Showing posts with label shenley church end. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shenley church end. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 September 2009

Church Openning at St Mary's

After the Biblothon in the summer there was enthusiasm to open St Mary's for the public on one morning each week. A rota of volunteers was organised and the church was opened up. They now have an A-frame notice board by both gates and free coffee and cakes available for passers by.
It's been great to pop in over the past couple of weeks and see this project develop. They've cleared the side chapel which is now set up for prayer (instead of being a junk room) with candles and chairs. They've also arranged for music to be played quietly in the background which creates a very warm and friendly atmosphere.
On one occasion I popped in and there were seven people - including a baby. The church feels open, friendly and alive.
This week we added morning prayer to the schedule on Wednesday and Thursday at 9:00am. Karen Reeves and I led one of these each with others helping out with readings.
Moving forward, we need to find ways of enabling people to make prayer requests - perhaps a little post-it board? Alison Baird is keen for morning prayer on Saturday in Advent - and the Service Planning Meeting have already been approached about a Wednesday evening communion...
It's great to see mid-week activity in this very pretty church. It feels like there's something important going on. It's all fairly simple and uncomplicated but that is often the most powerful thing when it comes to God-stuff. Well done St Mary's! - and I look forward to seeing how this all develops...

Sunday, 12 July 2009

Sunday

I did the 9:30am service at St Mary's this morning and consciously went fishing. I talked about church membership, confirmation and baptism and invited people to talk to me after the service if they were interested in exploring any of these possibilities. I may have one taker for confirmation...

At 11:00am we had the baptism for Alex. We decided to drop the Gospel reading since a story about the beheading of John the baptist didn't seem appropriate at a baptism with John as the father...

The afternoon was spent with Becky and co at her 40th birthday party in Grange Farm. Good party! All tired...

Sunday, 7 June 2009

Planning Christmas

Had lunch with the people of St Mary's Shenley so that we could plan the Christmas services. Most of the arangements will stay the same but there are some significant things in the pipeline, including:
  • A Sing-a-long-a-Shenley-Nativity with a Kareoke version of the video in the Church
  • Live video feed of the four O'clock service on Christmas Eve in the graveyard so that the hundreds of extra visitors don't break the fire safety limits...
Plus a number of details that needed to be agreed...

Alison Baird did an excelent job with this. It's good to know that everything has been thought through in good time! (Shame we couldn't meet on the 25th June...)

Sunday, 12 April 2009

Dawn in the Watling Valley

Up early for the dawn service at St Mary's in Shenley Church End. Nick led us in a communion service with bread, fish and grape juice - followed by an amazing breakfast in the church with porridge, croissants, cereal and more...

We lit the six candles for the five churches of the Watling Valley plus Christ the Sower School. It was a wonderful parable of unity since people had to help each other keep their candles alight. And as someone from St Mary's pointed out - they were slow but burned brightly when they got going...

Happy Easter everyone!

Saturday, 21 February 2009

Zero Waste Place

Shenley Church End is a Zero Waste Place - which means there is a six month government sponsored campaign taking place in the parish to reduce rubbish and raise recycling levels. Paul H and I met the people organising this a few weeks ago, but today we had the high point of the whole programme - a community day.

There was a splendid day at the leisure centre with free soup, teas and coffees and more. The community shop organised a swop shop, there were various demonstrations, a craft table and an opportunity to go pond dipping. It was a strangely local event with even the First Crownhill Scouts roped in...

We popped down with the Solloways and met Nick, the Catherills and a few others down there. While it is true that there weren't that many people (out of 3000plus residents) actually there, it was a true community event and was well worth while.

It did make me wonder (again) if there might be scope for a "Shenley Festival" one day...

Saturday, 14 February 2009

Gary and Naomi

We had a pretty "white" wedding at St Mary's this morning with snow on the ground and ice on the path. The only issue was the danger that Naomi's dress end get scraped though the sand and grit...

It was a great event and it was really super to celebrate with them. I forgot to bring my camera, but if anyone sends me a good photo, I'll post it later...

Wednesday, 17 December 2008

Carols for CtS

Today was a day of singing for the kids at CtS. There were two carols concerts at St Mary's Church. One in the morning (year 3 and 4) and one in the afternoon (year 5 and 6). The year 5/6 choir sang in both and had their lunch in the church.

These were great community events and a good number of parents turned up - many of them popping in during re-arranged lunch breaks. The children sang well and with real enthusiasm. The bells did indeed ring out this Christmas...

Sunday, 7 December 2008

Second Sunday of Advent

The heating's out at St Mary's so we were all asked to wrap up warm this morning. Alison Baird brought a big bag of gloves and hats for the 9:30. Paul Randal got us all up and down with Alleluias and Praise ye the Lords at 11:00. I kept the sermons short...

