Category Archives: Prayer

Liturgical comment and prayer diary

What am I Doing Here?

Kew United Benefice are giving members of their congregations the opportunity to give a sermon on their own faith journey and the path that has led them to their church.

Read below, St Philip and All Saints congregation member, Paul Gregorowski talking about his faith journey:

I will never forget the day a close friend, a fellow student in Cape Town, woke me up by hammering on my door in the early hours to announce that he had found faith overnight in a sudden revelation, this after years of bitter debate with me (and, I suspect, himself) about Christianity, which he had always castigated as a wicked lie. He went on to become an inspiring and much-loved priest in South Africa. My own journey has been very different. The Church has always been home to me. When I was two my father was sent as a young priest to Namaqualand, a remote district near Namibia. My mother would have loved to be ordained (but, of course, such a thing could never, ever happen!) so she saw herself as part of his vocation, and they worked together as a team. They couldn’t afford child-care so that my earliest memories include playing happily with plasticine under a pew during services. I was christened Paul after the saint, but there was no blinding light on the road to Damascus for me. I emerged from under the pew, learned to be a server, did intercessions, read lessons, and took my turn to pump the bellows of the antediluvian organ; one day I fell asleep at the task and the music died out with a groan, leaving the choir stranded like gasping fish. What I remember most were my father’s stirring sermons.
 
In my teens in Cape Town the Church’s fight against apartheid gave an extra focus to my faith I will never forget my father’s roar of rage when a government official stormed into our house to order him to cease preaching against the racist regime. I watched the man scuttle down our path to the safety of his limousine. We waited in terror for a month, but the police never arrived. We realised that even that arrogant and brutal dictatorship was afraid to act against the Church, and when the time came Nelson Mandela was there to lead his people to freedom. When I told an Afrikaner friend who had supported the regime that the Church had helped to save his people from themselves, he grabbed my hand and said with tears in his eyes, “That is God’s own truth”.
 
When I came to England in 1961 (lacking the courage to risk imprisonment) I was never lonely because wherever I went the local church was home. to me. Eventually I married and came to Kew. David Frayne, the vicar of the Barn was a great tactician. Almost immediately I was put in “temporary” charge of the intercessions rota, a task I have just relinquished after fifty years. So here I am installed as sacristan in this wonderful benefice so inspiringly led by Melanie. When I am thanked for my efforts, I am always embarrassed because I gain so much more than I ever give. One of my greatest joys is to arrive early on Sunday mornings and spend time in silent prayer as I prepare the church for the service.
 
Prayer comes in many forms. The shortest are arrow prayers that we shoot straight to God when we or someone we love needs urgent help. There is the Jesus Prayer, beloved of Christians throughout the centuries: Lord Jesus Christ son of God be merciful to me a sinner. There are the formal prayers in our services when we join together as a community in praise, confession, thanks and intercession. Above all there is the Lord’s prayer, Jesus’s own inspiring lesson in how to pray, which contains everything we need.
 
Then there is private prayer in which we simply speak to God in our own words. Each of us is unique. In the whole history of the universe there has never been anyone to replace you, and your way of relating to God is unique, so that you can speak to him in your own way as you would to a friend, and he will listen with full attention and love. We have seen those amazing pictures of the billions of stars and galaxies in the ever-expanding universe. The Power who created and sustains all that loves you so much that it hurts, who loves you so much that he gave his own son to die on the cross for you. That God is longing for you to respond to him. Jesus spent his ministry showing us how to do this.
 
In the Gospel of St Matthew Chapter 13: 31-52, Our Lord speaks of the Kingdom of Heaven. It is easy to let those words slip past. The idea of the Kingdom seems so remote, something for after death, an impossible dream for this world, but Jesus puts it at the heart of his teaching, so it must mean something to us here and now. He was a spellbinding story-teller, one of the greatest ever, and a true poet. His parables and sayings contain infinite truth. Here he uses a series of similes for the Kingdom: a tiny mustard seed that grows into a luscious tree full of singing birds; a piece of yeast that causes a lump of dough to rise into nourishing food; a net to catch a rich harvest of fish; and twice he compares it to inexhaustible treasure worth sacrificing everything to obtain. This is a poem about prayer. When you sit in mindful silence the tiniest longing for God can expand into a deep spiritual experience; a rich harvest of peace; infinite inner treasure as you melt into God’s presence.
 
