Tag Archive for 'images'

Resources for Advent 4

visitacion3

Advent 4 reflection from the collect/opening prayer.

The O antiphons have begun.

Don’t forget the Online Chapel with lots of resources of prayers and readings and reflections – many changing daily.

Advent4

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Please do let me know if this is, or is not working – one little letter wrong in the coding and all falls apart :-(

If you are on Facebook, you can send these badges to your friends there using church stuff

Please also continue adding quality Advent resources and ideas in the comments.

Resources for Advent 3

02baptis

Advent 3 December 13 reflection from the collect/opening prayer (used by BCP TEC and others)
Advent 3 December 13 reflection from the collect/opening prayer (used by CofE Common Worship and others)

Don’t forget the Online Chapel with lots of resources of prayers and readings and reflections – many changing daily.

Advent3

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Please do let me know if this is, or is not working – one little letter wrong in the coding and all falls apart :-(

If you are on Facebook, you can send these badges to your friends there using church stuff

In the comments below, please continue adding quality Advent resources and ideas.

Resources for Advent 2

juan

Advent 2 December 6 reflection from the collect/opening prayer (used by BCP TEC and others)
Advent 2 December 6 reflection from the collect/opening prayer (used by CofE Common Worship and others)

Don’t forget the Online Chapel with lots of resources of prayers and readings and reflections – many changing daily.

advent2

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Please do let me know if this is, or is not working – one little letter wrong in the coding and all falls apart :-(

If you are on Facebook, you can send these badges to your friends there using church stuff

In the comments below, please continue adding quality Advent resources and ideas.

Advent blog & site badge

Advent

Today the messages have started arriving asking for Advent badges to put on your website or blog. So I promised that I would work on that this afternoon. Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. If you like the idea – send your friends the URL of this blog post.

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


advent1

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Please do let me know if this is, or is not working – one little letter wrong in the coding and all falls apart :-(

If you are on Facebook, you can send these badges to your friends there using church stuff

St James of Jerusalem brother of Jesus

Fillipa Hamilton photoshopped

Fillipa Hamilton photoshopped

In the early church there was a saying: In Christ, God became what we are so that we might become what Christ is. God became fully human so that we might become divine.

You may have seen the news last week that the American fashion label Ralph Lauren fired the model Filippa Hamilton because she was too heavy. Filippa Hamilton is 178cm tall (5 foot 10) and weighs 54 Kg. Recently Ralph Lauren photoshopped an advertisement with Filippa Hamilton in which she was made to look impossibly thin – in fact in the advertisement she looks absolutely gross. Her waist has been photoshopped to be the same size as her head. She looks like an alien. I cannot imagine any normal woman looking at those photographs and thinking – I’ll buy those clothes. Clearly most normal persons would not be able to fit into such clothes. Certainly Filippa Hamilton cannot.

What sort of people do we aspire to be like? What sort of role-models inspire you? Do you get inspired by people that are like you and have achieved more? Or do you think role-models should be unattainable, fantasy, impossibly unhuman.

Today we celebrate the feast of St James the brother of Jesus. A lot of Christians start to squirm when they hear “brother of Jesus”, it makes Jesus and his family and his background sound too normal. It must have been his cousin – some of them say. Well, unfortunately for you, Greek has a perfectly good word for cousin, and a perfectly good word for brother, and James was Jesus’ brother – as we hear in today’s reading.

In fact a lot of Christians, I would even go so far as to say most Christians cannot name Jesus’ brothers. And of course, what might be worse – is that no one can list off Jesus’ sisters – we know he had some, but the society of the time was so sexist that their names are not even recorded.

Jesus was the oldest in the family. And James was the next boy. When Jesus died, James took over running the movement Jesus had started and James stayed the boss in Jerusalem – we call him the first bishop of Jerusalem. He probably wrote the letter of James we find in the Bible. James is mentioned by the historian Josephus writing at the time. Josephus mentions James is the well-respected brother of Jesus. And that his enemies took advantage of an interval between Roman Governors in 62AD to have James executed.

So the reading today has Jesus growing up in an ordinary first century Mediterranean peasant family – of five boys: Jesus, James and Joseph and Simon and Judas, and at least a couple of girls.

In Christ, God became what we are so that we might become what Christ is.

