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PARISH of All saints with st saviour Weston-super-mare Servers and Choir on Tim’s last day October/November 2016 50p The Parish of All Saints and St Saviour Weston-super-Mare Visit our website: www.allsaintswsm.org Parish Priest Father Andrew Hughes 01934 204217 [email protected] Associate Priest Father Stuart Boyd 01934 627897 [email protected] Hon Assistant Clergy Father David Parkinson 01934 708125 [email protected] Father Arthur Payne 01934 615522 [email protected] Father Alan Mills All Saints Church BS23 2NL: Junction All Saints’, Queen’s & St Joseph’s Roads: Sunday Services 9.00am: Mass (said) 10.30am: Parish Mass (choral) Weekday Services 10.00am: Wednesday Mass 10.00am: Thursday Mass 10.00am: EVERY Saturday: Mass 1st Saturday: Requiem Mass 2nd Saturday: Walsingham Mass 3rd Saturday: Healing Mass 4th Saturday: CBS Mass 5th Saturday: Mass All Saints’ and St Saviour’s is affiliated to The Society under the patronage of Saint Wilfred and Saint Hilda, also Forward in Faith and is under the extended Episcopal care of the Bishop of Ebbsfleet. All are welcome Crumbs under the Table When several generations of a family gather for a celebration, they usually sit down together for a meal. Some want to refuel quickly and dash off. There’s the picky eater and the one on a special diet; the person who talks too much and the slowcoach who keeps everyone waiting. Maybe there’s someone who only comes because they don’t want to stay home alone. Then, later on, when those who prepared everything just want to clear up and go for a walk, there’s always someone who wants to sit and chat. Our parish family is very similar, a wide range of people who come to church for a variety of reasons. In the Book of Common Prayer there is a prayer which begins: O GOD, the Creator and Preserver of all mankind, we humbly beseech thee for all sorts and conditions of men; that thou wouldest be pleased to make thy ways known unto them … So we don’t just share the Good News of Christ with those who share our point of view. Our services sometimes attract people who are not those whom we would choose to invite to Sunday lunch. Yet in church, we gather around one table, sharing a holy meal. In our Parish, we offer some variety of worship, at 9am and 10.30am, and three weekday Masses, including Masses for healing, for Walsingham, and for our Dead. And as I type this I am exploring a joint project with St. John’s Bath, to resurrect our cell of CBS. In addition we hold special services for differing events. Worshippers can select their preferred Sunday service time; whilst being united in the Mass at the Altar of God. However, providing something to suit all tastes can be a challenge, so what about those fringe members of our congregation whose attendance is unpredictable, or who turn up only at Christmas or Easter? There was once a Canaanite woman who came to Jesus. She was desperate for her daughter to be healed. But she was an outsider, considered by the Jewish community to be little better than a dog picking up crumbs from under the table. Yet Jesus commended her for her faith and her daughter was cured. Like the woman who came to Jesus, God gives to each one of us whatever we most need to receive; to each their own special gift. He speaks to each person in different ways and at different moments. He might even catch us out, by touching our lives when we least expect. The wonder of the Church of England is that it provides a wide variety of worship which enable as many people as possible to grow in relationship with God and with one another. At All Saints’ we offer a particular type of liturgy, backed-up by a distinctive theological slant, under the episcopal oversight of Bishop Jonathon Goodhall, Bishop of Ebbsfleet. So we give thanks for our unity and value our diversity, knowing that whatever is offered, we all remain part of the great sacrifice of praise by which all are fed and raised up. And we pray that we will continue to learn from one another, so that we can discover new ways of bringing those who do not know the Lord Jesus to experience his love and power at work in their lives. Elsewhere in this magazine we pay tribute to the hard work and dedication of Marjorie Fox, who is standing down from her role as Parish Administrator. I just want to add my own personal thank to her for all she has done for us here in All Saints’. Fr Andrew PEOPLE in the PEWS and POUNDS on the PLATE - AUGUST Attendance Week Collections Envelopes Services Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday Sunday 7th August Wednesday (incl Earlfield Lodge), Thursday and Saturday Sunday 14th August including Choral Vespers and Benediction Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday Sunday 21st August Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday Sunday 28th August Wednesday (incl Earlfield Lodge), Thursday and Saturday Communion of sick + Home visits 15 52 32 £62 £234 33 £66 £168 34 £70 £194 35 £59 £148 28 79 21 46 14 46 31 11 AUGUST 2016 Standing Orders paid direct to Bank A/C TOTALS £1,062 312 £257 £1,806 Children’s author Roald Dahl was born a century ago and his tales, including James And The Giant Peach and The BFG continue to delight. But he spent his early school years in Weston-super-Mare, and his experiences may have shaped the books he would write as an adult. Here are five things he said about Weston, in his book Boy: Tales Of Childhood. 1) Mr Dahl was sent to St Peter’s School in 1925 and arrived on a paddle-steamer. He later described Weston as a ‘slightly seedy seaside resort’. 2) He wasn’t exactly glowing about his school either. In Boy, he said: “St Peter’s was on a hill above the town. It was a long three-storey stone building that looked rather like a private lunatic asylum.” 