Monday, 30 November 2015
SYRIA
Thinking of Syria; At its core, the teachings of Jesus call us to love our enemies, seek justice, and serve the needy.
Monday, 16 November 2015
Hymn for harmony in a world of many faiths
1 Faith works, but how can love be shown
within a world of complex care?
Between each nation, in each town
how can God's love be focused there?
2 A different language, creed or dress
can build a wall and damage life;
and ignorance or fear of faith
could break our trust and fire our strife.
3 How can we legislate for peace,
or work for human harmony,
within a world of disparate needs,
maintaining our integrity.
4 God give us confidence to see
your face in people all around
that, in a world of many faiths,
your seeds of love may find rich ground.
Andrew E. Pratt (born 1948)
© Andrew Pratt 20/4/2006
8 8 8 8
Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
within a world of complex care?
Between each nation, in each town
how can God's love be focused there?
2 A different language, creed or dress
can build a wall and damage life;
and ignorance or fear of faith
could break our trust and fire our strife.
3 How can we legislate for peace,
or work for human harmony,
within a world of disparate needs,
maintaining our integrity.
4 God give us confidence to see
your face in people all around
that, in a world of many faiths,
your seeds of love may find rich ground.
Andrew E. Pratt (born 1948)
© Andrew Pratt 20/4/2006
8 8 8 8
Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Friday, 13 November 2015
Paris attacks - hymn
At least 18 people have been killed in several shootings in the French capital, Paris, as well as explosions near the Stade de France (BBC) 2254hrs 13/11/2015
This hymn written earlier this year has, sadly, been adapted in the light of today's attacks.
Hopeless to help in this violence, this crisis,
here in the focus of bloodshed and fear,
common humanity binds us together,
love at the centre, not hatred's veneer.
History repeats in this city of beauty,
here amid elegance: danger’s embrace.
Love is our purpose when those filled with hatred
break down relationships, nullify grace.
Give me your hand, then let peace grow between us,
let us rebuild what distrust might destroy.
Now in this moment we'll make a commitment,
love is the weapon we'll use and deploy.
© Andrew Pratt 20/1/2015 & 18/1/2015 &
13/11/2015Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Mohammed Emwazi (AKA Jihadi John)
In the light of the suspected death of Mohammed Emwazi (AKA Jihadi John), the following hymn originally written at the time of the death of Osama bin Laden might be pertintent - see below or follow the link
http://hymnsandbooks.blogspot.co.uk/2011/05/osama-bin-ladin-hymn.html
http://hymnsandbooks.blogspot.co.uk/2011/05/osama-bin-ladin-hymn.html
Sunday, 8 November 2015
REMEMBRANCE & PEACE - A HYMN - How do we heal the horror
How do we heal the horror:
the aftermath of war,
the sharpened, hurtful questions
we wonder what it’s for;
the tears that feed each memory,
the pain, the hurt, the fear,
the images that haunt each mind,
that always seem so near?
How can we unlearn hatred
that undermines our peace,
that hurts beyond our healing,
God, will it never cease?
How can we sound the purpose
that severs limb from limb,
that escalates the tension,
that sounds a war-like hymn?
No God can end this murder,
this futile loss of life,
this endless mutilation,
this pointless human strife,
for every generation
must learn to love again,
to mine the seam of healing,
to end this ceaseless pain.
© Andrew Pratt 7/11/2015
Tune: AURELIA
Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Thursday, 10 September 2015
Migration continues to exercise the politicians and people of the UK and Europe - a hymn
Sometimes
the footfall seems incessant,
a
challenge to our selfish greed,
how
can we clothe and house such numbers,
our
fear wells up to veil their need.
Yet
every living person coming
should
have a share of all our wealth,
but
dare we give without a limit
to
meet another’s need of health?
This
is the challenge set before us,
to
greet each stranger as a friend,
to
share God’s love, that knows no limits,
until
all fear and hunger ends.
©
Andrew Pratt 4/9/3015
Tune:
ST CLEMENTPlease include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Friday, 28 August 2015
They’re carted off like cattle - Reported this morning - 70 found dead in a lorry in Austria
They’re
carted off like cattle,
yet
we’d refuse a bed
to
those who flee from carnage
now
drowned, or lost or dead?
