Click here for the pewsheet for the week beginning Sunday 10 December 2017.
Click here for the pewsheet for the week beginning Sunday 10 December 2017.
In January, as a thank you, Fr Michael requests the pleasure of the company of all “retired” volunteers who have given of their time so much in the past, but are now officially “discharged”.
If this applies to you or someone you know, please contact us by 31 December 2017, so that an official invitation can be sent.
The music list for December has been released. Click here to view it.
Click here for the pewsheet for the week beginning Sunday 3rd December 2017.
Some of you will remember that, unusually, for 2 days this summer, St Nicholas’ was inaccessible to the public while filming took place for a young filmmaker’s new film, called No Apostle.
The fruits of Noah’s and the team’s labours can be watched here, and as you can see, the church building has a prominent role.
Click here for the pewsheet for the week beginning Sunday 26th November 2017.
Click here for the pewsheet for the week beginning Sunday 19th November 2017.
Click here for the pewsheet for the week beginning Sunday 12th November 2017.
My grandfather fought at The Somme but died when I was a little boy. My late mother was only thirteen when the Second World War ended. I have no memory whatever of those wars that our annual Remembrance Sunday first commemorated. There is, however, no sign of these commemorations disappearing with the generations who lived through the great wars of the twentieth century. What, though, do we mean today, by ‘remember’?
Literature, photography and film-making preserve our awareness of the sacrifices made during the world wars. Subsequent conflicts continue to take the lives of those serving in the armed forces. We remember what we have learned about the horrors of past wars and we remember those who, today, put their lives on the line, often in the cause of peace in distant countries. We remember and honour servicemen and women who lay aside their personal safety for the sake of others.
Images of the Christian Soldier are less popular than once they were, but it is worth remembering that a soldier fights for king and kingdom, never for self but always for the rights and wellbeing of those who cannot fight for themselves. Ought we not all to be soldiers of Christ and of his advancing Kingdom?
+Mark Horsham
Our 2017 Advent and Christmas services are as follows:
Sunday 3 December
Sunday 17 December
Sunday 24 December
Monday 25 December