Parish Life The Magazine of Holy Trinity Parish Church Kendal December 201 4 / January 201 5 40p —1 — Church Office: Website: General email: Address: Clergy, Hilary Murphy, Diane Letheren 721248 Open 09:30am–4:00pm (Friday, morning only) www.kendalparishchurch.co.uk office@kendalparishchurch.co.uk Kendal Parish Church, Kirkland, Kendal LA9 5AF —2— From the Vicarage Dear Friends, At the risk of ending up on the pages of the Daily Mail like a relative did when writing about Father Christmas, it’s time to own up. I don’t like ‘Away in a Manger’. I’m not too keen on ‘In the bleak midwinter’ either, but ‘Away in a Manger’ is the one in last place. I know that this is a minority view and that, for many, this carol makes Christmas. To leave it out would be like Christmas without presents and food. Consequently, over the next few weeks, we will be singing it on many, many occasions! It‘s not the sheer number of times we sing it that is the problem, it’s that it misrepresents the story. All the guts have been wrenched out and we end up with a story which bears no relation to real life. I’ve been present at three births and they all involved crying … by everybody. The point of the story is that this was a real human birth, with pain, worry, joy, tears and exhaustion – all taking place away from home and involving two young people with difficult questions to answer. Apologies if this is your favourite carol, but one of the glories of life (and the church) is that we don’t have to agree, and ‘Away in a Manger’ is quite safe at KPC! All this carries a serious point, which is that the nativity story is about God himself coming to be one of us, to be like us, to share the same joys and struggles. He shows us what it means to be truly human and fully alive. As he grows, Jesus lives life as it is meant to be lived. He is not immune to temptation, to loss, to hurt or to loneliness or worry. He does not glide through life cocooned from everyday human existence until the last few weeks. Too much of our ‘tradition’ of Christmas wraps the story up in sentimental bubble wrap. Jesus doesn’t cry. Mary looks like she's done nothing more strenuous than reading a book. The only nod to something strange and scandalous is often the ‘no room at the inn’ part of the story. Yet, even here, we may have got things wrong. It would have been scandalous in those days —3— for a family not to provide shelter for a pregnant relative. Joseph would certainly have arranged accommodation before arriving in Bethlehem. The inn in question may have been the main guest room of their relatives’ house, already full of other relatives arrived for the census. The young couple may have been placed in another part of the house, the lower part of which was for the animals. Jesus was indeed laid in a manger, but not necessarily in a shed outside. None of this takes away the miraculous and scandalous nature of the story. As is God’s way, the everyday and the miraculous collide. God himself steps into the everyday world of the people he loves. The king of all creation lies as a helpless baby in a manger in a relative’s house, looked after by two tired young parents far from home and worried about their parents’ reaction. On this night, which is both like every other and quite unlike any other, God cries and sleeps and feeds just like babies through all of history. Yet the miracle extends beyond the miracle that is any birth, to also being the salvation of all creation, accompanied by angels and shepherds through whom both the glory of heaven and the least of society are invited and welcomed to recognise the king of kings. The everyday and the miraculous work of God are brought together. The nativity is the ultimate love letter, telling us that God loved us so much that he moved into town and walked in our shoes. We can know God and bring all our lives to him because he knows what it is like to be us from the inside. It is also the reminder that God always brings the everyday and the miraculous together. We are not just about surviving life with a hope of heaven, but rather we are to seek and be part of God’s miraculous work in the everyday that we experience. The nativity is a particular event in history which can change every other event in history. Whichever is your favourite, or least favourite, carol, may each of them truly remind us of this wondrous event, and may we allow it to change us and change all the things we do. May you have a peaceful Christmas and happy New Year, With every blessing, Rob —4— Notices: Invitations Last year, we sent out 8000 invitations to our Christmas services and the Christmas Tree Festival. Please can you help us do this again? Cards are available from the back of church. Please take them for friends and neighbours. If you are delivering them to particular streets, could you please record this on the sheet on the wardens’ table as this will help us not to deliver to the same people. Many thanks. Gift Day There has been a lot of work going on with the £5 notes, with lots of creative ideas for growing them. Thank you everyone for