Christ
said accept the stranger,
how
can we bar the door
to
those both poor and hungry
who
wait beyond our shore.
How
can we guard our comfort
or
fear what we might lose
when
those who are more needy,
we
punish and abuse.
God,
must we wait for judgment?
Will
nothing change our face
from
sneering denigration
to
smiles of love and grace?
Good
God forgive the selfish,
the
ones who bind the free,
who
now withhold salvation.
Begin
right now with me!
©
Andrew Pratt 28/8/2015
Reported
this morning - 70 found dead in a lorry in Austria.
Tune:
CHERRY TREE CAROLCL return if you have one
Friday, 10 July 2015
More than Hymns - Words for a Lyrical Faith - NEW HYMN COLLECTION - Andrew Pratt
More than Hymns - Words for a Lyrical Faith – Stainer & Bell Ltd http://www.stainer.co.uk/shop/b944.html
ISBN 0
85249 944 3
A creative spirituality is the essence of Andrew Pratt’s continuing affirmation of the role of hymnody in contemporary faith, through a corpus of lyrics for public worship that are amongst the most relevant of recent contributions to the form. No less than with his very first texts, dating from the late 1970s, the goal in this fourth and latest collection is to make sense of language, living and worshipping in a way that also acknowledges the shifting and often contextual nature of our words and of our world. One important influence in More than Hymns has been the discipline of writing hymns for three years of the readings of the Revised Common Lectionary. Another has been his response to the problem of evil as manifest in the crises and conflicts of the last decade. There are challenging insights into familiar Biblical themes, and a number of refreshing items, each a pièce d’occasion arising from the author’s varied pastoral work.
Saturday, 27 June 2015
CHARLESTON, FRANCE, TUNISIA - A DIVIDED WORD - A HYMN
A world once rent by turmoil
will suffer once again,
the memories once buried
have surfaced with our pain,
the hatred that enslaved us
has found another dawn,
while love and grace are tattered,
bedraggled, lost and torn.
Once Christ had shown through living
the way to human life,
to cut through human hatred,
confronting human strife,
when those who made religion
an idol to defend,
stood fast against oppression
until life's very end.
God give us strength to covet
the love that makes us whole,
to claim again your promise,
the value of each soul.
God give us grace to cherish
your love above each creed,
to value every neighbour
through thought and word and deed.
© Andrew Pratt 27/6/2015
andrewpratt48@gmail.com
Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Wednesday, 13 May 2015
NEPAL EARTHQUAKE - POEM
Canyons heave and
mountains tumble,
earth beneath will
shift and rumble,
quaking buildings
tilting and falling
will God never head
our calling?
Like some hell afire
with trouble,
children buried in the
rubble:
seems there is no hope
or reason,
fear unleashed, death
finds its season.
Here in utter
desperation
harmed by nature's
harsh mutation,
will we ask 'is God
against us',
seeking to deny or
test us?
When, O when, as life
is rattled
and we feel dislodged,
embattled,
will an avalanche of
praying
turn a God bent on
betraying?
Then when rubble
ceases moving,
still God's grace, it
seems, needs proving.
All our trust and hope
is waning,
faith is taut, near
breaking, straining.
Yet, as neighbours,
sharing grieving,
let us bring God's
love, relieving
fears that leave the
world unsleeping
seeding trust, God's
grace unceasing.
© Andrew Pratt
12/5/2015
ITEMS POSTED ON THIS BLOG MAY BE USED FREELY LOCALLY WITH ACKNOWLEDGEMENT.
TO PUBLISH FOR PROFIT PLEASE CONTACT THE AUTHOR.
Open letter to the Prime Minister fomr Mike Walsh
Mike, a URC Minister wrote and open letter to Prime Minister Cameron after the 2015 election. It begins:
Dear Prime Minister,
I don't know if you will ever read this, but I have some things I wish to say to you.
You have won the General Election and command a majority in the House of Commons, and as such will feel you have a legitimate mandate to govern. However, you must also know that you don't command a majority of the British people.