3) Mr Dahl sets the scene for schooling in Weston in the mid-1920s. He describes wearing a flannel blazer and school cap, and carrying a trunk with his name printed on it. There were 150 boys at St Peter’s School, with 20 sleeping in each dormitory. 4) In his first letter to his mother, he told her he was having a lovely time, and played football every day. But during those weekly letterwriting sessions, Mr Dahl recalled the headmaster patrolling the room. He would check for spelling mistakes and that nothing negative was being said about the school. 5) By all accounts, Mr Dahl did not have the best of time at school. He was homesick through the whole of the first term, and even devised a scheme to leave. He pretended he had appendicitis, and he was sent home. The doctor in Wales saw through his act straight away – but promised to tell the school he had an infection. [Article taken from Weston Mercury website] 80 CLUB DRAW September 2016 Draw Date: 4th Sept 2016 Drawn by: Various Total Entries 69 (£69) Prizes £36 Church Funds £33 Prize 1st Value Winner £12 2nd £10 £8 £6 48 Angela Parkinson 72 3rd 4th Brian Bewley 44 Roger Ellery 52 Mike Fussell A blast from the past! at St Saviour's Church Fete on the left. Mayor (Clr RW Thomas) trying his hand as skittles at St Saviour’s Church Fete on the right. These photos show the summer just as I remember, them, long and gloriously sunny. Editor (I was only 17 then) Does anyone recognise these photos from 1966, the editor certainly recognises one of the faces, can anyone identify the others? Some of the fancy dress competitors Nature uncontrolled - To celebrate the fact that ‘The Anchor’ now appears in colour I publish some of my volcano pictures! It’s tempting to dismiss an interest in volcanoes and other spectacular natural phenomena as thrill-seeking – voyeurism, or ‘living for kicks’ and a subject for finger-wagging disapproval. For me however it is a reminder – or metaphor for – or symbol of – a God whom we do not own or invent (a complete contrast to atheists’ perceptions of which more elsewhere). I really would urge any Christian who is sufficiently physically fit to get as close as possible to something like this, and I have recommended volcano trips as something to save up for to the teenage boys and girls who hang around Sainsbury’s. Volcanoes are risky because anything could happen. Too often religion is associated with over-control. Witnessing eruptions suggests quite another way of approaching faith – the spirit of boldness, enterprise and risk in thought, and word, and deed. The English Church and Orthodoxy History is a very revealing subject, and the further back you go, the more is likely to be revealed. Thus it is with our traditional understanding of the history of the English Church. We’ve been taught at school (well, at least the older generations among us have been taught), that England originally became Christian under the aegis of the Catholic church from Rome, with a few Celtic features mixed in, and so we remained as part of the Roman Catholic Church until we decided to break out under Henry VIII and become an independent Church of England, and so we have remained ever since. I wish history were so simple, but unfortunately it’s usually a lot more complex than that, and so it is in this case. Not only is it the case that the English Church was not formally Catholic at the outset, as we understand it, but also that the Catholic Church of which we became a formal part is not the same thing as the Roman Catholic Church which existed during the Middle Ages, and continues to exist today. So I need to spend a little time trying to explain the various convolutions we’ve undergone over the past two thousand years. It is well known by historians that England was first visited by Christians in the very early years after the events recorded in the Gospels. The gospel of Jesus Christ was brought to Britain from Jerusalem by Saint Joseph of Arimathea, the disciple who buried Christ after His crucifixion. Gildas the Wise (AD 425-512), an early British historian wrote, “Christ, the True Sun, afforded His light, the knowledge of His precepts to our Island in the last year, as we know, of Tiberius Caesar.” The last year of Tiberius Caesar was AD 37, just a few years after the Resurrection of Christ. Cont…d -The English Church and Orthodoxy William of Malmesbury (AD 1080-1143), the best British historian of his day, says that after the crucifixion of Christ, Saint Joseph of Arimathea came to Britain with eleven missionaries, and that the King gave them twelve hides of land at Glastonbury. Saint Aristobulus, who is mentioned by Saint Paul in his Epistle to the Romans, was the first bishop in Britain. It is clear that there were Christian soldiers in the local Roman garrison shortly after the Resurrection, and later on Hadrian’s Wall, and the city and cathedral of Saint Albans are testimony to one such. Tertullian at the beginning of the third century claimed that parts of Britain ‘unreached by the Romans had become subject to the law of Christ.’ Certainly, three British bishops were present at the Council of Arles in AD 314. The English Church was subsequently acknowledged by five Western Church Councils (Pisa 1409; Constance 1417; Sens 1418; Sienna 1424; and Basel 1434) as the oldest Church outside of the Bible lands; with the Council of Basel declaring in 1434, ‘The Churches of France and Spain must yield in points of antiquity and precedence to that of Britain, as the latter Church was founded by Saint Joseph of Arimathea immediately after the passion of Christ.’ But with that early Romano-British Christianity the Anglican Church has only the most tenuous of connections. The invasions of the Angles, Saxons and Jutes broke up the settled life of towns and villas, and brought with them their own version of resurgent paganism. But the connections do exist. Although British Christianity was driven backward for a period in the face of these invasions, it moved out in three directions to the conversion of the Celtic world. In the fifth century Illtud pressed forward into the mountains of Wales, and founded a great monastery, the first home of Welsh Christianity. Before the end of the fourth century, Ninian had returned from Rome where he had been educated, had built his great monastery Candida Casa at Whithorn in Galloway, and begun the long and difficult task of evangelising the Picts. In 432 Patrick, who like most other famous Irishmen was not Irish, crossed to Ireland and gave just a generation of human life to its conversion. With the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, culture found its last refuge in the most distant of the western islands, flourished gloriously in Ireland, and in time flowed back in missionary enterprise and Cont…d -The English Church and Orthodoxy educational effort to the continent of Europe. This Celtic Christianity was very different from that of Roman times, with the centre of everything being the monastery, not the cities; and although there were bishops, there was no regular diocesan system. The bishops were mainly the abbots of the monasteries. From Ireland the Gospel crossed again to Scotland with Columba’s foundation of Iona in 563. From Iona Aidan came in 634 to convert the northern English, another monastic enterprise, and a little later in the century Cuthbert moved from Melrose Abbey, where he had been born, via Ripon to Lindisfarne, where he became bishop. He was a missionary to King Edwin of Northumbria, and after his death was buried in what became Durham Cathedral. By AD 450-500 there were some great 1,000-1,500 member monasteries in Wales and the west. The Church in the British Isles at this time tended to look to the Patriarchate of Jerusalem as the centre of the Church, as it was largely cut off from the Roman Church (insofar as it was ever connected). While the doctrine of the British Church is well attested to as being entirely Orthodox (the Pelagian heresy never gained more than a passing popularity in Britain and was apparently completely eradicated by the 420s-430s), the system of Church government and general atmosphere differed considerably from that of the Roman Church. In the meantime, the most famous of all the missionary embassies arrived in England. Augustine was sent with his company of monks to Canterbury in 597 by Pope Gregory the Great, befriended King Ethelbert of Kent and his Christian wife, Bertha, and the scene was set for the part of our history with which we are more familiar. There were thus three streams in early English Christianity, the RomanoBritish, the Celtic and the Roman. However, the important thing is that they all believed that there was only one Church, and that they all formed part of it. Within that one Church there might be controversy over details, and the clash over the date of Easter and the tonsuring of monks which was resolved at the Synod of Whitby in 663 is a good example, but they did not promote any idea of independence from the Church, only the measure of freedom that might be claimed by a local Church within the fellowship of the one universal Church. Cont…d -The English Church and Orthodoxy That’s what was happening in this country, and it’s worth looking now at the wider universal Church and how England fitted into that. As I’ve said in an earlier article, the Church was led by five great patriarchates, known as the Pentarchy: Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem. These were the major cities of the Roman Empire, and when the empire was split into two for ease of administration, and subsequently the western empire succumbed to barbarian invasion, this left four of them within the eastern empire, and only Rome in the west. Subsequently, after the rise of Islam in the seventh century, its explosive expansion beyond the confines of the Arabian peninsula quickly led to the occupation of large areas of the Middle East, with the subjugation of territory previously held by the Christians in three of the four eastern patriarchates, leaving only Constantinople to stand for several centuries more. In the west, the Church in Rome was able to establish itself as a formidable state during the early Dark Ages, and the Popes learned to exercise power in a new secular way as well as through their jurisdictional control over the western Church. This was very different from the traditional role of a patriarch; in Constantinople, for example, the Patriarch was expected to work in partnership with the Emperor. Although there could often be disputes between them, they both continued to exist right until the final collapse of the empire. Another complicating factor which became more important over time was the rivalry and competition for power in the upper reaches of the Roman hierarchy, and this was related to the changing fortunes of Charlemagne and his descendants. Charlemagne, the grandson of Charles Martel, Duke of the Franks, renowned for turning back the Moslem invasion of western Europe at Tours in 732 AD, had established the capital of his new Holy Roman Empire in Aachen (formerly known as Aix-la-Chapelle in all the history books), a town in modern day western Germany, and the bulk of his empire was located to the east and south, distinct and separate from what was slowly becoming France to the