Sunday 12 October 2014

Letter From Rose - September & October 2014


Dear Friends,
In my letter to you last time I mentioned that we were still looking for a new Team Rector.

By now you will know that following an interview with The Archdeacon of Dudley, a representative from Worcester Cathedral, the Rural Dean, Lay Chair, Revd Jan Ashton, representatives from the Kidderminster Parish Church Team Ministry, Wolverley and Cookley and the Superintendent of the Methodist Church, and an invitation from our Diocesan Bishop, Dr John Inge to the vacancy, I have been appointed as Team Rector Designate for the Kidderminster Ismere Team Ministry.

The decision to apply for this role was not taken lightly as after a great deal of prayer and ‘doing the job’ of Acting Team Rector since Owain’s retirement last year I was well aware of what not only lies before me, but before the whole of our new Team as we move into the reality of serving our Lord across a much larger area.

However, a lot of hard work has already been carried out by many people, both lay and ordained that will begin to take us forward from the firm foundations laid by both Revd Canon D. Owain Bell and Revd Geoffrey Shilvock, to whom we are eternally grateful, but now the time has come to begin to use the amazing God given gifts we have among us now.

With my appointment to Team Rector Designate this will of course mean that we still have a vacancy – this time for a Vicar in the Team with special responsibility for Broadwaters and Cookley and Workplace Chaplaincy with ‘Faith @ Work’ in Worcestershire, the role I have been doing for the last seven and a half years.

The wheels have already been put in motion to advertise this post and we are hopeful that it will be easier to fill than the Team Rector Designate. However, until then we, that is myself, Jan and Alex will be continuing to carry out the work across the Team together with the generous help of our retired clergy, Readers, ALM’s, senior Clergy (Bishop’s, Archdeacon’s and other Diocesan Staff) and of course everyone who carries out their own particular ministry in the seven churches.

In my previous letter to you all I wrote about the ‘winter period’, where seeds can lay dormant waiting for the spring when they will be given the opportunity to sprout, grow and bear fruit. Well we haven’t quite arrived at spring yet, but we are making progress towards it – towards the day when we have another colleague, are fully staffed and spring will have arrived!

Of course each new spring brings with it new life and with new life there can be change.
However, Jonathan Sacks, one time Chief Rabbi wrote in his book ‘Celebrating Life’ that –

‘Change is not threatening, so long as we keep firm hold of the values by and for which we live.
We can travel with confidence so long as we have a map.
We can jump with safety knowing there is someone to catch us as we fall.
It is when we lose these things that change creates anxiety…………..
The possibilities of happiness are all around us, if we would only open our eyes and give thanks.’

And so we move forward, we give thanks to God for bringing us to where we are and we pray that together as the Kidderminster Ismere Team we will indeed open our eyes, give thanks and bear good and abundant fruit in God’s world.

With every blessing for our future together,
Rose
Revd Rose Lawley
Team Rector Designate
Kidderminster Ismere Team




From the Parish Registers

Christenings

Emily Joan Bennett; 27th July at St. John’s, Wolverley
Havanna-Leigh Griffiths; 27th July at St. John’s, Wolverley
Mason Oliver Kent; 27th July at St. John’s, Wolverley
Christopher Hough; 4th August at St. John’s, Wolverley
Oscar Ben Ronnie Hodgetts; 10th August at St. John’s, Wolverley
Tallulah Elizabeth Morgan; 17th August at St. John’s, Wolverley
Erica Rose Copson; 27th August at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Storm Alexander Rice; 31st August at St. John’s, Wolverley
Layla Joy King; 31st August at St. John’s, Wolverley
Tiana Rose Clarke; 7th September at St. John’s, Wolverley
Lillie Mae Clarke; 7th September at St. John’s, Wolverley
Lacey Sharne England; 14th September at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Elle Marie Baker; 14th September at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Miley-Mae Baker; 14th September at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Finn Luca Turvey; 14th September at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Maggie-Beau Fowler; 21st September at St. John’s, Wolverley
Peggy Maud Frances Thomas; 21st September at St. John’s, Wolverley



