| Dear Reverend Williams, With you, people across the world can celebrate the joy and excitement of having safe water for the first time. Thank you for making this the best year ever. You've helped reach 1.7 million people with water, 11% more than last year, and brought sanitation to 2.2 million people, 15% more than in 2012. With you, families are happier and healthier. Water is the one thing that changes everything – because you're with us many more families have clean, safe water in their lives. You played a huge part in making this possible through your generous support. With you, there is new hope. We've made a special film to show you the inspiring moments you've helped to create this year, moments when safe water brought celebration and hope to the lives of people all over the world, moments made possible by your support. Be proud – you've brought smiles to so many people around the world. Thank you for being so incredible. Angharad McKenzie Head of Supporter Development, WaterAid |
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Tuesday, 31 December 2013
Michael has just received the following email from WaterAid
Sunday, 1 December 2013
“Be Prepared”, the old Scout motto reminds us!
From the Vicar - Advent Sunday 2013
“Be Prepared”, the old Scout motto reminds
us!
However, preparation
for Christmas these days often can mean baking, shopping, cleaning, decorating,
card writing and so many other things which seem to take up most of our time
and, if we’re not careful, we can simply end up mentally, physically and
spiritually exhausted.
Shop until you drop,
with the 25th December as our deadline, often means that whilst we
are ready for Christmas Day, it can be rather an anti climax when it is over.
It seems that whilst
we all want to enjoy the holiday, and some time together, we have allowed two
of the major issues of our times to drive the agenda - materialism and
consumerism, and so rob us of these four short weeks of Advent which can be and
should be, true preparation for the birth at Bethlehem and the opportunity for
us to prepare our hearts for a personal and shared encounter with Jesus Christ.
My hope and prayer
is that this Advent will be more prayerful, more spiritual – and dare I say it
– more Christian.
Michael
Tuesday, 5 November 2013
We affirm our faith
From the vicar - November 2013
Our God is the god
of all humans,
the God of heaven
and earth,
the God of sea and
rivers,
the God of sun and
moon,
the God of all the
heavenly bodies,
the God of the lofty
mountains,
the God of the lowly valleys.
God inspires all
things,
gives life to all
things,
stands above all
things,
and stands beneath
all things.
God has a Son who is
co-eternal with himself;
and similar in all
respects to himself;
and neither is the
Son younger than the Father,
nor is the Father
older than the son;
and the holy Spirit
breathes in them.
And the Father and
the Son and the holy spirit are inseparable. Amen.
Trinitarian Creed of Tirechan,
a 7th Century Irish Bishop and scholar
This 7th
Century Creed reminds us of all that we believe as Christians, whatever our
particular religious tradition. It is a timely reminder that we are all called
to work ecumenically so that we can all learn how to be different and yet
together in sacred things, “communion in sacris”.
I have included a
paper in this Newsletter which provides a background of how we have arrived at
where we are on the Ecumenical Scene – the first of two papers.
Please read the
paper carefully and prayerfully as an introduction to the proposals set out in
the second paper which I will include in the next Newsletter.
Michael
THE GATHERING/ Y CYDGYNULLIA
Report
presented to the Deanery Conference on Tuesday , September 17th
2013
A brief resume of how
we arrived at where we are on the Ecumenical Scene
Although there are indications in the New Testament and historical evidence thereafter of
division amongst Christians in the Early Church and in the following
centuries, the Church remained
officially united for the first 1000 years of its history. The Schism of 1054 brought about the separation of the
Church into an Eastern and Western Church, the first centred on Constantinople
and the second in Rome, known as the Latin Church which suffered another great
schism at the end of the fourteenth century with the election of rival popes. This
schism was later resolved.
The Reformation in sixteenth century Europe was a division
of the Church to rival that of 1054. The rise of the nation state meant a different kind of
religious reformation in different countries. In England (which by the 1536 Act
of Union included Wales) the Anglican Church of England was formed which
although part of the Protestant Reformation maintained its threefold ministry
of Bishop, Priest and Deacon. It was and remains both Catholic and Reformed.
Following the Elizabethan Settlement the Church of England became the
Established Church of England and Wales. In Scotland under the leadership of
John Knox Presbyterianism had become established and the Presbyterian Church of
Scotland (The Kirk) remains the established Church there.
The following centuries saw further breakaway from the
Church of England. The growth of Puritanism was very evident and many sought a
kind of worship beyond the establishment. The Act of Toleration in 1689 gave such permission to Baptists,
who rejected Infant Baptism in favour of
an adult believer’s Baptism, and Congregationalists who believed in the
authority of the local church/congregation as opposed to the central authority
of a Bishop. These so called Dissenters were still not permitted to hold
political office or enter the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. Catholics
were deliberately excluded and had to wait until the nineteenth century for
their emancipation. The eighteenth century saw the rise of Methodism under the
Wesley brothers who never envisaged a breakaway from the C of E, and neither did the equivalent
reformers in Wales such as William Williams, Daniel Rowlands and Howell
Harries, whose vision was more of a Calvinistic Methodist Church which was a
Presbyterian model rather like Scotland.
