Monthly Archives: September 2020

Billingsley Church – October events

Friday 2nd October

5.00pm 100 Club Draw

On the green at Lincoln Fields. Another £100 in prizes to be won, (if you have bought a ticket…)

 

Sunday 11th October

6.00pm; Remembering World War 2

To mark the 80th anniversary of the ending of the Second World War and to give thanks for the sacrifice of those who took part, we hear words of those who took part, music and reflections

 

Sunday 25th October

8.00am Billingsley Church: Holy Communion

 

David Poyner, assistant curate, Severn Valley Benefice.   Tel 01562 68638, email D.R.Poyner@aston.ac.uk

Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/BillingsleyChurch/  or our websites, www.st-marys-billingsley.org.uk ,  https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/10415/  (Billingsley) https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/10533/ (Glazeley)

Zoom events for week beginning 28th September

Dear All,

Details of events this coming week are below: all are welcome! Please pass these invitations on to anyone who you think might be interested.

1) Wednesday evening catch-up

Sept 16th, 2020 07:00 PM London

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

2) Friday Morning Prayer, 9.00am

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

3) Friday night prayer

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

 

 

 

 

 

Thought for the week 28th September – New Day, New Beginning

For me, this has been a busy week. I work at Aston University, on Monday the new term starts and our students have been arriving over the past few days. On Friday I met my new tutees; the students who have just arrived and for whom I will have pastoral responsibility over their time with us. Of course, this will be a year like no other, but some things were familiar. Every time I do this, I’m taken back to when I was a newly-arrived student, meeting my tutor for the very first time. That was now over forty years ago (!), but the memory remains fresh. The emotions are still vivid; a mixture of excitement, apprehension and uncertainty; perhaps really a dash of fear. I was now entering a new phase of my life; what would the future hold? And, so imperfectly over a computer screen, as I spoke with my new students and listened to their questions, I sensed at least some of them were having exactly the same emotions.

The truth is that every moment of our lives, we are facing the future. Often it is very predictable but we can never be sure what opportunities and challenges will face us. Occasionally we are particularly aware that we are moving to a new phase of our lives, but those moments only happen because of a host of decisions we have taken earlier and events that have happened to us.

As a vicar, I start my day by saying Morning Prayer, a short service available online (https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/join-us-service-daily-prayer) . I do it because it grounds me at the start of the day; it reminds me of who I am and what I should be. Almost at the start of this service are the words “The night has passed, and the day lies open before us; let us pray with one heart and mind.” I love that phrase; the first part reminds me that no matter how routine I expect the day to be, it has potential. The is double-edged, potential for things to go well or to go badly. That is where the second part comes in; whatever happens, I will face that day with God.

St Mary’s helps Mary’s Meals

Following the harvest festival service held on Sunday 13th September St Mary’s, Billingsley has made a donation, from the service collection, of £60 to the charity ‘Mary’s Meals’. This very worthwhile charity provides a healthy, balanced meal to thousands of children in deprived areas of the world each day. The meals are served at schools which not only assists the physical development and nourishment of the youngsters but also encourages regularly attendance at school which has long term benefits for future of the children, their families and the communities in which they live.

Here is the letter of thanks received from Mary’s Meal for our donation;

Dear Friends

Thank you so much for your donation of £60.00 to Mary’s Meals, which will be used to provide life-changing meals for children in their place of education.

Supporting our school feeding programmes is a great way of helping hungry children to learn and giving them the best chance of a future free from poverty.

The daily meals we provide are enabling thousands of children to attend school and work towards their dreams. Children such as 14-year-old Chimza Harry, who attends Mwalamba Primary School in Malawi.

Chimza – whose full name, Chimwemwe, means joy – lives at home with his mother Lucia and three siblings. The family ran out of food stores soon after last year’s harvest, having only managed to grow one bag of maize.

He said: “I feel weak in the mornings when I walk to school. I feel lethargic, but I am excited to go to school because I will eat here, and learn.”

Chimza is top of his class and has been every year since he started school.  However, as the eldest male living in the household, he feels duty-bound to help support the family and is adamant that he would not be at school if it weren’t for the phala (porridge).

“When I eat the phala I get the strength to eat, study, walk home, and work.”

“If there was no phala, I would have left school, because I know when I am hungry I cannot listen properly, I cannot learn. I would like to finish my education and become a doctor. I would like to help my people – the people around my village – to see a doctor in hospital faster.”

Chimza’s academic achievements show he is right to be ambitious. Thanks to your generosity, he and thousands more children have the chance to realise their dreams. On behalf of the 1,667,067 children who currently receive Mary’s Meals, I thank you from the bottom of my heart.

Yours sincerely,

Daniel Adams

Executive Director, Mary’s Meals UK

 

Above are a few photos that show the wonderful decorations and floral tributes that were organised by Mary and Ellen, we thank you both. The church looked splendid! All produce collected before and during the services was donated to Bridgnorth Food Bank to help those in need closer to home.

Take a look at the website of Mary’s Meal for more information about the work of the charity at https://www.marysmeals.org.uk/useful-links/about-marys-meals/

Thought for the week – 21st September – In praise of spontaneity

In praise of spontaneity

The day dawns fine and clear. Unexpectedly, there is a window in my diary; the expected work has not yet materialised. I have a day of freedom!

