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Christian Patriotism: a Sermon on S George's Day

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The Tyndall Sermon for the  Armourers and Braziers Company  p reached at the church of  S Margaret Lothbury on the Feast of S George, 23 April 2024 The Will of Roger Tyndall, Citizen and Armourer, 1589: … and also to procure yearly, on the feast-day of St. George the Martyr if it be not a fish-day, and if it be a fish-day then the next Sunday or Monday after that, a godly sermon be made in the forenoon of the same day in the parish Church of St. Dionise Backchurch [Now in S Margaret Lothbury ] by a godly learned preacher of King's College in Cambridge, [or some other godly preacher] at which sermon the livery of the said company, or the greater part of them, to be present in their liveries, they to give the said preacher for preaching the said sermon 6s. 8d., and also to have him with them from the said Church to their common hall to dinner if he will go. John 1:43-50 John 1:46 Nazareth! Can anything good come from there? “S George for England!” we used to cry, innocent and unabas

The Protect Duty - Respond to the Standard Tier Consultation

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The Protect Duty is a new statutory responsibility which will impact Churches and Places of Worship. Responses to this consultation are needed . The deadline for responses is 18 March 2024 What is all this about? The consultations and parliamentary process for the Bill to implement a Protect Duty (" Martyn's Law ") have made a difference. Changes have been introduced to mitigate the severe unintended consequences of the original proposals. As it was they would have given terrorism a win by making things very difficult for churches and places of worship. I set out why that was here . It is now really important to respond to the consultation on the impact of the proposals as they now stand so that the changes for the better are not lost and so that the Bill can be improved further. Government needs to be clear about the impact of the Duty on Churches and other places of worship The more individual responses there are the better. Please respond yourself, and ask others in

God’s Glory revealed in the face of Christ. The Transfiguration

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God’s Glory revealed in the face of Christ. Sermon for the Sunday before Lent at S Marks Hamilton Terrace. S Mark's church burnt down in 2023 and the community worships for the time being in the church hall. There are two sorts of barbers. Those who are silent and those who talk. Of those who talk there are those who talk and cut and those who only do one thing at a time. If you get one like that then you are sunk. It is going to take all morning just to get a short back and sides. The place I go to used to have a chap there who would talk but not cut, and one who was silent. I would always try and get to the silent one – but I did not usually manage it as the talkative chap loved to talk religion and I was to him as a honey pot is to a bee. I went one 6th August and he told me that today – he was a Greek Cypriot – was a great festival, the feast of the metamorphosis. You don’t have this festival in the West he said, yes we do said I it’s called the Transfiguration no metamorphosi

He saves by Sacrifice

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Sermon given in the context of the S John Passion at Holy Trinity Sloane Square, Palm Sunday 2023  The S John Passion was written as a liturgy to surround the sermon, and while tonight we perform it as a concert, there is justification for a few remarks about the religious import of what we are listening to. This is a Lutheran work but draws on the tradition of the Catholic Church to read the whole of the passion narrative of Saint John on Good Friday. On Palm Sunday one of the other gospels is read but St John comes round every year on Good Friday. Bach wrote for a Good Friday evening worship in which the passion lifted from Luther’s German translation of the Bible, specifically the 18th and 19th chapters of Saint John’s gospel, sung interspersed with hymns and interpretive Arias, and with a sermon at the heart. As we have heard, it begins with the betrayal and the question which is put to those who come to arrest Jesus but also to the congregation, Wen suchet ihr? whom do you