west. Cont…d -The English Church and Orthodoxy The Papal power was initially linked to the fortunes of his descendants in the ‘Germanic’ branch of the family, but eventually there was a power struggle, and the ascendancy moved to the Franks, who became the sponsors and protectors of the Popes. This was to have serious implications for the future prospects of England in due course, of which more below. Returning to England now, one or two personalities and events were due to have a major effect on the growth and development of the English Church. At the Synod of Whitby in 663, called at Saint Hilda’s abbey above the town, one of the main protagonists was Bishop Wilfred of Ripon, described as a ‘stormy petrel,’ who strongly advanced the Roman position as against the Celtic one represented by Saints Colman and Cedd, supported by Abbess Hilda. King Oswy decided in favour of Rome because he believed that Rome followed the teaching of Saint Peter, the holder of the keys of heaven. That decision led to the acceptance of Roman usage elsewhere in England and brought the English Church into closer contact with the Continent. Another key player during this period was Saint Theodore of Tarsus, Archbishop of Canterbury from 668 to 690, who overhauled the organisational system, appointed several new bishops and regularised a diocesan system of governance, which was to serve the Church well and has continued down to the present day. Theodore is a fascinating character, and his life exemplifies the universal nature of the ‘one Church’ during these early centuries. He was of Byzantine Greek descent, born in Tarsus in Cilicia, a Greek-speaking diocese of the Eastern Roman Empire. The Persian empire captured Tarsus when he was 11, but he studied at Antioch, also occupied by the Persians, before moving to Constantinople to continue his studies. At some time in the 660s, he moved to Rome and was subsequently sent to England by the Pope as the new archbishop. After Whitby, the English Church had come more directly within the ambit of the Pope in Rome, but the method of government from the Eternal City was not excessive or overly hierarchical, and the historical evidence all suggests that English bishops exercised considerable autonomy in their dioceses. Cont…d -The English Church and Orthodoxy They all had good links with other parts of Christendom as well, and these continued right down to the time of the Norman Conquest. In fact, in some ways they were closer to the church in Constantinople than to their Roman compatriots on the European mainland, given the comparative ease of sea routes during the troubling times on the continent. It is notable, for example, that when Bishop Wilfred tried to take issue with Archbishop Theodore over certain matters, and asked the Pope to intervene on his behalf, the English Witenagamot or Royal Parliament rejected the Pope’s adjudication, burned the Papal parchment and put Wilfred in prison for having the temerity to appeal to an outsider. When it was proposed at a later date that the Witenagamot should refer difficult questions to the Bishop of Rome - as primus inter pares, first among equals, the Witenagamot declared it would submit only to the jurisdiction of the British Archbishop. And so things might have continued indefinitely. However, the replacement of the German connection in the Papacy with the Frankish one coincided with the arrival of a new line of Popes intent on extending their jurisdiction not only territorially in Europe, but also within the Church. This new dynamism culminated in Cardinal Hildebrand, who ruled as Pope Gregory VII from 1073 to 1085, which period coincided with the early years of the Norman Conquest. It was his predecessor, Pope Nicholas II, who had blessed and sponsored the campaign by Duke William of Normandy to seize the English throne. The full relevance of the Norman Conquest is often overlooked or misunderstood. Coming as it did in the years immediately following the major rift between the Pope and the rest of the Church in 1054, it represented not only the overthrow of the old Anglo-Saxon monarchy, but also a decisive move by the Pope to extirpate the previous looser framework of government within the universal Church, and draw England firmly under the control of the new centralised Frankish Papacy. The message was not lost and, following the disastrous defeat at Hastings in October 1066, many younger scions of well-established English families, loyal to the Church they had grown up in, abandoned these islands and travelled to Constantinople, where many of them joined the Emperor’s Varangian Guard. Cont…d -The English Church and Orthodoxy The bishops remaining in England, regarded as Orthodox heretics by the Pope, were removed from office, some of them being executed, and replaced by men loyal to Gregory. Thus England, having always existed as a relatively relaxed Christian kingdom within the wider universal Church, now found itself governed by an intolerant Norman supported by an equally intolerant Bishop of Rome, hierarchical overlord within the newly separated Roman Catholic Church. More to follow in due course. Philip Pughe-Morgan WINTER WARMTH Each evening during the Winter, seven Churches in the town centre provide free food and fellowship for people in need. These facilities are provided by us on Saturday evenings at St. Saviour’s Hall on Locking Road. Three teams of four helpers rotate to prepare the food each Saturday evening between 7pm and 9pm. If you would like to join one of these teams or would like further information, please get in touch with me. Ray Armstrong (telephone 618127). Listed below are the other churches involved. Mondays: Somewhere to Go. 10.30am - 2.30pm Corpus Christi Church. 