Here I Am: Reflections on the Ordained Life
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About this ebook
Richard Giles
Richard Giles has been working in the technology industry for over fifteen years. He recognized the power of the Internet in the early nineties. He became passionate about blogging three years ago, helping to create Australia's first major blogging event, and now runs his personal blog (http://www.richardgiles.net/blog/) and Gadget Lounge (www.gadgetlounge.net), a successful gadget news site. He fell in love with podcasting in its earliest days, beginning his own podcasts in September 2004.
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Here I Am - Richard Giles
Here I Am
Richard Giles is the Dean of Philadelphia. He is the author of Repitching the Tent, a classic text on the design and ordering of church buildings, Creating Uncommon Worship and How to Be an Anglican.
Here I Am
Reflections on the ordained life
Richard Giles
Canterbury%20logo.gifCopyright information
Text © Richard Giles 2006
Illustrations © Bob O’Cathail
First published in 2006 by the Canterbury Press Norwich
(a publishing imprint of Hymns Ancient & Modern Limited,
a registered charity)
13–17 Long Lane, London
EC1A 9PN
www.scm-canterburypress.co.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, Canterbury Press.
The Author has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the Author of this Work
Quotations taken from the Authorized Text of the Ordination Services are copyright © The Archbishops’ Council of the Church of England, 2000–2006, www.cofe.anglican.org
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
978-1-85311-713-8
Typeset by Regent Typesetting, London
Printed and bound by CPI Antony Rowe, Chippenham, SN14 6LH
Contents
Introduction
1. Servants and Shepherds
Priests are called to be servants and shepherds among the people to whom they are sent.’
2. Co-Workers
‘With their bishop and fellow ministers’
3. Proclaiming
‘They are to proclaim the word of the Lord.’
4. Watching
. . . and to watch for the signs of God’s new creation.’
5. Messengers and Stewards
‘They are to be messengers, watchmen and stewards of the Lord; they are to teach and to admonish, to feed and provide for his family.’
6. Searching and Guiding
. . . to search for his children in the wilderness of this world’s temptations, and to guide them through its confusions.’
7. Declaring Forgiveness
‘Formed by the Word, they are to call their hearers to repentance and to declare in Christ’s name the absolution and forgiveness of their sins.’
8. Making Disciples
‘With all God’s people they are to tell the story of God’s love. They are to baptize new disciples in the name of the Father, the Son and Holy Spirit, and to walk with them in the way of Christ, nurturing them in the faith.’
9. Unfolding the Scriptures
‘They are to unfold the scriptures, to preach the word in season and out of season, and to declare the mighty acts of God.’
10. Presiding and Leading
‘They are to preside at the Lord’s table and lead his people in worship, offering with them a spiritual sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. They are to bless the people in God’s name.’
11. Supporting and Defending
‘They are to resist evil, support the weak, defend the poor, and intercede for all in need. They are to minister to the sick and prepare the dying for their death.’
12. Discerning and Fostering
‘Guided by the Spirit, they are to discern and foster the gifts of all God’s people, that the whole Church may be built up in unity and faith.’
Dedication
For
Hans Küng
presbyter, prophet
and pilot of the Church
This book grew out of an ordination retreat in December 2004 at the Wapiti Wilderness Retreat, Maryland for those preparing for ordination in the Diocese of Pennsylvania
And I heard the voice of the Lord saying,
‘Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?’
Then I said, ‘Here am I! Send me.’
Isaiah 6.8
Thus the Lord used to speak to Moses face to face,
as one speaks to a friend.
Exodus 33.11
Will you come and follow me if I but call your name?
Will you come and follow me and never be the same?
‘The Summons’, John L. Bell and Graham Maule, Celebration Hymnal for Everyone, McCrimmons, 1994
A better preest, I trowe that nowher noon is.
He waited after no pompe and reverence,
Ne maked him a spyced conscience;
But Cristes lore, and his Apostles twelve,
He taughte, but first followed it hymselve.
Geoffrey Chaucer, ‘The Parson’s Tale’ from The Canterbury Tales
I had stood at the foot of a huge north wall and knew unquestionably that I could climb it, that I was strong enough and good enough, and knew as certainly as I had ever known anything that this is exactly where I should be and what I should do. It seemed wonderfully irrational and ludicrously egotistical. It needed no justification, no rationale.
It had to be done, and done well, and nothing more.
Joe Simpson, This Game of Ghosts, Vintage, 1994
The Illustrations
The woodcuts are by Bob O’Cathail and are reproduced by permission of the artist.
Hill Shepherd, front cover, Chapters 1, 6 and 11
Set Dance, Chapters 2 and 8
Honey From Stone, Chapter 3
The Hermit, Chapter 4
Alphabet Stone, Chapters 5 and 12
Salmon Leap, Chapter 7
Poet’s Table, Chapter 9
Dolmen, Chapter 10
Introduction
Archbishop Donald Coggan used to say that there was no finer job on earth than that of a parish priest. If I remember rightly, he didn’t use the word ‘calling’ or ‘vocation’ in this context. He used a more down-to-earth word because what he was getting at was the incredible truth that those of us commissioned to full-time ordained ministry actually get paid and housed to do what we would give our right arm to do anyway.
No two days are ever the same; no one is breathing down your neck or looking over your shoulder. The presbyter is given immense freedom, but with freedom comes responsibility. The responsibility never to betray those who turn to us, trust in us. The responsibility never to lose the sense of awe and wonder at who we are, and at the possibilities of each day as a priest of the Church of God.
For given into our hands is the wondrous ‘cure of souls’; the care and succour of human beings in the most significant area of their lives – their relationship with the Holy One, the Life Force, God.
To be a presbyter of the Church of God requires a sense of adventure grounded