I have been trying for a long while to track down these words of the old Congregation service for the Lord's Supper. We used to use them when I was a girl and I found them such a helpful introduction to the Communion Service. While I would never want to lose the spontaneity of our non-conformist services I think perhaps we miss out by a wholesale rejection of liturgy, and some of these old pieces of liturgy form a marvellous focus for our thoughts and hearts as we meet together as believers. I especially like the final paragraph:-
"You that do truly and earnestly repent of your sins and are in love and charity with your neighbour, and intend to lead a new life, following the commandments of God and walking henceforth in his holy ways ...draw near with reverence, faith and thanksgiving, and take the Supper of the Lord to your comfort..."
"We do not presume to come to this your table trusting in our own righteousness but in your manifold and great mercies. We are not worthy so much as to gather up the crumbs from your table"
"We come to this sacred table, not because we must but because we may. We come, not to testify to our righteousness but that we sincerely love our Lord Jesus Christ and desire to be his true disciple. We come, not because we are strong but because we are weak. We come not because we have any claim on heaven's rewards but because in our frailty and sin we stand in constant need of heaven's mercy and help."
[See 'Devotional Services for Public Worship' by John Hunter, 1880]
'...They confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on earth...They were looking for a better country, a heavenly one' Hebrews 11:13,16
Monday, 23 October 2017
Thursday, 12 October 2017
Harvey Weinstein - the symptom not the disease
The Harvey Weinstein saga seems to contain strong echoes of the case of Jimmy
Savile and the BBC in that his behaviour appears to have been an open secret,
people who had the power to act did nothing and the seriousness of his behaviours
was dismissed as being just the norm at the time. Weinstein has been sacked
from his own company and the BAFTAs; no doubt the Oscars will soon follow suit
and the police look set to investigate. This is, hopefully, the end of Harvey
Weinstein’s reign of terror and no doubt Hollywood will breathe a collective
sigh of relief and get back to business as usual.
However, the film world is deluding itself if it thinks
that with Weinstein gone, this thing is now over. Harvey Weinstein is only one
symptom of the disease which riddles Hollywood from top to bottom – and not
just Hollywood but infects everyone who runs after the Hollywood culture.
Hollywood is a place without any values whatsoever when it comes to relations
between men and women. Absolutely anything goes. In such a moral vacuum it becomes a
case of the survival of the strongest and men like Weinstein have sat at the
top of the food chain using sex as weapon to ensure that they stay there.
In Hollywood - judging not only by the films which come out
of it but by the lives of its stars - infidelity, insincerity and indecency are
not only treated with total moral indifference but are actually glorified. Hollywood
has for generations been constantly pushing back push back standards of what is and is not acceptable in terms
of behaviour and dress. Now it is
throwing up its hands in horror at the consequences which all of this has had for
many women in the industry. But we cannot have our cake and eat it; if we
refuse to live with the rules and standards which protect society from this
sort of thing, we should not be surprised ourselves to find ourselves in a
dog-eat-dog environment where the weakest come off worst.
We will not accept that standards of sexual behaviour given by God were actually given for our own good. Because we want freedom. Well, freedom is what we will get - the kind of freedom that you get in anarchy, which is generally the freedom to be slaughtered by someone stronger than you who wants what you have got.
Hollywood is a long way away over in the US and yet it is
also here in our living rooms, on our screens and in our newspapers and magazines.
It impinges on us every day of our lives but we do have a choice in how we engage with it. Every time we watch a Hollywood film, buy a celebrity magazine or read an
online interview with a film star we providing a little more sustenance to this
serpent at the heart of our Western culture. Perhaps we all need to
think more carefully about where our money goes and what we might be
unwittingly supporting. And we all need to stop praising and emulating the celebrity world that has given birth to such unpleasant offspring as Harvey Weinstein.
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