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Good Friday Meditation: The Story of the Tree

In this meditation for Good Friday, Bishop Helen-Ann Hartley reflects on the felling of a Sycamore and the potential of trees to bear witness to pain, strength and new life.

The felling of the sycamore tree in Northumberland led to an outpouring of grief across the country. People had gone to Sycamore Gap to mark key moments in their lives; births, betrothals, bereavements. It was important to the Bishop of Newcastle, the Rt Rev Helen-Ann Hartley who sometimes ran along the stretch of Hadrian's wall where the tree once stood.

The medieval poem "The Dream of the Rood" tells the story of another tree, the tree that became the cross of Jesus. The story of the crucifixion is told from the point of view of the cross, a tree "cut down at the copse's end, moved from my root" and forced to bear the Saviour of the world.

Last autumn also saw the launch of the 鈥淪torychair鈥 in the crypt of Newcastle cathedral. It was created from an oak which came down during Storm Arwen in 2021. It was designed by local craftsman, Nick James, in collaboration with women from the Changing Lives charity which works with people involved in the criminal justice system. Dawn Harrison from Changing Lives tells Bishop Helen-Ann that the project has been life-changing. 鈥淭he women have transformed their image from being female offenders on the outskirts of society to being welcome in Newcastle cathedral 鈥 they are not calling themselves offenders any more, full of guilt and shame, they are designers that are the proud owners of the story chair. 鈥

In this meditation for Good Friday, Bishop Helen-Ann reflects on the potential of trees to bear witness to pain, strength and new life. Readings from the Dream of the Rood are woven together with music from the Northumbria community and the Northumbrian pipes to offer an original and compelling angle on an age-old story.

Producer: Rosie Dawson
Reader: Trevor Fox

28 minutes

Last on

Fri 29 Mar 2024 15:00

Broadcast

  • Fri 29 Mar 2024 15:00