Dear Friends

Thank you for your continued support and prayers which means so much to us. Our Summerfests were wonderful. It was such a joy to welcome, over the three weeks, approximately 250 people of which half were under the age of 18. God is showing us the beauty of inter-generational worship, activities and, of course, fun.

Not wanting to sound like a stuck record, we still would value your prayers for more community members. As we enter a new month, we are losing three significant people in Jacob, Hannah and Isaac from the Kitchen, so we would very much value your prayers for Ruth as Team Leader. Until we get new community members we are having to re-imagine how we support the Kitchen Team during this time.

September online events for your diary:
Our livestreamed Sanctuary service resumes from Wednesday 4th September (4:30pm)
online quiet day on Wednesday 11th September (free/donation ticket to join via Zoom) led by one of our Pastoral Team.
On earth as in heaven’ running Monday 23rd to Thursday 26th September (£50 ticket – to join via Zoom) where we welcome back Andreas to work with me (Phil S) as we explore the Lord’s prayer.

Please do let us know if there is anything we can pray for you by contacting us (at prayer@scargillmovement.org). It will be our joy and privilege to pray for you.

Please enjoy Di’s latest reflection inspired by our programme week with Roger Jones.

Diane writes:

Last week we had Roger Jones and his team working with their guests to produce Pharisee, one of his musicals. It is always absolutely amazing how with an unknown combination of musicians and singers they create a full evening’s entertainment. This year one of the opening songs was entitled ‘How I Love the Law’, by the end of the evening it had transformed to ‘How I love the Lord’. A subtle change but a very significant one.  

‘How I Love the Law’ though reminded of a painting I used way back in 2016:’Hachanasat Sefer Torah’ by Chana Helen Rosenberg which depicts a ceremony for the installation of a new Torah scroll in the artist synagogue in Jerusalem. When a new scroll is complete it is carried to its new home where, if there are other Torah scrolls already housed, they are removed and carried outside to “welcome” the new scroll; then all the scrolls are carried inside together with singing, dancing, and musical accompaniment.     

The artist Chana Helen Rosenberg wrote:
I love the joyful dancing with the Word of God!  Clinging to the Torah, the men dance.  It is as if the Scrolls themselves have legs! I wanted to express, in as powerful a way as I was able, a Jew’s love of the Torah.   I wanted the work to be rich, vibrant, and so full of joy that it couldn’t be contained on the canvas – I wanted to paint joy without bounds – joy leaping out of the canvas.’

Chana describes them as dancing not only with God but also with the word of God – a reminder of their ancestry, their history and our history. They are jubilant, triumphant, celebrating in the word of God. The word of God is central to their lives. The Torah and the people are one. The word of God is central to their lives. This made me consider how central I saw the word of God in my life?  For me scriptures come alive when I write these reflections. I get very excited, moving around from one scripture to another – oh, the flexibility of the internet!  searching for just the right quote and on the way encountering God ‘s great love and compassion as I read various blogs, opinions, thoughts, writings and ramblings etc.

As a child I remember every year in Sunday school there was a bible competition and we had to learn a passage word perfect. I can still recall the story of the healing at the Gate Beautiful. As I young adult it was also fashionable to have verse memory cards and posters in your room. Now all this seems very dated, but there is nothing dated about the word of God. How else can we begin to understand God, to have any idea of what he really wants of us, for us and with us.

In Psalm 119, the longest David wrote, all 176 verses are dedicated entirely to praising the law of God. Each verse references God’s word in some way, highlighting God’s wisdom and truth.  
Many verses are familiar to us:

1, 2 Happy are those who follow his commands, who obey him with all their heart. 
33 Teach me, Lord, the way of your decrees, that I may follow it to the end
35 Direct me in the path of your commands, for there I find delight.
97 Oh, how I love your law! I meditate on it all day long.
103 How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth!
105 Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.                                                                                                                  
Today I was drawn to verses 18-20 ‘Open my eyes to see wonderful things in your Word. I am but a pilgrim here on earth: how I need a map – and your commands are my chart and guide’.       

Maps, guides and charts lead us to where the treasure is, and Psalm 119 leads us to where X marks the spot – our treasure is stored in God’s word. Matthew 6:19: “There is no treasure on Earth as precious as the Word of God”.

That is why the ‘Hachanasat Sefer Torah’ painting is ‘full of joy,leaping out of the canvas.’ The Torah and the people are one, the word of God is central to their lives. And so it should be with us. Every single day, when we open up our Bibles, our phone apps, our word for the day, if we do so with expectant hearts and minds, we will find treasure: a pearl, a jewel, a phrase of encouragement, a piece of wisdom, a word of reassurance, a new understanding. They will encourages us to grasp and recognise what God really wants of us, for us and most of all with us.

We will be walking with our God – Oh, How I love the law / How I love the Lord. Amen

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

As I write this, we are just over half way through our Summerfest season and it has been wonderful. It has been a joy to have so many young people with their parents and grandparents enjoying Scargill.

We would very much value your prayers for Community as we will be soon saying goodbye to some members who have added much to our life over the last few years, and at this moment we are not sure who will be coming to join the adventure here at Scargill from the Autumn. So, please pray for us and if you know of anyone who you feel may be called to join Scargill Community then do encourage them to get in touch.

Below is Di’s reflection – ‘Sun on the hill’ – enjoy!

Diane writes:
Let the name of the Lord be praised now and forever. From dawn until sunset the name of the Lord deserves to be praised.’  Psalm 113

It is so good to be back in Yorkshire which really is a beautiful part of the world.
Summerfest has started with the rare occurrence of sunshine for more than a day! And this morning I took a photo of the sun rising down the hillside whilst holding the camera at a quite precarious angle, as the windows have limited opening powers!  To be honest I have taken several over the past 14 years – in fact nearly every time I caught the shadow moving. And when I do, I always find myself standing in awe of ‘a transcendent God who cares enough for humankind to look down, reach down, and raise up the poor and needy of the earth’. Also, from Psalm 113.

As I look across the valley my thoughts ramble along in no particular order – how straight and neat the sunline is and remains, how we see the light of the sun rather than the sun itself, how the movement down is so slight it is almost imperceptible, how the shadow is slowly but firmly being pushed down, pushed away, that there is a period of time before we are able to actually see the sun, but we know it is there. And then I say to myself ‘SURELY there must be a reflection here!’ And would you believe it  when working with the primary children later in the day we read in Matthew 5.14-16 :

‘You are the light of the world…… let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.’ 

So, at last, I am putting pen to paper!

For me, this photo shows me that God is always reaching down to us although as Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 13: ‘Now all we can see of God is like a cloudy picture in a mirror (or the sunlight on the hillside). Later we will see him face to face. … For now, there are faith, hope and love. But of these three the greatest is love’.

In John’s gospel. Jesus calls us to love one another, ‘You must love each other just as I have loved you. If you love each other, everyone will know that you are my disciples. John also in his first letter writes, ‘My dear friends, we must love each other. Love comes from God, and when we love each other, it shows we have been given new life. We are now God’s children, and we know him. ….  No one has ever seen God. But if we love each other, God lives in us, and his love is truly in our hearts’. 

This is where we need to be the light coming down the hill side, for others. We often talk about going that extra mile to help, of being generous with our time and resources, of seeing with God’s eyes and acting accordingly.  I feel sure this is our calling, and not just here at Scargill. We are all to be people with big-hearts and open-hands; a ready smile, full of joy and laughter. To have the mind-set of “I care about you as a person”, just as you are; with all your shadows and gifts. This is contagious because, like the sun, it warms the hearts of those it touches and allows the love of Christ to be visible – in all we do, all we say and particularly through who we are.    

But don’t forget the light in the photo was for all to see. As well as being light to others we need to spend time in God’s presence and to become more open to seeing the light, the glimpses of glory, all around us. Matt Whitney, an artist I have used for several Advent weekends, wrote ‘riding the bus forces me to wait.  It’s in these waiting moments that I seem to have glimpses of glory – kind deeds done amongst strangers crammed into an overcrowded bus, catching a sunset over the Ballard Locks, or the seemingly random flourishes of inspiration that strike me when my mind wanders. Spaces between immanence and transcendence are revealed. I have a heightened sense of spiritual awareness when I ride the bus – such an unlikely place for this to happen!’ Or is it?

So next time you see the sun rise or just the light on the hill give thanks to a God who ’showed his love for us when he sent his only Son into the world to give us life’ and be expectant for the moments you can share that love to others.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Di and I have now been back a week from our sabbatical, and it feels very good to be back. The Leadership and Community have lived well during this time, and we are very grateful to them. We look forward to sharing about our sabbatical adventures.

Over the last week, Community has grown a bit. We are currently a wonderfully international community and have recently welcomed new members from Poland, India, Kenya, Hungary and Sweden. Looking ahead, we realise that challenging times are before us as we know that Community will be changing a great deal in the Autumn. Very soon we will be saying goodbye to Hilary and Ivan who have been wonderful members of Community over the last six years – journeying with us through the challenges of Covid. They have been a loving, fun and deeply caring presence. We will most certainly miss them. Please pray for them as they begin a new adventure.

If you have anyone in mind who you think would be good to join the Scargill Community adventure – do ask them, in the first instance, to fill out an inquiry form on the ‘Join Community’ page on the website here: https://old.scargillmovement.org/join-community/

We will be soon entering into our Summerfest programme which is a beautiful inter-generational experience. Please pray for those guests who will be coming and the Community as we welcome them.

Here is Di’s reflection on our time in Fetlar, (One of the Shetland islands). Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Genesis 28 – Jacob’s dream at Bethel – God says ‘Know that I am with you and will keep with you wherever you go’.

These reflections during our sabbatical have helped me focus on home. Initially where home was, where it currently is and where it is to be! As the days and weeks went by, I have become more and more aware of ‘home; and all that the word encompasses. And, whilst visiting Sweden, I found a book with the nifty title: ‘From The Age of Surveillance Capitalism’ by Shoshana Zuboff, and read ‘Home is where we know and where we are known, where we love and are beloved. Home is mastery, voice and sanctuary: part freedom, part flourishing… part refuge, part prospect.’ … ‘The sense of home slipping away provokes an unbearable yearning.’  

Here was a far more eloquent way of articulating my restless thoughts, of verbalizing my wishes and yearnings with even an explanation of why:

 ‘It is in the nature of human attachment that every journey and expulsion sets into motion the search for home… finding home is one of our most profound needs…There is a universally shared ache to return to the place we left behind or to find a new home in which our hopes for the future can nest and grow. ‘

But now I find that home has become more as a constant presence rather than a place. You see our sabbatical slowly morphed into being a pilgrimage. We have sought God, sought refreshment, sought guidance.  It has been a time to acknowledge the past, to accept the present, to hope and dream dreams for the future. 

Why pilgrimage? Cintra Pemberton wrote in Soulfaring: ‘Pilgrim people are always on the move, on an interior or literal journey, always seeking that which will draw them closer to their God, seeking that which is Holy.’ And if Psalm 90 opens with these words – ‘Our Lord, in all the generations you have been our home!’ then home is where God is and God is here, with us, now and always.

If that is true, Phil Cousineau in ‘The Art of Pilgrimage’ writes ‘What matters most on your journey is how deeply you see, how attentively you hear, how richly the encounters are felt in your heart and soul’.
A reminder that we can see God in the ordinary, in the here and now. That we can be ‘at home’ with God wherever we are. As Bridget Macauley wrote: the ‘presence of God is not simply encased in the past and in historical tradition, nor merely hoped for in a prophetic future. We follow God in the here and now with all that our lives are full of, with all that trips us up, with all that makes us laugh, with the mess, the muddle and even the mundane’ because this is where God is – the holy here and now!

We bought this painting, ‘Journey Prayer’ in Shetland Mainland, at the conclusion of our Sabbatical but not our pilgrimage! There is much symbolism to take in, including that of the Orca or Killer Whale, perhaps surprising to be there, but the Orca features strongly in the mythologies of indigenous cultures and interestingly the Native Orca Symbol symbolizes family, romance, longevity, harmony, travel, community and protection. He is said to protect those who travel away from home, and to lead them back when the time comes.

So, we have returned physically home but my pilgrimage continues. It will I am sure continue as I write these reflections with you all in mind.  As I look around to see where God has been present, and perhaps where he hasn’t and notice what that means for me, for us today.  Always, I have been gently drawn closer to my God. 

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We hope you are enjoying our latest Momentum magazine/Programme, covering events September 2024 to February 2025, and are making plans for when you can next connect with us either online or in-house. Here is the Momentum/Programme as a PDF.

Forthcoming online events with spaces available for you to join us:

Friday 21st to Sunday 23rd June The Bass Note led by Adrian and Bridget Plass
Wednesday 10th July Online Quiet Day (Free and Donation tickets available)
Wednesday livestream services (4:30-5pm) – (on our Youtube channel) same link to catch up later

As a community, we recently enjoyed welcoming our guests of all ages for our Paddington themed May Half Term, and are looking forward to welcoming guests for all sorts of events and groups over the Summer.

Joining the Scargill adventure as a residential community member
As Summer approaches, the community will be welcoming some short-term summer workers amongst us. There are also a number of community member departures scheduled before September, as folk come to the end of their time with us and move on to new things.

We would welcome applications from folk for a shorter or longer stay, and there are gaps opening up across a number of teams – is God calling you or someone you know to be a part of the Scargill Community?

Please pray for God to send us the right people to join us for the Autumn, and join the adventure of living and serving on this Christian community. You may know someone who you think would both benefit from and contribute to the residential Scargill community. Do ask them to be in touch with us to enquire about joining – see here.

Phil and Di sabbatical
Phil and Di are now two-thirds of the way through their sabbatical. Di shares here some reflections on their recent trip to Italy and the life of St Francis of Assisi. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

During this mid-section of our sabbatical, we travelled to Italy with Jo P to visit two linked religious communities – Bose, the main house in North Italy, where we been many times and one of their three small houses which happens to be in Assisi! 

Our journey started by car then plane, coach, bus, train and taxi!! It felt very much like being on a pilgrimage – as indeed it turned out to be with a few days later and another day’s travelling we arrived in Assisi. Along the way we were also reading Chasing Francis – a pilgrim’s tale by Ian Morgan Cron. It is in the genre of WISDOM literature with a delicate balance of fiction and nonfiction, pilgrimage and teaching, focusing on the life of St Francis.

The story opens with these words:

 “In the middle of the journey of our life
  I came to my senses in a dark forest,
  For I had lost the straight path.
  Oh, how hard it is to tell
  what a dense, wild and tangled wood this was
  the thought of which renews my fears!”
  From – Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy – Canto1 lines 1-6

Now I have never read The Divine Comedy and probably never will but these words spoke to me. I felt very much like the main character, floundering in the unknown, the where, when and why-for not yet clear, a new way of being community – will we be able to stay the course?

Thankfully we were in a beautiful place, full of peace and quiet and as I began reading there was this quote from Anne Frank.

‘The best remedy for those who are afraid or unhappy is to go outside some where they can be quiet, alone with the heavens and nature and God, because only then does one feel that all is as it should be and that God wishes to see people happy, amidst the simple beauty in nature’

Not only were we encircled by the beauty of the surrounding countryside, there was also the incredible artwork in Bose, the frescos of Assisi filling many of the churches we visited as well as the beauty in the simplicity of the few unadorned churches, water fountains and fields. I also discovered that every confessional has a cross impregnated in the screen separating the priest and the individual. You’ll be pleased to know I checked in every church we visited! And I became truly excited about the idea that Christ is there in the centre of their conversation reminding me that he is also ever present with me and all the conversations and interaction I have each day.

Ian Morgan Cron also reminds us Francis loved God, the world and all that is in it, passionately. He was convinced that how we live together is what attracts people to faith. His way of evangelising people was through the example of his own life….” It is no good walking anywhere to preach unless our walking is our preaching” in other words we need to ‘walk the talk!’ That Christ is present when we offer radical generosity and open hospitality – eating together, praying together, embracing all – doing life together which has always excited and energised me and I know it will continue to.  It seems to be in my DNA!
Chasing Francis concludes with these lines from Dante’s Divine Comedy:

By that hidden way
My guide and I did enter to return
To the fair world: and heedless of repose
We climbed, he first, I following his steps,
Till on our view the beautiful lights of heaven
Dawn’d through a circular opening in the cave:
Thus issuing we again beheld the stars.

Our journeys are full of new chapters and mine now continues with the hope of Dante’s stars and the assurance that where ever we go our home will be a house of peace, a house of welcome, a house of laughter and a house of prayer, for all.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

The Scargill Community are continuing to welcome guests through our doors, who are enjoying the refurbished Marsh Lounge, seeing all the other fruit of the building work labours of the past year, and continue to receive from God via the experience of meeting here, walking in the beautiful grounds, listening to inspired speakers, and sharing conversation over meals.

Swifts and Swallows, our Summer bird visitors, have returned and it is a joy to see them soaring in flight over the site, and watch the change into Summer revealed by the plants, trees and creatures that call Scargill their home.

Phil and Di have enjoyed the first month of their sabbatical, and are to be away for another two months of sabbatical time. Di has taken time to write a reflection on knitting – see below.

We are preparing for the release of our latest combined Momentum magazine and Programme covering new events running from September 2024 to February 2025, and is due out on Monday 13th May in the morning (during office hours).

Our website events pages will be made live to coincide with printed copies of our publication starting to reach your doorstep. When the programme is released, do put in your booking requests via the website (rather than by ‘phone) to help our lovely Admin Team deal with your booking requests in the order that they are made, and we thank you in advance for your patience as we work through each booking in turn.

In the meantime, do look at our website for online and in-house events (May to August 2024) that still have space – we would love to see you!

We would like to highlight the following on-line events for you to join from the comfort of your own home:

Monday 13th to Thursday 16th May – Living gently and generously ONLINE – led by Roy Searle
Saturday 25th May – Online Quiet Day May 2024

Here is Diane’s reflection on knitting – Enjoy!

Marjorie knitting by Leonard Fuller

So our sabbatical has started and I have given myself the task of learning how to use a circular needle to knit a jumper. Not a very challenging or inspiring task you may say, but one that has already led me to reflect and learn.

The last jumper I attempted to knit was several years ago and it came out square!!!!!!!!!!  I had bought a pattern, the correct wool and as far as I know followed the instructions to the tee – often, as you can imagine, drinking a cuppa as well. It was all very disappointing.

But here I am loving the challenge and the circular needles; so easy to hold and at last I have reached a section where all I do is go round and round in circles knitting away, which may I quickly say is not the profound part. No, enlightenment came when all was not as it should be, when all was not plain sailing, by any means. You see it took me several attempts to cast on using a Swedish method and then I found ‘making a stitch’ quite demanding, my fingers failing to be either dexterous or nimble and to top it all I keep losing my markers. But on I go, why? because I have a lovely supportive friend who is always there on the end of an email offering advice and encouragement.

Now the book of Proverbs gives us much sound advice about friends:
Friends give pleasant, sincere advice, seeking our highest good (Proverbs 27:9; Proverbs 12:26); Friends challenge each other to meet the highest good (Proverbs 27:17). They also command us to, “… not forsake your friend” (Proverbs 27:10). Mine certainly hasn’t.

But what really came to mind were the lyrics from a great old hymn – “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” written by Joseph Scriven, a native of Dublin, Ireland (1820-1886).

What a friend we have in Jesus
All our sins and griefs to bear
What a privilege to carry everything to God in prayer!
O what peace we often forfeit
O what needless pain we bear
All because we do not carry everything to God in prayer

Have we trials and temptations?
Is there trouble anywhere?
We should never be discouraged
Take it to the Lord in prayer
Can we find a friend so faithful
Who will all our sorrows share?
Jesus knows our every weakness
Take it to the Lord in prayer

Here is the reminder that God is our refuge and strength, an everpresent help in trouble (Psalm 46v1). We can take all our concerns and needs to Jesus in prayer. Jesus who also calls us friend.  In John 15 we read: “My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command.”

So, my friends, much to reflect and be grateful for. Not only in the richness of true friendships here on earth but also in the knowledge that we have a heavenly friend and saviour who cares and loves each one of us.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We would like to wish you a very joyful Easter.

We have just finished our Holy Week and Easter Weekend event, which was a moving and joy-filled experience. You can hear my talk from Easter Sunday here.

Di and I have just begun our three-month sabbatical, but be encouraged to know that Di wants to carry on with her monthly reflections.

Please pray for the Community during this time as they continue to welcome guests.

Below is Di’s reflection. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Happy Easter all.
We have travelled through Holy Week, waited through Holy Saturday and celebrated our risen lord on Easter Sunday. Chocolate eggs, or rabbits have been eaten and we can now look forward to Spring, to new life in Christ. 

But just before we do, can we have a look at this most beautiful of paintings:
‘Mary and the mother of Judas embrace’ by Nicholas Mynheer, from ‘The Life of Mary’ series 2014, and then read the poem.

'Mary and the mother of Judas embrace' by Nicholas Mynheer

Two Mothers

Long time ago, so I have been told,
Two angels once met on streets paved  with gold.
“By the stars in your crown,” said the one to the other
“I see that on earth, you too, were a mother.

And by, the blue-tinted halo you wear
“You, too, have known sorrow and  deepest despair…”
“Ah yes,” she replied, “I once had a son,
A sweet little lad, full of laughter and fun.”

“But tell of your child.” “Oh, I knew I was blessed
From the moment I first held him close to my breast,
And my heart almost burst with the joy of that day.”
“Ah, yes,” said the other, “I felt the same way.”

The former continued: “The first steps he took-
So eager and breathless; the sweet startled look
Which came over his face – he trusted me so.”
“Ah, yes,” said the other, “How well do I know”

“But soon he had grown to a tall handsome boy,
So stalwart and kind – and it gave me so much joy
To have him just walk down the street by my side”
“Ah yes, “said the other mother, “I felt the same pride.”

“How often I shielded and spared him from pain
And when he for others was so cruelly slain.
When they crucified him – and they spat in his face
How gladly would I have hung there in his place!”

A moment of silence – “Oh then you are she –
The mother of Christ”; and she fell on one knee.
But the Blessed one raised her up, drawing her near,
And kissed from the cheek of the woman, a tear.

“Tell me the name of the son you love so,
That I may share with your grief and your woe.”
She lifted her eyes, looking straight at the other,
“He was Judas Iscariot: I am his mother.”

[Author Unknown]

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Thank you so much for your prayers and support – we really do appreciate your love. 

We are delighted that the building work of Phase 7 is all but finished. The Marsh Lounge is truly transformed and is a beautiful space. On Friday we welcomed Archbishop Stephen. We had a wonderful time with Stephen and part of the day was a celebration service re-dedicating the Marsh Lounge to our loving God and the ongoing ministry of Scargill. 

Below are a couple of photos, one just showing how spacious and beautiful the Lounge now looks, without the pillars, and the glorious art installation (created by Michelle Gillam-Hull), and the other with Stephen and Felicity Lawson, Chair of our Council. 

The refurbished Marsh Lounge – Phil Stone
Archbishop Stephen, Phil Stone and Felicity Lawson

We often talk about Scargill being an adventure and the day felt like reaching a glorious point on that journey. We are very grateful to Dave Lucas for holding the project over the last nine months, working closely with the contractors. Dave’s care and attention to detail, and fostering good relationships with the contractors, has been key.

We are so thankful for God’s faithfulness and love which is often expressed through our Friends. Thank you!

There are still online tickets available to join us ‘virtually’ for journey through Holy Week and Easter weekend  – it would be good to see you online.

Here is Di’s latest reflection on the wonder of the Curlew. It’s a joy to welcome their ‘call’ back….

Diane writes:

The Curlews have returned, they have been heard, they have been seen. Phil and I bought this painting by Liz Toole from a little art shop on the Isle of Arron. To be honest it was all we could afford but what a treasure we found. A daily reminder of the joy of hearing that first cry of the Curlew heralding Spring.

Our love for the Curlew also led us to a delightful exhibition in Hawes: ‘The Cry of the Curlew’. On entering the exhibition there stood this poem.

EXTINCTION
Have you heard the call of
The Curlew?
I tell you
I would rather we lost the
entire contents
of every art gallery
In the world
than lose
The cry of the Curlew.
 
Alistair Mcintosh

A passionate, ardent poem drawing a range of strong feelings. One minute I liked it, another I was angered by it. It seemed a bit OTT to me, abandoning everything for the Curlew! But as Phil said being Over The Top was probably intended, the poet wanted to ignite our feelings. Which he certainly did!
My thoughts went to Deuteronomy 6, a passionate, OTT passage, perhaps!

‘Listen, Israel! The Lord our God is the only true God!  So, love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, and strength. Memorize his laws and tell them to your children over and over again. Talk about them all the time, whether you’re at home or walking along the road or going to bed at night, or getting up in the morning… Worship Only the Lord’. Here is a passionate call from Moses to listen to God, obey Him, and love Him with all our heart, soul, and strength.’          

I don’t really do passionate but I did ask myself ‘Do I love God in that way – with ALL my heart, soul and strength. Do I listen, obey and love Him? Am I all consumed by God?’ Perhaps, at times, but I’m not so sure. Is this not just Old Testament and the Law of Moses?

Well, NO it isn’t! in Mark 12 (CEV) Jesus tells us ““The most important (commandment) says: ‘People of Israel, you have only one Lord and God. You must love him with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength.’  The second most important commandment says: ‘Love others as much as you love yourself.’ No other commandment is more important than these.”

Well, that’s clear – there is only ONE God who calls us to be fully immersed in His love, to love God above ourselves, being willing to lay down our life for our God. There is an understanding that loving God is a natural response to having been loved first. ‘We love because he first loved us’ 1 John 4:19. Love made the first move; our love for God is simply a response to His love for us as is loving our brother and sister. In fact, loving our brother is not only an expectation; it is a must.

And when we love God with all that we are, everything else falls into place, God’s place, God’s perspective, God’s balance. We find ourselves spending time with God, telling others about Jesus, serving others, and building others up.      

Loving God with all of our heart, soul, mind and strength takes our everyday loving of family, friends and neighbours to a different level. Maybe even a passionate level!

So how well do I, do you, really love God today? Do we just love God or do we really LOVE God, passionately love God with all of our heart, soul, mind and strength?

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Thank you so much for your love and prayers – it does mean so much to us.

There is good news regarding Phase 7: We are glad to say that we will be able to use the Marsh Lounge again in the very near future. This is how it is looking at the moment:

There are a few finishing bits still to be done but all the work on the lights down the drive, the new car park, new windows, sewage system, renewing of the Old House and of course the Marsh Lounge is looking splendid. The damage to the Walled Garden wall has been fixed. So, as we look forward to Spring we come to it with hopefulness and thankfulness.

Although the project has cost more than we budgeted (due to us adding elements and some unexpected costs) we have managed to pay for the whole work without borrowing, and we still have some money in the bank! We have much for which to be thankful.

Scargill is not really about the buildings – it is about the Community that live together here – and we are in good heart preparing to receive a good number of young people over these next two weeks of half term. We would value your prayers for these inter-generational weeks.

Here is Di’s reflection all about snowdrops. Enjoy:.


Diane writes:

Both Malachi 3:6 and Hebrews 13:8 declare that God is the same always and never ever changes. He is always good, always loving, always all-powerful. No matter how this world changes around us, we can trust God is consistent. He is the same yesterday, today, and forever!

