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Bible readings, reflections and prayers for the days of Holy Week,
and a large section of resources, including `Prayers on the seven
words from the Cross', `A service of lamentation to liberate us for
action', poems, meditations, and reflections ... The sun slowly
rises on city streets where saints trail and spread God's light.
The sun slowly rises in Glasgow classrooms where folk teach English
as a second language to refugees and asylum seekers. The sun slowly
rises at islands for world peace and over Iona Abbey. It rises on
farms in Palestine where folk plant olive trees and work to grow
peace from the ground up. It rises where street pastors hand out
bandages and love. It rises in houses of hospitality, in the work
of organisations like Church Action on Poverty, in Spirit-filled
churches everywhere from Taipei to Orkney, at demos in solidarity
with those suffering unjust taxation and benefit cuts. The sun
slowly rises at climate marches around the globe. The sun slowly
rises at Faslane submarine base where protesters sing and waltz the
dance of life and blockade death and pray for the day when all
nuclear weapons will be abolished ...
'Holy Ground' contains liturgies and worship resources on a range
of subjects and concerns: globalisation, food, water, HIV/Aids, the
environment, interfaith dialogue, prisoners of conscience, 20th
century martyrs, homelessness, racism, gender, living in community,
youth, children, ageing... and much more.
The dramatic events of the days leading up to Easter Sunday are
expressed through biblical readings and the reflections of several
well-known Iona Community members: Ruth Burgess - Jan Sutch Pickard
- Tom Gordon - Brian Woodcock - Peter Millar - Kathy Galloway -
Leith Fisher - Joy Mead - John Davies - Yvonne Morland Connecting
the denials, betrayals, suffering and eventual new dawn of this
life-changing week with what is happening in our own world today,
this book accompanies the reader as an insightful guide. To travel
through Holy Week with awareness leads to a greater understanding
of God and ourselves.
Daily readings for four months from a wide range of contributors
within the Iona Community. These prayers, liturgies, songs, poems
and articles can be used for group or individual reflection and are
intended to inspire positive action and change in our lives.
Hospitality and welcome, prayer, justice and peace, the
environment, healing, social action, church renewal, worship, work,
racial justice, women, community, pilgrimage, sexuality, Columban
Christianity and Celtic tradition, ecumenism, interfaith dialogue,
peacekeeping and non-violence, spirituality, commitment, economic
witness, youth.
When editor Neil Paynter called for contributions to Iona of My
Heart he wrote: `I'm looking for those human stories from Iona. You
know the ones - we all have them. Stories about different folk
coming together - people from different countries and backgrounds.
Stories of encounter, challenge, exchange, connection,
transformation. Stories about people and the power of the Spirit
... Show why Iona and what the Iona Community does there is
important to the world. Give it a human face.' This book of four
months of daily readings, which reflect the concerns of the Iona
Community, is the result. The book can be used for group or
individual reflection and is intended to inspire positive action
and change in our lives. Contributors include Ron Ferguson, Helen
Steven, Nancy Cocks, John Harvey, Molly Harvey, Norman Shanks,
Alastair McIntosh, Brian Woodcock, Martin Johnstone, Iain Whyte,
Alison Swinfen, Jan Sutch Pickard, Joy Mead, Stephen Wright, Janet
Lees, Thom M Shuman, Tom Gordon, Nicola Slee, Yvonne Morland, Kathy
Galloway, Peter Millar, Ruth Burgess, John Philip Newell - and many
other members, associates and friends of the Iona Community. The
royalties from Iona of My Heart will go to the Iona Community's
Iona Abbey Capital Appeal. Neil Paynter was a member of the Iona
Community's resident staff group on Iona. He is an editor with Wild
Goose Publications and of the Community's magazine Coracle.
Bible readings, reflections and worship resources from Iona
Community members and associates - Helen Boothroyd, Ruth Burgess,
David Coleman and Zam Walker, John Davies, Leith Fisher, Ian M
Fraser, Kathy Galloway, Tom Gordon, John Harvey, Peter Millar, Jan
Sutch Pickard, Norman Shanks, Thom Shuman, Alison Swinfen, Brian
Woodcock. May this book be a friend through the joy and euphoria of
Christmas and New Year, and may it feed you, challenge you, in the
in-between times. There are good-hearted, human companions here for
our journey through this bewildering and beautiful world.