7.30pm - 9.00pm Tuesdays: "The Beacon" Emmanuel Church. 12.00pm - 2.00pm Salvation Army. 7.30pm - 9.00pm Wednesdays: Somewhere to Go. 10.30am - 2.30pm Victoria Church. 7.30pm - 9.00pm Thursdays: "King's table" St Paul’s Church. 12.30pm - 2.30pm Friends Meeting House. 7.30pm - 9.00pm Fridays: Somewhere to Go. 10.30am - 2.30pm New Life Church. 7.00pm - 9.00pm Sundays: 1st & 3rd: "The Bigger Picture" Vintage Church 1.00pm - 3.30pm Weekly: Emmanuel Church 7.30pm – 9pm GLASTONBURY PILGRIMAGE 2016 As we race into Autumn it is hard to believe where the summer has gone and as usual we seem to be having an ‘INDIAN SUMMER’ which is always welcomes by all! Earlier in the summer (July 9th actually!) a group from All Saints set out on a Saturday morning for the annual Glastonbury pilgrimage. It was for me personally my first pilgrimage while for others it was one of many such events. Glastonbury as a town resonates with spiritual history for a number of beliefs and in some ways it has been hijacked by them so it was special to be a part of firmly stamping Christianity among them. We arrived for a solemn celebrated mass in the ruined nave of the still great Glastonbury abbey. It was led by Bishop Jonathan and Bishop Philip North, Bishop of Burnley who greatly impressed with the clarity of his preaching. Parishioners from all around the country were in attendance ranging from Chesterfield in Derbyshire to Falmouth in Cornwall as well as us Somerset locals! The volume of the singing was inspiring as well as the spirituality offered by the musicians. We had a picnic and an explored around the town before the mid afternoon procession through the main street of the town proudly displaying our parish banner. As with our special day in Coventry earlier in the year it showed me that we need from time to time to be reminded that we are a part of a much bigger body…the body of Gods church and as such are supported and encouraged by being with others of the same belief. There was a very impressive museum in the grounds of the abbey and it was rather nice to feel that 21st century Christians had actually got one over on Henry VIII as here we were 500 years after he ordered the demolition of the abbey still worshipping in this holy place! Owen James PEOPLE in the PEWS and POUNDS on the PLATE - SEPT Attendance Week Collections Envelopes Services Sunday 4th September Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday Sunday 11th September Monday PCC, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday Sunday 18th September Monday (Pilgrims), Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday Sunday 25th September Communion of sick + Home visits 52 36 £35 £271 37 £96 £296 38 £68 £154 39 £64 £220 19 52 37 50 25 51 12 SEPT 2016 Standing Orders paid direct to Bank A/C TOTALS £1,062 298 £263 £2,003 ENTRANCE £10 ON THE DOOR th Saturday 8 October 7.30pm Concert by:- North Somerset Community Brass We look forward to welcoming this popular Brass Band to All Saints’. Join us in this superb Grade II star listed church, which is fast becoming a venue for outstanding concerts, when the renowned North Somerset Community Brass ensemble, under their musical director Colin Thomas, will entertain us with a pot-pourri of musical delights, including arrangements of songs by Bert Kaempfert , songs from the shows, such as Oliver, Memory and Music of the Night, and well-known Christian melodies including Little Prayer and What a Wonderful World.This promises to be a delightful evening, and a must for lovers of brass band music. WHATS ON for the REST of 2016 Saturday 8th October North Somerset Community Brass Concert 7.30pm £10 on the door Saturday 22nd October Autumn Bazaar at St Saviour hall 11am to 1pm Sunday 30th October All Saints Festival Bring and Share lunch after mass and service Friday 25th November Loss to Addiction 5.30pm refreshments 6.00pm service Saturday 26th November Christmas Fayre at All Saints hall 2.00pm to 4pm Sunday 27th November Advent Carol Service 4.00pm Saturday 3rd December Great Western Chorus Christmas Concert in aid of Weston Branch of Parkinsons UK 7.30pm Saturday 10th December Weston Choral Society 7.30pm Christmas Concert “Ring out Wild Bells!” Sunday 11th December Andrea Monk Students 6.00pm Christmas Concert Wednesday 14th December Annual Carol Service in aid of the Alzheimer’s Society (Music Director Peter Leech, Harmonia Sacra Choir, Andrew Kirk organist and Bristol Brass Consort) 7.00pm PCC Minutes of meeting held at 10.00am on Monday12th September 2016 Meeting of the Parochial Church Council of All Saints with St Saviour held in All Saints Church, BS23 2NL 1. Members Present and apologies Fr Andrew Hughes (Chairman and Priest-in-Charge), Colin Taylor (Churchwarden), Fr Stuart Boyd (Associate Priest), Terry Edwards (Lay Chair, Treasurer and Secretary), Joan R Beer (Deanery Synod), Ron Fox (Deputy Churchwarden), Philip Pughe-Morgan (Deputy Churchwarden), Marjorie Fox (Deanery Synod), Diane Guy, Jude Forth (Safeguarding Officer), and Ray Armstrong. Apologies: Owen James The meeting opened with prayer and a gospel reading. 2. Minutes of previous meeting(s) The minutes of the meeting held on 6th June 2016 were approved and signed with no amendments. 