Sounds of Edinburgh Festival on the Royal Mile
Fr John McLuckie of Old St Paul's Episcopal Church marks the Festival from the heart of Edinburgh, and with Rev Jaime Wright reflects on how we can celebrate in a broken world.
Fr John McLuckie of Old St Paul's Episcopal Church marks the Edinburgh Festival from the heart of the city, and with Rev Jaime Wright reflects on how we can celebrate in a broken world.
In Matthew's Gospel, the Beatitudes pose the kind of challenging juxtapositions we often confront in our own experience.
John explores how, against a backdrop of pain and anxiety, we can find strength in sharing joy and celebration.
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SOUNDS OF EDINBURGH FESTIVAL ON ROYAL MILE
FR JOHN McLUCKIE
Good morning and
welcome to Sunday Worship.听 I鈥檓 Father
John McLuckie, I鈥檓 Rector of Old St Paul鈥檚 Church in the
centre of Edinburgh, and I鈥檓 standing here on the High Street, the Royal Mile.听 I walked just a few minutes from my home and on
the way to where I鈥檓 standing I passed an opera singer, a piper, a magician, an
acrobat, a contortionist, two caricaturists and even a pirate.听 听Everywhere you go in the city centre there are performers,
leafleters and visitors drawn to the annual spectacle of the world鈥檚 biggest
arts festival. It鈥檚 a familiar sight to those of us who live here and those who
make an annual visit to the International Festival and the Festival Fringe.
Except, of course, that this familiar sight was all but absent two years ago
and present only in a much-reduced form last year. The global pandemic brought
silence to this festival city and this year, the silence has, once more, given
way to a full-throated celebration of human creativity and artistic skill.
Perhaps that silence still has something to reveal to us about the arts that we
might too easily take for granted.
This morning, I want to invite you to join the celebration, but also to pause for a while and reflect on this universal human impulse to interpret the world around us through word, music and movement.
First, a hymn that celebrates creativity and directs our song
to the Creator of all things; Angel voices ever singing.
HYMN:听 ANGEL VOICES EVERY SINGING (Tune:
Angel Voices)
The London Fox Choir,听 Album: Then
Sings My Soul 鈥 Pam Rhodes,听 Label:
Elevation
JOHN
Now in the
tranquillity of Old St Paul鈥檚 Church a few yards from the Royal Mile, I鈥檓
joined by our Curate, Mother Jaime Wright, who leads us in prayer.
JAIME 鈥 PRAYER
O God, whose Spirit in our hearts teaches us to desire your perfection, to seek
for truth and to rejoice in beauty; enlighten and inspire all artists and
performers in whatever is true, life-giving and lovely so that our lives
together may be enriched and deepened. We make our prayer in the name of your
Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
JOHN
The poet, George Mackay Brown, was not much given to introspection in his work
鈥 his poems turn our eyes outwards to the world around us through a sustained
reflection on the landscape, history, daily labours and religious festivals of
his native Orkney. However, he did write a couple of poems about the work of
the poet, and he very much saw his craft as labour rather than leisure. Here鈥檚
one of them, simply called The Poet.听 I
can picture the figure he describes, moving around the streets of this city.听 In fact, I think I see him often.
POEM 鈥 GEORGE MACKAY BROWN
鈥淭herefore he no
more troubled the pool of silence 鈥︹ [Copyright material]
Publisher:听 Hodder & Stoughton
MUSIC:听 FAREWELL TO STROMNESS (Composer: Sir Peter
Maxwell Davies)
From Album Made
Famous by Classic FM 听(CD1)
JOHN
These words seem to contrast the serious business of poetry with the
frivolity of entertainment, but I don鈥檛 think George Mackay Brown intended to draw
too sharp a distinction. I am sure that many performers can identify with the need
to adopt a persona when taking to the stage 鈥 it鈥檚 part of the imaginative
process of seeing the world through different eyes for a time. And none of us
would deny the importance of taking a break from our cares and toils and simply
enjoying ourselves. Indeed, I think there is a deep spiritual value in the kind
of self-forgetting that comes with such joyfulness. It鈥檚 what Thomas Merton
meant when he invited us to 鈥榝orget ourselves on purpose, cast our awful
solemnity to the winds and join in the general dance.鈥 Us Scots are well-known
for being somewhat undemonstrative, but once I鈥檓 on the ceilidh dance floor鈥.
It seems to me that too much self-consciousness can make it difficult for us to
relate freely to others.
At the same time, George Mackay Brown is surely right to remind us of the
serious business of the artist who is willing to explore the deeper reaches of
the human condition, to ask the difficult questions and to reflect on the
mysteries of life. When he writes of the interrogation of silence, perhaps he
has in mind the silence of contemplative wonder; or maybe the silence which is
our only honest response to the problem of suffering; or the open, boundless
silence we find in prayer. And he is also surely right in seeing that it is
from this silence that a poem, a song, a play or a symphony arises.
