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Showing posts with label services. Show all posts
Showing posts with label services. Show all posts

Monday, 19 March 2018

#ruralpresence - After Easter till August 2018 – Ideas for church services and events


(this post was 1st published on the Rural Presence Blog)

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Around now might be the time you are bending your mind to events and services for after Easter – say April to August 2018.  Along with some of the red letter days, I’ve collated a number of other ideas.  The “usual suspects” are listed below along with – I hope – some other useful ideas and links.  If you have any ideas to add then please do share them via a comment – maybe with links – on this post.  In next year’s version of this post I’d love to include your ideas and credit you.

APRIL

Start a Men’s – or Women’s – or both – monthly pub lunch – Over Lent how about asking people whether they’d be interested in the idea of a monthly pub lunch.  You could encourage people interested to let a a named person in the church know.  OR – you might just go ahead and arrange one anyway.
Pub lunches are a great way to provide something to a community.  They bring people together and grow relationships.  Both times I’ve seen one set up at the initial lunch they had 5 or so attendees  – but within a year attendance had grown to 15 or so.
They’re also very resource-lite.  All you need is somebody to send out an email reminder the week before  and probably to make a booking at the pub.  And  it’s good to encourage attendees to invite neighbours and friends to the lunch.
A couple of swipes down this page is an example of publicity for a Men’s pub lunch organised by St. Mary’s church in the market town of Saffron Walden.  And a couple of swipes down this page is the information for a similar men’s pub lunch set up in my 5 parishes.
You’ll notice the publicity focuses on simple, informal, no strings, no agenda and each pay your own messages.
16th (Monday) – In Essex – parents/guardians find out which primary school their child will attend.  Why not include prayers for those involved in the process the Sunday before?  With a bit of planning ahead you could also include some prayers in your April magazine and in webpage and social media updates during early April.
23rd (Monday) – St. George’s Day – A service the Sunday before could invite uniformed organisations like the Brownies, Cubs, Guides and Scouts to take part.  They – and you – might link into Earth Day (22nd Sunday) and its 2018 theme of End Plastic Pollution.

MAY

6th (Rogation Sunday) – Organise a walk between some of your churches with short reflections at each, bacon butties at the start and a buffet lunch at the end.  The following text may help spark some other ideas as might the Chelmsford Diocese’s Agricultural Festivals pack, (towards the foot of the page I’ve linked to), which has further ideas on Rogation.
Formally the rogation days are the three weekdays before Ascension day but some churches celebrate this around May time if Easter is early.  Apparently Rogation took over a Greek/Roman annual procession in which the Gods were asked to protect crops.
The poet George Herbert interpreted the procession as a way of asking for God’s blessing on the land, of preserving boundaries, of encouraging fellowship between neighbours with differences, and of charitable giving to the poor.
The tradition of ‘beating the bounds’ – the parish boundary lines or some walk across parishes stopping at churches for refreshment and a short reflection – continues in some churches.
In more recent times, the scope of Rogation has been widened to include petition for the world of work and for accountable stewardship, and prayer for local communities, whether rural or urban.
Also … 6th May – Godparents Sunday – As the site says
“For the third time in 2018, it will take place on May 6th, but you can celebrate the role of godparents at any time of year if you wish.  One of the biggest findings of the research was that godparents really, really matter to families. Godparents are part of family life for all the years ahead, a relationship that will last into adulthood and beyond. “
10th – 20th May – Thy Kingdom Come – global wave of prayer  from Ascension Day (Thursday 10th May).   Website includes helpful resources for churches and families, including ideas for prayer stations and 24-7 prayer events.
13th (Sunday) to 19th (Saturday) – Christian Aid Week – Feed the hungry and welcome the stranger.  Be there for people facing poverty and injustice.
15th (Friday) to 17th (Sunday) National Weekend of Invitation  – “One weekend.  Multitudes of personal invitations to those outside our churches.  All with a simple request to please ‘Be our guest’. ”
20th (Sunday) – Pentecost – the birth of the Christian Church.  Whit Sunday is a favourite day for baptism in some places and Whitsun is the time for walks and processions.  The traditional “Procession of Witness” has long been celebrated throughout the North West.
Or another idea is a Pentecost Pudding and Pimms Party – see page 4 of this Norwich Diocese monthly magazine for more information on how one church does this.
25th (Friday) – General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) takes  effect  – in the UK from this date.  The Parish Resources website has various resources on what you need to do.  As a 1st step they suggest you carry out a data audit.
27th (Trinity Sunday) – dedicated to the Christian belief in the Trinity.trinity

