January 2015
Transcription
January 2015
A Deputy Churchwarden Writes… January 2015 Dear Friends With the immediate celebration and joy of the birth of our Saviour in humble surroundings on Christmas Day behind us, we now move on to a New Year…perhaps to a new beginning…with good resolutions faithfully made, but frequently broken by most of us. Epiphany, or the manifestation of Christ to the Gentiles, continues the wonder of the Christmas season. We marvel how the three Kings were led from a great distance by a star to worship the newborn King and bring Him costly and meaningful offerings. As the familiar hymn says:“Sacred gifts of mystic meaning: Incense doth their God disclose, Gold the King of Kings proclaimeth, Myrrh His sepulchre foreshows.” One wonders if Joseph and Mary were aware of their portent. The amazing story continues with the Magi being warned in a dream to return home by a different route. Perhaps we can learn from their inspiration, perseverance and obedience. Later in January, we celebrate the conversion of St Paul – the dramatic event on the road to Damascus. Maybe we too have experienced our own Damascus moment at some point in our lives, hopefully changing us into a better direction. Let us commence this January re-echoing the wonders of the season of Christmas and Epiphany and with thankfulness to God for His gift of each new day, good intentions and the strength to keep them. -1- NEWSROUND The Church ‘must not ignore’ youth ministry says Archbishop - The Archbishop of Canterbury says the Church cannot afford to ignore ministry to the young people within its ranks. He believes that youth workers from different Christian denominations across the country make an “untold contribution to society” by serving “thousands upon thousands of young people so faithfully”. Speaking at a recent conference, Justin Welby said: “I believe that there is no better decision anyone, of any age, can make than to become a follower of Jesus Christ. Many choose to become followers of Jesus in their formative years, meaning the importance of youth ministry cannot be overstated.” The Church of England encourages community cohesion through schools - The Rev Nigel Genders, Chief Education Officer for the CofE, has said that CofE schools have “always been committed to providing a high quality education for all young people, of all faiths and none.” He went on: "Clearly this must include rigorous … religious education to equip young people with the …understanding of a range of faith systems. We were delighted that the government recently acted to support us in doing this by providing bursaries for those training to teach RE. All our schools teach about same sex marriage being the law, but we also feel it is important to reflect that there are different views on marriage, including that of the Church, and we would expect all schools to do the same." £8 million for our Cathedrals - 25 CofE cathedrals will receive more than £8 million from a government sponsored grant scheme set up to support vital repairs to some of England’s most important historic buildings. The successful applicants are receiving £8.3 million of money made available as part of the First World War Centenary Cathedral Repairs Fund. -2- BEST NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION OF ALL ‘The object of a New Year is not that we should have a new year. It is that we should have a new soul and a new nose; new feet, a new backbone, new ears, and new eyes. Unless a particular man made New Year resolutions, he would make no resolutions. Unless a man starts afresh about things, he will certainly do nothing effective.’ (GK Chesterton) In a recent survey, 30% of those interviewed said they wanted to make a New Year resolution. The top resolutions included improving fitness, losing weight and a better diet. Others involved giving up smoking, cutting down on drink, doing more voluntary work and spending more time with family. However, when asked if they had actually made – and stuck – to a resolution last year, only 18% said yes! What resolutions can we make that will truly last beyond the end of January? The future is both challenging and exciting, but it can also be awesome and fearful. As we face what lies ahead, let’s echo Paul’s words in our hearts when he says ‘I want to know Christ – yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings’. Like Paul, our resolution should be to go deeper in knowing Christ during this coming year. Paul sees himself as an athlete running for Christ in the stadium. An athlete also strains every muscle to win the race. With the same determination Paul pursued his ambition of knowing Christ better. Let’s also be singleminded in making Jesus our focus during the coming year in everything we do. What practical steps are required if we are to go deeper in our prayer life and Bible reading? How can we more effectively see