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y op See y NOVEMBER 2015 MAGAZINE op sit eC THE JOURNAL OF BLACKBURN DIOCESE : THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND IN LANCASHIRE op y sit eC The front page of this edition of The See features a montage of photographs from the event at St Pauls, Scotforth. oc es “We are praying that we will see real growth in the region over the next 10 years, with a deep renewal of our life in the existing church and then with new church congregations,” he added. Diocesan website – www.blackburn.anglican.org – under the ‘Home’ menu; while the Vision Course short films are all available to view on the Diocesan YouTube channel (search online for YouTube and Blackburn Diocese). During this prayer and reflection period, each parish is being encouraged to appoint a ‘Vision Champion’ to ensure the Vision remains a top priority locally. The prayer evenings were also the first outing for the new Vision 2026 branding, which can be seen in the pictures on the front page. The brand is managed by Diocesan Communications Manager Ronnie Semley and has been developed to underpin our long-term work for the Vision. It will sit alongside the existing Diocesan logo, and can also be used by parishes and schools. op Then on September 8 – 11, 2016 a major four day mission weekend to support Vision 2026 will take place across Lancashire involving Bishops from across the north of England and led by the Archbishop of York, the Most Rev and Rt Hon Dr John Sentamu. se oc e Bishop Julian (front centre) with Bishop Geoff, front row third right and Rev Michael Gisbourne, front row second right, and some of the 120 people who attended the Vision prayer evening at St Paul's Scotforth Di Di oc es Resources will be available to aid prayer and discussion about the Vision, including a new Vision Course developed by the Diocesan Parish Mission Support team. The course was available to parishes Development of the brand is still in the very early on DVD/CD-Rom to take away at the prayer stages and guidelines for use in different contexts, evenings. as well as downloadable branded resources, will If your parish hasn’t got its DVD/CD-Rom pack yet, be available on the Diocesan website in due contact course. miranda.wraithmell@blackburn.anglican.org The next major event for Vision 2026 takes place As well as pack for all parishes, all the Vision on May 10, 2016 when there will be a gathering Course resources (including resources for of 2000 church members at The Guild Hall in delivering a version of the course in schools and to Preston. Parishes from across Lancashire will youth groups) can be downloaded online via the share their plans for future Vision activities at a Di local level during the evening. sit During his talks at the prayer evenings Bishop Julian called on the whole Diocese to have a period of prayer and reflection in the coming months in relation to the Vision and what we are all being called to do in response to it. eW eb Di They were called to prayer, using different styles of prayer, worship and audio-visual; including a short new video featuring people of all backgrounds, clergy and laity; young and old, from across the Diocese talking about the Vision. sit oc eW eb At the prayer evenings, people of all ages from across the Diocese heard the Vision outlined by Bishop Julian and several other contributors. eC es sit Rev. Michael Gisbourne, Vicar of St Paul's said: “We were delighted to be the first hosts for the Vision evenings - it was an excellent start to a new season of call to prayer which promises great things for the future of the Church in Lancashire.” y eW eb Di At the time of going to press, the first two evenings had taken place in Scotforth and Padiham and they were attended by 120 and 170 people respectively. eC oc Six prayer evenings were held across the region in Scotforth, Padiham, Marton, Leyland, Preston and Blackburn to mark the launch of Vision 2026: Healthy Churches Transforming Communities. eC op y Events to mark the formal start of our new Vision for growth took place in early to midOctober. W eb es eW eb Vision for our future The See can also be found on the Diocesan Website: www.blackburn.anglican.org under News, or scan the ‘QR code’ on the back p age with your smartphone to be taken to the Diocese website page which contains the current and archive editions of The See. y op CROSSROADS MISSION 2015 y WEST DONCASTER: Bishop Geoff and team op Next year the Archbishop and the Bishops will be hosted by our Diocese in Lancashire when the second Crossroads event takes place at venues across the region from September 8 – 11, 2016. Make sure you get it in your diaries now! op y sit eC Crossroads Mission is new and is a personal annual