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		<title>Springtime @ St Pythag&#8217;s</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Apr 2016 00:56:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Robert]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Firstly the solution to the St Pythag&#8217;s April Crossword can be found here, if anyone tried it. Sitting near some young people on a train on the Avocet Line the other day, I was able aurally to observe and study the dialect spoken by some of Today’s Youth. St Pythag’s Liturgical Innovation Forum Joint Working [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="/springtime-st-pythags/">Springtime @ St Pythag&#8217;s</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk">St Michael &amp; All Angels</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Firstly the solution to the St Pythag&#8217;s April Crossword can be found <strong><a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/StPy_Apr_Xword.ans_.pdf" title="Crossword Solution" target="_blank">here</a></strong>, if anyone tried it.</p>
<p>Sitting near some young people on a train on the Avocet Line the other day, I was able aurally to observe and study the dialect spoken by some of Today’s Youth.  St Pythag’s Liturgical Innovation Forum Joint Working Group therefore recommends modernising the text of the Plainsong Propers to make them like more accessible to Young People.</p>
<p>Thus for Easter III today we will experiment with using:-</p>
<p><strong>Introit</strong>: O BE joyful in God, all ye lands, alleluia: it’s like so amazing to sing praises unto the honour of his Name, alleluia: <strong>to like just make his praise to be so glorious, alleluia, amazing, alleluia.</strong>  Say unto God, O how wonderful art thou in thy works, O Lord: <strong>it’s I mean like through the greatness of thy power shall thine effin&#8217; enemies be so found liars unto thee.</strong> V. Glory be. </p>
<p><strong>Offertory</strong>: Praise the Lord, O my soul: while I live will I praise the Lord: <strong>yea, like as long as I just have any being, I will I mean so like sing praises unto my God, alleluia.</strong> </p>
<p><strong>Communion</strong>: A little while, and ye shall not see me, alleluia: <strong>and like again a little while, and you so shall just see me, it’s like I mean because I go to the Father, alleluia, amazeluia.</strong> </p>
<p>Just joking, but shows why the words we say, sing &#038; pray together benefit from rhythm, cadence and slightly more formality than the everyday.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/P1030641-e1460852274802.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/P1030641-e1460852274802-300x239.jpg" alt="Durham Cathedral from train" width="300" height="239" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4945" /></a><a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/P1030598-e1460852400334.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/P1030598-e1460852400334-300x235.jpg" alt="Newcastle Cathedral from train" width="300" height="235" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4946" /></a><br />
In an 8 hour Great British Rail Journey that would turn Michael Portillo&#8217;s jacket green with envy, we recently took what I like to call the Cathedrals Express Cross-Country service from Exeter to Edinburgh; one can count, I think, 10 Anglican cathedral cities and 14 dioceses on the journey, and the following <strong><a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Poem_Cathedrals_Express.pdf" title="Cathedrals Express Poem" target="_blank">commentary</a></strong> was the result.  It would be nice sometime to do the corresponding Cathedrals Crawl, stopping and visiting those en route.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Britishmuseumsnettishamgreattorc-e1460852602672.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Britishmuseumsnettishamgreattorc-e1460852602672-300x149.jpg" alt="British Museum Snettisham Torc" width="300" height="149" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4948" /></a><br />
The family Pythag also enjoyed the wide-ranging Celts Exhibition currently at the Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, including a lovely reconstruction of a Celtic chariot. How well did a Celtic chariot accelerate? It depended on the amount of torcs. </p>
<p>The next Pychester Short Story might start something like this:-</p>
<p>St Pythag&#8217;s School performance of “Lazytown – The Musical” had been excellent and surprisingly topical.  In <strong><a href="http://www.lazytown.com/" title="Lazytown official website">Lazytown</a></strong>, Sportacus decided everyone would be much healthier if they had 24/7 Sports Candy (fruit) and made the fruit growers work longer for less to provide it.  Robbie Rotten&#8217;s latest austerity scheme was to squeeze the Pips of those lazy disabled kids, but he relented when Pixel arranged a social media campaign and Stingy resigned.  Mayor Meanswell thought everyone would be happier if he ruled the world, especially if Lazytown were on its own planet, but forgot that Bessie Busybody really pulled the strings.  Meanwhile Stephanie sang, danced &#038; turned cartwheels, tried to hold the whole show together, and said her pink dress came from a Fairtrade offshore outlet.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/P1030572-e1458998295586.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/P1030572-e1458998295586-218x300.jpg" alt="Windows" width="218" height="300" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4896" /></a><br />