On our journey back from our last visit to St Oswald’s House, having shared a beautiful, if sad, weekend, these words from Hebrews ‘Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever’ kept coming to mind.
They were a reminder that Jesus Christ is in all, has always been and always will be – what a lot of, always, – sorry.     

Anyway, off I went in search of a painting and found “Tenderness” by Marina Mera on the statchiart.com website.  I had been looking for an expression of God’s constant love plus the assurance that although circumstances may change from the darkest hours to the brightest days our Jesus does not.  I found this in the bond of ‘tenderness’ from one generation to another as well as a hint of protection from the tiny hand being gently enfolded by the aged hands, in prayer!

Tenderness - Marina Mera
Tenderness – Marina Mera

Can we believe that God can draw a greater good even from circumstances where we fail to see His presence, as Julian of Norwich wrote: “Here I was taught by the grace of God that I should steadfastly hold me in the Faith … and that … I should take my stand on and earnestly believe in … that ‘all manner of thing shall be well”’ (The Revelations of Divine Love, Chapter 32). Of course, I often find myself questioning ‘why?’ but perhaps we should not put a question mark where God put a period!  ‘Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever’ – period.

On our journey home I also remembered, as we prayed, a comment made about God’s spirit brooding over the waters as well as being ever present now. Another prompt to an omnipresent God, an ever-present God who is here in the dark times as well as the light. And on returning to Scargill we saw the first snowdrops, the first sign of Spring, a reminder that although besieged by gale force winds, snow and storms I knew that soon the coming of the crocus will herald the arrival of daffodils who will once again dance along our highways and byways.

Yes, the God of past seasons is the same “yesterday, today, and forever.”
The final message that Julian of Norwich’s left with us was, “And all will be well”, “all manner of things shall be well”. Surely as relevant today as it was yesterday. And if that is so, let us pray:

Spirit of peace, quiet our hearts,
Heal our anxious thoughts,
And free us from our fretful ways.
Breath on us your holy calm,
So that in the stillness of your presence
We may open ourselves to trust,
And be transformed.
Amen

(Morning prayers – Watch, Wait)

With much love from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

On behalf of the Scargill Community we would like to wish you a peaceful and joy filled Christmas.

Please remember the St Oswald’s Community, Whitby in your prayers as the house closes and the Community are dispersed by the end of January. 

Our next livestream evening prayer service is taking place on Monday 1st January (from 4:30pm).

Here is Di’s reflection – enjoy!

Listening In by Charles Spencelayh (1865–1958), exhibited 1933, from the Tate Gallery. The description speaks of an ‘old man listening attentively to a startlingly modern wireless through a pair of head phones.’

Yesterday, as we entered the Harry Potter Experience with two of our grandchildren, we read these words from JK Rowling ‘No story lives unless someone wants to listen.’ I wanted to add – no story lives unless it is told.

A week ago, sitting at the back of Chapel, for once allowing myself to listen to one of our guest speakers, I found myself looking at people’s ears! (possibly because we were being encouraged to listen!) At first, I was struck by how funny ears are, two rather oddly wing shaped appendages, then of course I remembered that they serve us very well allowing us to hear all the sounds around, sweet as well as harsh.

I then began to think about my listening skills, well, they’re often not great! There are times I find myself mainly out of anxiety, butting-in whilst others are speaking, full of my thoughts and solutions, rather than hearing what is really being said. Unlike our first painting where we have an ‘old man listening attentively and in amazement’.

As did Joseph. Joseph a man of no words, a man of action: he plans, he resolves, he dreams, he hears an angel of the Lord, changes his mind, and obeys.

As did the shepherds. Who listened to the angels with utter astonishment and amazement and then left immediately, ‘with haste and found Mary and Joseph and the child lying in the manger. When they saw this, they made known what had been told them about this child, and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds told them.’

As did Mary. Who ‘treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart.’

Now I am fairly sure most of us won’t have a heavenly visitation, perhaps we may have a dream or two, perhaps not. Remember though ‘No story lives unless someone wants to listen’ – no story lives unless it is told.

This Christmas we can all hear God’s voice afresh, if we listen with renewed hearts to the words we read, hear and see, pondering them like Mary. Can we like Joseph treasure God’s words, savour them, try to understand little by little what God is asking of each of us. Can we like the Shepherds eagerly share the Christmas story of hope to a world that desperately needs it.

Georges de la Tour, The Newborn Christ, 1640s, Museum of Fine Art, Rennes, (Daily Art magazine ISLA PHILLIPS-EWEN 1 DECEMBER 2020

With much love and prayers

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We are glad to announce that the new Scargill Programme (covering new events both in-house and online from March to August 2024), combined with our latest Momentum magazine, will be available to book online from Wednesday 8th November (from after morning coffee) – please place booking requests via the website if possible, as our ‘phone lines will be busy. 

Our lovely Admin Team will be working their way through your requests in order, and will respond to specific requests as soon as they are able. We hope that you enjoy our new publication as you read,  browse and start to make plans to come to visit us. We look forward to welcoming you through our doors or seeing you online at one of these programme events.

Momentum is packed full of articles for you to enjoy and includes updates on our Phase 7 Building project which has been progressing well since April.

We are still looking for new members of the Community who can be a lead on worship and youth – Job Descriptions are here. Please do pray with us for the right people to join the Scargill adventure.

This month, Di has been reflecting on ‘faith’. Enjoy!

Diane writes:
Evening Prayer liturgy:
Opening prayer
God the fulfiller of enduring promises,
God the sharer of abundant love, and giver of eternal life
   We remember Your faithfulness
God, who calls all life into being – the earth, sea and sky are Yours
Your Spirit enlivens all who walk on earth
   We remember Your faithfulness
We praise and thank you this day
  We remember Your faithfulness
Our prayer is one and simple
    May God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven,
God’s righteousness and beauty echo through the universe

A while back in morning prayers I heard a quote from David Pawson ’It is not the faith we start with but the faithfulness we finish with that is important.’ I was intrigued and challenged by these words, placing them on my desk and mulling over them. Then recently we had cause to have been given a courtesy car and I was horrified to find no brake handle to firmly hold onto when wanting to release or apply my brakes. NO! All I had to do was apparently rely on a button that shone, presumably to reassure me, and another that said AUTO HOLD. Hence the most uninspiring photo to look at.

But it does highlight my apparent complete lack of faith in technology. I found it really hard to believe that those two buttons were going to keep me safe, I honestly felt scared avoiding at one point to drive it. But that was silly, so, yes, I did embrace the technology and even began to rest and relax when stopping or parking. Alas, just as I began to ‘enjoy’ driving the car, in fact only yesterday, we had to return it – I had survived, Phew!! And it was such a joy to use a handbrake again.

So why was it so difficult to have faith in the light and the button – perhaps because it was trust I was lacking rather than faith. Which did get me thinking once again about faith. Merriam-Webster defines faith as “belief and trust in and loyalty to God.” So, there is a link between the two words but recent research has prompted some to argue that New Testament faith and belief in Jesus should be understood in terms of faithfulness, loyalty, and commitment to him and his teachings, rather than in terms of belief, trust and reliance.

Faith is important because faith frames who we are, our existence, our values, our hopes, and our dreams. Faith is the quiet calm before a storm as well as the anchor within it. You see Faith is a gift from God, an absolutely gratuitous gift. It is the establishment of God’s relationship to his people. A relationship our evening prayer reminds us of with the refrain ‘we remember His faithfulness’.

The Old Testament is full of examples of God’s faithfulness. We are all very familiar with Noah’s rainbow and whilst writing I saw the most beautiful double rainbow. A visual reminder that God’s promise to Noah is not simply part of an ancient story or merely a symbol of hope, it is a living example of God’s faithfulness. It is an assurance that God has not forgotten us and that he continues to work in this world. Also, I read an article (https://www.pastorwoman.net/podcast/episode/2… Posted by Christine on November 11, 2022) about faithfulness’ through the eyes of Caleb. Christine talked about Caleb, one of the twelve spies, along with Joshua who were sent to ‘suss out’ Canaan.  They were the only two who brought back a good report [because they trusted God!!]  Joshua and Caleb ‘through Eyes of Faith’ saw no reason to delay but to immediately go and take the land.  Caleb was a man who remembered the God who was faithful, and on that basis, plus God’s promise, he trusted him.  And that trust readied him for action.  We too have the choice to either see with eyes of faith what may seem impossible for us to accomplish or see with expectant eyes of faith what is possible for us, us only to accomplish – an interesting thought!

This reflection has strengthened my resolve to seeing faith in the terms of faithfulness, of moving beyond being something I think to including an attitude of action. James’ letter is all about the works of faith, in fact faith is the centrepiece of his argument. In 2v14 James writes “What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if you say you have faith but do not have works?” And a few verses later he firmly answers his own question by stating, “So faith by itself, if it has no works, is dead”. Well, that’s quite clear! 

What makes faith a living and a saving faith is what you do about it. We must not stop at a faith that involves mere mental consent. Our faith is meaningless unless it produces the confidence in God that would cause us to act … to take on giants in the land.  

So let me finish as I started with our Evening Prayer liturgy:

Closing prayer
May Your kingdom come O Lord, on earth as it is in heaven,
May our words proclaim it, our actions reveal it
May Your kingdom come through us, this day and every day
May we feel its heartbeat of love

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Autumn is coming to the Dales. The trees on the estate are beginning to change colour with beautiful bronze and golden colours, and we are also getting our fair share of rain!

The building work is going well with the work currently focusing on the Marsh Lounge roof. The other parts of Phase 7 (front of the old house, woodland car park, new sewage plant and widening of the entrance ) are making progress and work has started on the Walled Garden walls. Lots going on! Please continue to pray for all those who come on site that they may experience the love of God, and our ongoing good relationships with them.

This Autumn Community has changed shape. We are delighted to welcome Sarah who joins the Admin team, Annie, Chaplain, who will be on the Pastoral and House teams, and John who is on the Kitchen and Estate teams.  

We are still looking for new members of the Community who can be a lead on worship and youth – Job Descriptions are here. We are also looking urgently for a new Community member to join the Personnel team. Please do pray with us for the right people to join the Scargill adventure.

We would also value your prayers for St Oswald’s Community  (many of you will remember Jackie, Paul and Michyla).This Community was founded in partnership between Scargill and the Sisters of the Order of the Holy Paraclete Whitby (OHP). This was to continue and develop the ministry of the sisters at St Oswald’s Pastoral Centre which they own. OHP, due to their own financial difficulties, have decided to sell St Oswald’s – this has not been an easy decision for them. This obviously puts in jeopardy the life of this fledgling Community and a beautiful ministry of hospitality that has been so well received by those who stay. Please pray for the Community and their Trustees (Phil is Chair of Trustees) as they discern a life giving and creative way forward in a future that is uncertain – here is a link to their website

Here is Di’s latest reflection on the gift of colour – enjoy!  

A Bit of Colour (by Anonymous)

Grey was the morn, all things were grey,

‘Twas winter more than spring;

A bleak east wind swept o’er the land,

And sobered everything.

Grey was the sky, the fields were grey,

The hills, the woods, the trees –

Distance and foreground – all the scene

Was grey in the grey breeze.

Grey cushions, and a grey skin rug,

A dark grey wicker trap,

Grey were the ladies’ hats and cloaks,

And grey my coat and cap.

A narrow, lonely, grey old lane;

And lo, on a grey gate,

Just by the side of a grey wood,

A sooty sweep there sat!

With grimy chin ‘twixt grimy hands

He sat and whistled shrill;

And in his sooty cap he wore

A yellow daffodil.

And often when the days are dull,

I seem to see him still –

The jaunty air, the sooty face –

And the yellow daffodil.
 

Recently Margi and I led an Enneagram course away from Scargill and we were given an Airbnb for our stay. It was a small 2 up / 2 down very clean, neat and tidy. What struck me the most was the grey sofa, grey blinds, grey curtains, grey carpets. The grey kitchen, grey bed, grey bed linen, even a grey garden path leading to grey wicker chairs. BUT there was a vase with white silk flowers and, yes you’ve guessed it – green leaves. HOORAY a touch of colour!

Without colour life has been described as ’a dull canvas’ – without vibrancy – monotonous – dull.  And to be honest I found the house oppressive, hanging my red pinafore dress not in the wardrobe but on the back of the door to give me a splash of colour. A splash of colour that I believe many of us need in these disturbing and difficult times. Colour reminds me of God. Look around you. The world, both the rural and city are full of colour. Life itself is full of colour – in the characters we meet along the way, the places we visit, the conversations we have. God’s world is not black and white and ours shouldn’t be either.

Bringing colour in to our lives is bringing God into our life. God has given us, his children, a precious gift of vivid colours for us to enjoy.  And enjoying life is central to all that happens here at Scargill; whilst our official colour is blue I am convinced we radiate yellow which is the perfect colour for laughter and is associated with joy, happiness, and humour or perhaps orange which is the colour of comfort and warmth, playfulness and social interaction. Maybe red which represents love or green which is all around us bringing springtime, freshness, and hope. Perhaps the colours of Scargill should be the colours of the rainbow a symbol of God’s promise to all.

We know there are times when the colours we encounter are grey or black or red or purple . . . the hard things of life. But then by faith we know that like ‘the jaunty air and the yellow daffodil’ God’s presence is still here, all the time, within all and all around, whether we see Him or not. Perhaps this is the time to remember that often a stormy grey sky holds a rainbow high for us all to see.

We have a choice, we can choose the positive and see all the colours set out before us, or we can choose negative and live in a perpetual storm of grey. We can choose friends who bring us down or friends who help us see an orange sunset when colour eludes us. Allen Klein wrote ‘Your attitude is like a box of crayons that colour your world. Constantly colour your picture grey, and your picture will always be bleak. Try adding some bright colours to the picture by including humour, and your picture begins to lighten up.’ And this can be a beacon to others – the way we get through challenges and live out our lives in the love of Christ, can make a significant and lasting impact as they too begin to look for the colour in their lives.

Historically, I would have instinctively seen things in black or white, in shades of grey, in the negative rather than the positive, in the half-empty rather than half-full glass. I have learnt to work at choosing to have fun, to unlock my stuffy personality and stop being as reserved and self-conscious as I naturally am. To let the bold and funny side of me out and wear my purple dress!  In fact to be more alive, more fully the person God intended me to be.                                                                                             

Why not today join me in bringing the colours of the rainbow alive however we are, wherever we are.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Summerfest was amazing, and over the three weeks we were able to welcome many guests including over one hundred young people. Please pray for the Community as we gradually return to our usual rhythm, welcome new Community and say goodbye to much-loved members.

Thank you for your prayers for another Chaplain to join us, and I am delighted to say that Rev. Annie Naish will be arriving in early October. Annie will be known to some of you through Lee Abbey, and she comes to us after being Chaplain on the Mercy Ships over the last couple of years. It is great news that Annie is joining us.

We are also pleased to announce that Sarah Collett, who has been a working friend over a number of years, will also be joining the Admin Team – this is also very good news.

Ailsa, who has been leading House wonderfully over the last few years, is moving on this Autumn. We are very grateful for the way that she has kept the House looking so beautiful and homely, and coping with the challenge of two changeovers most weeks. We have very much valued her contribution to the life of Community. She is going on to Thornleigh Christian Hotel in Grange-Over-Sands in Cumbria to be Resident Duty Manager.

We are working on our new Programme and Momentum, which should be with you this Autumn, covering dates up to August 2024.

In the current programme for September we have two online events – we would love to see you on Zoom for these:

Thu 14 September – Online Quiet Day
Mon 25 to Thu 28 September online – ‘A second childhood’ led by John Bell

There is also an opportunity to come to Scargill for a refreshing residential retreat (different from what is on the programme) – ‘Walk with me and work with me’ – Wed 11th (lunch) to Fri 13th October (after breakfast) – We are opening it up to anyone who would like a break away (no longer just for couples), and we are delighted to have Tony and Lucille Porter with us for those couple of days, who will be doing some of the teaching.

Thank you for your continued love and support, it means so much to us.

Here is Di’s reflection on hairdressing. Enjoy!

I was sitting in the hairdresser last week, I always enjoy going because there is a warm welcome: “Hello Diane, would you like a cup of tea”, and a sense of being cared for as my hair is washed, cut and dried; often with a brief scalp massage thrown in for good measure! Over the years, 13 in fact!, a relationship has developed and there are times we speak a lot, other times hardly at all, but we have always journeyed and shared a little of our stories which in many ways is much like my journey with God /Jesus.

Looking for a suitable painting, I found ‘Art UK’, which is an online home for every public art collection in the United Kingdom. They have a section on ‘The Art of Hairdressing’ where I found – ‘Combing the Hair (‘La Coiffure’)’ by Edgar Degas. The blurb for which says: ‘Hairdressing has been at the heart of communities since time began. An intimate ritual, it’s at once private and very public; there aren’t many jobs which allow you to get as close as a hairdresser …. caring for the hair, allows an unparalleled closeness… which this painting captures, a very private act feels incredibly intimate – even when the hair brushing looks painful!’

‘La Coiffure’ by Edgar Degas

For some reason, this painting brought Martha, of Mary and Martha fame, to mind. We seem to get caught up on Martha being “distracted by all the preparations” but the fact of the matter is, she’s the one that opened her home to Jesus in the first place, showing a generous heart of hospitality and servitude. And we know she found it stressful. In return Jesus teaches her that the most important thing in life is to seek His presence. Something we too should emulate. It is important for all of us to seek God’s presence, to develop a close and intimate relationship with Him even if at times it feels painful, like having your hair brushed.

Going to the hairdressers we set aside time and, in many ways, surrender ourselves into their care, which can be quite daunting!  As we settle into the chair we trust in their experience and creativity to work, for me at least, a miracle!

Can we too sit before God, surrender ourselves, for even the briefest of moments, into God’s care? Can we too invite and receive a miracle?

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community.

Dear Friends

We are just coming to the end of SummerFest 2 with Fest 3 beginning on Saturday. Fest is exuberant, fun and wonderfully inter-generational, including having great grandparents with their great grandchildren enjoying all the activities.

This week we have 39 young people on site! Our theme this year has been ‘Chosen – called by name’. Please pray for the Community who have been wonderful, and the large number of Working Friends, they have been wonderful too! But please pray for energy, endurance and open hearts as we move to the end of SummerFest.

While Fest has been going on, so has Phase 7 and particularly the substantial refurbishment of the Marsh Lounge. Below are some photos of the latest developments. The first shows the underfloor heating pipes and the second shows them being covered with a special type of concrete.  You have one guess to notice what is missing from the Lounge!

Marsh Lounge heating
Marsh Lounge concrete layer

Please pray for the ongoing relationships with the Contractors, which are really good, and that the works will keep to schedule. Our hope is that Phase 7 will be finished by mid November.

You will be aware that Helen (music and worship co-ordinator) and Wendy (youth co-ordinator) are leaving very soon. The job description for these important roles are on our website. Please pass them on to anyone you think has a calling to Community and could fulfil one of these positions. Prayers for this please!

And here is Di’s latest reflection on the subject of shared lives –  enjoy!

[A Shared Meal – Felix Schlesinger]

A grace from the Book of Common Prayer:
Blessed are you, O Lord God, King of the Universe, for you give us food to sustain our lives and make our hearts glad; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

This, I believe, is especially true when we eat with others. Barry D.Jones in an article for VOICE (Dallas Theological Seminary 20515) talks about the dinner table as a place of connection, of brokenness and of blessing. Unlike our painting, the article goes on to talk about the table as a ‘place to remember the blessing of God’ and that ‘we need to recover the importance of gathering with people around our tables for the purpose of enjoying a meal as both a gift and means of grace’. Simple, humble or lavish ‘meals where we gather with family or friends both old and new, perhaps even, ‘to be!’ are the meals where we can receive a glimpse of the banquet of the kingdom to come… a little foretaste of the shalom of God’.       

These meals are what the Celts called “thin places”—where the veil that separates heaven and earth seems exceedingly thin. Which is exactly what Phil and I discovered not only here at Scargill but in Kensal Rise, Hackney, Cambridge, Lee Abbey Youth Camp and Kenward House. Lee Abbey Camp was where I first encountered a generous hospitality where all were welcome. Even after the two weeks we spent together on the field camp team members would invite me round for a meal or to stay, something my mother never really understood. And 13 years on from having moved to Yorkshire, whenever I walk up to the main house there is the same distinct feeling that stirs within me as I had every time I walked onto the camp field. It feels like an acknowledgement that here is a sacred place, and I have, for some reason, the privilege to be here, to live, work and share my life with a myriad of people.

One reason I believe this is a safe haven for people is because from the very start of this adventure we knew that eating together, sharing meals, was to play a vital role in the life of Scargill. By default really, we quickly got into the routine of morning prayers followed by breakfast – well there was no one else to get breakfast! And we have never looked back, there is something very precious about coming down from prayers and starting the day with whoever is here over breakfast.

Interestingly I am writing this sitting at our kitchen table alone, having eaten alone. Phil is away. For me a solitary meal is quite a novelty. The meal I partook of was fine, I cooked it, but it was very short lived.  It did though lead me to start writing this reflection and suddenly I felt inspired and no longer alone. We can’t always share our meals with others but we can share our lives.  So with glad hearts, whether we eat alone or with others, let us remember that lives shared, with Christ at the centre, are lives transformed.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Thank you for love and support which we so very much appreciate. Thank you to those who joined the online prayer and praise meeting last week – it was a great encouragement to have many ‘screens’ joining us!

We have much for which to be thankful here at Scargill. The building work is going well with the extensive refurbishment of the Marsh Lounge. The Old House bedroom windows have now been replaced and are looking wonderful and the roof tiles have been re-laid. Please continue to pray for the building work and our ongoing good relationship with the Contractors and all that come on site, and pray that they may know the love and peace of Jesus while with us.

The Community continues to change. We had a wave of new Community join us within a fortnight! The Community is just over 30 and I will say more about that in the next newsletter. This week though we say goodbye to Fernanda who has been an amazing Community member. She returns back to Brazil this coming week and we will miss her loving joyful presence.

The other big news with Community is that Helen Cook will be leaving us in September. Helen has been with us for 4 1/2 years leading and co-ordinating our worship and music which many of you have really appreciated. Helen will be begin training to become a Methodist Deacon at Queen’s College Birmingham. We will miss her and we have very much valued her contribution to Community life.

With Wendy (see previous newsletter) and Helen leaving, we have two significant roles that need filling in coordinating youth and music, as well as their valuable contributions to the Admin and Personnel Teams. Please pray for us about this – the adverts are here and please pass them onto those you think would be interested.

Shaun has written a wonderful article, ‘The upwelling of the Holy Spirit’ you can find here.

And here is Di’s latest reflection on a beautiful painting, ‘Grace before Meal’ – enjoy!

‘Grace Before Meal’ painted in 1875 by Franz Defregger (1835-1921) can be seen in the Museum der Blilenden Kunstw  Austria. I think it is a most beautiful painting of a mother or perhaps even a grandmother encouraging her grandchildren/children to say grace with their mother standing by. You can’t see much of her face but there is the sense of an older person smiling as they gently hold the child’s hands in prayer. There is pride as each child, hands clasped together, show their youngest sibling how to pray.  A busy yet peaceful painting with the dog joining in and the chickens already feasting.

In Matthew 19:13-15 we read:
‘People brought little children to Jesus, for him to lay his hands on them and say a prayer. The disciples turned them away, but Jesus said, ‘Let the little children alone, and do not stop them coming to me; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of heaven belongs.’ Then he laid his hands on them and went on his way.’

Last weekend Phil and I were ‘down south’ visiting family, the main reason to go was sharing in the dedication of two of our grandchildren on the Sunday. It was a real joy to be there and feel very much part of the promises the parents, god-parents, us and the church family made. There was a deep conviction that the responsibility for nurturing these two boys was a collective task. We had all been commissioned to care for, nurture and pray for them. What a responsibility and one not to be taken lightly.

Then this week in my search for a painting I came across an article by Loren Marks and David C. Dollahite and Laura Mckeighen which first appeared in Public Square Magazine in 2022 and was entitled, ‘Will My Kids Keep the Faith? Parents’ Hopes and Children’s Choices’.

Early in the article they write, ‘Among all the many things parents aspire for in a child, one of the strongest desires and greatest dreams of many parents is that their faith will be passed down.’

As a parent with a deep faith it was really important to me that my children grew up with an understanding of what I believe in. Not because I wanted to control them or dictate how they should live their lives but because I wanted them to know the freedom, acceptance and love that comes from being a Christian and following Jesus.  As a parent and now a grandparent I have wanted to equip all our children and grandchildren to be resilient, to stand up for what they believe and to be bold enough to be different at times. This means they may walk away from faith and, if so, we must let them be. Our task now is to keep on praying for them, keep on loving them with the hope that after exploring for themselves they will come back to the faith in which they grew up in.

As Anne Frank wrote in The Diary of a Young Girl,“Parents can only give good advice or put their children on the right paths, but the final forming of a person’s character lies in their own hands.” How wise and from such a young person.

Soon after a lovely lunch we started the journey home leaving our grandchildren confident in the knowledge that they would be well nurtured and loved, not only by their parents but also by all those who had stood with us that morning.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

We have just had a very lovely week with Roy Searle reflecting on ‘Sabbath’ and this weekend John Pritchard helping us around the discipline of ‘Thankfulness’. It has been a rich few days, so thank you for your prayers and loving support.

In May we said goodbye to Helen B, Xavier and Anna B. 

Anna B came to us from Hungary for three months and she was a ray of sunshine, a taste of spring, a truly beautiful member of community.

We are very grateful to Xavier for his valuable contribution to community life, and he speaks of Scargill very much as being his home in this country. Please do pray for him as he settles into a new job and for his family back in Pakistan.

Helen B would have been known to many of you and has done a number of stints on community over the last ten years. We are very grateful for all the many ways she has enriched guests and community, and during her last time here being such a support to Hilary in the Kitchen. We wish her every blessing in her new adventure.

As we have said goodbye to three members of community, over the last two weeks we have now welcomed five members of community (I will mention this again in the next update). So, please pray for community as we say goodbye and welcome new community into our rhythm of life.

On Monday 26th June there is an Online Quiet Day. You can book through the website.

And 8-9pm on Tuesday 27th June we would like to welcome you to a Community Praise and Prayer in the Chapel which you will be able to Zoom into, tickets are free – book here. It would be lovely to welcome as many of you as possible to join us for this.

Here below is Di’s latest reflection, which should be read with a cup of tea! Enjoy!

Henri Fantin-Latour: White Cup and Saucer (1864)


Do you remember the Tea advert that took many of us back to 1937:
I like a nice cup of tea in the morning,
For to start the day, you see!
And at half past eleven,
Well my idea of heaven
Is a nice cup of tea!

Well, as soon as I saw this painting I knew it was to be my inspiration. Here is a cup and saucer with teaspoon. Just a cup and saucer with teaspoon? Perhaps not! You see I was immediately struck by the beauty of such a simple painting. The light and shade with shining teaspoon is a delight, whilst the slightly off-centre of the cup in the saucer as well as the saucer in the composition was intriguing; as was the absence of a table, or even any tea! Did this give life to the composition? Possibly, I have read it does, but what gave me life were the myriad of thoughts, images, memories filling by head and my heart.

The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge ask these questions about the painting:

What can you imagine drinking from this cup, and what would you eat with it? 