initiative of the Archbishop, The Most Rev. and Rt Hon. Dr John Sentamu to evangelise the north with the help of all the northern Bishops in the Church of England and volunteers from their Dioceses. With the event coming here next year, this year’s Crossroads mission, the first, was a great opportunity to get a close up look at how it worked first time, to help shape our planning. eC We were guests in people’s homes, parishes, schools, etc. We appreciated the generous hospitality and every opportunity to share Jesus. Although it is energising to talk to hundreds of young people in schools, it was also good to appreciate the small occasion in private conversation or a few people chatting over cake and coffee. Archbishop Sentamu was on form and led by example. It was a joy to partner with other churches in this mission. People who’d never met before instantaneously became partners in the Gospel and even friends! Even in Yorkshire! God used the well planned events; the bishop’s question time and the praise parties. But He also used the informal, the spontaneous and the small scale such as cups of tea with groups of three or a conversation next to a jumble sale. God was at work in individuals on a diocesan scale. The lesson learned seemed to simply be: ‘if you don’t know what to do, just do something and trust God.” The visiting teams benefitted from fellowship and encouragement in seeing God at work. The hosts benefitted from encouragement and the lasting fruit of the mission. eW eb Rev. James Gwyn-Thomas, Buckshaw Village Church W eb Bishop Julian with volunteers during a visit to Gleadless Valley Foodbank in Attercliffe on the second day of the Crossroads Mission se es oc Di ATTERCLIFFE: Bishop Julian and team The invitation by the Archbishop of York for all Northern Province Bishops to spend four days in the Diocese of Sheffield and engage in outreach and mission events has proved to be a real encouragement and challenge to the deaneries that were visited. I took a team of five from this diocese, three ordinands, one incumbent and one curate, to the Attercliffe Deanery, a number of deprived and needy communities near the centre of Sheffield. We had a full programme of events in schools, colleges, shopping centres, pubs, an evening with a Christian illusionist, as well as invitation services in local churches. On Sunday morning I was sawn in half, an illustration of the trust we are called to put in Jesus Christ! There was a real openness to have conversations about things that matter and an appreciation that Christians were out there. On the Saturday evening after a number of good conversations in the pub, I was called over by three people I hadn’t spoken to and they said: ‘we are so pleased to see you here. Thank you for spending the evening with us’. It is good to go to where people are rather than expecting them to come to us. Bishop Julian sit oc es Bishop Geoff op eW eb es oc Di y Yes it was a busy time but the key words that kept cropping up in the cards I received, were joy and fun. May that be reciprocated here in Lancashire next September. sit eW eb ADWICK: Bishop Philip and team New Bentley is a hard place to be the church, a former mining community which has never recovered from the loss of the pit and a place where people can be hard to reach and resistant to the Good News. I have known the priest there for many years and he has often felt exhausted by the challenges and disheartened by a tiny congregation. Yet during Crossroads this gentle and undemonstrative man found a new gift. Speaking to a Bishop Philip chats with drama teacher Jay Martin on a visit to packed church at an evening event, he moved us all Campsmount Academy during the to tears with a brilliant, impromptu and passionate Crossroads Mission evangelistic address. On Sunday the attendance at Mass was nearly four times that of normal. A mission can work wonders in inspiring congregations and church leaders to reach out with the Gospel. Crossroads was fun and it was exhausting. It was inspiring and it was challenging. But above all it was Spirit-filled. There was a profound sense of a Diocese finding its voice and its confidence and speaking out to a generation in search of meaning. I am going to pray every day from now on that we can capture something of that spirit when Crossroads comes to Blackburn Diocese next year. Bishop Philip Our team, working with Bishop Philip, attended several church fun days. At one of them my husband Pete was talking to a young man trying to encourage him to come to church the next day. Pete said there were going to be doughnuts there. The man replied, “I’ve got doughnuts at home.” To which Pete said “Well Jesus is gonna be there too!” It’s one conversation amongst dozens that weekend