Hello,This month I’d like to focus on the work of the Uttoxeter Area of Parishes Young People’s Trust. Some of you will know it as ‘Youth Trust’ but having checked the paperwork we have been calling it by the wrong name for at least the last 12 years!The Young People’s Trust was set up before my time (so before August 2011) to fund youth work around the Area. Many individuals and PCCs kindly donated to the fund, and several still do, to the amount of £840 per annum.Up until Rev. Sue Willetts left the Area in 2016 the fund was well-used, paying for venue hire, activities and days away at Dovedale House. We also had two leaders in Sue and Andy Willetts who had experience in running youth work and they were aided by a group of enthusiastic people who volunteered at these events and largely made up the Board of Trustees for the charity. It went to pot a bit after they moved on, as we struggled to find people with the time and skills to carry on Sue’s work.However, that has now changed, with the Trust recently finding a new lease of life in supporting activities for young people around the Area and indeed the Deanery, and also joining with three other local churches in providing finance for a Christian Youth worker, Jordan Lambert.Jordan was invited to a Trust meeting to tell us about what he has been doing. His work is quite extensive, going into most of the town and village First and Middle schools to work with the young people around worship and faith issues. Jordan has been doing this work for six years locally and in the past the Anglicans have not got involved. However, Jordan started his third 3-year cycle in September 2022 and from September 2023 we will be contributing an equal ¼ share of the c.£26000 annual cost of employing Jordan (c. £6500). The other churches involved are the URC, the Methodists and the Renew Pentecostal church. Rev. Margaret has joined the management committee that supervises Jordan.As of 31/12/22 the Trust had £29309 in its account, so at the moment we have enough money. However, if Jordan (or his successor) continues for a fourth term we will need to consider how to raise more funds to meet this ongoing cost.Secondly, as a sign of good intent, the Trust offered to pay the excess for Jordan’s scheme of giving a selection box to every Primary and Middle school aged child in the Uttoxeter area, along with the members of staff. This amounted to £1193.00.Thirdly, the Trust significantly funded (£440) the Saltmine Theatre visit to two schools (St. Mary’s Uttoxeter and Ryecroft, Rocester) with their production of Bob Hartman’s The Rhyming Bible. This took place in February 2023 and other schools were able to join in as well. The reviews and feedback have been fantastic. The Trust hopes to link in with any future productions from Saltmine so that as many schools in the area as possible can benefit from this innovative expression of the Christian faith. Fourthly, the Trust has made a £200 donation to Open The Book, which is run through Churches Together Uttoxeter, and, fifthly, has offered to fund start-up costs for Cinema Church at Christ Church, Upper Tean, which is in the planning stages.This all adds up to a breath of new life for the Uttoxeter Area of Parishes Young People’s Trust and we are hugely grateful to all those who have contributed in the past, contribute in the present and hopefully will contribute in the future.Peace and prayers, Joe (Team Vicar, Uttoxeter Area of Parishes and – slightly incompetently - Uttoxeter Area of Parishes Young People’s Trust Secretary)
Dear friends, As I write this letter, the King’s Coronation is about to take place and I trust that you all have been planning special services and festivities to pray for him, to rejoice with him as he takes on this major role and to give thanks for his willingness to continue the unswerving loyalty to a servant role, which his mother, the late Queen Elizabeth 11 fulfilled over seventy years as she strengthened links with other countries as Head of the Commonwealth, visited countries abroad and received guests from overseas. I am sure that King Charles will willingly follow in her footsteps and so let us rejoice in the fact that we live in a democratic monarchy, where our monarch is not there to rule by “divine right”, but to serve his people as a symbol of tolerance, freedom of expression and integrity. I hope that you will be able to share with gladness the activities of your communities, whatever they may be. I remember fondly the Coronation in 1953, when my family was able to join with many others to watch the Coronation on the television in St Mary’s Church, Bucknall as, like many people, we did not have a television at that point! My Primary School at Bagnall (now sadly destroyed by a fire some years ago) took the ten year olds to Windsor on a day trip. That was such a delightful experience for me, and my mother encouraged me to create a scrap book to record everything about this important event in my life! Giving thanks for our King is an opportunity to thank God for all that is so good in our lives. Our news is so dominated by the injustices and sadness of the world – violence, disaster, war, terrorism - that it is so easy to be blind to the many joys and acts of goodness and love that are there in everyday life. The Bible has several accounts of kingship in its finest forms though it does not hide the fact that they sometimes got things wrong. It depicts Solomon's reign as an era of unprecedented prosperity due to his wisdom, a quality bestowed upon him by God. In a dream, God had asked him what he wanted most, and Solomon replied, “an understanding mind to govern your people, able to discern between good and evil” (I Kings 3:9). He built the first great Temple in Jerusalem, established peaceful relations with surrounding nations, and ruled Israel with wisdom and justice. He contributed books to the biblical canon including Ecclesiastes and the Song of Songs, and made many decrees that kept religious observance on a high level. The king had an important function to play as Yahweh’s viceroy, concerned to preserve peace, justice and righteousness in the land. He made some mistakes, but nobody's infallible! King Charles is the longest-waiting heir apparent, and he’s the oldest British monarch to ever take the throne. May God bless him and the Queen Consort as they enter this important new chapter of their lives. Love and peace, Irene Smith Irene is an OLM in the Uttoxeter Area of Parishes and Self-Supporting Minister at Checkley.
