׉?ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://uWhqyaemoA36csxGTAC97O-5VaDxyFgW_jH4RJL4R5I Ĳ`׉	 7cassandra://d5rcBq7GB13_bCAxSOA6Q4IB86qZ42yDLuAV-8poKF8v`s׉	 7cassandra://tI0vZx3_LCpxNqNTS3gqDaBc8_F9tSmrdIvOdDqPTWs,` ׉	 7cassandra://Ny1HOWLrDp9mC760HNIdHaNv28UlOh5A6iyHj5ZFJC8 ͠]^ݪz T]ט   (u׈   Ө*  ׈E^ݪz T\׉E COWLEY
ST JOHN
MAGAZINE
SPRING 2020
BROKEN FLOWERS
DAN EMLYN-JONES
ECOTHEOLOGY IN
OXFORD
MICHAEL BARRETT
THE PORCH AND
CORONOVIRUS
SISTER FRANCES
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^ުz T]נ^ߪz T]
 9ׁHmailto:lostgelfling@gmail.comׁׁЈ׉EtST MARY AND ST JOHN
One of the joys of living right next to St Mary and St John
Church is the amazing views we have over the churchyard
which is frothy with spring growth at the moment! The
good news of the resurrection is always reflected in the
profusion of flowers and new growth at this time of year
but the Cowley road gives us a very different picture with
businesses shut down and the normally bustling
pavements, quiet. Times are hard for many of us separated
from our everyday interactions with others. However it has
been a real joy meeting such a mix of people at the Sunday
morning parish 'virtual coffee' meetings or seeing the
comments and hearts floating up the screen during the Face
book service usually in the vicarage garden. Speaking to
many of you on the phone (or dropping off Sunday sheets
to those who don't have internet access) has given me a
different and bigger picture of life in the parish.
The great profusion of community activity to help those on
the margins has been heartening but all of us have come to
terms with finding new ways of relating and being together.
Despite the pain that many have suffered there has also
been deep expressions of compassion and a new sense of
our common life together. I miss seeing you all face to face
and yearn for the day when we can be together again in
prayer and fellowship. Holding you all in prayer.
FATHER PHIL RITCHIE
׉	 7cassandra://Mvky2ZB25yv357pFRLGqeanqdfbzsbniG0T8-QApq4MB` ^ݪz T\׉E4ST ALBANS NEWS
It seems more than six weeks since we
last had a service at St Albans.
All members of the congregation are
very much missing the services, and
seeing each other, but we are looking
forward to the time when it is possible
to meet, worship and sing together
again.
St Albans Hall has been used by a
fabulous team from Oxford Mutual Aid
to back up boxes and bags of food for
vulnerable residents.
DAVID GIMSON, CHURCHWARDEN
This magazine is designed and edited by Lorna Robinson. Please
email lostgelfling@gmail.com if you'd like to submit an article.
^ݪz T\^ݪz T\(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1lhb_q98aPZGSVzR8R7-3DYm0XeeAU2-wJfQ3FSojBg x`iq׉	 7cassandra://Em9Y_pkIJRxM2jtclUS0oXwhDEWW6pQED0AqiL8SAKsd`׉	 7cassandra://T4ev_fXhQeabdFdmO62YJVBZSXM6RCV5rTXjLpQqwec;C` ׉	 7cassandra://OF11GmofEVrLmdyhakwe1fleJaTAiLAFehZqJ8tJulE 
x <,͠
^z T]׉E bA VIRUS CREATED
THESE BEAUTIFUL
FLOWERS
Dan Emlyn- Jones expl or es
t he ar t ist r y of nat ur e
׉	 7cassandra://T4ev_fXhQeabdFdmO62YJVBZSXM6RCV5rTXjLpQqwec;C` ^ݪz T\׉EvSeventeenth century Netherlands gave birth to some of the greatest artists who
have ever lived: Rembrandt, Vermeer and Van Dijk to name but a few. It may come
as a surprise to many to learn that one of the greatest artists to arise at that time
was not human. It was not even living. It was a virus.
Viruses are miniscule particles, some ten thousand times smaller than a millimetre.