Lent is traditionally a time of repentance and penitence but it
also offers an opportunity to see the world afresh, with a new
sense of wonder. These readings, up to Easter and beyond, encourage
us not only to regard ourselves with a healthy realism and accept
responsibility for our shortcomings, but also to recognise the
nature and purposes of God and the never-ending renewal of
possibility, both within ourselves and in the world.
Here, in the `Celtic' tradition, are prayers from members,
associates and friends of the Iona Community for the whole of life:
for starting an engine, for keeping us engaged and on the road to
God's Kingdom; for taking a daily walk, for refugees travelling
dangerous seas; an Iona Abbey kitchen prayer for chopping carrots,
making bread and sanitising surfaces, and a Harvest supper prayer
of sharing; prayers for personal healing, and for our deeply
wounded world; a prayer for self-knowledge, and another for doing
the laundry and remembering `lost socks' ... Contributors include:
Tom Gordon, John Harvey, Jan Sutch Pickard, Peter Millar, Rosemary
Power, David McNeish, David Osborne, Ewan Aitken, Anna Briggs,
Elaine Gisbourne, Thom M Shuman, Chris Polhill, Neil Paynter and
others. Lord God ... we bring you everything, and tip it out in
front of you ... And now we pause a while in silence, waiting for
you to show us what we need to understand ...
Fifty new prayers from young and old and from folk around the globe
- from Glasgow to Cincinnati, from Malawi to Alaska, including
well-known Iona Community writers like John Harvey, Ian M. Fraser,
Peter Millar, Yvonne Morland, Chris Polhill, Thom Shuman, Brian
Woodcock, the Wild Goose Resource Group and many others - A
pocketbook of prayers that might be used in a daily discipline,
many on the concerns of the Iona Community - poverty and economic
justice, welcome and hospitality, interfaith dialogue, church
renewal, peacemaking - A prayer book to use in church worship, and
to carry in your coat or handbag out into the world: to connect
with the still small voice in the midst of the busyness and babble;
to root yourself firmly in the Word. There are prayers here for the
renewal of global and local community, and for recharging the
battery of your mobile phone: 'Either He is the Lord of everything
or He is Lord of nothing,' wrote George MacLeod, founder of the
Iona Community. Also includes a helpful 'scrapbook' of thoughts on
prayer from many sources.
Daily readings for four months from a wide range of contributors
within the Iona Community, including John L. Bell, Ruth Burgess,
Ian M. Fraser, Kathy Galloway, Tom Gordon, Peter Millar, J. Philip
Newell, Jan Sutch Pickard. These prayers, songs, poems, articles,
liturgies, which reflect the concerns of the Community, can be used
for group or individual reflection and are intended to inspire
positive action and change in our lives. Subjects covered include:
Hospitality and welcomePrayerJustice and peaceThe
environmentHealingSocial actionChurch renewalWorshipWorkRacial
justiceWomenCommunityPilgrimageSexualityColumban Christianity and
the Celtic traditionEcumenismInferfaith dialogueNonviolence and
peacekeepingSpiritualityCommitmentEconomic witnessYouthLiturgies
Neil Paynter was a member of the resident staff group of the Iona
Community for four years on Iona. He is an Associate of the
Community and the editor of Lent & Easter Readings from Iona,
This Is the Day, Blessed Be Our Table, Holy Ground, Growing Hope,
Iona Dawn and Iona: Images and Reflections.