Christ at work in our workplace and career, or family and children? -3- BEATING THE WINTER CHILLS If you are older, winter can be a challenging time of year. Age UK has offered the following tips to help you get through the winter in good shape: Stay active. Try never to sit still for more than an hour at a time. Keep moving around - even if it is just walking to the kitchen and back a few times. Eat well. Aim for at least one hot meal a day, and regular hot drinks. Stock up cupboards with basic food items well in advance, in case bad weather arrives. Keep your home warm, around 21C. Being cold can increase the risk of a heart attack, stroke and breathing difficulties. Keep your hands, face and feet warm. Wear several layers of clothing, as layers trap warm air. Wool and fleecy garments are excellent. Get a flu jab. Flu can develop into pneumonia, so take preventative measures! Order any repeat prescriptions early, especially if bad weather is forecast. Does your pharmacy offer a delivery service? Keep in regular touch with friends and family, even if just by phone or email. Check your benefits. Most people born before 6 January 1952 will receive a Winter Fuel Payment. Reduce your energy bills with insulation and draughtproofing. For info, call the Energy Saving Advice Service on 0300 123 1234. Keep on top of your energy bills – talk to your energy supplier about repayment plans or even grants. -4- AN APPLE A DAY Try eating one apple a day. Apparently, it really does keep the doctor away, as apparently it can be as effective as statins in preventing strokes and heart attacks. Researchers at Oxford University believe that more than 8,000 deaths a year might be prevented if over 50s who are not already on statins simply ate an apple each day. Apples are high in soluble fibre which slows the buildup of cholesterol-rich plaque in the arteries. Also, apples, unlike statins, have no side-effects. So – they are worth trying! TAKE A DAILY WALK Want to combat ageing and even help prevent an early death? It is easy – take a daily walk of about half an hour a day. According to recent research from the School of Life and Health Services at Aston University, a daily walk of half an hour can help prevent obesity and diabetes, lower the risk of some cancers, relieve depression and anxiety, increase mobility and reduce the chance of hip fracture by 40 percent among older people. That daily half hour walk will also improve your ability to think and to reason, slow the progression of dementia, cut arthritic pain, raise your energy levels, and reduce fatigue. The really good news is that “all these changes are not seen in people who run marathons….people who lift weights in the gym, or spend four hours running on the treadmill. These are seen in people who simply walk, and who walk for half an hour a day.” So says Dr James Brown of Aston University. -5- HOW TO GET YOUR CHURCH NOTICED! In today’s society, many churches struggle to make their voices heard above the cacophony of voices vying for our attention. Some still rely on methods they used 40 years ago to try to communicate their messages – the hand-drawn poster stuck to the church noticeboard, the photocopied parish magazine, or the verbal notice at the start of worship. Because there is so much more information for everyone to absorb these days, even regular churchgoers may miss the casual reference to an event or an opportunity. These methods may also be the wrong types of communication for the kind of people we want to attract. The vast majority of people in the UK could be classed as ‘browsers’ – not those who devour books, but those who might flick through magazines or websites, stopping only to read when an eye-catching headline or photo catches their attention. Broadly speaking, congregations and church leaders will tend to be among the ‘readers’ within the population. The type of communication they use tends to be text-based, rather than visual. Yet for the vast majority of people, this often isn’t attractive. Give a ‘browser’ a typical piece of church literature, and it’s unlikely to grab their attention for long. So how can we make sure our churches get noticed in this busy, secular, visual world? In his book ‘100 Ways To Get Your Church Noticed’, Neil Pugmire, incorporates ideas you might understand as ‘publicity’ in the normal sense – websites, posters, parish magazines, media liaison, social media – with other ideas that have more to do with involvement with the local community or the look and feel of our church building, which also have a valuable role to play in our church’s communications strategy. -6- THE NAMING OF JESUS It is Matthew and Luke who tell the story of how the angel instructed that Mary’s baby was to be named Jesus. The Church recalls the naming of Jesus on 1st January – eight days after 25th December, for in Jewish tradition, the male babies were circumcised