Although our political views are very much at odds on many issues, I'm willing to believe that you are a good man, as sure of your ideals as I am of mine, and believe your plan is what's best for us all. You said today that you will govern for the whole country and bring back together that which has clearly fractured. I hope you will.
Thanks to Mike for this - a timely word
Read the whole of the letter here
https://www.facebook.com/revd.walsh?fref=ts
Dear Prime Minister,
I don't know if you will ever read this, but I have some things I wish to say to you.
You have won the General Election and command a majority in the House of Commons, and as such will feel you have a legitimate mandate to govern. However, you must also know that you don't command a majority of the British people.
Although our political views are very much at odds on many issues, I'm willing to believe that you are a good man, as sure of your ideals as I am of mine, and believe your plan is what's best for us all. You said today that you will govern for the whole country and bring back together that which has clearly fractured. I hope you will.
Thanks to Mike for this - a timely word
Read the whole of the letter here
https://www.facebook.com/revd.walsh?fref=ts
Thursday, 23 April 2015
MIGRATION HYMN - hymn response to reports of more than 800 people drowned off Libya's coast
Idyllic beaches break the waves
as bathers line the shore
This view of peace is now disturbed:
an aftermath of war.
The ones who fled from lives they knew
have gone in fear and dread,
the ships that offered hope to them
are sunk with many dead.
And where is God amid the swell
where tides still ebb and flow,
unfeeling of this loss of life,
as others come and go?
The commerce of the world goes on.
Can we ignore the pain?
It is as though we're blind to see
Christ crucified again.
The ones who drown are ones we own
as neighbours we should love,
how can we turn our eyes away,
avert our gaze above?
For when our politics conspires
to shut the door to grace
it is as though we turn away
from Jesus' tortured face.
© Andrew Pratt 22/4/2015 Please include on your CCL return if you have one
Tune: ELLACOMBE or KINGSFOLD
The
challenge of migration: In response
to reports of more than 800 people drowned off Libya's
coast on Sunday 19th
April 2015, bringing the number of deaths this year to 1,750.
Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Saturday, 28 March 2015
A HYMN BEFORE THE ELECTION - If we claim to love our neighbours
PLEASE
NOTE; The copyright notice for this text should now read: © 2015 Stainer &
Bell Ltd and NOT © 2015 Andrew Pratt. The text is available using a CCL
Licence.
1 If we claim to love our neighbour
while the hungry queue for food,
are we prey to self-deception?
Is perception quite so crude?
If we sit beside our neighbours,
begging for the things they need,
we might share their own injustice
in a world that thrives on greed.
2 If we punish those with nothing,
blaming them for where they stand,
is this love of friend or neighbour,
do we still not understand?
Love of neighbour is not easy,
cuts us till we feel the pain,
sharing hurt that they are feeling
till they find new life again.
3 Love of neighbour sets us squarely
in the place where they now sit,
till the richness God has given
builds a pearl around the grit;
till each person shares the comfort
of the love of which we preach,
till we live as fact the Gospel:
none can be beyond love's reach.
Andrew E Pratt (born 1948)
1 If we claim to love our neighbour
while the hungry queue for food,
are we prey to self-deception?
Is perception quite so crude?
If we sit beside our neighbours,
begging for the things they need,
we might share their own injustice
in a world that thrives on greed.
2 If we punish those with nothing,
blaming them for where they stand,
is this love of friend or neighbour,
do we still not understand?
Love of neighbour is not easy,
cuts us till we feel the pain,
sharing hurt that they are feeling
till they find new life again.
3 Love of neighbour sets us squarely
in the place where they now sit,
till the richness God has given
builds a pearl around the grit;
till each person shares the comfort
of the love of which we preach,
till we live as fact the Gospel:
none can be beyond love's reach.
