Archive for the ‘Reflections’ Category

#YouAreLOVED! preparing buckets of love

Saturday, February 13th, 2016

After creating our new window and sending out a hundred cards, a small team of our pray-ers have again gathered today to prepare buckets of love to take out on the streets of Ilkley tomorrow to share the message #YouAreLOVED with even more people…

loved 16 buckets of love

We’re super excited to give these beautiful living messages of love away: we’ll be gathering extra early tomorrow morning to pray together before we go out round the town centre to lay these Fairtrade roses (together with their LOVED tags and badges) on benches, doorsteps, postboxes… and anywhere else where people will see and find them.

Here are some more pics of the gifts and some of our wonderful volunteers making them.

If you’re near to Ilkley, you might want to come into town early tomorrow!

loved 16 rose

loved 16 back of rose tag

loved 16 roses in vase shot

loved 16 rose action shot

loved 16 rose assembline line 2

 

 

meet Barbara and Kevin Macnish

Thursday, February 4th, 2016

Barbara and Kevin Macnish have been highly treasured members of the Sanctuary’s Management Group for several months now, and involved with the project considerably before this through prayer and creative contributions. They have made an enormous difference already, so we thought it was high time our virtual community got to meet them too!

Barbara and Kevin MacnishKevin Macnish, PhD is a Teaching Fellow and Consultant in Applied Ethics at the University of Leeds.

He has worked with the European Commission and several UK parliamentary committees, and has been interviewed on national television and radio in relation to his research.

He has also been a civil servant in the UK and the US, and helped to start a church in Florence which recently celebrated its tenth anniversary.

Kevin has degrees in Philosophy, International Relations, and Theology.

Kevin is thrilled to be able to offer his experience and skills to help develop some of the thinking and ideas that underpin the Sanctuary.

Barbara is married to Kevin and comes to the Sanctuary from a visual and creative arts background.

She is currently a team development coach with the business she founded – Triquester Teams – and loves working with teams and individuals to develop their environments for maximum growth and productivity.

Before this she has been a middle school Art and English teacher in inner city Baltimore; a picture framer; the Office Manager for the executive team at World Relief; and a church planter in Florence, Italy.

She especially loves her involvement with creative projects at the Sanctuary such as regularly contributing original artwork to outreach projects like the window and undertaking creative writing for the Sanctuary’s outward focused worship resource library.

Barbara and Kevin have two human children and a third that’s rather hairier!

To find out more about the rest of the team involved with running the Sanctuary, visit our who we are page.

a prayer for new questions

Friday, January 29th, 2016

This week our hearts have been full of grief – again – at the heart of so much of Europe towards some of the world’s most vulnerable people. On Tuesday we prayed for Denmark, and the whole continent, to remember the acts of brave self-sacrifice that had made her great in the past. But although many people spoke up against it, the legislation around confiscating ‘migrant’s’ assets and delaying family reunification went through. And then there was Greece…

praying for peace... in humility

Whilst the social media feeds of key international organisations have been filling up with discussion over whether the people of Greece will be nominated for a Nobel Peace prize, the headlines of mainstream media have been telling of the EU’s anger and criticism of the same nation for the same behaviour.

What a difference heart and perspective make. A truth brilliantly demonstrated in the prophetic voice that comes through from Greece in this interview with the country’s Migration Minister that we watched yesterday.

Like us throughout our prayer times this week, Yiannis Mouzalas also looks back to history to learn from its lessons – heroic and otherwise – in order to champion what he believes Europe should be about.

To him – and the majority of the Greek people – there can be no alternative but to help those landing on their shores fleeing desperate circumstances. And to do so in a humane way. Perhaps it is because Greece keeps coming face to face with the actual people  involved – those who make the voyage successfully, and those who don’t – that it can’t avoid the truth that each one is of priceless value.

It reminded us of the scene near the end of Schindler’s List where Schindler has to leave as the allies advance, and he breaks down weeping. He throws off his expensive wrist watch, trying to calculate how many more lives he could have saved had he not kept it… having allowed himself to fully see the human worth of each individual others felt were disposable, he is then broken to think of the other individuals that had been disposed of because he did not do more.

Back to today, Yiannis Mouzalas is asked in this interview who he blames for the situation Europe is in with the ‘migrant’ crisis. And he responds by saying that he isn’t interested in playing the blame game. But instead he wants to find the solution for the refugees.