3. Matters arising and outstanding from previous meetings a) House of Bishops Resolution A letter from The Right Reverend Peter Hancock (Bishop of Bath and Wells) was received by Fr Andrew dated 8th September 2016. This letter was read out at this meeting and explained, the Bishop has fully supported our request,[the document was attached to the previous minutes] the letter stated . “I entirely understand your request, and I am committed to a diocese where traditions within the Church of England can flourish and play as full a part as possible in our common life. This commitment means I will abide by the House of Bishops ‘Five Guiding Principles’ and the Guidance Note issued with them in the Synod document GS Misc 1077 in June last year.” Further that the Bishop of Ebbsfleet provide Episcopal ministry for the Parish of All Saints with St Saviour. b) Unfortunately we were not successful in our Listed Places of Worship grant application for the church rainwater goods. It is hoped that another round of grants will be forthcoming. c) Security had been reviewed at Church following the boiler house door being breached, being badly damaged and a Strimmer stolen. Also a car having been broken into on the car park. Places of Worship were also requested to review their security arrangements by the Government following the atrocities perpetrated in France. This has now been undertaken and our alarm provider ‘DS Securities’ were invited to review our building for the introduction d) e) f) g) h) i) j) k) of external/internal CCTV with live recording. Grants are available for places of worship under a Home Office anti-terrorism initiative that offers 80% of the cost of fitting such devices. We have a quote for our requirements of circa £3,000. It was unanimously agreed by the PCC that if we can gain a grant that we should go ahead and install CCTV. We are currently awaiting approval for full installation of the Viscount digital organ and the PCC will be kept informed when this has been received. It has been proposed by the Standing Committee that the Carol Service profits this year should support the Alzheimer’s Society, this was unanimously agreed by the PCC. Also it was proposed by the Concert Committee that we support Alzheimer’s Society during the year as well, with contributions being given from the receipts from our concert/recitals, this was also unanimously agreed by the PCC. The Secretary to contact local branch informing them of our decision and asking for publicity material etc. The ex St Saviour stained glass windows, Alan Yeates and Colin are planning a visit to establish precisely what Bakers have in storage. The Deputy Church Wardens Ron Fox and Philip PugheMorgan, have agreed to join the PCC Standing Committee, this unanimously agreed by the PCC. Way Forward a new sub-committee of the PCC called the Mission Committee will co-ordinate this activity and will be formed from the Standing Committee plus Ray Armstrong, Jude Forth and Owen James. It’s first meeting to be arranged after the Walsingham pilgrimage. Colin gave a churchwarden report; an intense period of activity was undertaken during the summer covering car parks to church records and inventories to Intercessors. Full report issued prior to meeting. Ongoing actions discussed at Standing Committee. Finances were covered by Terry; 2016 income is nearly the same as last year, some encouraging signs in giving are evident. Fr Andrew proposed that we cope with one churchwarden until next year’s APCM with the deputies taking on duties as necessary, this was unanimously agreed by the PCC. Our Patronal Festival on Sunday 30th October will have guest celebrant and preacher Fr Ron Farrell from St Francis of Assisi, Friar Park. This will be followed by a bring and share lunch and service (to be finalised). Loss to Addiction on 25th November will be attended by the Bishop of Bath and Wells and our Christmas Fayre on Saturday 26th with the Advent Carol Service on the Sunday 27th and then annual Carol Service and Christmas services a busy time! The meeting closed at 11.30am with the peace and mass led by Fr Andrew. Next Meeting Monday 5th December 2016 10.00am venue All Saints Church Item Matters for action 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Digital Organ/Compton Security CCTV Grant Charity of year Alzheimer’s Bakers Stained Glass Storage “Way Forward” progress Assigned Terry Terry Terry Colin Fr Andrew Many thanks to Marjorie for all the work undertaken, when a considerable number of years ago she agreed to temporarily become parish administrator. To keep a parish office running smoothly requires dedication and skill, sometimes it’s challenging, but all of the time it is about outreach to the community. Marjorie has been our flag bearer in this respect. However, nothing lasts forever and from the beginning of October Marjorie will no longer be at the parish office Monday, Tuesday and Thursday. So once again thank you for all the years faithful service you have given to All Saints with St Saviour. Terry Edwards [This article from 2012 is reproduced in this months’ magazine as food for thought and also a reminder that it is approaching that time of year when we have our annual giving review] Lots of littles make a lot The role of a Diocesan Stewardship Adviser is one that can be very daunting indeed. There is an expectation (perhaps some of it is selfadministered) that you will find the resources, already given by God, to resource the mission and ministry of His Church in the geographic area where you are working. It could be quite alarming to wake up in the morning and think “people expect me to find £25,000,000 over the next twelve months in order to ensure that vital work is undertaken”. It would be tempting to retire under the bed clothes and stay there for ever. Fortunately I don’t think like that. I tend to look at manageable targets. £25,000,000 is only £50,000 per Church in the Diocese. At least I know what £50,000 looks like. When working in a bank I have held that much in a suitcase. The sum has also featured in mortgages which I have coped with. And, they were coped with over a managed period of time. So, £50,000 