March 2015 - St Mary`s Hale
Transcription
March 2015 - St Mary`s Hale
PARISH MAGAZIE St. Mary’s Church Hale with Halebank 30P PARISH DIRECTORY • Revd. Janice Collier - Team Rector 425 3195 • Revd. Dr. Jeremy Duff - Team Vicar 424 2221 • Revd. Greg Sharples—Team Curate 07730512603 • Joyce Reilly ( P.C.C. Secretary ) 425 3982 • Steve Collins( Warden ) 425 2490 • Peter Naylor (Warden) 01925 629110 • Jeff Holt (Deputy Warden) 425 4230 • Steve Farrell (Reader and Treasurer) 420 1464 • Ros Barlow (Verger) 425 4163 • David Ford (Organist) 425 2233 • Kath Williams (Sunday School & Alpha Course) 425 5171 • Di Evans (Alpha Course) 01925 752416 • Naomi Hadden (Flowers) 425 2265 • Ruth Hilton (Bell Ringers) 425 2123 • Mark France (Magazine Editorial) 07950 897564 • Gilly Thompson (Magazine Editorial) 425 2012 • Anna Banks (Ladies Group) • Val Borlase (Magazine Advertising 425 3519 • Hale C of E School 425 3023 • Halebank C of E School 424 4878 • Evelyn Hudson ( Cathedral Parish Representative ) 425 2635 • Janice Farrell (Reader and Wedding Co-ordinator) 420 1464 • All enquiries for Baptisms, Funerals, Weddings etc. call the Team Administrator, Felicity Price, on 0151 345 0558, or email at southwidnesteam@hotmail.co.uk. Church Website: http://www.saintmaryshale.com Church Email address: vicar@saintmaryshale.com Halebank News! In September, I moved to Halebank working for the church. So, I thought I would start writing a short article for the newsletter each month with news from Halebank! Every Wednesday at the Halebank Youth Club there is Pensioners lunch and bingo. It is great fun! Starting at 12.30 there is bingo, a raffle, and always a wonderful dinner cooked by the hard working committee members at the Youth Club. I started going along, even though I am not a pensioner, when I was new to Halebank and it was a great way to get to know people. It is lots of fun, with laugh after laugh, and a brilliant community spirit. I have never yet won at the bingo... But I enjoy playing none the less! Wednesday afternoons 12.30-14.30 (price is dependent on how many lines of bingo you play and if you go in for the raffle...) Rachel Gaunt ALPHA is starting in Halebank 12th March It will be every Thursday at 8pm From the Editorial Team Contributions to the magazine are most welcome. Articles for the April magazine must be submitted by the 20th March 2015. The preferred way is to e-mail it as an attachment to : parishmag@fsmail.net It can also be handed on a disc to Mark or Gilly , printed out (use Arial font 12pts) or handwritten. Contact Val on 425 3519 for advertisements to be placed onto the magazine Any opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the editorial team or the Church. Coffee and Cake A chance to find out more about Christianity For more Information contact Rachel Gaunt on 07891378299 LENT LUNCHES AT HALE VILLAGE HALL Every Thursday in Lent: 12.30—1.30pm 5th March, 12th March, 19th March, 26thMarch. We will be serving a simple meal of Homemade soup, Fresh bread and Cheese Tea and Coffee All proceeds will be given to WATERAID Just come along. You will be most welcome £3.50 We are in the Church season of Lent. This is the time from Pancake Tuesday to Easter Day, about 6 weeks long. The church originally invented Lent as a time to prepare for the great Celebration of Easter. During Lent a variety of traditions have come down to us over the centuries. Eating Pancakes at the very beginning, giving something up, the colour purple in the church building, no flowers or singing of the Gloria in services. You may be able to think of others! But what is the real purpose of Lent? I want to suggest it is a time to get closer to God. But how do we do that? I suggest that we stop being so busy. That we DO nothing for Lent and maybe just spend a bit of time BEING still. I have three suggestions for this time: Firstly, maybe do a bit of chewing the cud...pondering, ruminating, using the Lord's Prayer. Have a real think about each line, each phrase, each word. Try and get to the bottom of what it really means. Or Fast from Facebook, Twitter, internet browsing, online shopping, channel hopping etc., These things can steal our time! Or Practise the presence of God, This is really just remembering that God is with you always and everywhere. Take a moment when you are working, or in the kitchen or doing a routine task that requires no thinking. Remember God is with you, always. Or try and use an established form of prayer called the Examen... ask yourself 2 questions “For what am I most grateful today?” Bring the memory to mind and thank God or the event or person involved. Then ask “For what