Would you share it with someone?

What conversations can you imagine (whilst) you eat and drink? 

I don’t know what your answers will be but for me there is of course tea – good old Yorkshire Tea with the occasional Earl Grey, Jasmine or Peppermint (hopefully using loose tea).  As to what you might eat with it, well, when at Scargill there is always cake! And always someone to share it with. Offering tea and cake is so simple yet it is the pivot around which we gather to meet old friends, welcome new friends, share highs and lows or just sit in peaceful company. 

Tom Lubbock writing for The Independent’s Great Art Series says
‘This achievement of the still life has a moral dimension. It expresses a religious or democratic belief in the value of humble, everyday things. It says that the ordinary, and perhaps especially the ordinary, is glorious…’  

How wonderful to read the words ordinary and glorious in the same sentence. I have often said, and know I have read, that one of the great themes that run through the Bible is how a great God takes ordinary people and does extraordinary things with them to accomplish his miraculous purpose.  And here at Scargill I feel we ‘do’ ordinary well, ordinary with the love of God at the centre, that reveals God’s glory. And community is not defined by walls, geography or community membership, we are bound by a common belief that where-ever we are ‘lives shared, lives transformed with Jesus at the centre’ is there for everyone. The longer I am here the more I realise it is the little act of kindness, the passing smile or remark that has a profound effect upon both guests and community. As well as being the face, the hands, the feet of Jesus we are also His ‘cups of tea’, we are God’s welcome inviting others to belong.

So next time you sit down to a cup of tea, remember it is no ordinary cup of tea but an invitation to become part of God’s great plan. How exciting is that!

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Thank you for all your continued love, support and prayers.

The building work seems to be going very well, and we have a really good relationship with all the contractors and workers that are coming on site.

Thank you for your prayers regarding the Chaplain interviews, we had four lovely candidates and we will hopefully be able to let you know the outcome in the near future.

On Community we have welcomed and said goodbye to a few people, which I will go into more detail on within a future update. The big news is that Wendy, who manages group bookings and is our Youth Co-Ordinator, will be leaving at the end of August to become a Methodist Primary Schools’ Chaplain within the Methodist North Yorkshire Dales Circuit. This is a wonderful opportunity for Wendy and brings together many of the gifts that have been developed over the years, as well as her heart for young people. Please pray for her. 

So, we will be looking for a new member of Community who would like to join us as Youth Co-ordinator (half time) as well as someone to be part of the Admin Team. There will be an official advert going out, but if you know somebody now then please pass on this information.

In May there are opportunities to join us online for a Pentecost Quiet Day (Thu 25th May), and also for a Renew Refresh Restore Weekend on a Pentecost theme (Fri 26th to Sun 28th May) which will be led by Felicity Lawson and myself.

Here is Di’s reflection on Dandelions. Enjoy!

As a child dandelions were considered a weed, an unwanted pest preventing the perfect lawn, although as children we enjoyed playing clock with them, blowing the ‘puffball’ very, very carefully, very, very gently hoping to reach 12 o’clock!

So is a dandelion a weed or a beautiful flower? Answer: A dandelion may well be considered a weed in a garden but I have discovered it is a beautiful flower along the hedgerow and in the fields.

Whether you love them or hate them, dandelions are among the most familiar plants in the world, most of us can identify them at a glance. Before the invention of lawns, people acclaimed golden flowers and lion-toothed leaves as a versatile food, medicine and magic; gardeners would often weed out the grass to make room for the dandelion!  But somewhere in the twentieth century, it was decided that the dandelion was a weed.   

Now the R H S consider Dandelions ‘worth tolerating where possible’ because ‘they have many herbal uses and are a good early source of nectar and pollen for insects’. ‘Worth tolerating where possible’ is quite a dismissive sentence really. But it got me thinking that God doesn’t just tolerate us or dismiss any of us. Each one of us is worth more than many sparrows, more than all the flowers of the field, more than the Dandelions along the road, more than we dare to hope. God’s love is absolute and unconditional.

I was also intrigued to read that Dandelions have wide-spreading roots, which sink into the soil going deeper and deeper up to 15 feet!!! – which is perhaps why they are so difficult to eradicate from our gardens!  We too are called to put down roots. Jeremiah in Chapter 29 instructs the exiles to ‘Build houses and dwell in them; plant gardens and eat what they produce. Marry, have sons and daughters…’ In other words, set down roots even in their exile. Matthew 13 / Luke 8 tell the story of the farmer that who scattered seeds, some of which fell on good ground, were able to put down roots and produced a hundred times as many seeds. A challenge for each of us.

One of the challenges of community life is constantly saying hello and goodbye, both of which we are doing this week. As they leave or arrive perhaps the Dandelion will lighten their steps, whichever way they are travelling, and that like the Dandelion they too will be able to lay down roots and settle into their new communities.

Anyway, here in North Yorkshire there are masses of Dandelions; there is not only an abundance along all the verges but the fields are full of them, as Phil might say, ‘lavished’ by their bright yellow flowers. William Wordsworth writes about the sheer joy that can be found in the beauty of God’s creation in his poem ‘I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud’. Try reading it replacing daffodils with dandelions – they are most certainly not a weed here.

I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud 
 
I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o’er vales and hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden dandelions;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
 
Continuous as the stars that shine
And twinkle on the milky way,
They stretched in never-ending line
Along the margin of a bay:
Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.
 
The waves beside them danced; but they
Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:
A poet could not but be gay,
In such a jocund company:
I gazed – and gazed – but little thought
What wealth the show to me had brought:
 
For oft, when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
They flash upon that inward eye
Which is the bliss of solitude;
And then my heart with pleasure fills,
And dances with the dandelions.
[WIlliam Wordsworth]


With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We will be praying that you have a blessed Holy Week, and a wonderful joyful Easter Day. Our livestream service during Holy Week will be at 12 noon on Good Friday – and you would be very welcome to join us live, or catch it later on.

Thank you so much for your love and support, which means so much to us, as on Monday 17th April we begin Phase 7 of our building work which at the heart is the renovation of the Marsh Lounge. The whole Phase will take seven months. It won’t be a huge disruption to guest experience as we have made plans!

Also on Monday 17th April, our new Programme (combined with our latest Momentum) should be coming through your letterbox, and will be live on our website during the morning. The new Programme takes us up to end February 2024.

The advert for a Chaplain is on our website. If you know of anyone for whom this might be the next step – please do pass on the information. The closing date is Monday 24th April.

Community is in good heart, on the whole, but we would still very much value your prayers for the community and for new members to join the adventure.

On the website you will see that our next online quiet day is on Thursday 25th May, and that will have a Pentecost theme.

Please also see here the latest blog from Shaun on how Scargill is a spacious place.

Di and I happened to be in Durham and we visited St Brandon’s church, a most beautiful space. So here is Di’s reflection on our experience. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Recently we visited St Brandon’s – Brancepeth Parish Church near Durham. There we found the most exquisite, amazing altar window. The church has Saxon roots although most of the present building dates from 1075. After a major fire in 1998 the exterior of the building was preserved and the church was reordered, combining the ancient with ‘an elegant modern reordering’ which includes the Paradise Window.  There was such peace in the church that at first I just stood before the window for quite a while, looking at, looking through and beyond the flowers, then moved away, only returning later to take these photographs.

The information, ‘very elegantly displayed’ next to the window, says, ‘Jesus spoke of ‘paradise’ as a place to which we may travel at the end of our journey through this life, to be at peace with God.’ It goes on to explain that the ‘paradise flowers also… refer to the story of St Brandon  … who travelled far and wide.. and may well have visited the Canary Islands’ !!. It concludes with ‘The flowers in the window both reflect Brandon’s story and speak about Christian hope.’

Tomorrow will be Palm Sunday with the triumphant entry of Jesus into Jerusalem, the start of our journey through Holy Week, to the cross, where all seems lost. Perhaps. because we have the knowledge of Easter Sunday, we skim over the words Jesus says to the criminal hanging, dying beside him:

“I assure you, today you will be with me in paradise.” /
“Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.” Luke 23:43

I trust these words and this window offer you the hope, joy and peace of Easter Sunday that they offered to me.

Let us be thankful that we know the joy of the risen Christ which speaks of hope and healing.

Let us remember, this Easter, to prayer for those who seek to know God’s love and peace; for those who need the hope that comes with the joy of the risen Lord. 

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

As I write this, the snow is beginning to fall at Scargill, as it has done, I’m sure, for many of you. It is a strong possibility that we could wake up to a foot of snow tomorrow morning.

We have been glad to welcome Ben (UK), Iris (UK) and Anna (Hungary) to community. We have sadly said goodbye to Remiel, Jairo and Eva. We are so grateful for their valuable contribution to the life and work of this place.

For your diaries, we have another online quiet day on Tuesday 21st March; and if you wish, you could also join us online for some of the reflections and services over Holy week to Easter Sunday.

As I write this, we are advertising for a Chaplain to join the team. If you know anybody, please put them in touch with us. The closing date is 24th April, and the interviews will be in the week beginning 8th May. We very much value your prayers for the right person to come to join the Scargill adventure.

Here is Di’s reflection – Enjoy!  

Diane writes:

Have you read any of Max Lucado books? 

Max Lucado is interested in helping children understand their value – not from the world’s perspective but from God’s, and so he invented Wemmicksville, a land created by Eli, the “God” figure of the story. He creates each Wemmick in Wemmicksville uniquely, each with its own look and personality. Each story has its own new adventure centred around Punchinello and his friends Lucia, Splint, and Chip.

Recently, I was given a copy of ‘You are mine’. In this story Punchinello yet again strays from Eli forgetting what Eli has taught him and, of cause, this leads to troubles, difficulties and disappointments which eventually draw Punchinello back to Eli, where we find him at the knee of his creator, knowing he has been forgiven and hearing the words he needs the most: “You are special, not because of the things you have, but because you are mine.”

For some reason the word MINE disturbed me. For a while I wasn’t sure I liked it. Were there not connotations to power, ownership, of master and servant relationships. I could almost hear someone shouting ‘That’s mine!’ 

But I could also hear the words from Isaiah 43:1 
“But now, this is what the LORD says – he who created you, O Jacob, he who formed you, O Israel: “Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine.””

Thankfully, reason returned and of course I began to recognise that Eli saying ‘you are mine’ is amazing because deep down all that Punchinello wanted was to belong, to be loved.

So, yes, to be ‘mine’ could be a power thing but it could also be a statement of love. A statement of love so full of grace, so mind-blowing that it is beyond our understanding.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This, as ever, comes with much love and prayers from the Community here at Scargill. 

The Community continues to grow slowly and steadily. Hope is rising with Community numbers but we would still very much appreciate your prayers with this. Community is like a kaleidoscope – dynamic, changing shape as new community members bring themselves and their gifts, and others sadly move on. Community life is never static – it can be exciting, exhausting, life giving and challenging!

We are glad to say that after Easter we are hoping to start Phase 7 of our building project the main focus being the major refurbishment of the Marsh Lounge. Please read the article from +Chris and John Fell in the last Momentum (link here) which outlines our financial challenge.

The next online Quiet Day is on Saturday 25th February. It would be great to see you!  (book here)

Here is Di’s latest reflection – enjoy!

‘A pair of shoes’ – Vincent Van Gogh,1886

In 2019, The EY Exhibition ‘Van Gough and Britain’ took place at Tate Britain. A Pair of Shoes 1886 by Vincent Van Gough was among the paintings. Will Gompertz, for the BBC, reviewing the exhibition wrote ‘Two battered black boots, laces asunder and soles heavy with mud, are left forlornly in the middle of the canvas with no evidence of their exhausted owner. They remind me of late Rembrandt, Vincent’s fellow countryman and guiding star, who had the same knack for showing the effects of hard labour with unsentimental honesty.’

This morning’s reading was Deuteronomy 15:1-11. Verses 7-11 from ‘The Message’ say this:

‘When you happen on someone who’s in trouble or needs help among your people with whom you live in this land that GOD, your God, is giving you, don’t look the other way pretending you don’t see him. Don’t keep a tight grip on your purse. No. Look at him, open your purse, lend whatever and as much as he needs. Don’t count the cost. Don’t listen to that selfish voice saying, “It’s almost the seventh year, the year of All-Debts-Are-Cancelled,” and turn aside and leave your needy neighbour in the lurch, refusing to help him. He’ll call GOD’s attention to you and your blatant sin. 

Give freely and spontaneously. Don’t have a stingy heart. The way you handle matters like this triggers GOD, your God’s, blessing in everything you do, all your work and ventures. There are always going to be poor and needy people among you. So I command you: Always be generous, open purse and hands, give to your neighbours in trouble, your poor and hurting neighbours.’

Well, this really spoke to me – I am so thankful that I married Phil. He is many things! But his generosity of spirit, in all its forms is top of the list. As you all know (well I hope you do!) we have a heart for the poor, for community, for welcome, for enjoying the company of others. Phil has also encouraged me to more generous with money than my cautious spirit would naturally allow.

And it is a mixed generosity to which we are called, commanded even. Jesus echoes Moses, and in the Gospels, we read about being generous to neighbours and moving toward a society in which there is “no one in need”. Perhaps stating the impossible, perhaps not, but surely this should be our overarching goal. And along the way, ‘there are milestones when special acts of generosity, moments of extravagance-in-love, are beautiful and fitting’. (SALT blog March 2022)

Generosity reminded me that our Wednesday Midday Prayers uses these words ‘God has generously entrusted us with a very beautiful part of creation, so we have promised to be involved in carefully looking after this gift’. Well, we may not feel we have been ‘generously entrusted with a very beautiful part of creation’!  But ,where ever we are, God’s beauty will be present. We just need to look a harder, to look beyond the immediate, to look to relationships. Within our communities there are the poor in: spirit, friendship, housing, freedom, opportunities….  And we are called to honour them in love and grace, to open our hands to each personally, and at the same time to be active in supporting those who are fighting against poverty in all its forms. We are called to bring the light of Christ to shine in the darkness, and reveal God’s beauty.

‘Give freely and spontaneously. Don’t have a stingy heart. The way you handle matters like this triggers GOD, your God’s, blessing in everything you do, all your work and ventures.  There are always going to be poor and needy people among you. So I command you: Always be generous, open purse and hands, give to your neighbours in trouble, your poor and hurting neighbours.’ Deuteronomy 15:7-11

What a beautiful world that would be.
Diane

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

We pray that your new year has started well and this comes with much love and prayers from the Community.

We have just finished a closed period, with our own retreat, fun and training together, which was very enriching.

Although we have had a couple of Community leaving at the end of their contract, we are glad to say that we have some new Community joining, as well as some people on sabbatical. Please continue to pray for new Community to join us.

We open our doors today to the first of our two Friends’ and Companions’ weekends. Next weekend’s event is open for folk to join us online, and if you wanted to join us online you would be very welcome – check it out on our website here.

We have resumed our online Wednesday Evening Prayer services, back to Wednesdays from next week 18th January (4:30pm start), and we also have an online Quiet Day on Thursday 26th January. You can find these via our website.

Shaun Lambert has written an article for the Baptist Times reflecting on the year that has passed: 2022 – A Year of Symbolic Loss and Fatalism…- see it here.

Here is Di’s reflection – Enjoy!

Diane writes:

“Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty, who was and is and is to come!” (Revelation 4:8).

Last week in mornings prayers Dave mentioned God’s holiness and, although we may sing about it, holiness is not often forefront in our conversations, well mine anyway!

This reminded me that for quite a while now I have been using these opening lines of The Lord’s Prayer:
Our Father in heaven,
May your name be kept holy

Road to Grassington - Diane Stone
Road to Grassington – Diane Stone

I also recalled that, recently driving to Grassington I was so struck by the beauty of the sun rising that I stopped and took this photo. To be honest I’m not sure why it had such an impact on me, the world was cold and still, it was early, I was alone. But it was a wow factor, an awe and wonder moment when I felt very close to God and that God felt immense. This greatness being along the lines of God perceiving all things (Omniscient), being present everywhere (Omnipresent) and possessing infinite power (Omnipotent). I had to look these up! Here was God’s holiness. 

Of course we love the idea that God is with us, here amongst His people but we also need to remember that God is beyond our everyday experience, he is beyond our ordinary – back to Omniscient, Omnipresent and Omnipotent.  God’s holiness means that he is sinless, He is absolutely and purely good. Only God is perfectly holy. God is love. “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5).   This should fill us with reverence and awe, I do hope so!           

So should the fact that God’s also requires His people to be holy. We are called to be like him. We too have been set apart. Jesus’ call to follow him is much more than an invitation to simply pray with him or to him. It is a call to follow him with our whole lives, meaning we have to lose the lives we think we want to have and find new life within him.                                                                                                                                                        
Our being made holy by God takes place in love. Every day we can re- experience God’s love for us, and we can express our love for Him in return. Every day we can participate in, contribute to, the holiness of God. Which I believe is summed up and hopefully lived out, in the greatest command Jesus gave us – ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbour as yourself.’ There is no other greater commandment.’ Mark 12:30-31

Perhaps it was through the Holy Spirit that I recognised God’s holiness that morning, perhaps it was the Holy Spirit that drew me to the line ‘May your name be kept holy’. Perhaps it is the Holy Spirit encouraging me to encourage us all to keep God’s name holy. There is a greatness to God beyond my comprehension with the implication that somehow we are called to keep His name holy.

As the sun has risen on a new year – it is January 1st 2023. What a wonderful way to start the year recognising God holiness, His greatness and His love.  His love for you and for me and for all those we walk alongside.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

The Community wish you all a peaceful and joyful Christmas – that we all may know the love and light of the Christ-child in our hearts.

Thank you to those of you who joined us for the Prayer Day, and for those of you who joined us in the evening. We were very encouraged by the Prayer Day and I am working through the many responses that we received. Needless to say, we would continue to value your prayers for the Community and for new members to join us.

The Community will having a holiday from Monday 20th December and, if all goes to plan, will be back to welcome guests for the New Year House Party starting on Wednesday 29th December.

If you wish to join us online on New Year’s Day we are having livestreamed worship at 11:45am on Saturday 1st January 2022. It would be wonderful if you could join us.

On Saturday 8th January 2022 there will be an Epiphany-themed online Quiet Day that Phil Stone and Felicity Lawson will be leading, collaborating with ReSource.

Our Wednesday livestream Evening Prayers will begin again at 4:30pm on Wednesday 5th January 2022.

Here is Di’s reflection which is all about the wonder of light. Enjoy!

Diane writes:
‘We are like moths, drawn to the light’ well not quite the quote I was expecting, but it did make me chuckle – have a think why?! 

Two weeks ago, Advent Sunday, Phil and I were walking up to the main house when I took this photo. I was first attracted to the light on the smoke from the wood-chip boiler and then the light from the dining room. But when I looked at the photo I also saw the light from the star, and the row of lights along the path.

Advent photo of Phil

Have you ever given much thought to light? What does it mean? On both the natural and spiritual levels of life, it dispels darkness. Do you remember when the clocks went back, suddenly the world felt darker, the nights began to draw in and soon the mornings followed. It is winter, there is a cold, dark and damp feeling to life. Often people feel low in the winter.  Perhaps darkness perhaps suggests ignorance.

Children are afraid of the dark because of ignorance, we learn that knowledge can dispel our fears and bring peace to our hearts. Maybe it also suggests uncertainty. Today we have uncertainty, often the news stirs up – fear of the future, fear of the present. The world is in a state of fear because of uncertainty. We want security and for me there is only one security and that is in God himself. 

For whom has Christ come? For whom has God given the precious gift of His Son? Christ has come for all, for the entire world.

Luke tells us Jesus was born during the night watch, at midnight, when it was pitch black outside, the time when the darkness was the deepest and most intense. On that first Christmas night, the light shined in the darkness (John), the glory of the Lord shone (Luke), the darkness has not overcome it (John), and it enlightens everyone (John).

The light of Christ can dispel fears of many kinds.

Was Phil being drawn to the light, like a moth, or was the light revealing the path he was to travel? Either way, let us in this season of Advent, look about to find the signs of light and let us be signs of light for others. Drawing them to the Good News of Christmas Day.

With love and prayers to you all this Christmas time

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This comes with love and prayers this Advent and thank you for your ongoing support and encouragement.

It is has been a fulfilling Autumn at Scargill and a joy to welcome back old friends and make new friends as people visit for the first time. Please do check out our new programme that takes us up to August 2023, as you plan for your next visit or online event.

One event to highlight in the early new year is the opportunity to join us online for the Friends and Companions (2) weekend on Fri 20th – Sun 22nd January. We would like to make this a hybrid event so please sign up as usual on our website if you would like to join us. We do need though a minimum of six online guests to make this viable as it involves an extra two Community to make it happen.

Livestream 4:30pm Evening prayers over the Christmas season will be on Wednesday 7th December and then we take a break until Saturday 31st December. Then we are back to the usual weekly rhythm on Wednesday 11th January 2023.
 
Here, Di writes about the Advent theme of joy. Enjoy!

Diane writes:
A few months ago I had a strong feeling that my Advent weekend should be about joy. Whilst preparing my talks I was reminded about Mary visiting Elizabeth – such an important time for them both. For Mary, on meeting Elizabeth, the impact of what God had done must have suddenly become a reality. As soon as she steps into the house, the child in Elizabeth’s womb starts to dance for joy so much so that it causes Elizabeth to say:

‘The moment the sound of your
    greeting entered my ears,
The babe in my womb
    skipped like a lamb for sheer joy.
Blessed woman, who believed what God said,
    believed every word would come true!’

Elizabeth and Mary – Dinah Roe Kendall

Jane Williams, in ‘Approaching Christmas’, writes: ‘it is the simple joy of the child in the womb, dancing to celebrate the presence of Jesus that is so touching’ – an aspect of the nativity story we hardly ever dwell on.

Throughout the Old Testament, God calls his people to joyfulness. In the years and centuries before Christ’s birth, God’s people waited in joyful expectation, for a Saviour promised, but One who had not yet come. Their joy was not based on the knowledge of what God had already done through his Son, Jesus Christ, but their joy was an outpouring of their faith in what God WOULD do.

There doesn’t seem to be much real joy around at the moment, and perhaps there hasn’t been for quite a while. Why? To be honest I’m not sure.  

Do we feel overwhelmed with the demands of everyday life? So much so that our joy has been buried and Christ’s light has been greatly dimmed.  Is this because our focus has strayed and we find ourselves centring on all the ‘stuff’ around us rather than God’s Kingdom. Perhaps we have forgotten that joy is a fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22) given to us by God himself and no one can take it away. Perhaps we have forgotten that, ’The joy of the lord is our strength’.

Many things can bring us joy – a day of rest, entering an empty swimming pool (for me anyway), time with friends, a good book, a sunset, a glass of wine. There are plenty of Greek and Hebrew words for joy but what is important is not necessarily what joy means but rather where it comes from. Biblical joy comes from God. Like the joy of the ancient Israelites, our joy is a response to what God has already done and continues to do. It is an eager anticipation about wonderful things to come. It is the joy that flooded the hearts of the shepherds, the angels, the wise men, the hosts of heaven, Elizabeth, Mary and Joseph. It was there that first Christmas and still has the power to overwhelm our hearts with rejoicing.

This Advent can we rekindle the flame of love, revive our hope, restore our faith and unwrap the gift of joy, the ‘simple joy of the child in the womb, dancing to celebrate the presence of Jesus’, cherish and nurture it because today, our joy, fuelled by the Holy Spirit, is what God uses to spread his joy throughout the world. Mother Teresa once said “Joy is a net of love by which you can catch souls. A joyful heart is the inevitable result of a heart burning with love.”

We wish you all a blessed and joyful Christmas.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community


Dear Scargill Friends

Thank you for your continued support and the love shown to us. In this mailing we have news of our latest magazine and programme release, and a reflection from Di about ‘sacred walking’. 

We are glad to announce the publication of our new Programme combined with Momentum (covering new events from January to August 2023). We do hope that you find much to encourage you to continue to journey with us and to plan to book a visit to stay here, amongst the wide variety of events on offer both in-house and online. Please complete your booking forms via the website if at all possible.

We are all aware of the financial instability and struggles that many people are facing, please be aware of our bursary fund. You can access our bursary fund application form on each of our programme event booking web pages.

We mentioned in our last MailChimp that Hilary, our Kitchen Team lead who has done a wonderful job, is needing to step aside for family commitments, in the New Year. If you know of anyone who would be interested in joining Community with a particular gifting and passion to join the Kitchen Team please look on our website for the job description, or contact di@scargillmovement.org

Here is Di’s latest reflection. Enjoy!

Diane writes:
In a recent application I read the words ‘……spending time and learning about each other was so sacred, walking on the holy grounds of other people’s experiences.’
 
Wow, this line jumped out at me and I underscored it twice! It speaks of spending time and learning about each other as being sacred because it involves ‘walking on the holy grounds of other people’s experience’. Quite a profound statement that made me acknowledge what a huge privilege it is to be able to walk alongside another.
 
Holy Ground, hmmm, I wonder what they meant by that! I wonder what ‘Holy Ground’ means for you?

Emmaus – Janet Brooks Gerloff

Betsy Jean writing for A Rocha says  ‘When Moses was out in the desert looking after the flocks of his father-in-law, he saw the burning bush, he stopped, and turned aside to look and then to listen. Very quickly he found himself on holy ground. What made it holy, of course, was the presence of God, manifested in flaming shrubbery.’
 
She goes on to say, ‘What if, God, being everywhere (as Christian doctrine teaches us), makes every place holy? What if, every bush dances with the flames of God’s presence, but our eyes are just not calibrated to see it?’
 
Well, that’s a thought. If that is the case, and I certainly believe it is, we can also say – What if every bush, every street, every kitchen table, every time we spend with others, every conversation dances with the flames of God’s presence but our senses are just not calibrated to see it? What if indeed! Perhaps walking alongside one-another should not be taken so lightly.
 
The two travellers in our painting by Janet Brooks Gerloff (1947- 2008), are walking along the Emmaus Road completely unaware of Jesus’ presence. He was just another traveller who spent time with them, walking alongside, gently explaining the scriptures, accepting their hospitality, until they were able to recognise who he was and begin to comprehend the full significance of the journey they had just walked.
 
Like Moses, we need to be prepared to stop and turn aside, to look and to listen to where God is calling and like Jesus with his two companions we need to be willing to walk alongside, to tread gently on holy ground, with as Jacob said this morning, ‘Your (God’s) spirit in our steps and your (God’s) joy in our hearts.
 
To conclude, in our kitchen we have the most beautiful calligraphy of several blessings by John O’Donohue. One which I am constantly drawn to includes the words
 
‘Endeavour to remain aware
Of the quiet world
That lives behind each face.’
 
And another:
 
‘Be fair in your expectations
Compassionate in your criticism.
May you have the grace of encouragement,
To awaken the gift in the other’s heart,
Building in them the confidence 
To follow the call of the gift.’
 
Perhaps this is how we walk on the sacred, holy ground of other people’s experiences.  Perhaps this is the call we are being asked to follow!

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Thank you for your continued love and prayers.

The shape of Community keeps changing and a good friend of ours has described community as always being in a liminal space, on a threshold to new horizons. This can be both exhausting as well as a place of growth and new life. Richard Rohr writes about that liminal space as:

“That graced time when we are not certain or in control, when something genuinely new can happen. We are empty, receptive, an erased tablet waiting for new words.”