Weddings

Simon Robert Knight and Marie Louise Wyatt; 26th July at Cookley
Richard Charles Moreby and Leanne Julie Mills; 2nd August at Cookley
Adam Charles Howell and Hayley Dawn Branford; 16th August at Wolverley
James Philip Paul Swift and Ruby Barnell; 27th August at Wolverley
Terence Edwin Harris and Sarah Maureen Freeman; 29th August at Wolverley
Gary Robert Hawkins and Jodie Michelle Hobbins; 30th August at Wolverley
Colin David Prince and Christine Elizabeth Parsonage; 30th August at Cookley
Scott Graeme Hynd and Kirsty Louise MacGregor; 6th September at Cookley




Funerals

Michael Kennedy Ayre; 24th July at St. John’s, Wolverley
Rosella Edna Page of Cookley; 28th July at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Phyllis Maud Thompson; 29th July at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Joyce Chillington of Wolverley; 6th August at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Janet Elizabeth Bridges; 13th August at St. John’s, Wolverley & Wyre Forest Crematorium
Christopher Danks; 14th August at St. John’s, Wolverley
Sybil Margaret Clee; 29th August at St. Peter’s, Cookley & Wyre Forest Crematorium
Diane Day of Wolverley; 4th September at Stourbridge Crematorium
David John Turner of Cookley; 4th September at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Patricia Kirk of Cookley; 5th September at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Doris Laidlaw; 10th September at St. John’s, Wolverley




Saturday 16 August 2014

Letter from Rose - August & September 2014


Letter from Rose

August/September 2014

Dear Friends,

Last Sunday (20th July) the reading set from the Gospel was that well known parable of the sower. (Matthew 11: 16-19, 25 to end)

At St Mary’s I explored the fates of the different seed, but in particular the seed that fell amongst the thorns.

As I write this letter we are in the ninth month of interregnum where we have all being working extra hard to maintain the church across the seven churches including Wolverley and Cookley and the places they serve while at the same time waiting for the formation of the new Kidderminster Ismere Team and looking for a new Team Rector.

During my sermon we thought about our position in God’s church at this moment in time with the parable of the sower in mind, and which seed we might think we are. Perhaps we may feel a little like the seed that is being choked by the weight of the ‘thorns’ of extra work?

It is so easy to give in when things get a bit tough, but let’s think about those thorns for a moment and what can happen to them.

When winter comes along they too will lose their leaves and strength and die back, then when spring comes along the seed once more is given the opportunity to sprout, to grow and bear fruit, 30, 60 or 100 times over.

I know we have all been disappointed by the fact that we have not been successful in appointing a Rector, perhaps we were not ready.

Maybe we needed a winter period first but now are at a point when we need to open the door anew to the Spirit’s working and see what God wants of us.

Whatever form the future may take, I am sure we all realize that it will not be as it was before - but I wonder if we are brave enough to embrace whatever God has in mind for us and become the ‘good soil’ where the Spirit can and will be able to work and grow the Kingdom across our seven churches and beyond.

Bishop John, our Diocesan Bishop says that ‘our churches should be communities where the Kingdom is our core conversation, where these Kingdom values (of love, compassion, justice and freedom) are evident and through which we strive to incarnate them in our communities ….. a framework in which churches might flourish and grow rather than impose a blueprint of how every church should look.’

The new Kidderminster Ismere Team has now been ‘made’ and will come into being as soon as the Clergy are relicensed and so across our new Team we have a wonderful opportunity to grow those Kingdom values but it will mean a renewed openness to the working of the Spirit and hard work supported by prayer.

Are we brave enough to move forward?

A prayer from Bishop Tom Wright praying for God’s church – for us.

‘Give us faith, good Lord, to see your kingdom at work even when the seeds seem wasted and the soil seems bare.

Thank you for the promise of the great harvest, of which your resurrection was the first fruits.’

Amen.



