A Letter from John

My dear sisters and brothers

I hope that this letter finds you well. I know many of you will be anxious for yourselves and those that you love - I also know that you are keen to support others in your neighbourhood. Thank you for all that you are doing and have done to support the most vulnerable.

The times we are living in are changing rapidly, we at St. Luke's are trying to ensure that we respond in the most appropriate and creative way whilst encouraging the well being of all connected with our community.

We are closing your church building to public worship. This is following instructions from both Government and our Bishops. We will, however continue to shine light and love and hope and enable St. Luke's to continue as a community of good news. We will need to find different ways of being, we have made a start on what this new way might look like. We also know that this will evolve as something won't work and you will come back to me with far better ways of being!

Our plans today are:

  • To suspend all services of public worship with immediate effect. We will be live streaming a simplified service on YouTube at 11.00 on Sunday morning (Use this link to tune in, set a reminder or watch on catchup. Liturgy and Lyrics will be included) 

  • To begin a service of morning prayer at 9.30 every day (not Sundays) - we would invite you to email your prayer requests to here and these will be prayed for at this time. For the time being the church will be open at this time and therefore an opportunity for you to come and light a candle - we will need to monitor this and ask that we maintain social distancing etc. 

  • We know that we want to support our neighbours and church family, we have therefore divided up the electoral roll (our only database of members) into smaller groups and will be asking a member of that group to coordinate that local response. ensuring that everyone is contacted, perhaps setting up a WhatsApp group to aid local communication. Martin, the Churchwardens and I will communicate with those coordinators and contact others as appropriate. I know that not all our family are on the Electoral Roll - if this is you please do send your contact details to Tina with your permission for us to contact you in this way. 

  • We would encourage you to give to Foodbanks, contact those nearby (especially those you know are in high risk categories) to see what we can do practically, to be a people of prayer, especially joining us in spirit (if not in person) at our 9.30 time of prayer.

We will have more updates - please do read these as they come, we will try to keep them as concise as we can. These plans, as I said will continue to evolve, please be prepared for more church emails than just the regular once a week!

I know that this community has been a beacon for many of you in the past, I know that you will ensure that it continues to be so in the present difficulties.

Much love

John

Give it up for St Luke's West Holloway

St Luke’s runs mainly on the goodwill, energy and commitment of hundreds of volunteers every week: contributing to services, making tea and coffee, singing in the choir, cooking church lunch, tending the garden, volunteering at Nightshelter, leading Sunday School and innumerable other tasks, see and unseen. Thank you.

Twice a year we have a Gift Day, when we ask people to think about their financial contribution towards the £175k that it costs to run St Luke’s each year. Half of this money goes to the Diocese to pay for clergy and vicarages, and for supporting other church communities around the country. The rest goes to keeping our C19th building safe and warm, our administration and music in good order with oversight from paid professionals, and supporting charities that share our mission locally and globally like the food bank, Amos Trust and Raising Voices.

For Gift Day this Autumn we're asking people to consider making a one-off donation to help us get going on an ambitious project in this 'No Ordinary Time'. Our routine building survey has identified structural problems on the South Wall, by the back garden. Renovating this wall, gives us an opportunity to embark on a plan we've had for several years - to restore our leaky south-facing roof with an array of solar panels. As well as upgrading the building, this will both reduce our carbon footprint and reduce our energy costs. It’s a big project, which will cost upwards of £50,000 and we've started to seek external funding from grant-giving bodies. To start the project we’ll need to fund a detailed survey, plan and costing.

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Focussing on this in our Gift Day is an important expression of our response to the climate emergency; and showing our commitment to the project by part-funding the project will improve our prospects with grant applications.

Please can you support us now in raising £5,000 as a down-payment towards a new green roof, to get the scheme underway.

You can give easily online here or transfer from your bank using the details here.

We also invite you to consider your regular giving to St Luke’s. If you don’t have a Standing Order set up, it’s easy to do.

If you do have a Standing Order, you might considering increasing it, even by a small amount. As with things in our homes, all our costs go up by 2-3% each year; and next year we’re switching to a 100% renewable energy tariff that costs more than this. (If we achieve the goal of installing the solar roof, we’ll be able to generate some of our own energy.) Supporting St Luke’s in your regular giving makes it much easier to make these important commitments in service of our goals.

Five things you need to know about the Grand Scheme

A special gift day season Grand Scheme is coming, and it needs you to help make it happen. But what is the Grand Scheme? I hear you cry (through the magic of the internet.)

1. It's about having fun. Different people in church organise events and if an event sounds like fun to you, you buy a ticket to go along.

2. It's also about raising money. At the moment, St Luke's is only just managing to pay its bills. During the vacancy, we've seen a drop in giving and in the next few years we need to do some serious (ie, expensive) activity to fix some of our stone work. We can only get stuff done if we raise a bit more money. That's why Grand Scheme events are ticketed; the money goes to keeping the show on the road and prevent stones falling on your head.

3. It's about building community. When people organise events, only the type of event and rough location are promoted, and that means you're more likely to make friends with someone new.