So, this week we were glad to welcome Eva from Ghana. Please pray for her as she continues to settle not just into community life, but adjusting to the UK climate!

We are all very grateful to the leadership of the Kitchen Team during these challenging times and we would continue to value your prayers for this Team. Our current Kitchen Team Leader is moving aside due to family commitments in the New Year, and we are also looking for a deputy Kitchen Team Leader. If you know anyone then please ask them to contact di@scargillmovement.org

Our next online Quiet Day is on Thu 20 October – please book through the website, it will be lovely to see you.

Here is Di’s reflection – enjoy!.

Two weeks ago we were visiting Bose, an ecumenical monastic community in northern Italy. Our first visit there was in 2010, after arriving at Scargill and being encouraged to go on a ‘fact finding’ expedition to visit 3 communities. We have regularly returned to Bose, a beautiful place, where we experience the warmth of the sun but also the warmth of the hospitality they share. They have a rhythm of prayer, beginning each morning at 5.30am, yes I will repeat that! Beginning at 5.30am with a rather loud, wake-up call heralding our short, silent, chill walk to the Chapel for 6am prayers, the sun just rising on the horizon.  It really was my favourite time of the day, as was the breakfast of homemade bread and homemade jam with a return to bed for an hour’s nap!

This reminded me of a painting by Jean-Baptiste Greuze called ‘Young Knitter Asleep’, painted in 1759.

Young Knitter asleep Jean Baptiste-Greuze

The young girl has fallen asleep while knitting. Her hands loosely hold the four fine needles required to create the enclosed shape of a stocking, whose toe curls in her lap. She has fallen asleep on duty. Oh no, surely not!

Now I have never knitted a sock, let alone a stocking, in my life! It feels like quite a momentous task for such a young girl, no wonder she has fallen asleep! But let’s take another look at the painting, notice the young girl has been quite industrious and productive; the stocking is well on the way to being completed. Very soon, I picture, this young girl’s mother will appear, gently wake her, come alongside with encouragement and the stocking will soon be finished. I do hope so. Although another thought comes to mind, a second stocking may be required before the task is fully completed!

Perhaps the best example of sleeping at the wrong time is found in the gospels just before Jesus’ death when he and the disciples are in the garden of Gethsemane.

Paula Gooder mentions that Jesus does not condemn them for sleeping too much but for sleeping at the wrong time. This was not the time to sleep. This was the time to watch and pray in preparation for the trials ahead. You see there is a time for everything (Ecclesiastes 3: 1-8) and a season for every activity under the heavens, including knitting stockings!

If we move on to verse 12 the author of Ecclesiastes writes, ‘I know that there is nothing better for people than to be happy and to do good while they live. That each of them may eat and drink, and find satisfaction in all their toil—this is the gift of God.’

I hope we too, though for many I am sure life at the moment feels particularly stark and demanding, can recognise this gift in our lives as we find time to not only work, rest and play but to also hear the gentle reassurance from our God, encouraging us through the Holy Spirit who is our Comforter, Counsellor, Helper, Advocate – the one who comes alongside to help and comfort and strengthen.

To finish, this morning at 8am! prayers Hilary sang these words:

‘I came to Jesus as I was,
weary, and worn, and sad;
I found in him a resting place,
and he has made me glad.’

[Words by Horatius Bonar from the hymn, ‘I heard the voice of Jesus say’]

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We would like to begin by thanking you for your continued support and prayers. We have had a rich and enjoyable summer but it has not been without its challenges. At the beginning of July we had a Covid outbreak amongst us which put us under quite a lot of pressure, but we are all OK and we had  a wonderful Summerfest, which felt much more like a festival than the previous year.

Community is gradually growing and it has been a joy to welcome some new members over the summer. We would very much appreciate your prayers for Community and for new members to join the adventure at Scargill.

We are delighted to welcome on to Community Phil and Liz Goodacre with Miriam and Phoebe. Phil will be an additional Chaplain working with the Pastoral Team and we are still looking for a female Chaplain. We very much value your prayers in this area. You won’t be surprised that all our Chaplains are working hard on other teams at this time. We are delighted that Liz will be joining the House Team when she is not looking after the children.

Goodacre Family

For your diaries, the next online Quiet Day is Thursday 20th October.

Our regular Wednesday Evening Prayer services will resume on Wednesday 14th September.

Thank you to those who pray for the life of Scargill. We have published the prayer diary for September and October this year to aid your prayer.

Di and I had an enjoyable weekend at Greenbelt, it was a nurturing and enriching time catching up with old friends. Di reflects on one of our experiences there. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

It feels like a long time since my last reflection. I have missed writing them and have therefore made a pact with myself to write a reflection each month and by hook or by crook I will send it out!

Anyway, Bank Holiday weekend found Phil and I going to Greenbelt, Phil full of excitement, me hesitant – I fear I have become a ‘fair weather’ Greenbelter! Thankfully the weather was fair, very fair, in fact possibly too fair, reminding me of the ever present climate emergency which, along with migration, UK poverty and gender equality, was topping the main issues talked about this year.  In their programme the welcome to Greenbelt included a call to ‘wake-up,’ to ‘wake up to our lives, to our world, to the work there is for us to do, to the party there is waiting for us.’

Perhaps like me ’to the party there is waiting for us’ came as a bit of a surprise, although it really shouldn’t have. In revelation 21 we read, ‘I saw a new heaven and a new earth……. And I heard a voice shout from the throne: “God’s home is now with his people. He will live with them, and they will be his own. Yes, God will make his home among his people.   He will wipe all tears from their eyes, and there will be no more death, suffering, crying, or pain. These things of the past are gone forever.” ‘

Creation at Greenbelt

Here is a photo taken by my friend Tricia; Phil, Andrew and I standing under the earth! looking up to our world! and for a brief moment or two I wondered if we have already given up on saving our planet, perhaps its time has come, it can certainly feel like it. But soon that small kernel of hope reawakened and despite all not being well I felt that all could be well.

Julian of Norwich wrote ‘Sin is Behovely, but All shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.’ Now, I don’t remember reading ‘Sin is Behovely’ before and had to look it up – ‘necessary, required, unable to be avoided, inevitable’ which gives the much quoted sentence more depth and great clarity, for me anyway! Darkness is all around us but even so, ‘all manner of things shall be well’. All we have to do is ‘wake up to our lives, to our world, to the work there is for us to do’.

Waking up though leads to choices being made with the endless list of do’s and don’ts we hear almost daily.  At Greenbelt I heard this question – ‘Do the dos we do, out do the dos we don’t do? Yes! Yes! Yes! I certainly hope so. Read it through a few times – it took me awhile to get my head round what it means. But I like it! I find it encouraging, encouraging us to do what we can, as much as we can, however small and seemingly trivial, to save the world, to live in hope for the Earth God created and loves, the planet he has given us the task of overseeing and looking after.

Perhaps we have forgotten and have become very poor stewards, but we can redeem ourselves if we ‘wake up to our lives, to our world, to the work there is for us to do’, if we re-evaluate and find the courage to do what we can, to save the world and to have hope of a party waiting for us.

I am sure deep inside we already know what to do and are probably well on the way, we just need that little nudge to do that little bit more, to keep going, to, like Phil, Andrew and I, begin to look at our world with renewed hope.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

It has been some time since we have been in touch so here is a quick update. 

We have been beavering away here welcoming guests through our doors, which has been really joyful. The feedback is really encouraging as guests encounter the love of Jesus through Scargill. The Community still remains small and this limits the number of guests we can welcome, which is frustrating. Sometimes, we have as many on the waiting list as we have guests in the house for a programmed event.

Encouragingly the Community is slowly growing, and we have just recently welcomed new Community members from Brazil and Pakistan and there is a trickle of new applications coming in. It is wonderful to have that International flavour as it enriches our lives so much. So we have much to be thankful to God for his ongoing provision and in particular our working friends without whom we would be in great difficulty. Please continue to hold us in your prayers and if there is anything you would like prayer for please email in at prayer@scargillmovement.org – it will be our joy and privilege.

Please find here the leaflet for Lee Abbey Field event for 18 -30 year olds – it used to be the Camp that Di and I were involved in for many years – You may know some young adults who would really enjoy this experience – it is wonderful! 

Also, here is a leaflet about some Wild Camping events you or others might be interested in organised by our Matt.  It’s likely to be a lot of fun!

Many have missed Di’s reflections – so here is her latest on silence – enjoy!

Blessing – golden circle

Diane writes:

The words ‘Silence is golden, golden’ keep singing in my mind with the tune from The Tremeloes released in 1964! (Probably because last Wednesday I made a golden circle to represent the word ‘blessing’). But, perhaps, that came from a brief conversation I had a few days earlier, when at breakfast one of our guests said to me, ’I have been watching you’. Oh help I thought, what does that mean!!!!!!!!!!!!

Apparently, they had noticed during afternoon prayers, focused around silence, me being still and at peace. Well! I was flabbergasted, that is certainly not how I perceive myself and I’m sure most people who know me see someone who is always on a mission, rushing here, there and everywhere. They may also know that, yes, I do have a deep desire to rest in God, to be at peace with myself and yes I am always trying to quieten my spinning mind and find stillness. And, to be honest, I do now enjoy sitting on one of the cushioned chairs (only at 4.30pm mind!), having my bead bracelet to hand and, just occasionally, I have found myself lost in the silence and pleasantly surprised to hear the closing liturgy. I have then truly felt blessed. Yet I still find it so hard to enter into this gift of silence.

The saying though, actually comes from a proverb extolling the value of silence over speech – “Speech is silver, silence is golden”. It most likely originated in Arabic culture, where it was used as early as the 9th century. This wise old proverb simply means that the value of our words can be compared to that of silver, but the value of silence is as precious as that of gold or put another way by Thomas Carlyle, Sartor Resartus “Speech is of Time, Silence is of Eternity.” I was excited when I read these words, for silence leads me into a spacious place with God, silence leads me into his presence. Girolamo Savonarola said, ‘Silence alone makes listening possible – in other words, it alone allows us to welcome within us not only the Word, but also the presence of the One who speaks’.

In ‘Finding Your Hidden Treasure: The Way of Silent Prayer’ Benignus O’Rourke writes, ’To lose the burden of self and rest in God’s love is a pearl of great price’ and later, ‘Our prayer of stillness is all about being with God without any agenda. It is just being there’. He also quotes the following reflection by an unknown writer which he says ‘beautifully sums up our response to the invitation ‘Be still and know that I am God’’.

The Womb of Silence
Not in the whirlwind
not in the lightening,
not in the strife of tongues,
or in the jangling of subtle reasoning
is He found,
but in the still small voice of silence.
Therefore be silent.

Let the past be silent.
Let there be no vain regrets,
no brooding on past failures,
no bitterness,
no judgement of oneself
or others.
Let all be silent.

Be still and know.
Be still and look.
Let the eyes of the mind be closed,
that you may hear
what otherwise you would not hear,
that you may know
what otherwise you would not know.

Abandon yourself to Him,
in longing love, simply,
holding onto nothing but Him.
So you may enter the silence of eternity
and know the union of yourself with Him.
And if in the stillness he does not answer,
He is still there.
His silence is the silence of love.
Wait then in patience
and in submission.
It is good to wait in silence
for his coming.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This comes with much love and prayers to you in this Easter Season. We pray that you may know the love and power of the Risen Lord in your lives.

Scargill Chapel Easter Sunday

It was a real joy for the Community to welcome guests for Holy Week and Easter, the first time since 2019. You can catch up on our Good Friday Hour at the Cross and Easter Sunday Service on our YouTube channel.

We are glad to announce that our new combined Momentum magazine and Programme (covering events from September 2022 to February 2023) will be coming through your letter box on Monday 25th April (and go live on the website from around 10am that day). We do hope that you find much to encourage you to continue to journey with us and to plan to book a visit to stay here, amongst the wide variety of events on offer both in-house and online. Please complete your booking forms via the website if at all possible.

Thank you for your prayers for new Community. We are pleased to have welcomed a couple of new members, from Brazil and Pakistan.

We offer enormous congratulations to Sarah and Dani who have added to our Community numbers! Ezra Daniel was born on April 9th, weighing in at 6lb 2oz and is such a wonderful blessing from God. Mum and baby are doing well and we’re all thrilled with the new addition to our Scargill family!

We would very much value your prayers at the beginning of May when we will be interviewing for a new Chaplain, who will be an additional person to work with Mike and the rest of the Pastoral Team.

There is a very helpful blog from Shaun entitled, ‘Closing the wound within’, first published on the Baptist Union of Great Britain website.  We are aware that many of us are living in a Holy Saturday moment and this article could be helpful.Thank you Shaun!

Below is Di’s article on the Emmaus Road – Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Emmaus Road – Miklos Somos

Nusi, a dear friend of ours from Hungary, first introduced me to this painting one Easter whilst here on community. The painting is entitled Emmaus Road by Miklos Somos. Miklos Somos was born in Hungary in 1933 and died in 2009. Unity and relationships in the world were important to him with his paintings always having a reference to transcendence, state of grace or divine existence, often with a Bible theme.

At first, even though it was Easter! I didn’t recognise the shadow on the wall as Jesus, alas, I don’t think I even saw it!  I hope you did! I hope you were drawn to the shadow walking just a little apart from the despondent disciples, perhaps unbeknown to them even leading the way!  Anyway here is a clever, gentle painting showing the travellers too busy talking to notice they have been joined by a companion. They are blind to Jesus’ presence; their friend will appear as a stranger, their teacher as a traveller. This painting made me wonder how many times have I been too busy to notice what is happening around me, too busy to really listen to what is being said. Probably far too many. And how many times I have sat in Chapel willing myself to be open to God, to listen for his voice when instead I find myself listening to my thoughts, my concerns and my worries of the day. Again far too many!

But when walking, walking alone or with Ossie, the dog, I find my thoughts disappear and I can begin to feel a companionable presence alongside. God walked with Adam and Eve in the garden and he walks with us now. God has promised throughout the scriptures he will be with us always. From Moses to the Jews in exile, from the early persecuted Church to the church of today we can all recall God’s promises to accompany his people.

This past week I have seen community members, Working Friends and guests sitting alongside another, being a companion. They had noticed a need and responded. They had looked with eyes that saw and acted. They listened and shared, probably not for the hours of a long walk, although I know many conversations take place on the walk to Connie Pie, but for the time they have been given. There have been times when we have all been a companion to others. There have been times when we knew we should walk alongside another when perhaps we did, perhaps we didn’t.  

As we travel onwards, in this Easter Season, can we seek to be more aware of those who are actually walking alongside us? Can we be a ready companion, an encouraging friend, a listening ear, a source of joy and laughter, a giver of chocolate?       

Can we be bringers of hope into this tired and distorted world?  I do hope so.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This comes with much love and prayers, and particularly for Ukraine during these dark days. We do believe in the God who is able to do miracles, who is Hope, Love and Peace. We are in need of a miracle.

Lord have mercy on Ukraine

Some of you have asked: ‘How can we pray for Ukraine?’ – A good question. There are two wonderful prayers you may find helpful. One is from Taizé by Brother Alois and the other is from CAFOD (see here):

Loving God,
We pray for the people of Ukraine,
for all those suffering or afraid,
that you will be close to them and protect them.

We pray for world leaders,
for compassion, strength and wisdom to guide their choices.

We pray for the world
that in this moment of crisis,
we may reach out in solidarity
to our brothers and sisters in need.

May we walk in your ways
so that peace and justice
become a reality for the people of Ukraine
and for all the world.
Amen
[CAFOD]

Last Wednesday 2nd March our 4:30pm livestreamed prayers were focused on praying for Ukraine. See link here.

Also, below you can find the link to a Ukrainian Chant of the Jesus Prayer- “Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy upon us” – which you may find helpful as you pray.
Jesus Prayer music from Ukraine

A couple of weeks back, we remembered the life of Archbishop Janani Luwum who was martyred for his faith. Di’s reflection picks up on this which speaks of placing Jesus right at the centre. Amen to that.

Diane writes, beginning with an exerpt from ‘Blessed are the Patient Meek’ by Hannah Hurnard:
Immortal meek! Who take the earth 
By flinging all away!
Who die – and death is but their birth
Who lose-and win the day 
Hewn down and stripped and scorned and slain.

O Christ-like meek! By heaven blessed,
Before whom hell must quake,
By foolish, blinded men oppressed,
Who yet the earth do shake.
O “seed” of him who won through loss

And conquered death while on a cross.

Today’s picture is found here:
The Modern Martyrs – Westminster Abbey

In my last reflection we looked at Martin and Rosa Up Front, a beautiful painting by Coiln Bootman and today I would like us to think about modern martyrs.  

‘Why?’ you may ask.

Because two weeks ago, as I began writing this reflection, we had the family of Archbishop Janani Luwum of Uganda staying with us. Janani Luwum is one of the ten Modern Martyrs of the 20th century who stand above the west door of Westminster Abbey. Unveiled in 1998, Janani Luwum . stands 3rd from the left with Dr Martin Luther King Jr 5th.  Following the closure of St. John’s, Nottingham, a plaque originally erected there in memory of the Archbishop Janani Luwum was, last October, relocated to Scargill House with the hope that an act of commemoration would take place here, every year on the 16th February – the day the Archbishop was killed in 1977.

Also, the week before a regular guest, who supports Open Doors, was staying with us. Open Doors tells us that every day, millions of Christians risk their lives to follow Jesus. In more than 60 countries, Open Doors supports them by supplying Bibles, providing emergency relief and helping persecuted believers stand strong for the long-term. In the UK and Ireland, Open Doors helps the church to pray, give and speak out for those who share our faith but not our freedom. Are we able to show our unity with those in peril? Have a look to see how you could help.

Unfortunately suffering is an expected element in Christian living (see 2 Tim. 2:3) and although for us here in the UK the actual “persecution” may be less, the unbelieving world will always remain deeply hostile to the gospel. The New Testament talks a lot about forgiving one’s enemies, a noble and altruistic notion perhaps but one that is so difficult. As humans, we want revenge and vindication. We don’t naturally think about praying for our enemies. But Jesus commanded us to pray for those who persecute us. In Luke 6 we read ‘this is what I say to all who will listen to me: Love your enemies, and be good to everyone who hates you.  Ask God to bless anyone who curses you, and pray for everyone who is cruel to you.’

Ephesians 4 also tells us to treat enemies with kindness, putting away the temptations to gossip or become bitter.  When we forgive those who are against us, we start to treat them differently, looking at them through a lens of compassion. Praying softens our heart, as we let go of our agenda. And most of all it allows us to become more like Jesus. And so as we pray for our enemies, we forgive them and we become channels of peace.

Can you join me in the prayer below and perhaps like me you may even find yourself singing it! How wonderful that would be.

Make me a channel of your peace
Where there is hatred let me bring your love
Where there is injury, your pardon Lord
And where there is doubt true faith in You

Make me a channel of your peace
Where there is despair in life let me bring hope
Where there is darkness only light
And where there’s sadness ever joy

Oh, Master grant that I may never seek
So much to be consoled as to console
To be understood as to understand
To be loved as to love with all my soul

Make me a channel of your peace
It is in pardoning that we are pardoned
It is in giving to all men that we receive
And in dying that we are born to eternal life

Oh, Master grant that I may never seek
So much to be consoled as to console
To be understood as to understand
To be loved as to love with all my soul

Make me a channel of your peace
Where there’s despair in life let me bring hope
Where there is darkness only light
And where there’s sadness ever joy

Amen

Make me a channel of your Peace (Susan Boyle version) – words and music by Sebastian Temple, St Francis of Assisi

With much love and prayers to you all

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We do hope this finds you well. It is hard to believe that we are into February!

Thank you for your continued love and support, and particularly for your prayers for new community. Community numbers continue to be an ongoing challenge for us, but we are very glad to welcome Remiel (from Hong Kong), Emily and Richard. We will be having another day of prayer in the near future and we will obviously send you the details as we would really love for you to join in.

You would be very welcome to join us for any of our hybrid or online events which you can find on our website. We are committed to continue our Wednesday 4:30pm Evening Prayer Services and thank you for the encouragements from those of you who have found them really helpful.

We wanted to remind you of the current Free Wills Network offer – please find information below from Clare:

Between January and March this year Scargill Movement is partnering again with the National Free Wills Network (NFWN). This scheme enables an individual or couple to get a simple Will written, free of charge, by a participating solicitor, near to where they live. Your details are forwarded by us to the NFWN who will provide a list of six local participating solicitors from which you can make a choice that works best for you. 

There is no obligation of course, but should you choose to leave a gift through this scheme it  would be a wonderful legacy to bless the work of Scargill Movement into the future. 

If this is of interest, please either email your name and contact details (including address) to legacy@scargillmovement.org

Or alternatively, feel free to call Clare Lambert on 01756 760515. 

Those of you who have been waiting again for Di’s reflection, here is the latest one. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Recently, we have had so many beautiful days here and the other morning was no exception except that it occurred to me how easy it is for us to see God’s beauty, glimpses of God’s glory – we are surrounded by it. BUT, oh how difficult it can be to see it in the city. It is certainly not impossible it just requires a different way of looking.

When at university in Camden I used to cycle from Hackney up and down Holloway Road, which for the most part appeared cold and dreary. Then, one day, our history tutor took us to St Pancras Station and she told us to look up, always look up. For here was our history, in the buildings and their architecture. And looking up, as well as making cycling a little more hazardous, opened for me a new perspective of God’s presence.

But looking up is only part of the story. Laura Knight, one of the most popular English artists of the twentieth century who focused on recording daily life has an exhibition in Milton Keynes which we saw last week when visiting our daughter. The blurb for one of her earlier paintings includes this quote:  ‘there was beauty in very simple things if one had eyes to see it.’

Matt Whitney, an artist I have used a few times in my Advent weekends, writes about ‘glimpses of glory’:  ‘Riding the bus forces me to wait.  It’s in these waiting moments that I seem to have glimpses of glory – kind deeds done amongst strangers crammed into an overcrowded bus, catching a sunset over the Ballard Locks, or the seemingly random flourishes of inspiration that strike me when my mind wanders. Spaces between immanence and transcendence are revealed. I have a heightened sense of spiritual awareness when I ride the bus – such an unlikely place for this to happen! Or is it?’

Martin and Rosa Up Front by Colin Bootman (2001, Oil on canvas, private collection)

You see only today I saw this painting, Martin and Rosa Up Front, in our ‘page-a-day gallery calendar 2022′, and it is sitting on our kitchen table next to me whilst I write. Surely here is a very beautiful and tender painting. Peace and warmth called out to me long before I read the title (I had to go and get my glasses!!) then the story behind the picture made it extra special, and guess what, they are sitting on a bus.

Riding the bus causes Matt Whitney to pay more careful attention, to look with undistracted eyes. Laura Knight encourages us to see beauty in the simple things of life and I pray that today all of us will catch a glimpses of God’s Glory where ever we are. God’s spirit is everywhere drawing us in, we need only to look with open eyes and hearts full of expectation. It is not about where we are but about how we look.

WIth love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This comes, as always, with much love and prayers.

We would like to thank you for joining us on the day of prayer for new community. During the day, praying in the Chapel, there was a sense of well-being – acknowledging that God very much had this in His hands. Since the day of prayer there have been some green shoots with some enquiries to join community which is looking hopeful.

Di’s reflection this week is centred around the wonder of creation, how we are so much part of it and how we are called to love it.

I have just returned from an A Rocha Partners-in-action retreat and the forthcoming COP26 in Glasgow was a major topic in our conversations. A Rocha are going to be at the conference and, needless to say, we will be holding the conference in our prayers throughout the two weeks which starts on Sunday 31st October. We will be trying our best to put reflections, prayers and updates onto our website and Facebook page.

Our next online Quiet Day is on Saturday 20th November, reflecting on Christ the King.

In the House, there are still opportunities to book residentially for:
Mon 1st – Thu 4th Nov Fuzzy Church: Exploring Gospel and Culture in the North of England
Fri 12th – Sun 14th Nov Time for Justice (also online)
Fri 12th – Sun 14th Nov Divorce Recovery Workshop
Tue 16th – Thu 18th Nov Church Leaders’ Retreat led by ReSource (also online)

Our new programme, which will take us from beginning of March to end of August 2022, should be with you by the end of November.

The Wednesday Evening Prayer Livestream services will continue for the foreseeable future.

Diane writes:

This month Glasgow will host COP26, the United Nations climate change conference. And it feels that we have reached a pivotal moment in the fight against climate change.  

So here is my aboriginal painting entitled Creation by Jeremy Devitt Wunongmurra, which I bought when visiting Phil’s sister in Australia. Placing this photo out in the garden not only brings the painting to life it also reminds us that creation is all around us. Yes even in the cities; although it was difficult to find a city backdrop in our garden! ‘God saw all that he had made, and it was very good. And there was evening, and there was morning–the sixth day.’ Genesis 1 v 31

The background of this painting is full of muted colours, really quite beautiful, and if you follow the spiral into the middle there is a flower in full bloom with its petals reaching out into the world, sadly they seem to become distorted the further out you look. Well, that’s what I can see!  The Aboriginals believe that the entire world was made by their Ancestors, way back in the very beginning of time, the Dreamtime. They have a profound spiritual connection to land. Tom Dystra an Aboriginal elder says ‘We cultivate our land, but in a different way from white man. We endeavour to live with the land; they seem to live off it’. Sadly I think this is true, hopefully this is what COP26 will try to address.

And that is not all, I remember being excited when I first unrolled the painting and saw on the back much more than I had expected. Jeremy wants to give us a sense of his rich heritage, of what makes him who he is and his paintings what they are. Jeremy “Mudjai” Devitt is descendent of the Nganyaywana, Daingutti (Dhanggatti) and Gumbainga (Gumbaynggir) nations and has English, Irish and Scottish heritage. He also tells us his skin name which is inherited at birth and forms part of a broader kinship system that spans across Australia. This kinship system dictates daily life, social relationships and responsibilities, rights to land, ceremony and Dreamings, and of course, the Aboriginal artworks they share. (ARTARK)

“Mudjai” is written in the palm of, presumably, Jeremy’s hand and in Isaiah 43 we read “Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine.” And later in Chapter 49,  ‘I (God) have written your name on the palms of my hands.’ He has called us by name and made us his very own beloved children.  I began to think what would I write? What makes me tick, what makes me who I am? Is there a rich heritage to be found? Well, for me, family is important, very important. Not only my familial family but also in knowing I belong to the family of God. Surely there can be no richer inheritance! ‘You are no longer foreigners and strangers, but fellow citizens with God’s people and also members of his household.’ Ephesians 2

And being fellow citizens brings us back to Creation. In Genesis 2 v 15 we read ‘Humans were placed in the Garden of Eden and instructed to ‘work it and take care of it’. In other words, God has given us the responsibility to act as stewards of his creation – to care for, manage, oversee and protect all that God owns. Which does not give us free licence to exploit and abuse God’s earth. No! God commissions us to rule over the creation in a way that sustains, protects, and enhances his works so that all creation may fulfil the purposes God intended for it.    

We must learn to manage the environment not simply for our own benefit but for God′s glory. Perhaps we must learn to ‘live with the land not off it.’

With much love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This, as ever, comes with much love and prayers as well as a deep gratitude for all your support during these days that continue to be challenging.

We’d like to ask you to pray alongside us on Friday 24th September as a day of prayer for new Community.

