The Way of Love: 40 Days of Reflections on the Commandments

The Way of Love: 40 Days of Reflections on the Commandments

Author Steven Croft
Publisher CHP £3.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9781781402719

Bishop Steven Croft has used his wide knowledge of the Bible and his considerable pastoral expertise to produce a handy pocket guide to the Ten Commandments. It is the fourth in the ‘Pilgrim Journeys’ series – the others have featured the Beatitudes, the Lord’s Prayer and the Creeds – and it serves as an ideal companion for the forty days of Lent. I was struck however by the possibility that it would also be an excellent guide for those preparing for adult baptism or confirmation. I am sure this is right.

The strengths of the book are found firstly in the overarching emphasis on love – love for God, love for our neighbour, love for the wider world, love for creation. Secondly, I was impressed by the selection of forty different Bible passages for study and reflection. Bishop Steven has chosen well, balancing the familiar (John 3:1-17, Psalm 23, 1 Corinthians 13) with much less well-known passages (Song of Solomon 2:8-17, 2 Kings 7:3-11 – the intriguing story of the leprous men who realised they had a loving responsibility towards their community). He also chooses Psalms with subtle messages such as Psalm 15 and Psalm 131 and reminds us that the seemingly monotonous refrain of Psalm 136 (…his steadfast love endures forever…) has formidable notes of strength, faithfulness, mercy and forgiveness. Nor is he afraid to choose passages which show God’s people breaking the commandments – for example, the narrative of the idolatrous golden calf, David’s adultery with Bathsheba and Paul’s strictures on sexual immorality (1 Corinthians 6).

The subsequent reflections are short, pithy and instructive and are followed by prayers (often well-known) and some suggested actions. This is a good book for Lent, and its dedicated and consistent use, whether for personal devotion or as a group resource, should help many to deepen their commitment and discipleship.

I recommend this booklet, for it not only takes us back to basics, but also pushes us forward to new horizons of faith. It is also available from Church House Publishing in packs of 10 (£32) or even 50 (£150), to enable whole congregations to join the daily study.

Reviewed by Alice Burdett

Lent

 

Watch + Pray: Wisdom and Hope for Lent and Life

Watch + Pray: Wisdom and Hope for Lent and Life

Author Carlton Turner
Publisher CHP £2.50
Format pbk
ISBN 9781781404454
Pack of 10: £22; Pack of 50 £95

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Watch + Pray: A Lent Journey for Children

Author Anon
Publisher CHP £1.50
Format pbk
ISBN 9781781404485
Pack of 10 £12.50

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

These two pocket-sized books of reflections for Lent represent a core component of the Church of England’s resources for Lent 2024. The contributions are closely aligned to the themes within Tarry Awhile by Selina Stone, the Archbishop of Canterbury’s chosen text for the season, which features wisdom from Black spirituality for people of faith.

The booklet by Carlton Turner uses a familiar formula: a Bible passage with short reflection; time for personal reflection (‘Watch’) and suggestions for prayer. There is a special emphasis on waiting expectantly for God to meet us and sustain us.

Writing a daily task or prayer for children during Lent seems to me a formidable and unenviable task, and I am not quite convinced that all the suggested activities and actions will find favour with young people. Nonetheless, I hope and pray that this booklet will succeed. Not surprisingly, it seems to be written for parents to guide and encourage rather than as a self-starter for children. The accompanying videos for children seem to be a more fruitful way of engaging young minds (see website below).

Further details and supporting resources can be found at cofe.io/WatchAndPray

Reviewed by Elizabeth Stephenson

Lent

 

Reflections for Lent: 14 February – 30 March 2024

Reflections for Lent: 14 February – 30 March 2024

Author Andrew Davison et al
Publisher CHP £4.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9781781404515

This slim booklet is a seasonal extract from Reflections for Daily Prayer (Advent 2023 – Eve of Advent 2024). I have previously reviewed the full volume within the Transforming Ministry Advent resources feature on our website. As I wrote then,

If you have previously used this annual volume, you will know its great value in providing a focus on one of the daily lectionary readings (Monday-Saturday) for Morning Prayer. It helps to give rigour and discipline to daily worship within the rhythms of Anglican liturgy. Having used these reflections now for several years, I find that most of them stay in your mind throughout the day, and the finest stay for ever to be frequently re-told or recycled within sermons and talks… The whole book reminded me of the richness of God’s eternal word in scripture and the wisdom that accumulates in the minds of his devoted servants. Used well, this book will magnify your lectionary year.

The Lent reflections include memorable contributions from Rachel Mann, Mark Oakley, Bishop Rachel Treweeke and Holy Week reflections by Archbishop Stephen Cottrell. Highly recommended.

Reviewed by Reviewed by Elizabeth Stephenson

Lent

 

Also recommended – for Lent and throughout the year

Also recommended – for Lent and throughout the year

 

 

A Truth Universally Acknowledged: 40 days with Jane Austen

Author Rachel Mann
Publisher Canterbury Press, £12.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9781786225030

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Transfiguration: Fifty Pilgrim Steps

Author Rob Marshall
Publisher Canterbury Press, £12.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9781786225313

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Infernal Word: Notes from a Rebel Angel

Author Nicholas Papadopulos
Publisher Canterbury Press, £9.99
Format pbk
ISBN 9781786225290

 

These titles will be reviewed in Transforming Ministry Magazine later this year.

 

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

 

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