Coming to his senses, Peregrine Pythag gazed through the open curtains and oblong window of the bedroom at the circles within circles of St Pythag&#8217;s Rose window, lovely even from without as the morning sun warmed the honey stone of the south aisle and transept, but at its sensuous colourful best for the <strong><a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Joy_of_Evensong.pdf" title="Mothering Sunday Evensong" target="_blank">Joy of Evensong</a></strong> on warm Summer nights. </p>
<p>Oh, the complexities of the Church of St Pythagoras &#038; All Angles.  The multifaceted jewel comprising congregation, choir, servers and clergy had held together during the Interregnum, welcoming a variety of well-chosen locum priests.  But soon would come the Installation of their new Priest-in-Charge.  For, back in mid-February, Bishop Rick and Archdeacon Idris had made an offer down at the carelessly named Blue Anchor Inn that the Churchwardens couldn&#8217;t refuse. </p>
<p>“What&#8217;s your website say? Traditional Church for Today – time to show it, chaps. We&#8217;ve got a lovely clergy couple looking to relocate out of London with their children.  As you will have noticed, Bishop Rick has been building one of his <strong><a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/easter-st-pythags/" title="Easter @ St Pythag's">50 Sheds of Pray</a></strong> down by the River Pyke, between the Allotments and that new housing estate, Jurassic Park, where the diggersaurs tore up the grass and trees and deposited nicely spaced 4-bed homes. And now it&#8217;s fini-shed.” </p>
<p>“Just so, Idris.  Of course, St Simon Says wanted to do the Church Plant, but it&#8217;s in your Parish; your big chance to man up for the Gospel and diversity.  Don&#8217;t panic! Fr Helen knows the score; she&#8217;ll do Earthy Churchy in the Shed down by the riverside; got a smile to flutter a thousand sails; you will support her, I&#8217;m sure.  And Fr Basil will look after all the priestly stuff up at St Pythag&#8217;s&#8230; unless you want&#8230; No, okay.  Well, Thomas doubted at first, but he got over it, experience &#8211; touch and go, I always say &#8211; in a positive, safeguarded sort of way.  Wonderful!” </p>
<p>“So, Fulge, Jesu fulge, as we say.  The Archdeacon will effect the paperwork.  See you for the Installations.  I&#8217;ll expect an “Ecce sacerdos magnus” from your choir, always enjoy your bunfights.  Must dash, train to London, General Synod, don&#8217;t you know. Ciao!” </p>
<p>Words for the <strong>Oxford Movement English Dictionary</strong>.<br />
Cassock – elderly garment with missing buttons thrown on before the service to make you unattractive to the opposite sex. (Thanks to @theladyorganist)<br />
Ineffably – without swearing.<br />
Panna Cotta – Favourite dessert of Servers.<br />
Reform &#038; Renewal – last year&#8217;s campaign of the CofE to make it more fit for purpose.<br />
Renewal &#038; Reform – the current campaign of the CofE to make it more fit for purpose.<br />
ReNewAll – the Spring slogan of Blessed John Lewis.<br />
Spice – the variety of life.</p>
<p>And finally, 17th April be the day 23 years ago when Mrs Pythag and I plighted our troth either to other in the historic Church of St Edward, King &#038; Martyr, in Cambridge, a church recently glimpsed in a couple of episodes of Grantchester. </p>
<p>Richard Barnes &#8211; with personal views from St Pythag&#8217;s fresh espresso of church < ;-)>></p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="/springtime-st-pythags/">Springtime @ St Pythag&#8217;s</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk">St Michael &amp; All Angels</a>.</p>
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		<title>Easter @ St Pythag&#8217;s</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2015 12:01:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Robert]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Many of our Christian brothers and sisters in many parts of this world have been suffering cruel persecution recently and our prayers are with them; but it is the faiths that have no fun, and claim purity or perfection, that are usually the most dangerous and hurtful, so I think it&#8217;s good occasionally to have [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="/easter-st-pythags/">Easter @ St Pythag&#8217;s</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk">St Michael &amp; All Angels</a>.</p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Many of our Christian brothers and sisters in many parts of this world have been suffering cruel persecution recently and our prayers are with them; but it is the faiths that have no fun, and claim purity or perfection, that are usually the most dangerous and hurtful, so I think it&#8217;s good occasionally to have a little laugh at ourselves.</p>