all your hard work and inspiration! The deadline looms and we will be offering what we have raised at the services on Sunday, 14 December. Envelopes can be returned before this date if that is easier, but we hope to be able to announce the results the following week. Thank you again. Christmas Fair Thank you to everyone for all your hard work at the Christmas Fair last week. It was a really super event and it was lovely to see so many people involved. There is a report from Ashley on the following page of this magazine. Nether Hall As mentioned earlier this year, the Trustees of the Kirkland Hall have decided to put the Nether Hall up for sale. This can now happen, following the necessary reports and legal process, and we will keep you informed of developments. —5— Christmas Fair A big thank you to everyone who supported our Christmas Fair. As we have not held one for a number of years, this was something of a ‘suck it and see’ exercise as part of our general fund-raising drive but it turned out to be a great success and one which we shall certainly be looking to repeat in future years. From the initial planning through to the provision and collection of goods, setting up, decorating the hall (thanks Boys Brigade), welcoming, selling, haggling and tidying up, it was a real team-effort at every stage, with the workload shared, a role for everyone who wanted one and helpers ranging from the very young to the very young at heart! We were blessed with a good day for weather and a steady throughflow of visitors, which certainly helped but, just as importantly as raising much needed funds, it was a positive exercise in good public relations, especially at a time when we are looking at ways of maximising the use of the Parish Hall in the future. When the dust had settled, the customers gone, the hall cleared and unsold items gratefully received by Manna House and other charities, we made a clear profit of £700, which was a fantastic achievement. And to put this into further context, it does not include the money raised by individuals or groups who had a stall as part of their ‘£5 talents initiative’, some of whom we know raised well in excess of £50 during the day. Sarah Tulley keeps the data base of families we invite to Messy Church and other events and one of those families who attended texted her back after the Fair with these words – “Hi there, just wanted to say we had a lovely time at the Christmas Fair yesterday. My little ones really enjoyed seeing Santa. Hope you made some good money for the church.” Thanks to everyone again. Same again next year please! Ashley —6— Letter from Bishop James Growing Disciples It is nearly four years since we published the ‘Green Book’ setting out our mission and our vision for the next ten years. Over that time we have been working out what we need to do to fulfil our mission and make the vision a reality. This has been translated into three linked strategies – Mission and Outreach, Ministry, and Buildings – and we have developed an underlying committment to doing this with our sister churches. On Saturday, 11 October our Diocesan Synod agreed two important steps. One is that our budget, for the first time planned for five years ahead, is shaped around what we are going to do. We continue to resource parochial ministry hugely – which is the heart of the Ministry Strategy. But we are also going to spend money on Ministry and Outreach. Bishop Robert describes: • MeReach (what each of us can do to draw ourselves and others into closer faithfulness and discipleship); • InReach (welcoming those who come to us and inviting those with some links to church); • Outreach and BigReach (using both more traditional and innovative means to reach out to the perhaps half a million people living in Cumbria, and our 13 million tourists, who have almost no contact with church). Synod also agreed a second step – that we are going to shape ministry round Mission Communities. These will be more than simple federations of churches – they must be communities of churches, with all that this means for mutual support. And they will have mission in their DNA – they must remember that Church is not a club, but has been called into being by God to look outwards to the whole of his creation, to help make his Kingdom a reality. The rough shapes of Mission Communities are emerging across the county – we think there will be about forty of them. They —7— will each be different and will go at different speeds – and that range of possibilities is, from my perspective, exciting. They will all provide mutual support, encouragement and challenge in prayer and a shared committment to growing disciples. This second step has been the subject of much discussion over the past year. It is a big change and so of course there has been and is uncertainty, which causes anxiety. We are very grateful to the Ministry Strategy Feedback and Advisory Group which has handled much of this. Now we have had the Synod vote, we want the nascent Mission Communities to continue their local conversations with determination. There