This is turning the problem on its head – heart side up. And as a result, asking completely new questions.

There was much in his words throughout the interview that resonated with us and further fuelled our prayers yesterday, but this particular idea – the idea of asking a different question – lingered beyond them all and spilled into our prayer this morning too…

What if we started praying for new questions?

A prayer for new questions

What is this beautiful exchange?
Our sin for your sacrifice;
our rebellion for your reconciliation;
our hard hearts for your hands and feet pierced;
our fear for your faithful, perfect love.

Oh Lord Jesus we need another beautiful exchange.
Take Europe’s defensive questions,
our smoke and mirror arguments
and our blame shifting rhetoric
and reveal the true, hard heart behind them.

And in their place?
Give us wise questions,
substantial possibles,
true words
and a renewed heart of love in our continent.

Oh Jesus let us unwind all this noise
and start again,
daring to figure our this crisis on our knees
as we pour out these new questions
to you and each other.

Not who is to blame?
But how can we help?
Not what comfort might we lose?
But whose life might we save?
Not do we have enough?
But will they survive?
Not how will this affect our security tomorrow?
But how will we bear today’s negligence
when it becomes the yesterday we wrote?

Lord Jesus we trust you to help us embrace this beautiful exchange,
to replace a continent of stone with a continent of flesh again
for the sake of the suffering refugees
and the ones whose hearts are shutting down enough
to shut the door to ones you so love,
awaken the right questions again.

praying for the hearts of Denmark and Europe

Tuesday, January 26th, 2016

Today, as we were preparing for morning worship, we read another heart-breaking article about the heart of Europe’s nations towards refugees. It brought tears in preparation and tears in prayer. Here are a few of our thoughts and prayers in response.

welcome low res

History keeps invading our prayers for the now at the moment.  And today it was the same.

As we cried out to God for Denmark – and Europe – to have softened hearts of mercy and welcome, our prayers were full of stories from the past, calling out to us to have courage in the present.

There was the story – shared by one of our pray-ers – about Denmark’s incredible rescue of Jewish people in 1943 when its Nazi occupiers sought to round them up. Thanks to the extraordinary efforts of the resistance movement and ordinary Danish people, more than 99% of Danish Jews survived the holocaust. How? Through an incredible rescue plan that got them to boats, a journey across the sea to Sweden, and a unilateral welcome from a neutral nation.

What did the rescuers risk because of their believe in the sanctity of each individual life? Everything.

What difference did it make? All the difference.

Thousands of lives were not sent to the death camps. And to this day, Denmark is honoured at holocaust memorials as ‘a righteous nation’.

And then another story – shared by another pray-er – about a friend she was going on from our prayer time to meet… whose mother told her only very recently how she had left Eastern Europe as a girl of 14 with her family and spent two years travelling to the UK to be welcomed – initially in a refugee camp – and then as a full citizen.

What was the horror of the fear that led her to flee, and the journey itself, that this mother has only now told her daughter that it even happened?

What would have happened to her if she hadn’t been welcomed? Would our pray-ers precious friend even have been born?

A prayer for Denmark and Europe to remember their greatest stories

Oh God, have mercy on our unmerciful hearts,
grown calloused and hard with forgetfulness
that no longer seem to remember the value of a life
or how much we still admire the best of us
when their heroism saves even just one.
When did we forget that each one represents the greatest treasure of all?

Remind us please Lord that the greatest moments in our past
were not victories, empires or full, prosperous bank accounts,
but those times we surrendered our comfort
to save the lives of those with nothing but danger at their backs
and when we didn’t turn ours to send them packing
to worse than we wouldn’t even let ourselves imagine.

Oh God, today is a day for remembering inspiring stories of life
and prizing them above rational protectionism and balance sheets.
It’s a day we urgently need you to stir up in us
the memory of what we have always known
and bring us to our knees in repentant, dependent surrender
that finally recognises we will never find the right solution from the wrong heart.

Please Lord, today – on this day you have made –
give us another reason to rejoice.
Let our mourning turn to shouts of joy
as we witness governments, media and ordinary people
listen to history and say yes to your strong Spirit in the now
to speak what seems the bravest word of all:
Welcome.

He is on the move: Happy Christ-with-us

Monday, December 21st, 2015

It used to be… Always Winter and Never Christmas…

Narnia window - best door shot
The snow scene that greets Lucy and the other children when they come through the wardrobe doors into Narnia is more than just a beautiful setting for a story…

In Narnia, under the reign of the self-appointed evil Queen Jardis – otherwise known as the White Witch – it is always winter but never Christmas.