<p>Easter came late to the fictitious Church of <strong>St Pythagoras &#038; All Angles</strong> in the <strong>Diocese of Pychester</strong> this year.  Lent started a week late at St Peregrine&#8217;s Cathedral as Dean Arius and Sister Tius were away on Retreat; an Alpine ski retreat with the catechumens of the confirmation class considering the spiritual similarities of the downhill slalom to the game of croquet.  Rather than shorten Lent, using the so-called Fast Forward option, the whole Diocese decided to grow beards and keep Easter Julian calendar style with the Orthodox Church on 12th April.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020830-e1428619486249.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020830-e1428619486249-300x201.jpg" alt="Orthodox Easter" width="300" height="201" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4244" /></a><br />
With our best robes and bonnets, chanting, incense, hundreds of candles and tables groaning with food and drink, the Easter Vigil at St Pythag&#8217;s to my fanciful eye looks rather like a banquet in the Great Hall at Hogwarts.  Indeed, the purple robe, spear and stone have all played their hallowed parts in the story of the Passion and the love of Christ has triumphed, harrowing hell and dispelling the darknesses of this world with the grace and glory of his Resurrection.  Alleluia!<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020789-e1428619619253.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020789-e1428619619253-300x252.jpg" alt="Tenebrae Candles" width="300" height="252" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4245" /></a><br />
A few relevant words for the Oxford Movement English Dictionary ;-)>><br />
<strong>Church Plant</strong> – the trendy way of being Church, especially useful for clergy bored with a grumpy old Parish and looking for a new model to revive their flagging liturgy.<br />
<strong>Episcopally</strong> – friendly with the Bishop, or a narrow Dickensian street where Bishops and actresses ply their trade.<br />
<strong>Peregrinus</strong> – term used during the early Roman empire to denote a free provincial subject of the Empire who was not a Roman citizen, hence a wanderer or pilgrim.<br />
<strong>Pilgrimage of Greys</strong> – a Saga holiday tour.<br />
<strong>Plantagenet</strong> – even better than a Church Plant at bringing in new people, especially for a Cathedral.<br />
<strong>Procrastination</strong> – to be defined tomorrow.<br />
<strong>Spring</strong> – when an old man&#8217;s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of gardening.<br />
<strong>Trendy</strong> – in church terms, adopting musical, management and training styles that were popular in society and business 15 years ago, and now largely discredited.<br />
<strong>True Romance</strong> – where a Cornish clergyman might live.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020811-e1428620124933.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020811-e1428620124933-237x300.jpg" alt="Easter Garden - Votive Candles" width="237" height="300" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4249" /></a><br />
Given recent events in Leicester surrounding King Richard III, it seems clear that it is not Church Plants but the Church Plantagenet that will bring in new worshippers.  Nevertheless, inspired by the beauty of St Pythag’s Easter Garden, our Bishop of Pychester has taken up the challenge, issued recently by the Bishop of London, to be the new Bishop for Church Plants.  After pottering around his Palace gardens during Lent with a copy of <strong>“A Brief History of Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme”</strong>, <strong>Bishop Rick</strong> is ready to modernise the Diocese this Spring by establishing the <strong>Fellowship of Saints Bill &#038; Ben and the Blessed Weed</strong> to prick out and pot on radical young disciples for the task.</p>
<p>Church Planting has a long and diverse history; not justin the Early Church, but with Saints Francis and Dominic stirring up the complacent 13th century Catholic church with their make do &#038; mendicant orders of Friars and Preachers, and with Whitefield and the Wesleys riding rough-shod over the sleepy 18th century CofE to build Methodism.  In response to the Industrial Revolution, numerous inner-city Anglo-Catholic Parishes were spawned as the Victorian Oxford Movement took root.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020827-e1428619899141.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020827-e1428619899141-300x216.jpg" alt="Calvary - Dice" width="300" height="216" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4248" /></a><br />
Bishop Rick has been busy trying to replace the complicated and controversial theories of the Atonement with <strong>theories of the Allotment</strong>.  But he found there an equally wide spectrum, from the infra-Liberal &#8216;weeds are plants too&#8217;, to the ultra-Calvinist &#8216;selecting only the perfect&#8217; for the Flower and Produce Judgement.  From the Garden of Eden to images of wheat &#038; tares growing together, pruning for more fruit, and Mary Magdalen meeting the risen Jesus in the Garden, there&#8217;s plenteous food for thought.  Is God the Groundforce of our being, and just how much incense does it take to fumigate the Potting Shed?<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020826-e1428620336689.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020826-e1428620336689-300x207.jpg" alt="Easter Garden - Empty Tomb" width="300" height="207" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4250" /></a><br />