With every blessing for our future together,

Rose

Revd Rose Lawley

Acting Team Rector




 
From the Parish Registers

Christenings

Paula Michelle Cooper; 8th June at St. John’s, Wolverley
Aaron Lee Meagham; 8th June at St. John’s, Wolverley
Fraser James Brooks; 8th June at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Carly Louise Lewis; 6th July at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Jessica Daisy Sullivan; 6th July at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Eric Phillip Waldron; 6th July at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Ruby Louise Williamson; 13th July at St. John’s, Wolverley
Ethan Shaun Davies; 20th July at St. Peter’s, Cookley


Weddings

Luke Nicholas William Martin and Rebecca Louise Portman; 25th May at Cookley
Jamie Luke Childs and Emma Jane Taylor; 25th May at St. John’s, Wolverley
Matthew Alan Fidoe and Harriet Emily Smith; 30th May at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Alexander Michael Bowman and Gemma Elizabeth White; 14th June at Cookley
Stefan Karl Jordan and Victoria Louise Clarke; 21st June at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Matthew Ashley Thompson and Elizabeth Charlotte Crich; 12th July at Cookley
Simon Mark Cox and Heather Janet Neal; 18th July at St. Peter’s, Cookley



Funerals

Anthony Chapman of Cookley; 2nd May at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Brian John Jacques; 9th June at St. John’s, Wolverley
Gillian Lynes of Wolverley; 13th June at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Irene Richards of Cookley; 17th June at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Leonard Thomas Mumford of Wolverley; 18th June at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Avril Elizabeth Forrester; 19th June at St. Peter’s, Cookley & W.F. Crematorium
Muriel Baynham of Wolverley; 9th July at Stourbridge Crematorium
Stanley William King; 16th July at St. John’s, Wolverley & W.F. Crematorium


Saturday 31 May 2014

Letter from Jan - June & July 2014


Letter from Jan
June/July 2014

Dear Friends

As many of you know, I met Chris three months before coming here to Kidderminster. And in those three months, I knew so much about him: about his mum who’d died when he was two; also the fun times he’d had in Guildford and at his church in Lye.
But there was one thing I didn’t know about him. How much he earned.
I found this surprising that he just couldn’t tell me, (trust me, it’s no BIG deal!!), because I come from a family who talked about money openly and honestly. I knew how much my dad earned and my mum earned so I understood why some years we couldn’t go on holiday.
I can’t work out whether most people are like Chris or like my parents. I do know that if our collections are not keeping pace with our outgoings, we are uncomfortable about what to do about this.
In the Old Testament there was a stipulation for the people of God to give a 10% of their income away (if people had no income there was no stipulation). Many Christians who earn still give away 10% because they want to be generous just as God is generous.
Let us be generous givers and if we are giving money to the church let’s celebrate this and if we are giving money elsewhere let’s celebrate this too.
I want the church to be solvent and to pay its bills. But I want far more that we as Christians are generous and can say I’m grateful for what I’ve been given and I’ll give away a proportion as a way of expressing my thankfulness.
If Chris was old school about money, I’m glad the church is new school. If you want to know exactly what the church spends its money on and where it gets this money from and what the diocese spends our money on, do ask a church treasurer. The church is trying to be open and honest about monetary matters.

Let us be open and honest with ourselves too about how generous we actually are.

Jan





Bishop John offers some thoughts on growing deeply as disciples by offering our money to God.

Where is your treasure?

"Do not store up for yourself treasures on Earth, where moth and rust consume and where thieves break in and steal; but store up for yourselves treasures in Heaven, where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." (Matthew 6. 19-21)

What I want to do here is to ask you a simple question arising from that passage from St Matthew's gospel. Where is your treasure? It's strange how reticent we are as Christians to talk about money particularly in view of the fact that Jesus mentioned it so often. The parable of the talents, the dishonest manager, the story of the rich young ruler, the widows mite, the importance of serving God versus serving mammon - the list goes on and on. A quick count indicates that 19 out of the 47 teachings which are clearly parables relate directly to money or material possessions. And that is just the parables. If the frequency of his sayings in the gospels is anything to go on, Jesus talked about money every other day (or every other teaching): he knew how interesting and vital it is to people. Our Lord made more reference to money and possessions than to either prayer or faith - more than his sayings about Heaven and Hell combined. And he preached to rich and poor alike.