Anyone can do this, I love this reminiscence of a rural priest. Every evening when he went into church he encountered an old farm labourer sitting in the front pew. The man was very reserved, almost inarticulate. One day the priest, puzzled and slightly patronising, asked him what he was doing while he sat there. The old man nodded to the figure of Christ on the large cross above the altar and said, “Sometimes I looks at him, and sometimes he looks at me.”  This reminded me of something that happened when my son John was young; he had spent an exhausting day at my father-in-law’s funeral. It had involved a long car journey and much overwhelming emotion. As I tucked him into bed hours later than usual his relief was palpable; in a weary murmur, thinking of his grandfather he asked, “Has Jesus got beds?” I reassured him that Granddad was safely at rest with Jesus. We always said his bedtime prayers together, but on this occasion, I said, “We won’t use words tonight, we will just be with Jesus”. Within seconds he was asleep. Some months later after an equally exhausting but happier day, including a football match, a river swim and a birthday party, as I was tucking him in at 11 o’clock he said, “Can we do the one when we just be with Jesus?” He is now 49, a regular church attender and meditator. TS Eliot,in “Four Quartets” that great poem about prayer says that this kind of prayer is like music, “Music that is heard so deeply it is not heard at all, but you are the music while the music lasts, and the rest is prayer, observation, discipline, thought and action”, the complete Christian life.
 
In this benefice we are fortunate to have a practical way to begin this great adventure. On Monday evenings Beni Woolmer leads silent meditation at the Barn, where everyone is welcome. Here on offer is the great treasure Jesus promised us. He is always there, reaching out to us to enfold us in his love. All we have to do is respond.
 
Lord Jesus Christ, son of the living God, fill us with your spirit and your love. Amen. 

Christian Meditation Group at the Barn Church

Kew United Benefice will be starting a new initiative aimed at offering some space in our busy lives for quiet, meditative time with God. Beginning on Monday 17th April, there will be a weekly half hour meditation group meeting at St Philip & All Saints (The Barn Church) on Mondays at 7pm. Please arrive by 6.50pm to start meditating promptly at 7pm. All are welcome and no prior experience is needed. 

Beni Woolmer from the Barn Church has spent time working and training in Christian meditation and writes:

“Meditation involves sitting quietly in silence and repeating one word, or a short phrase, called the mantra. The word that is recommended in Christian meditation is Maranatha, the oldest Christian prayer, it’s an Aramaic word, the language Jesus spoke, meaning “Come Lord” or “The Lord Comes”

This sounds simple, actually it’s incredibly difficult because our minds chatter away in mini seconds, thinking we must buy a birthday card for our niece, or remembering to put olive oil on our Sainsbury’s list or -did I switch the oven off?! The best way to learn to meditate is to meditate! Most of our training in prayer is limited to the mind, there are many different types of prayer but meditation is the prayer of the heart where we are not talking to God or thinking about God, or asking for what we need- we are simply being with God. “Be still, and know that I am God”. (Psalm 46)

This tradition of meditation goes back to the time of Christ (Matt.8) Jesus says about prayer- don’t go chattering on; go to your private room and close the door.

John Main, a Benedictine monk recovered this very ancient Christian way of prayer, of bringing the mind to rest in the heart,  through the teaching of the desert fathers and mothers, especially John Cassian. 4th century AD.

The Vatican Council in the early 1960’s emphasized the need to develop “a contemplative orientation” in the spiritual lives of Christians today. Meditation is a universal, spiritual practice which brings us to silence, stillness and simplicity.

I do hop you will join me.”

Prayer Course at Holy Trinity, Barnes

Holy Trinity, Barnes, are running an eight week prayer course, starting on the 31st January and running every Tuesday from 7.30 – 9.15pm.

The Prayer Course is an eight week journey through the Lord’s Prayer using the 24/7 Prayer course material, it is a time to grow and deepen your prayer life as individuals and as a community.

Why come?
Enjoy a good meal, good company and spend time exploring prayer together.

Click here for more details and to sign up.

St Mary Mortlake Remembers the Wangle III Tragedy

In August 1950 a group of ten Sea Scouts from the 1st Mortlake Group set sail for a trip to France. They arrived safely in Calais, but on the journey back home their boat, a “whaler” named Wangle III, disappeared completely and they never made it back to the English coast.

