The
Parish Church of
HOLY TRINITY, TARLETON
Parish
"Webzine" January 2007
EPIPHANY
WEEK OF PRAYER for CHRISTIAN UNITY
THE PRESENTATION OF CHRIST
From
the Rectory
Dear
Friends,
I
do hope that you have all enjoyed a very happy and blessed
Christmas and may I say a big ‘thank you’
for the many cards and gifts which I have received.
Those
of you who have been into church over the last few weeks
cannot have failed to notice the work which has transformed
the reredos behind the high altar. The late Gerry Hogg
generously left money in his will and asked that it might
be used for just such a project. The P.C.C. also agreed
to use part of some other funds which were given to Holy
Trinity in recent bequests to complete the work. I realise
that in this day and age the financial pressures facing
this and many parishes is high but bequests should not
be used to pay for everyday running costs. Paying a gas
or electric bill in somebody’s memory is hardly
appropriate. Instead we have a lasting gift which all
can enjoy.
Many
of you will have met the artist who did the restoration.
Laurentiu Nechita is a specialist iconographer, fresco
painter and art restorer. For most of the year he lives
with his wife and daughter in his native Romania where
he is employed by the Archbishop of Iasi (pronounced Yash)
to restore and decorate churches. As well as heading a
team of nine trained artists Laurentiu is himself a very
devout Christian and three of his brothers are priests
in the Romanian Orthodox Church. Some of the commissions
which Laurentiu has undertaken have involved painting
frescos covering up to 400m².
In
the winter months it is too cold and damp in Romania to
paint frescos, an ancient technique which involves applying
the paint to the plaster whilst it is still wet. And so
for the last six years Laurentiu has spent a few months
each year working in England and Greece.
His
work and finances are managed in England by a proper Trust
which is headed by the Archdeacon of Pontefract and the
Vicar of St John’s, Tuebrook, Liverpool.
When
Laurentiu first came to see our reredos he was impressed
by the quality of the paintings and of the stone carving.
His careful work has brought out the beauty and detail
which went largely unnoticed before. He has given me several
photographs which I will display in church so that you
can see the marked difference the cleaning and gilding
have made. I must also thank John Heap who has so carefully
crafted four new pinnacles to replace the originals which
were damaged and removed many years ago. Once the missing
curtains either side of the altar are re-hung in the next
few weeks, then the sanctuary will once again appear more
or less as William Bassett-Smith, the architect originally
intended.
Many
thanks to all who offered hospitality and help during
Laurentiu’s stay. I hope you will all enjoy the
reredos for many years to come and that we may glimpse
in our worship on earth something of the beauty of heaven.
With
my prayers and best wishes for the New Year,
Fr
Nicholas
PARISH
NOTICE BOARD
EPIPHANY
SPECIAL
We will celebrate Epiphany on Sunday 7th of January and
this will be special in two ways.
First,
our diocesan Bishop, the Rt Rev Nicholas Reade is visiting
us to celebrate and preach at the 10.30 Parish Eucharist.
Second,
we will follow this service with the Parish Lunch, to
which Bp Nicholas and his wife are staying. Tickets £6
from members of the Social Committee.
WEEK
OF PRAYER FOR CHRISTIAN UNITY
Our joint service will be here at Trinity at 6.30 pm on
Sunday 21st January. This will be held jointly with our
friends from the Methodist, Roman Catholic, and independent
churches here in Tarleton. See below for theme
St
Mary’s Graveyard: Christmas wreaths
If you have put out special Christmas wreaths or decorations
on your relatives' graves, please be sure to remove them
by Candlemas (February 2nd) when the Christmas-Epiphany
season comes to an end. Thank you.
FROM THE PARISH REGISTERS 2006
Baptisms
“Inheritors with us of the Kingdom of God”
10
December 2006 Seth Baxter
The
Social Committee
We
will be holding a Feast for Epiphany on Sunday 7th January
in the School Hall instead of the Pre Lenten lunch. Tickets
will be available at £6.00 each.
