![]() ![]() As Joel preached on Sunday, we are becoming holy guides to one another - and what a wonderful vision to live into! It’s all testimony to a living, breathing faith, and it all helps build up the faith of others. So a big thank you to Rachel, for sharing her painting of a scar tree, and thanks to all of you who offer images, words, questions and stories of faith, whether for worship, the Lent Book, a Wednesday email, in conversation, or in other ways. We are so lucky, and so grateful, that our worship life is enriched in this way. ![]() If you have Spotify, you will find the song on his Hindsight album.įor those who don’t live locally, the painting forms one of the slides during the Lenten Zoom service indeed, many of the service slides feature images provided by Sanctuary folk. In the deep of the night, I hear a Mopoke cry Scars on ancient red gums, secrets all their own “…….walking on Kirrae, walking on Tjapwurrong The name of the painting comes from the lyrics of a Neil Murray song called Where My People Go: ![]() This moving image will be with us through Lent, Easter, and the fifty days to Pentecost as we journey through Christ’s suffering, death and resurrection, and learn to recognize the Risen Christ once again by his scars. The Revelation Lamb has been taken down, and a painting of a great scar tree is now hanging in the Sanctuary space. ![]()
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