supporting mission outreach work in local communities. It was a special blessing for us to be an encouragement to the clergy too and we’ve already got lots of ideas for the teams sent to us next year! Rev. Linda Tomkinson, Curate at St John's Church, Blackpool It was helpful having Bishop Geoff and his mission team a musician, a former colleague Rev. Dave Banbury (back row, actor and an right) of Blackburn Diocese with some of evangelist. Yes we those who attended a ‘tea and drew on the gifts and testimony’ during the Crossroads graces that God had Mission given us but mainly we were available to be used as the opportunity arose. eC oc On these pages each of our Bishops, together with one colleague from each of their teams, give their impressions of the Crossroads Mission and look ahead to the exciting opportunities for us next year here in Blackburn Diocese. Di My team spent its energy talking about Jesus and responding to the various requests that came from churches in the West Doncaster area. sit es eW eb Our Bishops and teams of willing people from parishes across our Diocese spent four days across the Pennines in South Yorkshire in September as part of a major four day mission event led by the Archbishop of York in Sheffield Diocese. eC op y sit eC Crossroads Mission 2015 is a taste of things to come oc e Di Di Crossroads was a great opportunity to partner with, learn from and encourage the churches of Sheffield in the work they are doing to make Jesus known in their local communities. The churches in Attercliffe Deanery, an area of deprivation, valued the support we were able to give them, by spending time in schools answering tough questions from young people, chatting to people on the street, and helping and speaking at larger events. I feel as a team we learnt lots that will help us as we plan for Crossroads in our diocese next year; to make sure we make the most of this exciting opportunity and the encouragement and support of our brothers and sisters from other Northern Dioceses. Rev. Rebecca Crowe, Curate at Penwortham, St Mary’s y PEOPLE AND PLACES op y Annes-on-Sea, FY8 3BA is presenting a recital, on organ and piano, by its highly talented Director of Music, Alistair MacKenzie, on Sunday 8th November at 3pm. The recital will be held in Church and admission is £5 for adults, £2 for teenagers, and younger children free. Everyone is welcome. eC Music for Remembrance with Blackpool Male Voice Choir on Friday November 13, 2015 at St Paul's Church (Marton) Blackpool at 7.30pm. Admission £6 (Children under 16 free if accompanied by an adult). Tickets available from Church Office tel: 01253 692047 or 07434 922245 or 01253 987529. op eC On Friday November 13 at St Mary’s Centre in Clitheroe, The Western Valley Hotclub perform a variety of Swing, Bluegrass, Gypsy Jazz and Rock and Roll feel-good music that you can dance along to with some of the best musicians in the area including two British Country Musicians of the Year. This event brings the first Ribble Valley Music Festival to a close after several months of raising funds for various churches and establishments in the Blackburn Diocese. Tickets are £10 from St Mary’s Centre, Church Street, Clitheroe or call 01200 422828 or 01254 384893. All proceeds are donated St Mary Magdalene Church in Clitheroe. eC op y eW eb sit The Red Rose Singers (conductor Peter Jelley) are performing ‘The Manchester Carols’ by Carol Ann Duffy and Sasha Johnson Manning at St Joseph’s Church, Belgarth Road, Accrington at 7.30pm on Sunday December 6. Donations for the Syrian appeal. Refreshments included at the end of the performance. Christmas fair, St Aidan’s Church, Station Road, Bamber Bridge, Saturday 21st November , 11am – 2pm. Grand raffle, tombolas, Father Christmas and much more. Donations for the stalls gratefully received please leave at the back of church or bring on the morning of the fair. W eb es oc es se oc e Di oc Come to St. Silas Parish Church, Preston New Rd, BB2 6PS on Saturday, November 21st at 7.30pm, and meet and hear the best-selling novelist, Milly Johnson! Tickets £12; under 16s £2; under 3s free from Jean, on 07935 498060 or Carole; 01254 54991; or by email; stsilasorganfund@email. com. Event includes wine, canapes and nibbles and is to Autumn Fair on Saturday 11th November 2015 St raise funds for restoration of our Harrison pipe Paul's Church (Marton) Blackpool at 11am. Refreshments and plenty of stalls and games. To be organ. opened by His Worshipful the Mayor of Blackpool. St Leonard's Church Marshalls Brow Penwortham is More info: church Office Tel: 01253 692047. having a Christmas Tree Festival on 14th November Organ and piano recital: St Annes Parish Church, St from 10am - 4pm and 15th November from noon - Di Education Fred