They are the ultimate hitchhikers, with an astonishing facility to multiply in living
cells and infect others. At the moment, viruses understandably have an extremely
bad press, but in seventeenth century Netherlands, the Tulip Breaking Virus, a virus
which infects tulips, gave rise to some of the most beautiful tulip flowers to have
ever existed. The virus disrupted or ?broke? the natural pigmentation in the flowers,
so crimsons were gorgeously fragmented into delicate feather patterns. The Dutch
at the time wowed at these living masterpieces, and owning one became the
ultimate status symbol. Prices rose until single bulbs sold for far more than any of
the paintings of the time. One of the most famous tulips from this ?Tulipmania?
period, Semper Augustus, sold for more than a house! Sadly, or perhaps not so
sadly, this economic bubble eventually burst. The virus which had created such
beauty also gradually weakened the tulip plants of these famous varieties, and over
the years they died out.
Having said this, there are one or two varieties from this era which have managed
to survive down the centuries, thanks to some very patient and dedicated
gardeners. The tulip Zomerschoon (1620), which is the Dutch for ?summer beauty?,
is one such survivor. No one is quite sure why it has survived so well for four
hundred years. It may be the virus has been somehow weakened in this tulip, or
that the plants for some reason have better resistance to the virus? weakening
effects. This tulip is still offered for sale in specialist garden shops, and I purchased
a single bulb for £70 a few years back. This isn?t quite the 13,000 florins it would
have sold for in seventeenth century Holland, but it?s still a hefty price for a single
bulb! These true broken tulips are still preserved in Holland?s Hortus Bulborum, a
place well worth a visit in the future, but commercial growers of tulips keep more
than a social distance from these flowers. The Tulip Breaking Virus they carry could
cause devastation of modern tulip varieties. Indeed, in the Netherlands it is now
illegal to grow the true broken tulips without special license.
Zomerschoon is a temperamental and slow growing diva of a tulip, but one sunny
spring day last year, my Zomerschoon delighted our East Oxford neighbours during
the Divinity Road Area Open Gardens. Local photographer Paul Proudman was even
kind enough to capture the blooms (see photographs). May the true broken tulips
of seventeenth century Holland continue to bloom and delight us for many years to
come!
^ݪz T\^ݪz T\(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://h8Axwfpi7sptXYwzewysQdedpUwMNwVM5u7bNxUY2O0 )`iq׉	 7cassandra://5Q91eP1xzGosGtzbP7eW9m5qHzyQxiufYkPlt7wteK8`׉	 7cassandra://wm6chot6YoMbJaaD3Lw6s8PwPtaRrZ0mzq__hRm9KmIK'` ׉	 7cassandra://6KxpPRo37wPotkBFbf6pKNgEgnk2gYRww9ikri1JGlo G0z2͠
^z T]׉E 2THE PORCH AND
CORONAVIRUS
SISTER FRANCES DOMINICA
׉	 7cassandra://wm6chot6YoMbJaaD3Lw6s8PwPtaRrZ0mzq__hRm9KmIK'` ^ݪz T\׉EZDuring the lock-down The Porch has had to re-invent itself. It is
no longer possible for ?Members? to come into the building as
they normally do. Instead the staff and a wonderful cohort of
volunteers are working 7 days a week to prepare, cook and
deliver 200 meals a day. About 50 people come to the door for
their take-away, 50 are delivered to those who are too frail to
come or who have underlying conditions, 23 are delivered to
Matilda House, 25 to Connections and about 50 are distributed
at Bonn Square.
At the end of each day the staff and the volunteers are still
smiling, laughing, singing!
^ݪz T\^ݪz T\(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://6D03MTNnjJgGozlVjCNfQHfwXOcSBRhD7ObDStXd3BY 8`iq׉	 7cassandra://GBJY83O8A-fP4BLlxu9eBgXsVYMS486GbYMmbfobog4͚"`׉	 7cassandra://a3aX9WwANnWNSeBPYuy-K1wSHAxzEDuKDfsqNQji9fE21` ׉	 7cassandra://hQAzitA9STTuhJR3jPAulxhcj_6CLJdv-wulIW5WqMI .͠
^z T]׉E׉	 7cassandra://a3aX9WwANnWNSeBPYuy-K1wSHAxzEDuKDfsqNQji9fE21` ^ݪz T\׉E.And where is Jesus, this strange Easter day?
Not lost in our locked churches, anymore
Than he was sealed in that dark sepulchre.
