Our Monday Lunch Bunch starts again on Monday 15th January. Free simple lunch of soup and a roll; baked potato with beans and cheese or beans on toast. Tea, coffee and soft drinks always available. Pop in for lunch or just coffee and a chat. Everyone welcome.
Jesus said, ‘I came that all may have life, and have it abundantly.’ This year, the National Health Service, marks 75 years since it was first established. It was started because the government at that time believed everyone should be able to get healthcare - no matter how much or little money they had. Since earliest times, Christian doctors and nurses, inspired by the example and teaching of Jesus, have been at the forefront of efforts to alleviate human suffering, cure disease, and advance knowledge and understanding. It was Christians who began to change society's attitude towards the sick, disabled and dying. In AD 369, a man called Basil in Caesarea founded a 300-bed hospital. This was the first large-scale hospital for the seriously ill and disabled. It cared for victims of the plague and was the first of many built by the Church. It was not until the 18th century that the Christian hospital movement re-emerged. It reminded Christians to remember the poor and needy in their midst. They came to understand afresh that bodies needed tending as much as ‘souls’. New institutions were built by devout Christians for the 'sick poor', supported mainly by voluntary contributions. And Christians were at the forefront of the dispensary movement (the prototype of general practice), providing medical care for the urban poor. Indeed, modern nursing owes much to Christian influences. For centuries the majority of nursing, like most medicine, was carried out by monastic orders in their own hospitals. In many ways, the Christian faith and medicine are natural allies; medicine offers people unique opportunities to express their faith in practical caring for others, embodying the command of Christ: 'whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me'. The Rev’d Dr Richard Hines Rural Dean
Over 100 people enjoyed the Sounds of Simon tribute concert on 12th May at All Saints’ Church. The duo, Ben Bowden and Adam Ellis, performed a mix of Simon & Garfunkel hits such as ‘Homeward Bound’ and ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’ as well as some of their less well known numbers like ‘A Most Peculiar Man’. Ben is something of an expert on Paul Simon and the history of Simon & Garfunkel, and the concert included several anecdotes about the songs and the famously fractious relationship between the two musicians. Just over £1000 was raised for church funds. Many thanks to efforts of the Friends of All Saints for this fantastic result!
The little and large of meeting others As I write I’ve just logged off from a world-wide live-streamed Christian Conference. I’ve been watching thousands of mostly young attractive men and women, gathered in different venues in many nations around the globe, all linked up to the one Conference, based in the Royal Albert Hall. Wow! What a facility the internet is, and what extra-ordinary possibilities it offers for a certain kind of inter-personal communication! But I logged off early because it left me somewhat unmoved and feeling decidedly out of touch. I prefer the small-scale or one-to-one possibilities. I’m happier when I meet someone in the most ordinary of circumstances, where we can listen to and talk with each other, simply and quite privately – rather as I sense Jesus liked doing in his day. Amazingly, Jesus was criticised for taking so much interest in ordinary everyday people, irrespective of their supposed reputation or gender or age or faith tradition. But he had such gentle insight into and sincere concern for others. It was, as we say, ‘meat and drink’ to him. Indeed, he sometimes forgot to eat and drink because he was so preoccupied with others’ needs rather than his own. The first wise vicar who supervised me taught me by example that each and every person has their unique story and God’s infinite love and goodwill is as much for that one person as for another. That’s why I’m content to leave my large-gathering Christian friends to their internet style of meeting, and may God richly bless them. Meanwhile, I ask Him to help me go on noticing and enjoying the person next door, beside me in the queue, or who finds themselves standing alone somewhere – and, perhaps in that way, may He bless us too. The Rev’d Dr Richard Hines Rural Dean