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ST MARY’S CHURCH

Diocesan Update – February 2020

Dear Friends
‘Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom’.
Luke 12.32

This is a time of considerable anxiety in the Diocese, as we feel our way into an uncertain future.  I want you to know that I am not immune from that anxiety – but that I am drawing comfort from these words of Jesus, spoken to his disciples as they too felt their way into an uncertain future. Of course, the kingdom of which Jesus was speaking is not the same as the institution of the Church  of England and offers no guarantee as to the future shape of the Church of England. But I find these words an encouragement nevertheless and I hope you might too. I take heart from the summons not to be afraid, from the reminder that we are the Lord’s own ‘little flock’ and from the
knowledge that the Father’s good pleasure is assured.

In that spirit, I am writing to bring you all up to date with developments in the Diocese with regard to the future deployment of stipendiary clergy posts. I intend to write an Ad Clerum on this subject once a month for the next six months, in the first week of each month, as one reliable channel of communication — even if sometimes there will be little to report.

In December I forwarded a briefing document I had prepared for Bishop’s Council and Diocesan Synod. This letter is an attempt to summarise developments since that paper was circulated.

However, I want to begin by setting our challenges in context. It is important for everyone to understand that the challenges we are addressing are a) not new ones to Sheffield and b) not local to Sheffield.

The challenges are not new to Sheffield. Over Christmas and the New Year, as some of you know, I was reading a document published in November 1998, called ‘The Diocesan Strategy, 1999-2004: A Consultative Document’. It states, baldly, that ‘We do not in fact believe that our current patterns of church life and ministry are sustainable as they stand in an area such as ours’. It goes on to explain that ‘the parish system now faces urgent pressures deriving mainly from the problem of insufficient resources especially to pay clergy stipends. It is a known fact that the numbers of clergy are being reduced in this diocese. We shall be required to lose 5 posts per year over a period of 5 years (ie 25 in total)’. It concludes ‘We cannot expect the remaining clergy to absorb the additional workload’. It is my own view that this is in fact exactly what has happened in this Diocese over the past 20 years since the publication of that report — and that our structures are now at breaking point as a result. Many of you were part of this journey even then, and you know better than I do that there is at least a 20 year history to the challenges we are now having to address.

But in the last 15 months, since I laid out the issue in my Presidential Address to Synod in November 2018, it has become clear that the challenges are not local to Sheffield either. If you have access to the internet, you might like to look at the ‘People and Places’ programme in the Diocese of Birmingham; or at the consultation paper now published on the website of the Diocese of Manchester. The national church is so acutely aware that the challenges we are facing are general to the northern, urban, post-industrial, post Victorian dioceses that the Church Commissioners announced to General Synod in July a new £45m Diocesan Sustainability Fund, to enable Dioceses like ours to re-structure to achieve full genuine sustainability, in the present triennium (2020-2022).

It was suggested to our senior staff team this week that the Diocese of Sheffield finds itself in the prow of the good ship Church of England. To change the image, we will be among the Dioceses pioneering a path which others will then follow.

In that context, where have we got to? What have been the chief developments since I circulated that briefing paper last autumn and what will happen next?

1. Towards the end of last year, after an extensive consultation in which many of you engaged, the senior staff team agreed a model which assumes (and secures) a total of 77 stipendiary ‘oversight minister’ posts in the Diocese to 2025, and draft proposals for the way we expect to allocate these stipendiary posts in each pair of twinned deaneries (Snaith and Hatfield with Adwick le Street; Wath with Tankersley; Doncaster with West Doncaster; Rotherham with Laughton; Attercliffe with Ecclesall; Ecclesfield with Hallam). The question is simply how we can deploy reduced resources more fruitfully for the sake of the Gospel and of God’s coming kingdom, seeking to follow Jesus in the power of the Spirit to the glory of the Father.