Narnia really is in the bleak midwinter – her ground is literally hard as iron… no new life can grow. Creatures are turned to stone. And fear blankets the whole country.

Snow is beautiful, but endless winter spells death – and in this story it acts as a picture of evil’s dreadful, strangling grip; of a world under the wrong rule.

…But now: Spring is coming because Aslan is on the move!

Did you know that C.S. Lewis deliberately wrote The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as an allegory? In it Aslan represents Jesus… When he comes to Narnia – when he is “on the move” – everything starts to change. The ice starts to thaw and evil begins to lose its grip.

Life bursts forth – spring starts to blossom… everything begins to be restored. And we start to know the Witch is losing for sure, because Christmas comes…

Christmas – Christ with us: Jesus with us: God with us – or in Narnia… Aslan with us.

2,000 years ago, Jesus moving – God coming to be with us in our world (with all its wintery brokenness) was the start of a spring of restoration dawning… the start of the whole world’s story changing forever.

We all know more chapters follow this one – in Narnia and in our world – but Advent is all about celebrating the start of the thaw… and looking forward to the day when winter can never come again.

This Christmas…

…it would be possible to feel overwhelmed by just how much winter the headlines testify to being left around us.

But we must remember Isaiah’s words. There is only one government that will never stop increasing – only one power that will last. And that is Jesus’.

And he is on the move – he is always on the move. The evidence is always all around us if we look with faith-opened eyes and Spirit-softened hearts.

So, this Christmas, take time to remember just how much he is transforming.

In the last few weeks alone, Myanmar has seen an extraordinary breakthrough with a new government, the last Ebola patient was discharged in Guinea and extraordinary beauty has come from ashes in Paris.

Every time we used our daily prayer for COP21 during the International Climate Talks, we connected once again with the sense we had first had in the prayer time that inspired its creation – that these would be the talks to come of age. And we meant it every time we gave thanks for the bravery of this city in continuing to host the talks after all it had been through, and of the world leaders who overcame fear to come.

This 21st round of Climate Talks had more prayer surrounding it than any of the others. It was time. And on Saturday night, a breakthrough agreement was reached which not only went further in some areas than even the campaigning organisations had asked for, but which also built in the views of poorer countries like never before.

As many of our partner organisations have already said, the agreement is far from perfect – and it is a step rather than an arrival. But it is a triumph – in and of itself, and also because it is a victory for hope. It reminds us that transformation can come, and is coming, and really will come to every broken situation and seemingly impossible challenge – in his perfect timing.

Spring always wins – the increase of his government knows no end. So this Christmas, receive his very good comfort and joy, for he is on the move among us.

the lion, the witch and the sanctuary

Tuesday, December 1st, 2015

It’s been so exciting putting together our latest creative outreach window (and door!). What a joy and privilege to bring to life this moment from C.S. Lewis’ most famous and well-loved allegorical story, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe…

Narnia window - lead image

It’s best seen in person as we can’t possibly capture all the different elements in one picture for you – from fur coats, animals turned to stone and Turkish delight through to a tree and forest canopy bursting to life again now Aslan has come.

But here are a couple of close-up shots that might help a bit:

Narnia window - taste of winter close up

Narnia window - taste of spring close up

What’s it all about?

Well besides giving away a beautiful piece of art which brings to life something so well-loved and Christmassy…

We’ve chosen to feature Lewis’ story to provide an intriguing way in to the Christmas story’s truth and beauty this year. The poster in the left hand side of the window explains it all…

Narnia explanation text

Here’s what it says:

It used to be… Always Winter and Never Christmas…

The snow scene that greets Lucy and the other children when they come through the wardrobe doors into Narnia is more than just a beautiful setting for a story…

In Narnia, under the reign of the self-appointed evil Queen Jardis – otherwise known as the White Witch – it is always winter but never Christmas.

Narnia really is in the bleak midwinter – her ground is literally hard as iron… no new life can grow. Creatures are turned to stone. And fear blankets the whole country.

Snow is beautiful, but endless winter spells death – and in this story it acts as a picture of evil’s dreadful, strangling grip; of a world under the wrong rule.

… But now: Spring is coming because Aslan is on the move!

Did you know that C.S. Lewis deliberately wrote The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as an allegory (a symbolic story)?