and named on the eighth day of life. The name Jesus is a transliteration of a name that occurs in several languages. The Hebrew origin is ‘Yehosua’ or Joshua, in Hebrew-Aramaic it is ‘Yesua’, in Greek, it became ‘Ιησοữς’ (Ιēsoûs), and in Latin it became ‘Iesus’. The meaning of the name is ‘Yahweh delivers’ or ‘Yahweh rescues’ or ’Yahweh is salvation’. No wonder the angel Gabriel told Mary to name her baby Jesus: “because he will save his people from their sins”. For early Christians, the name of Jesus held a special significance. In Jewish tradition, names expressed aspects of personality. Jesus’ name permeated his ministry, and it does so today: we are baptised in the name of Jesus and God the Father has given Jesus a name above all others. All Christian prayer is through “Jesus Christ our Lord” and it is “at the name of Jesus that every knee shall bow”’ GIVING UP SMOKING A congregation was disappointed when one of its number, who had quit smoking a few weeks before, suddenly began again, and just before the beginning of Lent, at that. Taking him to one side, the minister explained that the point of Lent was to give something up, not start something. ‘Oh yes, I know,’ said the man. ‘But you see, I decided to give up my New Year’s resolution.’ -7- WHY CHAPLAINS? You may wonder why, in a Britain that is becoming more secular, so many organisations are appointing chaplains. We are used to chaplains in schools and universities, hospitals, prisons or the armed forces but so many other organisations are now appointing chaplains to give pastoral and spiritual care to their members. For example, there are chaplains at airports and in shopping malls, often with places set apart for prayer or reflection. They must be meeting a perceived need. In England, chaplains originate from medieval times when they were first engaged by monarchs and noble families. Often chaplains served as clerks – not all noblemen were literate (hence ‘clerk in holy orders’). Chaplains were also paid to say masses for the souls of their patrons, in the hope of gaining favour in heaven. Often chaplains would accompany their lord into battle, on land or sea – the original armed forces chaplains. So what is the appeal of chaplaincies today? Perhaps it is a natural development in a secular society. In an age when fewer people attend church it makes particular sense for Christian ministers to join people where they are, offering pastoral and spiritual care to specific groups of people. Chaplains are in the front line of Christian ministry and outreach in the 21st century, meeting people at opportune moments, often in passing, just as Jesus did. Many see modern Britain as a post-faith society, but the growth of the ministry of chaplains suggests otherwise. Many people are searching for meaning and something or someone to believe in. People find themselves praying at important times in their lives, however vague their experience of God may be. Chaplains have unique opportunities to be alongside. -8- TWO FACES OF WAR In the run-up to Christmas, Sainsbury’s produced an exceptional commercial. It was very long - nearly four minutes, an eternity in television terms - and beautifully filmed and produced. It got people talking several hundred people complained about it, but millions watched it spell-bound. One TV critic described it as the most moving piece of television of the year. In case you missed it, it recreated an actual incident from Christmas Day 1914, when British and German soldiers gathered in no-man’s land for a game of football and then joined in singing carols together - ‘Silent Night’ or ‘Heilige Nacht’ according to nationality. When it was over, they shook hands, wished each other luck and went back to their trenches. The only ‘commercial’ element in it was that one of the British soldiers slipped a bar of chocolate into the pocket of a young German. Then, of course, the next morning they were once again manning their guns or fixing their bayonets. It was a moment of peace, of a glorious shared humanity on the day when we remember that God in Jesus shared ours. But the insanity of war could not be cured by one moment of glorious sanity. A few days later, on the same front, the German army deployed deadly chlorine gas, the first time it had been used in warfare, killing 140 British soldiers. Many others were affected by it but not fatally. Two stories within ten days sharply illustrate the two faces of war - and indeed the two faces of humanity. We are capable of great acts of humanity and also of great evil - not two different sets of people, but the same ones. No wonder we put a cross on soldiers’ graves: the symbol of a great evil and, at the same time, of the ‘greatest love’. -9- 175 YEARS OF THE PENNY POST In January 1840 – just 175 years ago – the penny post was established throughout the UK and, as we know from Dickens and other novelists, letters