The
Parish Church of
HOLY TRINITY, TARLETON
Parish
"Webzine" February 2007
From the Rectory February 2007
Dear
Friends,
Now
that February is upon us, Lent is just around the corner.
The season of Lent is immediately preceded by a celebration
that has no mention on the calendar of the church year.
The tradition of Mardi Gras (French for ‘Fat Tuesday’)
began as a pre-lenten day of feasting and carnival (from
the Latin carnelevarium, ‘removal of meat’).
It was a ‘last fling’ in preparation for the
severe fasting and abstinence which began the next day
on Ash Wednesday.
This
popular tradition probably had a practical purpose. Foods
forbidden by the church’s severe lenten discipline
were the ones needing refrigeration. Since controlled
refrigeration was unheard of until the 19th century, it
made sense to eat what would otherwise spoil during the
six weeks of Lent and to help other families to do the
same with a party atmosphere. Hence the tradition of pancakes.
The English name for the day before Lent, Shrove Tuesday
(from the Old English to shrive – to make confession)
comes from a long-established custom of going to confession
in preparation for the holy season of Lent. Going to confession?
You may ask. Surely that’s not part of mainstream
Anglicanism! Well it may come as a surprise to some of
you, but it is and, in theory, it always has been. Book
of Common Prayer outlines clear teaching about the importance
of confession in the ‘Exhortations’ found
in the Order for Holy Communion.
Sadly
these days many Anglicans no longer take sin and the need
for God’s forgiveness as seriously as did our Christian
forbears. In an age that goes out of its way to excuse,
explain away, even glorify all sorts of behaviour and
attitudes that fall short of God’s vision for us,
many people today don’t see the need to go to confession.
– Why should I tell a priest, it’s none of
his business! – And in one sense you’re right
– I do not want to know all your secrets.
But
sin is not just about our personal relationship with God
– it is also about our relationships with one another,
with the community, with Christ’s Body, the Church.
We can tell God in our private prayers how we have failed
but for fear of upset and discord we cannot always tell
one another. In the confessional the priest not only assures
the penitent of God’s saving forgiveness but also,
in a non-judgmental role, represents the Christian community
with which we also need reconciliation. Again and again
in the Gospels Jesus encourages repentance and reconciliation
and he explicitly gave authority to his apostles to pronounce
God’s forgiveness to the penitent.
The
Church of England has long adopted the approach in relation
to the Sacrament of Confession ‘none must, all may,
some should’. But I wonder how many of you have
ever even thought about it – I’m more than
happy to have a chat with anyone who would like to know
more, as I’m sure Fr Tom is too.
And
so at the Shrove Tuesday/Ash Wednesday juncture, what
is it to be? Party or penitence? If we read the story
of the Prodigal son one, most definitely without doubt,
is cause for the other.
With
my prayers and best wishes for a holy Lent,
Fr
Nicholas
PARISH NOTICE BOARD
FROM THE PARISH REGISTERS 2006
Funerals
“Rest eternal grant unto them, O Lord”
16 January Trudie Bannister
Confirmation
Interested in Confirmation? Please take a form from the
rear of church, fill in the details, and give it back
to Fr Nicholas. Young people should be in year 6 or older.
Mature enquirers are welcome at any age - it’s never
too late!
PCC
Monday 5th February:
PCC 7.30 pm (after Eucharist at 7.00 pm)
Children’s
Society
The presentation of Boxes and Donations will take place
at the 10.30 am Church Family Eucharist on Sunday 18th
February.
Ash
Wednesday 21st February
10 am Communion service (traditional language)
7.30 pm Eucharist with Ashing
Lent
Course
Our Lent Course will be held on Thursdays at 7.30 pm in
the Parish Room (after a 7 pm Eucharist for those who
wish to attend it.) Please sign up for the course on the
notice on the notice board at the back of church. Even
if Thursdays are unsuitable for you, you can still order
a book and follow the course at another time. Course details
on page 12 of this magazine. It starts on Thursday 1st
March and runs to March 29th.
Ecumenical
Walk of Witness Quiz Night
Friday 23rd February 2007 at Our Lady’s 7.30 p.m.
start
Tickets £6.50 including Hot Pot
available now from Jean Greaves
All the profits from this occasion go to the costs of
Walking Day – thank you for helping!!
Mothers’ Union February
Thank
you to all the ladies of the congregation and the MU who
made desserts for the Epiphany lunch. I understand they
were absolutely delicious.