So, coming into fairly modern times we have a variety of religious
traditions in Britain (I have not included Ireland’s story as this would
require much more space!). There was the established C of E, Presbyterianism,
Methodism, Baptists and Congregationalists as well as the un-emancipated Roman Catholic Church. The
nineteenth century so the advent of Pentecostalism and The Salvation Army and
the rediscovery of its Catholic heritage through the Oxford Movement in the
Church of England. In Wales all this mixture was further complicated by
language with denominations having English-speaking and Welsh-speaking parts.
Generally the Non Conformists were largely Welsh-speaking and the Cof E in
Wales largely English-speaking.
The twentieth century will be seen as a century of ecumenism
by historians. A conference in Edinburgh in 1910 began the Ecumenical Movement.
The word ecumenical or oecumenical means “of the whole world together”
“all-embracing” or “universal” which is also the meaning of “catholic”. The
movement sought to bring different traditions closer together and to cooperate
in mission. Unfortunately the missionary movements of the 19th
century had exported our Christian divisions to the rest of the world. As the
century progressed ecumenical bodies were founded: The World Council of
Churches, The British Council of Churches and in 1956 the Council of Churches
for Wales. In 1990 the Roman Catholic Church came into membership for the first
time in this country with the formation of the Council of Churches for Britain
and Ireland, and Cytun in Wales which included now all the main denominations
in Wales except the Welsh Baptist Union.
In 1975 five denominations in Wales entered into a Covenant
together to work and pray for visible unity. These denominations were:
The Church in Wales
The Presbyterian Church of Wales
The Methodist Church
The United Reformed Church
and a number of
Baptist Church, mainly in Cardiff
and Newport belong to the Baptist Union of GB.
The United Reformed Church (URC) had come about by a union
between English Presbyterians, Congregationalists and the Church of
Christ. Notably the Covenant did not
include the Welsh Baptists, the Welsh Congregationalists (Yr Annibynwyr)
nor the Roman Catholic Church.
Since 1975 much has been achieved on the journey to a
visible unity and there have been several disappointments. In 1981 a Holy
Communion/Cymun Bendigaid service was published and a revised modern version
was published in 2012 both of which were highly acclaimed. Several Local
Ecumenical Partnerships have been set up. Ministry and our understanding of it
is key to progress. Only one of the five (Church in Wales) is an Episcopal Church,
the other four being non-Episcopal (no bishops!) A way has to found in crossing
this barrier. Attempts were made in 1986 and in 1998 to address this issue but
did not succeed. All the while our mission to Wales is impeded by our divisions
and every denomination has seen a decline in stipendiary ministers and
congregations. On the positive side every denomination has re-discovered the
role of the laity in ministry, yet many areas, especially rural ones, bemoan
the loss of ordained leadership by full time ministers.
The Gathering/Y Cydgynulliad held in Aberystwyth in October
2012 is the latest attempt to bring us nearer to a uniting Church in the nation
of Wales. We have until the middle of 2014 to consider its proposals and our
responses will come to another Gathering in 2015. It is hoped each parish, deanery and diocese
in the Church in Wales will give the matter careful thought and prayer, as will
the various structures in our partner Churches.
Tuesday, 29 October 2013
Monday, 21 October 2013
Harvest flowers
Wednesday, 2 October 2013
Harvest 2013
October 2013 - from the vicar
These past weeks,
through our worship, we have been focussing our thoughts on the issues of
discipleship and the role we each need to play in the church’s ministry.
We are fortunate to
be members of a liturgical church which provides a framework of themes week by
week and in step with other churches across the world which helps us keep
things in perspective. Week by week we
are mindful that God offers us his love and his life, without conditions, and
that each of us is quite special in his eyes. We need always to make space in
order to let him find us and for us to remember to find him.
Harvest speaks of how everything we have is a gift
from God, given and worked on by our hands, yes, a gift perhaps even further
developed by our own talents, yet, still something given by a gracious God. For
it is God who gives us the hands we need and the talents we have.
Harvest is always a time in our year to think about
how well God treats us, even when we are not treating him well or thinking all
that much about him. It is a time which makes us think about how, sometimes, we
do not really appreciate what we have, or behave as if we know where it has
come from.
Our Harvest Prayer is that we may be given an even
greater ability to appreciate all that we have, and to be prepared to share
that which we have been given, with others.
Michael
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