After the service was a bonfire and fireworks - the photo shows the display.
Talking with a colleague recently he told me that one author used the idea of a bonfire of what the church should be. In the book “Love and Faith and Unity in a Postmodern Age” by John Gladwin published 1998 he writes
"The vision of God revealed to us in the Gospel of Christ is like a perpetual blazing fire which draws individuals and communities towards it.
Every year at the season of Bonfire Night in November the London Borough of Islington holds a massive bonfire and firework party. On a good night 60,000 people can be there.
The bonfire party is a great image of the Church as it is called to be today. Watch the company of people gathered around the fire. They are somewhat untidily assembled. Some will feel the need to be close in near the blaze, others stand further off watching and wondering, and even further away are those conscious of the fire but yet not wholly attentive to it. All the time some are drawing near and others moving away. The fire itself seems to encourage the movement. There are people on their own drawn to the warmth, family groups and small communities there. The thing which unites all is not necessarily their mutual knowledge of each other but the power of the blaze at the heart of what is happening.”
Every year at the season of Bonfire Night in November the London Borough of Islington holds a massive bonfire and firework party. On a good night 60,000 people can be there.
The bonfire party is a great image of the Church as it is called to be today. Watch the company of people gathered around the fire. They are somewhat untidily assembled. Some will feel the need to be close in near the blaze, others stand further off watching and wondering, and even further away are those conscious of the fire but yet not wholly attentive to it. All the time some are drawing near and others moving away. The fire itself seems to encourage the movement. There are people on their own drawn to the warmth, family groups and small communities there. The thing which unites all is not necessarily their mutual knowledge of each other but the power of the blaze at the heart of what is happening.”
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