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Neighbourhood News for Carleton

Neighbourhood News for Carleton

Yahoo30-01-2025

St Mary's services: each Sunday at 11.15am. 3rd and 5th Sunday – Bread, Wine & Worship. 2nd & 4th Sunday – Parish Communion. 1st Sunday of each month: 8am Book of Common Prayer Communion.
St Mary's 'Coffee Pot' is open each Friday from 2pm – 4pm.

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Safeguarding courses for flower arrangers? The Church of England is heading for oblivion
Safeguarding courses for flower arrangers? The Church of England is heading for oblivion

Yahoo

time28-03-2025

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Safeguarding courses for flower arrangers? The Church of England is heading for oblivion

It's a church that dates back to the 12th century. St Andrews, handsomely cast in limestone and rebuilt in the 14th century, stands proud in the village of Pickworth in Lincolnshire. And it's like so many churches across the country; centres of the community, which, for centuries, have gathered folk to rejoice, mourn, pray and sing among the wooden pew seats. At least, that was until recent decades when the presiding Church of England set itself on a path to empty its churches rather than fill them. In its bid to modernise, to become relevant, most churches have dispensed with those nice old prayer books, bound in black, that you often find on shelves by a church's entrance. The 1662 Book of Common Prayer which, along with Latin, has influenced and merrily tortured generations of children, can now mostly be found gathering dust in secondhand bookshops. And in its place are bits of paper, hastily printed, distributed and invariably blown by a gust of wind when the big door opens, fluttering like a wandering angel over the altar. Then there are the nice old vicars, now kicked out at the age of 70 (which was the new 60 when I last looked), who – with no leader in the midst – see further dwindling of congregations. And there's the enforced secular informality, which to me removes the charming mystery of religion, its poetry and its charming obscurity. When the machinations of church are made as obvious as the rules of a Saturday night TV gameshow, it becomes less, rather than more, appealing. For isn't the very challenge of church stimulating, my view being that to earn your pre-Sunday lunch sherry, you need to sit through a sermon. Which is especially the case on Christmas Day; no pressies in our house 'til you've done church. And now, I hear – from the charming village of Pickworth – there's a more dreaded axe falling on parishioners. 'I was approached about becoming a church warden for my church,' a local tells me, 'something I thought might be worth doing for my community.' Church wardens help to organise services, care for the buildings, support the priest and are often the first faces you see on entering a church, welcoming one in, handing out those bits of paper. There's a shortage across the country of such volunteers and without them a church literally cannot function. Without them a church might have to close. But, my correspondent tells me, 'having expressed strong interest I was privately told, 'It's not worth getting involved.'' And why? You might ask. Safeguarding, of course, specifically the courses all volunteers are now expected, nay must, attend, online or otherwise. 'I was immediately put off,' the villager tells me. 'One course I was told I needed to take catered for safeguarding in care homes, which I couldn't fathom as being either relevant or appropriate for a church warden role.' He then added what seemed a final hammer blow: 'It seems flower arrangers have to do it too.' And, indeed, Church of England policy is now that all such volunteers must undergo safeguarding training. For which there is, of course, an online learning portal. So, not so fast Grandma, with your secateurs and cuttings, your vases and your Oasis floral foams. Before you tackle the old front door with its dodgy, clanking bolts, you need to get yourself in front of a computer, then wail that familiar cry for help as you look about you for that username and password. The Church of England's National Safeguarding Team tells those steeling themselves for the course that: 'The resources and training you can access here will equip you and your church to engage positively with the protection of children, young people and vulnerable adults in both a practical and theologically informed way.' Now, of course, these learning portals are being brandished in the faces of well-intentioned country folk following safeguarding scandals, specifically that involving the prolific child abuser John Smyth, a barrister who ran Christian summer camps in the 1970s and 1980s and who committed physical, psychological and sexual abuse against more than 100 boys and young men. A scandal that, following a report published last November, saw the resignation of Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury. But as an ancient prep-school headmaster thrashes the entire school as retribution for a single misdemeanour, so the Church of England relishes its chance to wield power, abandon common sense and set in a metaphorical stone tablet an eleventh commandment even: 'Before thou ironest the altar cloth or polisheth the silver, thou shalt complete an online safeguarding course.' So flower arrangers and church wardens pay the price with these ludicrous demands to undergo courses which, believe me, will simply – as with my correspondent from Lincolnshire – dissuade them from such honourable efforts. And, doubtless, if an abuser wants to inveigle their way into a church, they'll master the online portal anyway. These barriers will only ever stop the innocent. While recent figures show an increase in Church of England attendance following Covid, the general trend is sadly of decline (falling from around one million in 1990 to 693,000 in 2023). And, free of flowers, of friendly welcomes, church attendance will dwindle further. While modern priests, attempting to entice a new generation, proffer a guitar at the entrance, advertise 'messy church' and treat congregations like school assembly or a Christmas panto ('How are we all? I can't hear you. Once more with feeling!'), the actual congregation cringes, yearning for some good old-fashioned high church matins, a sermon brimful of complex theology, a Nunc dimittis, some psalms to struggle through and a good hymn as reward. Meanwhile, the humble volunteers are shown not the path through the church yard but an internet portal. The only get-out clause being they can't access the internet anyway as the Lincolnshire district of South Kesteven has some of the slowest broadband speeds in the country. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Search for relics using radar inside the walls of a historic Reading church yields promising results
Search for relics using radar inside the walls of a historic Reading church yields promising results