Why then was Jesus so concerned about something we tend to keep quiet about? It wasn't anything to do with a shortfall in Parish Share, it was much closer to home than that. Jesus didn't wait until things got desperate to teach about giving. He wasn't concerned with fund raising, he was concerned with faith-raising, and he knew that ultimately our security will be defined by what we depend upon. And in his kingdom, lasting treasure is measured not by what we have but by what we give away. For where our treasure is, there will our heart be also. Our giving will reflect what is really going on inside us. When Jesus said, "Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" he put his finger on our spiritual pulse. He knew the signs of spiritual vitality, and the blockage of the giving arteries that will be a serious risk to our health.

That we are created to be givers follows quite simply from the fact that we are made in God's image. It is when we give that we will most reflect the gracious God who formed us in his likeness. God's nature is to give, rather than to accumulate. When Christ did not exploit equality with God for his own use but emptied himself, giving himself to a death on the cross, he was expressing something very profound about God. Our God is in the giving business. He can't help it. It's just the way he is. Money Managers in the City would say that God has a real problem: much more expenditure than income. Praise God for his economics.

Although the instinct for self-preservation in us is strong, deep down we know that it is only in sacrificial giving that we will find and enjoy real life. Only in giving to others will we find the real joy and fulfilment we crave. Christmas reminds us of that. It's a sign of maturity when we move from focusing on what presents were received to the joy we can bring to family and friends by what we give.

Financial crises in churches and dioceses are opportunities: opportunities compelling us to discover who and what we really depend upon. We give not just because others have a need or because the church needs it for its mission but for our own good; we were created to give and will be frustrated spiritually and stunted in our growth if we don't. God doesn't need our money. He wants our hearts. But the fact is that our hearts are very closely connected to our cheque books. The cords that bind them are many and strong. Some of us have bad memories, but I bet there is no one reading this who can't remember immediately where they bank. We know it in a heartbeat. And what is written in our bank and credit card statements tell a story where our true religion is really found.

In Old Testament times, God gave his people the gift of the law. In Leviticus 27 he commanded them to give a tithe, 10% of their crops and herds back to him. The tithe was a holy reminder that whether they were rich or poor everything the people had belonged to him. The profit Malachi said that to do less than tithe was to rob God (Malachi 3.8). On top of that tithe, the Israelites were to give special offerings on specific occasions. In addition to that, they were also to give alms to the poor as needed. That was the minimum commanded in the scripture.

Jesus criticised Pharisees who were tithing spices while neglecting weightier matters, but he didn't dismiss tithing (Matthew 23.23). There is not the slightest evidence that the very first Christians stopped tithing, providing offerings, and giving alms. In the New Covenant in which we have been giving the gift of the Spirit and every spiritual blessing, God says, "Give as you have prospered". Have we prospered any less than the people of Israel? I tithe and have received many blessings as a result. For the fact of the matter is that the way in which our gracious God orders the creation means that the more we give the more will be given back to us; "Give and it will be given to you; good measure, press down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For the measure you give will be the measure you get back".

In my experience it is the poorest of people who are the most generous. I was vicar of a church right in the heart of inner city Tyneside and I moved from there to Ely Cathedral. I was shocked to discover that, with congregations of roughly equivalent size, giving in Ely Cathedral was less than on Tyneside. That's not in relative terms, that's in absolute terms: prosperous Ely as compared with impoverished Tyneside. And that's a picture I have seen reflected the world over - travelling in Africa and Peru and seeing the extraordinary sacrificial generosity of people there who, frankly, are a lot more cheerful than much more prosperous people in England.