The number of applications to join Community is currently very low due to the pandemic and implications of Brexit. The current Community is around 23 and, with those who are set to be leaving during the next few months, in January 2022 the size of the community could be 18. The Community are in good heart and we have been very grateful to our Working Friends, without whom we would not be able to fulfil our gift of hospitality.

We have always believed that Scargill is about ‘lives –shared, lives-transformed’ with Jesus at the centre, and we do believe that God will bring the right people to join the Scargill adventure. Please pray with us that the Holy Spirit will be working in those people’s lives to join them to Scargill.

A YouTube resource will be available on our website to help you in your prayers – but whatever you do it will be great if you can pray for Scargill and the Community on Friday 24th September.

Our next online Quiet Day will be on Saturday 9th October and you would be very welcome to join online any of our hybrid events which you can find on our website.

It has been such a joy to be open again to guests and there is no doubt that people are encountering God and His love during their stay.

We look forward to seeing you in person, hopefully in the near future.

Di’s reflection this week explores ‘Treasure’.

Diane writes:

Well Summer is almost over and I’m still waiting for a heatwave! Yes, there have been gorgeous, warm, almost hot, still days but for the most part it feels as if the warmth was lost in dull and grey skies. So here is a picture by Kelly McNeil of her son playing on the beach (Big Beach, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia).

Kelly McNeil – ‘Discovering a Treasure’

The painting is titled, ‘Discovering a Treasure’, and shows the little boy, feet in the water, looking for something, looking for treasure.  And he seems to have found it; perhaps a beautiful shell or some seaweed, a pebble or a few minnows, he will enjoy trying to catch. Perhaps the treasure is in the enjoyment of finding and chasing it!  Perhaps not, but all are beautiful gifts from nature.

In Matthew 13, Jesus said to the crowds: ‘The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field which someone has found; he hides it again, goes off happy, sells everything he owns and buys the field’. The treasure the man found is so precious to him that it completely transforms his life.

Small treasures are there for the finding. I remember one morning, many years ago, when we had two small children under three years old. We were living in Cambridge and Phil was away on placement. Unlike this painting it was a damp, dull Autumn morning and we were walking the dog in one of the gardens. I was tired, annoyed and possibly a little resentful when our eldest cried ‘Mummy come here, come and see the flower’. Over I trudged and saw her standing there with a late blooming flower in her hand (sorry, yes she had picked it) and a wonderful smile on her face. I too smiled, the day was transformed, was there even a hint of sunshine? Rachel had found one of God’s treasures and I have never forgotten it.

This morning Phil reminded me of another treasure – the Holy Spirit that strengthens us from within. As we listened to this song by Alistair MacLean I was struck by the many similarities with my story.

Even though the day be laden
and my task dreary
and my strength small,
a song keeps singing in my heart.
For I know that I am Thine.
I am part of Thee.
Thou art kin to me,
and all my times are in Thy hand.

As we journey on into Autumn can we have expectant hearts to see the treasures God has already prepared for each of us. 

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We have just finished three weeks of Summerfest, and it has been such a joy to welcome guests back, to hear the sound of young people and wonderfully see how God has been blessing many on their return back to Scargill. Thank you for your continued prayers, love and support – it means a great deal to us.

We continue to offer online quiet days and our next one is on Saturday 4th September which I will be leading around the theme of, ‘Jesus: the Bread of life’. Do book – we’d love to see you through the wonder of Zoom. There are plenty of space on our other online and hybrid events (online tickets). See here for further details of online events in September and October:

Sat 4th September:
Quiet Day on Zoom led by Phil Stone

Tue 14th to Thu 16th September:
Encounters with God led by Phil Stone and Dave Hopwood 

Mon 20th to Thu 23rd September:
Ten by Eight led by John Bell

Sat 9th October:
Quiet Day on Zoom led by Scargill Community

Tue 19th to Fri 22nd October:
Enneagram 1: God-shaped people led by Margi Walker 

We are continuing with our Wednesday Livestream Evening Prayer services from Wednesday 8th September (there is not one on Wednesday 1st September)- which you can pick up on our YouTube channel.

Please do look at our Autumn in-house programme, which is booking well.

I would like to highlight for Church Leaders: Fuzzy Church led by Elli Wort and Nigel Rooms – Mon 1st to Thu 4th November – which is based on their new book looking at the Gospel and Culture in the North of England.

For those of you who want to develop their understanding about Justice, I recommend the course Fri 12th to Sun 14th November, funnily enough it is called Time for Justice.

Below is Di’s latest reflection about fitting in and green noses!

Diane writes:

‘If only I had a green nose’ the title of a Max Lucado story and what a brilliant way to start a reflection? The blurb for ‘If only I had a green nose’ tells us a green nose is the latest trend and everyone wants one, everyone wants to fit in, but the colour kept changing and soon ‘Punchinello and his buddies had so many layers of paint on their noses they couldn’t remember what they really looked like.They had been trying to fit in but now returned to Eli because they just wanted to be themselves.’  

Trying to fit in! Now isn’t that what I have been secretly trying to do most of my life? I have wanted to be slimmer, taller, sportier, wear the right clothes, say the right things etc. etc. And although it wasn’t necessarily true, I often felt ‘left out’ and I still think people don’t really understand me, but of course that’s because I am such a unique person or maybe it’s because I don’t let them!

Now, I knew there was a poem out there somewhere about being ourselves and Shaun kindly sent me it, “Warning” by Jenny Joseph also known as “When I Grow Old, I Shall Wear Purple” which was penned in 1961 at the age of twenty-nine! On the surface a light-hearted poem until you start reflecting, especially at my age, and mulling over what is really being said!

Warning  [by Jenny Joseph]
When I am an old woman I shall wear purple
With a red hat which doesn’t go, and doesn’t suit me.
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
And satin sandals, and say we’ve no money for butter.
I shall sit down on the pavement when I’m tired
And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
And run my stick along the public railings
And make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
And pick flowers in other people’s gardens
And learn to spit.

You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat
And eat three pounds of sausages at a go
Or only bread and pickle for a week
And hoard pens and pencils and beermats and things in boxes.

But now we must have clothes that keep us dry
And pay our rent and not swear in the street
And set a good example for the children.
We must have friends to dinner and read the papers.

But maybe I ought to practise a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple

About this poem J R Milson wrote “I hear her speaking to each of us, male or female, in an ode to nonconformity, one of my personal favourite rants and topics.   In a humorous, tongue-in-cheek and fun way, Jenny Joseph conveys a serious message for all, to never take ourselves too seriously or lose the twinkle in our eyes.” I will certainly continue to wear my bright red pinafore dress with pride!

Thankfully fitting in is perhaps the opposite to where following Christ will lead us. Did Jesus ever fit in with the world? No, and neither will His followers. We were never meant to fit in with the crowd. 1 Peter 2:9 tells us ‘But you are God’s chosen and special people. You are a group of royal priests and a holy nation. God has brought you out of darkness into his marvellous light. Now you must tell all the wonderful things that he has done”.

We have been called to stand out, to be different in this world where God is often put aside. To be the one to show an alternative way of living, one that shares the love of God, and draws others in –  perhaps with a twinkle in our eyes, whatever the colour of our noses. 

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We do hope this finds you well as we navigate through these challenging, and sometimes confusing, days.

We are very thankful to God for being able to be open since the beginning of June and the feedback has been wholeheartedly positive. It has been lovely to watch how God has gently worked in people’s lives.

We are now readying ourselves for Summerfest with reduced numbers yet open to all that God has for us and hopefully with plenty of fun and laughter!

Our livestreamed Evening Prayer services will resume this coming Wednesday 4th August at 4:30pm and they will continue through Summerfest.

We are delighted to say that the new Programme will be released today. It covers events through to February 2022 and we are very pleased with the variety of events and speakers you have to choose from. You can obviously find it on the website, and those of you who signed up for a paper copy will have one coming through your letter box.

The Programme is not as full as it has been in the past as this reflects the size of the Community, which remains small, but also the desire to care for our guests and Community as we continue to navigate through the Pandemic. We look forward so much to welcoming you again through our doors.

We still long for new Community members so would you continue to pray for us and spread the word. Thank you! Details of how to join Community are on our website.

Below is Di’s reflection on Friendship. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Do you remember playing with your shadow? I still enjoy playing shadows with our grandchildren, and I particularly enjoy those shadows that make me look tall and willowy. 

I first met Cathy in 1975 when I started my SRN training at Charing Cross Hospital. Since then we have remained firm friends. This week we met Cathy and her husband for the first time in 18 months at Nostell Priory. In many ways nothing had changed, we looked much the same, yet so much had changed and not just due to COVID but also because life goes on regardless. We stood for a while just ‘being’ together, no words, no action, just being close.

Di’s photo of the shadows of herself and friends

Later as we stood on a bridge I saw our shadows – a good photo opportunity perhaps?  I took the photo, rather hurriedly before we moved on, using my phone – oh how I miss holding the old camera up to my eye! Anyway, the shadows began to represent our friendship.  You see shadows are always there whether we can see them or not, as are good friends. The weather being extremely hot found us seeking out shaded areas to provide relief from the direct heat of the sun. The shadows of the trees provided a cool place to rest and as we sat and talked I began to think about Psalm 91 “Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty.”  Later I read that the word “dwell” means, “to take up permanent residence in.” The psalmist is reminding us to stay in God’s presence. Ephesians also reminds us that God is constructing a new Temple, a Temple not of stones, arches or pillars but of human beings because God seeks to make his home in the hearts, lives and communities of his people. And if that is the case whatever each day brings we can “rest” in the very “shadow (the very presence) of the Almighty.”   

Our daughter Ruth is watching once again the sitcom Friends. Friends is a 90’s Comedy TV show, based in Manhattan, about 6 friends who go through just about every life experience imaginable together; love, marriage, divorce, children, heartbreaks, fights, new jobs and job losses and all sorts of drama. The show starts off with each character in their 20’s, and expands over a 10 year period, as each character tries to find happiness, success and what the true meaning of a “friend” really is. What they discovered can be seen in a few short quotes from the programme

Friendship is another word for love. – …

It’s the friends you can call up at 4 a.m. that matter. – …

The only way to have a friend is to be one. – …

A friend is what the heart needs all the time. – …

The greatest gift of life is friendship, and I have received it. –

Just recently two very different friends have responded to two very different concerns, both have encouraged me to rest in God’s presence, to trust, to have hope. Both have blessed me more than they will ever know. Their shadows have been long, they have supported me from afar. Our friendships are secure. Our friends whether present in person or in shadow, whether new or old, will often help us to ‘rest in the shadow of the most high’, if would only we let them!

I’ll finish with a tweet from Conversation UN Women: ‘On Friendship Day (30th July), and every day, let’s support each other, lean on each other, believe in each other & encourage each other.’

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This, as ever, comes with much love and prayers from the Scargill Community. Many of you will be aware that we were delighted to welcome a limited number of guests back from 4th June which has been wonderful.

The feedback has been very positive, as one guest wrote:
‘I am encouraged that the Scargill Community has survived a difficult year and very much appreciate being able to come here and all the careful planning you have put in place to keep us safe. It is always good to come here and sense God’s presence in this special place. Thank you for your love and support.’

We would very much value your continued prayers for Community as our hearts’ desire is to give a warm Scargill welcome within the restrictions that we have to abide to at this time. So far it is going well!

We are very much wanting to grow the Community – and if you know of anyone who is looking to fill a gap year then please do point them in our direction.

Our next online event is a Renew Refresh Restore– Friday 16th to Sunday 18th July, which is alongside an in-house event. Please look at the website for details.

We will be continuing with our livestream Wednesday Evening Prayer service but just to give you a heads up the Community will be taking some downtime allowing for some holiday, so sadly there will not be a service on Wednesdays 21st and 28th July. We will be back livestreaming on 4th August.

We are very much working on the next programme, which we hope will be with you by the end of this month, and cover September 2021 to February 2022 events.

We are very much looking forward to welcoming you again through our doors.

Here is Di’s latest reflection. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

I have been thinking a lot about change recently. COVID hastily brought, rightly so, an enforced, sustained time of change upon us, which we were not used to. And it has, again, rightly so, been constantly changing!  Most of us are coping well, other just about, but perhaps all us feel weary. The past was much simpler!!!  Or was it?

Bob Tamsay reassures us that ‘One of life’s constants is change. Ready or not, it happens. We grow. We age. Technology reinvents each new day. Some relish change; others resist. We like it best on our terms, but don’t always have that option. Sometimes all we can do is cope with it’.  Which is perhaps where most of us are at the moment.

Picasso: 18 years old
Picasso: 25 years old
Picasso: 35 years old
Picasso: 56 years old
Picasso: 83 years old
Picasso: 90 years old

Picasso seems to have embraced change, he constantly sought out and experimented with new ideas, new techniques, new materials to work with, and created a whole range of self-portraits – the same person seen through evolving styles of art.  Here are a few of them, from mymodernart.com which in December 2016 had an article by Kelly Richman-Abdou ‘Evolution of Picasso’s Iconic Self-Portraits from Age 15 to 90’. They all reflect Picasso’s constantly changing styles and although I appreciate some more than others they all suggest, reveal something of Picasso’s personality and they are all part of his journey.  

Cinema going has been a constant part of my journey and after Faith went to see Anthony Hopkins in The Father at the Skipton Plaza, I became rather nostalgic about going to the cinema; which has certainly changed in my life time. As I child I remember two shorter full length films and the usher. The usher with her torch, showing you to your seat, identify the young couple at the back or those talking too loudly and then, in the interval striding down the aisle to serve ice-cream. I also have a vague memory of ladies wearing hats (at times so annoying) and standing for the National Anthem. Did we really do that? 

Slowly all this changed, multiplex cinemas became the thing, with small cinemas like our Skipton Plaza being the exception! They show long films, have an usher who rarely moves, heaps of popcorn, an interval after the ads and going out to get your own ice-cream. Mind you a couple of years ago we went to a cinema with sofas and the pre-order interval refreshments were brought to you. So, you see, not all change is bad.

This past year we have had to learn to embrace change, find new ways of living, that although strange and unfamiliar have become acceptable and achievable. Rick Newman wrote ‘Change can teach us to adapt and help us develop resilience, but only if we understand our own capacity for growth and learning. When change makes us better, it’s because we have learned how to turn a challenging situation to our own advantage, not merely because change happens.’

Can we look back and use the changes made for ‘the common good’, sift through them and find those that will be beneficial to keep, those that have brought about positive change and those that could be adapted for the days ahead? Here at Scargill we will keep an eye on our ‘rhythm of life’ with and without guests and continue having zoom events, often alongside residential ones – a hybrid programme apparently! And I will certainly keep up my morning exercises, shop locally or online, be more creative with cooking – thanks to our daughter and visit all our children and grandchildren as often as possible – I have sorely missed them and OH, how much they have grown and matured (well some of them!) in 15 months.

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

We do hope you are enjoying good weather, as we are, at this time. We always seem to be talking about the weather here at Scargill.

We have a few things to share with you:

We hope that you will join us for our online Evening Prayer Service which has now moved to Wednesdays (the first on 9th June) – it will be good to have you with us.

We are so glad that we have been able to receive our first residential guests but our online presence will continue. You are very welcome to join us for a Quiet Day on Saturday 26th June. There will also be some online events in July, and we will send you details in the next mailing.

We are still very much looking for new Community members, so if you know someone who may be looking for a gap year, or you know someone who may be feeling called to community, please do get in touch with us (di@scargillmovement.org).

I know that many of you have enjoyed these mailings with Di’s reflections. They will continue but will now become monthly.

Di and I have just enjoyed a week off here at Scargill where we have been welcoming some of our family to stay for the first time for over a year. Di’s reflection speaks of the joy of re-connecting with grandchildren. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Some of you may remember reading Shirley Hughes books. My favourite one for a long time has been Lucy & Tom’s Christmas which has now become a firm family favourite. It finishes with the first illustration below and these words ‘Christmas can be quite tiring as Tom gets very excited about his presents and rather cross. So he and grandpa go for a walk together in the snow, just the two of them. The sun is very big and red.’

‘Lucy and Tom’s Christmas’ by Shirley Hughes.

In other books, Alfie and Grandma are very special friends, and together they have lots of adventures! Whether it’s saving the day and finding a lost pet, or exploring indoors and out, Alfie loves being with his grandma. In the short story A Journey to the North Pole, ‘after being stuck indoors all morning relations between Alfie and his sister Annie Rose are becoming fraught so Grandma suggests they all put their waterproofs on and go for a walk in the rain’. (second  illustration). Good old grandma!

‘Journey to the North Pole’ by Shirley Hughes

‘One thing we all have in common is family. Whether large or small, near or far, dear or distant, our families and familial relationships influence who we are. Siblings and cousins are often our first friends; parents and grandparents are frequently the first people we love’.  A quote I read looking up a possible etching by John Costigan at the Whitney Museum of America. 

And families has been the focus of our recent week’s holiday with the children and grandchildren visiting – one set Friday night to Wednesday, the second from Wednesday to Sunday – with grandchildren aged from 9 weeks to 8years!!!!!!!!!!!  During the week we stayed local, the weather has been kind and generous, the sun remaining remarkably warm for most of the week – miracles still happen! And wherever we went there were grandparents like ourselves basking in the company of their children and grandchildren. Monday though, will see us back with community a little tired, well a lot really, but also very content, with a renewed sense of purpose and place.

In Proverbs 17:6 we read: ‘Children’s children are a crown to the aged, and parents are the pride of their children.’

Not sure what our children would say! BUT I can definitely say that to see one’s children’s children born into this world and have an opportunity to interact with them, to have fun with them, to laugh and listen is a pure joy which many of us have missed over the past year. It has been helpful using Zoom, WhatsApp and messenger as well as visiting castles!!! Castles have been amazing places to meet halfway for a few hours whenever lockdown has been lifted, keeping those vital links that have made this week so special.

I also know that in families, all is not necessarily well, that fractions and frictions can and do arise and that unlike Shirley Hughes stories, endings are not always happy. So let us this weekend rejoice and be thankful for the good times and pray for God’s presence in the more difficult and challenging times.   

With much love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community 

Dear Scargillians

The swifts are beginning to return to Scargill and we await the house martins to once more build their nests in the eaves, and after some days of heavy rain the sun is now shining. This week we welcome a small working party from A Rocha as we develop our sensory garden with a pond as well as doing a Bio Blitz on the Scargill Estate – all very exciting!

This past week Community members have been training to prepare for residential guests coming once more through our doors from the beginning of June, wanting to make it a joyful and welcoming experience. 

Before June, we are continuing to run online events. Two events coming up in the next couple of weeks are still available for online bookings – we’d love to see you:

Pentecost Retreat with Donna Worthington – Fri 28 to Sun 30 May

Do sign up for our online Spring Half Term Tournaquiz at 7pm on Wed 2 June – it will be lots of fun.

We will continue to have the Weekly Evening Prayer livestreamed service when residential guests return, and we have one on Thu 27 May, but this moves to Wednesdays from Wed 9 June. [We will not have a livestreamed Evening Prayer on Thu 3 June as we transition]

We are pleased to give thanks for a grant received from Allchurches Trust Hope Beyond programme to help provide and improve the equipment we need to enable us to offer our ongoing online ministry.  “Hope Beyond aims to enable churches and Christian charities to meet changing needs within their communities, helping them and the communities they support to adapt to the challenges and opportunities presented by the Coronavirus pandemic.”   See further details in our blog here: https://old.scargillmovement.org/2021/05/online-retreats-a-sacred-place/

There is much to give thanks for over this first half of 2021, and we thank you for your friendship to us over these months. We hope that we have brought a message of encouragement and hope to you over this time, and even some laughter! 

There are still lots of details to get our heads round on practicalities of opening to guests once more. In this context, Di writes today about the subject of worrying. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Recently, Shaun sent me a poem from “Swan: Poems and Prose Poems” by Mary Oliver (Beacon Press), which seems to express so eloquently my thoughts and my fears because I am a worrier, I just am. I often lay awake with anxious thoughts running around my brain. Sometimes I awake far too early for my liking, with non-urgent concerns vanishing any idea of further sleep. Then during the day all it takes is for something to be said, especially on the news or I notice a slip-up, a blunder or even an error – heaven forbid, and off I go again.  Anyway, here is the poem.

I Worried
 
I worried a lot. Will the garden grow, will the rivers
flow in the right direction, will the earth turn
as it was taught, and if not how shall
I correct it?
 
Was I right, was I wrong, will I be forgiven,
can I do better?
 
Will I ever be able to sing, even the sparrow
can do it and I am, well,
hopeless.
 
Is my eyesight fading or am I just imagining it.
am I going to get rheumatism,
lockjaw, dementia?

Finally, I saw that worrying had come to nothing.
And I gave it up. And took my old body
and went out into the morning
And sang.

Sparrows by Mostafa Keyhani

Well I probably wouldn’t sing, but I would go in the garden – if the rain has stopped, and sit with a ‘nice cup of tea’. And this poem makes me smile, puts my worries into perspective and reminds me of Jesus’ words:
‘Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? And not one of them will fall to the ground apart from your Father. But even the hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear not, therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows.’ Matthew 10:29-31

Now I know life isn’t this easy, we all have bouts of stress and anxiety, which the pandemic has only fuelled, but this Sunday, we are reminded that on the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit was poured out upon those followers of Jesus who had waited in the locked room for the Spirit, which was to give them boldness, confidence and the nerve to follow Jesus; to be empowered and encouraged to be living witnesses to a life with Christ or as one of our morning prayers says – to be companions of God.  Surely that can give us hope.

So ‘sweet dreams’ everyone and remember. ‘Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me (Jesus!).’John 14

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

As ever, this comes with much love and prayers to you all, especially as the lockdown restrictions are gradually eased.

At Scargill we feel we in a transitional space as we prepare to warmly welcome back residential guests at the beginning of June. We are so excited! The online events will continue and here is what is coming up.

We would like to warmly welcome you to our Scargill Forum on Wednesday 12th May (8-9:30pm) where Phil will be giving a short Biblical reflection as we begin to emerge into a new way of living. There will be an opportunity to ask questions, share thoughts and have fun!

Before that, on Tuesday 11th May, Mike will be leading a singing morning – ‘Finding your Voice’.

On Friday 14th and Saturday 15th May Phil will be leading two separate Quiet Days (repeated material) reflecting on the wonder of the Ascension and looking forward to Pentecost.  

Our next Crafternoon is on Saturday 22nd May 3-4pm (email hello@scargillmovement.org for the link).

From Tuesday 25th to Thursday 27th May – Di and Margi will be leading an Enneagram 3 course.

It is lovely to welcome Donna Worthington to be leading us on a Pentecost Retreat Fri 28th to Sun 30th May.

We would very much value your prayers for us as a Community on the week beginning Monday 17th May, as we have a training week to ready ourselves for residential guests.

There is much to be thankful to God for – and we are very thankful to YOU for the love and support you have given us.

Here is Di’s reflection – enjoy!

Diane writes:

Wall, walls, walls, over the last two weeks I seem to have constantly been faced by walls, so I thought I should pass them onto you! 

It began with Chloe’s morning prayers from Ephesians 2. Chloe was struck by a recurring theme of walls.  From v14 Chloe read that ‘Christ has made peace between Jews and Gentiles, and he has united us by breaking down the wall of hatred that divides us.’ More interestingly from v20 she read ‘You are like a building, with the apostles and prophets as the foundation and with Christ as the most important stone.…and you are part of that building Christ has built as a place for God’s own Spirit to live.’ Here was a metaphor of Christians, us, you and me, being the bricks that make up God’s household. Chloe, liked this idea, that we are the bricks that make up God’s dwelling place because ‘if you think about it, all bricks are important, if you take away one, you lose the integrity of the house. All the bricks are equal; there is no hierarchy, the bricks at the top are no more or less important than the bricks at the bottom, and they are all the same – no inequality, no prejudice, no exclusion: they are all just as important and just as valued’.  She finished with ‘That’s what the Church is supposed to be like anyway.’ Yes!

Prodigal Son – Sieger Koder

Then during the recent Enneagram course Margi and I led, we asked our participants to choose one of three paintings to reflect on in a meditative way. During the feedback Joce, having chosen ‘The Prodigal Son by Sieger Koder, decided to sketch it. As she sketched Joce noticed the wall jutting out towards us held her focus and attention. That the white wall formed a barrier between the elder son and his father, reinforcing the separation between the lives and characters of the sons. The elder son, jealous, serious, looks on from the outside! – He looks squeezed, thin, hands wringing together. Is this self-imposed isolation? In contrast 2/3 of the picture is of the rounded encircling figures of the younger son and his embracing father; intimate, hands and arms outstretched towards one another. Although the elder son is hidden by the wall that separates him from his father, we are drawn to his right arm resting slightly in front of the wall, perhaps hedging forwards, maybe a sign of hope or redemption – if he chooses!

I was also reading A Passion for Life written by Joan Chittister and in the Chapter ‘Rumi – Icon of wisdom’ I came across this short quote from Jeluddin Rumi, a Sufi Saint born in 1207.

‘The clear bead at the centre changes everything.
There are no edges to my loving now.                                                    
I’ve heard it said, there is a window

that opens from one mind to another.
But if there is no wall, there is no need
for fitting the window, or the latch’.

Joan Chittister went on to write ‘It’s fine to say we can open the windows to the world outside of ourselves, that we can, if we will, let the outside in, but what, Rumi asks, is the point of building walls between us to begin with?’ A good question, the poem is quite a challenge?

Saint Joseph Foster Father of Christ – Francois Jean Baptiste Benjamin Constant

And finally from my Daily Gospel -Christian Art I was given this beautiful painting ‘Saint Joseph, Foster Father of Christ’ by François-Jean-Baptiste-Benjamin Constant (1845-1902) – Wow what a name!          

 Anyway, here we see Joseph as a middle aged man, with the carpenter’s saw at his feet simply sitting next to his Son, Jesus, in his early teens. They don’t look at each other, but… they are looking ahead together… they share the same horizon and they are sitting on a wall!

Perhaps we all need to think about which wall we are sitting on, knocking down, building up or edging around?

WIth much love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

We are excited to announce that our latest Momentum, prayer letter and our residential programme (yes!) for the Summer will be coming through your letter boxes by the end of this week. Obviously, we will have limited in-house numbers as we navigate through the Covid restrictions. Our residential bookings will open on Saturday 1st May.

Meanwhile, we will continue with our online programme of events and just to highlight some in May that are available to book:

  • Tue 4 to Thu 6 May: Felicity Lawson leads ‘Walking with Jesus – Adventures on the Emmaus Road’.
  • Fri 7 to Sun 9 May: Shaun and Phil will be leading a weekend on ‘The Wisdom of Community meets Mindfulness‘.
  • Tue 11 May: Mike will be leading an online Singing morning entitled ‘Finding your voice
  • Wed 12 May: We will be having our Scargill Forum (7:45-9:30pm)
  • Fri 14 and Sat 15 May: Phil will be leading two separate Quiet Days, with repeat material.
  • Tue 25 to Thu 27 May: Margi and Di will be leading a week on ‘Enneagram 3‘.
  • Fri 28 to Sun 30 May: We are very glad to welcome Donna Worthington to lead a Pentecost Retreat weekend.
  • Watch out too for news of our online Half Term event during the week beginning 31 May.

 
We are obviously still looking for new Community, so please do check our website for further details.
 