2. In January, a series of meetings were held between Area Deans and Lay Chairs from each pair of ‘twinned Deaneries’ and members of the Parish Support Team, with maps, to look at how these indicative allocations of stipendiary posts might be deployed on the ground. I am told that these meetings were consistently constructive and encouraging. I am grateful to those involved for the spirit in which they have engaged with this process and embraced the journey ahead.

3. There now follows a two month period (ie February and March), in which we are asking Area Deans and Deanery Lay Chairs to facilitate local consultation in each pair of deaneries, sharing these provisional plans and draft maps with the respective Deanery Mission & Pastoral Committees, Chapters, Deanery Synods and PCCs, to gather responses to both the proposed ‘mission areas’ and the proposed deployment of stipendiary oversight ministers.

4. As most of you will be aware, we are expecting that, locally, congregations are led more and more by volunteer lay leaders (called focal ministers). We are aware of the concern many have voiced, that in many situations these focal ministers may prove hard to find: it is a concern we share — though we are much encouraged by the first pilot projects we have been trialing.

5. The draft maps and indicative deployments have been carefully considered by PST, Archdeacons, Area Deans and Lay Chairs, but they are by no means cast in stone at this point. The consultation is genuinely open to alternative suggestions about how we could respond more fruitfully to local missional opportunities with the resources we have available. However, the ‘ceiling’ of 77 posts will only rise as and when additional funding for stipends is secure.

6. By the end of March, we have asked Area Deans and Lay Chairs to negotiate with their respective Archdeacons to take into account possible amendments raised during this consultation period. Then in April and May, the senior staff will then finalise these plans, with a view to taking them to the Diocesan Mission and Pastoral Committee in May.

7. However, as I have been at pains to emphasise repeatedly, there is no ‘guillotine’ date at which we will suddenly transition to a new model. We are on a journey. It is as a matter of fact a journey which has been underway for about 30 years, since the late 1980s, when there were 164 stipendiary incumbents in this Diocese.

8. At the time of writing, there are still 91.5 DBF-funded stipendiary incumbents in our Diocese. There is no date at which this number will be suddenly reduced to 77. For the rest of 2020 and into 2021 and beyond, we will continue to inch our way to the indicative model agreed next May, although along an unwavering direction of travel: ‘to grow a sustainable network of Christ-like, lively and diverse Christian communities in every place which are effective in making disciples and in seeking to transform our society and God’s world’.

9. My senior staff colleagues and I want to recognise how stressful and difficult this process is proving — for lay people and clergy alike: for church wardens (especially in the increased numbers of parishes in vacancy); for licensed and authorised lay leaders; for self-supporting clergy; for curates; for interim ministers; for stipendiary incumbents. We are seeking to do everything we can to minimise uncertainty, by communicating clearly, consistently and frequently.

10. We will make mistakes, I’m afraid, and we will try your patience. But we ask for your forbearance: no Diocese has completed this transition before, so there is no precedent for us to follow. That fact also accounts for the extent to which you will understandably feel goal posts are moving and deadlines slipping. They are, though we are working hard to minimise these too.

11. In particular, my senior staff colleagues and I want to recognise that it is bound to seem (in the short term) to lay people and clergy alike that you are being asked to produce more with less: like the Israelite slaves in bondage to Pharaoh, asked to keep up the brick quota only now without straw (Exodus 5). This is detrimental, not least, to the wellbeing of all concerned.

12. We know this and we are working hard to address it. In particular, we are determined that those who take up posts as stipendiary Oversight Ministers will find them designed to be ‘do-able’ in a healthy number of working hours per week: duties and expectations will be defined and agreed by PCCs, clergy and the senior staff so that we do not repeat the mistake of the past decades by simply spreading the residual number of stipendiary incumbents more thinly.

13. The goal is not oppression but liberation — this is the point of our strategy: renewed, released, rejuvenated! Our aim is to mobilise the whole people of God for the whole mission of God. The primary measure of this will be our ‘Lights for Christ’ initiative: we are seeking to enable all the baptised to enter into the full dignity of their baptismal vocation to shine as lights for Christ in the world, by the power of the Spirit, to the glory of God the Father.