flowed freely to and fro several times a day. It was a golden age of communication. Sadly, this facility has now disappeared: recently the Royal Mail reported that it is struggling to deliver to every house just once a day for a price of 62p, over 150 times more than in 1840 (1p = 2½ old pennies). That’s not quite as bad as it seems, of course: a penny in 1840 would be equivalent to about 35p now. Never mind; we now have another golden age of communication, featuring the mobile phone. Mobiles are as ubiquitous nowadays as the penny post was in 1840, and it is hard to believe that it was only 30 years ago that the first mobile phone call was made in the UK – by comedian Ernie Wise, who called Vodafone’s head office in Newbury from St Katharine Docks in London on New Year’s Day, 1985. Quick off the mark as always, it was in the same month (just over a fortnight later) that British Telecom officially retired the much-missed iconic red telephone box. Maybe it was a bit too quick off the mark because there are still vast tracts of Britain without a reliable mobile phone signal - not such a golden age after all. CHRISTMAS SHOPPING It was Christmas and the judge was in a benign mood as he asked the prisoner what he was charged with. “Doing my Christmas shopping early,” replied the man. “Why, that’s no offence,” said the judge. “How early were you doing it?” “Before the store opened,” replied the defendant. - 10 - REMEMBERING T S ELIOT T S Eliot was an American, but was adopted enthusiastically as a British poet after he became a British citizen in 1927. He died 50 years ago, on 4th January 1965, having won the 1948 Nobel Prize for Literature. As well as being perhaps the outstanding poet writing in English in the 20th century, he was also a playwright, a literary critic and editor. Thomas Stearns Eliot was born in Missouri on 26th September, 1888. He went to Harvard and then to the Sorbonne. After a year in Paris, he returned to Harvard, but settled in England in 1914, marrying Vivienne HaighWood and working in London, first as a teacher, and later for Lloyd’s Bank. His long poem The Waste Land is considered by many to be as good as poetry gets but he always acknowledged the input of fellow poet Ezra Pound, who encouraged him and acted as his editor. Both are referenced in Bob Dylan’s key early song, Desolation Row. Eliot had a huge impact on contemporary literary taste. After his conversion to orthodox Anglo-Catholic Christianity in the late thirties, his poetry was based on a conservative world view: he believed in a Christian society as a bulwark against communism and fascism, questioning the values of liberalism, which he saw as empty and corrosive. His major later poetry collections include Ash Wednesday (1930) and Four Quartets (1943); his plays included Murder in the Cathedral and The Cocktail Party. Through Faber & Faber he published many younger poets and eventually became director of the firm. After an unhappy first marriage, Eliot separated from his wife in 1933 and married Valerie Fletcher in 1956. - 11 - CALENDAR FOR JANUARY Sun 4 THE EPIPHANY Tue Wed Sun 6 7 11 THE BAPTISM OF CHRIST Tue Wed Thu Fri Sun 13 14 15 16 18 EPIPHANY 2 Tue Wed Thu Sun 20 21 22 25 CONVERSION OF ST PAUL Tue Wed Thu 27 28 29 8.00 am 10.30 am 6.00 pm 10.00 am 10.30 am 8.00 am 10.30 am 6.00 pm 10.00 am 10.30 am 10.00 am 10.30 am 8.00 am 9.30 am 10.30 am 6.00 pm 10.00 am 10.30 am 4.00 pm 8.00 am 10.30 am 6.00 pm 10.00 am 10.30 am 10.00 am Holy Communion Parish Communion (Sun Club in church) Evening Prayer Gardening Group Holy Communion (at St Nicolas) Holy Communion Matins (Sun Club in church room) Evening Prayer Gardening Group Holy Communion (at St Nicolas) Parish Art Group Coffee Morning in Hall Holy Communion Family Service Parish Communion (NO Sun Club) Choral Evensong Gardening Group Holy Communion (at St Nicolas) Magazine Collation Holy Communion Matins (Sun Club in church room) Evening Prayer Gardening Group Holy Communion (at St Nicolas) Parish Art Group USE YOUR TIME WELL Where has your year gone? Did you use it well? Numbering our days should mean offering them to God, and seeking his direction for our lives. If we don’t use our time wisely, we are squandering it, and throwing away a part of our very lives. - 12 - THE HAWTHORN It is the only British tree to be named after the month in which it flowers, “May”. The fruits are called haws and are ripe in late autumn. This year the mild spring resulted in a bumper crop of haws. There is a lot of folklore associated with the Hawthorn, especially with its flowers. For example, to bring a sprig of flower into the house will cause the death of someone living there. This fear may have come from the fact that the concentrated scent of the flowers contains a chemical (triethylamine), which is also given off by decomposing flesh. Until recently the body of a deceased person could remain in the house