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Farewell Neil Summers

On Sunday 9 October, Rev Neil Summers stepped down as Richmond Team Ministry Vicar after twenty two years of ordained ministry in the parish, eight of them as full-time priest at St John the Divine.

His final service was a Team Eucharist at St John’s on Sunday 9 October: A service filled with love, more people than the building could hold, and a wonderful sermon by Neil. Thank you, Neil. And thank you, God!

Before his final service, Neil wrote:

On Tuesday evening I sat in the Lady Chapel at St John’s, as I’ve done so many times, for half an hour of quiet contemplation with the Blessed Sacrament as the focal point.  This week was especially poignant because it was the last time I would do this as Vicar of the church.  It happened to be the feast day of Francis of Assisi, one of the four saints whose statues stand in the niches in the Chapel’s magnificent gilded reredos.  He is accompanied by Saints Agnes, Etheldreda and Martin – a somewhat eclectic gathering!

During these very special half-hours (the highlight of my liturgical week), I often recall the more recent saints I have met here over the past 37 years, both before and since my ordination.  As the hymn puts it: ‘These stones that have echoed their praises are holy, and dear is the ground where their feet have once trod.’  It wasn’t fame or perfection that made these people part of the community of saints at St John the Divine, and they will never be immortalised in a statue.  I remember them chiefly because of their very humanity – each of them in many ways quite ordinary, yet each one unique, as we all are.  They made their contribution to keeping the flame of faith alight in their time, sharing the spiritual and life journey with one another, and with me. 

Christians believe that God is to be found everywhere, but a church building has a special significance.  It is where people may experience the divine in particular ways, inspired by art, architecture, music, flowers, incense, candles, colour, vestments and, supremely, through liturgy and sacrament.  We call our churches ‘holy ground’ – and they are.  TS Eliot, an Anglican convert, wrote, ‘You are here to kneel where prayer has been valid’, reminding us of our links with preceding generations.  And even sceptics and agnostics recognise at least something of the importance; the poet Philip Larkin said a church is ‘a serious house on serious earth’.

In the Christian understanding, though, it is in you and me, not in bricks and stone, that God chooses to locate the divine dwelling place.  That is what Incarnation – God sharing our humanity in Jesus – is all about.  Yes, God is certainly to be encountered in the beauty of the church building, but what also makes our churches holy is that they are the meeting place of today’s community of very human saints whose prayers, whether spoken or silent, fill the air and soak into the very fabric, mingling with those of the generations who have gone before us.  In his celebrated sermon, ‘The Weight of Glory’, CS Lewis said, ‘There are no ordinary people.  You have never talked to a mere mortal….. Next to the Blessed Sacrament itself, your neighbour is the holiest object presented to your senses’.

My colleagues and I quite often turn to the contemporary priest/poet, Malcom Guite, and I end my final RTM e-newsletter contribution with this reflection from him:

And now we turn our eyes from wood and paint
to contemplate the saints in flesh and blood,
the ones who’ve seen these pictures with us.  Faint
traces of God’s image, and his glad
presence in humanity, have shone
awhile for us in paintings on a wall,
the dark glass brightened, and the shadows gone.
How shall we know each other now?  Will all
that we have seen recede to memory?
Or is our sight restored, and having gazed
on icons in this place, will clarity
transfigure all of us?  We turn, amazed,
to see the ones beside us, face to face,
as living icons, sacraments of grace.

To the saints of the Church in Richmond, my thanks for the great privilege of serving in this parish. 

Welcome to New Clergy

Over the past six months we have welcomed four new members of clergy to our deanery

Rev Canon Dr Giles Fraser was installed as vicar of St Anne’s on 25th May 2022
Rev Matthew Watts was ordained Deacon in June 2022 and subsequently licensed as the Parish Curate of St Mary the Virgin, Mortlake
Rev Jonathan Haynes was licensed as Team Vicar of Christ Church, East Sheen in the Mortlake and East Sheen Team Ministry on 6th September 2022.
Rev Eils Osgood was licensed as associate vicar of Holy Trinity, Richmond, on 15th September 2022.

Deanery Synod 3rd October 2022

This was held at St Mary the Virgin, Mortlake High Street, Mortlake at 7:30pm on Monday 3rd October.  See below for agenda and minutes.

Background to the discussion on family ministry is based on the Multi-National Children’s Ministry Report 2021:

This was livestreamed to St Mary’s Facebook page:

Exploring Prayer at St Mary Magdalene

500 years ago St Ignatius of Loyola, a wilful and warlike young man, met God when a cannonball ended his military career.  During his long and painful convalescence God met him and he met God in an entirely new way.  Ignatius learned to listen to God through reflecting on his feelings and experiences and taught others to do the same.

St Mary Magdalene, Richmond is running 5 sessions in which we will learn the different sorts of prayer Ignatius used, so that we, like him, can deepen and grow our relationship with God. God always meets us where we are, so this group is for everyone – no previous experience necessary!  There will be time for prayer and silence and if you want to, sharing our experience of prayer.  Everything shared in the group is absolutely confidential.

We will meet in St Mary Magdalene in the All Souls Chapel at 3pm to 4pm on Tuesdays 27th September, 11th and 25th October, 8th and 22nd November.  The group will be run by a trained Prayer Guide in the Ignatian tradition.  Please contact Richmond Team Ministry admin@richmondteamministry.org if you would like to come.  Everyone is welcome.

Glass Door Winter Shelter Update

We had anticipated this coming season might have seen a return to the overnight shelters, but we have recently heard from Glass Door that they will not be running the Richmond circuit this year, having to focus their limited resources and services in three specific areas where the need is greatest.  They hope to be able to resume the circuit here in future years should finances allow and, in the meantime, their caseworkers are supporting guests at the Vineyard five days a week. 
 
The Soup Kitchen at St John the Divine will run again on largely the same basis as last year, i.e. an outdoor takeaway service, on Wednesdays and Thursdays, 5.00-6.00pm, between 2nd November and 27th April.

Bishop Richard is Retiring

Please share this with your congregations.

The Bishop of Kingston, The Rt Revd Dr Richard Cheetham, will be concluding his term of office on 17 October 2022, the 20th anniversary of his consecration. He is one of the longest-serving stipendiary bishops in the Church of England.

“It has been a great privilege to serve the Diocese of Southwark for the last 20 years,” said Bishop Richard. “The Kingston Episcopal Area, covering five London boroughs from Kingston to Waterloo, is a wonderfully interesting and diverse part of London, full of many fine examples of mission and ministry. It is served by very committed and able clergy and laity and their faithful and imaginative responses and adaptations to the many often rapid changes in communities during the last 20 years have been inspirational. I have also been privileged to engage with its many excellent institutions and organisations in the wider world on matters of common concern such as the environment, education and interfaith relations.”

To mark Bishop Richard’s retirement as Bishop of Kingston a live-streamed “Celebration of Church’s local ministry” is arranged for Tuesday 4 October at 7.30pm from All Saints Kingston. It will start with Evensong led by the Parish Choir and will include a celebration of the breadth of ministry across Kingston Episcopal Area through a range of short reflections and music.

The live-stream link is found at www.allsaintskingston.co.uk and the recording will be available afterwards on All Saints’ YouTube channel.