AREA LETTER FROM ONE OF THE AREA STAFF TEAM – APRIL 2023 In March St Peter’s church is holding their Forest church with the theme of Hope. It’s a word that we so often use when we are looking forward, hoping for something which is always something positive. At this time of the year Spring is trying to arrive as we see the carpets of snowdrops, the crocuses are out and now it’s time for the daffodils and then tulips. Soon there will be bright green buds on the trees and the birds increase their morning chorus. After the long dark nights and the cold we can look forward with hope for the warmer weather, the sun shining and the our mood improves, we feel so much brighter, perhaps ready to do something new. I remember John Cleese in Clockwise saying ‘ it’s not the despair, I can take the despair, it’s the hope I can’t stand.” Don’t we all live with hope, hope for warm sunny days, hope that our children and grand children will grow up to be happy and contented? But then there is the hope that maybe will never happen when we set our sights too high. When we are tempted by all manner of things that we really don’t need. Jesus was tempted but he knew that he was God’s beloved son in whom God was well pleased. Do we realise that as part of Gods family he is pleased with us?! As Easter comes around, we are reminded of the suffering and death of Jesus and then his resurrection on Easter Sunday. At St Peter’s we remove the seven symbols of Lent and replace them with posies of flowers to symbolise the hope we have as followers of Christ. Hope is a blessing, we can always look forward with hope for the future and endeavour to be part of the future by taking part, not sitting back and hoping things will just happen, we have to work towards our hopes, work to make our hopes happen. Easter signals new life in Christ, hope for the future. Let’s be those Easter people. Peace and prayers Maggie Maggie Hatchard, Reader for the Uttoxeter Area of Parishes.
Area Letter for March 2023 from a member of the Area Staff Team.I am often intrigued by natural phenomena. In the early 2000’s I was given a gift for Valentine’s Day. A ticket to board a plane at Liverpool John Lennon Airport, late at night, to be taken to explore the Aurora Borealis – The Northern Lights. It was spectacular seeing such beauty and amazing colours. It looked like the sky was dancing, in tune with our maker. At this time of year I love looking outside or being outside late afternoon. Watching the flock of birds moving like synchronized swimmers or a well-choreographed dance troupe, dark flowing against the white clouds. Listening to the gentle beat of the wings as they fly over me, and the gentle rustling noise as they all flock into the waiting trees for cover. Isaiah writes ‘Who are these that fly like a cloud, and like doves to their windows’ (60:8), I wonder if he is referring to ‘starlings’!When birds, usually starlings, fly together and swirl in a mesmerizing, coordinated ever-changing pattern – this dazzling dance is called a murmuration. What a word! In the twilight, the dance begins with a few birds, but gradually other starlings arrive, then more and more, until they all join together in one massive flock. Their movements create incredible patterns, streams, circles, trails. As they twist and turn in tight formation, amazingly they swirl but never collide.A murmuration has been described like this: “Each starling in a flock is connected to every other. When a flock turns in unison, it’s a phase transition. At the individual level, the rules guiding this are relatively simple. When a neighbour moves, so do you. Depending on the flock’s size and speed and its members’ flight physiologies, the large-scale pattern changes. What’s complicated, or at least unknown, is how criticality is created and maintained.” Psalm 50 v11 says: ‘I know all the birds of the air, and all that moves in the field is mine.’What music did they hear? Who leads them? Who taught them such grace? I am amazed at the Creator’s wonders found in nature. The bird murmuration, and the dancing colours in the night sky of the Aurora Borealis. Do you have a favourite natural wonder?Scientists don’t fully understand the how’s and whys of murmuration. A mystery. Maybe God is dancing with them and remains unknown, there but unseen. I wish we as humans could work together like these birds. Too often we are more like chickens, scraping only for ourselves, ruffling another person’s feathers so we feel better or superior. I know I can’t change the whole world, but the optimist in me believes if I keep my eyes on Christ, maybe, just maybe, a small movement will grace the sky and inspire others to join in the cosmic dance, led by God. God turns. He takes the lead in this dazzling dance. My role is to immediately follow. Are you joining me?BlessingsMargaretRevd Margaret Sherwin, Area Rector UAP.