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To save our cities we must return to the springs of our spiritual past

9th August 2024 By Jenny James Taylor

A version of this article first appeared as a Monk in the World guest blog at The Abbey of the Arts

Spending nine days on virtual pilgrimage in the company of “dancing monks”, and guided by Christine Valters Paintner’s hypnotic meditations, has stirred something deep in me. As our world yields to unrest and the implacable advance of digital control, the real becomes not just more important, but more sacramental. The real is held for ever in the life-giving embrace of the places and stories, the springs of our spiritual past. And it is to them and to our ancestors that we must I also believe, turn back, if we are to save our souls – and our cities.

After forty years in London, I returned to Suffolk where I was born, and which was once called “Selig”. The Pilgrimage has caused me to reconnect with what that means. It is Anglo-Saxon for “holy” or blessed.  It became, as is the way of these things, “silly Suffolk”, and I think that’s delightfully playful.  There is a surprising Celtic connection too, but I’ll come to that in a moment.  Suffolk probably got the nickname “selig” because there were so many churches and monasteries in the county. And the reason for that was partly because it was one of the first places in these islands to have a Christian King – Raedwald of Sutton Hoo fame – and was also very rich from the wool trade.  But there may be even more to it than that.

Thanks to the Pilgrimage, I’ve become attentive to these things.  The place I live in was built to benefit from the springs that rise up in the cliffs here.  This is a former spa town on the very edge of Suffolk. But our Edwardian forebears, in their drive to attract London holiday-makers, seem to have ignored the inherent spiritual attraction of these springs.  Imagine my delight then, last week, when my eyes were opened to a well in the grounds, a tiny sacred well, formed from one of the springs, created quietly by our gardener! It is set about with duckweed – a magical herb of great value to animals.  And it is edged by driftwood found on the shore below, and stone statues.

One of the three friends who joined me during that unforgettable nine days, who is drawn to “wild edges”, joined me in going to the well each day after the retreats.  We sprinkled our hurting places – our heads and hearts – with its water.  I realized that the elements are everywhere, speaking to me of the enduring reality of God’s love and the life force all around.  I am never alone when I have wind, and water, the sea’s constant yearning for the shore, and the creatures that speak to me of my kinship with all that is. I need never feel disconnected or oppressed. All these things are sacraments of hope and presence.

And now, thanks to the Abbey of the Arts, I’m more fed by that than ever. So much so that friends and I are planning a pilgrim way-station ourselves, near the new King Charles Coastal Path that will run near here. Someone wants to bequeath their home for this. Others have long dreamed of serving the new housing estates with “spiritual wells”. Walking in the elements, in the way of the ancestors, connecting with each other and with the past, may lead many back to the selig in their lives.

And the other Celtic connection? St Fursey, one of the “Four Comely Saints”, who was baptised by Brendan, was the first recorded Irish missionary to East Anglia. He arrived in the 630s, and was given land by the king to establish an abbey here.

Caption:  How can we serve the inner-city from the deep spiritual wells of our past?

Filed Under: Activity, Uncategorised Tagged With: Christianity, healing, pilgrimage, retreat, spirituality

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Jenny James Taylor

mmJENNY JAMES TAYLOR specialises in religious literacy and was appointed Research Fellow in Communication, Media and Journalism at the Kirby Laing Centre for Public Theology in Cambridge in 2019. A Bloomsbury author and campaigner she pioneered religious literacy in journalism, founding Lapido Media in 2005 as a publicly subscribed online newspaper and publisher. Described by historian Tom Holland as 'groundbreaking', it helped to change the national secular discourse by providing resources for journalists needing to ‘get religion’ in an age of globalization. Widely travelled, Taylor has a doctorate in religion from the School of Oriental and African Studies, and has been published many times in academic journals and the mainstream and on-line media including the Guardian, the Times and, in translation, the European press. Her books include Faith and Power: Christianity and Islam in ‘Secular’ Britain with Lesslie Newbigin and Lamin Sanneh (SPCK 1998 and Wipf&Stock 2005) and A Wild Constraint (Continuum 2008), an extended essay on contemporary sexuality. An Associate of the Community of St Mary the Virgin, she lives where she was born, in Suffolk.

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