awaiting burial for up to week. It was the custom for relatives to visit the open coffin to pay their respects. However, when the same chemical is diluted in the countryside on warm summer nights it acts as a stimulant for frivolous behaviour between young people. There are many accounts of May Day celebrations such as those in Shillingstone, which once had the tallest Maypole in Dorset at 86 feet. There is a Maypole on the village green at Downton, near Salisbury which is still the centre piece for May Day celebrations. Catholic families in the 19th century often placed a sprig of Hawthorn in the window to inform others of the faith that a priest was staying in the house to hold Mass. Reverence for particular Hawthorns still persists, such as the Glastonbury thorn which usually flowers in April and again in December to coincide with Christmas and Easter. This particular thorn took root and flowered when, according to legend, Joseph of Arimathea put his staff into the ground thus proclaiming the introduction of Christianity to Britain. The Queen now receives her Christmas sprig of thorn from a secret source. (Cedric Nielsen) - 13 - GENEROSITY: THE TREND IS UPWARDS According to the World Giving Index, the world has become a more generous place. The index is the largest study into charitable behaviour, covering the proportion of people who have donated money, volunteered their time or helped a stranger. The current edition presents giving data across 135 countries between 2009 and 2013. One striking finding is that Myanmar (formerly Burma) shares first place in the table with the United States. While America’s strong performance is across all forms of giving, Myanmar’s position is driven primarily by an incredibly high proportion of people donating money: 2.3 billion. This time, the USA is the the top ten for all three of the covered by the World Giving volunteering time and donating only country to be ranked in charitable giving behaviours Index (helping a stranger, money). The number of people helping strangers grew again by over 200 million in 2013. This now equates to about 2.3 billion people worldwide having helped a stranger in the month prior to the poll. Since 2009, women have become more likely than men to donate money to charity than men at a global level, despite the gap in economic participation that still exists between men and women world-wide. Reflecting this global disparity, women are only more likely to give money in high-income countries. In middle and low-income countries, men are more likely to donate. For people who like peace and quiet - a phoneless cord! - 14 - THE NEW YEAR: 2015 By Megan Carter He comes he goes, his times are set The New Year now has shown his face, For time is here and will not wait For dwellers all in time and space. We sojourn here on this fair earth, Just for a time so quickly gone, Our lives just like a vapour spent As we await another dawn. There is a day God has ordained When we will reach a distant shore, Eternity our new address Where time will cease and be no more. WORK E-MAILS OVER CHRISTMAS? Okay, be honest: did you check your office emails over the Christmas break? It seems that as many as 48 per cent of us find it really hard to let go while on holiday. Some of us say we want to keep up, and so reduce the workload on our return. Others of us say we love our job, and miss the office. Still others of us simply worry lest our job might have vanished in our absence..... The poll was carried out by TripAdvisor. Two hats were hanging on a hat rack in the hallway. One hat said to the other: 'You stay here; I'll go on a head.' - 15 - THE EAGLE AND THE ANT Our Kenyan friends are good at drawing analogies from the natural world - a bit like in the book of Proverbs in the Old Testament. So in beginning to look at some things in our own lives we've taken a leaf out of their book and focused on the eagle and the ant. The eagle flies high and sees for miles, taking in the grand sweep, the big picture. This is all well and good when the big picture is encouraging, inspiring or beautiful. It's a lot harder when the vista is one of large scale suffering or devastation. The ant knows how to focus on what is in the direct vicinity, working hard to create shelter and find food, working especially hard on behalf of others. This is all well and good when the details of the work are fruitful and something recognisable is being built. It's a lot harder when the vista is one of hard slog and not nearly enough progress appears to be being made. Despite some very good stuff that has happened recently, the last three weeks have been quite tough. There have been some things we've worked towards which appear to have fallen to the ground. There have also been two children we found during CBR fieldwork and we possibly didn't reach them in time to avert disaster and we await the outcome. We have both had