is quite easy to see. But, there are very few people in a congregation that have £50,000 available. And, if there were, that would probably not be the right route to follow any way. This is for several reasons. Not least is our own responsibility to respond to God’s giving to us. Whatever we give back will not match his giving to us. We turn to the Bible, where we read of proportionate giving – those with more giving more than those with less. We read of the joy of the early Church in Giving in response to God’s love. And we read of the extraordinary things achieved as a result of that generosity. We read that it was spontaneous but that did not mean that teaching on Giving stopped. So, one thought that maintains the comfort of my pillow is that there are 34,000 people on the electoral roles of Churches in this Diocese. Divide that figure into £25,000,000 and all of a sudden the sum is very achievable – somewhere in the region of the cost of a daily newspaper and a magazine per week; a take away meal per week; or a prompt to give up smoking & save the cost of 3 packets of cigarettes per week – you can work out your own picture. And, the £25,000,000 covers restoration works; funding of parish youth workers; operation of halls etc across all areas of the Diocese. It could all be done without the need for grant funding. If such grant funding was obtained considerably more could be done. Those of us who are better off should be able to give more than the average. That is right and proper and will allow those who are less well off to give in accordance with their means. That is how the parish share system works and it is how it should work in each and every parish. Why not try the exercise on your parish budget? Then have a look at your own giving. How near is it to the average needed? Then comes the hard part. You have to ask yourself the question, “how near should it be – or should it be above the average?” This is difficult because human nature is that we look at what others have and what we do not have whereas if we looked at what we DO have the exercise becomes easier. If we can get our giving good then fund raising events can be fun raising events and we can exert more effort into faith raising events. Isn’t that what we are about? Andrew Rainsford Stewardship Adviser, Diocese of Bath & Wells Sunday 30th October - Annual Giving Review Dear Church Member We wish to take this opportunity on behalf of the PCC of All Saints’ with St Saviour’s to thank you for your giving during 2016. Declaration forms for the coming year are available at the back of church should you need one. The new free will offering envelopes will be handed out before Christmas, so if you want to be included in this weekly giving programme please let the Treasurer know. If you wish to volunteer for any of the tasks undertaken to keep the parish operating effectively please contact or ask Colin, Fr Andrew or Terry about ways you can help. Many Thanks The Law of……. Law of Gravity - Any tool, nut, bolt, screw, when dropped, will roll to the least accessible corner. Law of Probability -The probability of being watched is directly proportional to the stupidity of your act Law of Random Numbers - If you dial a wrong number, you never get a busy signal and someone always answers. Variation Law - If you change queues (or traffic lanes), the one you were in will always move faster than the one you are in now. Law of Close Encounters -The probability of meeting someone you know increases dramatically when you are with someone you don't want to be seen with. Law of the Result - When you try to prove to someone that a machine won't work, it will... Wilson's Law of Commercial Marketing Strategy - As soon as you find a product that you really like, they will stop making it. Doctors' Law - If you don't feel well, make an appointment to go to the doctor, by the time you get there you'll feel better. But don't make an appointment, and you'll stay sick. Don’t forget to put the clocks back, before you go to bed on Saturday 29th October Key Anchor Dates for 2016 onwards Dec2016/Jan2017 Copy to Editor by SUNDAY 27th Nov Issue Date SUNDAY 4th Dec Feb 2017/Mar2017 Copy to Editor by SUNDAY 29th Jan Issue Date SUNDAY 5th Feb Apr 2017/May2017 Copy to Editor by SUNDAY 26th Mar Issue Date SUNDAY 2nd Apr These dates will be published on a regular basis in each Anchor issue. Poor Charlie had fallen on hard times. He lost his job at the car plant, his wife had left him, his unemployment had run out, and he was evicted from his flat. He packed what little he had in a knapsack, made a little sign that read "Will work for food" and set off down the road on foot. Toward the middle of the day, he came to a farmhouse. He was getting very hungry, and so he knocked on the front door. A woman answered, and Charlie explained his situation, and how he could do most anything and how hungry he was. At first the woman wanted no part of Charlie, but he persisted. Finally she asked "Can you paint?" "Oh yes, ma'am," Charlie said, "I sure can paint. I've done a lot of painting. Just let me show you." The woman relented, found a can of paint and a brush and said, "You go around back and paint the porch, and I'll fix you dinner." Happily, Charlie went to work. About 40 minutes later, Charlie appeared at the front door. "Are you finished so soon?" asked the woman. "Oh yes, ma'am," said Charlie, "but I think you ought to know that's not a Porsche, it's a Volvo." ALL YEAR AROUND WE ARE COLLECTING ITEMS FOR SALE AT THE FOUR MAIN EVENTS HELD BETWEEN THE TWO HALLS New Year Bring and Buy (All Saints) Raised £270 Summer Jumble Sale (St Saviour) Raised £330 Autumn Bazaar (St Saviour) 22nd Oct Winter St Nicholas