am I least grateful today?” Bring this to mind, remember how it felt, and recognise that God is in there with you, beside you even in the really difficult things. Give it a go, even just once. Have a good Lent. Love from Janice REGISTERS Funerals Doris Sankey We pray for her family and all who mourn. coming soon... Tuesday 10th March 7.30 Hale Church. A service to commission the new Shared Ministry team. Please come and support the team members as they make this commitment. Halebank School Easter Communion Wednesday 1st April 9.30am in Hale Church All welcome. Hale School Easter Communion on Maundy Thursday 2nd April 9.30am in Hale Church. All welcome. ADVANCE NOTICE THIS YEAR’S AGM WILL TAKE PLACE ON MONDAY 20th APRIL 2015 at 7.30pm in CHURCH. ALL CHURCH GROUPS ARE INVITED TO SUBMIT AN ANNUAL REPORT FOR INCLUSION AT THE AGM AS IN PREVIOUS YEARS CAN WE REQUEST THAT ALL REPORTS ARE SUBMITTED TO THE MAGAZINE TEAM BY 7TH MARCH TO ENSURE THEY ARE INCLUDED IN THE APRIL MAGAZINE – THIS WILL ALLOW FOR THE INFORMATION TO BE READ IN ADVANCE OF THE MEETING. Reports can be emailed to the magazine team on parishmag@fsmail.net or handed directly to Gilly Thompson. First Service Fears Approaching the huge wooden doors of the church entrance, I felt terrified. It was the first time I had voluntarily attended a church service and the first time I had ever attended a service at St Mary’s. As a teacher I can only compare the feeling to entering an unfamiliar staff room at a new school. Where will I sit? What if I sit in somebody else’s seat or end up in the middle of an exclusive group who obviously don’t want me there? What if nobody speaks to me or worse, if they can see through my lack of knowledge and reject me entirely? This anxiety only increased as I walked through the wooden doors to a surprisingly large number of people chatting throughout the church. On entering I was handed some flyers but at the time I was too blinded by my own fear to acknowledge what they were or who had given them to me. I located an empty seat towards the back of the church and took a deep breath: I had made it in at least. Looking around me I was again surprised to see people socialising, laughing and entirely relaxed. There was an immediate sense of community in the church that which made it far less formal and intimidating than I had expected. With this sense of reassurance I began to read the documents in my hand, understanding some, but not all of what was about to happen. Fortunately somebody nearby noticed my uncertainty and offered to talk me through the service. An hour later I had made it through without embarrassing myself too much: although I didn’t recognise the hymns it was easy to pick up on the tune with so many people singing around me; the vicar analysed the reading in a way that appealed to my creative nature and I had even signed up to help at the Christmas Fair! It took several months for me to familiarise myself with the routines of the different services but I am proud to say that I am now one of those relaxed people who can laugh and socialise at church on a Sunday morning. Trying something new and unknown is always scary but I’m glad I had the courage to do it and I would like to thank everyone at St Mary’s for making me feel so welcome. Hayley. Our Services Prayer Changes Things! Have you ever felt you had an emergency situation which you would love to share with someone and ask them to pray for or with you? Well you can! We have set up some emergency prayer circles, so that anyone who has an urgent need can make one phone call and know that very soon many people will be praying with them about it. If you would like to be part of a prayer circle, do let Val Borlase (0151 425 3519) or Gilly Thompson (0151 425 2012) know. Your name will be included in a circle of about 10 people; when there is an urgent need you will receive a phone call or a text with a few details about the need, you phone one other person and then pray in your own time wherever you are. You will be given all the information you need about how the prayer circles work. For regular prayer requests please continue to use the weekly sheet at church. The easiest way if you have email is weeklysheet@saintmaryshale.com. If you know of an urgent or emergency need, please phone Val or Gilly and then trust God for the answer to that prayer. We have seen some amazing answers! Sunday 1st 11am Holy Communion Sunday 8th 11am All age Worship 4.30pm Holy Communion BCP Sunday 15th Mothering Sunday 11am Family Communion Sunday 22nd 11am Holy Communion with prayer ministry. Sunday 29th Palm Sunday 11am Songs of Praise and Worship 