On Sunday 23rd October, St. Mary The Virgin, Mortlake held a special memorial section to remember the Scouts of the Wangle III during the Eucharist service. The service was attended by family members as well as Commissioners and other senior Scouters representing the District, the County and national headquarters.

In her sermon, Rev Canon Dr Ann Nickson recounts the tragedy and talks of God’s love.

Rev Canon Dr Ann Nickson’s sermon on the Wangle III tragedy.

The ten boys and men that perished in 1950 were: Lt. Cmdr. John Weeden (1917); William Patrick (Bill) Towndrow (1932); Bernard Bell (1924); Donald Edward (Olly) Amos (1924); Robert Edward (Bob) Walford (1933); Peter Frederick White (1932); Brian Alan (Soley) Peters (1933); William Woods (1934); Maurice Alan Percival (1934); Kenneth Black (1926). They were remembered individually in the Act of Remembrance:

Rev Canon Dr Ann Nickson leads the Act of Remembrance around the Scouts’ memorial.
Memorial to the Sea Scouts in St Mary the Virgin, Mortlake

Click here to read more about the tragedy.

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.

National Day of Reflection 23 March

The Church of England are supporting the National Day of Reflection on 23 March, the first anniversary of the UK lockdown, to commemorate this tragic loss of life and to stand together with everyone who’s grieving.

Organised by Marie Curie, the National Day of Reflection looks to reflect on our collective loss, support those who’ve been bereaved, and hope for a brighter future.

Pray…

Christ yesterday and today, the beginning and the end,
Alpha and Omega, all time belongs to him, and all ages.
From the Easter Vigil, Common Worship

God of all that has been, that is, that is to come
as we reflect on the year that has past,
those we have lost,
those we have missed,
the contact not made,
the hopes dashed,
new things discovered,
new opportunities seized,
new love embraced,
we thank you that you have been with us
and brought us to this day.
Stay with us
as we step into your future
with faith and hope and love
and in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.
Dean Andrew Nunn

Light a candle…

Click here to light a virtual candle.

Support the bereaved

Phone someone or send a prayer postcard

Be silent…

Lent Across the Deanery

Ash Wednesday Services, 17th February

St Michael and All Angels, Barnes
12 noon Mass with Imposition of Ashes (in person).
8pm Sung Mass with Imposition of Ashes (in person).

St Mary, Barnes
Online Service. Click here.

All Saints, East Sheen
8pm Eucharist with Ashing (in person and live-streamed).

St Mary the Virgin, Mortlake
8pm Live-streamed service (click here).

Richmond Team Ministry
8pm Zoom service. Please have a blank piece of paper with you (A5 or similar size). Email admin@richmondteamministry.org for meeting details.

St Mary Magdalene, Richmond
10am Service with the sprinkling of ashes (in person).
5pm Service with the sprinkling of ashes (in person).

St John the Divine, Richmond
6pm Said Eucharist, including the sprinkling of ashes (in person and live-streamed).

St Anne’s, Kew
8pm Sung mass (in person and live-streamed). Booking essential to attend in person, email saintannekew@gmail.com by 11am Tuesday 16th February.

Lent Course from St George’s College, Jerusalem

St Mary’s, Barnes, Richmond Team Ministry and St Luke’s and the Barn Church, Kew, are following a Lent course from St George’s College in Jerusalem.  The course consists of six sessions  exploring the geography of the Holy Land, following Jesus from Galilee to Golgotha. Each session will reflect on the theme with questions for exploration and comes with links to short films from the Holy Land. You can follow the course individually by emailing resources@sgcjerusalem.org or by taking part in the virtual discussion groups (see below). Click here for more details.

St Michael and All Angels, Barnes

St Mary’s Barnes

‘A River Through the Desert’ discussion group. Monday evenings via Zoom. Lent course from St George’s College, Jerusalem. See above. Email revdjames@stmarybarnes.org if you would like to join.

Mortlake and East Sheen Team Ministry

All Saints, East Sheen are running a Lent course via Zoom at 6:30pm on Sundays 21st, 28th February, 7th, 14th, and 21st March. They will be looking at the themes salvation, justice, consolation and desolation, sacrifice and grace and mercy with the aim of helping people develop and clarify their thinking and understanding of these words and ideas that we frequently use in church. Email alexbarrow1@gmail.com if you would like to join.