Fayre (All Saints) 26th Nov Please bring any non perishable items, Clothes, Footwear, Bric a Brac, Unwanted Gifts, Ornaments, Picture Frames, Paintings, Decanters, Watches, Clocks, Mirrors, Kitchenalia, CD’s DVD’s, Jewellery etc. They can be placed at the back of church, if you have large items that require assistance in bringing to church please contact Terry Edwards (Tel: 01934 522026) ADVERTISEMENT FAMILY HISTORY www.researchassist.co.uk Are you interested in discovering who your ancestors were and how they lived? Would you like to create your family tree so your children and grandchildren are able to discover their own personal history? Perhaps you have already started your research but become stuck and wonder where to go next. Like some of the celebrities on “Who do you think you are?”, you might find that your family have a fascinating past – perhaps there are intriguing stories about your ancestors that you would like to check. We are here ready to assist your research and are able to obtain all necessary certificates and other evidence to prove your family connections. Give us a call and we will be happy to discuss your personal requirements. We are sure you will not regret it. Everyone deserves to be remembered so let us honour those who have gone before us and leave a lasting memory to be handed on for the education and enjoyment of our descendants. RESEARCHASSIST P.O. Box 655, Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, BS23 9NX. [email protected] Telephone: 07436 533 148 Second World War Years at All Saints….Part 3 It was April 1944 and the meeting of the PCC had just voted to allow a peoples deputy churchwarden to be elected from the membership of the council to stand in for the recently resigned churchwarden until the next AGM could appoint a new one. A Preparatory school using All Saints Hall was suggested for 9-14 year old boys and would be called ‘St Georges”. This school would be open Monday to Friday from 9.30am to 4pm. Fr Barker was the brain behind the idea having had past cathedral posts at Manchester, Southwark, York Minister, Canterbury and Exeter. The application was unanimously approved in principal. The Vicar said that gift day had been most successful some 95 contributors had given the sum of £104-8s-6d Church membership had fallen over the war years from 121 in 1939 to 66 by the end of 1944 (in was on the rise again, in 1943 in was only 57). In April 1945 the Vicar told the PCC that he would have to stand down due to ill health and that talks were well underway to find a temporary priest. In November 1945 the most important topic was introduced to the council by the Vicar “Victory Memorial”. It was pointed out that after the Great war 1914-1918 the Lady Chapel had been built in 1925 at a cost of 2,000 guineas as a war memorial. This was a shock to many PCC members who had no knowledge of this and it was agreed that as part of the old and new memorial that a tablet be commissioned. It was suggested and agreed that all the black-out curtains could now be removed and all the sand bags! The Victory War Memorial Committee met in November 1945. It was agreed that the “All Saints General Scheme” be adopted, needless to say the Diocesan Architect was involved and it centred on the Decoration of the whole church. The Victory Memorial would a.) as an expression of Gratitude and Thanksgiving to God for the preservation of All saints Church Building throughout the war that a substantial gift be given to Holy Nativity at Knowle, which had been totally destroyed by enemy action. This gift to take some tangible form and agreed by the Vicar. And b.) That in memory of our own Members of All Saints who have made the supreme sacrifice that as a first instalment the Sanctuary should be beautified; a new High Altar provided together with a seat for the Altar Servers; an inscription to be placed in a prominent position in the Church, setting out what the Victory Memorial is. The Parish of All Saints and St Saviour Weston-super-Mare Visit our website: www.allsaintswsm.org CONTACTS Parish Office St Saviour’s Hall, Locking Road,BS23 3EN. Tel: 01934 415379 E-mail : [email protected] Open 10am-12noon Monday to Friday Enquiries for baptisms, banns, weddings, funerals, and the booking of both halls to the Parish Office Churchwardens Colin Taylor 01934 519069 e-mail: [email protected] Vacancy PCC Treasurer, Secretary and Vice chairman Terry Edwards 01934 522026 e-mail: [email protected] Sacristan Colin Taylor 01934 519069 e-mail: [email protected] Director of Music Gordon Pullin e-mail: [email protected] PCC Members and sub-committees of the PCC The PCC consists of the Priest-in-Charge, Associate Priest, Churchwarden(s) Marjorie Fox (Deanery Synod Representative & Electoral Roll Officer), Joan R Beer (Deanery Synod Representative), Jude Forth (Safeguarding Officer), Ron Fox (Deputy Churchwarden), Terry Edwards (Treasurer and Secretary), Diane Guy, Owen James, Ray Armstrong, Philip Pughe-Morgan (Deputy Churchwarden) Standing Committee Fr. Andrew Hughes, Fr. Stuart Boyd, Colin Taylor, Terry Edwards, Ron Fox & Philip Pughe-Morgan Concert Committee Jude Forth (Chair), Humphrey Reader (Secretary), Roger Ellery, Barbara Ellery, Janice Rice and the Standing Committee Fundraising Committee Sandy Flood, Joan M Beer, Bobby Butcher, Joan R Beer, Barry RobinsonMallet, Ray Armstrong and the Standing Committee Mission Committee Jude Forth, Owen James, Ray Armstrong and the Standing Committee The articles in this magazine are the responsibility of the contributors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Clergy, Churchwardens or Parochial Church Council. Editors: Terry Edwards and Marjorie Fox Printed by St. Saviour Press