4.30pm Ecumenical Stations of the Cross. Holy Week Services Monday 30th March 7.30pm led by a Discovery Group Tuesday 31st March 7.30pm led by a Discovery Group Wednesday 1st April 7.30pm led by Rachel Gaunt Maundy Thursday 2nd April 7.30pm Holy Communion with Stripping of the Altar. Good Friday 3rd April 11am Morning Service suitable for all followed by Ecumenical walk to the Cross 2pm The Last Hour suitable for adults only. Easter Sunday 5th April 11am Family Communion Start your day with: Daily prayers at Hale Church Monday-Friday at 9am just for 20 minutes. LICC Word for the Week Commit to Get Fit 29th March Palm Sunday: Jesus at the gates of Jerusalem Holy Week begins with Palm Sunday, when the Church remembers how Je- Anyone who competes as an athlete does not receive the victor’s crown except by competing according to the rules. 2 Timothy 2:5 sus arrived at the gates of Jerusalem just a few days before the Passover Do you jog to work? Bench-press in front of your computer screen? Lift weights at the coffee machine? Even do sit ups in meetings? Perhaps not. But what would it mean to see our workplaces as a spiritual gym? reputation as a healer, and welcomed him. But sadly the welcome was Paul uses the example of an athlete when encouraging Timothy to ‘be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus’ (2 Timothy 2:1). In any physical training programme, fitness doesn’t happen by accident. It requires the ongoing commitment to change unhelpful patterns and replace them with health-inducing habits. The work of change requires effort and a sustainable fitness programme. With spiritual ‘fitness’ these same elements are important, especially if we desire to be fruitful on our frontlines. It takes effort. The letters of both Paul and Peter contain many exhortations to become spiritually mature, with God’s help, through disciplined effort. See, for example, 2 Peter 1:5-9: ‘For this very reason, make every effort to add to your faith goodness; and to goodness, knowledge; and to knowledge, self-control; and to self-control, perseverance; and to perseverance, godliness; and to godliness, mutual affection; and to mutual affection, love. For if you possess these qualities in increasing measure, they will keep you from being ineffective and unproductive in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.’ was due to be held. He was the Messiah come to his own people in their capital city, and yet he came in humility, riding on a young donkey, not in triumph, riding on a war-horse. As Jesus entered the city, the crowds gave him a rapturous welcome, throwing palm fronds into his path. They knew his short-lived and shallow, for Jerusalem would soon reject her Messiah, and put him to death. On this day churches worldwide will distribute little crosses made from palm fronds in memory of Jesus’ arrival in Jerusalem. Palm Sunday (Jn 12:12-16, Zech9:9,Mt 2:11) Palms and praises pointing to victory as the King rides on, the promised King, gentle and riding on a donkey. Promised of old and given that gift of gold, early on. Half-recognised in his kingdom- signs and words, kindling hope, leading to hosannas, to palms and praises. And then the turning, as this King shows a different sovereignty. The cries of “Crucify”, the cruel crowning as thorns pierce head and hearts. Effort goes hand in hand with a sustainable programme. Inwardly (our personalities and preferences) and outwardly (our commitments and responsibilities) we are all different. Any fitness programme we commit to needs to reflect this, as one size does not fit all. Yet without reorganising our lives at some level we are unlikely to create healthy lifelong spiritual habits to sustain us. Athletes do not get fit by accident, but by design. A misunderstanding. A misreading of the signs, so clear. A failure to trust the King, who was and is and always will be Truth. Father, forgive us, We know not what we are doing, Still. 17th March St Patrick – beloved apostle to Ireland St Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland. If you’ve ever been in New York on St Patrick’s Day, you’d think he was the patron saint of New York as well... the flamboyant parade is full of American/Irish razzmatazz. It’s all a far cry from the hard life of this 5th century humble Christian who became in time both bishop and apostle of Ireland. Patrick was born the son of a town councillor in the west of England, between the Severn and the Clyde. But as a young man he was captured by Irish pirates, kidnapped to Ireland, and St. Mary’s is part of the South Widnes Team of churches: St. Mary’s Hale, St. Mary’s West Bank and St. Paul’s