We now hear Jonathan Dove鈥檚 setting of that great song of praise, the Gloria,
which erupts from the stillness as Christians gather to worship God.
MUSIC:听 GLORIA (Composer: Jonathan Dove)
Choir of Canterbury Cathedral directed by David Flood
Album: The Canterbury Voice,听 Label: The
Dean and Chapter of Canterbury
JOHN
Our artistic impulses, which arise from our silence in the face of life鈥檚
mysteries, give expression to those mysteries and allow us to bear them with something
akin to joy. Christian tradition articulates this paradox in the text we know
as the Beatitudes. Jesus identifies several conditions and dispositions that we
would not normally associate with happiness and dares to call those who
experience these things blessed.
ALEX ANDERSON听 听Matthew
5:1-12
5When Jesus听saw the crowds, he went up the mountain; and after he sat down, his disciples came to him.听2Then he began to speak, and taught them, saying:
3听鈥楤lessed
are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
4听鈥楤lessed
are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.
5听鈥楤lessed
are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.
6听鈥楤lessed
are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.
7听鈥楤lessed
are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.
8听鈥楤lessed
are the pure in heart, for they will see God.
9听鈥楤lessed
are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.
10听鈥楤lessed
are those who are persecuted for righteousness鈥 sake, for theirs is the kingdom
of heaven.
11听鈥楤lessed
are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil
against you falsely听on my account.听12Rejoice and be glad, for your reward
is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were
before you.
JOHN
鈥楻ejoice and be
glad鈥 even in the face of persecution! I wonder what it is that allows us to do
that. What is it that can lift our eyes beyond forces that limit, diminish and
even destroy life and deliver us from the despair that can immobilise us?
Jesus calls us blessed not when we manage to evade grief, poverty of spirit or persecution, but when we are sustained through them. Perhaps some of the things that can sustain us are the imagination to see that we are sharing in the common experience of humanity, the willingness to respond compassionately and the faith to see that the things that matter most endure: love, mercy, simplicity. And that imagination can be fed by the arts. I was very touched during the long, anxious days at the height of the pandemic, by the resilience of artists I know who turned their attention to supporting those most affected: online choirs to support young carers or refugee women far from home; weekly broadcasts of music to keep children in good mental health; church choirs bringing comfort and connection to isolated older people.
We鈥檙e going to hear the words of the Beatitudes again, this
time sung in a setting by Arvo P盲rt.
MUSIC:听听 BEATITUDES (Composer: Arvo P盲rt)
Choir of King鈥檚
College, Cambridge, directed by David Goode
Album: The Best of Arvo P盲rt,听 Label:
Warner Classics
JOHN
Just as Jesus identified blessedness in the midst of suffering, human
creativity is often found in places where we might least expect it, not as a
distraction from what is going on, but as an act of defiance or hope even when
the spirit is completely broken and all seems lost. Just think of that haunting
Quartet for the End of Time composed by Messiaen in a POW camp with the few
instruments that were available to him.
In a
programme recorded in 2005, the late Ian Mackenzie, a brilliant musician
himself, as well as a theologian and broadcaster, reflected on his experience
of that first ever Edinburgh International Festival, held in the shadow of the Second
World War.
CLIP FROM RADIO 4 SUNDAY WORSHIP 2005; PRESENTER:听 IAN MACKENZIE
The first Festival was still in the wake of the Holocaust, the Second World War, and the atom bombs.听 The problem of evil had not been solved, in fact it was more intractable than ever.听 The human spirit had faced, but not resolved, the enigmas of beauty versus obscenity, truth versus distortion.听 One form of the enigma was caught in a unique fusion of form and reality in the Usher Hall on the final Saturday of the first Festival.听
I was there, sitting in the organ gallery, facing the conductor.听 His was a noble face, but at this moment etched in anguish.听 As he unfurled melodies which stole into our ears and round the hall the walls seemed to fade and give way to the woods round Vienna and the Danube river flowing through the Europe which had just savaged itself.听 The conductor was the great maestro Bruno Walter who had been a friend of Mahler and disciple of Brahms.听 And the orchestra spread before him, from which I was only a few feet away, was his beloved Vienna Philharmonic.听 Hitler had cut a swathe through the Jews in the orchestra.听 Bruno Walter had escaped, to spend the war years in America.听 In an inspired move, those who midwifed the Festival into existence had invited the Vienna Philharmonic to reunite with their maestro as the climactic act of Edinburgh鈥檚 three weeks of spiritual healing.