Kershaw was held recently at Blackburn Cathedral. There was a large turnout of colleagues and friends from across Lancashire to wish him well as he begins a new phase in his life. (Picture: Norman Ivison) y Come and enjoy live classical music at our Friday Recitals in November at St George the Martyr, Lune Street, Preston. On 6 November we have a special rendition of 'Handel's Heroes and Heroines' with three female soloists and Jonathan Ellis on piano; on 20 November we have Qian Wu, Violin with Russell Lomas on piano. Recitals start at 12.30pm with complimentary refreshments served beforehand. Entrance is £6, and doors are open at 11.00am. sit eW eb es oc Di Di 175th Anniversary by holding a Gala Anniversary Ball at Ribby Hall. The black tie event was attended by 185 people connected to the church. The event raised £4200 for the church building repair fund. Pictured are the organising committee on the night from left to right Peter and Brenda Squires, Rosemary Cartwright, Francis Tomlinson, Fr John Bannister, Mrs Anne Bannister, Jeff Penman and Margaret Collinge.(Picture: Roger Eckton) sit eW eb St Paul’s church, Warton (PR4 1BD) is holding a three day commemorative WW1 exhibition in November with a focus on events at home and abroad 100 years ago in 1915. The exhibition is free Rev. Kevin Logan, who has been ministering in and runs from noon – 4pm on Thursday 12 Blackburn diocese for 40 years, has just published a November and 10am – 4pm on Friday 13 and new e-book entitled 'What is Love'. It’s based on Saturday 14 November. Refreshments available. Hosea’s Love story in the Old Testament and is The Saturday evening (14 November) at 7.30 pm offered as a Bible study for church groups. It can be sees the fabulous Freckleton Brass Band performing downloaded from Amazon Kindle. Just search The Great War Concert. Come along and enjoy the online for the author name and book title. music of the time. Tickets are on sale now at £10 per adult and £5 per child. Box office 01772 635546 Book review: The Ultimate Three Minutes by William Cummings (Sussex Academic Press). Review or tickets from Jaguar Hair amnd Beauty or Warton by Eddie Burns. In a book whose foreword has been Hardware (above Harbour Properties) in the village. written by Bishop Nicholas Reade, the former Dean Cork Jackets and Drill: St Annes Parish Church, St of Battle has set the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ Annes-on-Sea, FY8 3BA is hosting a performance of against a panoramic view of human development 'Cork Jackets and Drill' on Saturday November 21 at which focuses on the Roman civilization and reveals 7pm. The performance is about the 1886 Mexico a deep understanding of it. He thereby shows the lifeboat disaster told in folk-song. The tragedy relationship between one of the great watersheds claimed the lives of most of the crews of the St of human history and the ultimate watershed of the Annes and Southport lifeboats as they attempted divine plan of salvation. A fascinating read. to save the crew of the German ship, 'The Mexico', in distress off Southport sands. The performance With over two hundred inspiring ideas, the new will be held in Church and admission is £5 for book ‘A guide to Fun Ways to Fundraise for your adults, £2 for teenagers, and younger children free. community, church or charity’ offers excellent Refreshments will be served. An event not to be advice on how to organise fundraising events and missed! activities that are as profitable as they are fun. It includes hot tips on how to set objectives, choose a International Piano Recitalist, Jean-Efflam Bavouzet venue, find sponsors, publicise effectively and will be performing in Preston Minster on Friday make sure your event or activity is safe and 22nd January 2016 at 7.30pm. Tickets, priced at £20, legal. Available from Amazon priced £7.99 (Kindle are available by calling 01772 901313 or by £3.97). Author Penny Hallett is donating all emailing office@preston minster.org royalties from the book to a £5.5m church and If you are stuck for a present then pop along to community project in Gloucestershire. Adlington St Paul’s Church’s ever popular Annual Forthcoming events Craft Fair on Saturday November 7, 10am to 4pm, at the Community Centre, Railway Road, Adlington, The Mosamaria Trust Fund is in the midst of PR6 9RF. For further information please email planning a Mosamaria Christmas Auction Event to be held at Tiffany’s Hotel, Promenade, Blackpool at stpauls.parishmag @btinternet.com. 7pm on 27 November 2015 with a hot pot supper A Fairtrade Christmas Market, with light along with a vegetarian option. A number of refreshments, will be held on Friday November 13th professional singers are giving their time for free and Saturday November 14 from 