Love Makes Things Happen
62 pages
English

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62 pages
English

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Description

We can’t truly participate in prayer, or worship, or the sacraments, or the reading of Scripture, and so on, in a way that is divorced from the doctrine of the Trinity, or the Incarnation, or the Resurrection. Following on from its predecessor, Love Makes No Sense each chapter in this book deals with central issues of Christian practice, and presents an introduction to Christian doctrine without losing focus of the lived Christian life. The book sets forth central aspects of Christian living and practice that are the natural expression of those doctrines when they are understood properly as a lived phenomenon.

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Publié par
Date de parution 30 novembre 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780334059950
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Love Makes Things Happen
An Invitation to Christian Living
Edited by
Jennifer Strawbridge
Jarred Mercer
and
Peter Groves





© Editors and Contributors 2022
Published in 2022 by SCM Press
Editorial office
3rd Floor, Invicta House,
108–114 Golden Lane,
London EC1Y 0TG, UK
www.scmpress.co.uk
SCM Press is an imprint of Hymns Ancient & Modern Ltd (a registered charity)

Hymns Ancient & Modern® is a registered trademark of Hymns Ancient & Modern Ltd
13A Hellesdon Park Road, Norwich,
Norfolk NR6 5DR, UK
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, SCM Press.
The Authors have asserted their right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the Authors of this Work
The Scripture quotations contained herein are from
The New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Anglicized Edition, Copyright © 1989, 1995 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America, and are used by permission. All rights reserved.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-0-334-05993-6
Typeset by Regent Typesetting
Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd




Contents
Preface
List of Contributors

1. Love in God’s Presence: An Invitation to Prayer
Jennifer Strawbridge
2. Love in Offering: An Invitation to Worship
Jarred Mercer
3. Love in Listening: An Invitation to Scripture
Jarred Mercer
4. Love Incarnate: An Invitation to the Sacraments
Peter Groves
5. Love in New Creation: An Invitation to Baptism
Jonathan Jong
6. Love in Thanksgiving: An Invitation to the Eucharist
Peter Groves
7. Love in Proclamation: An Invitation to Evangelism and Mission
Melanie Marshall
8. Love in Self-Gift: An Invitation to Justice and Reconciliation
Jonathan Jong
9. Love in Politics: An Invitation to a Public Faith
Simon Cuff
10. Love in Hospitality: An Invitation to Welcome
Jennifer Strawbridge




Preface
Christianity is a lived phenomenon grounded in a call to love. As a lived, practised reality, Christianity cannot be abstract or divorced from our everyday lives. Doctrine (a word that just means ‘teaching’) which is separate from doing is not Christian teaching. Beginning with a focus on prayer, worship, Scripture and sacraments, Love Makes Things Happen explores the day-to-day experience that Christian faith is all about through the distinctive practices that manifest and depend upon Christian theology and doctrine.
The assumption in this book is that one cannot truly participate in prayer, worship, the sacraments, the reading of Scripture, or mission, in a way that is detached from the doctrine of the Trinity, or the Incarnation, or the Resurrection (whether one knows it or not). All of ordinary Christian life is a lived expression of the depths of Christian theology. The actions of Christian faith are more than just ‘practical applications’ of Christian teaching or theological understandings; they are the fullness of that understanding. They are doctrines that are alive, theology that breathes.
God’s love is always creative – it makes things happen. It does this through the real lives of real people, among them Christian people. The actions of prayer, sacramental celebration, evangelism, justice, hospitality and public faith, which are at the heart of Christian life, are living expressions of Christian theology. As the life and teachings of Christ make clear, God loves the poor, outcast and marginalized, and that love is shared in the public square and lived out in prayer and worship. We cannot claim to be disciples without sharing that same love.
By exploring Christian doctrine as something which is done, this book examines the Christian life as it emerges from and returns to the core foundations of Christian thought. Following on from a previous collection, Love Makes No Sense: An Invitation to Christian Theology, the chapters which follow evidence the practicality of Christian doctrine as it naturally takes shape in the world around us and invite readers to discover that love makes things happen in the course of their Christian lives. This book does not claim to be a comprehensive introduction. It is rather, as the title suggests, an invitation – something to help draw the reader deeper into a living faith, with every hope that the reader continues moving far beyond these pages.
This volume is the third collection written by a group of priests connected to the St Mary Magdalen School of Theology ( www.theschooloftheology.org ). The School of Theology – with a mission to read, pray and teach the Christian faith – seeks to offer approachable theological teaching as it explores the central teachings of Christian faith. In what follows, readers are invited to discover anew a theology of love – God’s dynamic and life-changing love – and the impact that this love has on Christian living.