4. It's about trying something new (or doing something fun). In the past, Grand Scheme events have included film nights, guided bird watching, cream tea, fancy dress dinner parties, singalongs, dance classes....it could be anything really, so if you have a passion for something then please consider putting on an event, and if you just want to have fun then please buy tickets to other people's events.

5. Did we mention it will be fun?

This year we're running a mini Grand Scheme in the autumn and planning for something bigger in the spring, when our new vicar will be around and presumably looking for fun things to do.

If you want to organise an event, please get in touch with Susie, Sarah or Joy (you can email Sarah) and if you want to use the church space to host your event, please check availability by sending Tina an email.

(Grand Scheme events are not charged a rental fee)

Speakeasy is back: Friday 4th October

The biggest event in the St Luke's calendar (except for maybe Easter and Christmas) is back. For the uninitiated, Speakeasy is a Crispin-produced cabaret, variety and singalong event, complemented by a live band, entertainment and bar (ooh, naughty). As ever, St Luke's will be magically transformed into a stunning night club setting. It's the perfect occasion to bring your friends, family and neighbours for a night of holy revelry.

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Photovoltaic Blessings

In the calendar of the church year in June we enter Ordinary Time, which takes us all the way to Advent.

But what’s ordinary about 2019?

In light of the climate crisis we seem to be finally waking up to, we’re reinventing the season as 'No Ordinary Time' and hanging our Sunday mornings at St Luke’s around our fractured friendship with the good earth. The home we share with 7 billion other humanoids, billions of other created beings… and soulful seas, forests, mountains, rivers, fields.

This is how Rowan Williams, former AB Of C put it, “Fewer and fewer people now doubt the urgency of our climate crisis, and a younger generation is showing us the way in resisting cynicism and passivity about this. It is imperative for people of faith to stand up and be counted – as witnesses to the sacredness of the world gifted to us by God, and as advocates in the cause of justice for all whose lives and livelihood will be most damaged by severe and unpredictable changes in climate.”

How do people in a community of faith, trying to follow a way of justice and peace, respond more urgently, creatively and radically to what we're doing to the planet we share… and those we share it with ? How do we rebel against a mass extinction?

Each week someone will dig into a different idea or theme: from non violent direct action to dealing with hopelessness or grief: from the use and abuse of holy writ to the hidden voices of climate justice in history, alternative icons like hildegard of bingen or dorothy stang; from asking how and what we eat to how we travel or where we get our energy…

We’ll ask how we can transform our shared life as a community, including reducing the carbon footprint of our great big Victorian building, and a group of creatives are at work on a new altar cloth, a tree of life to which everyone can add a leaf.

Find each talk on our Talks Page here. https://www.saintlukeschurch.org.uk/talks

Photovoltaic blessings on your lives in this no ordinary time.

An Arbor Blessing for Sissy

Every year on the anniversary of the death of her husband Bill, Sissy used to make a gift to Sam – and later to Jean – to plant some bulbs in the church garden. The beauty of the gardens over time was sponsored by Sissy without anyone knowing. On Sunday June 16th, some of Sissy’s children and grandchildren, joined us to bless an arbor in the garden in her memory. Here’s the blessing we shared.

May this be an arbor of shade and shelter

As Sissy’s presence through the years

Helped make this place a shelter of community

As we pass by and walk through,

May we notice the quiet life of plants, the silent grass

The earth that we come from, that holds us up,

Just as we come from each other and also hold each other up

 

As the life in this garden harnesses the great sun

To make real the unlikely dream of life

May we photosynthesize the light in the face of stranger and friend

Generating faith, hope and love to sustain each daily journey

 

And may Sissy always be a sign to us,

… like Jean and Norman, like Sam and Julia,

like those in decades past and decades to come,

who tend this hidden plot of planet

… a sign like all who nurture the hidden seeds of life

in flower pots and on window sills,  front and back gardens,

A sign of the life of this good earth

Which keeps us alive and longs for our friendship and care.

Amen

Easter at St Luke's

Easter is one of the Church’s great festivals and Holy Week a special way to enter it.  Join us at St Luke’s.

Palm Sunday (the Sunday before Easter) commemorates Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem, before the tide turned, leading to his crucifixion five days later. On 14 April, in keeping with tradition, we’ll start our service at 10:45am in the garden, before processing into the church carrying woven crosses.

Maundy Thursday, marks the Last Supper that Jesus shared with his friends and we also share a meal together, along with a short service and reflection. (8pm, Thursday 18 April)

Our Good Friday meditation at 12 noon on 19 April takes the form of a contemplative service, where we move around the church through  a series of ‘stations’ created by members of the church. The theme of these installations this year is 'Hope Carriers’ - who are the people and what are the places holding hope in our world today?  

On Saturday 20 April at 11.15pm we gather for the dramatic  Vigil of Fire - a midnight mass of darkness, fire and light in which we meditate on the dark hours after Christ’s death, followed by his rising.

On Easter Sunday, 21 April, we’re back in the church at 11am to celebrate resurrection morning. 

Whether you’re a regular at St Luke’s, an occasional visitor or have never joined us before, you’re very welcome at any of our Easter events.