Yahoo

time17-12-2024

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Search for relics using radar inside the walls of a historic Reading church yields promising results

The search for relics inside the walls of a historic Reading church has all the earmarks of an Indiana Jones adventure. And there was an edge-of-the-seat excitement Monday afternoon when work crews used a radar device to scan the red sandstone exterior of Christ Episcopal Church at Fifth and Court streets. What church officials had hoped to discover was the location of a time capsule that was embedded into the wall of the church during a rededication service in 1863 that could become a centerpiece of the church's bicentennial celebration in 2026. When Ken M. Saul Jr. of Restoration Artisans LLC of Kutztown was doing exterior restoration work in 2021, he found an anomaly in the front wall of the church. 'While we were doing the work, I noticed these stones were in a really unusual pattern,' he said. Cliff Buckwalter, a member of the church property committee, had recalled an old newspaper clipping from the 1863 rededication service of the church, and they both wondered whether a time capsule could be located within that wall. The image from the ground-penetrating radar system shows a metallic object in the wall of Christ Episcopal Church at Fifth and Court streets. (BILL UHRICH – READING EAGLE) A Reading Times story from Sept. 8, 1863, tells of the fate of the first time capsule that was constructed of tin and found inside the original 1826 cornerstone of the church when it was removed for the reconstruction. All that remained were a few coins with 'the other contents having mouldered away.' For the newer time capsule, the article states that the original coins were carefully placed back in with the addition of other coins reflecting the 1863 date along with a copy of the Holy Bible and the Book of Common Prayer. Other items enclosed included 'a sheet of parchment specially prepared, with a red and black border beaded — 'Christ Church, Reading, Pennsylvania, 1863' in beautifully engraved German text.' The rest of the parchment bears the names of the church officials, the architects and builders. Rounding out the contents were newspapers that included a history of the church and various other ephemera on the government of the state and the city along with the by-laws of the church. In hopes of better preserving the contents, the article notes, 'The whole was enclosed in a box manufactured of copper, and hermetically sealed.' How well the copper box preserved the contents will be seen when the box is removed and opened in time for the church's bicentennial celebration scheduled for May 10, 2026. For Andrew Machemer of Ground Penetrating Radar Systems in Aston, Delaware County, this was the first time he used the radar to find an object like this embedded in a wall. He usually works with utility and construction companies to locate pipelines and other underground utilities. 'I can't tell you exactly, but we've got good evidence that suggests there's some type of metallic object inside,' he said after scanning various parts of the wall. 'The fact that we don't have any rebar in the wall that we know of would indicate that we do have an object inside the wall.' For Saul, the findings give him a good place to start to excavate in the wall. The readings indicate that there's a 4-inch slab of stone behind which is the box that the radar estimates at around 6 by 10 inches, he said. Andrew Machemer of Ground Penetrating Radar Systems, right, shows the results of his scans to Cliff Buckwalter, a member of the Christ Episcopal Church's property committee. The image from the ground penetrating radar system shows a metallic object in the wall of Christ Episcopal Church at Fifth and Court streets. (BILL UHRICH – READING EAGLE) The Rev. Bryce Wandrey, rector of the church, is looking forward with the congregation to the bicentennial and to the revealing of the contents of the box. 'It will be a celebration not only of our past, but propelling us even more into our future and being a better resource to downtown Reading,' he said as he watched Machemer operate the radar. Wandrey said the congregation has been energized by the current restoration efforts in the church and will be carrying that energy through to the bicentennial. 'I know they're excited to put together a time capsule now,' he said, 'so in 2226 somebody can open it up and go, what was going on in 2026?' The Reading Times story reflects the unease of the city and the congregation as the nation was in the midst of the Civil War, but the placement of the copper box within the walls had offered a sense of renewed hope. 'Such were the historic records deposited,' the article concludes, 'connecting the past and present, reminiscences of the structure so appropriated to the service of Him, who dwelleth in a temple not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.'

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