bad stomachs and we are both quite tired. We're also concerned about the welfare of several people near and dear to us. So today we are stepping aside to rest a little, reflect on life and regain perspective. The eagle and the ant are going to chat awhile they've both got things to learn! - 16 - KEEP TAKING THE TABLETS! Tablet computers such as iPads are becoming increasingly popular. Without the additional accessories like a keyboard or mouse, a Tablet with its built-in camera and speakers takes up far less space than a conventional computer. Tablets are designed to be intuitive. Navigating and viewing information – such as zooming in on text or pictures or scrolling down a page – is as simple as swiping your fingers over the screen. Typing is done on a touchscreen keyboard. From one device you can send emails, listen to music, watch films, surf the internet, call friends and family, take and edit photos, shop and do your banking online. Tablets are often faster than traditional computers and they benefit from specially designed applications, called ‘apps’, which can be downloaded from the internet and will make your tablet even more useful. The saying goes that there is an app for everything. Some are free, others you’ll have to buy. Most retailers like Ocado and John Lewis have their own official apps, meaning that ordering groceries online is quick and easy. Apps like BBC iPlayer allow you to catch up on your favourite TV shows, while Cookery apps from Jamie Oliver and Nigella Lawson include video tutorials. Puzzle apps like Sudoku will keep you amused for hours! Ease yourself in by getting used to the swiping, pinching and zooming motions on the screen. Then familiarise yourself with the pre-loaded apps. It’s best to start with the internet browser. Above all, concentrate on what interests you the most and have fun. This is how you will really get the most out of the device. - 17 - COMFORTABLE WORDS “This is a true saying, and worthy of all men to be received, that Jesus Christ came into the world...to save sinners.” Every Sunday morning at 8.00 am the celebrant reads the so-called “comfortable words”. In fact, these words of Scripture – albeit comforting – are there to remind us of the fundamental trust that is so easily left in the manger at Christmas. The material momentum of the Advent and Christmas festivals sometimes elbows out the obvious question: “Why the Incarnation? Why did God send his Son among us?” The simple answer is in those words of comfort: “to save us”. “So God loved the world, that he gave his onlybegotten Son, to the end that all believe in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” The more difficult answer involves questioning the motivation behind this generous offer of salvation; and who better than Jesus to offer some further light? “So God loved the world...” The answer is LOVE...pure and simple. What difference will your faith make in 2015...to you and to those others who maybe share some aspect of your life? The answer is in your hands; and while those “comfortable words” will go on being offered Sunday by Sunday in church, their power will only be realised by those with receptive hearts and minds. The church’s fellowship will be here to remind you of their power; and for as long as there are people willing to make its witness real and effective, others too will be drawn into it. They too will become part of the fellowship of the faithful: the fellowship of the free; for the Christian message is one that offers salvation: one that saves us for eternity. - 18 - POINTS TO PONDER GK Chesterton: “Hope means expectancy when things are otherwise hopeless.” John F Kennedy: “Do not pray for easy lives. Pray to be stronger men.” Thomas Merton: solitudes.” “Churches in cities are most wonderful Somerset Maugham: “It was such a lovely day I thought it a pity to get up.” George Carlin: “Those who dance are considered insane by those who cannot hear the music.” James M. Barrie: “Nothing is really work unless you would rather be doing something else.” T Hansel: “Laughter adds richness, texture and colour to otherwise ordinary days. It is a gift, a choice, a discipline and an art.” Galileo Galilei: “I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from him.” Sir Barnett Cocks: “A committee is a cul-de-sac down which ideas are lured and then quietly strangled.” William Shakespeare: “He is winding the watch of his wit; by and by it will strike.” Jackie Mason: “I have enough money to last me the rest of my life, unless I buy something.” Orson Welles: “I hate television. I hate it as much as I hate peanuts. But I can't stop eating peanuts.” William Feather: “Setting a good example for children takes all the fun out of middle age.” Kathy Sierra: “In many cases, the more you try to compete, the less competitive you actually are.” - 19 - THOMAS AQUINAS Thomas will be remembered at the mid-week