Christ Church, East Sheen will be running a Zoom discussion group on Mondays from 2:30-4pm for five weeks starting Monday 22nd February. They will be following a series that explores the relationship with God and neighbour through the metaphors of landscapes: Barren Land, Wilderness, Gardens, Wasteland and Re-Wilding. Contact russenbergerjudith@gmail.com to join.

Christ Church, East Sheen will also be posting daily Lent reflections on Facebook.

During Lent, Canon Ann Nickson will be running a Lent course on the Psalms via Zoom 6pm on Sundays, starting Sunday 21st February. They will be using the York Course study guide (www.yorkcourses.co.uk/product/the-psalms/) with some poems by Malcolm Guite on the Psalms. Email AnnNickson@aol.com if you would like to join.

Richmond Team Ministry

Recommended books for Lent

Candles in the Dark – Faith, hope and love in a time of pandemic by Rowan Williams (SPCK, 2021). From March to September 2020 Rowan Williams wrote weekly meditations for the congregation of his parish church. They offer light in these dark times and challenge the reader, but always give hope!

Thy Will be done The 2021 Lent Book by Stephen Cherry (Bloomsbury Continuum, 2021). At a time of change, uncertainly and widespread anxiety, we go back to familiar spiritual resources, such as the Lord’s Prayer. Thy will be done presents the comforts and challenges of the prayer in 36 short chapters, one for almost every day in Lent (excluding Sundays).

David’s Crown – Sounding the Psalms by Malcolm Guite (Canterbury Press, 2021). Poems of each of the 150 psalms, to reflect on, go back to and read alongside the biblical psalms.

At home in Lent – An exploration of Lent through 46 objects by Gordon Giles (BRF, 2019). Here is an original way of approaching Lent, one that will encourage you to consider your own faith journey in the light of the Easter story. Inspired by Ian McGregor’s Radio 4 programme, ‘The History of the World in 100 Objects’, Gordon Giles spends each week in a different room gleaning spiritual lessons from everyday household objects, such as a mobile phone, keys, shoes, kettle.

My sour-sweet days – George Herbert and the journey of the soul by Mark Oakley (SPCK, 2020). Forty poems by George Herbert each followed by a short meditation – poetry bringing comfort, refreshment and renewed energy.

Lent Courses and Services

‘Holy Habits’ – 10:30-11:30am Thursdays via Zoom.
‘A River Through the Desert’ discussion group
. 6:30-7pm Sundays via Zoom. Lent course from St George’s College, Jerusalem. See above. Material must have been read in advance.
Lenten Meditations and Compline – Wednesdays in Lent, 7.30pm till 8.00pm, via Zoom.
Stations of the Cross – 4pm Wednesdays (from 24 February) via Zoom.

Email admin@richmondteamministry.org for links to zoom meetings.

Holy Trinity, Richmond

Click here to subscribe to Holy Trinity’s daily Lent devotions which will take you through the whole of Mark’s Gospel.

St Anne’s, Kew

5pm SundaysStations of the Cross live-streamed here.

Faith in the time of Coronavirus. 6:30-7:45pm Sundays via Zoom – A series of informal discussions reflecting from five different theological perspectives on our experience of living through the Coronavirus pandemic and its impact on our faith, our fellowship and our hopes for the future. Starts Sunday 21st February. Click here for more details and to register.

For such a time as this. 2:30-3:30pm Mondays via Zoom – USPG Lent Course – a five week series of informal study and discussion on the Christian response to Climate Change. Starts Monday 22nd February. Contact Claudine McCreadie (dandcmcc@gmail.com, 020 8241 7627) if you would like to join.

During Lent, St Anne’s will be sharing a weekly conversation with a different member of our congregation, talking about life, church, wider interests and how faith has made a difference to them. Click here to listen.

St Phillip and All Saints and St Luke’s, Kew

‘A River Through the Desert’ discussion group. 8pm, Monday evenings via Zoom. Lent course from St George’s College, Jerusalem. See above. Email office@kewparishes.plus.com if you would like to join.

#LiveLent: God’s Story, Our Story

Click here to download the free app from the Church of England or to sign up to receive emails, with daily reading, reflection and a prayer as well as some action. Each day also has a family action, which can be done by everyone, young and old! 

