Rev Margaret Sherwin Rev Joe Cant Rev Jules Walker 07541993969 07592206706 07369216993AREA UPDATEHopefully, by now you will all have heard the announcement that the Benefice of Uttoxeter Area of Parishes (UAP) is to have 3 permanent Area Stipendiary (paid) Clergy, ministering alongside the dedicated and wonderful volunteer Area Staff Team (AST). As many of you will know, we have been working hard with the Diocese over the last few years to prove that UAP can sustain 3 full-time clergy and we are grateful for the commitment and support that everyone in the parishes has given to this. Rev Jules Walker arrived with us on a 3-year interim contract in August 2021, with a brief to help the Area prove sustainability and viability, and we are delighted that as part of that process she has accepted the Bishop’s invitation to become a permanent Team Vicar at her licensing service at St Mary’s Uttoxeter on Sunday 2nd June at 3pm with Bishop Matthew and Archdeacon Megan. Everyone is very warmly invited to this Area service as we celebrate a new chapter in the way mission and ministry will happen in the Area. Please do come along!We know there will be questions about how this affects the parishes, and although the next 12 months will be a time of bedding in new ways of working, we did want to communicate right at the start of the new process our initial thoughts and the process going forward. Why change?Put simply, the old system wasn’t working and wasn’t the shape needed for the changing nature of church and society. Following discussions within the wider Team, the Deanery via its ‘Shaping for Mission’ initiative, and with Diocesan colleagues in August 2023 a new Strategy for UAP was agreed at Bishop’s Council, recognising that the current way of working through ‘key’ ministers was no longer fit for purpose. A new team structure was required that allowed a more ‘fluid’ approach to roles within the Team, which would ensure no part of UAP became detached or dysfunctional, and allowed the gifts of the clergy to be deployed across the Team to ensure missional effectiveness and financial stability into the future. This approach would support effective, sustainable and healthy mission and ministry, and seek to equip and enable parishes to serve the wider community now and in the future. What does that mean for us?The next 12 months, in particular, will be a time of transition and we recognise that change is challenging for all involved. Change isn’t easy, but it is very necessary. The new Area Strategy requires substantial changes to the roles and responsibilities of much we currently do including the legal Area governance through the Area Team Council (ATC); new processes for parish governance and Mission Action Plans through the Parochial Church Councils (PCCs); new ways of working for the Area Staff Team (AST) with a more flexible approach to ministry; and changes in the way we finance all this through the Area Finance Committee (AFC) in its responsibilities towards finance in the Area, including Common Fund. Importantly, it will also see changes in the structures for pastoral care and local mission within the parishes, and this will take time to develop, communicate and bed-in. That’s a lot! So please do pray!What will we see happening?Although many of these changes will take time to develop, especially around legal governance and new ways of working, there are some things you will notice change straight away: • The rota and service leaders: The service rota will not change – the services and times you currently have will remain (with a slight exception for St Peter’s Marchington). However, as the Area Stipendiary Clergy move away from being ‘key’ ministers at particular churches, becoming instead fluid across the whole Area of 10 parishes and 11 church buildings, you will see different service leaders each week. Don’t think of it as loosing “your vicar” but receiving 2 more and of course, this change means no Area parish will ever be in vacancy again! The Area Staff Team will continue to work across the Area too – with the exception of John at Bramshall and Irene at Checkley. • Chairing of PCCs. The Area Stipendiary Clergy now Chair all PCCs (with the exception of Bramshall presently). The new Area Ministry Plan provides a new structure which means the Area Stipendiary Clergy will rotate the chairing of PCCs, although each PCC will have the same Clergy Chair for 3 years for continuity. • Area Stipendiary Clergy meeting. To ensure effective leadership we have already started to meet together weekly to pray, support and plan. The holding of UAP in prayer is an important aspect of our role as we seek God’s guidance in all we do. We meet weekly on a Monday morning as an Area Stipendiary Team and monthly with the Area Co-ordinator to ensure the administration process is effective and robust. Any queries can be passed to any member of the Stipendiary Clergy Team for discussion at these meetings. • Pastoral Care. We recognise that a move from ‘key ministers’ will create anxiety within the parishes, with concern that Clergy will become detached. There is already outstanding pastoral care taking place within our parishes and all the Area Staff Team are keen to support that. Any pastoral concerns, or requests for pastoral visits, can be passed to the Area Co-ordinator at anytime. If the request is urgent it will be sent to Joe, Jules and Margaret for action. If not, it will be discussed at the Monday meeting and appropriate action decided on and feedback given. All of the AST will be available for pastoral care and visiting. • Life Events (Weddings, Baptisms & Funerals). A vitally important part of church life involves Life Events. We will develop and implement the system to share-out Life Events across the AST and develop