JUNE

3rd (Sunday) – The Big Lunch – The UK’s annual get together for neighbours –  a free starter pack is available.
8th & 9th June (Friday & Saturday) – Rural Ministries Annual Conference 2018 –
The Hayes Conference Centre, Swanwick. Rev. Cannon Dave Male, Church of England Director for Evangelism & Discipleship is their key note speaker.
“The two days together bring an opportunity to receive core biblical teaching through a range of workshops and seminar programme. “
It costs £90 per person including all accommodation, meals and conference pack. (Found via Rural Ministries March e-news)
9th (Saturday) to 17th (Sunday) – Children’s Art Week – a theme to bring into a Sunday service.
10th Open Farm Sunday – “Opening your farm for LEAF Open Farm Sunday is a fantastic chance to show people what real farming is all about and why supporting British farming matters. Get involved in the farming industry’s annual open day on the 10th June and demonstrate the skills, technology and passion that goes into producing nutritious food and managing the countryside.”  Resources are available to order here.
15th (Friday) to 17th (Sunday) The National Weekend of Invitation – As their website says “One weekend. Multitudes of personal invitations to those outside our churches. All with a simple request to please ‘Be our guest’.” The National Weekend of Invitation reflects 14 years of experience of Back to Church Sunday in the UK and internationally. It is an initiative of the Unlocking the Growth Trust – a charity.
17th (Sunday) – Father’s Day – Who let the Dads out – a Messy Church event for Dads, Grandads & kids  – with food, games, a bible story, songs and craft activities.

22nd (Friday) to 24th (Sunday – The Great Get Together weekend – as the website says
“A celebration of your choosing!  Arrange something with your neighbours, find an event taking place near you or join in online. Whatever you decide, you’ll be part of a huge national celebration. “
(Found via a @ACRE_national tweet)

JULY

15th – Rural Mission Sunday – As the webpage I’ve linked to from Germinate: The Arthur Rank Centre says …
” we feel passionately about the importance of small churches: we know they do mission and we want to celebrate that fact.  Rural Mission Sunday is an annual event celebrating the work of small rural churches”.
The page says their 2018 resources will be available by 1st May.   This page shares their stories from 2017 covering examples of what churches did like:
– a Pet Service;
– a BBQ and treasure hunt round the churchyard, a prayer station in church, and ending with a celebratory service;
– Fun, Frogs and Bishops, a community outreach event with a bouncy castle, games, Open the Book displays, Messy Church crafts – and a bishop!  The church building hosted a teddy bears’ picnic, a bear hunt and a quiet cafe area.

AUGUST

1st (Wednesday) – Lammas –  What about a Lammas service the Sunday before?  Or a Bread Making event – Messy Church or one-off Adult Fresh Expression?  The following text may help prompt some other ideas as may Chelmsford Diocese’s Agricultural Festivals pack, (towards the foot of the page I’ve linked to), and its Lammas ideas.
Lammas or ‘Loaf-mass’ is an English feast in origin traditionally held on 1 August.  Now- a-days at others times also.
Its a thanksgiving for the first-fruits of the wheat harvest.  Traditionally, a newly baked loaf from the wheat harvest was presented before God within the mass of that day.
The Lammas loaf might be baked by members of the congregation, using local produce if possible. Other small loaves or buns, in the tradition of ‘blessed bread’, may be distributed to the congregation.
Part of the Lammas loaf might be used as the bread at a Holy Communion.

Sunday, 14 December 2014

the @OurCofE this week asked for @C_of_e typos in services – here’s a summary

ht @PeterWilcox 1564 via @paulbayes & see below for original tweet

The recent Guest tweeter at @OurCofE was @paulargooder - speaker and writer on the New Testament; Theologian in Residence for the Bible Society; co-author of Love Life Live Advent.

As she explained in a tweet - "Nudged by the excellent @FictionFox to enjoy my final 2 days of tweeting for @OurCofE" Paula requested people's favourite church typos.

I've pasted those I could find into a summary below and will add others as and when I can find them



  Allow me to start the bidding on best Church typos - on our wedding service my husband nearly put 'Deep his wisdom, padding thought'

 Read your Bible, pray every day, if you want to throw.'


 "Because there is none other that fightest against us but only Thou O God"

 Pres 2 Deacon "The Lord be in your heart and on your hips that you may worthily proclaim...




   wedding order of service had 'be still for the golly of the Lord'

 "there are varieties of gits but the same Spirit"


last line of "old rugged cross" - "and exchange it some day for a clown" at a funeral. Black biro used to fix




A colleague tells me of a dictated Order of Service: 'We commit these ashes to the elephants'




  I have pages of note from theological lecture on mission die. (Missio dei)


 MPrayer: say "...may the light of your presence, O God, set our farts on fire with love for you" once and you're lost.


 and of course there is Gladly, my cross-eyed bear


  2001 communion service: We prayed for those who are working among the poo.

 in deeper Reverend Sprays (last line, first verse of Dear Lord & Father of Mankind)


   'it easier for a camel to go through the knee of an idol'.