In it Aslan represents Jesus… When he comes to Narnia – when he is ‘on the move’ – everything starts to change. The ice starts to thaw and evil begins to lose its grip.

Life bursts forth – spring starts to blossom… everything begins to be restored. And we start to know the Witch is losing for sure, because Christmas comes…

Christmas – Christ with us: Jesus with us: God with us – or in Narnia… Aslan with us.
2,000 years ago, Jesus moving – God coming to be with us in our world (with all its wintery brokenness) was the start of a Spring of restoration dawning… the start of the whole world’s story changing forever.

We all know more chapters follow this one – in Narnia and in our world – but Advent is all about celebrating Christmas and the start of the thaw…

Narnia window - best door shot

Special thanks to all our core team for their hard and creative work on this window. But most especially to the amazingly talented Alison Hodson who has brought our dream of turning our front door into the wardrobe into Narnia to life!

 

a daily prayer for COP21

Monday, November 30th, 2015

Today is the first of twelve days of International Climate Talks in Paris as the UN meets for its 21st round of attempts to agree a global and effective action plan to reduce emissions and help nations to adapt to the changing climate. This morning our 9AM rhythm focused solely on these significant talks. We’ve written this prayer for you to use each morning of the talks, coming out of that time:

cop21

Healer of nations,
we join with the world
to face Paris again today –
but this time in hope…

…And in thanks:
for a city brave enough to still host these talks
for leaders determined enough to still attend them
and for more than 2,500 marches of support
by ordinary people all around the globe.

And today, Lord, we ask:
for bravery to make strong and sacrificial decisions
for determination to find creative ways forward
and for more support
for ordinary people in the poorest nations around the globe.

Please Lord, in your mercy today:
protect these vital talks –
and every venue and person involved –
send your Spirit to inhabit every key discussion,
enable people to listen with soft hearts,
speak with kindness and clarity,
think with a wisdom and insight beyond themselves
and make creative and just policies as a result.

Let these talks finally come of age –
help us all to grow up enough
to follow your lead and work together
to find real and binding solutions
for the sake of every one you so love today
and all those you so love who are coming tomorrow.

Please Lord, this very day,
inspire commitments to reduce emissions,
limit global temperature rise
and help those already affected to adapt.

Healer of nations,
we join with the world
to face Paris again today –
but this time in hope.

a hugely inspiring and encouraging read

Friday, November 27th, 2015

If you haven’t had the chance to read this yet, do download our annual review… ‘Not by power, not by might, but by my Spirit’ says the Lord. We can promise you a faith-building read!

God so loved the world

new devotional monologue from Joseph

Wednesday, November 25th, 2015

We’ve added a new meditation/monologue to our growing family of devotionals bringing to life the inside story of different characters in the Christmas story. The latest one – Joseph: on the run with the baby Deliverer – which deliberately examines the events of the incarnation from Egypt in order to explore a refugee’s perspective, is currently just available as a written pdf, but we will be adding a spoken word mp3 file towards the end of next week.

(You can find more devotional monologues from the Christmas story and other resources for Advent on our seasonal resources page)

joseph

Meanwhile, here’s Joseph’s story brought to life for you to preview:

None of it has worked out how I once dreamed it would. Betrothal, marriage, fatherhood.

It’s been nothing like the wonderful home-coming to start a new life together I’d imagined during all those long years of waiting for her…

Mary.

I look up and see her with me now.

Cradling her baby in girl-slim arms; thick dark locks falling over her adoring, downward-tilted face. Eyes locked on his.

Oh how she loves. Oh how she treasures who he is and the secrets that have been shared with her.

So beautiful. So young to carry the weight of such near rejection, closely-avoided tragedy and very real struggle alongside her first child… so gentle to bear the heaviness of responsibility for this little one and all that his future might hold.

For he is a king-child. What other boy from Nazareth has ever been given gold and frankincense and myrrh? (Oh how the myrrh troubles us both.)

************

And now we’ve had to bring him here. I don’t know if I can possibly make you understand what it’s like.

Fear of Mary’s pregnancy being discovered and her character denounced stalked us all the way to Bethlehem. And then terror chased us all the way out of it again.

Leaving in the dead of night in haste but in willing obedience after that fearful dream. Herod wants to kill God’s son!

And so suddenly we’re fleeing. Fleeing for his life.