strategies for follow-up. It’s important that the Area Coordinator is the central point of contact for all Life Events across all parishes so that effective and timely administration happens. All requests for weddings, baptisms and funerals should be directed to the Area Co-ordinator who will then make arrangements with the Area Staff Team, church and make sure records are updated. • Local Mission. Part of the new structure is for the Stipendiary Clergy Team to develop and lead on a strategy to equip and support parishes to do ministry, mission and pastoral care through new flexible processes developed and communicated through the ATC. This new way of working will require a time of transition and consultation with the parishes and ATC, but please be assured that the AST will be available to help parishes in the ways we get the message of God’s love out to everyone. • Communication. We recognise that good, effective and timely communication is vital. Many will know that Lesley White is retiring at the end of July and we are already in the process of advertising and recruiting a new Benefice Administrator. Details will be available very soon. This role will continue to provide central communication, and we hope there will also be the development of a Benefice diary and new social media routes. Watch this space! What do we ask of you?Please pray! For those involved in the process of change, for new and creative ways of connecting with our communities, and for our current ways of worshipping to be invitational and welcoming. The reason we exist as church is to glorify God and asking for God’s help in all we hope to achieve in the coming years is important. Everyone has a role to play in praying!Please ensure that any communications – newsletters, parish magazines, noticeboards, websites – do not have individual named “local vicars’’ anymore but instead point to the 3 Area Stipendiary Clergy Margaret, Jules & Joe and the Area Office. It is in reinforcing the new ways of working that real change will embed into our practices. Margaret, Joe and Jules all have mobile phones dedicated to Area work, the numbers are at the top of this letter, and ask that these numbers alone as advertised. For safeguarding reasons, Area Staff Teams’ emails can also be published, but not our home addresses please. Think about how you can be involved – do you have gifts and energy that you can give to the Area. Might God be nudging you to be more or differently involved? Please do speak to any of the Area Staff Team to explore this further. Be positive! We know that change is challenging, but we also hope and believe in a God who is abundantly generous to his children. God wants great things for the UAP – can you join in with his mission and ministry?With great thanks for all you do, are and will be!Margaret, Joe & Jules
As I sat listening to the exploits and explorations of someone else’s recent holiday the other night I was in awe of their confidence in embracing an adventure which I would never contemplate doing myself. They’d been to an area of the world which has been associated with conflict, drugs and trouble for backpackers. They had researched carefully and had then gone with a reputable travel firm who led them through every change of venue and adventure taking then through the jungle, close up to elephants and much more. A few years ago, they would never have had that confidence but by using the same travel firm and travelling with the same partner gradually working from European destinations to further flung ones they had jumped the hurdle, shed their worries and gone for it clearly now buzzing from the consequences.As they were away the summer school term had started with pupils telling me that Easter was over, they’d finished all their chocolate eggs long ago! But, as far as the church is concerned, the Easter season isn’t over – not until Ascension Day (9th May) and Pentecost (19th May) have been celebrated. So, from Easter Day until Pentecost the awe, wonder and mystery of Jesus’ Resurrection and its aftermath can be revisited. For 40 days after the discovery of nobody in the tomb Jesus reappeared to his disciples and a select few others. These witnesses were then able to testify and give first hand evidence to others of the encounters. Was God presenting Jesus in this way to build an evidence bank able to withstand sceptics? When Jesus ascended to his Father finally (Acts 1/Luke 24) and the crowds 10 days later experienced the powerful events of Pentecost (Acts 2) which brought the Holy Spirit to them, the disciples and the early Christian believers had a platform from which to share the magnificence and wonder of their saviour. I doubt they could explain the events and mystery any better than we can today. They needed to take that step of faith and run with it on the evidence presented by others who were the first witnesses. Today, we still build faith on taking a conscious step into the unknown to experience what believing can do for us. To my mind faith is very similar to the holiday exploration that I highlighted earlier. Our Christian knowledge is built on others’ past experiences, but our own confidence in articulating and sharing our faith is built gradually by personal encounters, reading the Bible, hearing what others have to say and discussing our thoughts. I hope you can venture out to seek new experiences and find the wonder in both your faith and in God’s vast and varied world during this summer. Perhaps engage in one or more of these ideas: check out the Christian Aid website (Christian Aid week is 12th – 18th May this year) where you can find inspiring stories from around the world as well as donate to their work; Join us at the Ascension Day Area service at St Mary’s, Uttoxeter; find out about a Bible study near you; take time to think about how faith helps you in your daily living. Stephanie Goodwin – UAP Reader