Here is Di’s latest reflection – enjoy!

Mary Sitting in a Wood by Louis Ginett

The other day I went up to Morning prayers, there I found the table beautifully covered with daffodils and large pebbles/stones. Blue and brown fabric fell down, alongside the potted tree from the Morning room, and across the floor in front of the table in folds playing with the small gems, candles and more pebbles. We were to look at Psalm 15 – Who May Worship the Lord?

For me, and I am sure for many, Psalm 15 presents a conundrum. David describes the man ‘who may stay in God’s temple’, who may ‘live on the holy mountain of the Lord’. Now please, have a quick read because who do you know that fits these credentials? Definitely not me! 

So I chose to sit at the back, hiding behind a pillar facing the Taizé cross. As I sat and faced the cross there in front of me was God’s greatest gift –  Himself.  There was the gift of GRACE.  I knew that although I cannot perfectly live up to these standards, Jesus has, and because He has, I can, through him. I leant against the pillar, the wood was warm and surprisingly comforting, I felt at peace.

After prayers, I googled paintings of sitting by trees and found Mary Sitting in a Wood. I was drawn to the dappled light, the hint of Spring (so like Scargill), the open coat and Mary lost in her sewing, at peace and untroubled. Is there a soft cushion by her back? I do hope so, it would be rather nice if there was.  Here is a beautiful painting giving substance to my thoughts, a reminder of that rare morning; of feeling cocooned, loved, accepted and forgiven.

Watchman Nee wrote ‘For rightness is not our goal. The test of our actions is not, ‘Are they right or wrong?’ But always and only, ‘Is the divine blessing upon them?’

The divine blessing is surely upon Mary sitting in a wood and I feel certain it is upon us all, if we, with the help of the Holy Spirit and encouragement from each other, follow the example of Jesus, and seek to live the pathway of love and the kingdom. 

Please be assured of our love and prayers, and we very much look forward to seeing you either on Zoom or in-house.

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This comes with much love and Easter greetings to you. There is much to share with you as life begins to open up for us again. When I think of Easter I think of Psalm 18:19 ‘He brought me out into a spacious place, He rescued me because He delighted in me.’ The Resurrection encounter is an invitation to adventurous living!

The first thing to share with you is that we are delighted to say that we will be able to welcome Day Visitors on Saturdays and Wednesdays starting on Saturday 17th April. Please check the website here on how to book and the structure of the visit- the dates available and further details will be updated during the coming week. It will be lovely to see you again.

At the beginning of June we will be opening for a limited number of residential guests, watch out for details in the new Momentum that comes out at the beginning of May.

As we look to welcome people back through our doors, one area that we would value your prayers and support for is the need to grow Community again. We are particularly looking for community members who may want to do a gap-year and there are also other opportunities for joining community. It may be that you know people who could be the missing piece in our Scargill jigsaw. Please check out for more details here on our website or email Di on di@scargillmovement.org

We are continuing to offer our online programme, and have published details to the middle of May. Here are links for events over the next couple of weeks, do check our website for the full list.

Fri 16th to Sun 18th April We welcome back Andreas and Anna Anderssson, through the wonders of Zoom, as we explore ‘Resurrection Encounters’.

Tue 20th to Fri 23rd April  ‘Enneagram 1’ led by Margi Walker and Diane Stone (note closing date is early on Wed 14th April).

Sat 24th April ‘Quiet Day’ with Mike Leigh and Shaun Lambert looking at ‘Pathways to Stillness’

Tue 27th to Thu 29th April  ‘Messiness, Grace and Following Jesus’ led by Phil Stone and Mike Leigh

It will be a joy to see you on any of these courses!

As well as these online courses, we will continue with our Thursday Evening Prayers livestreamed at 4:30pm and our Tuesday Teaparty on Facebooklive at 3:30pm.

Our next Crafternoon is 3-3:45pm on Saturday 24th April – e-mail hello@scargillmovement.org if you would like to be involved.

And, of course, if there is anything that you would like us to pray for then do email at prayer@scargillmovement.org

There is a lot going on, so please have a good look at the website!

Here is Di’s latest reflection on Masks – enjoy!.

Here is a snapshot of a few of the masks we have at home. Last summer I made some and some came for the Community at the house. And I feel a completely irrational delight and sense of achievement whenever I go out, mainly shopping, and my mask coordinates with my clothes, I hate to say outfit as that is certainly not me!

There is a sadness at the death of Prince Philip and as I write a COVID restricted funeral is being discussed! And so we all continue to wear our masks, probably for quite some time. Whether we’re aware of it or not we will use our eyes to communicate our thoughts and feelings every single day.  You see we naturally speak with our eyes – we stare, we wink and we roll them, our eyes can show fear and surprise, joy and sadness, laughter and tears. Our eyes speak volumes about who we are and how we feel. Although if you’re anything like me you will try to hide some of your emotions, especially the negative or angry ones!

When we meet people, whether they are wearing a mask or not, Phil and I are very different. Phil will find out many details and points of interest whilst I would have had a lovely time chatting about this and that, but learning nothing! I used to think this was because I didn’t ask the right questions, possibly quite so, but perhaps there is also a time and place to listen and enjoy another’s company without intruding. You see, when we left Kensal Rise for North Yorkshire we were given a beautifully framed set of blessings by John O’Donohue, personally penned in green ink from ‘Benedictus: A Book of Blessing’. It is there in our kitchen just by the door. The blessing I am frequently drawn to, and often challenged by, says:

Remember to be kind
To those who work for you,
Endeavour to remain aware
Of the quiet world
That lives behind each face.

‘Endeavour to remain aware of the quiet world that lives behind each face’ has perhaps become an even greater challenge now with us all wearing masks. Here we are being asked to try, to strive, to attempt to understand that what we see or hear is not always the full picture. To be aware of, is not asking us to find everything out about a person, only to recognise that what we see or hear is not all the story and so to tread gently in our relationships. We are to be driven by love and grace, not inquisitiveness; with a generosity of time, embracing silence, accepting there will be unspoken words and thoughts.  It is the generosity of the heart, it is companionship.

Sr Jane once said ‘God respects each one of us as a mystery and we must do the same.’

With love and prayers from

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

This comes with much love and prayers to you all as we move into Holy Week, journeying with Jesus to the Cross and then to the wonder and joy of his Resurrection on Easter Day. We pray that during this disorientating and difficult time we will all know the joy of the Risen Lord amongst us.

Please do check out our website for our Holy Week reflections and other livestreamed Easter events, if you would like to journey with us. On the website there is also information of events for Families and Young people, including a cook-along!

We will be having our usual Tea Party on Tuesday 30th March, and a special Tea Party on Easter Sunday 4th April – both from 3:30pm on Facebooklive.

The week beginning 5th April, the whole Community will be having a week of holiday therefore the Office will be closed during this time and re-open on Monday 12th April.

On the website you will see some post-Easter events for you to book onto: with Bridget and Adrian Plass; and (Zooming in from Sweden) we have Anna and Andreas Andersson. There is also an Enneagram 1 course (available to book now) led by Margi and Di, and on 24th April there will be a Zoom Quiet Day (watch out for further details to be released).

Here is Di’s Holy Week reflection on washing feet – enjoy!

Diane writes:

Over the last year in my reflections, I have written a number of words and included many paintings and poems but today I leave the words to a woodblock by Sadao Watanabe called, ‘Christ Washing the Feet of St. Peter’ and a poem entitled, ‘I Wash Your Feet Just Because’. Both surprised and challenged me – in a good way! I hope they will do the same for you.

This woodblock is said to be one of his best and reminds me of mediaeval book illuminations. The print, with its ‘harmony of colours’ has been described as ‘a bold and impressive rendering of John 13:6-11’. The strong lines, the elongated hands, fingers and toes plus the large eyes of Jesus highlight the importance of this symbolic act.  For me, the surprise is the hovering Holy Spirit up in the corner – is Jesus being honoured and blessed as he honours and blesses others. I’ll leave you to find the surprise in the poem.

Sadao Watanabe – Christ Washing the Feet of St Peter

I WASH YOUR FEET JUST BECAUSE                                                                             
In the middle of the meal –
not when they came in the door
not before the meal –
but in the middle of the meal
 
Jesus fell on his knees
and washed their feet,
not even looking up
to see which foot goes with which face!
He washed them all, one by one.
 
He washes the feet of all of us,
believers and unbelievers,
old and young,
saints and sinners,
women and men,
rulers and ruled,
rich and poor,
filled and hungry,
dressed and naked.
 
Can it be possible that Jesus washed                  
The feet not because they were dirty
but just because …
 
”I want to wash your feet                                          
because I want to wash your feet.
For no other reason except
that I love you.”
  
[Author unknown, seen on A-MUSED]
 
We pray you have a blessed Easter.   
With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community  

Dear Scargillians

As ever, this comes with much love and prayers from the Community here at Scargill. We long to see you again through our doors, and we are so grateful that we can mutually support each other during these difficult and for many, exhausting days. St. Paul talks about carrying each other’s burdens (Galatians 6) and thank you for love during this time that seems just to drag on and on. Please contact us at prayer@scargillmovement.org if we can pray for you in any way. 

If the Government’s road map is able to keep on track, we look forward to welcoming day visitors again soon after April 12th, and in early June a limited number of residential guests to begin with. Please keep checking out our website where we will inform you of these exciting possibilities.

On our website, you will find our latest online offerings that are coming up which could be encouraging for you during these times. Check them out here. They include: 

This coming Saturday, at 7pm on Saturday 20 March, come and join a free-to-view concert by our wonderful friend Simeon Wood livestreamed especially for the whole band of Scargillians (expected run time 1 hour):

The “Feeling Good” show – Simeon Wood
As the title suggests an uplifting, inspiring, happy and thought provoking show full of hope and packed with music taken from Simeon’s latest album.

Performed live on YouTube. Link: https://youtu.be/Ic1NWh1e59s

[Further descriptive details will be put on the Home page of Scargill website later this week]

This coming week Bishop Chris Edmondson invites you to join him in looking at ’Finding hope when it feels in short supply’, Tue 16 to Thu 18 March.  

Mike Leigh and Shaun Lambert are looking at ‘Finding our voice – mindfulness and song’, Fri 19 to Sun 21 March. There are still a few spaces left if you would like to book.

Margi Walker will be leading us in a Palm Sunday themed Quiet Day ‘Journeying into Holy Week‘ on Saturday 27th March on Zoom.

We will also be offering an online programme over Easter so please look out for details. This will include Holy Week morning reflections on Zoom, livestreamed services and a film of the powerful Good Friday ‘Walkaround’ along with an Easter Sunday afternoon Tea Party on Facebooklive.

Following the success of February Half Term, we’re going to have an ‘Edible Easter Garden’ cook-along for the youngsters (or young at heart) on Holy Saturday (3rd April) at 2:30pm on Zoom. Information about how to book for this, along with other resources to help families engage with Holy Week, will appear on our website programme page later this week.

As we begin to look forward, there are a few ways in which you can help us with spreading the word about Scargill:

  • As the roadmap to end lockdown offers the possibilities of opening our doors again to actual guests, rather than virtual guests, our presence on social media is vital to communicating our values, programme and friends. If you are on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram please do follow us and like or repost our content as we move forward!
  • Follow us on Twitter via @ScargillHouse; follow us on Facebook via @Scargillmovement; and Instagram via @scargill movement.

Also, we’re updating our mailing list. Please could you email hello@scargillmovement.org with your latest contact details if you’re a Scargill Companion (have said the Companion promises, received your badge and are following the Scargill Pathway). Thank you!

Do know that you are warmly welcomed to join us online weekly for our fun Tuesday Teaparties on Facebooklive at 3:30pm, and our reflective Evening Prayers livestreamed from Scargill Chapel on Thursdays from 4:30pm.

Thank you again for journeying with us.

Here is Di’s reflection, enjoy!

Diane writes:

Did you know that in the Middle Ages mothering was apparently multifaceted, complex and difficult — rather like today, and intellectuals compared it to the very work of God. I wholeheartedly agree!

It feels that Mother’s Day has been part of the church calendar for ever, daffodils and all but ‘Nooo’ you hear me cry, not at all. Traditionally this Sunday has been a day of celebration, within the sombre period of Lent to celebrate the Church as mother of the faithful. It was considered important for people to return home to their ‘mother’ church once a year – the church you were baptised in, the local parish church or the nearest cathedral. Domestic servants were given the day off and so inevitably this became an occasion for family reunions.  I have often looked forward to and enjoyed this day with family and friends, lots of fun and offers of help! But alas, we remain unable to visit or be visited by family or friends and not all churches are open for worship. Oh, it would be so easy to just let the day go by!

But last Sunday I spoke on The Ten Commandments where I was reminded that our first duty after our obedience to God is within the family and only then can we consider our obligation to other people.  Family and Judaism for me have always gone together, so I wasn’t surprised to learn that scholars have partially credited the survival of Judaism to the importance and value they place on the family. In Jewish families, parents and children are responsible for each other as a way of honouring God. Parents are seen as partners in God’s creation of each human being, so to honour one’s parents is to honour God. We are called to honour our parents.

Jesus & the Samaritan Woman by He Qi

Samuel Johnson, (A Dictionary of the English Language -1755) defined honour as having several senses, the first of which was “nobility of soul, magnanimity, and a scorn of meanness”. I was struck by the definitions, certainly worth thinking about! This quote led me to ‘Jesus-&-the-Samaritan-Woman’ painted by He Qi through Patrick van der Vorst’s reflection on a different painting / same subject, where he talks about Jesus seeing the Samaritan women as a person and approaching her as a person. That Jesus acknowledges her as an equal and treats her with sensitivity and openness. Is this honouring others? If so Patrick van der Vorst’s goes on to mention ‘that words of openness, kindness and encouragement can bring about daily resurrections of hope in people’. How good it that?

As well as showing me how important families are and how bereft I have felt not being able to meet ours, other than on zoom, this past year has also confirmed in me, that family values are wider than just family. That perhaps living community is living family values, where ever we are. So let’s not forget Mothering Sunday, I certainly won’t – I have a small parcel sitting in the kitchen with Mama Stone written on it! Let us, me included, also use this day to look to others, honouring one another with our time and commitment, with generosity of heart towards all we meet or have contact with.  And in doing so, by honouring our families and neighbours, we will also be honouring God.

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This week we have had hopeful and encouraging news! The Government laid out their roadmap to bring us out of lockdown, subject to conditions at every stage. So, if this goes to plan, we will reopen to residential guests in early June. To begin with, it will be for a limited number of guests but, at last, we can see some light at the end of this very long tunnel – how life-giving and warming is that. Thank you for the journey that we have shared, and continue to share, through this time together. It gives us hope.

By the beginning of May, we will publish a programme that will take us through the Summer, at this point we will start taking bookings for these residential stays. In July another programme will be released which will take us through to the end of the year!

In the meantime, we will continue to offer an online programme and in the new post-lockdown world Scargill will continue to offer an online presence alongside residential events.

The online programme until Palm Sunday is on our website, and we will soon be releasing details of what it looks like for Easter and beyond.

We would like to highlight a few of the events coming up – we would love to see you online:
‘Heal the Land’ next week led by Russ Parker – Tuesday 2nd to Thursday 4th March
‘Quiet Days’ (same content on each day) led by Phil Stone and Mike Leigh – Friday 5th and Saturday 6th March
Dust and Glory’ – Lent Retreat led by David Runcorn – Tuesday 9th to Thursday 11th March
‘Scargill Forum’ – Wednesday 10th March
‘Younger than Springtime’ led by Adrian and Bridget Plass – Friday 12th to Sunday 14th March
Additionally – Scargillians are invited to a free special online concert put on for us by Simeon Wood at 7pm on Saturday 20th March. The link for this, and more details, will be publicised nearer the time.

I hope that you enjoy Di’s hopeful reflection.

Diane writes:

“Yours, LORD, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the majesty and the splendour, for everything in heaven and earth is yours. Yours, LORD, is the kingdom; you are exalted as head over all.”
1 Chronicles 29:11

February always feels like a long month that drags on at the best of times, not much happens except perhaps the start of Lent!  But last weekend I went for my COVID vaccination, a very pleasant experience, in fact the highlight of the week / month. The icing on the cake was driving back home listening to Karl Jenkins’ “The Armed Man – a Mass for Peace – Benedictus” being played on Classic FM. As I listened I, quite unusually for me, became aware of the goodness of God, of a deep inner peace and a sense that ’all shall be well, all manner of things shall be well’. (Julian of Norwich)

Then on Monday, following rumours and speculations, the plan forward was laid before us, it was going to be a slow move out of lockdown. Excellent News of course, but there were also anxious thoughts and uncertainty about what the future might hold, how do we leave the safety of our homes, however small and begin again to meet friends and family without fear?  

So what should I write about this week?  Well instead of a painting I found two poems that excited me and gave me hope. One written in 1860 and the other in 2020. Emily Dickinson wrote ‘“Hope” is the Thing with feathers’ 160 years ago and it still speaks to us today, well to me anyway!

“Hope” is the thing with feathers –
That perches in the soul –
And sings the tune without the words –
And never stops – at all –

And sweetest – in the Gale – is heard –
And sore must be the storm –
That could abash the little Bird
That kept so many warm –

I’ve heard it in the chillest land –
And on the strangest Sea –
Yet – never – in Extremity,
It asked a crumb – of me.

Emily Dickinson’s poem has been described as a kind of hymn of praise, written to honour the human capacity for hope. Recently I read (‘writers-on-line’) ‘If ever there was a poem that reminds us not to give up hope, it’s this one – hope can take flight even in the darkest of times, and if that tiny brave bird can keep singing, then so can we’. The poem portrays hope as a bird that lives within the human soul, that dwells inside the human spirit and sings a wordless tune come rain or shine, gale or storm, good times or bad; not stopping under any circumstances. This ‘tiny brave bird’, for me, is the Holy Spirit, often seen as a dove! God’s Spirit that keeps me in tune with His grace, truth, goodness, mercy, justice, knowledge, power, majesty –  all that He is.  Paul reminds us (Corinthians & Romans) that Christ isn’t outside of us as some kind of Helper in our time of need. No he actually lives in us and is with us all the time. ‘…that the Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit, that we are children of God’.   

I smiled when I read this second poem ‘The Orange’ by Wendy Cope and remembered Sister Jane’s quote Humour is near to holiness, and love to laughter” and that a good healthy laugh relieves tension and stress and so allows us to hope. Many of us will be able to recognise ourselves in this amusing and in many ways light hearted poem.  But, at its core, this poem holds a deep truth for all of us. It shows us how to make the most of the small, quiet pleasures, such as sharing a fruit with loved ones and that these small pleasures enable us to get through difficult times. The poem ends with counting the biggest blessings – love, life itself (and of course laughter) – as a reminder of what is really important. And both these poems remind us of the power of hope and how little it requires of us, it is a gift freely given by God.

The Orange
At lunchtime I bought a huge orange –
The size of it made us all laugh.
I peeled it and shared it with Robert and Dave
They got quarters and I had a half.

And that orange, it made me so happy,
As ordinary things often do
Just lately. The shopping. A walk in the park.
This is peace and contentment. It’s new.

The rest of the day was quite easy.
I did all the jobs on my list
And enjoyed them and had some time over.
I love you. I’m glad I exist. 

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

This week has been really cold, and snow still covers the hills around us, but we are now starting to see many snowdrops – the promise of spring, as they are a sign of hope.

It has been a joy and a comfort to connect with you during these challenging times, and we are glad to announce our next programme which takes us up to Palm Sunday weekend. Please do have a look, you will find both short retreats and programmed events, as well as our regular Forum and Quiet Days. We are very thankful to work with such speakers as Bridget and Adrian PlassBishop Chris EdmondsonDavid Runcorn and Russ Parker.

This coming week is Half Term which is always the most challenging of them all, and never more so than it is during lockdown. So, please do look up our Half Term activities based on C.S. Lewis’ ‘Voyage of the Dawn Treader’ – there are plenty of fun activities to be involved in including a cook-along.

We had our first Crafternoon this weekend, which people really enjoyed, and our next one is going to be on Saturday 27th February at 3pm. Please e-mail hello@scargillmovement.org if you would like to be involved.

Last year we journeyed through Lent through the first lockdown, and here we are, a year later, starting Lent in lockdown 3. Who would have thought?

Below is Di’s reflection as we approach Ash Wednesday. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

” Ash Wednesday” by Carl Spitzweg

Can you believe it? Lent starts this week with Shrove Tuesday and Ash Wednesday, so perhaps we should be thinking about depriving ourselves of some small pleasure or indulgence and offer that sacrifice up to God.

Here is a painting by Carl Spitzweg entitled “Ash Wednesday”. At first glance the painting and the title do not seem to match. Here is a ‘mardi-gras’ clown sitting in a prison cell after a nights revelling. He has perhaps woken up to the painful reality of pushing the spirit of Mardi Gras a bit too far and gets to spend Ash Wednesday in jail. The downcast carnival clown is seated in the corner of a cell with head bent and arms crossed. There is no clowning around here! No laughing at life or ignoring of the rules. Despondent perhaps but there is also hope. The clown is bathed in light from an upper window; perhaps this prison cell has ‘become a place of retreat, repentance, and conversion’. The dark archway, directly across from the clown, shows us where he has come from however the window above lets in the light, and the rays point the way upward, inviting the clown towards a change of direction from darkness to light. (Daniella Zsupan-Jerome on Loyolapress)

As a child I was brought up attending our lively Congregational church, I have no memories of either a Shrove Tuesday or Ash Wednesday service, although warm memories of eating many pancakes – with lemon and sugar, of course! And we did often talk about ‘giving something up’ for Lent; I have to admit mine often contained a ‘figure changing’ element rather than a spirit enhancing one!  But it has occurred to me that during this past year we as individuals and as a nation have already given up so much that it would be difficult to think how this tradition would be of any benefit.

Thinking about this the bridegroom passage from Matthew 9 came to mind where Jesus says to his disciples “How can the guests of the bridegroom mourn while he is with them?”, as I have mentioned in an earlier reflection ‘God is not elsewhere’, that must in turn mean that God is here with us right now, so perhaps this is not the time to fast. Perhaps this Lent is the time to become aware of the bridegroom’s presence through spending time with Him, quality time, getting to know him, getting to recognise His presence.  

And I’m thinking (again), can we, like the clown, have a change of direction, but unlike the clown can we move from a penitential Lent, to one where we are free to treat ourselves, free to be kind to ourselves and free to invite God into our lives. Because God cares for our souls, but he also cares about our bodies and physical welfare. Our bodies are given to us to do God’s work. As Christians taking caring of our bodies is therefore taking care of the place where the Holy Spirit dwells (Patrick van der Vorst -12.2.21).  As we open up time to spend with God we can begin to open our hearts, our whole selves and our whole lives back to Him. And surely this is what Lent is all about.

P.S. Phil has just read this and rejoices that chocolate remains a possibility!!

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians
 
This comes as ever with much love and prayers. I would imagine that the majority of us are struggling with this lockdown, particularly as we are having a proper Winter, today at Scargill we have had some more snow. But we do have some online events which we hope will be a light in the darkness as we meet together ‘virtually’. This week is busy with opportunity!
 
This coming Monday we are very pleased to have a Quiet Day led by Mat Ineson, there is still time to book, and if you miss Monday Mat will be doing a repeat of the content on Saturday’s Quiet Day.
 
Also on Monday, we are also delighted that Gordon Dey will be beginning an eight week course on The World of Jesus, running 7-9pm. There is still time to book.
 
Tuesday to Thursday: Dave Hopwood and I are leading a retreat on ‘The Voice and Silence of God’. I am very tempted to have one of the sessions where we are silent together! There is still space and we’d love to see you.
 
Our Enneagram 2 course with Margi Walker and Diane Stone begins on Tuesday 9th February.
 
Our monthly Scargill Forum will be on Wednesday February 10th, 7:45 for 8-9:30pm, which has become a real joy to meet with fellow Scargillians, to have some fun and think theologically over the issues we are facing.
 
We are very pleased to announce ‘Crafternoons’ a new opportunity to connect with other Scargillians and the Scargill Community over your favourite craft, jigsaw or knitting on a Saturday afternoon from 3-4pm. The initial two dates are Saturdays 13th and 27th February. If you wish to come along to this Zoom event then do email hello@scargillmovement.org for details. We’d love to see you.
  
The final thing to mention is our online Half Term event (week beginning 15th February)  based on ‘The Dawn Treader’ by C.S. Lewis. There will be a number of fun activities for all ages – watch out for further details.
 
Thank you to those who have used recycle4charity envelopes to send spent Printer cartridges off for recycling, raising money for Scargill. These envelopes are no longer valid, so please send your spent printer cartridges to Scargill Admin Team for sending on as a batch.
 
Here is Di’s reflection on one of J.M.W. Turner’s wonderful paintings. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

Now, when did you last sing – ‘Jesus bids us shine’?

Jesus bids us shine
With a pure, clear light,
Like a little candle,
Burning in the night.
In this world is darkness,
So let us shine–
You in your small corner,
And I in mine……………………

It possibly wasn’t in 1868 when it was written by Susan Warner! Faith and I both recall singing it in Sunday School whilst my children, now all in their 30’s, have never heard of it!  But we have all read and know the passage from Matthew 5:13-16 where Jesus said, ‘You are like salt for everyone on earth……. You are like a light for the whole world……Make your light shine, so that others will see the good that you do and will praise your Father in heaven.’ In my Bible I have written (in pencil) How? Why?

‘Snow Storm – Steam-Boat off a Harbour’s Mouth’ by JMW Turner

Well, a few weeks ago there was chaos in Washington as Trump supporters stormed the Capitol and forced the lockdown of Congress BUT this was followed by Joe Biden’s inauguration where a young woman of colour, wearing a long, gorgeous, warm, yellow coat, read her amazing poem giving hope, not only to Americans, but across the world.  Amanda Gorman’s poem, ‘The Hill We Climb’ concluded with these words:

“When day comes we step out of the shade,
aflame and unafraid
The new dawn blooms as we free it
For there is always light,
if only we’re brave enough to see it
If only we’re brave enough to be it”

This got me thinking, firstly, ‘are we ‘brave enough to see it’? Can we see the light in our present darkness? Some of us may be able to, others will find it more difficult, and I started to look for a painting that would hold and support these thoughts. First I found this quote from Dorothy Koppelman who wrote, ‘Magnificently, in the paintings of J. M. W. Turner, there is a light so blazing and so deep, one can almost be completely absorbed – and always, too, there is that blackness.’

And so, ‘Snow Storm – Steam-Boat off a Harbour’s Mouth’ painted in 1842 by Joseph Mallord William Turner (The Tate) has become my picture of the week.  As I looked at the painting, ‘The swirling storm’ encouraged my eyes ‘to circle around the canvas repeatedly’ – in fact at one point I felt a little queasy, never having been a good sailor! Anyway, I noticed ‘The black of the wind and the waves of the sea create a circle around the doomed ship. Through the windy peephole, (you) can see the helpless ship at the mercy of nature’s violent motion.’  BUT within the chaos of the storm there is light. In fact, it was the bright light that drew me to the ship in the middle of the canvas.

Although we, today, may feel powerless against the storm of the virus with numbers of UK deaths reaching 100,000, Amanda has reminded us ‘there is always light’. So let us look for the light, let us look towards the hope we have in the vaccination program and the falling numbers of cases, let us look and see Spring is on its way, ‘Aslan is on the move’, let us begin to see there is light at the end of the tunnel.

