Live Lent. Embracing Justice: a 40-day challenge (For Kids)

Live Lent
Embracing Justice: a 40-day challenge (For Kids)

Author Anon
Publisher CHP £1.50 (10 pack £122.50; 50 pack £55)
Format pbk
ISBN 9781781402658

This version of the daily challenge for children and families uses a weekly reading and prayer, together with daily practical challenges designed to promote Christian values of justice and good neighbourliness.

Reviewed by ELIZABETH STEPHENSON

Lenten devotion

 

Live Lent. Embracing Justice: a 40-day challenge

Live Lent
Embracing Justice: a 40-day challenge

Author Isabelle Hamley
Publisher CHP £1.99 (10-pack £17.50; 50-pack £75)
Format pbk
ISBN 9781781402597

This small companion volume to Isabelle Hamley’s substantive book, Embracing Justice, is designed for individuals or groups to follow the theme of seeking Christian justice daily (Monday-Saturday) during Lent, using carefully selected Bible passages, short reflections and simple prayers. It will be accompanied by daily postings on social media, each day from Ash Wednesday to Easter Sunday, with free video and other digital resources from www.churchofengland.org/livelent.

Reviewed by ELIZABETH STEPHENSON

Lenten devotion

 

All’s Well that Ends Well

All’s Well That Ends Well:
From Dust to Resurrection:
Forty Days with Shakespeare

Author Peter Graystone
Publisher Canterbury Press, £12.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9781786223548

Were you deterred from Shakespeare at school by the grinding need to study a set text? Or – more positively – were you enchanted for life when you saw one of the classic comedies or tragedies on stage and recognised the power of his prose and the depth of his characterisations? Surely it is only the Bible (especially the Psalms) which can exceed Shakespeare in providing a greater insight into the failings and foibles of the human condition. Perhaps that is why each guest on ‘Desert Island Discs’ is provided automatically with the Bible and the complete works of Shakespeare. What are we doing here, and what is the meaning of life? Both books provide an answer, in different ways.

The wonderful and original idea behind this delightful book is captured in its subtitle: ‘From Dust to Resurrection: 40 days with Shakespeare’. Peter Graystone, a Reader in the Diocese of Southwark, has taken excerpts from Shakespeare’s writings, elucidated their meaning, and linked them systematically and imaginatively to our Gospel story. Our humanity, exposed by the Bard, can be reconciled with God, day by day, as we journey into Lent. For forty days we can quarry the wisdom of Shakespeare and find it expanded and illuminated by the teachings of Scripture: the greatest glories of the English language, surpassed by the greater glory of Jesus Christ. .

Each of the forty sections has a Shakespearean excerpt, carefully chosen. Some are familiar words: ‘If music be the food of love, play on,,,; ‘To be, or not to be…’; ‘Jealousy…the green-eyed monster…’; ‘Out, damned spot!’ Nonetheless, fresh ideas spring from each page, and we are halted in our tracks, made to think and provoked into prayer. Other passages will probably not be known to you. Sonnet 29, for example, begins: ‘When in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes / I all alone beweep my outcast state’, and Graystone quickly fastens this to the pathos and deep lament of Psalm 88. One of the loveliest excerpts is from Cymbeline – not a familiar play for me – a beautiful funeral poem which evokes the opening rite of Lent on Ash Wednesday: ‘Remember you are dust and to dust you shall return’. This provides a worthy opening chapter, and an ideal start to Lenten solemnities.

Was Shakespeare a model Christian? Perhaps he was all too fallible, given the deliberate bawdiness of some plays and what we know of his life. But there is a lot of evidence that he truly believed in God. For day 39 of our journey – ideally to be read on Holy Saturday – Graystone ingeniously provides not a play or a poem, but an extract from Shakespeare’s will. We remember of course that he notoriously left his wife Anne his ‘second-best bed; but elsewhere in the will we read: ‘I commend my soul into the hands of God my Creator, hoping and assuredly believing, through the only merits of Jesus Christ my Saviour, to be made partaker of life everlasting…’

As Graystone notes, Shakespeare’s literary legacy is a source of comfort which can sustain us in dark times. But ultimately it is derived from a firm faith in Jesus, and the resurrection hope of Easter. I commend to you this fine, interesting and original book.

Reviewed by MALCOLM DAWSON

Lenten devotion

 

Embracing Justice

The Archbishop of Canterbury’s Lent Book, 2022

 

Embracing Justice

Author Isabelle Hamley
Publisher SPCK, £10.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9780281086542

Isabelle Hamley has the highly important, but perhaps unenviable, job of being theological adviser to the Church of England’s House of Bishops. Unsurprisingly, there is thus a lot of very sound theological teaching in her latest book, which should certainly engage – not only bishops and other ministers – but also lay members throughout the church, across all levels of Christian experience and traditions. It is a comprehensive and plain-speaking call for social justice in all its forms, at a time when the world-wide pandemic has created new and disturbing levels of injustice. Embracing Justice deserves a wide audience, and makes an ideal read for Lent for several reasons.

First, it explains with biblical examples from the early chapters of Genesis to the Gospels and the writing of St Paul what justice means to God and therefore why it must be important to Christians. There is particular power in the author’s exposition of the exodus from Egypt, with resonances of liberation theology. And – in a beautiful concluding chapter on Holy Communion – we are reminded of the physical reality, as well as the symbolism, behind the breaking and sharing of bread and drinking wine together. This is summed up in one especially powerful sentence: ‘The simplicity of bread and wine is an antidote to an imagination that justifies giving much to some and little to others, banquets for some and hunger for others.’

Embracing Justice uses powerful narratives and stories – sometimes shocking ones, for example on exploitation and abuse – to move us from complacency to compassion. I was jerked from my own indifference when I read the author’s objective but graphic summary of the ongoing conflict in South Sudan, where in the five years between 2013 and 2018, civil war cost 400 000 lives and displaced 2.5 million people, although few headlines were generated in the west. When we look closely at our broken, unequal and violent world, home and abroad, we yearn to do something about the glaring lack of justice.

At the end of each chapter there are questions for discussion and pointers for prayer and reflection, allowing for the book’s use as a powerful Lent-long course with home- or church-based discussion groups. Reading it alone is also salutary and valuable. However it is used, this book has the potential to show how each of us can more fully reflect the justice, mercy and compassion of Jesus Christ in our everyday lives.

Reviewed by ELIZABETH STEPHENSON

Lenten devotion

 

Keeping Lent and Easter

Keeping Lent and Easter

Author Leigh Hatts
Publisher DLT £9.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9780232533378

Subtitled, ‘Discovering the rhythms and riches of the Christian seasons’, this is a very well researched book about the traditions that surround the key events from Lent to Easter. From Pancakes to the washing of feet on Maundy Thursday, the practices and ceremonies that have developed to show the truths of the Gospel are painstakingly documented. I consider this would be a most useful book for ministers who take Primary school assemblies, especially in Church schools. It links the ceremonies and rituals to the biblical stories of Holy Week and beyond in a way that will be very helpful if you are preparing a sermon or some liturgy or fresh expression. The author has been able to explain the meaning and origin of some of the church’s most obscure ideas. One of the strengths of this book is that it does not just talk about British traditions but explains international ones as well. It also contains suggestions for suitable hymns and prayers to match the seasons. This is an invaluable reference book to be consulted and drawn upon.

Reviewed by CAVAN WOOD

Lenten devotion

 

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