That concert crossed the boundary of the bitter-sweet, then the boundary of the poignant, and finally the boundary of the unbearable, before metamorphosing into the sublime.听 Not because of tragic music.听 There was no Brahms鈥 tragic overture or Mahler鈥檚 despairing 9th Symphony.听 The music took wing on a whirl of Strauss Waltzes.听 As the tunes poised and pounced and soared, tears poured down the players鈥 faces.听 I watched one ancient cellist sway to the rhythms while gulps of grief shook his body.听 Tread softly, for you tread on my nightmares.听 I had a fleeting vision of the kind of God who has entrusted our species with such fathomless dilemmas of free will, and a Middle East carpenter who decided to dance with the human race into the dark.
MUSIC: THE BLUE DANUBE (Composer: Johann Strauss)
Album: Music on a Summer Evening, 听Label: Teldec 0630 11383-2
JOHN
I find that juxtaposition of grief and celebration deeply moving.
It鈥檚 difficult to imagine the depths from which the artistic spirits of those musicians had to struggle to offer that music, so redolent of luxury, frivolity and light.听 And how powerful for the audience to hear the familiar, joyful melody after the shattering experiences of the war.
For me this lays bare that dual experience of our own joys and lightness of heart alongside our knowledge of the darkness being suffered by so many people in the same moments.听 It sets us on the painful end of the tussle between selfishness and altruism.
Many of us experience discomfort or even guilt when confronted with this juxtaposition, which is so sharpened by the constant availability of devastating stories we hear reported.
But perhaps giving in to that discomfort and guilt is the easy way out.听 It risks allowing us to give in to cynicism and fatalism.听
It can, at times, take much more effort to respond
positively, and to summon our energy to create or receive something beautiful.
And that is what we are called by God to do.
JAIME
Our next hymn repeats many of these themes, reminding us of that extraordinary
moment recounted by both Matthew and Mark when Jesus and his disciples sang a
hymn just as he was about to face his betrayal and arrest; When in our
music God is glorified.
HYMN:听 WHEN IN OUR MUSIC GOD IS GLORIFIED
(Tune: Engelberg)
Winchester College Chapel Choir directed by Malcolm Archer.
Album: Stanford Choral Works,听 Label: Convivium
Records
JOHN
One of the thousands
of international visitors here in Edinburgh is Kiki, whose full name is Odile
Gakire Katese.听 听
Kiki has
spent years accumulating letters written by survivors and perpetrators of
Rwanda鈥檚 1994 genocide 鈥 letters by ordinary people addressing those who are
gone.听 Kiki鈥檚 play is woven through with
song and drumming by the Women Drummers of Rwanda. I had the wonderful
opportunity to meet Kiki shortly after she arrived in the city.
JOHN CONVERSATION WITH KIKI, RWANDAN RECONCILIATION ACTIVIST;
DRUMMING AND SONG BY WOMEN DRUMMERS OF RWANDA
JAIME:
The responses to our prayers this morning, composed by Sir James Macmillan,
are given by Edinburgh singer and harpist, Anna McLuckie.
ANNA:听 KYRIE (James Macmillan)
[Harp continues under prayers]
JAIME
We give you thanks, O God our Creator, for the gift of human creativity to
inspire, sustain and restore us. We give thanks for those whose words and music
help us to make sense of the world and to see things we would not otherwise
see. Bless all those who work in the arts, especially those whose livelihoods
have been affected during the pandemic.
听
We pray for those whose lives are overshadowed by current or past conflicts,
those whose bodies and minds bear the scars of human violence, and those who
have been driven far from their homes and families. Bring your peace to
Ukraine, to Israel and Palestine, to Afghanistan and all the troubled places of
the world, and bless all peacemakers.
We pray for all whose lives are marked by suffering, who face illness or loss,
who are troubled by their past or fearful for their future. May they know peace
and healing, strength and comfort, and may all those who care for others be sustained
by your love.
ANNA:听 KYRIE
JAIME
Hear us, O God, as
we offer our prayer to you in the words our Saviour taught us:
JAIME AND
JOHN:听
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 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,
For ever and ever, Amen.
JOHN
We close our worship with that great hymn of praise and gratitude, Now thank we
all our God.
But first, the blessing;
May the Lord bless you and watch over you, the Lord make his face to shine upon
you and be gracious to you; the Lord look kindly on you and give you his peace;
and the blessing of God almighty, the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit, be
upon you this day and always.听 Amen.
MUSIC:听 NOW THANK WE ALL OUR GOD (Tune:听 Nun Danket)
Saint Michael鈥檚 Singers, Coventry Cathedral, directed by Paul Leddington
Wright
Album: Royal Coventry,听 Label: Classic
Fox Records
Broadcast
- Sun 14 Aug 2022 08:10麻豆约拍 Radio 4