Mothers’
Union January
As
the first Monday of the month is New Year’s Day
there will not be a Prayer Meeting in January.
Our
first meeting of the New Year will be on Wednesday January
10th at 7.30 pm when we will have a DIY evening.
Our
afternoon meeting on January 24th will begin to lunch
in the Parish Room at 1.00 pm followed by our AGM at 2.00
pm.
We
invite friends to join us on any of these occasions, and
we wish everybody peace and happiness in the coming year.
Pat Heap
News from Holy Trinity School
A very Happy New Year to you all.
As
I write this it is a cold, wet December day and Christmas
has not yet arrived! However the infants have produced
a very successful Nativity play and there are parties
planned for the whole school. The children have been asked
this year to reflect on the Advent journey and the Good
News of Christmas and in the new year we will all be reflecting
on our personal goals through the SEAL project and our
relationship with God through our worship and R.E.
Looking back at the past term we have been successful
in our bid for a Supergrounds Award with the help of the
NatWest and one of its employees. The Eco-Committee are
on the brink of collecting the Green Flag award and the
Governors have continued in their work to encourage, monitor
and support the school in every aspect of its life.
Looking
forward, it is important to remember that all we do in
school and in our lives is to the glory of God and that
what is achieved is through his love and guidance. Thanks
be to God.
Did
you put an advert in the papers?
That’s
what I was asked towards the end of a recent parish event.
And the answer was "No." I never spend our church
money on advertising in the local papers (that just alerts
dealers looking for cheap bargains for car boot sales.)
Press releases, yes, and they always get the printed version
of the magazine.
What
I didn’t say - and perhaps I should have done -
was “But who did you ask to come?” That event
was meant mostly for people already associated with the
church, regulars or occasionals, and the occasionals might
need a little friendly prompting.
That’s
true of our worship as well. Here in the dark days of
January, some people may need a bit of encouragement to
turn out. Just ask them to come with you. And think of
your neighbours or friends who might be a little nervous
about turning up on their own and are (perhaps unwittingly)
just waiting to be asked.
Make
that an additional New Year resolution - Ask a neighbour
or friend to come to church with you. And even if they
don’t say ‘Yes’, they may start to talk
about why they don’t - and you’ll have a real
opportunity to ‘gossip the gospel.’ Don’t
believe me? Then read on:-
From
a recent book on how people came to Christ:‡
“This co-worker just invites you, a life-long Buddhist,
to go to church and you agree? Is that right?” “Yes”
she replied.
“Has anyone invited you to go to church before?”
I asked. “No,” she said.
“So you went to church the first time you were ever
invited?” “That’s right.”
Who is waiting for you to ask them?
Ian, Parish Reader
‡ The Unexpected Journey Thom S Rainer, Zondervan
2005
The
Leprosy Mission Sue Wells
Thank
you to everyone who has been giving me the L-boxes back
to empty and count. I will be happy to have any more boxes
back between now and Leprosy Sunday (28th January 2007)
to spread out the counting up! We will offer our parish
donations, whether counted or just in, at the 10.30 service
that day, when there will be a special sermon about the
work of TLM. New Boxes are available.
Ian
and I have decided to mark our 40th wedding anniversary
(which is earlier in January) by holding an Open Afternoon
and Evening on Sunday 28th, World Leprosy Day. Everyone
is welcome to drop in to 62 Sidney Avenue from 4 to 6
pm or after 8 pm. Donations for TLM will be very welcome.
Coming
soon with TLM
Derek Hartley, our area organiser, has been working hard
to set up interesting events again. Alas, two of them
clash with parish events in June, but the first one is
entirely possible.
Sing Out Saturday 31st March at Blackburn Cathedral
Come and sing Stainer’s Crucifixion.
Cathedral organist Richard Tanner will lead the rehearsal
from 4.30 pm to 6.00 pm. After a break for a snack (bring
your own - hot and cold drinks available - or nip into
the town centre) the performance will run from 7.30 pm.
Tickets: to sing £8, to come and listen, £5.