he stories he tells here come out of the experience of working in
homeless shelters in North America and Britain, as a nurse's aide
with the elderly and as a mental health worker. A book about
searching for, and finding, Jesus, God and the Holy Spirit in
down-to-earth places. In a world of easy compromises and much false
posturing in which the rich, the often corrupt, and the people with
power keep telling us how to live and what to strive for, Neil
writes about a world where hearts matter and in which vulnerable
folk can teach us much. - Peter Millar, from the Foreword Contains
strong language
Concerns include: The ministry of the whole people of God * the
renewal of prayer and worship * health and wholeness and the
ministry of healing * church renewal * the ecumenical movement *
people of other faiths and beliefs and the promotion of
understanding through dialogue and joint action for justice and
peace * economic witness * poverty * trade justice * young people *
working together for change * social and political action for
justice, peace and the integrity of creation * victims and
perpetrators of violence * peace movements and organisations *
human rights and gender justice * racial justice and the rights of
indigenous peoples * the environment and all who work for
ecological sustainability * refugees and asylum seekers and our
commitment to hospitality * the renewal of community and the
well-being of our own local communities * intentional and basic
Christian communities throughout the world ...Contributors include:
Brian Woodcock, the Wild Goose Resource Group, Chris Polhill, Ruth
Burgess, Peter Millar, Jan Sutch Pickard, Kathy Galloway, Joy Mead,
Rosemary Power, Ian M Fraser, John Harvey, Ruth Harvey, Warren
Bardsley, Norman Shanks, Alison Swinfen, Alastair McIntosh, Thom M
Shuman and many other members, associates and friends of the Iona
Community.
Life just seems to be getting busier and busier. And even when
we're not doing, our minds are eternally busy - life seems so full
of distractions, different messages: babble - So: a book of short
daily readings for the whole year, to help folk still themselves.
Short readings because sometimes it feels like there are enough
words in the world! The world is so crowded with words it makes it
difficult to focus on the Word. The Still Small Voice is a book for
those who feel themselves travelling at an increasingly frantic
pace each day, and are hungry for snatches of nourishment to feed
their souls - energy and inspiration and wonder to help keep them
on the Way. Jesus lived a balanced life of reflection and action,
of times rooted in prayer and contemplation and of times engaged in
the tangled messy thick of it. This is a book to help with that
balance. God, help us to hear your voice through the babble of this
busy world where words are used to confuse, distract, manipulate,
sell illusion, buy power; help us to be still and receptive to your
healing, encouraging, inspiring, enduring, life-giving Word.
Features full colour photographs by a Iona Community member and
photographer David Coleman, and Anja Grosse-Uhlmann, who lives on
the isle of Iona, with accompanying reflections, prayers, poems and
stories by Community writers.
The title comes from one of the closing responses of the morning
service in Iona Abbey: Go in peace to love and to serve; We will
seek peace and pursue it. Contributors include: Lesley Orr, Iain
Whyte, Paul Nicolson, Helen Steven, Alastair McIntosh, Kathy
Galloway, Molly Harvey, Rosemary Power, Ruth Harvey, Jan Sutch
Pickard, John Philip Newell, Mel Duncan, Jonathan Inkpin, Alison
Swinfen, Peter Millar, Chris Polhill, Sally Foster-Fulton, Bonnie
Thurston, Murphy Davis and others. While several of the
contributors are from various grassroots organisations and
communities, many are members, associates or friends of the Iona
Community, which, from its beginning, has been engaged in work for
peace and reconciliation.
Reflections for Advent from members, associates and friends of the
Iona Community around the world - from Uganda, Scotland, Wales,
Palestine, Switzerland, India, Malawi, Australia, China, Iona,
Sweden, Kenya, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, the Netherlands, Germany,
Jerusalem, Japan, Ireland, Taiwan, Cuba, Alaska - and more. Many
people are seeking for a meaningful spiritual dimension in their
lives. There is evidence of that in the huge number of people who
work for peace and justice, who accompany the marginalised, and
who, in trying to live more simply, become deeply attentive to the
cries of our wounded planet. The writers in this book come from
different parts of the world. In everyday language they reflect on
the challenge and hope of Advent - a time in the Christian year
both of waiting and of expectancy. Their thoughts relate directly
to our present world situation in which both hope and uncertainty
are interconnected. They also remind us that many are seeking the
reality of God's presence in the midst of human experience - or in
more traditional language, 'the light of the Lord upon us'. The
various reflections point us to places and people in many parts of
the world where that light shines, often - surprising as it may
seem - brightly. Their insights enable us to walk more creatively
and compassionately in our own local situations, and to discover
that God's light sometimes shines where we least expect it.