The locks are loosed; the stone is rolled away,
And he is up and risen, long before,
Alive, at large, and making his strong way
Into the world he gave his life to save,
No need to seek him in his empty grave.
He might have been a wafer in the hands
Of priests this day, or music from the lips
Of red-robed choristers, instead he slips
Away from church, shakes off our linen bands
To don his apron with a nurse: he grips
And lifts a stretcher, soothes with gentle hands
The frail flesh of the dying, gives them hope,
Breathes with the breathless, lends them strength to cope.
On Thursday we applauded, for he came
And served us in a thousand names and faces
Mopping our sickroom floors and catching traces
Of that virus which was death to him:
Good Friday happened in a thousand places
Where Jesus held the helpless, died with them
That they might share his Easter in their need,
Now they are risen with him, risen indeed.
Malcolm Guite 2020
^ݪz T\^ݪz T\(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://ZseA55t3WtbNfz9ecVX3xp7EvkP88EpCXTChFibyRzk `iq׉	 7cassandra://dy_y_Ge8ZgzzDsIq0Il6_8gYzFnNKvJmPW-tU0AC3v4\`׉	 7cassandra://-p8GBEB5Bq3457jAG8TtO7ixx-bo2ZhrbtzhqVhKAf4D` ׉	 7cassandra://wSrs-9NCOzaNhj_lmJDXtzH4Tns4OCnoPKGM0K_dwpg 2 ͠
^z T]׉E :PREPARING FOR
ORDINATION IN A
GLOBAL PANDEMIC
SORREL WOOD
׉	 7cassandra://-p8GBEB5Bq3457jAG8TtO7ixx-bo2ZhrbtzhqVhKAf4D` ^ݪz T\׉EAs you might expect of a church within five miles of three theological
colleges, St Mary and St John has seen plenty of ordinands come and go in
the past few years. Some join for a few weeks in the summer, others come
as chiefly observers in their first year, and some take the opportunity to
preach and get involved in the serving team. SMSJ is also very excited to
welcome a curate for the first time in a while this year.
I can?t speak for all the others, particularly as my experience as an ordinand
at SMSJ was a little idiosyncratic: I met the love of my life there and,
lockdown situation permitting, we hope to get married there on August 1st.
However, I can share something of what it feels like to be going through
such a practical and existential transition in such an uncertain time.
The global pandemic has, perhaps without precedent, disrupted the lives of
almost everyone in the world. For hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions
of people, this disruption has come in the form of bereavement, sickness or
acute financial distress. As NHS and other keyworkers are run off their feet,
and Rev Sabina brings us news of the situation in developing countries
across the globe, it seems crass- self-indulgent and maybe even irrelevantto
turn my thoughts to ordination. What difference will a dog collar make, in
a world that needs more and better distribution of PPE equipment? What
can my spiritual and academic formation in a theological college possibly
contribute to such a hurting world?
I hope and pray that, as I move to my curacy, I will quickly find practical ways
to help people in physical, emotional and spiritual need. I hope I will be able
to pray for and with those who are too busy, too anxious or too sick to pray
themselves. I hope I will be able to contribute as we find new ways to
worship when we cannot be together.
Please pray for us ordinands as we approach ordinations which may be
delayed, or behind closed doors, and when we enter virtual retreats online
and perhaps meet our new congregations from the distance of a screen. I
know your prayer lists are very long at the moment, but we would
appreciate it! And please be assured, of course, that we will continue to pray
for you all as well.
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^z T]׉E2A NEW
ECOTHEOLOGY
CENTRE IN OXFORD
MICHAEL BARRETT
In the last twenty years or so, with the rise of awareness around the world
of the threats to humanity and to other species of the consequences of
man-made climate change, environmental pollution, and ecological
breakdown, the field of ecotheology has moved mainstream, from its
former position on the fringes of academic religious discussion, to being a
subject of current interest at a time when religious organizations are
struggling to be seen as relevant in an increasingly secular world.
On 28 June this year the official launch will take place of Oxford?s newest
academic body, the Laudato Si? Research Institute (LSRI) which takes its
name from the 2015 papal ?encyclical? Laudato Si?: On Care for Our
Common Home. As its name implies, this document is the Vatican?s formal
response to the current ecological crisis, in which Pope Francis sets
out his radical vision on a range of environmental issues for the billion or
more Catholics around the world, putting ecological and social justice at
the heart of the church?s faith and practice. LSRI?s stated mission is to
undertake multidisciplinary research ?for societal transformation, at the
intersections of theology, ecology, and the social and natural sciences, on
the most pressing environmental issues of our day?.