Thursday, 4 December 2008

Barry Newboult

Barry Newboult was born in Sheffield on the 30th November 1933.

He was clearly a bright young man who passed a scholarship exam which enabled him to attend one of the top schools in Sheffield. Unfortunately, there wasn't enough money for him to continue full time education so he left school at 17 and went to work for Hadfield's, where he was involved in specialist steel work. 

His education continued through night school where he gained a BSc and then was released by Hadfield's to complete an MSc. His Job title, Margaret informs me, was Christallographer, which I think has something to do with the way atoms are arranged in metals - clever stuff! 

Alongside work and study he also made time for a social life. He met Margaret at a church dance and they eventually married. The two of them had a very strong and positive relationship. Margaret tells me that they never fell out in 46 years and their two girls have said much the same - so it must be true. They enjoyed many of the same things but were also happy to have different interests as well.

Family life was very important to Barry. Heather tells me that the absolute highpoint of every family holiday was him taking over bedtime stories.  But he didn't just read them, he would take one of his fairy tales, Cinderella, Snow White or Hansel & Gretl, and enchant it with gruesome extra detail, much to the delight of his daughters.

He was diagnosed with MS at 17 but it only began to bother him in his early twenties. He was, however, very fortunate that the disease progressed very slowly, allowing him to live a very full life. It never stopped him doing anything and they were never forced to cancel a holiday. He was able to work and get around, making good use of his car, wheel chair and scooter. 

The steel industry, however, did begin to face serious difficulties. In 1979 Hadfield's offered the option of redundancy and Barry decided that it would be wise to accept. He decided that the future would be in computers and so took a three month residential course at the Queen Elizabeth School for the disabled.

Through this course he met a man who told him about a new centre in a place called Milton Keynes which was run by SCOPE. He couldn't find work in Sheffield and so the decision was made to move south. He was offered a voluntary post at the centre and the council provided them with an appropriate house.

Although it was a difficult move in many ways. It turned out to be a good choice. Barry enjoyed his new work which involved programming - and wrote programs for a number of local schools. This work eventually began to tail off but Barry continued to work at the print shop at Neath Hill - where he polished his publishing skills which have been used so prolifically in this church.

Barry's links to St Mary's began through the Fellowship Singers - a local group that involved people from a number of local congregations. When Agnes Yates decided to restart the choir here, Veronica seems to have recruited Barry and Margaret. Their involvement in this church has been significant since then. Not only have they sung in the choir, but Barry also became the communications supremo - producing the weekly and monthly newsletters and much more besides... He was also a great help to Margaret in her work with wedding couples - a responsibility to which both of them gave a great deal of commitment, professionalism and genuine care.

How will he be remembered?

His daughters remember, necklaces bought after winning a sweepstake at work, the lego house he built Christine while looking after her with chicken pox one day,  teaching Heather to drive safely on the motorway, Sheffield Wednesday,  the Guardian newspaper and his dry, dark sense of humour.

Many people will remember the practical help and support he gave them - or the work he did with them.

In this church he will be remembered for his commitment, his publications and the things he did with Margaret.

Many people will remember him as a friend.

I asked Margaret what three things she thought he would be remembered for. I think most of you would agree with her list:

He will be remembered for the way he got things done - quietly, competently and reliably...

He will be remembered for the remarkable way he coped with his MS - without complaint or self-pity...

Most of all, he will be remembered for his dry sense of humour - mentioned by many people in the many cards of condolence which have been sent.

We'd like to thank you Margaret for sharing him with us and let you know that we'll all be missing him. 

It has been good to know you Barry and we thanks God for all that you have brought to our lives. May God bless you as your journey continues and may we all meet again in God's kingdom where all will be well.

(Extract from Tribute)

Wednesday, 3 December 2008

Sunday, 2 November 2008

Near miss

A couple of church members had a near miss on Sunday while attending the service at St Mary's Shenley. A tree fell across the car park. Nobody was hurt but Anne P's car was badly damaged.

It's good news that no-one was hurt. 

Tuesday, 9 September 2008

The Apostrophe Police and "The Sportsmens Rest"

Last night Isla set up a Facebook Group called "The Apostrophe Police". This was largely inspired by the (now legendary) "Sportsmens Rest" - the name chosen for the relaunched "Clock Inn".

Even as I type this I can see a red line underneath "Sportsmens" which is refusing to go away. Should I ask Firefox to add it to its dictionary?

As Isla says, "Sportsmens Rest" is wrong on so many levels. Yes, it's gramatically incorrect, and hardly a good use of inclusive language - although I note that two of the three "sportsmens" on the poster are female...

We all make mistakes in grammar, spelling, punctuation and language, but rarely spend a lot of money on signage to spread the word. Well done Isla - and best wishes to the Apostrophe Police!