Many people believe in a Christian spirituality which actually
relates to the modern world - in all of its division, hope,
violence and interconnectedness. Others find belief in a God of any
kind impossible. Our human future is uncertain in many ways and
this is not a time for the churches to respond with easy answers.
This Easter book is not about easy answers. The words of Jesus from
the Cross are difficult and challenging. And yet the fact that they
emerge from a situation of human agony gives them huge relevance
for our times. And the God whom Jesus addresses from the Cross
remains at the heart of humanity and continues to weep with us.
Each contributor to the book shares what a particular word means to
her or him. These various reflections will enable the reader to
encounter the words of Jesus in new ways; to be spiritually
refreshed in order to listen more tenderly to the cries and
longings of our sisters and brothers around the world. Includes
reflections by Jan Sutch Pickard, Ruth Burgess and others, and an
introduction by Donald Eadie.
This is a book of quotes and readings - poems, prayers, short
reflections and stories - for each day of the year from writers and
thinkers who have inspired the Iona Community and from members of
the community themselves. The royalties from this book will go to
the Iona Community's Growing Hope appeal to renovate the Camas
outdoor centre on the Isle of Mull and to extend the community's
day-visitor facilities on Iona.
Third in the series following This Is the Day and Gathered and
Scattered Daily readings for four months from a wide range of
contributors within the Iona Community, including Warren Bardsley,
John L. Bell and the Wild Goose Resource Group, Ruth Burgess, Ian
M. Fraser, Kathy Galloway, Tom Gordon, John Harvey, Peter
Macdonald, Joy Mead, Peter Millar, J. Philip Newell, Jan Sutch
Pickard, Rosemary Power, Eurig Scandrett, Alison Swinfen, Iain
Whyte, Brian Woodcock and many others. These reflections, prayers,
poems, songs, which reflect the concerns of the Community, can be
used for group or individual reflection and are intended to inspire
positive action and change in our lives. Subjects covered include:
Hospitality and welcome prayer justice and peace the environment
healing social action church renewal worship work racial justice
women community pilgrimage sexuality Columban Christianity and the
Celtic tradition ecumenism interfaith dialogue nonviolence and
peacekeeping the rediscovery of spirituality commitment economic
witness youth Neil Paynter was a member of the resident staff group
of the Iona Community for four years on Iona. He is a member of the
Iona Community and the editor of This Is the Day, Gathered and
Scattered, Blessed Be Our Table, Holy Ground, Growing Hope, Iona:
Images and Reflections, and many other books, and the author of
Down to Earth: Stories and Sketches (Wild Goose).
50 of the best-loved prayers of the Iona Community in a portable
edition. A book that is sure to become dog-eared through use in
worship, or from being carried around on the often bumpy, sometimes
tran
For many people prayer is difficult. This collection helps us to be
less bothered with our uncertainties about what we should be saying
when we pray. We can read a prayer and then sit quietly for a few
minutes, allowing the particular words and thoughts to meet with
our inner self, with our soul, which is linked to the energies and
wisdom of the Creator of all things. The prayers here are not to be
read in a rush. They are not about a small God, but about One who
at every moment is at the very heart of both our personal lives and
the life of the world. A God whose goodness, healing and tender
grace are at the core of humanity. In the reading of them may our
hearts become more loving and aware, for each prayer invites us
into a reality much wider than ourselves - the whole world in its
contradiction and promise - and brings us close to our sisters and
brothers who, like us, are on a journey in which both light and
shadow, sadness and joy are regular companions. Living God, like
leaves that turn to the sun so we turn to you, the source of all
life, for your love to sustain us, your will to strengthen us and
your wisdom to guide us. Amen - Chris Polhill
For centuries pilgrims have travelled to the isle of Iona in search
of the sacred, inspired by the example of St Columba, a 6th-century
Irish monk who founded a monastery there, and whose influence is
felt to the present day. Many modern-day pilgrims and seekers are
also drawn to the island through the work of the Iona Community, an
ecumenical Christian community acting for justice and peace, the
rebuilding of the common life and the renewal of worship. The Iona
Community runs a weekly pilgrimage around the island for those who
visit, pausing for reflection at places of spiritual and historical
significance, and at less obvious landmarks which offer inspiration
for our daily lives and our engagement with the wider world.
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