Often in order to be brave enough to see the light there needs to be those who are ‘brave enough to be it’ encouraging those who currently can’t see.  Susan Warner almost urges us to shine ‘in (our) small corners’ and Matthew 5 encourages us to make our light shine for others to see. You may like me ask ‘How’? Well just now after walking Ossie I met a delivery man, we greeted each other and then I mentioned the miserable weather, his cheerful response agreed then he added ‘but it’s what you make of it! Have a lovely day’ and left with a smile on both our faces.

So today I want to inspire us all to ‘be brave enough to be it’, ‘be brave enough to look for it’, ‘be brave enough to see it’.  Remember there is always light.

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

We continue to pray for you and please be assured of our love as we live through this latest lockdown. We are very aware that for many of us it is very challenging.

It has been a real joy this weekend to link up with Scargill Companions and, though we did not need to be reminded again, we recognise how important it is to connect with one another and the encouragement we can give and receive. We all need building up during this time.

It would be lovely to connect with you and our Scargill Programme is available on our website.

I would like to highlight three of the events: We are delighted that Shaun Lambert will be Zooming in to speak on, Redeeming the Present Moment. Shaun is a great friend to Scargill, an excellent speaker and practitioner on Christian Mindfulness. I would truly recommend this week if you happen to be free.

Next weekend is a ‘Friends’ Weekend – so that is open to all of you! Mike, our Chaplain, will be leading some reflections with his usual humour and insight.

I would also like to highlight the Individually Guided Retreat (Tuesday 26th to Friday 29th January) led by a Scargill Team.

The Scargill Pantomime, which we were working on before Christmas, is now released. I do hope it brings a smile to your face (also available on Scargill Home Page). The Community had fun producing it, we hope that comes through!

As always, you can join us for our Tea Party on Tuesdays at 3:30pm, and our Thursday Evening Prayers at 4:30pm.

So, here is Di’s reflection thinking about ‘loving yourself’. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

When I started writing these reflections I never thought I would quote from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, but I am. On recently reading ‘The Servant Queen and the King she serves, a tribute for her Majesty’s 90th birthday’, I was struck by how Christ centred her Christmas messages to the nation have been. Under the heading Love your Neighbour, towards the end of the book, Her Majesty is quoted from her 1975 Christmas message:

‘He (Jesus) commanded us to love our neighbours as we love ourselves, but what exactly is meant by ‘loving ourselves’?  A good question, and one which a few years ago I would have found difficult to answer? In fact, it may well have been a question I would rather not answer, as I really didn’t know what to say. Surely it should be “God first. Others second. Myself third!’  

But when the teachers of the law ask Jesus, “What is the greatest commandment?” he responds,  ” ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbour as yourself’ ” (Matt. 22:37-38).  Here, loving God remains at the top of the list, but love of neighbour and self are inextricably related. In fact, Jesus’ command implies that we will know how to love our neighbour only if we properly love ourselves.

“God is love.” (1 John 4:16) and “Beloved” means to be greatly loved. No one can love us like God. God spoke the world into existence with love, Jesus is the greatest expression of God’s love and, through the Holy Spirit, God’s great love lives in us. We are His beloved children, undeserving of His love yet chosen to not only receive it but to also pass it on; to live God’s love out in our communities and day to day encounters. And, although I think many of us find it hard to believe, ‘scripture clearly states that God sees us as His beloved, His beautiful sons and daughters who are adored, loved and chosen. To love ourselves, means recognising and accepting that God freely loves us, as we are and who we are, that we do have God given gifts and talents and whilst we’ll never be perfect this side of heaven, we are perfectly made in His image for His purpose’ (Anna Currin). It is through accepting that we are loved, that we can begin to love ourselves (as we are and who we are) and are then able to love our neighbours, out of a love filled with grace, forgiveness, compassion and empathy; having hearts open to hear and eyes open to see that God’s love is alive and active.

Which is perhaps what the Dalai Lama was also saying when he wrote, ‘If you don’t love yourself, you cannot love others. You will not be able to love others. If you have no compassion for yourself then you are not capable of developing compassion for others.’

The Queen’s answer was also about believing in oneself, recognising that we do have abilities, gifts and talents and using them for the good of others. “I believe it means trying to make the most of the abilities we have been given, it means caring for our talents. It is a matter of making the best of ourselves, not just doing the best for ourselves. We are all different, but each of us has his own best to offer. The responsibility for the way we live life with all its challenges, sadness and joy is ours alone. If we do this well, it will also be good for our neighbour.”

Her Majesty asks us to try our best, our community promises end with ‘ …with God’s help ….. I promise to try my very best to follow the example set by Jesus …’, it is what God asks of all of us. So, knowing we are beloved, can we try to be the very best we can, can we love our neighbours as we love ourselves, and see where that takes us?

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

This comes with much love and prayers as we begin this New Year. Since we were last in touch, the situation has become more challenging. We will continue to do our very best to keep connected with you in a number of ways:

  • Our Tea Party will resume this coming Tuesday 5th January at 3:30pm.
  • On Wednesday 6th January we have our evening Forum as we celebrate Epiphany (7:45pm for 8-9:30pm).  
  • On Thursday 7th January we will be livestreaming our Evening Prayer at 4:30pm.
  • Our January Quiet Day is being run twice, on Friday 8th and Saturday 9th January. This will be led by Mike and Phil and have an Epiphany theme.

Please look at our website where you will find a number of online events that are planned to the middle of February. We very much look forward to seeing you.

Below is Di’s reflection on a wonderful word that I have never heard before. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

I am hesitant to wish your all ‘A Happy New Year’, but I do pray that we will all, very soon, be able to glimpse a light at the end of the tunnel and that for all of us 2021 will hold moments of happiness.

Listening to Classic FM over Christmas, I was introduced to the word ‘confelicity’. It is a much-underused word, which has a lovely ring to it and one which I certainly have neither heard nor read before. Anyway the radio broadcaster was very excited because confelicity means ‘delight in someone else’s happiness’ and ‘participation in the joy of others’. Which reminded me of a great friend of ours called Felicity.  She is absolutely someone who relishes life and has great pleasure when those around her are enjoying themselves. Now surely this is a word that should be in common parlance? So why isn’t it?

Well I’ve no idea. But when I looked up confelicity the German word ‘Schadenfreude’ kept appearing.  Now Schadenfreude means the complete opposite: “joy over some harm or misfortune suffered by another”.  The Japanese have a similar saying: “The misfortune of others tastes like honey” and the French speak of “joie maligne”, a diabolical delight in other people’s suffering and I could go on, but instead let me mention that there has never really been an equivalent word in English for which there is surely only one possible conclusion: as a journalist in the Spectator asserted in 1926, “There is no English word for schadenfreude because there is no such feeling here.”

Really? What utter nonsense! Do we not delight in Laurel and Hardy and Tom and Jerry or as Mr Bennet in that most essentially English of novels, Pride and Prejudice, declares “For what do we live but to make sport for our neighbours, and laugh at them in our turn?” And I’m sure like a German study carried out in 2015 our football fans smile more quickly and broadly when their rival teams miss a penalty than when their own team scores! More seriously though, do we not, like the media, seem to delight in the misfortunes of others?

Cartoon by Henry Scarpelli from ‘The Laurel and Hardy Magazine’ archive

But I digress, what has this got to do with confelicity? Well perhaps we can overthrow Schadenfreude. Can our New Year resolutions be to ‘try our very best’ to live the values of confelicity each day. To make the word commonplace, common parlance even. And I am sure as we ‘delight in someone else’s happiness’ and ‘participate in the joy of others’ we too will feel the warmth of God’s happiness as we travel through 2021.

With much love and prayers

Phil, Di and the Scargill Community


Friday 18th December 2020

Dear Scargillians

This comes with much love and prayers as we prepare to celebrate Christmas.

The Community will be having a break over the Christmas period, and will be coming back together early in the New Year.

I am very pleased to announce that this Sunday 20th December at 5pm we will be having an online Carol Service. It will be lovely to welcome you virtually into the Chapel.

We would also like to welcome you to our Christmas Tea Party via Facebooklive on Tuesday 22nd December at 3:30pm.

Watch out for the links for Di’s Bedtime Stories that are being released on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day on our home page.

You will be very welcome to join us for Evening Prayer livestreamed from Scargill Chapel at 4:30pm on 31st December, as we ‘fly with fragile wings, courageous but a little scared’ into 2021.

Please look at our new online programme on the website which starts with an Epiphany Forum on Wednesday 6th January. This programme runs to the middle of February.

Our Christmas Momentum magazine, if you have not received a hard copy, is now available to read online here.

Diane’s reflection is sparked by an unusual depiction of Joseph, Mary and the Christmas story. Enjoy!

Diane writes: The illustration I am using today came as a complete surprise. Earlier this week just before Anna left community she was leading morning prayers and introduced us to ‘José y Maria’ by Everett Patterson.

Looking at this illustration with its pouring rain it could easily be a scene you drive past, observe whilst waiting for a bus, notice from the warmth and safety of your home, or walk by on the other side. Here I see a hot-line to God (telephone) and I love the donkey!!! But is this also a reality check; is this perhaps a more realistic interpretation of how Mary and Joseph might have felt on arriving at Bethlehem. Does this illustration challenge our perception of the lonely, the down and out, the refugee, the homeless? And as I write this listening to Jo Brand asking us to support ‘Crisis for Christmas’ I am reminded of ‘Jesus in the breadline’, that our Jesus’s parents (and indeed, Jesus himself) were at one time similarly unfortunate. I am reminded of a story or two Jesus once told…. and that ‘God did not send his Son into the world to condemn its people. He sent him to save them!’  (John 3:17)

Within their desperation there is HOPE. Have you noticed a hint of colour, a kernel of faith, a sapling of new life, the new shoot of Jesse’s tree, the promised Messiah, the Kingdom of God here with us? In his blog Everett Patterson writes ‘the main goal of this illustration was to pack as many clever biblical references into the scene as possible.’ There are at least a dozen including his favourites; the verse from the prophet Ezekiel in the graffiti on the phone kiosk, ‘the way the “Save More!” behind Mary’s head looks kinda like “Ave Maria!”’ and the two advertisements for “Glad” and “Tide” on the newspaper’ And YES I did find them all – eventually!  Why not enlarge the image and have a go? It will, I’m sure, in a strange way, give you HOPE. As I searched God promises came to mind ‘You will seek Me and find Me when you search for Me with all your heart. (Jeremiah 29:13 ) and “I (God) love those who love me, and those who diligently seek me will find me. (Proverbs 8:17).

Advent is a journey of the soul to meet with God, the journey is nearing completion, Bethlehem has been reached, the shepherds are in the field, the Magi travel on and the stable, where the Christ child will be born awaits his parent’s arrival. For this is the stable in which God keeps his appointment to meet his people. Remember in an out-of-the-way place which folk never thought to visit – there God kept and keeps his promise; there God sends his son.

Wishing you a very blessed Christmas in these strange and challenging times.

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargill Friends,

As always, this comes with much love and prayers to you all especially as the days become shorter and the weather becomes more inhospitable. We long to receive warmth and companionship and our prayer is that this newsletter provides something of that.

So, what’s coming up?

We are still livestreaming our Thursday Evening Prayers. On Sunday 20th December we will be livestreaming our Carol Service – watch out for details of this. Our Facebook Live Tuesday Tea Parties at 3:30pm continue. You are very welcome to join us for some silliness. Talking about silliness, watch out for our Scargill Pantomime which is being filmed this week.

If you wish to join our online programme – please click here. It is not too late yet to join Di and I on Picturing the Gospel which starts this coming Tuesday. Mike, our Chaplain, is leading a retreat next weekend (Free). Our last online event for this year will be with Bridget and Adrian Plass,’Laughter in No Man’s Land’ (Monday 14th to Wednesday 16th December).

For our younger Scargillians, there will be a virtual Scargill Christmas Party with the Youth Team  on Saturday 19th December at 4pm – do book in here.

I am very pleased that Di is also going to record some Christmas stories which you will be able to listen to over the Christmas period.

And speaking of Di, here is her latest reflection on clouds and rainbows. Enjoy!

Diane writes:

This week in morning prayers, in answer to the question ‘How can we be kind to others?’, one of Alison’s 5yr old, past pupils thought for a while, then offered this as their reply, ‘Try to be a rainbow in someone else’s cloud’.  Wish I’d thought of that. But I did start thinking, were there such things as rainbow clouds? Well, yes there are! And in a nutshell iridescent clouds, or rainbow clouds, are caused by the diffraction of sunlight caused by tiny ice crystals or drops of water suspended in the atmosphere. They are rare, often appearing on hot and humid days and accompanying storms. Of course most of you knew this already but, just in case, here are two photos for those who didn’t showing Circumhorizontal arcs (Fire Rainbow) from Nepal, Himalayas and Everett, America. 

My thoughts soon moved on to the symbolic presence of rainbows. What do we think when we see one? Which took me to Noah and the NHS, well they both begin with N!

In Genesis 9:12-15, “God said, ‘This is the sign of the covenant I am making between me and you and every living creature with you, a covenant for all generations to come: I have set my rainbow in the clouds, and it will be the sign of the covenant between me and the earth. Whenever I bring clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will remember my covenant between me and you and all living creatures of every kind. Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life.’” This does not imply that God “needs” reminding; it is simply a way of saying that God will faithfully keep His covenant, that He is ever mindful of His promise.

The rainbow reassured Noah and his family that a flood on the same scale will never take place again. This was an everlasting covenant with Noah, his family, their descendants, and all the living creatures. The rainbow was and continues to be a reminder of God’s commitment to the earth. It is not simply part of an ancient story or merely a symbol of hope, it is a living example of God’s faithfulness. It is an assurance that God has not forgotten us and that he continues to work in this world.

And this world has during this pandemic desperately needed hope. Many of us were taken by surprise, shocked at what was happening as the first lock down was put in place and we began to put our hope in the NHS and Key workers. Rainbows became the sign of our hope, our thanks and our wishes. So much so that ‘Rainbows for the NHS’ a giant interactive ‘mosaic of hope’, made up of thousands of pictures and stories, was created. One photo was of Suzy ‘s son, she writes “I’m sadly in the ‘extremely vulnerable’ group as I’ve suffered a Stroke. I was saved by my 6-year-old son who called an Ambulance, followed by 3 heart surgeries. My son has been shielding with me for 11 weeks. He is my rainbow and sunshine”.  

For many just seeing a rainbow cheers them up and is a sign of hope. Advent also invites us to hope. To hope in our God of yesterday, today and forever who has promised his people ‘Shalom’, a peace that includes “wholeness, and well-being”. Advent is not only a time of looking forward and preparing ourselves for the coming of Christ it is the time for us to be bringers of hope to others. The lyrics from Desolation Row by Bob Dylan, ‘And though her eyes are fixed upon Noah’s great rainbow, She spends her time peeking into Desolation Row’ reminds me that many are now living on the edge of ‘Desolation Road’ hoping, hoping perhaps for a rainbow. So how can we this Advent ‘… be a rainbow in someone else’s cloud’? To be honest I don’t really know? It will be different for all of us. A listening ear, a helping hand, the giving of a treat, a smile or a joke. A prayer, a phone call, a shoulder to cry on, a ……… Have a think I’m sure you know what your rainbow needs to be.

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians,

As we enter the third week of ‘Lockdown 2’, we hope that this finds you well in what continues to be very challenging times.

If we can pray for you, please let us know at: prayer@scargillmovement.org

Di’s reflection on ‘Building Bridges’ is a wonderful theme that runs through the life of Scargill.

So, we would love to connect with you. We have a Scargill Forum on Wednesday 25th November with our guests being Faith Lucas, Michael Mitton and Felicity Lawson. We gather at 7:45pm for 8pm start, and are finished by 9:30pm.We’d love to see you so do book here

Our online programme is going well. We offer it as a way of encouraging us all in these dark days. Coming up is the Advent weekend (Friday 27th to Sunday 29th November) entitled ‘Strength for today and bright hope for tomorrow’ with Bishop Chris and Karen Openshaw; from Wednesday 2nd to Friday 4th December Felicity Lawson will be leading our Advent Retreat entitled ‘Watching, Waiting, Hoping’. There are other online events for the rest of December please look at our Programme.

It has been a real joy to connect with may of you in our Thursday Evening Prayers (4:30pm). We will continue to livestream these and thank you for your encouraging and constructive feedback.

Now for Di’s reflection – enjoy!

Diane writes:

I don’t know how old this song is but I remember singing it as a child – and that was quite a long time ago!!!

He’s got the whole world in His hands
He’s got the whole wide world in His hands
He’s got the whole world in His hands
He’s got the whole world in His hands

He’s got the sun and the rain in His hands… 

He’s got my brother and my sister in His hands… 

He’s got the rivers and the mountains in His hands… 

He’s got the whole world in His hands…

It was not so long ago David Attenborough showed us (his) Life on Our Planet asking us again to face the consequences of our actions! And since I last wrote there has been the American Presidential election; our hopes for a vaccine seems nearer, with promises of a World Wide vaccination programme; we have heard from the news and from friends around the world that there remains many concerns and difficulties; and Phil and I have begun watching Small Axe – 5 films set from the late 1960s to the mid-1980s, each telling a story involving London’s West Indian community, whose lives have been shaped by their own force of will, despite rampant racism and discrimination. And so I have recently been thinking that I should be praying more and more for the world. To pray beyond my local community here at Scargill, beyond my family and friends, including Working Friends of course! Beyond the divides in the United Kingdom and BREXIT.

At the same time, I remembered a giant sculpture Faith introduced me to called ‘Building Bridges’, used by Patrick van der Vorst to illustrate Matthew 6:7-15 (The Lord’s Prayer). It is the work of Lorenzo Quinn, for the Venice Biennale 2019.

“The artist wanted to symbolise how people can overcome their differences and his sculpture consists of ‘six pairs of hands joining across ‘dividing’ waters, with each pair representing an essential, universal value: “Friendship, to build on the future together; Wisdom, to make mutually beneficial decisions; Help, to cement lasting relationships; Faith, to trust in your heart and self-worth; Hope, to persevere in worthwhile endeavours; and love, the fundamental purpose for it all”. Surely these values go beyond dividing waters, to the joining of hands also across dividing seas and nations.

‘Our Father in heaven, may your name be held holy, your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we have forgiven those who are in debt to us. ….’

Jesus tells us that praying the ‘Our Father’ reminds us that God is the father of us all, and therefore every human person is truly our brother or sister. Can you join me in holding the ‘whole world in our hands’? Our world needs friendship, wisdom, help, faith (trust), hope and love. Our world needs prayer. Our world needs praying hands.

Oh and to finish, an apology, in my last reflection I quoted ‘Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another…..’  Of course this was from John 14 not Paul – although we all know he did write a lot about love, but not this sentence. A rambling mind I’m afraid is not always reliable.

With much love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargill Friends,

This morning we went to the Walled Garden to finish our service with the act of Remembrance. For me, it seemed more poignant than ever before, being in lockdown, as many would not have been able to commemorate an act of Remembrance. It is so important for us to continue to pray for peace for our world, giving thanks for those who have given their lives for the freedom that we enjoy. In these difficult days, I am reflecting on what it means to be a person of peace.

It was lovely to connect with many of you last Thursday for our livestreamed prayers and we will be doing that again this Thursday from 4:30pm. Watch out for the link on our website. It was a profound and beautiful time to be together in the Chapel. We warmly welcome you to join us again this Thursday.

We are very pleased that Jock and Margaret Stein are leading our Quiet Days next week, and you can still book in for Saturday’s Quiet Day here.

The next on-line programmed event is with Bishop Chris and Susan Edmondson, titled ‘For everything a season’. I am very grateful to +Chris and Susan for being willing to do this. If you would like to join this course then here is the link.

On Tuesday at 3:30pm, inspired by our new Community members Mike and Alison Leigh, we are going to do a Facebook live streamed Tea Party – and this is going to be just fun. You don’t need to sign up for Facebook to be part of this, and the link will again be on our website.

Here now is Di’s reflection on ‘what is essential?’ Enjoy!

Diane writes:

I have recently been on Grandma Di duty and when reading a bedtime chapter from The Animals of Farthing Wood. I read ‘Like Vixen, Fox wanted to run as far as he could in the opposite direction. – to keep running until those ghastly sounds (of the hunt) became memories only. But he had already decided once that day, that to be reunited with his friends was his most important objective. These friends, who needed him were somewhere ahead.’ Fox knew that his friends needed him, but was also beginning to realise they were also important to him, they were who he was and he was lost without them. It was essential that he found them.

Which set me thinking about what is essential to me. Well, first I asked Bonnie and Jack, they very helpfully said that dancing and jam sandwiches were essential to life! So moving swiftly on; for some reason I began dividing my life into Church and other! Perhaps that was more realistic back 11 years ago in London, even so I have spent a long time now talking about God–with-Us, about God not being elsewhere, about God being in our work, rest and play. So what was the ‘other’ if not part of the now?

I then looked at Ecclesiastes 4 ‘A rope made from three strands of cord is hard to break.” Phil often used this verse at a wedding; it is often seen as a picture of their relationship within the Triune God, and the third strand could be the Holy Spirit who has bound them together in oneness giving strength and durability to their relationship.

But I also read that the actual Hebrew does not say “three strands” but simply “three”. Now this left me room for interpretation. Of course the Trinity – the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit sprang to mind, but also Faith, Hope and Love – and the greatest of these is Love. Then last Sunday Mike reminded us about being called into God’s love; that we are to enter into God’s love, to live the way of God’s love. Paul tells us ‘Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. No one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is made complete in us.’  And this love cannot be contained, we need to go out, we need to share this love with the world, we need to be God’s love in the world. This is what is essential!

But now we find ourselves back in lock down and once again we need to look beyond what is essential to us as individuals to what is essential to our family, our friends, and our neighbours. The editor of ConnectUs recently wrote ‘God has designed humans to be social. He is community in and of himself, and we are most in his image when we are in community with others, sharing God’s love and supporting one another.’

How we do this during these next few weeks I do not know? It will be different for each and every one of us. But I do know that we are to be God’s people wherever we are and that it will be in the small deeds as well as the large.  Mother Teresa once wrote: ‘If you can’t feed a hundred people, then just feed one’.

We are called to live the way of Christ, we are called to walk the way of love – this is what is essential.

With love from

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This latest letter comes with much love and prayers. The COVID crisis has become more complicated and restrictive for many of us so please know that we hold you before Jesus in our Chapel prayers,  in whatever the circumstances that you face, especially as we enter what is going to be a challenging winter. The importance of connectedness and relationships, where love can be shared, warmth experienced, even if it is in Zoom land, will be so important in the months to come. Let us know if there is anything we can pray for by emailing – prayer@scargillmovement.org

Please check out our online programme here. There will be something that will be nourishing and warming for you during these days ahead.

You will also find the links to our ongoing free quiet days and forums here.

There is also an addition to the programme! We are delighted and excited that Bridget and Adrian Plass will be with us in December helping us discover  ‘Laughter in no man’s land’ here. I love the title.

There are many other thought provoking and relevant courses and good speakers, John Bell, just to mention one, so please have a look. We would love to see you and hopefully be an encouragement!

And talking of encouragement – here is Di’s latest reflection – enjoy!

Diane writes:

Queuing – The British like to queue, or we like to think we like to queue. We like to think we are better than most other countries at queuing and when living in London if anyone dared to ‘jump the queue’ they were very much frowned upon.

On Thursday last week at the Forum, which, by the way, I enjoyed very much, Gordon, in our breakout group, mentioned queuing and the great conversations he had. Sadly, for me this has not always been the case. There have been times when the 2m distance, the muffled speech and apparent deafness, that comes from wearing a mask, has made queuing a very quiet and perhaps anxious affair. We are left trying to communicate with our eyes, which is almost impossible, so we smile and nod to one another BUT there is hope: Mother Teresa wrote “Let us always meet each other with a smile, for the smile is the beginning of love.”  I’m learning to smile with my eyes!

The Christ in the Breadline by Fritz Eichenberg

Queuing reminded me of a woodcutting by Fritz Eichenberg (1951) called The Christ of the Breadline and the nights when Phil and I would go down to Charing Cross station to serve homemade soup to the homeless.  Here we see Jesus Christ standing in line at a soup kitchen, waiting with the rest of the Homeless for His turn to be served. In front of Him and behind Him are other scruffy people, hands in their pockets, wrapped up in thread bare layers, anxiously waiting for food, a meal they couldn’t prepare for themselves. They’re all together, the riff-raff, the vagrants and the homeless.

This though is not a typical portrayal of Jesus. Here Paul Luikart notes Eichenberg’s Jesus is weak, wrapped in a blanket. He’s entirely in shadow and like the ‘riff-raff’ stands silent and still. They stand, with the Lord of the universe in their midst, motionless in their deep poverty and hunger, wanting the same thing He wants—rest, fulfilment, and an end to suffering. Although Jesus is the central figure, and the only source of light in the entire image is His halo, the details are with those in the soup kitchen line standing with Jesus and not Jesus Himself. Paul Luikart also observes, ‘they can only be seen by the light of His crown.’   An interesting thought.

Jesus has come for all of us, every one of us, the whole world.  Jesus is here with us, the question is, where will we find him?  Today in 2020, in a year so full of turbulence how will we meet Jesus in the here and now? Will we meet Jesus in our queues? As we queue will others meet Jesus in us?                                                             

Remember Mother Teresa said: “Let us always meet each other with a smile, for the smile is the beginning of love.”

May Jesus our Hope be with us during these difficult days.

With love from

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Scargillians

We are still hoping to open in October and there will be another MailChimp coming out next weekend with further details – so watch out for this! We are so much looking forward to welcoming you back. You can be sure of a warm welcome in a place that is ‘Covid-secure’. Each programme event will have limited spaces available to book.

We are doing two ‘Renew, Refresh Restore Quiet Days’ on Zoom either this Thursday 17th September or Saturday 26th September (10am to 4:30pm). We will be looking at the gift of the Holy Spirit, and this will be led by Philip and Phil. These are bookable through our website (please do not use the hello@ e-mail to book these events).

This September we still have open the opportunity to make a Day Visit. For details of how to book please go to here.

We value very much praying for you so please send any prayer requests to: prayer@scargillmovement.org

Here is Di’s latest reflection. Since she wrote this, Phil has managed to spectacularly break his glasses and so is waiting eagerly to receive a new pair! :+)

Diane writes:

Phil had to go for a regular eye test last week. Which is fine except we couldn’t find his glasses. We searched everywhere, under every table and chair or so we thought, looking but apparently not seeing. As my Nan would have said “You can’t see the Wood for the trees!” although for us she may well have said ‘You can’t see the glasses for the toys, the mess and the washing!’ Our only excuse being that it was the day after a fortnight of having our children and grandchildren here – in distanced dribs and drabs, which was great.  Oh, and we did find the glasses, just in time!