List of Contributors
Simon Cuff is Vicar of St Peter de Beauvoir Town in the Diocese of London. He was formerly Lecturer in Theology at St Mellitus College and Fellow of the Centre for Theology and Community. He is a trustee of refugee charity Migrants Organise and Vice Chair of ECCR, a charity concerned with financial justice and Christian use of money.
Peter Groves is Vicar of St Mary Magdalen and Assistant Archdeacon of Oxford. He is a Senior Research Fellow in Theology at Worcester College, Oxford, where he teaches doctrine.
Jonathan Jong is Rector of Cocking with West Lavington, Bepton and Heyshott in the Diocese of Chichester. He is also an experimental psychologist and Assistant Professor at the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations at Coventry University.
Melanie Marshall is Associate Priest at St Mary Magdalen, Oxford. She was previously Chaplain of Lincoln College and has taught Latin and Greek literature in Oxford for some years.
Jarred Mercer is Rector of St Paul’s Episcopal Church in Newburyport, Massachusetts and formerly a chaplain and member of the Faculty of Theology and Religion at the University of Oxford, where he specialized in patristic theology.
Jennifer Strawbridge is Associate Professor in New Testament Studies at the University of Oxford and Caird Fellow in Theology at Mansfield College. She is also a theological canon at Chichester and Blackburn Cathedrals and Associate Priest at St Andrew’s, Headington.




1. Love in God’s Presence: An Invitation to Prayer
JENNIFER STRAWBRIDGE
Introduction
Prayer is one of the essential elements of the Christian faith. Jesus taught his disciples to pray giving them what we now call ‘The Lord’s Prayer’ (Matt. 6.9–13; Luke 11.2–4). Jesus also models prayers of intercession with his promise to pray for Christians when he is ‘at the right hand of God’ (see Rom. 8.34). Prayer is what the Apostle Paul commands us to do so that we might grow into the full stature of Christ (1 Thess. 5.17; Eph. 4.13) and what he too models through his prayer for his colleagues and communities night and day (Phil. 1.4). Prayer is even what the Spirit does on our behalf, offering ‘sighs too deep for words’ (Rom. 8.26).
But prayer is easy to take for granted. If you are a Christian, you might assume that you know how to pray or that everyone else seems to know and so you fake it until you make it. For some, prayer is a kind of ‘spiritual Father Christmas business’ (Williams) where we make a list and if we have been good, some of the petitions might be granted. For others, prayer is open and spontaneous and we speak as the Spirit moves us. And for some, prayer is set, built upon the words written in a book of common prayer and often part of a service said every morning and evening. If you are not religious, prayer may seem rather pointless and an exercise of speaking our needs into the ether; a way of making ourselves feel better in difficult situations, but it doesn’t actually do anything.
As Christians, however, prayer determines how we live our lives. This belief isn’t new but goes all the way back to the earliest Christians. The command to pray and examples of prayer are found throughout our scriptures and across our tradition and are ‘multi-faceted, profound, and without true precedent or analogy’ (Hurtado, p. 35). The Gospels and earliest Christian writers assume that prayer is a part of life, not simply what happens when Christians gather together (and how much more has this been true in the time of Covid?). God is always present and always active in all that we do, and prayer is simply acknowledging this truth. It is, in many ways, like breathing. But, as a wise monk clarifies, ‘breathing is never just one more task on our list of things to do. It is essential to life; without it we die. Prayer, like breathing, is essential to our life in God. Without it, our spiritual lives cannot be sustained’ (Vryhof).
So how do we respond to God in prayer? How might prayer infuse our lives? This chapter explores such questions through Scripture, looking to Jesus as a model for prayer, and examining the ways that prayer can be communal and solitary, gourmet or very simple, and how it helps us to engage with the joys and sorrows of our transitory lives.
What does it mean to pray? Looking to Jesus as our model
One of the biggest challenges of prayer is that our minds are constantly on the go

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