Isn’t it funny how some people want our heroes to be different to us. Some people want models to look more glamorous than we will ever manage. And what’s the consequence of that? Well we will never be able to be like them – so we don’t even try. We won’t even need to try. We don’t even start out on the journey. We can give up before we start.

When models are a lot more like us, when heroes are a lot more like us, when spiritual leaders are a lot more like we are – then maybe we are challenged – scary eh! – to go on the same journey they went on. Or at least a similar one.

So in the reading, Jesus goes to his hometown and it says they “take offence at him.” Because this is the guy who grew up in their midst We’ve known him since he was a kid; he’s the carpenter’s son– that’s his carpenter’s shop down there; We know his Mum, Mary. We know his brothers James and Joseph, Simon and Judas. All his sisters live here. Who does he think he is?” They get their noses all out of joint.

In Christ, God became what we are so that we might become what Christ is.

Jesus said: “Prophets are not without honor except in their own country and in their own house. A prophet is taken for granted, he is not accepted, in his hometown and his family.”

Look at the pictures we see of Jesus, the stained glass images. The Shroud of Turin notwithstanding – this is an image of Jesus pretty hard to live up to. But what if Jesus didn’t look like that.

We now know a lot more about Mediterranean peasant diet and lifestyle at the time of Jesus. We know more about their health, what they looked like. What if Jesus actually was short, and old looking, bald, and fat, with bad teeth and bad breath? That would not have been uncommon for a first century Mediterranean carpenter, a building-site labourer, a builder.

Jesus was essentially indistinguishable from the people of his day. He was one of them.

In Christ, God became what we are so that we might become what Christ is.

postscript: a useful alternative perspective on “brother of Jesus”
pps. untangle the different biblical James here

Ordinary Time Badge

I have been requested to produce badges through the liturgical seasons. You will find badges for Ordinary Time, and the HTML to add to your website or blog on the home page. OK – you’ve twisted my arm and I’ve made “After Pentecost” and “After Trinity” badges for you as well…

Easter Season badge

I have been requested to produce badges through the liturgical seasons. I have again been requested for an Easter season badge. You will find it, and the HTML to add to your website or blog on the home page.

If you are a member of facebook you can join those encouraging the concept of a 50-day Easter. Facebook people can also send the 50-day Easter badge to their friends.

More about the 50-day Easter Season here.

Lent badge

lentbadgeI have been requested to produce badges through the liturgical seasons. I have again been requested for a Lent badge.

Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. For ease, you can pick up the HTML on the home page (I’m struggling to get it correct here – too late – too tired). If you like this idea – please forward this URL to your friends. Let me know if there are any problems.

Ordinary Time – After Epiphany badges

Ordinary TimeI have been requested to produce badges through the liturgical seasons. Here I use the Kiwi idea of growing life represented in the unfurling fern frond for Ordinary Time – appropriately it is green.

Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. If you like the idea – send your friends the URL of this blog post.

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:

After Epiphany

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:

Christmas badge

christmasAn interesting response to my series of badges, one for each week of Advent, has been a request to continue producing badges – one for Christmas, and in fact through the seasons.

Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. If you like the idea – send your friends the URL of this blog post.

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Advent 4 wreath badge

Advent 4Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. There has been positive interest and a lot of use of the Advent 1 , 2 & 3 wreath images – so here is Advent 4. If you like the idea – send your friends the URL of this blog post.

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Advent 3 wreath badge

Advent 3I THINK this badge has been fixed now! Thanks to the person who let me know it wasn’t working! I always appreciate being told parts of the site are not going properly – I am still very much a learner in HTML etc. :-)

Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. There has been positive interest and a lot of use of the Advent 1 & 2 wreath images – so here is Advent 3. If you like the idea – send your friends the URL of this blog post.

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Advent 2 wreath badge

Advent 2Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. There was positive interest and a lot of use of the Advent 1 wreath image – so here is Advent 2. If you like the idea – send your friends the URL of this blog post.

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:

Advent wreath badge

Advent 1Many people like, from time to time, to add a badge to their website or blog. So if there is interest in this I will produce a new badge each week of Advent. If you like the idea – send your friends the URL of this blog post.

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:

clip art

Jesus on water Hermanoleón clipart is a wonderful site from which one can draw a variety of different styles of clip art. Here is an example of an image for this coming Sunday. Enjoy using this resource!

Vanderbilt Divinity Library has an online collection of lectionary linked images.

Artchive is another resource for images that can be used in power point or other options.