No man, having put his hand to the plough, and looking back,
Is fit for the Kingdom of God.
Collect For Epiphany 1 (Plough Sunday)
The celebration on the First Sunday after Epiphany has been increasingly revived in modern times as ‘Plough Sunday’ – a tradition that goes back centuries (the earliest record dates back to 1423 in Durham Cathedral). In the agricultural calendar, as the days start to stretch and the coming spring light promises to defeat the darkness of winter, it signals the first ploughing of the year which takes place on the first working day after the Christmas season on ‘Plough Monday’. Essentially, our Plough Service is a way in which we can say ‘Please’ – just as on Harvest Sunday, we say ‘Thank you’. The Plough Sunday liturgy is beautiful and poetic, and as we stand in blessing around the decorated plough in Church, we are reminded of our own responsibilities to care for God’s creation.
I suspect that if asked where the food they are eating comes from, the answer from many would be Aldi, Supervalu or Tesco (ok, Waitrose if you’re posh…). We need to remember that if a farmer doesn’t grow it, we can’t eat it – and unless we in turn care for God’s provision in creation, the land will die. We use chemical fertilisers, toxic weedkillers, antibiotics and hormones to enhance growth; all of these may appear to increase productivity and yield – but in the longer term, they literally will cost the earth.
In recent years, we have seen a welcome increase in the availability of organic and/ or Fairtrade produce, even better when locally grown. Yes, it’s more expensive (and there’s no denying that challenge when people are already struggling) – but much of the cost is markup by large retail chains, which maintain their profit by driving down supplier costs. Then it’s not just small farmers who struggle, but local shops, and they will not be able to last much longer against the competitive power of the multinationals. In the end, rather than enjoying food that has been responsibly produced with care and consideration for the environment and has a known provenance – if at all possible, sourced locally – we will eat the refined product of a heartless industrialised process. We may as well just live on vitamin pills.
Of course, individually we can’t make much of a difference – but giving thanks that we have been given all we need – and concentrating on that, rather than what we want, becoming more aware and behaving more responsibility, every small difference adds up. We are commanded to preserve God’s gift of creation’s rich, healthy soil on behalf of future generations, not to waste that gift on a dying desert choked by thorns. That’s your choice. Choose life.
The following prayer is taken from the Plough Service Liturgy.
Our Unworthiness of God’s Gifts
No man, having put his hand to the plough, and looking back,
Is fit for the Kingdom of God.
When we are ungrateful for the rain, and the sun, the snow and the frost, in their season,
And forget they are god’s gifts to us:
When we are blind to the mystery of germination,
And forget it is God’s handiwork:
When we are careless with the beasts,
And forget they are God’s creatures:
When we are unkind to men and women,
And forget they are God’s children:
When we scrimp our work,
And forget we are God’s workmen:
When we ill-treat the land
And forget it is the splendour of God:
May the almighty and all-loving Father make you clean from the wrong you have done in the past: May our merciful Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ make you strong to sin no more in the future: May the gracious and life-giving Holy Spirit make you faithful to God again today: To whom be the Glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Heavenly Father, we your people thank you and bless you for our creation, preservation and above all the love you show in giving your Son to be our Saviour, Redeemer and friend. Give us a continual sense of your presence, so that our praise may not be only on our lips but in our lives. May we be a living sacrifice, using our gifts according to your purpose, in the power of your Holy Spirit. Amen
Praying Together 10th August 2025
And while we think of the things we value most, do we remember that we are of such value to God, that His Son was prepared to go into the flames for us?
Praying Together 27th July 2025
In a word, it is all prayer, a rich sequence, choreographed in different moments of gathering, praise, listening and communion.
Praying Together 20th July 2025
Jesus comes to us in many ways and with many faces. Are we aware we may ‘entertain Angels without knowing it?
Praying Together 13th July 2025
May we never miss meeting your gaze,
in the eyes of our sibling, the stranger.
Praying Together 6th July 2025
Always remember that ‘success’ is simply doing His will – it’s not necessarily achieving the outcome we would ourselves consider to be ‘successful’. Leave that definition with Him.
Praying Together 29th June 2025
Jesus is looking for commitment. Absolute, unconditional, commitment. When I think of what that means, I’m always minded of Martina Navratilova’s remark: “The difference between involvement and commitment is like ham and eggs. The chicken is involved; the pig is committed.”
Praying Together 22nd June 2025
As Christians, may we never regard mercy and compassion towards others as weakness, naivety or gullibility, but display the traits which demonstrate that we follow a Saviour who came to rescue those left behind.
Praying Together 15th June 2025
You couldn’t fly a kite inside a church building –for the Kite to fly you’d have to go into the windy street outside. Where does that place the need for the Spirit to act?
Praying Together 8 June 2025
Of all the strange things happening on the Day of Pentecost, perhaps the most puzzling is when God appears to have second thoughts. In Genesis 11, He makes it difficult for people to understand each other’s language
Praying Together 1st June 2025
The song by Mary Black, ‘Bless the Road’, while written as from a parent whose child is leaving home alone for the first time – maybe first day at primary school, going to college, beginning an independent life – always puts me in mind of the thoughts and blessing of Jesus as He prays for His disciples before His Ascension.
Praying Together 25th May 2025
‘Peace I give to you… do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not be afraid.’
His peace is not remote and only there at the end of things – His Peace is with us now.
Praying Together 18th May 2025
So the commandment is a challenge. To love those who betray you. Those who jeer. Those who wield the whips embedded with flint, hammer in the nails, pierce your side.











