Join us for a special Mothering Sunday service on 31 March at 10:30 celebrating & remembering the wonderful women in our lives.
In days gone by Mothering Sunday became a day when domestic servants were given a day off to visit their mother church, usually with their own mothers and other family members. It was often the only time that whole families could gather together, since on other days they were prevented from doing so by conflicting working hours.
Children and young people who were “in service” (as household servants) were given a day off on that date so they could visit their families (or, originally, return to their “mother” church). The children would pick wild flowers along the way to place in the church or give to their mothers.
Celebrating Women’s Ministry
An event to mark the 25th anniversary of the ordination of women. It is also the 50th anniversary of the first female Readers licensed this year, and both will be part of the celebration.
The event will take place on Saturday, 18 May at 2.30pm in Doncaster Minster. The guest speaker is The Ven Joanne Grenfell, Archdeacon of Portsmouth (and former Dean of Women’s Ministry in Sheffield Diocese). How is ministry richer for everyone due to the presence of women in the priesthood? What difference has a generation of women made in ministry? It is a celebration of all that women have brought to ministry, and continue to bring.
The event is open to everyone and anyone!
Bookings for the event are being taken through Eventbrite CLICK TO BOOK
There will be refreshments available following the service.
Those wishing to robe should wear cassock, surplice and white stole or blue Reader’s scarf. Robing is optional!
The Bishop of Sheffield’s Annual Lecture 2019
Bishop Pete Wilcox
“Imagining the Good News: Inhabiting and commending the beauty of the Christian Faith through storytelling and poetry.”
The Bishop of Sheffield’s Annual Lecture 2019
Our Lent project this year is United World Schools.
This charity is dedicated to improving lives of some of the world’s poorest children through education. They work in Nepal, Cambodia and Myanmar, partnering with local communities to build schools and provide teachers especially in isolated districts
We are invited to collect our change to be presented on Easter Day. Please take a receptacle from church.
https://www.unitedworldschools.org/


It is now three months since I addressed the last Diocesan Synod. In my presidential address on 24 November 2018, I spoke about the four-headed beast threatening our diocese, something that I think we are all familiar with now. Just in case you need a reminder, the four-headed beast is:
Attendance trends: numbers are still falling, or at best are barely holding their own
Significant financial challenges across most parishes and for the Diocesan Board of Finance: budgets are in deficit
In many places church structures (buildings, rules and compliance regulations) are not what we would choose
The demographics of our congregations are imbalanced and we depend too heavily on our older members
My address in November focussed on B for budgets. With the Diocesan budget for 2019 needing approval, this head was snarling most ferociously. You can watch my full presidential address online at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2fqLAki-n0.
A Task and Finish group commissioned by the Bishop’s Council has been meeting on average every two weeks since October 2018. It has been wrestling with the fact that, while at the end of 2018 we had 103 stipendiary incumbents in the Diocese of Sheffield, in fact (were it not for the sale of three properties), we could afford only 90 this year. But what is especially challenging for the Bishop’s Council is the knowledge that we cannot be certain of our capacity to maintain income levels. For this reason, the Task and Finish group is working on a plan for the deployment of our stipendiary clergy which assumes only 75 stipendiary incumbents and a drop from 12 to 6 deaneries. I am personally visiting every deanery in the first 6 months of this year, with other members of the senior staff team, to explain this situation and to invite comments and questions. I have so far been to Adwick le Street, Ecclesfield and Rotherham, with visits to Wath, Tankersley, and Snaith & Hatfield scheduled before Easter.
The group also commissioned a review of Church House, to ensure that, in light of the new strategy, our central function is well-placed to deliver. This review is now complete and its findings will be incorporated into the proposals now under consideration. From this point, the anticipated timeline is as follows:
By March 2019, the task and finish group will present a mature model for the deployment of fewer clergy (likely 75) to the Bishop’s Council (12th) and Diocesan Synod (23rd).