10am -5.30pm in and there will be a comedy interlude. Contact St Andrew's Church Hall, Liverpool Rd, Longton, PR4 Gloria Birdsall – Mosamaria Trust Fund Chairman 5AA with a wide variety of food and gifts for sale. Christmas cakes and puddings and a range of A service wines may also be ordered. For further details and marking the for information on promoting Fairtrade in churches retirement of and schools, please contact Cath Greenlees, the Diocesan Blackburn Diocesan World Development Group: Deputy cathgreenlees@hotmail.co.uk 01772 613500. Director of Di The Parish of Lund, St John the Evangelist, recently celebrated its op y This coming Advent, the Church Urban Fund (CUF) is asking churches to give up a night of comfort and organise their own sponsored sleepouts with friends, families, churches and community groups. The Advent Sleepout Challenge is a new annual fundraising event organised by CUF and the money raised will help the charity with its work, empowering some of the poorest and most marginalised people in England to transform their lives. A dedicated website www.sleepoutchallenge. org with resources and online sponsorship details is now live. Find out more about the work of CUF at www.cuf.org.uk oc Riding Lights Theatre Company comes to St Cuthbert’s, Fulwood, Preston to serve up a sharp and deliciously comic slice of Baked Alaska bringing interconnecting stories of the wild and unpredictable effects of climate change from the four corners of the earth. The show presents the reality of climate change like you’ve never heard it before on November 9, 2015 at 7.30pm. The venue is St Cuthbert’s Church Centre, Lytham Road, Preston PR2 3AR. Box Office: 01904 613000 Tickets: £12 or £9 (concessions). For groups of 8+ under 18s, tickets are £7.50 per person. The show is presented in partnership with Christian Aid, Operation Noah and the Diocese of Litchfield, hoping to raise a compassionate voice in the run up to the United Nations Conference on Climate Change in Paris this December. sit eC es eW eb sit eC An exciting new chapter in the work of the Diocese begins this month. As outlined in previous editions of The See, staff working for the Diocese will be moving to new offices approximately two miles from the present Church House in Blackburn. They will be in the new building from November 16. The offices are located on Walker Business Park, adjacent to Junction 5 of the M65 and the address will be: Diocesan Offices, Clayton House, Walker Office Park, Blackburn, BB1 2QE. Full details about the move can be found on the Diocesan website under the Home menu. by email gloriabirdsall@yahoo.co.uk or by calling 07790 768845 to access a ticket for £10. Mosamaria Trust Fund supports the Mosamaria AIDS Ministry (www.mosamaria.co.za), which is a non-profit organisation in the Free State, South Africa. op News round-up y News? Feedback? thesee@blackburn.anglican.org op COMMENT / PEOPLE AND PLACES op y op A heartfelt thank you from Archdeacon John eC Thank you for giving me such a wonderful send off into retirement. I received well over 150 cards, 25 bottles of single malt whisky, a wonderful cheque from the diocese and many other gifts. I intend to send `thank you` letters once I have got my study in Goole up and running. The Revd Andrew Malcom has resigned as Vicar of Langho St Leonard and SSM Curate of Salesbury St Peter from 18 October 2015 and has been granted Permission to Officiate in the Diocese. I must thank Bishop Julian and Dean Christopher for allowing me to have the deeply moving Cathedral Service and the fun bash at Whalley Abbey. The Revd Jeff Radcliffe, Priest in Charge, West Preston Team Ministry, will retire on 1 November 2015. eC op y Clergy updates Bishop Julian sit St Leonard's Church in Penwortham is blessed with a growing choir. Along with that blessing comes a need for more music, specifically, copies of Mission Praise (the Music edition). If any church can help, please let St Leonard's Director of Music know he's David Cookson, david@musicalsolutions.com (07721 677831). Di oc es In August I completed a sponsored walk of approximately 70 miles from Winchester Cathedral to Romsey Abbey, Salisbury Cathedral and back to Winchester Cathedral, writes Cath Greenlees. Most of the proceeds will go to Christian Aid and some to Traidcraft Exchange and a few smaller development charities run by friends in Malawi, Uganda, Zambia, India and Peru. I am happy to give a talk to groups on the Walk and its purpose. Sponsor money may be donated through the Just Giving website: www.justgiving.com/CathGreenlees or sent to 16 Franklands, Longton PR4 5PD. My prayer is that we shall in the coming months find ourselves waiting upon God with a new urgency and praying with a new passion for others to