Service of Holy Communion on Wednesday, 28th January Thomas Aquinas has been described as the greatest thinker and teacher of the medieval church. Born at Rocca Secca, near Aquino in Italy in 1225, Thomas was educated first by the Benedictines at Monte Cassino and then at the university of Naples. Against his family’s wishes, he joined the Dominican Order of Preachers. Thomas was the foremost classical proponent of natural theology. His influence on Western thought is considerable, and much of modern philosophy was conceived in development or opposition of his ideas, particularly in the areas of ethics, natural law, metaphysics, and political theory. Unlike many currents in the Church of the time, Thomas embraced several ideas put forward by Aristotle — whom he referred to as "the Philosopher" — and attempted to synthesize Aristotelian philosophy with the principles of Christianity. The works for which he is best known are the Summa Theologica and the Summa contra Gentiles. His commentaries on Sacred Scripture and on Aristotle are an important part of his body of work. Furthermore, Thomas is distinguished for his eucharistic hymns, which form a part of the Church's liturgy. Thomas’s profound, theological wisdom and capacity to impart this, as well in homilies as in hymns, along with his gentleness of spirit in dealing with all, earned him the title “the angelic doctor”. Thomas is honoured as a saint by the Catholic Church and is held to be the model teacher for those studying for the priesthood. He died on 7th March 1274 en route to the Council of Lyons and his feast has been celebrated on this day since 1970. - 20 - SUNDAY READINGS IN JANUARY Sunday 4th January – THE EPIPHANY OLD TESTAMENT: Isaiah 60.1-6 Isaiah speaks of a glorious day when people will come to the Lord from far and wide, bringing their gifts and their worship. NEW TESTAMENT: Ephesians 3.1-12 Paul reveals that the riches of Christ are for Gentiles as well as Jews. GOSPEL: Matthew 2.1-12 In the days of Herod, Jesus is born in Bethlehem. Wise men come enquiring about the King of the Jews. Herod is worried. Sunday 11th January – THE BAPTISM OF CHRIST OLD TESTAMENT: Genesis 1.1-5 The beginning of Genesis describes the first day of the creation of the world when God separated light from darkness. NEW TESTAMENT: Mark 1.4-11 John the Baptist prepares the way for the coming of Jesus. Jesus is baptised by John and hears the voice of God. Sunday 18th January – EPIPHANY 2 OLD TESTAMENT: 1 Samuel 3.1-10 God reveals himself to Samuel through the medium of a dream and its interpretation by Eli. NEW TESTAMENT: Revelation 5.1-10 Jesus was worthy of breaking the seals and opening the scroll because by his sacrifice he became God’s representative on earth. GOSPEL: John 1.43-end Jesus calls his first group of disciples and it is clear that these men are instantly aware of Jesus’ identity from their first moment of contact with him. - 21 - Sunday 25th January – CONVERSION OF ST PAUL OLD TESTAMENT: Jeremiah 1.4-10 It is abundantly clear that Jeremiah’s reluctance to serve is useless in the face of God’s determination to appoint him as his prophet and spokesman. NEW TESTAMENT: Matthew 19.27-end Jesus presents the concept of conversion and discipleship as the sacrifice of possessions and family for a life focused on the message of Christ. TO MIND ONE’S PS AND QS To mind one’s Ps and Qs is to take great care how one speaks and behaves. Speculation abounds on the origin of this phrase which has been with us since the beginning of the 17th century. One explanation is that the expression used to be ‘mind your toupee and your queues’, the toupee being false hair and the queue being the pigtail popular in the days gone by. Hairpieces are never very secure and would certainly prohibit the wearer from anything but the most decorous behaviour. Another suggestion is that it comes from the dancing school where wigs remained a problem. Students were constantly being reminded to perfect their ‘pieds’ (footwork) and to have care for their ‘queues’ (wigs). There are also stories arising from the similarity of ‘p’ and ‘q’. Children often have difficulty in distinguishing between ‘p’ and ‘q’ and ‘mind your Ps and Qs’ must have been on the lips of governesses and tutors throughout the land. A final thought in this regard is that typesetters had problems in keeping their Ps and Qs from getting mixed up. - 22 - - 23 - FROM THE REGISTERS NO SERVICES THIS MONTH ALTAR FLOWERS Jan Jan Jan Jan 4th 11th 18th 25th The Guild The Guild Mrs W Bales Mrs W Bales JANUARY THAW ____________________________________ The sun came out, And the snowman cried. His tears ran down on every side. His tears ran down Till the spot was cleared. He cried so hard That he disappeared. (Margaret Hillert) MAGAZINE DEADLINE The deadline for the February edition of the Church Magazine is 10.00 am on Wednesday, 14th January 2015 - 24 -