A few months ago, there were endless opportunities when this happened. I do recall some years ago when the trains were in chaos with the line to Birmingham likely to be blocked for hours. What happened immediately after the “abandon hope all ye who enter here” announcement on the station is still mysterious to me; the next thing I remember was pulling on my walking boots at the foot of Tryfan, a mountain in Snowdonia and having a very enjoyable day on the hills.

One of the less remarked effect of Covid is that our ability to opt for leisure activities on the spur of the moment have been significantly curtailed. With the easing of lockdown (for the moment!), a day in the hills is now possible. However, a trip to a museum is now much harder, with most establishments requiring advanced booking. Of course, it is just a minor irritation, but it does remind me of a lost freedom.

Spontaneity can be a great joy; it opens up a world of unexpected opportunities and pleasures. It allows us to delight in the world, to experience joy in ways we never imagined. Jesus spoke of how the wind, that is the Holy Spirit, blows where it will; I think by that he was telling us that God also acts on the spur of the moment, in ways which we cannot imagine. Whilst some of our spontaneity has, currently, to be restricted we should still treasure what we have and expect to see God at work in the unplanned.

Thought for the week 14th September – What does harvest mean for you?

This is the time of year when we celebrate harvest but what does harvest mean for you? Perhaps it’s the familiar hymns that we sing, or the church decorated with flowers and home-grown fruit and vegetables.

Here we live in a very rural part of the country and we see evidence all around us of the yearly cycle of ploughing, sowing, nurturing and reaping. We are aware of how closely related our lives are to the land and the farmers who work, day by day, throughout the year to ensure the harvest. Those who live in cities do not see this so clearly; harvest is represented by the food that is available in the supermarket – the colourful array of fruits and vegetables which seem to be in constant and abundant supply, whatever the season, transported across the world so we can eat our fill.

 

As we gather together in our churches to celebrate Harvest, to give thanks to God for all that he provides year after year, we are also conscious that there are many parts of the world where the harvest is poor or fails entirely, and people go hungry, or where people are refugees and cannot even sow and reap. In the Bible there is a story about a woman called Ruth; a woman living in a foreign place because of her loyalty to her mother-in-law, and because she chose to accept God in her life. There she encountered kindness from a landowner called Boaz, who not only allowed her to gather left over grain from his harvest fields, but also instructed his workers to deliberately leave some extra for her to gather.

 

We too can show kindness and generosity by providing for others from the abundance of what God gives to each of us. It may be by can supporting the local food bank, or we can give our time or some of our resources to charities that help to ensure that those who are hungry will be fed. We are called to live generously, even sacrificially, so that others too may have life. Not just at harvest time but each and every day.

 

What will harvest mean for you this year?

Zoom events for week beginning 14th September

Dear All,

Details of events this coming week are below: all are welcome! Please pass these invitations on to anyone who you think might be interested.

 

 

1) Wednesday evening catch-up

Sept 16th, 2020 07:00 PM London

 

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

2) Friday Morning Prayer, 9.00am

Sept 18th, 2020 09:00 AM London

 

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

Service at https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/join-us-in-daily-prayer/morning-prayer-contemporary-friday-18-september-2020

3) Friday night prayer

September 18th, 2020 09:00 PM London

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

Service at https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/join-us-in-daily-prayer/night-prayer-contemporary-friday-18-september-2020

 

 

 

 

 

 

Zoom events for week beginning 7th September

Details of events this coming week are below: all are welcome! Please pass these invitations on to anyone who you think might be interested.

Zoom services

1) Wednesday evening catch-up

Sept 9th, 2020 07:00 PM London

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

2) Friday Morning Prayer, 9.00am

Sept 11th, 2020 09:00 AM London

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 1895

Service at https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/join-us-in-daily-prayer/morning-prayer-contemporary-friday-11-september-2020

3) Friday night prayer

September 11th, 2020 09:00 PM London

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3592851895?pwd=cksyL0t5TlhFUURRenpxMG9yQTVhUT09

Meeting ID: 359 285 189

Service at https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/join-us-in-daily-prayer/night-prayer-contemporary-friday-11-september-2020

 

 

 

 

 

 

Harvest Festival – 6pm Sunday 13th September

A reminder that St Mary’s, Billingsley will be holding their Harvest Festival on Sunday at 6 pm. The service will be lead by Mary Rayner, Reader. The service will include music, reading and poetry which will focus on the personal meaning of harvest to individuals together with a traditional celebration and thanks appropriate to this time of year.

A warm welcome is offered to everyone; we look forward to seeing you.

Any donations of harvest gifts can be brought to the church; it is being decorated on Friday 11th at 5pm and again everyone is most welcome to help. All food will be donated to the Bridgnorth Food Bank following the service and half of the service collection is to be donated to ‘Mary’s Meals’. This inspirational charity provides free school meals for children in some of the poorest parts of the world to support education as a means to self development as well as providing much needed nourishment.

5th September – Evening walk from Glazeley Church to Chelmarsh Church

On Friday the final evening guided walk of the Summer took place. The event was once again well attended and David guided the walkers through fields and woodland, tracks and farmyards, from Glazeley Church to Chelmarsh Church and back.  The journey out was one of discovery as several tracks were difficult to find but undeterred the group made it to their destination. A refreshment break was taken at Chelmarsh where everyone enjoyed a quick sandwich before heading home before sunset. The views on the return journey of the Clee Hills and the glorious Shropshire countryside in the fading light were spectacular.

It is hoped that day time walks will continue during the Autumn and Winter when everyone is welcome to join us. Look out for further details.