׉	 7cassandra://LJqVsL321k5CkPothxv7Aif9a-35enAUT5Wj834BqJMO` ^ݪz T\׉EIts research programmes will aim to develop an ?integral ecology?that
responds?to the cry of the earth? and the cry of the poor?, and provide
resources both for academics and practitioners in fields such as
development, and for influencing government policies and
decision-making at national and global level.
Established under the aegis of Campion Hall, LSRI will have Jesuit
traditions as a defining element of its research identity while being open
to insights from other faiths, including indigenous traditions, and
collaborating with other religious and secular traditions. In the spirit of
Pope Francis? encyclical, LSRI research will pay particular attention to the
insights of marginalised people on such crucial issues as sustainable
development goals and international climate agreements.
The recently appointed director of LSRI is Celia Deane-Drummond, until
last year professor of theology at Notre Dame university, Indiana. With a
background in natural sciences, having specialized in plant physiology at
Cambridge, Reading, and Durham universities, Celia Deane-Drummond
holds a doctorate in systematic theology from Manchester university. At
Notre Dame she taught systematic theology in relation to biological
science (evolution, ecology, and genetics), and bioethics (including
sustainability and ecotheology). Her many books and publications
include:Genetics and Christian Ethics(2006),Ecotheology(2008),Christ and
Evolution: Wonder and Wisdom(2009),Creaturely Theology: God, Humans
and Other Animals(joint editor) (2009),Religion and Ecology in the Public
Sphere(joint editor) (2011), andA Primer in Ecotheology: Theology for a
Fragile Earth(2017).
LSRI is based in Albion House, Littlegate Street, (below St Ebbes Street),
OX1 1SG. After some 800 years in which Oxford has been one of the
western world?s great centres of academic religious study, the ambitious
aims of the Laudato Si? Research Institute will help position the city as a
world-leading centre of contemporary religious research in the context of
the current global ecological crisis.
^ݪz T\^ݪz T\(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://LOzvrUEWLVAlolTIyYOLgAFqJvkOGS8bNsPR8AFdvok ͯ`iq׉	 7cassandra://2NBR14okqlGXhRxGL-jG3fd2VLX3rLt2ZcJ2FaHgJd0G`׉	 7cassandra://nOAtGRyiWi-xPa_vyjZOa2soZXdek0WH3VgZXYtbUw8Aj` ׉	 7cassandra://xCQTlrILLnl_zir30fi9QEBNih0Qr_7yxjVofZy2xA4 u j͠
^z T]נ^z T] &AV9ׁHhttp://atoxfordshiremind.org.ukׁׁЈ׉E ,MENTAL HEALTH
AND COVID-19
HILARY CALDICOTT
׉	 7cassandra://nOAtGRyiWi-xPa_vyjZOa2soZXdek0WH3VgZXYtbUw8Aj` ^ݪz T\׉E	IFor many of us, including me, religious faith and practice are of enormous
significance in helping us to live with the realities of living with mental
health problems. Prayer, the structure of services (especially the Eucharist)
and the sense of being part of a community where we are all loved and
valued; these things have real meaning and power when struggling with
intrusive thoughts, and sometimes despairing ones. In the knowledge that
these times are hard for everyone everywhere, here are a few suggestions
about how to live through lockdown while dealing with mental distress.
First of all, Oxfordshire Mind (which has been in continuous existence for
over 50 years, a remarkable feat for a voluntary organisation) is still
providing advice and support services for anyone with a mental health
problem, and for concerned families and friends. Their Information and
Line is open Mon-Thurs from 9.30 to 4.30, and on Fridays from 9.30 to 4
pm. The number is 01865 247788. The full Mind Guide to mental health
services in Oxfordshire is available online atoxfordshiremind.org.ukAnd the
wonderful Safe Haven crisis service (personally checked out by Alice Hicks
and me at a user-only open event last year) is open Fri, Sat, Sun and
Monday evenings from 6 - 10 pm. The phone number is 01865 903037 and
the line is open from 5 pm each evening of operation.