Fleeing with a baby. With hearts in mouths the whole time because of the preciousness of what we carry – what we’ve been charged by God to protect.

Fleeing through dark, cold nights and desert storm days.

Fleeing for weeks in exhausted speed – constantly willing each foot to put itself in front of the one before during the day and willing the heart , mind and body to somehow sleep despite the cold, hard ground and the eyes wide open watchfulness. So unsure of the future – not knowing much if anything about what lies ahead…

But knowing what is behind us is so terrible that we have to keep walking anyway.

Herod.

I’m just hoping the rumours of our people’s settlement in Egypt are true and we will find refuge with them there. That if we do, they will honour the Lord’s command to welcome the stranger. And that we can make it far enough to find them….

For if not, who will we be able to trust here? Who will welcome us? And how can we possibly know who is safe until it is potentially too late?

We are strangers and so far from anyone who values us as friend. And we are the worst kind of strangers to cross Egypt.

Hebrews.

We have hundreds of years of the wrong sort of history between us. How do I look an Egyptian in the eyes and tell him I had to flee – that I had to bring the boy here – that Mary’s first born son was to be slaughtered. It’s too close to home… they’ll remember. Every first born son…

I can’t tell anyone here how precious he is of course anyway. It’s too dangerous and it’s vital I protect him.

And so we hide. Hope to get by in this strange new-old place on our wits and our deeply held wish for wary kindness from just a few… far from our home and my bench and tools – and the community who would do anything for us.

************

And so we’re raising the one who’s supposed to deliver us once and for all here. We’ve had to run away from the Promised Land – and even the occupied Promised Land is still the place all the prophecies about him are set – and we’ve had to come back with the Deliverer himself to hide in the very place we were oppressed for so long.

It makes you question… challenges your faith that real freedom could ever come. It makes you wonder whether you’re mad sometimes. Whether you imagined it all – the angels visiting, the glorious heavenly chorus and the star, the shepherds and the strange men from the east, the priest and the ancient prophetess, and all those dreams…

And most of all… this tiny baby really being the one we’ve all been waiting for. Salvation come. Messiah born.

************

Mary says we shouldn’t be afraid. She says God can be trusted – he’s never let our people down before and he’s not going to start now. Especially not now. Not with this son given and born to us. Not with him growing up among us.

She sings her song over and over again as a lullaby. Sometimes I think she’s singing to calm us as much as the baby!

This song reminds me of Nazareth and home and of all the wonder we saw in Bethlehem. It is a song of Zion, sweeter still in this new time of exile. The melody rises again now – sweetly confident – hushed then clear… till it reaches the bit for all of us:

“His mercy extends to those who fear him,
from generation to generation.
He has performed mighty deeds with his arm;
he has scattered those who are proud in their inmost thoughts.
He has brought down rulers from their thrones
but has lifted up the humble.
He has filled the hungry with good things
but has sent the rich away empty.
He has helped his servant Israel,
remembering to be merciful
to Abraham and his descendants forever,
just as he promised our ancestors.”

And while she worships I see clearly again.

No, none of it has worked out how I once dreamed it would.

But amidst the terror and the danger and has been indescribable beauty and wonder and glory – such glory. He is with us. God is with us. My dreams really were messages from heaven. And the visitors really came! The time in the temple at his circumcision really was like that. These are no mis-remembered mirages after weeks in the hot, desert sun. They really did all recognise him as the One.

The promises must be true… the prophecies must, somehow, be being fulfilled even here.

And so we watch and wait as patiently as we can. We just need to keep hope alive and keep him from harm. We just need to hang on long enough till it’s safe to go back home.

It will be safe to go back home someday won’t it Lord?

************

I walk over and kneel beside her.

Mary.

I place one arm round her and one on his head, to bless it again. To bless the one who is blessing itself.

Jesus.

I look again at their laughing smiles and I choose to do it. I choose to believe the truth all over again – one day this baby Deliverer will lead us all home.

new studio version of kneel me down

Tuesday, November 17th, 2015

At the end of last week, we uploaded our latest brand new studio recording. This one’s of our song: Kneel me down. There are few songs we find more helpful after the events of the last week or so… for this song takes us back to focusing on Jesus and above all, to celebrating his extraordinary mercy. Oh how we need his mercy in our world.

sanctuary_song_index

We hope you enjoy listening to the song. You can download the mp3 audio, sheet music, chord sheet and story behind the song all for free on our songs page.