Assuming no substantial amendments are demanded from Council and Synod, we hope this model can then be circulated between Easter and June for consultation with PCCs, with a request for responses by July 5th, to inform Diocesan Synod on
July 13th
This proposal will then be worked up into an implementation plan, to be published in the autumn, for implementation to begin in 2020 — I hope the new plan will be adopted by Diocesan Synod in November this year.
Whatever the final form of the agreed proposal, the transition from where we are to where we want to be will not take place overnight. There will be no sudden drop in the number of stipendiary clergy. In fact, we will have to inch our way towards a new model. Progress will be slower than we would like and will be more expensive too, because of the nature of the common tenure and freehold protection which stipendiary clergy enjoy. This is probably a good thing, in God’s providence: it will prevent us from rushing into anything. We will continue to offer updates on this through a number of outlets as the weeks progress.
Meanwhile, let me reaffirm my sense of God’s providence here: although it is true that we are having to respond to financial pressures, the real impetus is, I am convinced, coming from the Holy Spirit. We are being called by God to be renewed in our
dependence on his grace and power, to be released as the baptised people of God into the whole mission of God, and to be rejuvenated so that we can serve every local community across the Diocese more vigorously and effectively. We are being called to a renewal of our dedication to the Lord Jesus and to one another in his service, and to recover the sense of mission which is at the heart of God’s Church. Those of us who have been called to ordained ministries are being thrown back upon the One who has called us. At our ordination as Deacons and / or Priests we were reminded:
The Church is the Body of Christ, the people of God and the dwelling-place of the Holy Spirit. In baptism the whole Church is summoned to witness to God’s love and to work for the coming of his kingdom. To serve this royal priesthood, God has given a variety of ministries. Deacons are ordained so that the people of God may be better equipped to make Christ known. Priests… share with the Bishop in the oversight of the Church, delighting in its beauty and rejoicing in its well-being… With the Bishop and their fellow presbyters, they are to sustain the community of the faithful by the ministry of word and sacrament, that we all may grow into the fullness of Christ and be a living sacrifice acceptable to God.
I am confident that, in God’s grace, this process will enable all of us, lay and ordained, to fulfil our callings more fully, so that the Church of God in the Diocese of Sheffield can fulfil its vocation more fully too.
+ Pete
Posted by Bishop Pete on 26th February 2019
Dear Friends,
As you are probably aware an appeal was launched several months ago to undertake some significant repairs to the tower at St Mary’s church which I’m pleased to report should be undertaken during the course of 2019. We are eternally gratefully for everyone who has and continues to support our appeal.
We now see this as an opportune time to consider how we may be able to reorder some of the internal parts of our church building in ways to make it a major centre for the day to day life of Tickhill, where people can gather to enjoy activities which are perhaps presently not available elsewhere. The vision is that St. Mary’s church is inclusive to everyone, regular churchgoers or not, and still keeping its integrity as being a central place of Christian worship and witness in the community, this being our parish church.
Churches are being encouraged to develop their use as a sustainable community resource and St. Mary’s wishes to move in this direction to actively play our part in fulfilling the needs of today’s people and for the generations that follow. It would be great if you could help us with this important and exciting work.
In working towards this goal, we would love to hear what facilities you think we might be able to provide to make this wonderful medieval building a welcoming place to the whole community.
Please come along to a very informal gathering to be held in church on Saturday 06 April at 2.00 p.m. when we would very much look forward to seeing you and hear your views, all of which are important to us. Please put this date in your diary and I look forward to seeing you there.
Every blessing
Revd Ali

The end of the internal work on the tower is at last in sight. We now have to think about cleaning the church after it. Could you please spare some time between 9:00 am and 12:00 noon on Thursday 11 April and/or Friday 12th April.
We are looking for budding Mrs Hinchs (or Mr Hinchs) so that between us we can sweep, vacuum and dust all areas of the church following the work, and in time for Easter?
These occasions usually turn out to be quite enjoyable! As always, refreshments will be provided
Thank you
Hazel Horrigan
Cleaning Co-ordinator