14. We are working closely with colleagues from the national church to ensure that a bid to the Diocesan Sustainability Fund will provide some additional resources to enable this ‘release’: providing buildings and operations support at parish level for example. We are currently exploring with the Church Commissioners a proposal to submit a phase 1 bid quite soon, with a fully fledged phase 2 towards the end of this year. This would make us the first beneficiaries of the new fund — although it is important to note that this is new territory for the Church Commissioners too and the process is therefore uncertain!

15. Meanwhile, I am heartened to have completed a round of appointments to the vacant posts on my senior staff team. Following the exciting appointment of Canon Sophie Jelley, announced in December, we have now been successful in making equally encouraging appointments to the posts of Archdeacon of Doncaster and Diocesan Secretary (CEO of the DBF). Announcements about those
appointments will follow in the coming days. Meanwhile, you are all invited to the consecration of Canon Sophie at York Minster on the Feast of the Annunciation (Wednesday 25 March) at 11am and to her installation in Sheffield Cathedral on Saturday 28th March at 2pm.

16. Finally, thank you to all of you who are praying each day the Diocesan Vision Prayer. The Lord will hear us and bless us.

Living God, Jesus calls his followers to seek first your kingdom.
Renew us, as we make your love known.
Release us, to share freely together in mission; and Rejuvenate us, to be fruitful in your service.
Give us courage, wisdom and compassion
that strengthened with the grace of the Holy Spirit
we may, as the Diocese of Sheffield, both flourish and grow through Christ our Lord.

Nothing in this Ad Clerum is confidential, though obviously much of it is sensitive: do please therefore feel free to share any or all of it with your PCC0(s), or with your congregation(s) more widely.

I am grateful for the assurance many of you have given me of your prayers during this period of  challenge and change. I am seeking to serve you in the Spirit of Jesus, to the best of my ability, and I know my senior colleagues would say the same.
With every blessing in Christ

Dr Pete Wilcox
Bishop of Sheffield

WEEK OF PRAYER FOR CHRISTIAN UNITY

The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity will take place from 18 – 25 January 2020.

This is an annual initiative whereby Christian communities throughout the world are invited to pray for one another and for greater Christian Unity.

The theme for 2020 is “They showed an unusual kindness”, which finds its origins in Acts 27:18 – 28:10.

The annual Unity Supper shared with other Christian churches in Tickhill is on Tuesday 21st January in the Methodist School Room

Tickets cost £8:00 and are available now from Elaine Millard

GIFT SERVICE

Christmas Gift Service

Sunday 15th December, 10:30 am

(gifts are also gratefully received at the 8am and 6pm services on that day).

For our Christmas appeal for gifts for children in need, please bring wrapped Christmas gifts for children in need suitable for ages ranging from baby to teenager, for local distribution by the Salvation Army and Families First.

Please indicate on a label attached to the wrapping, whether the gift is suitable for a boy or a girl or both and also indicate for what age range the gift is intended.

Thank you for making a difference for these children at Christmas

BRITISH FORCES IN SOUTH SUDAN APPEAL

300 British Troops are about to be deployed in South Sudan, one of the most dangerous areas of the world today.
They will be working with the UN, repairing infrastructure, delivering aid to and protecting civilians.

What can YOU do to help them?

Find an empty shoe box and fill it with things that will bring a touch of home and comfort to the men/women serving in these dangerous conditions.

The Gideons have provided a Bible to include in each box. These have been produced specially for the task force and are really beautiful. They are in a box at the back of church, please take one for your box. They are quite small and weigh only 135g.

Welcome items include:

  • Shower gel…the top must be sealed with sellotape so that it can`t be tampered with.
  • Packets of biscuits, no chocolate as it would melt
  • Cereal bars
  • Packets of sweets ie Haribo
  • Crossword books
Items that cannot be included:
  • Aerosols

Please overwrap in brown paper

THE TOTAL WEIGHT, INCLUDING THE BOX CAN BE NO MORE THAT 2 KG.
The boxes will be sent via BFPO (British Forces Post Office), this is free post up to 2 Kg.