Also,
thank you to all the people who have sent me loving messages,
flowers and cards following my recent operation.
The
Prayer Group will meet on Monday February 5th at 2.00
pm in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel.
On
Monday 12th February we will hold our act of remembrance,
thanksgiving and intercession by taking part in the Wave
of Prayer 2007. We will meet at Lilian’s at 10.30
am on this occasion.
Pat
and Bill Sutton will present “Musicolour Fantasies”
on Wednesday 14th June at 7.30 pm in the Parish Room.
Our
afternoon meeting will be held on Wednesday 28th February
at 2.00 pm when Margaret Richardson will tell us “Ken’s
Story.”
We
invite friends to join us on any of these occasions, and
we wish everybody peace and happiness in the coming
Pat Heap
Women’s
World Day of Prayer
The Tarleton and District Service for Women’s World
Day of Prayer will take place at All Saints, Hesketh Bank
Parish Church, Station Road, Hesketh Bank, on Friday March
2nd at 7.30 pm.
The Theme for the Service is “United Under God’s
Tent” and was prepared by Christian Women of Paraguay.
The Speaker will be Elizabeth Clark of London. The Service
will be followed by refreshments
All are invited to join us.
Sunday
School:
Thank
you to everyone for your help and support over the Christmas
period and it was so nice to see so many children in Sunday
School for the new year – thank you and we could
always do with more!!
Those
of you who regularly come to Holy Trinity School will
know about the ‘building project’. This project
means that we are not able to access School by the side
entrance next to Church until it is completed and we will
be coming into School each Sunday through the Hall Door
from the playground until work is completed. Please could
everyone pass the message round – it’s so
easy to assume everyone knows, so if you see someone looking
lost on a Sunday morning about 10.15 please post them
in the right direction!!
Social
Committee news:
A
very big thank you to everyone for your help with our
recent events.
The
sale of raffle tickets for the Christmas Hamper went very
well and resulted in a profit of £467. Perhaps some
of you will be pleased to hear we will not be holding
the ‘Beat the Bills’ raffle this year!
The
Epiphany Feast was extremely well attended and very successful
and would not have been possible without help from many
sources. The ‘pudding’ providers – thank
you especially to them, to Mary for the flowers, and also
to the many hands on the day who made light of all the
clearing up. Also we must not forget the ‘blue team’
from our thanks, with special mention to Holly, Bethany,
Daniel and Joshua who not only lowered the average age
tremendously but were a wonderful help. Although we were
more concerned with the social occasion than making a
profit, because of the generosity of many people, just
over £300 will be added to the disabled access fund.
Coming soon with TLM Sue Wells
Derek
Hartley, our Leprosy Mission 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
at church or on 813267 by Sunday February 25th.
After
last year’s Lindisfarne pilgrimage, there is the
Venture Out Pilgrimage to Whithorn 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.
If you fancy walking Morecambe Bay, then the Splash Out
Morecambe Bay Walk is 23rd of June (Rose Queen / Field
Day!) and is £7. More details available for both
events (813267).
This
magazine goes to press just before Leprosy Sunday, so
I thank those who have returned their L-boxes early -
and will report the total donations in the next magazine.
The
New TLM Collecting boxes
The old plastic L-boxes are being phased out, and replaced
by larger, blue ones. These are of hand-made paper, made
by students in the vocational training centre at Vizianagaram,
India. The paper itself is made from off-cuts of material
from the dress making courses at the same centre. You
can keep your old box if you prefer - but the new one
is bigger and holds more - and helps train students recovering
from the effects of leprosy.
News
from Holy Trinity School
We have settled into the new term and are once again knuckling
down to some hard work - staff and children alike!
This half term in our Personal, Social and Health education
we are looking at "Going for Goals". No, not
all of us being involved in a huge game of football but
a look at what we are good at, how we can improve and
the importance of persistence and resilience. We are linking
this theme with examples from the Bible such as Daniel
and Samuel. We are also looking forward to the visit from
the Life Education Centre where the children find out
more about the human body and consider feelings and relationships.
The Governors have also been busy and continue in their
encouragement and support of the children and staff. We
do appreciate all that they do and the unpaid hours they
spend attending meetings and making important decisions.
On a personal note, I enjoyed the Epiphany Service and
sharing Sunday Lunch with Bishop Nicholas and the church
community. Than you for making me feel so welcome.
Sue Hodgkins.