Several of us will definitely be going. Book through me
on 813267.
Venture Out Pilgrimage to Whithorn is on Saturday 9th
June. This clashes both with the Ecumenical Walk of Witness
and a diocesan event. I will be going with someone from
a neighbouring parish. Price £30/adult, family ticket
(2 adult, max 3 children) £65. Splash Out Morecambe
Bay Walk is 23rd of June (Rose Queen / Field Day!) and
is £7. More details available for both events (813267).
Thank
you for all the stamps and postcards: please keep them
coming.
Week
of Prayer for Christian Unity 2007
The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity a worldwide movement
of Christians of many denominations, languages, and great
diversity of race and culture, who are engaged in praying
and working for the unity of Christians in the service
of the wider redemption, unity and peace of all peoples.
Every year the dates are the same, 18 to 25 January, regardless
of the days of the week. Praying for unity does not involve
prayer for any specific schemes for unity. It is about
being faithful to the prayer of Jesus Christ, as seen
in John 17, 'that they may be one'.
The theme for 2007 is 'He even makes the deaf to hear
and the mute to speak,' based on Mark 7.31 - 37. The theme
was chosen by the Churches of South Africa.
Background to the service theme:- Saturday is ‘funeral
day’ in South Africa when communities, devastated
by HIV/AIDS, bury their dead. Week after week, they cope
with mourning and carrying on with life. Their experience
–of despair, resilience and hope – forms the
backdrop for the worship in the Week of Prayer for Christian
Unity 2007.
Prayers
from Africa and striking posters and pamphlets with vibrantly
coloured designs of hands reflect the wish from the Churches
in South Africa to speak out for those whose suffering
is overlooked. The design of hands was inspired by the
British Sign Language (BSL) sign for ’speak out’.
Christians
in South Africa find their faith in Christ gives them
the courage to speak out, to break their silence, to overcome
the shame of victims and to overcome ignorance about preventing
the disease. The Revd Bob Fyffe, General Secretary of
CTBI, said: For the writers of the worship material, to
listen to the Churches in Africa became ‘an exercise
of the heart and into the heart of God’.
Lent Course - coming soon
CAN
WE BUILD A BETTER WORLD?
learning from William Wilberforce
The YORK COURSE BOOKLET - which includes questions for
groups - is written by Canon John Young.
Participants on the CD/audio tape are:
Archbishop
John Sentamu
Leslie Griffiths (of Wesley's Chapel)
Wendy Craig
Introduced by Dr David Hope
Poor Clares from BBC TV’s The Convent - closing
reflections
In
this course we celebrate the life, work and faith of a
great Yorkshireman. We pay tribute to his work in combating
slavery 200 years ago.
But
it is not a history lesson. Like William Wilberforce,
we live in a divided and hurting world and with a burning
question. As Christians in the 21st century, can we –
together with others of good will – build a better
world?
The
five sessions are: -
1. Slavery: then and now
2. Friendship & Prayer: then and now
3. Change & Struggle: then and now
4. The Bible: then and now
5. Redemption & Restitution: then and now
Time
and date to be announced soon - all welcome to attend.
From
previous magazines:
Parish
Jottings for February, 1902 (Archdeacon Fletcher)
On New Year’s Day evening the members of the Choir
and their friends enjoyed the pleasant relaxation of a
dance, in the New School, which they had decorated very
prettily for the purpose. The profits, after payment of
expenses, have been placed to the credit of the Choir
Fund.
On the 19th January, the congregation, after many weeks
of services in the School, had the satisfaction of assembling
again in Church; the new boiler having been fixed and
the additional piping in the Chancel having been completed.
The improvement in the warmth of the Chancel was so great
as to warrant the removal of two old coils containing
some 90 feet of piping, during the following week, from
the Chancel to the West end of the Nave Seats, and it
is now found that the Church is fairly warm in all parts.