Boxes can be left at Tickhill Library for collection, labelling and posting.

To find out more about the work being carried out by UNMISS and the British Forces in South Sudan please follow the link

FESTIVE FAYRE

St. Mary’s Church will be holding its Festive Fayre this coming Saturday between 10am and 12pm in the Tickhill Scout and Guide Headquarters.

Please come and join us for Fun and Seasonal Refreshments. We will have Christmas Cards, Cakes, Chocolates, Novelty Biscuits, Books, a Bottle Stall, Tombola, Raffle and Games.

Funds raised will help with the work of the Church at home and abroad.

FESTIVAL OF LIGHT

Saturday 2nd November at 4:30pm

We will be holding a “Festival of Light” in church on Saturday 2nd November at 4:30pm. Please come and experience St. Mary’s in a different light.

It will be a time for quiet reflection, for lighting a candle and a chance to meet others.

All are welcome

St. Helen's Chapel at night

BIBLE STUDY

October 2019 – Pilgrim Course

Our Readers will be leading another Bible Study series from the Pilgrim Course on four Thursdays in October in the Parish Room.

Pilgrim Course 7: The Bible as: “Living Water”, “Lamp”, “Sword”, “Daily Bread”.

The style will be informal – please come and share your questions, insights and wisdom. The sessions stand on their own, so please come to whatever sessions you are able.

The Pilgrim booklets will be supplied. If you wish to have a copy in advance of the first meeting please contact John Hosker at back of church or on 751132. We will be using sessions, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the booklet

These events will take place on 10th, 17th, 24th and 31st October (7:30 pm for about an hour)

Refreshments provided at the start.

Pilgrim Course

 

A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF ENGLISH PARISH CHURCHES

WEDNESDAY 9th OCTOBER @ 7:30 pm

John Hoare will be giving an illustrated talk on “A Pictorial History of English Parish Churches” in the Parish Room. This is seen through the eyes of the Churches Conservation Trust and promises to be a fantastic evening.

Tickets cost £5:00.

Please buy in advance as accommodation is limited

HARVEST SERVICE

Sunday 29th September 2019 @10:30

St. Mary’s will hold it’s 2019 Harvest Service at 10:30am on Sunday 29th September.

We would really appreciate any donations of non-perishable foodstuffs for Doncaster Foodbank, such as tinned food, tinned fruit, tinned meat, biscuits, etc.  These can be left at the back of the church before the service.

We would also welcome you to join us afterwards for a bring and share lunch

 

 

HARVEST PROJECT

Harvest Project 2019

At St. Mary’s our harvest project this year is to support Wateraid.

We would be very grateful if you could please save your small change and bring it to church any Sunday in September. Our final collection will be at the Harvest Service on Sunday 29th September

Please take some time to see the fantastic work they do www.wateraid.org

RECITAL AND LATE SUMMER DESSERTS

Monday 9th September

Following the tremendous success of the “Recital and Summer Desserts” St. Mary’s will now be holding a “Recital and Late Summer Desserts” on Monday 9th September starting at 7pm in aid of the Tower Appeal.

This will be another fantastic opportunity to enjoy the acoustics under the tower. It will feature Hannah Webb on Saxophone, Marianne Hofman on Flute and Charlotte Cummings on Violin.

Tickets are £5 and can be purchased on the night or by contacting John Marsden on 744142

TICKHILL OPEN GARDENS

Sunday 14th July 2019

12pm and 5pm

Why not take an opportunity to see some of the fantastic gardens in Tickhill. For a combined admission of £4 (Children free) you can see seven amazing gardens.

Tickets are available in advance from the Castlegate card shop or on the day from inside St. Mary’s or at the gardens.