News
from Mere Brow School
I am writing this having just returned home from meeting
many of you at the Parish Lunch. I would like to take
the opportunity of saying how much I enjoyed the Epiphany
service, and of course the ‘bountiful’ lunch
(to quote, and agree with, Bishop Nicholas) that we all
enjoyed afterwards.
Mere Brow School has always shared in Church events, for
example the annual Parish Carol Service, the Rose Queen
Coffee Evening, Walking Day and the Rose Queen Fete. Unfortunately
we are not as physically close to Church as Holy Trinity
School, and we cannot therefore cast our eyes on the Church
building each day as we go about our school business.
Neither can we visit the Church as readily as we would
like, again due to our physical separation.
I can, however, assure you that we are just as spiritually
connected with you as is our sister school, and I would
therefore ask you to remember all in the Mere Brow School
community in your prayers, whenever we may come to mind.
Ian Cookson (Acting Headteacher)
Lent
Course - Thursdays at 7.30
Parish Room 1st - 29th March
CAN
WE BUILD A BETTER WORLD?
learning from William Wilberforce
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
Christian
Stewardship - Some myths and Truths
Myth
Truth
A
tithe (1 tenth/ 10%) 100% is God’s.
is God’s Everything belongs to him
Stewardship
is our Stewardship is our
response to the church response as the church
Stewardship
is about Stewardship is about
money a way of life
Financial
stewardship Financial stewardship
encourages equal gifts encourages equal sacrifice
We
should give We should give
until it hurts until it feels good
We
enter the world with nothing.
We leave the world with nothing.
BUT we have responsibility for the stewardship of all
that we are given in between.
From
Snippets, the newsletter for resources and stewardship
in our diocese
From
previous magazines: February 1902
On January 31st, the Bishop of Manchester confirmed 66
persons in our Church. The number was thus made up;
Male candidates, from Tarleton, 13; Hoole, 12; Hesketh,
3; total 28. Female candidates, from Tarleton, 24; Hoole,
7; Hesketh, 7; total, 38.
The Church was well filled, the service was much appreciated,
and the address of the Bishop on the subject of “Lead
us not into temptation” was most able and effective.
We hope that the echoes of the service will long linger
in many hearts, and that its effects will be manifest
in many lives.
May all who were that day confirmed, and all who were
then reminded of their own confirmation in years gone
by, have grace granted them, and use it, to live as fully
as they can that high Christian life to which God calls
us all.
Advert
in the Thame Gazette
Wasps
£35.00 Inclusive Guaranteed.
No Hidden Charges
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
PARISH
DIARY for February
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)
Thursday
1st 7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 2nd Presentation of Christ in the Temple (Candlemas)
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
Tuesday 6th 10.00 am Eucharist Oakgate Close
6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 7th 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP) + coffee
Thursday 8th 7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 9th 12.15 pm Eucharist
Sunday 11th Second Sunday before Lent
8.00 am Eucharist
10.15 am Sunday School
10.30 am PARISH EUCHARIST
Monday
12th 10.30 am MU Wave of Prayer: 13 Ruskin Close
Tuesday 13th 6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 14th 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP)
7.30 pm MU: Parish Room: Pat & Bill Sutton
“Musicolour Fantasies”
Thursday 15th 7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 16th 12.15 pm Eucharist
Sunday 18th Sunday next before Lent
8.00 am Eucharist
10.30 am CHURCH FAMILY EUCHARIST
with presentation of the Children’s Society Boxes
and Donations
Tuesday 20th 6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 21st ASH WEDNESDAY
10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP)
7.30 pm EUCHARIST with Ashing
Thursday 22nd 7.30 pm Eucharist
Friday 23rd 12.15 pm Eucharist
Sunday 25th First Sunday of Lent
8.00 am Eucharist
10.15 am Sunday School
10.30 am PARISH EUCHARIST
Tuesday 27th 6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 28th 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP)
MARCH
Thursday 1st St David
7.00 pm Eucharist
7.30 pm Lent Course: Parish Room see above
Friday 2nd 12.15 pm Eucharist
7.30 pm WWDP All Saints, Hesketh Bank
- see page 4
Sunday 4th Second Sunday of 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
Tuesday 6th 10.00 am Eucharist: Oakgate Close
6.50 pm Choir practice
Wednesday 7th 10.00 am Holy Communion (BCP) + coffee
Thursday 8th 7.00 pm Eucharist
7.30 pm Lent Course: Parish Room
Friday 9th 12.15 pm Eucharist