Prayer for the Nation

The Archbishops of Canterbury and York are encouraging us to pray for the nation as we continue to struggle with the effects of the pandemic on our lives, and mourn the loss of over 100,000 lives. They are suggesting that we put aside some time every day at 6pm to pause, pray and remember those who have died, and those who mourn and support the bereaved. Click here to read their letter and find more information.


Gracious God,
as we remember before you the thousands who have died,
surround us and all who mourn with your strong compassion.
Be gentle with us in our grief,
protect us from despair,
and give us grace to persevere
and face the future with hope
in Jesus Christ our risen Lord.
Amen.

Advent Talks, Discussion Groups and Trails around the Deanery

Liturgy of the Ordinary from St Michael and All Angels, Barnes

This year, St Michael and All Angels has an Advent theme of prayer and spirituality at home, inspired by the amount of time we have all had to spend at home this year.
Rev Stephen Stavrou writes:
“Our sermons, books and discussion groups seek to help us connect our faith with the daily practice of living. To see the sacred in the secular and secular in the sacred.”

They recommend two books for Advent reading (see below) and will be holding Advent book groups via Zoom. Please email admin@stmichaelbarnes.org if your are interested in joining.

Christmas Tree Festival at St Michael and All Angels, Barnes

Come and see the sparkling trees and visit the Nativity Stable. Click here to see some pictures.

Advent Journey from Christ Church, East Sheen

Each day during Advent receive by email a daily reflection based on an image poem or text, following the themes of change, uncertainty, light and hope. Each day there will be a simple activity or craft. Please email russenbergerjudith@gmail.com if you wish to take part.

Follow Burrito’s Advent Journey daily on Facebook

Advent Talks from All Saints, East Sheen

This year All Saints, East Sheen are looking at the Nativity and Person of Jesus – what the Gospels say about his birth, what Jesus says about himself, and why these things matter to our faith. There will be a bit of preparatory thinking for each session.
The talks will be at 8.00 p.m. on Tuesdays 24th November and 1st, 8th, and 15th December. Please email alexbarrow1@gmail.com for the link to the Zoom meeting.

Advent Meditations from Richmond Team Ministry

Each Wednesday during Advent clergy from Richmond Team Ministry will each lead a short reflection on the theme of Advent, which is
concluded by saying Compline together. Click here for the order of service for Compline.

The reflections will be at 7.30 p.m. on Wednesdays 2nd, 9th, 16th and 23rd December. Click here to contact Richmond Team Ministry for the meeting link..

Advent Book List from Richmond Team Ministry

The Richmond Team Ministry clergy have put together a short recommended Advent booklist.
Prayer, Where to Start and How to Keep Going by Stephen Cottrell
No one ever becomes an expert in prayer, but this little book sets out to help become more open to God’s presence, which is the heart of prayer.
Let it Slow, an Advent Calendar with a Difference by Stephen Cottrell
Christmas can be one of the most joyful but stressful times of year. This guide offers another way to approach December.
Heaven in Ordinary, a Poet’s Corner Collection by Malcolm Guite Everyday events and encounters, landscapes and poetry, stories, memory and a sense of the sacred: the musings of a poet’s mind
Frequencies of God, Walking through Advent with R.S. Thomas by Carys Walsh
28 reflections on Thomas’s poetry as a guide for this season, exploring themes of waiting, accepting, journeying and birthing.

Christmas Trails

Look our for Christmas windows and displays in homes around Richmond, Mortlake and Ham as Churches encourage us to display the joy of Christmas. Holy Trinity, Richmond are even having a competition (click here)! Click here for a trail map around Mortlake and visit St Michael and All Angels, Barnes or click here to pick up trail maps around Barnes. Click here to see more pictures.

Mission Advent Calendar from Holy Trinity, Richmond

During Advent Holy Trinity, Richmond are highlighting the various aspects of mission they support. Every day they will highlight a person or organisation they are connected with, and a new one will be revealed each day. Click here daily to find encouragements for your faith and ways to pray for mission during Advent.

Online Advent Calendar

Online Advent Calendar produced by a group of clergy gives a daily
reflection, a reading, pieces of art and music for each day during Advent, starting Sunday 29th November. Good for the soul and easier on the waistline!
https://adventonline.faith/advent-calendar/