Why don't we dare to embark on an adventure of giving? Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could start a renewal movement in the church based on the neglected gift of the Spirit, the gift of radical giving? It's fun to give away money that belongs to someone else. Everything we have belongs to someone else - to God. Where our treasure is, there will our heart be also. Our heart should be committed to giving for we were created to give. Give for Life - giving in order that we might have life and conform more completely to the image of the God who created us, to be truly Kingdom People.
Bishop John



From the Parish Registers

Christenings

Isabella Diva Curty-Pitt; 12th January at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Gabriel John Curty-Pitt; 12th January at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Dylan Joseph Stewart Roberts; 27th April at St. John’s, Wolverley
Dexter Joseph Spare; 11th May at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Aston Joseph Price; 11th May at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Noah Zackary Price; 11th May at St. Peter’s, Cookley


Weddings
Stuart James Thorpe and Lynsey Dawn Bache; 2nd May at St. John’s, Wolverley


Funerals

Doreen Edith Evans of Wolverley; 7th March at Wyre Forest Crematorium
John Quinn Billingsley; 8th April at St. Peter’s, Cookley and Wyre Forest Crematorium
Edward Harris of Cookley; 28th March at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Robert Trevor Hodgson; 16th April at St. John’s, Wolverley and Wyre Forest Crematorium
Margaret Monger of Wolverley; 17th April at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Anthony Andrew Harrison; 22nd April at St. John’s, Wolverley
Margaret Frances Perks; 23rd April at St. John’s, Wolverley
Dorothy Garbett of Wolverley; 8th May at Wyre Forest Crematorium
David Albert Freeman; 8th May at St. John’s, Wolverley
Derek Gordon Wren; 13th May at St. Peter’s, Cookley



Memorial Service

Malcolm James Green; 1st May at St. Peter’s, Cookley





 

Tuesday 1 April 2014

Letter from Alex & Archdeacon of Dudley, Nikki Groarke - April & May 2014


Letter from Alex
April/May 2014

Dear Friends

Going to the Holy Land was something we always said we’d do “one day”. And so I have to admit that it seemed slightly unreal to find ourselves, at the end of January, on the Diocesan Pilgrimage, travelling to visit the places where Jesus lived, died and carried out his ministry. It was an amazing experience, not least because of the privilege of sharing it with 65 other wonderful people, all pilgrims from across the Diocese, and with Bishop John and his wife Denise. We spent four days in and around Jerusalem, with its hustle and bustle, its incredible history and mix of cultures; and then three nights at Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee, where the pace of life was slower and the scenery simply breathtaking.

In this multi-media age, we think we’ve seen it all; we can watch films, read books, view video clips of almost anywhere in the world. But somehow, reality is different. Of course places like Jerusalem have changed in 2000 years – it would be strange if they hadn’t! But there was still the incredibly intimate sense of walking where Jesus would have walked, of seeing the landscape that he would have seen. Standing on the Mount of Olives and looking over to the city of Jerusalem itself, it became easy to envisage Jesus and the disciples walking out across the Kidron Valley – still there today – after the Last Supper, to the Garden of Gethsemane – also still there today – where Jesus would finally be betrayed by Judas’s kiss.

We had expected that the most visited sites would have succumbed to the plague of tourism and become commercialised and tacky, with plastic souvenirs and contrived photo opportunities, but we were surprised to find that this wasn’t the case. Although the churches and shrines built over those places where the key moments of Jesus’ life were purported to have taken place were sometimes cluttered and over-ornate for our western tastes, they were merely in keeping with the Orthodox denominations that were responsible for them.

In Bethlehem we queued to pick our way down the narrow stone steps to kneel at the 14-pointed silver star that marks the place where, it is said, Jesus was born to Mary over 2000 years ago. And in Jerusalem we knelt again, to reach down and touch the hard, roughened rock at the spot where it is believed that the cross on which Christ was crucified would have stood. And I think that what stuck us with a surprising intensity at those moments was that, although these might not be the precise places, although the true location might have been lost in rumour and the mists of time – still, somewhere, very close to where we were, there was a place where all these things actually did happen. 
 
What was brought home to us was that all this was real. That the Bible stories that we’ve known so well since childhood weren’t just made-up fables, but accounts of real happenings, in real places, that involved real people. The reality of Jesus was there all around us – and has remained with us.