An interesting fact – I have discovered that the origin of this phrase comes from Bath, in England. It refers to a concourse of houses that were designed by the architect John Wood. There was a tree planted directly in front of these houses, and it grew quite large. So people began to exclaim: “You can’t see the Wood for the tree!”
This adage also speaks about being so involved and concerned with all the small details (the trees) of a situation that we are unable to get a clear overview of the whole situation (the wood) and so often lose perspective.  And as autumn approaches, or has it already settled itself in, with the ever changing COVID guidelines and the differing information we are receiving I am beginning to ‘lose the plot’. I can’t see clearly anymore, the negative seems to have overtaken the positive and instead of noticing the special moments, the kind words, the thoughtful acts I find myself complaining, complaining, mainly over details that effect ME!

So today in our morning meeting as we sang:

May we never lose our wonder
May we never lose our wonder
Wide eyed and mystified
May we be just like a child
Staring at the beauty of our King
‘Cause you are beautiful in all your ways
You are beautiful in all your ways
[‘Wonder’, written by Amanda Cook, © 2013 Bethel Music Publishing]

I realised that I had begun to lose the wonder of God, perhaps a little like in Corinthians 4:4 where we read, ‘In their case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God’. Today we have uncertainty, the world is in a state of fear because of uncertainty, we feel helpless and out of control. But we can turn to the One who is fully in control and perfectly able to help in our times of need. Psalm 62 says, ‘For you have been my refuge, a strong tower against the enemy’.  We can turn to a God, who wants to meet with us, who is involved in the heaven and earth he created, who takes his material world so seriously that he became a part of it, embodied and embedded, in Christ. (Paula Gooder – ‘Heaven’)

When visiting Hungary for Kata and Greg’s wedding several community stayed in a wonderful Airbnb and there on a shelf was a heavy, metal statue of Mary sitting peacefully holding Jesus in her lap. It felt as if she was offering Jesus to me. The statue was heavier than expected and suddenly I realised Jesus was separate, that I could hold him. It was astonishing how I felt holding baby Jesus. So many memories came flooding back, of cradling each of our four children newly born and oh so precious. As I held each one, time seemed to stop; I gently held their small fingers and toes, sensed their vulnerability with a deep sense of responsibility. I remember a warm stillness, there were just the two of us – A moment of wonder. I gently returned Jesus to his mother and took this photo.

Mary offered me, offered the world the gift, of her son Jesus, a gift given by God.

Can we today accept that offer and offer ourselves back to God? Perhaps then we can see the wood AND the trees – the gift and the wonder of God within the mess of these uncertain times.

This comes, as always, with much love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We hope this finds you well as we all navigate through these disorientating and strange times.

We are still hoping to open in October. We will let you know what we are doing, and how to book, sometime in September. We are so much looking forward to being able to welcome people back again through our doors.

If you are unaware, we will be doing a Scargill Forum on Zoom on Wednesday 9th September (8-9:30pm).  We will let you know soon who our guest speakers will be for this.  This is bookable through our website here (please do not use the hello@ e-mail to book onto this event).

We are also doing two ‘Renew, Refresh, Restore’ Quiet Days on Zoom on either Thursday 17th or Saturday 26th September (10am to 4:30pm). They will be led by Philip and Phil, and also involve other members of the Community. These are bookable through our website here (please do not use the hello@ e-mail to book onto this event).

As we pray for you, please do pray for us. September is going to be a busy month as we prepare to receive guests again in the COVID world that we are living in.

I hope you enjoy Di’s reflection. I just want to highlight the bit that we are actively looking for new Community to join the Scargill Adventure, particularly those who would like to do a gap year.

As a Community we would love to pray for you so please send any prayer requests to: prayer@scargillmovement.org

We are delighted to be able to welcome Day Visitors on Wednesdays and Saturdays, and have released dates into the middle of September.  It will be lovely to see you.  For details and how to book please go to here.

All these events are free but if anyone would like to donate then please visit our website here which shows how you can do that.

Diane writes:

In my last reflection I talked about being ‘half-empty / half-full’ people and was sent this – ‘The optimist says this glass is half full, the pessimist says this glass is half empty and the engineer says this glass is twice as big as it needs to be!’ which made me smile, thank you.

When we closed due to COVID Scargill Community was in many ways ‘twice as big as it needed to be’. We stopped inviting guests and Working Friends and began the slow process of saying good-bye to Community, including very recently 5 over a period of two weeks. We are indeed now half the size we were! Ironically in the hope of opening to a small number of guests later this year I am on the verge of recruiting a small number of Community!  And with all the news concerning universities and gap-years I am also hoping to recruit two or three gap-year students – so if you know of any – honestly, let me know. As for all you Working Friends, you are not forgotten, we just need to see how all the logistics pan out. Please continue to be patient and continue praying for us. We’ll be in touch

The artwork below, ‘Camels in the Eye of a Needle’, isn’t ‘photoshopped’. These are actual tiny, sculptures that fit in the eye of a needle! Russian artist, Nikolai Aldunin, using syringes, toothpicks and superglue keeping his hands perfectly still, in order to build these extraordinarily microscopic artworks. I find this absolutely amazing especially as I have been making face masks for Phil and I and in the process I have struggled to even thread the needle, time and time again I have squinted with poised thread to no avail, until at last for no apparent reason, hey presto, the thread slides through the eye of the needle, reminding me of Matthew 19 where Jesus says to his disciples, ‘I tell you solemnly, it will be hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. Yes, I tell you again, it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven.’ When the disciples heard this they were astonished. ‘Who can be saved, then?’ they said. Jesus gazed at them. ‘For men’ he told them ‘this is impossible; for God everything is possible.’

The image of a camel going through the eye of a needle, even if it was a very small gateway, is a great description of our planning meetings, where we have discussed many practical issues, trying to cover every guideline we can read about to prepare for guests, but we also need to ensure we can provide – A WARM WELCOME, a FRIENDLY STAY and a feeling of being WANTED and VALUED notwithstanding social distancing and family units. As Dr Guli Francis-Dehqani, on ‘Thought for the Day’ this week said, “if society remains so gripped by fear of illness and death that we think of nothing but physical safety we risk losing sight of other virtues that make us human in the fullest sense. Virtues like compassion, kindness, sociability, community, to name but a few.” She went on to say, “We are more than physical shells we are soul and spirit too.”

At times this all feels like an impossible, uphill task, so I hold onto the fact that Jesus said. ‘For men this is impossible; for God everything is possible.’

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

This comes with all our love and prayers. As it is true for all of us, the Community are working out how to live through these disorientating times. To be honest, it can really drain the life out of us! We are praying that you may know the mystery of God’s presence each day. I hope you enjoy Di’s reflection on ‘half empty/half full’.

As a Community we would love to pray for you so please send any prayer requests to: prayer@scargillmovement.org

We are delighted that we can now offer you some forthcoming Scargillian online events. It will be a joy to connect with you.

Our next Scargill Forum will be on Wednesday 9th September (8-9:30pm) on Zoom.  We will let you know soon who our guest speakers will be for this.  This is bookable through our website (please do not use the hello@ e-mail to book onto this event).

We would love to welcome you to one of our ‘Renew, Refresh, Restore’ Quiet Days on either Thursday 17th or Saturday 26th September (10am to 4:30pm). They will be led by Philip and Phil, and also involve other members of the Community.  These are bookable through our website (please do not use the hello@ e-mail to book onto this event).

We are delighted to be able to welcome Day Visitors on Wednesdays and Saturdays, and have released dates into the middle of September.  It will be lovely to see you.  For details and how to book please go here.

Also, watch out for some ‘Fun on Friday’ dates that we will announce soon.

All these events are free but if anyone would like to donate then please visit our website here which shows how you can do that.

Diane writes:

Since I last wrote I have been swimming in a ‘proper’ pool and not the river and I HAVE HAD MY HAIR CUT! Yes!! Curiously they were both ‘life-giving’ and ‘life draining’. There I was in the hairdresser’s, a solitary customer with my solitary hairdresser in an otherwise empty room. All very friendly and we had a little laugh towards the end when I was asked if I wanted my hair any shorter? The trouble was with my comely, flowery mask across my face I had no idea. So I furtively lowered my mask had a quick peek and said no – next time I may say yes!  Likewise, when I went swimming I was allocated my lane, the fast lane, unfortunately no one was booked into the slow lane so here I was again all alone. Now I have always treasured those swims when I have had the pool for a few minutes all to myself, but soon I began to feel very lonely, fit but lonely. Both had given me life but there I was dwelling on the negative. Have I become a ‘half-empty’ person, are we becoming ‘half-empty’ people – I do hope not.

For some reason this caused me to remember a poem I’ve had tacked to my office bulletin board ever since our son Matt sent it to me a couple of years. It still fills me with ‘the gladness of living’ every time I read it. The poem has been translated from the Turkish of Edip Cansever and is called Table.

Table
A man filled with the gladness of living
Put his keys on the table,
Put flowers in a copper bowl there.
He put his eggs and milk on the table.
He put there the light that came in through the window,
Sounds of a bicycle, sound of a spinning wheel.
The softness of bread and weather he put there.
On the table the man put
Things that happened in his mind.
What he wanted to do in life,
He put that there.
Those he loved, those he didn’t love,
The man put them on the table too.
Three times three make nine:
The man put nine on the table.
He was next to the window next to the sky;
He reached out and placed on the table endlessness.
So many days he had wanted to drink a beer!
He put on the table the pouring of that beer.
He placed there his sleep and his wakefulness;
His hunger and his fullness he placed there.
Now that’s what I call a table!
It didn’t complain at all about the load.
It wobbled once or twice, then stood firm.
The man kept piling things on.

Here is a ‘half-full’ or even a ‘brim-full table if ever there was one. Sarah Robyn (August 19 2000) has written very expressively about this poem, capturing, for me, its very heart.

This poem ‘speaks to me across cultures because it is a poem about being human – anywhere, any time. The delight of it hinges on the turn the poem makes, beginning in line 5, where the table – which starts out as an ordinary piece of furniture – begins to metamorphose into a magic table, one whose capacity seems limitless – a veritable groaning board, but one that doesn’t groan.

At first the table is a convenient surface for a man to put things down on, presumably the things he is carrying: his keys, fresh flowers, the groceries he has brought home. But in the enthusiasm of the moment, the man doesn’t stop. Onto the table goes the light from the window; then, some ambient sounds; then, some pleasing textures; then – pell-mell – his imaginings, his hopes, his relationships. And then (“Three times three make nine”) the tally of what he has already put down.

This man is putting all his cards on the table, so to speak. Before we can stop him, he has “reached out” and “placed on the table endlessness,” or his right to reach for the sky, to put anything at all on the table … our man’s next move is homely: he longs for a beer. He places on the table – not the beer itself, but “the pouring of that beer,” the frothy moment of promise.

Next, as if they were equal in weight, the paired opposites of sleep and wakefulness, hunger and fullness: even life’s privations, the poem seems to say, are part of its bounty – for what would fullness be, without hunger?’

We leave the man still happily “piling things on”; the table standing firm, despite a wobble or two. I love this poem because it reminds me that my own “table” is sturdy, too, and will hold as much as I have the heart and the gusto to heap on it. Here is a poem speaking of abundant life within the everyday, of the glass ‘hall-full’ rather than ‘half-empty’ or perhaps that even an honest ‘half-empty’ glass is just as meritorious of going on the table.

Have another read of the poem (read it perhaps a couple of times) then think about what you’d like to put on the table. Perhaps even make a list – you may be pleasantly surprised.

With love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We do hope this finds you well as the easing of lockdown is stalled at this moment. In this newsletter we have Di’s reflection on ‘trust’, and to begin with a short message from Lucy, our Chaplain, who leaves us next week. It is has been a joy to work with Lucy, and we have very much appreciated her valuable contribution to Community and our guests.

Our next Forum is on Wednesday 5th August (8-9:30pm) – please book via our website by 2pm on Monday 3rd August.

Also you can book a day visit to Scargill via our website. We would love to see you!

And don’t forget to e-mail us at prayer@scargillmovement.org if you would like us to pray for you.

Lucy writes:

I wanted to share a few words with the extended Scargill family before I move to parishes in Cambridgeshire on 10th August.

My three years living and serving in the Scargill community have been a fertile and fruitful experience.  I have certainly grown through the experience and I trust that you have found your stay(s) here to be enriching.  The first event I led here was a ‘Renew-Refresh-Restore’ weekend on Life Balance.  As a group we explored “Time to Pause & Rest, Laugh & Play, Rejoice & Celebrate.”  From my own story, I know that Scargill is a place where we can grapple with these possibilities and begin to embed them in daily life.  Thank you for joining me on that journey through your companionship.

This February, a matter of weeks before lockdown, I preached in Scargill Chapel on Romans 8:16-27.  Groaning was the theme of the talk: Creation groaning in labour pains; Christians groaning inwardly; the Spirit interceding with groans.  Many of us may have groaned inwardly and outwardly in recent months amidst the changes, restrictions, questions and concerns we have faced.  I am heartened that creation is perhaps groaning a little less in the wake of severely reduced travel and a slightly smaller environmental impact.  I believe that the Spirit of God has faithfully interceded for us and will continue to do so throughout the age of Covid-19.

As I say farewell, I do so with thankfulness for all that has been at Scargill and in anticipation of all that will be.  With Paul’s words in Romans 8 in mind, may we look to the future waiting eagerly, hopefully and patiently for our redemption in all its fullness.

Diane writes:

Welcome once again to my short reflection.

I have several cousins, one of them, when very young developed a congenital bilateral blindness. As she grew older she wanted more and more independence and one day asked her mother if she could walk down to the corner shop on her own. Knowing this need for independence her mother said yes, but then followed her daughter along the opposite pavement there and back again. On her return my cousin told her mother off for following and not trusting her! Was my auntie wrong to have followed her daughter?

Why have I told this story? Because Phil and I have recently been thinking about trust. We agreed (a rare thing indeed!) that trust is such a fragile thing. It’s relational; always relational and it grows love and forgiveness. We also agreed, to be trusted is very affirming and can nurture responsibility, whereas not to be trusted can be quite soul destroying. We also felt that trust allows for the possibility of failure, which is a healthy thing, but failure can also lead to hurt, a hurt which will not always easily mend.

And yesterday (28th July) I heard Hannah Malcolm an ordinand at Durham speak on Thought for the Day. She spoke about how for many lockdown kept us safe from uncontrolled encounters but with restrictions being lifted “we face a wider challenge concerning our sense of collective belonging and public trust. We are (now) negotiating the anxious spaces shared by those who have returned to all but normal life and those who remain at home … We are treading murky waters away from our tight circles” towards others “containing potent danger … As we negotiate the growing pressure of constantly counting risks, the temptation to become more suspicious rather than less generous is not one we can ignore … To be in communion, to be in common with each other we have to relinquish some control leaving our interests behind.”

This felt very near to home and resounded with how I see Scargill today. At the beginning of this pandemic Phil spoke about us all being in the storm but not necessarily in the same boat. Some boats have been travelling along troubled waters, others going right through the eye of the storm, whilst we have steadily meandered along in the relative calm, only now venturing outwards into the murky water as we prepare to once again welcome guests, friends and family. For some this has been challenging and exciting, for others fear–provoking and disquieting because possibly deep down, like many, we want to keep control, we don’t want to steer through murky waters!

Proverbs 3 says “With all your heart you must trust the Lord and not your own judgment. Always let him lead you, and he will clear the road for you to follow”.  Of course the prerequisite is to trust Jesus, but that is not nearly as easy as said. Take the calming of the storm. All the pictures I have seen have Jesus sleeping whilst the storm rages. If I was in the boat I like to think I would ‘stay calm and trust Jesus’, but in reality I’m sure I would be scared, very scared.  We do need to trust Jesus to clear the road ahead but we also need to trust each other as we travel along it. Trust, responsibility and forgiveness should all walk alongside allowing relationships to grow and friendships to deepen, generosity to develop and hospitality to be given with an open heart that welcomes all – when the time is right.

With much love and prayers to you all as we negotiate this challenging landscape together.

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

Thank you for you continued love, support and prayers, it means a great deal to us.

Below are details of how you can book on to our forthcoming online events. We are in the process of changing the way that you can book! Please bear with us.

We would love to welcome you to one of our Renew, Refresh, Restore Quiet Days on either Friday 31st July or Saturday 1st August. The theme will be around Jesus – the Light of the World and the Bread of Life. They will be led by Lucy and Phil involving other members of the Community. If you would like to be involved in either of these days then please e-mail us at: hello@scargillmovement.org

During what would have been our Summerfest Programme, we are hosting ‘Fest Teas for all ages’. We hope to have some fun together on Zoom! These Teas will start at 4pm and the dates are:

Monday 27th, Tuesday 28th, Wednesday 29th July

and then Monday 3rd, Tuesday 4th, Wednesday 5th, Monday 10th and Tuesday 11th August

To be a part of these Fest Teas, please e-mail us at: hello@scargillmovement.org

Our next Scargill Forum will be on Wednesday 5th August (8-9:30pm) on Zoom. We will let you know soon who our guests will be for this forum. This is bookable through our website (please do not use the hello@ e-mail to book onto this event).

We are also delighted to announce that starting in August we are able to welcome Day Visitors on Wednesdays and Saturdays. It will be lovely to see you. Further details and booking is through our website.

All these events are free but if anyone would like to donate then please visit our website here which shows how you can do that.

Diane’s reflection this week is on ‘Love and laughter’.  Enjoy!

“I love to laugh … Loud and long and clear … The more I laugh, the more I fill with glee.” (Mary Poppins – Film). Hi, I hope you are now all singing away with Bert!  A question – When did you last laugh, really laugh out loud? I asked that question when reading a quote from “Loving God Whatever” (reflections by Sister Jane) on July 11th “Humour is near to holiness, and love to laughter”. I was initially drawn to the book by a comment on the back cover which says “This selection of her writings reveals not only her spiritual wisdom but also her great capacity for friendship and understanding, her down-to-earth sense of humour and fun and her ability to meet people where they were, making them feel special.”

Does this remind you of anywhere? It did remind me of the time when the small initial core community were thinking about our Community Promises and we unanimously decided to include the promise “Love, laughter, and a generous spirit are foundational values in our life together. We see Jesus taking great pleasure in receiving and giving unexpected treats to other people. Are you willing to do likewise?” Oh Yes! We all replied loudly and with broad smiles on our faces.  Since that day Scargill really has been a house of love and laughter. Each morning after prayers we now meet together and start with ‘HUMOUR’. Phil asked us all to send in something to watch that would make us laugh. Why? Because it’s good to laugh. Medical science says “A good, hearty laugh relieves physical tension and stress, leaving your muscles relaxed for up to 45 minutes after. Laughter boosts the immune system. Laughter decreases stress hormones and increases immune cells and infection-fighting antibodies, thus improving your resistance to disease.” Wow!

My sisters now regularly send me a joke or a funny video, something that made them laugh, which they want to share, and over the last few months this has become a life-line for many. But it really isn’t the same as seeing them in person. One of the reasons why many of us have found lockdown, isolation and distancing so hard is because we naturally want to be in community. We were not created in isolation, but within the Trinity of God – Father Son and Holy Spirit, and we were created to reflect that community within our human communities. Sophie Scott, explains that people are thirty times more likely to laugh if they’re with someone else. In other words, people are more apt to laugh in community than isolation, the very place most of us are! So what can we do about that? Nothing, but when meeting or passing someone by, even if wearing a mask, love and laughter can come over in a smile, the inflection of your voice or seen through your eyes.

To finish with – Did you know, one reason I married Phil was to have fun and laugh? Although I yearned to, I was not very good at either, but instinctively knew I should, and there he was! Also, many of you will know that we have a Munsterlander (dog) – but did you know Munsterlanders really want their owners to have as much fun as they do! I can’t think why Phil decided this was the dog for us.

We look forward to welcoming you whether it is online or through a booked Day Visit.

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We hope and pray that this latest newsletter finds you well.  Thank you so much for your continued love and support.  It means a great deal to us, and we are very much looking forward at some stage to welcome you again through our doors.

The Community is in good spirits.  We have just had a couple of days retreat which has strengthened our life together.  The Community continues to reduce in size as we will be saying goodbye to Carolin and Annette over the next two weeks.

Please do get in touch with us at: prayer@scargillmovement.org if we can pray for you during these strange times.  We continue to have our rhythm of prayer and within this we have a time for intercession.

We have just had our first Scargill Forum, which was a very rich experience.  Someone wrote afterwards: ‘Thank you for all the thoughts, the wisdom, the laughter, the prayer, the gathering us together into community again.’

We are planning our second Scargill Forum for Thursday 9th July (8-9:30pm), as we continue to learn together about God and ourselves through these disorientating times.  If you would like to be involved in this Zoom event, please send an e-mail requesting to be involved to hello@scargillmovement.org so we can send you a link.

It is still not too late to join one of our Quiet Days through Zoom on Friday 26th or Saturday 27th June.  The theme will be: ’Waymarks for the journey’.  Each will begin at 10am and finish around 5pm.  Within the day there will be a couple of reflections, an opportunity for a Zoom discussion and tea and cake together at the end with some worship.  Again, if you would like to be part of either of the days please e-mail: hello@scargillmovement.org

These events are free but if anyone would like to donate then please visit our website here which shows how you can do that.

If you wish to listen to our morning prayers and the Sunday morning sermon they are to be found here on our website

Here is another reflection for us from Diane Stone:

A while back I had a dream that woke me.  Influenced I think by the fact that our daughter, staying with us, (for now!) has strongly encouraged us to de-clutter, and throw away three items a day!  In my dream I am in a post war railway station, quite dark and dingy.  I have lost my suitcase and my best coat, not sure about the coat!  But I am extremely anxious, asking people to help.  No one can find either the bag or the coat and eventually I have to travel on leaving both behind.  Thinking about this I was reminded that Jesus sent his disciples telling them not to take a money bag or a travelling bag or sandals.

So was I being asked to travel light when we so often, if not all the time, carry things that are not necessary, things that only weigh us down, slow us down, keep us from being and doing what God intends for us.

Just before the dream Hilary led a lovely morning prayer during which she talked about how our sin/mistakes block our relationship with God and demonstrated God’s total forgiveness by emptying a household rubbish bin onto a sheet then, gathering it all up before throwing the sheet away, out of sight.  I know I need to accept the abundant GRACE given by God and travel on renewed in hope and faith.  But as she was throwing the rubbish away I saw several items which would or could be recycled.  Surely, I thought, some of my sins/mistakes could be recycled?  I’m always saying we learn by our mistakes and although in my head I know that God forgives, I do not forget so perhaps I could channel my sins/mistakes into memories, into cue cards, preventing the same mistake again.  Well why not?

‘…we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.’ Romans 8:28

As we journey, we often desire to meet with God!  But we often fail to give time to God!  We are full of excuses – too busy, too tired, too many burdens!  Philippians 4 tells us to ‘be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.’

Here at Scargill, we are perhaps travelling alone, travelling light, unable to welcome guests has created a void, a void that is, I hope, encouraging us to seek a deeper relationship with God and each other.  Perhaps now is the time for all of us to set aside time – no excuses, not even for me!!  Now is sacred – now is where God is to be encountered, not tomorrow, not next week but here in the middle of this pandemic God wishes to be met.

To finish, a poem by Robert Frost.  It is an ambiguous poem that allows us to think about choices in life, whether to go with the mainstream or go it alone. If life is a journey, this poem highlights those times in life when a decision has to be made.

The Road Not Taken
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveller, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I –
I took the one less travelled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Please be assured of our love and prayers

Phil, Diane and the Scargill Community

Dear Friends

We hope and pray that this latest newsletter finds you well.
Thank you so much for your continued love and support it means a great deal to us.  As I have mentioned before, please do get in touch with us at: prayer@scargillmovement.org if there is anything we can pray for you during these strange times.

We are glad to say that on Thursday 18th June from 8 to 9:30pm I will be chairing our first Scargill Forum, and be joined by Rev’d Mike Leigh (currently Vicar in Scarborough and a Scargillian); and Jo Penn (current Community Member) to talk about what we are learning about God and ourselves through this pandemic.  If you would like to be involved in this Zoom event then please email: hello@scargillmovement.org so that we can send you a link to join in.

We will also be doing two separate Quiet Days through Zoom on Friday 26th and Saturday 27th June.  The theme will be: ’Waymarks for the journey’.  Each will begin at 10am and finish around 5pm.  Within the day there will be a couple of reflections, an opportunity for a Zoom discussion and tea and cake together at the end with some worship.  Again, if you would like to be part of either of the days please e-mail: hello@scargillmovement.org

These events are free but if anyone would like to donate then please visit our website here which shows how you can do that.

Here is a reflection from Diane Stone:

A couple of weeks ago Phil asked me to head-up this two-weekly ‘keeping in touch’ letter.  Possibly like you, Community seem to either have too much time on their hands or too little time, either way it has struck me that this is a waiting time, a time for us to wait on God.  And two poems, both about time, have come to mind, perhaps because although I will be asking other members of community to contribute this week, alas, I ran out of time to ask anyone!

The first poem, really the opening sentence, is a song from my childhood by Bing Crosby on the soundtrack of the film ‘A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court’ (1949).  To be honest it’s really the first line which seems to sum up life at the moment, well not quite for me, but for many.  This song may seem trivial but I think there is a lot of honesty in it.  And it makes me smile, I hope it does the same for you.

We’re busy doin’ nothin’
Workin’ the whole day through
Tryin’ to find lots of things not to do.
We’re busy goin’ nowhere
Isn’t it just a crime
We’d like to be unhappy, but
We never do have the time
I have to watch the river
To see that it doesn’t stop
And stick around the rosebuds
So they’ll know when to pop
And keep the crickets cheerful
They’re really a solemn bunch
Hustle, bustle
And only an hour for lunch

The second was a poem I found when preparing for morning prayers by William Henry Davies entitled Leisure.  Wikipedia told me that this poem written in 1911 warns that “the hectic pace of modern life has a detrimental effect on the human spirit.  Modern man has no time to spend free time in the lap of nature”.  And not so long ago we may all have agreed, but now, for our physical and mental health, we have been encouraged to spend time outside ‘in the lap of nature’.  I have never walked so consistently I don’t think in my entire life and this poem encourages us to look and see!

What is this life if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.
No time to stand beneath the boughs
And stare as long as sheep or cows.
No time to see, when woods we pass,
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.
No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night.
No time to turn at Beauty’s glance,
And watch her feet, how they can dance.
No time to wait till her mouth can
Enrich that smile her eyes began.
A poor life this if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.

So where do we go from here?  Let’s turn to Ecclesiastes 3 where we read ‘Everything on earth has its own time and its own season.  There is a time for birth and death, planting and reaping, for killing and healing, destroying and building, for crying and laughing, weeping and dancing, for throwing stones and gathering stones, embracing and parting.
There is a time for finding and losing, keeping and giving, for tearing and sewing, listening and speaking.
There is also a time for love and hate, for war and peace.’

This ‘song’ is followed by the heading ‘Life isn’t always fair, so live wisely’ and soon we are reassured that ‘God makes everything happen at the right time.’  The chapter confirms ‘We can never know the future.’

As a community we have promised to meet with God, to set aside time throughout the day to refresh our relationship with Him.  So let’s use this waiting time wisely, whether we are busy or not, working or at home, can we rest as well as walk trusting in our God.  A God who will not abandon his world but plans on redeeming it.  Recently I heard, and have mentioned before, the phrase ‘God is not elsewhere’, a phrase which helps me feel very close to God, you see if God is not elsewhere then He must be HERE, here with you and me.  Here in the midst of our waiting…

Please be assured of our love and prayers

Phil and Diane & the Scargill Community