is an element of urgency here, and of reality too. We do face financial pressures and there is a shortage of stipendiary clergy. But this is not a strategy to manage decline, it is a way of becoming a more effective and faithful, sustainable and growing church. These two key decisions affirm our understanding that God is for all (the Mission and Outreach strategy) and Church is by all (the Ministry strategy). So each of us – from congregation members in each Church to me as Bishop – will need to change the way we work as Church members. God has called us to service and he will give us the gifts we need to fulfil our task as it changes. Of course, managing change is an art and a skill, and we are thinking and working at this. But it is God’s call to grow disciples, and we regards all this as part of our fathful and obedient response. With best wishes. Yours in Christ James 201 5 – A Date for your Diary The Annual Helm Group Away Day at Rydal Hall will take place on Saturday, 28 March, 10am – 4pm. This year the day will be led by Canon Cameron Butland, Rector of Grasmere and Chaplain at Rydal. His theme will be ‘Prayer of the Heart: Lenten Reflections. Further details in the February Magazine. —8— —9— Prayer for the Persecuted Church In recent years we have become more and more conscious that many Christians today are suffering persecution for their faith. In a recent speech Prince Charles has added his voice to this concern. The number of those persecuted today is tremendous. I was looking for a prayer on this subject when I was taking Evensong recently. I was not surprised not to find one in the intercession book which my father gave me in 1955, but surprised not to find one in a recent book of intercessions (2011). There was a general prayer for all who are oppressed but nothing directly for the persecuted church. My motto is these situations is: If you can’t find one, write one! So here it is: Lord God, we pray for our brothers and sisters throughout the world, who are suffering persecution because of their beliefs; give them courage and strength in their ordeal and soften the hearts of their persecutors. We ask this in the name of Him who died upon the Cross, Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord. Amen. Michael Thistlewood Annual report for Holy Trinity Mothers’ Union Kendal 201 4 We seem to have had a very eventful year. A few of us attended the Lady Day Service at Milnthorpe Chuch on Tuesday, 25 March and the Quiet Afternoon at St George’s Church on Monday, 20 October. We ran a production line again assembling all the daffodil posies for the Mothering Sunday Services. We all enjoyed preparing soup and tray bakes for the Lent Lunches and we are all now looking forward to preparing all the oranges for the forthcoming Christingle Service. We supported Springfield House with our Christmas Tree in the Charity Christmas Tree Festival and were able to give them £51.32. This year we will be supporting New Beginnings as our named charity. For our Annual Mother’s Day Summer Outing, 19 of us went for a guided tour around the Dew-Lay Cheese Factory and Shop — 10 — from where we went to Margaret Tomlinson’s previous Mothers’ Union at Whitechapel Church near Bilsborough. They had prepared a delicious afternoon tea for us before we ended our tour with a ride through the Trough of Bowland. We have been given Appleby as our Prayer on Action Link and hopefully look forward to meeting them next year. On Sunday, 8 June we enrolled four new members to Holy Trinity Mothers’ Union which gives us a total of 33 members. Earlier this year I took on the role of sending Baptism Anniversary Cards to the families on the anniversary of their Baptism up to five years ago and by the end of this year I will have sent out 59 Anniversary Cards. We pray for these families at our meetings. We supported the first ever Baptism Anniversary Party on Saturday, 7 June and hope to follow on with the families maybe meeting with them at ‘The Gate’. Next year the Women’s World Day of Prayer will be held on Friday, 6 March and we will be looking after the refreshments. Joan Carnaffin A credit union in South Lakeland Credit unions are savings and borrowing co-operatives, owned and managed by their members, which offer to all members of the community, including those who are excluded from traditional banking services, an easy way to save and to access reasonably priced loans. Much of Cumbria already has access to a credit union, and now a group of volunteers is seeking formal approval from the Bank of England for the creation of a credit union which will serve the whole of South Lakeland. Initially, services, which are likely to come on stream around Easter 2015, will be centred on Kendal with a phased roll-out across the District over the following couple of years. An employed manager will make everything fit together and run smoothly but otherwise the credit union will rely on volunteers to do everything from being a part of the management committee to working directly with customers. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at: <http://southlakelandcu.org.uk/index.html>. Then, if you would like to join our team as a volunteer, or can help us spread the word about what we are doing, or simply would like to be kept in touch with our progress, please get in touch with Angela Lovett by email at: <volunteering@southlakelandcu.org.uk> — 11 — Kendal Parish Church Library I am sorry to have been so quiet for so long! It is not that nothing has been happening – many of you are still very kindly passing on books to me and the library is still very much used. There are a number of things in the pipeline. You will have noticed that in some of the book cases, books are lying flat rather than standing up. This is because we are using hymn book cases. We are the victims of our own success! I have been investigating the possibility of new bookcases. It is probable that some will be made for us and someone has kindly offered to pay for these. The other point under discussion is where the book cases will eventually be placed. The present location is not entirely satisfactory. Somewhere against a wall would be more satisfactory. This depends on the developments in the West End Scheme. I also have a number of boxes of books still to be sorted! So when we have the new bookcases, I have a big job to do sorting out books and checking with my database lists. In some cases I will have to start culling – all libraries are faced with this problem. I shall be a happy bunny when it all looks tidy! I have read the new Pope’s biography (as have many others) and I am in the middle of a new biography of the new Archbishop of Canterbury. I hope to pass these on to the library in due course. Blessings on you all. Michael Thistlewood — 12 — Services — December 201 4 — January 201 5 — Sunday, 7 December – Second Sunday of Advent 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 2:00pm 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Choral Communion (BCP) The Gathering with Communion Scout and Beaver Carol Service Evensong (BCP) Sunday, 1 4 December – Third Sunday of Advent 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 1:00pm 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Parish Communion (CW) The Gathering Holy Baptism (CW) Evensong (BCP) Sunday, 21 December – Fourth Sunday of Advent 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Parish Communion (CW) The Gathering with Communion The Service of Nine Lessons and Carols Wednesday, 24 December – Christmas Eve 4:00pm 11:15pm Crib Service Midnight Communion (CW) Thursday, 25 December – Christmas Day 9:00am 10:30am Holy Communion (BCP) Christmas Communion (CW) (continued …) — 13 — Services (continued) — December 201 4 — January 201 5 — Sunday, 28 December – First Sunday of Christmas 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Parish Communion (CW) The Gathering Evensong (BCP) Sunday, 4 January – Epiphany 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Choral Communion (BCP) The Gathering with Communion Evensong (BCP) Sunday, 1 1 January – Baptism of Christ 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Parish Communion (CW) The Gathering Epiphany Carol Service Sunday, 1 8 January – Second Sunday of Epiphany 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 1:00pm 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Parish Communion (CW) The Gathering with Communion Holy Baptism (CW) Evensong (BCP) Sunday, 25 January – Conversion of Paul 8:00am 9:30am 11:00am 6:30pm Holy Communion (BCP) Parish Communion (CW) The Gathering Evensong (BCP) — 14 — From the Registers Baptisms 19 October 26 October 2 November 16 November Weddings 25 October Harris Samuel Stewart Lacey Skye Harrison Vinnie Mark Littlewood Ethan Hauxwell Theo Dexter Hauxwell Sadie Isabella Greenup Riley Jack Partington Bella Rose Aplin Esme Amelia Armstrong Scarlett Grace Lowe. William James Colvin Smith and Katie Louise Flevill. Another Date for Your Diary Travellers of the Heart ~ Exploring different Christian traditions on our journey through life A study day with Canon Michael Mitton drawing on his own experiences within the church. He will explore how our faith and mission can be deepened by these encounters. Saturday, 14 March 2015, 10:30am–3pm, Kirkland Hall, Kendal Parish Church. (Tea and coffee provided, bring your own lunch) The Revd Canon Michael Mitton is a freelance writer, consultant, trainer, Fresh Expressions Officer for the Diocese of Derby and Priest-in-Charge of St Paul’s Church, Derby. © Holy Trinity Kendal Parish Church, 2014. Any views expressed in this magazine are not necessarily those of the editors or the Anglican Parish Church. — 15 — Holy Communion (BCP) 8:00am Parish Communion 9:30am (Common Worship, except 1st Sunday BCP) The Gathering 11:00am (with Communion 1st & 3rd Sundays) (Except Matins BCP on 5th Sunday) Evensong 6:30pm Mid Week Morning Prayer Mon, Tues, Thurs 9:15am Morning Prayer Wednesday 10:00am Meditation Tuesday 10:00am Holy Communion (BCP) Thursday 10:30am (Saints’ Days and Holy Days as announced) — 16 —
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