Widnes. Every month we will try to give some information about what is happening in the other churches. For this month, here is how the leadership of the team is made up, reduced to slavery. He was made to tend his master’s herds. Desolate and despairing, Patrick turned to prayer. He found God was there for him, even in such desperate circumstances. He spent much time in prayer, and his faith grew and deepened, in contrast to his earlier years, when he “knew not the true God”. Then, after six gruelling, lonely years he was told in a dream he would soon go to his own country. He either escaped or was freed, made his way to a port 200 miles away and eventually persuaded Team Clergy Rev. Janice Collier—Team Rector Rev. Jeremy Duff—Team Vicar Rev. Greg Sharples—Curate some sailors to take him with them away from Ireland. After various adventures in other lands, including near-starvation, Patrick landed on English soil at last, and returned to his family. But he was much changed. He had enjoyed his life of plenty before; now he wanted to devote the rest of his life to Christ. Patrick received some form of training for the priesthood, but not the higher education he really wanted. But by 435, well educated or not, Local Missional Leader at St. Mary’s West Bank Chris Holleran Readers Janice Farrell—St. Mary’s Hale Steve Farrell—St. Mary’s Hale Linda Foster—St. Paul’s Patrick was badly needed. Palladius’ mission to the Irish had failed, and so the Pope sent Patrick back to the land of his slavery. He set up his see at Armagh, and worked principally in the north. He urged the Irish to greater spirituality, set up a school, and made several missionary journeys. Patrick’s writings are the first literature certainly identified from the British Other staff Retired Clergy Rev. Walter Balmer Rev. David Thompson Church. They reveal sincere simplicity and a deep pastoral care. He wanted to abolish paganism, idolatry, and was ready for imprisonment or death in the following of Christ. Patrick remains the most popular of the Irish saints. The principal cathedral of New York is dedicated to him, as, of course, is the Anglican cathedral of Dublin. Administrator Felicity Price Bob Milton—Sports Minister Rachel Gaunt— ordinand, working part-time in Halebank Children’s Society Box Collection 2015 I would like to thank everyone who brought in their Chil- dren’s Society collection boxes to the Christingle Service. Evelyn and David Hudson and I have been busy counting and counting and counting! The final total amounted to £1918.60 including some donations to the Society. This is our highest total ever and we are so pleased. I rang Mrs. Ailison Wilson who was our speaker at the service and she was thrilled. Thank you all so much. I would like to thank Evelyn and Dave; they help me so much. The Children’s Society has a ”collection for children” throughout the country which takes place in the spring. This year it runs between 11th April to 25th April. We are very lucky in Hale and Halebank to have valued collectors who go out in all weathers to every house in the village and parts of Halebank. When your envelope comes through your letterbox please try and support the society in any small way you can. The Children’s Society does such good work with vulnerable children and young people and families in need. THANK YOU ONCE AGAIN. God bless. Love, Jo Saville. 15th March Mothering Sunday – 4th Sunday in Lent There is an old Jewish saying: God could not be everywhere, and therefore He made mothers. Mother Church, Mother Earth, Mother of the Gods - our human mothers - all of them have been part of the celebration of ‘Mothering Sunday’ - as the fourth Sunday in Lent is affectionately known. It has been celebrated in the UK since at least the 16th century. In Roman times, great festivals were held every Spring to honour Cybele, Mother of all the Gods. Other pagan festivals in honour of Mother Earth were also celebrated. With the arrival of Christianity, the festival became one honouring Mother Church. During the Middle Ages, young people apprenticed to craftsmen or working as ‘live-in’ servants were allowed only one holiday a year on which to visit their families - which is how ‘Mothering Sunday’ got its name. This special day became a day of family rejoicing, and the Lenten fast was broken. In some places the day was called Simnel Day, because of the sweet cakes called simnel cakes traditionally eaten on that day. In recent years the holiday has changed and in many ways now resembles the American Mothers’ Day, with families going out to Sunday lunch and generally making a fuss of their mother on the day.