The Jesus that we mostly have in our imagination is rooted in the images that we encounter; the pictures in our children’s bible, the actors in Biblical dramas in film or on TV – and in our own imaginations, the images that we conjure up as we read the Gospel stories. But Jesus wasn’t just a character in a story, a good subject for an artist. The Son of God walked the dusty streets of that noisy city, trod the stone steps that rise up out of the Kidron Valley, made long and difficult journeys through the barren desert landscape. He was as real as we are. And having that brought home so vividly has made our faith more real, more alive. And as we watched the sun rise over the sea of Galilee on our last morning, while a fisherman drew in his catch, hauling the net up the side of his boat – we felt that we were honoured to see something just like Jesus must have witnessed as he stood on the lakeside waiting for his disciples.


Alex





Letter from the Archdeacon of Dudley, Nikki Groarke

My introduction to the Diocese of Worcester and the Archdeaconry of Dudley has been a very watery one. As I have met with diocesan staff to find out how their roles interact with mine, the views through their windows in the Old Palace offices have been ones of vast expanses of water stretching across to the Malverns. As I have driven from one church to another, detours to avoid roads and bridges closed by floods have featured often. I have learned that life in the country means permanently having a dirty car and that wellies in the boot are a must-have item!

The floods across our area, and in other parts of the country even more so, have been devastating for many, though thankfully held back by new defences along much of the Severn this time. Water in vast quantities in the wrong place can be powerful and destructive, it permeates everything, flows everywhere there is space, gets in through the cracks, over and under many barriers. Yet we know too that water is vital for life. In countries ravaged by drought, the rains are longed for, every drop of clean water is regarded as a precious gift.

It may be hard for us to imagine intense heat and desperate thirst, surrounded as we are by our flooded countryside and with clean water readily on tap, but that is the experience of many, and one with which many can therefore connect when King David draws a spiritual parallel with his need for God in Psalm 63: "You, God, are my God, earnestly I seek you; I thirst for you, my whole being longs for you, in a dry and parched land where there is no water."

God's presence is as life giving water to the soul, as crucial for our spiritual health as water is for our bodies. The Bible teaches us that through the Holy Spirit we can experience God's refreshing presence in abundance. In John's gospel Jesus talks about the water of life:

"On the last and greatest day of the festival, Jesus stood and said in a loud voice, ‘Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as Scripture has said, rivers of living water will flow from within them.’ By this he meant the Spirit, whom those who believed in him were later to receive." (John 7:37-39)

As healthy kingdom people who are deeply rooted in prayer and being renewed and transformed by regular worship, we are constantly filled with the Spirit, in order that the Holy Spirit might flow from us into our communities. How wonderful it would be if the life and hope of the gospel, its values of love, compassion, justice and freedom, flowed from our churches into our communities with the same persistent permeation that flood water exhibits. What an impact for good will be made if God's love seeps through every crevice and crack as his people serve those around them. And what good news stories there will be to share if barriers are consistently broken down by acts of loving kindness in God's name.

I pray that my Worcester experiences will continue to be watery as I explore the diocese, but in the spiritual realms rather than the physical ones, as I see God's life-giving presence flowing from the people of our churches into our neighbourhoods.

Ven. Nicki Groarke
 

From the Parish Registers

Christenings

Felicity Rachel Wright; 9th February at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Felicity Amber White; 9th March at St. Peter’s, Cookley



Funerals

John Goodall; 13th December at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Thomas Clarke; 17th January at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Jennifer Ann Cox; 31st January at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Natalia Andree Brittain; 6th February at St. Peter’s, Cookley
Gordon Thomas Ross; 13th February at St. John’s, Wolverley & Wyre Forest Crematorium
Lilian Denise Tompkins of Cookley; 13th February at Stourbridge Crematorium
Lilian Mary Edwards of Cookley; 18th February at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Cynthia Margaret Male; 6th March at St. John’s, Wolverley
Dorothy Edith Pinfold of Cookley; 19th March at Wyre Forest Crematorium
Pamela Maud Griffin; 21st March at St. John’s, Wolverley