Refreshments will also be available at St. Mary’s Church

The gardens are

14 Westgate – Hilary Shields

An old fashioned Walled garden with Herbs

 10 Westgate – Michelle and Jason Long

(Access from the side of No. 6 Church Lane)

Combines elements of a walled kitchen garden with contemporary outdoor living

 10 Church Lane – Pat and Paul Stephenson

A Patio garden full of pots

8 Church Lane – Debbie and Paul Jackson

A newly-planted modern family garden

7 Church Lane – Sue and Joe green, Lorna, Richard, Alice and Samuel

A cottage garden with stone walls

21 St. Mary’s Gate – Eluned and Geoff Foulds

A cottage garden with vegetable patch

27 Sunderland Street – John Marsden

A garden for wildlife

CHRISTMAS TREE FESTIVAL – MEETING

St. Mary’s would like to thank all the Societies and Clubs that have responded to our letters in regards to this year’s Christmas Tree Festival.
 
We are holding meetings on Monday 1st July and Thursday 4th July at 7 pm in St. Luke’s Chapel, to provide you with further information about the organisation and plans for the event. We would like to invite a representative of your group to come to and meet with us on either of these evenings.
 
Our Committee look forward to seeing you

RECITAL AND SUMMER DESSERTS

Monday 1st July at 7pm

St. Mary’s are holding a “Recital and Summer Desserts” evening on Monday 1st July starting at 7pm in aid of the Tower Appeal.

This will be a fantastic opportunity to enjoy the acoustic under the tower.

We will have Clarinet, Saxophone, Voice and Hand-Bells.

Tickets are £5 and can be purchased by contacting John Marsden on 744142

PET CELEBRATION SERVICE

Let your pet bring you to a ….

Pet Celebration Service

3 pm Sunday 30th June

St Mary’s Church, Tickhill

“I call you by your name”

 For pets of all types, and owners of all ages
 For pets large and small
 Celebrate how our pets enrich our lives
 Remember past pets (bring photo)
 Informal service lasting around 40 minutes
 Bring your pets on a lead or in a cage/crate/container/bowl so they can all get on with each other
 Procession and blessing of the animals
 Come and share in giving thanks for how our pets make us happier and healthier

DEPUTY CHURCH WARDEN

Parish Churches now have just the two churchwardens. As our long tradition of three wardens comes to an end, the P.C.C. is keen to explore the position of a Deputy position. To enable a wider understanding of the role of a churchwarden the following is an extract from the recent “Visitation” Service.

The Office of Churchwarden is an ancient and honourable office in the life of the Church and nation. The Churchwardens are the Bishop’s lay officers in the parish, responsible directly to him for the life and work of the Church within the community. They are admitted to their office by the Archdeacon (on behalf of the Bishop) to whom they are particularly responsible for the care of the church building, its fabric and its contents. The Churchwardens are called to cooperate with the incumbent and the Parochial Church Council in the pastoral, evangelistic, financial and worshipping life of the parish church. They should bring to the attention of the Bishop such matters as come to their knowledge affecting the life of the Church and congregation for which they are responsible.

During an Interregnum the Wardens are responsible for the organisation and running of the Parish.

If you feel drawn towards thinking about the role of Deputy warden with a view to supporting and shadowing the current wardens, please have a word with them or the Vicar.

SUMMER FAIR

Saturday 22nd June 2019

St. Mary’s Church – Tickhill

Please come and join us for an afternoon of Family fun

Starting at 2pm.

Stalls, Raffles

Refreshments

Competitions

Children’s Games

 

This is an all weather event

ANNUAL PAROCHIAL CHURCH MEETING RESULTS

Following the APCM and Vestry Meetings held on 29 April 2019, the following were appointed for the ensuing year.

Churchwardens:

Eluned Foulds, John Marsden

PCC Members:

Phil Beavers, Peter Chappell, David Horrigan, Ha­zel Horrigan, Elaine Millard, David Morley, Liz Rennison, Vickie Shirt, Phil Thom­as, Ian Wilson, Stephanie Wilson, Nigel Wright

Ex Officio PCC Members

Revd Alison Earl, Margaret Culloden, John Hoare, Jenny Hosker, Noreen Sweed