Andrew E Pratt (born 1948)
© 2015 Stainer & Bell LtdMetre 8.7.8.7.D
Tune: BETHANY
(Smart)
Written during
the Manchester & Stockport District Synod (in response to a Joint Public
Issues presentation by Rachel Lampard & Paul Morrison). The hymn was sung
at the close of Synod.HYMNS POSTED ON THIS BLOG MAY BE USED FREELY LOCALLY WITH ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. TO PUBLISH FOR PROFIT PLEASE CONTACT THE AUTHOR.
Sunday, 8 February 2015
BBC Radio Merseyside Acts of Worship
Having
given notice to BBC Radio Merseyside that I am no longer willing to take Acts
of Worship as part of the Daybreak Sunday
morning religious programme some people have asked why this is.
Firstly,
· I am very happy with
the people that I have worked with on a day to day basis for over a decade and
I continue to hold them in high regard.
· I still have the
capacity to do this work and will, in fact, have more time from August 31st
when I retire from full-time employment.
So why have I ‘given
notice’?
During
the autumn of 2014 presenters of the Act of Worship were invited to Radio
Merseyside for a training session. Part of this related to Compliance. The gist
of this was that each Act of Worship would need to be submitted for scrutiny on
Thursday morning when it was to be presented live on a Sunday. In this process
the script could be approved or amended and approved.
In principle there is
nothing wrong with this.
The downside is that the whole
script needs to be ready to be submitted at the end of Wednesday and cannot be
significantly changed following this. In the event of local or national events
taking place between submission and broadcast no changes can be made.
The
week preceding February 8th was in some ways exceptional, but during this time
two significant national news items related to child abuse, Lord Chilcot
(reporting on the Iraq War) appeared before a Select Committee, a Parliamentray debate focussed on mitochondrial DNA, discussions
were taking place at an international level relating to the Ukraine and Russia and
ISIS displayed a video of a man being burnt alive. On the 7th
February a man was shot in Liverpool.
Had
I been leading worship in a church I would have at least mentioned some of
these in the prayers. In reality I might well have reflected on one of them in
the act of worship. The BBC response is that these issues were dealt with
elsewhere in the programme and, indeed, some were.
Another
BBC comment was that there, ‘are the days when our contributors cannot come in
live and so we broadcast a pre-recorded Act of Worship. This will not reflect
the news of the day.’
It
was added, ‘But that is not necessarily a bad thing’.
As
I believe
· that worship ought to
reflect context,
· that it is an act of
worship that I am seeking to enable,
· that context includes
an awareness by the congregation (audience) of what is happening in the world,
then
not to respond to events is to diminish the act of worship.
From
this perspective in 30 years of ministry it has been my experience that people
seem to find it helpful to reflect within worship on such things. I have sought
to do this publicly and by writing hymns on issues as varied as tsunamis and
the death of Osama bin Laden.
Not
to make such links may not ‘be a bad thing’ but it is, for me, thoroughly unsatisfactory.
The
rightness of my decision was underlined for me this morning (8th
February 2015) as I led an Act of Worship, broadcast live focussing on awe,
wonder and hope without being able to relate to any of the things that had been
a focus of the rest of the programme, or that had happened since submitting my
script.
It is for this reason that
I have indicated that I am no longer able to lead Acts of Worship on BBC Radio
Merseyside with integrity.
Saturday, 10 January 2015
PARIS SHOOTINGS - HYMN IN RESPONSE
Definitive
- French Killings hymn - This version should be used from now to
replace the previous version.
Hopeless to help in
this violence, this crisis,
here in the focus of
bloodshed and fear,
common humanity binds
us together,
love at the centre, not
hatred's veneer.
Jewish and Christian
and Muslim together,
all the world’s people,
we each have a place.
Love is our purpose
when those filled with hatred
break down
relationships, nullify grace.
Give me your hand, then
let peace grow between us,
let us rebuild what
distrust might destroy.
Now in this moment
we'll make a commitment,
love is the weapon
we'll use and deploy.
© Andrew Pratt
20/1/2015 & 18/1/2015
Tune:
STEWARDSHIP
HYMNS POSTED ON THIS BLOG MAY BE USED FREELY LOCALLY WITH ACKNOWLEDGEMENT.
TO PUBLISH FOR PROFIT PLEASE CONTACT THE AUTHOR.
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