  My mother as a child imagined a large fruit in Heaven 'thine be the kingdom, the pear and the glory...'

 I've seen somewhere (can't think where) 'His first avowed intent to be a penguin'

 at my confirmation we sang "God in three parsons, blessed Trinity"

 Father, Son and Hoky Spirit (autocorrected to Hokey).


 I'm very much enjoying these C of E typos. Let me offer you 'The redeeming wok of God'.


 the three parsons of the Trinity


therevsteve There was once a reading from "Philistines" on the notice sheet when I was a curate...
 The Apostles' Greed

FictionFox  @FictionFox Someone's just told me this one: 'The meeting will be gin with prayer.



 'Jesus Chris is waiting' hurry up Jesus!

 · The groom now takes the bride's hind in his...


 · Liverpool core group rather enjoyed this (h/t ) >> ”
















  And there was a friend's wedding where we sang Thine be the Glory and declared 'death hath lost its string'!



 b2dac 'Our Father, who art in heaven, Harold is thy name

OurCofE 'On earth as it is in devon'



FictionFox accidental church spoonerisms also great fun. 'They shall mount up on ings like weagles.'


revgpp Once a funeral director printed Love Divine's lst vse - 'Finnish then thy new creation.'#scandinavian

PrayingAnglican my friend at college once said 'kneekly mealing'

HannahCleugh Favourite mis-speak in evensong "Endure thy ministers with righteousness"
ReverendAlly Last week we had 'Our Father, who rat in heaven' - led to interesting discussion about animal souls!


StPaulsForum pic.twitter.com/uXKDu2ZgBT

LosTheSkald we were encouraged at a baptism to 'reject Stan, and all his works, and all his empty promises'. Hope I never meet him

PhilipAStewart  spoken rather than in print - 'The angel went to her and said, “Greetings, you who are highly flavoured!" '


d1sc1ple In a wedding, from Shine Jesus shine - As we gaze on your kingly brightness, May our faces display your illness


Ally Barrett‏ @ReverendAlly In 'The King of love my shepherd is' - we had 'Thy unicorn grace bestoweth...'


David Newsome‏ @newsome_david Carol service typo: "Risen with heating in his wings"


PeteWilcox1564 Yep, I once typed 'Get thee behind me, Stan'. Horrible man.


OurChurchofEngland‏ @OurCofE one of the best typos I ever saw on a carol sheet was thus spake the seraph and forthwith appeared a shining thong'


Catherine Fox ‏@FictionFox 'Give his angels charge at last, in the file the tares to cast.'


Mike Haslam‏ @revmikehaslam 'Away in a manager' The dubious joys of spell check!


Maggie Swinson @MaggieSwinson I still think mine has to rank highly. 'A hymn is sung and the offerings of the people are collected and resented'



Raquelita‏ @raquelita_e  I saw '...yours is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever and ever. men.'   this yr. My friend whispered 'patriarchy!'



Michael Jones ‏@MichaelJone5   Not typo but as a lad it was some time before I realised that at the end of a reading we didn't say, "Thanks Peter God"



margaret johnson‏ @johnsonmahj our hope to follow Julie is in thy strength alone



Chris Upton ‏@Turkeyplucker From death's dead string thy servants free.



Andrew Graystone  The opening words of a service at our church last month were "Let's all close our minds..."


gittite  Has anyone yet mentioned 'let angels prostate fall'?


PeterNimmo1 If you're still on mis-speaks- lots of children in Scotland think the carol's called A Wean in a Manger


tall_rich I've seen several service sheets inviting me to Evensnog. Resultant services less fulfilling than promised.


StephCouvela in fairness to share one of my own, once in open prayer I thanked God from the heart of my bottom.


kkousseff
And one from our pew sheet yesterday - on Gaudete Sunday we tell jokes while waiting for God! pic.twitter.com/d0QreDHZma



markrusselluk
@FictionFox @OurCofE I have seen a PowerPoint where the preacher meant to describe the church as an organism... But got the wrong word!



and added afterwards from comments received .....



I once sang in the responses at evensong: 'that peach which the world cannot give'. (from Rowan)


When I was very small I thought the third person of the Trinity was the Harry Ghost. (from  Anne)