come to faith in Jesus Christ. W eb Di oc At St. Peters Church, Salesbury The Rotary Club of Blackburn presents a traditional Christmas miscellany of words and music with audience participation featuring The Renaissance Singers at 8pm on Tuesday 15th December 2015. Tickets £10 each including gift aid donation and seasonal refreshments are available from Keith Sowerbutts on 01254 247129. All proceeds to charity. at His pace. sit information. Tel. 01772 687644 or email wesmarks@btinternet.com eW eb es 4pm. Come along and look at the trees followed by some refreshments. eC op y sit eC eW eb oc es eW eb A phrase in one of the Common Worship prefaces in the prayers at Holy Communion speaks of ‘learning to be the The arrival of new leaders in the diocesan team, the move of the diocesan People of God once again.’ That is not offices to new premises, the conclusion always comfortable, but it is essential if we are to pass the baton of the Gospel of a major and long awaited development in the centre of Blackburn on to the next generation. around the Cathedral and the Vision 2026 is all about that reform and development of Vision 2026 all combine renewal of the church for the work of to create an exciting fresh energy for the making Jesus Christ more widely known work God has called us to do. loved and believed. I don’t believe this is an accident or It gives us a focus, so that our energy down to chance. I do believe that God is and resources can address some of the working all things together for good and weaknesses of our shared life and we must respond with faith and prepare us to have much to celebrate on enthusiasm. that 100th anniversary of being a diocese That is not to decry the faithful ministry in 11 years’ time. and mission work of previous years but it The calls to prayer last month (see pages is a fresh boost to all the excellent work 1 and 2 of this edition) were not a one being done around the diocese in the off, but were intended to fuel an cause of the Gospel. extended time of seeking God, There are always times and seasons in personally and corporately, so that we keep in step with the Holy Spirit and go the life of the church and it seems that Di Significant moments for our Diocese y here in Blackburn Diocese we are entering one of change and new ways of being a Christian community. sit eC On several occasions recently I have found myself saying that it is extraordinary how a number of significant decisions have all coincided during the last couple of years. Canon Hindley did me proud along with the Choir at the Cathedral and Rev Tim Horobin and his gang did a brilliant job at Whalley despite the rain! (That`s Lancashire for you!) I shall continue to pray for you daily and look forward to hearing about all the good things happening in the Diocese of Blackburn. The Church of England must make mission and Situations vacant or wanted discipleship as priorities, but must make sure that The Revd Denis Tate, SSM Curate, Ellel St John the The church of St Nicholas, Wrea Green, is seeking its core strength is in each church family being Evangelist has been appointed House for Duty an organist for the principal weekly service (Sunday servants and carers to the parish as a whole- and Team Vicar in the Ingleborough Team Ministry with 9:30 am), the usual seasonal festivals and for the clergy to take the lead in this in prayerful pastoral responsibility for Burton in Lonsdale All occasional special evening services. The church and practical ways. Saints and Thornton in Lonsdale St Oswald in the benefits from a two-manual pipe organ, a new A huge thank you to you all for the privilege of Diocese of West Yorkshire and the Dales. digital piano and musical talent within the allowing me to be the Archdeacon of Blackburn, congregation that will thrive under the right The Bishop has granted Permission to Officiate in and your friend. direction. Remuneration to be agreed. Please the Diocese to the Revd Peter Endall and the Revd John Hawley: Archdeacon emeritus. contact Reverend Wes Marks for further Geoff Dearden. sit W eb se se oc e Di oc e To submit an article for the next edition by the deadline on the left, send to thesee@blackburn.anglican.org For more information about deadlines and guidance for submission of articles to The See, visit the Diocese website (www.blackburn.anglican.org) and search for ‘The See’ For change of delivery address or quantity of The See contact Christine Ellis at christine.ellis@blackburn.anglican.org or phone 01254 503070 Di Deadline for the December edition is November 2, 2015 The Revd Mark Simpson, Associate Priest, Leyland St Andrew has been appointed Ordained Pioneer Minister to lead Leyland Wellfield Church and will be licensed on 20 December 2015 by Bishop Julian.