Tag: prayer

  • Creation Time

    Creation Time

    The period from 1st September until 4th October is celebrated by churches throughout the world as ‘Creation Time’. It’s a time “dedicated to prayer for the protection of Creation and the promotion of sustainable lifestyles that reverse our contribution to climate change”.

    The beginning and end dates are significant:

    • 1st September is the first day of the Eastern Orthodox liturgical year. In 1989, the Ecumenical Patriarch suggested that it should be observed as a day of “protection of the natural environment”. 10 years later, the the European Christian Environmental Network (ECEN) expanded the idea to cover a longer period and they encouraged churches to adopt the period from 1st September until 4th October as a ‘Time for Creation’.
    • 4th October is the feast day of St Francis, known for his love for animals and the environment.

    The theme for this year is A home for all? Renewing the Oikos of God. Psalm 24:1 says: The earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it. Sadly, however, we’re now facing a climate crisis – a crisis that’s putting all of creation at serious risk. This year’s focus on Oikos – the family, the family’s property and the house – looks to remind us of our interconnectedness. It’s a reminder that the Season of Creation should be a time for action as well as prayer.

    Within the whole inhabited Earth (oikoumene), the Church (oikoumene) calls all households and societies (oikos) to turn our political, social and economic systems (oikonomia) towards just, sustainable economies of life, which respect the limits and life giving ecological boundaries (oikologia) of our common home.

    https://seasonofcreation.org/about/

    Season of Creation 2021 Prayer
    Creator of All,
    We are grateful that from your communion of love you created our planet to be a home
    for all. By your Holy Wisdom you made the Earth to bring forth a diversity of living beings
    that filled the soil, water and air. Each part of creation praises you in their being, and
    cares for one another from our place in the web of life.
    With the Psalmist, we sing your praise that in your house “even the sparrow finds a
    home, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may lay her young.” We remember
    that you call human beings to keep your garden in ways that honor the dignity of each
    creature and conserve their place in the abundance of life on Earth.
    But we know that our will to power pushes the planet beyond her limits. Our
    consumption is out of harmony and rhythm with Earth’s capacity to heal herself.
    Habitats are left barren or lost. Species are lost and systems fail. Where reefs and
    burrows, mountaintops and ocean deeps once teemed with life and relationships, wet
    and dry deserts lie empty, as if uncreated. Human families are displaced by insecurity
    and conflict, migrating in search of peace. Animals flee fires, deforestation and famine,
    wandering in search of a new place to find a home to lay their young and live.
    In this Season of Creation, we pray that the breath of your creative Word would move
    our hearts, as in the waters of our birth and baptism. Give us faith to follow Christ to our
    just place in the beloved community. Enlighten us with the grace to respond to your
    covenant and call to care for our common home. In our tilling and keeping, gladden our
    hearts to know that we participate with your Holy Spirit to renew the face of your Earth,
    and safeguard a home for all.
    In the name of the One who came to proclaim good news to all creation, Jesus Christ.
    Amen.

    Further resources:

  • 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.