The extension of the piping through the Vestries is also
a great improvement, and will save the trouble and expense
of vestry fires. The collections for these improvements
upon the re-opening Sunday realised the handsome amount
of £15 12s 9d., and subscriptions from the Bible
Class and a few other persons realised a further £4
11s 7d., and a collection on the 26th – a very cold
and unfavourable day – produced another £3
10s 8d., to which must be added the proceeds of the Christmas
Tree Party, £18 3s 8d. The exact amount of the expense
incurred is not yet known, as all the bills have not yet
been received; but roughly speaking some £30 may
yet be required, and towards this the Archdeacon and Churchwardens
will be glad to receive any subscriptions that may be
offered.
Parish
Visiting Team
If you know of anybody who would welcome a visit, either
because they are in hospital, or because they are confined
to the home for whatever reason, or because they are new
to the parish, would you please fill in one of the slips
at the back of the church and place it in the box or contact
Fr Nicholas on 812614 or Pat Heap on 812991
DID YOU SEE?
Radio 4 Listings, Thursday 14 December 2006
2.15 Afternoon Play: Heart Transplant.
3.00 Check Up
Notice spotted at the West Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Open
Summer
until 5pm
Winter until 4pm
Livestock
please close gates
Well,
Yorkshire sheep are really very clever.
DID
YOU SEE?
Guardian Corrections column (Sat 21 Oct 06)
“We apologise for the rare appearance of ‘Angus
Dei’ in a liturgical context in Friday’s classical
music reviews.”
PARISH DIARY for January
NORMAL SUNDAY SERVICES
8.00 am Holy Communion,
10.15 am Sunday School and Crèche
10.30 am SUNG EUCHARIST
(3rd Sunday, FAMILY PARISH COMMUNION)
DECEMBER
Sunday 31st First Sunday of Christmas
8.00 am Eucharist
10.30 am PARISH EUCHARIST
6.30 pm NINE LESSONS AND CAROLS
JANUARY
2007
Monday 1st January The Naming & Circumision of Jesus
11.00 am Eucharist
Tuesday 2nd 10.00 am Eucharist Oakgate Close
6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 3rd 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP) + coffee
Thursday 4th 7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 5th 12.15 pm Eucharist
Sunday 7th EPIPHANY
8.00 am Eucharist
10.15 am Sunday School
10.30 am PARISH EUCHARIST
with the Rt Rev Nicholas Reade, Bishop of Blackburn
followed by Parish Lunch
Tuesday 9th 6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 10th 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP)
7.30 pm MU: Parish Room: DIY meeting
Thursday 11th 7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 12th 12.15 pm Eucharist
Sunday 14th Second Sunday of Epiphany
8.00 am Eucharist
10.15 am Sunday School
10.30 am PARISH EUCHARIST
Tuesday 16th 6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 17th 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP)
Thursday 18th Start of Week of Prayer for Christian Unity
7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 19th 12.15 pm Eucharist
Sunday 21st Third Sunday of Epiphany
8.00 am Eucharist
10.30 am CHURCH FAMILY EUCHARIST
6.30 pm COMBINED SERVICE for the WEEK OF PRAYER FOR CHRISTIAN
UNITY
at Holy Trinity
Tuesday 23rd 6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 24th 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP)
Thursday 25th Conversion of St Paul
7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 26th 12.15 pm Eucharist
Sunday 28th Fourth Sunday of Epiphany
International Leprosy Sunday
8.00 am Eucharist
10.15 am Sunday School
10.30 am PARISH EUCHARIST
4.00-6.00 pm 8.00 pm on Open House for TLM at 62 Sidney
Avenue
Tuesday 30th 6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 31st 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP)
FEBRUARY
Thursday 1st 7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 2nd Presentation of Christ in the Temple (Candlemas)
12.15 pm Eucharist
7.30 pm Sung Eucharist
Sunday 4th Third Sunday before Lent
8.00 am Eucharist
10.15 am Sunday School
10.30 am PARISH EUCHARIST
Monday 5th 2.00 pm MU Prayer Group:
Blessed Sacrament Chapel
7.00 pm Eucharist
7.30 pm PCC: Parish Room