Category: February 2021

  • Fairtrade Breakfast

    Fairtrade Breakfast

    This beautifully sunny and frosty morning twelve of us, including friends from other churches in Orkneys, met on Zoom for a Fairtrade Breakfast to celebrate FT products near and far. Orkney Fairtrade Group motto “Buy Fair Buy Local” was truly followed as people had on their breakfast tables FT coffee and tea, FT breakfast juice, FT dates and bananas, home made muffins made with FT and local ingredients (good Orkney milk and butter and some had eggs from their own hens). Not to forget the delicious Birsay oats.                      

    It was a different way of having breakfast together from our usual FT breakfast at church, however we all enjoyed coming together though there were some problems connecting because of poor internet connection.

  • Evening Service for Sunday 21st February

    Sunday 21st is the UNESCO International Mother Language Day, This year’s observance is a call on policymakers, educators and teachers, parents and families to scale up their commitment to multilingual education, and inclusion in education to advance education recovery in the context of COVID-19. This effort also contributes to the United Nations International Decade of Indigenous Languages (2022-2032), for which UNESCO is the lead agency, and which places multilingualism at the heart of indigenous peoples’ development.  Alongside this we remember all those displaced people who are struggling to survive in alien cultures and surroundings.

  • Celtic Christianity

    Celtic Christianity

    Over the last few weeks, our Fellowship group has been looking at themes of Celtic Spirituality. We’ve been using Michael Mitton’s book Restoring the Woven Cord – studying one chapter each week – and it’s certainly given us a lot to think about.

    Each chapter focuses on a different aspect of Celtic Christianity and on a particular key figure, but there’s a fair amount of overlap and the strands are often interwoven. At times, to be honest, we felt that the narrative jumped about a bit – and that could be quite frustrating! But it’s stimulated some really interesting discussions and challenged us in many ways.

    Various things have struck us – the humility of the key figures; the sense of community; the passion for the gospel; the care for God’s creation. We discovered a simplicity and an authenticity that’s sometimes lacking in today’s church. These were people who lived the gospel in an unassuming way and who had what Mitten describes at one point as ‘an infectious holiness’.

    The ‘Application’ section at the end of each chapter has sometimes been particularly challenging. We’ve been challenged to look at our own, personal lives and also at the life of our church. In each of these we’ve found a lot we can feel positive about, but we’ve also begun to appreciate that there’s plenty of room for improvement.

    In the last chapter of the book, Mitton says:

    “The more I read about the Celtic church, the more I am moved and humbled by it, and the more I am convinced that it is speaking to us today.”

    It is certainly speaking to those of us who have been exploring it together.

    Restoring the Woven Cord by Michael Mitton

  • A year to remember

    A year to remember

    On 30th January 2020, the World Health Organisation declared the Corona Virus outbreak as a global health emergency.  To mark the anniversary of this, members of St Olaf’s organised a Prayer Vigil and invited 12 churches, representing a variety of denominations and Orkney locations, to contribute.

    We were overwhelmed by the response and support.  To avoid technical issues, the bulk of the vigil was in pre-recorded 5-minute sections, each focusing on a particular group or issue.  Each church sent a sound or video file and suggested some prayer points, and these were then compiled and edited by Mike Robertson.  The vigil began with a short introduction from Stuart Little, during which we were invited to light a candle, and Linda Broadley (Church of Scotland) led a short act of worship at the end.

    We were joined on the night by about 70 people – mainly from Orkney, but we also had people joining us from Shetland, Scotland, England and even as far afield as New York – and we’ve had some very positive and encouraging feedback.

    The vigil was recorded and is available on Youtube.