For myself, I have found following a familiar routine to be helpful during
these strange times. I?m under the mild form of lockdown where I?m
allowed out for daily exercise, and I value my walks. Prayer, music and
reading comforting or inspiring books - nothing too heavy or bleak! - help
to ground me. I aim to make one phone call a day to a friend or family
member who is on their own, or struggling. I love the Codeword puzzles in
the papers (the Independent?s is online, but the Guardian?s only appears in
the print version) and the crosswords. Clearing out cupboards and filing
cabinets doesn?t fill me with enthusiasm, so I?m avoiding those tasks for
now, but I quite like cleaning and it makes sense to do it when we are all
trying to avoid infection. Like most of us, I?m concentrating on staying well
through this crisis. I remind myself that God is always present and the
Church still exists, even when so much has fallen silent. The weekly
bulletins are helpful, although I?ve not been tempted to Zoom yet!
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͠
^z T]׉E 0OXFORD WINTER
NIGHT SHELTER
UPDATE
KATE CHAPMAN
׉	 7cassandra://IhMqJeeqwCyJXQbn31on1yxkiFOVDXOtvkzei3xDPeQM` ^ݪz T] ׉E
_It seems another epoch now but only two months ago Oxford housing issues
seemed so unsolvable that the very best on offer for some would be a camp
bed in a temporary night shelter, a different one each night, open only at night.
What was offered was a safe environment, a warm welcome, hot drinks and a
snack on arrival, a warm bed, and breakfast the following morning with a further
option of a coffee club at the gatehouse.
For some guests this was a respite from a life lived out on the streets and
camping, for others it was a pause that allowed them to explore the very few
options and wait for vacancies, still others were too unstable to accept the beds
offered and every night we waited for the neediest guests who wouldn't come
or only came in occasionally. Some of the guests wanted to talk, some were in
despair, other delighted to be there, others stoical, most calm and polite most
of the time. Most looked through the clean clothes, socks ,toiletries and
underwear on offer taking what was needed for the week ahead. By the second
week of March it was clear that however impossible these guests had to be
housed and by in no dormitory accommodation somehow for almost everyone
that is what has happened.
In Oxford four hundred trained volunteers manned the shelters supported by a
valiant project worker and assistant. At the eleven St Alban's Thursday night
sessions shift volunteers included parishioners neighbors, members of the
other Oxford churches, students with essays to write, people who had never set
foot in a church before, overnight volunteers who would get up and go to work,
an eighteen year old who volunteered for his eighteenth birthday, at least one
monk and one wheelchair user. Each morning the laundry would find its way to
St Stephens house to be done by the their wonderful housekeeper. It also felt
as if the entire parish was supporting us in some way: there were lots of cash
donations, a fantastic carol concert that raised the rest of the budgeted cost:
then the goods in kind donations of maintenance services, fresh baked cakes
and bread weekly, hotel shampoos and soaps from some very unexpected
places, anonymous bags of warm clothing, job lots of porridge, pot noodles,
new underwear and a lot of other supplies especially for women. We had food
left most weeks that went to the Porch, we had clothes bounty to gift to the
Emmaus project, we had supplies left over which went into the OWNs pool and
onto the expanding food banks to supported the newly housed guests, we had
money left over which has gone to the Porch Covid operation. We all learnt a lot
and where that takes us in the future is up to us.
^ݪz T]^ݪz T] (בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://G_QFaV5dGcbjTVmcegJ05LtEDRGgdmzEwhUmTew6FCQ j\`׉	 7cassandra://woF0CTrMUiOJYYuCsiuvMuKbjbPahujO648c99gep-8Eb`s׉	 7cassandra://8lDpwOZHq9Ef-9kJQsZds7kp99DRqfml-NSrN0s4Q4M` ׉	 7cassandra://ekqB3WqOJoIlsE0GGMMFuMO4ideM4YBEf2iKQTSrLv0 <͠]^z T]׉E׉	 7cassandra://8lDpwOZHq9Ef-9kJQsZds7kp99DRqfml-NSrN0s4Q4M` ^ݪz T]׈E^ݪz T]^ݪz T](, )COWLEY ST JOHN MAGAZINE SPRING EDITION(6)^8Hg/zܯ