evermore. Amen.

ITEM 20 Organ Postlude CHRISTOPHER ENSTON

Fuge in G minor by JS Bach.

CLOSING ANNO:

Sunday Worship came live from Gresford Methodist Church in Wrexham. The service was led by the Rev’d Richard Sharples and the preacher was the Rev. Dr. Stephen Wigley, Chair of the Wales Synod of the Methodist Church. The Sirenian Singers were directed by Jean Stanley-Jones, the flautist was Linda Boylett and the Organist Christopher Enston. The producer was Karen Walker.

'Alone and Together'is the Churches Together in Britain and Ireland pilgrimage theme for Mothering Sunday Worship next week live from St Martin-in-the-Fields. And a link to the CTBI materials, is available on this week’s Sunday Worship web page.

Broadcast

  • Sun 28 Feb 2016 08:10

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