So, the plan is, those churches that were successful in bids to the Thatch Repair Fund are safe, but, given the shortage of affordable barn conversions in the diocese, many listed chocolate-box churches with only a few toffees and humbugs left in their congregations will be sold off to our friends in the City for redevelopment. </p>
<p>This financial windfall will fund the building of <strong>50 Sheds of Pray</strong> on village greens and allotments across the county, equipped with state-of-the-art sound systems and giant display screens, replacing troublesome musicians and boring old books.  This will be especially useful for Baptism Services, when the Font size can be adjusted to fit the baby, and, with virtual reality headsets, adults can even opt for the total immersion experience.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020800-e1428620473222.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020800-e1428620473222-300x255.jpg" alt="Easter Vigil - Paschal Candles" width="300" height="255" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4246" /></a><br />
Indeed, we foresee the day when multi-sensory headsets will mean that everyone can worship at home or on the golf course or moor or beach, with the sacrament delivered by 3-D printer.  To this end, as Parish Priests retire they will be replaced by <strong>Sacrament Facilitators</strong> based in the Diocesan Centre of Online Liturgy (COOL).  To oversee consistency with the Archiepiscopal Mainframe, we are advertising for a Director of Digital Mission Facilitation.</p>
<p>“Are you fed up with PCC Meetings?  Bored with Parish Ministry?  Do you think pastoral work is so passé?  Rejuvenate your career with our Mission position.  Well-equipped office, attractive salary and secretary.  You could overturn decades of faithful informed local ministry, clone Shed-based fresh infusions of church in far-flung corners of the Diocese, and be back in time for Choral Evensong in the Cathedral.” </p>
<p>Now, our Cathedral of St Peregrine may not have a mediaeval monarch to rebury, but under its car park lie our Roman Baths and Temple of Mithras.  With generous funding from Wessex Olde Things and the Big Raffle, we had planned to develop these as an exclusive spiritual health spa and gym, a fresh expression of muscular Christianity, until someone mentioned the recent bad events at Pagford (where were the churches?).  It looks like we will have to go with a multi-sensory 4-D interactive virtual pilgrimage <strong>“Festivals of Wessex”</strong> from Stonehenge to Glastonbury and a Heritage Garden Centre for Church Plants.<br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020842-e1428619329109.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020842-e1428619329109-300x221.jpg" alt="April Blossom" width="300" height="221" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4243" /></a><br />
After the success of &#8220;Italy Unpacked&#8221; on the BBC, Spring on PyTV will feature the popular Food &#038; Travel programme <strong>“O Taste and See”</strong> exploring Wessex from the ancient croquet playing Cerne Abbas Giant to the sun-worshipping surfers of St Ives.  Andy (I look at things) and George (I cook things) will travel the highways and by-ways of the West Country in search of the best in art, food and religion.  Will they be visiting your cathedral refectory, church, festival or allotment shed?</p>
<p>The Science Angle.<br />
How to remember the Colours of the Rainbow.  The church horticultural is no longer comfortable with the aggressive associations of “battle” and “violet”, nor with the imperial tone of purple, preferring the more gentle lilac, so the revised common mnemonic will be:-<br />
(Son of) <strong>Richard Of York Got</strong> (re)<strong>Buried In Leicester.</strong><br />
<a href="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020824-e1428619745875.jpg" class="fancybox" rel="gallery"><img src="http://www.stmichaelsmountdinham.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/P1020824-e1428619745875-192x300.jpg" alt="Paschal Candle 2015" width="192" height="300" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-4247" /></a><br />
Sorry if I&#8217;m a bit ambivalent about the CofE&#8217;s new-found enthusiasm for Church Plants; fine where they are truly cultivating new ground in the widest sense, but not fine to replace the variegated life of our Parishes with a liturgically-modified monoculture of clones of the Holy Top Brand franchise.</p>
<p>Hope you have had a Happy and Joyful Easter,<br />
Richard the Barnes.</p>
<p>For a more elegant and ultimately hopeful satire on the future of the Church of England, try the following little story from Prof Martyn Percy, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford:- Sorry, this link is no longer available.<br />
<strong><a href="http://www.chch.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/Doodles%20from%20the%20Dean%20-%20Ch1%20-%20Coda.pdf" title="Faith in the Free-Market">Faith in the Free-Market: A Cautionary Tale.</a></strong></p>
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