One of my earliest childhood recollections is standing on the front doorstep with mother as we waited for the bus to take my brother off to school. As I stood there a young Jean Sargeant shouted across the road to me saying that I had dropped my handkerchief and, as I looked on the ground for it, she gleefully added ‘April Fool!’ Yes, it’s April and the month begins with light-hearted jest – and some slight embarrassment for those caught out. With humour being in short supply at the moment, maybe a little laughter wouldn’t hurt.Looking at the lectionary for the month, I was mindful that the Sunday after Easter was traditionally referred to as Low Sunday; possibly because of the contrast with the high celebration of Easter Day, or even because congregation numbers were typically lower. Another theory is that ‘Low’ was simply a corruption of the word ‘Laudes’ meaning praise. Whatever the reason, the name seems to have disappeared from common use. In fact, a couple of years ago I discovered a new name for this particular Sunday… Holy Humour Sunday or Laughter Sunday.With much going on in the world that is very unsettling, it’s no wonder that people are becoming disillusioned. Disillusioned with world powers and leaders, disillusioned with politics, even disillusioned with the weather! During that first Easter week the disciples were afraid, and locked themselves in the room where they stayed. Not only were they fearful, but they would also have been disillusioned, and probably hurting from all that they had lost. We cannot fully imagine the immense joy they experienced when the risen Christ burst into their places of darkness. For them this was the start of something wonderfully new which gained momentum through this feeling of joy.Most of us would agree that joy and laughter are important things, yet many people experience worship in churches where laughter and even the sound of children is still frowned upon. For some reason, many have equated devout religion with solemnity, which is rather sad. Joy and laughter can lead us to healing. Sometimes God’s grace comes to us in the form of humour that helps us make it through another day. Recognising that humour is a characteristic of the divine nature helps us deepen our understanding of the nature of God; remembering that God laughs at us and with us – and that laughter is an expression of God’s love and acceptance.May we all be so infected with the joy of this Eastertide, that both our fellowship and our secular lives will reflect that love and acceptance that God desires, and that we can overcome disillusionment with laughter – even if we just laugh at ourselves. So, I leave you with this…A vicar requested quotes from local painters to redecorate the exterior of the parish hall. All the quotes were within a few pounds of one another, except for one by a parishioner who had been in business for years and had an excellent reputation in the community. His quote was about half of his competitors, so naturally the vicar gave him the job. On the day he was to begin, the painter realised that he had miscalculated badly. Not wanting to lose face and the job, he decided to add water to the paint to make it go further. A week later he received a phone call from the vicar, complaining that after recent rain half the paint had washed off. Feeling a sense of guilt, the painter went inside the church to pray about his dilemma, knowing that his business reputation was on the line. “What can I possibly do, Lord?” prayed the disheartened painter. In a loud voice God replied, “Repaint! Repaint and thin no more!”With Blessings and Big Smiles,JohnRevd John Lander, Self-Supporting Minister within the Area, especially for Bramshall.
Dear friends,As I write, my Alexa has just informed me that we have a severe weather warning for snow in Marchington in the next few days. Really, I say! Only yesterday I was marvelling at the snow-drops blooming, and the daffodil bulbs peeking through, so really – more grey and dismal weather! But then I reminded myself that creation is telling me that once again we are entering into the season of new life. After the deadness of Winter, we are witnessing trees and plants coming back to life and perhaps that’s the same for us too - there is much to celebrate in the shoots of growth in our lives, and parishes, and Area. It’s amazing what Spring can do for our spirits, isn’t it? We may feel fed-up with the way life is during Winter – all the cold and damp and dull weather – but when Spring arrives it lifts our spirits. It gives us hope!The Church’s liturgical year mirrors that transformation from death to life with the season of Lent as we move towards our Easter Day Celebrations on March 31st. The season of Lent continues through-out March, a time of personal reflection paused only for the celebration of Mother Church on March 10th. For Christians this season is meant to get us ready to receive new life, and in particular the new life that we experience in the resurrection of Jesus. It’s an important time to journey and reflect on Jesus’ place in our lives – let’s not rush to the chocolate eggs and bunnies too quickly!As we near the end of Lent, the journey of Holy Week draws us deeper into the story of God and God’s profound love for the world. We will journey through the events of Palm Sunday and Maundy Thursday when our emotions will range from gleeful joy, to humble wonder, to dark sadness. Good Friday will bring us to the broken, pain-filled sorrow of death. On Easter Day, the resurrection of Jesus Christ reveals God’s gift to us in the truth of the new life: the truth that God is a God of love who walks with us and longs to brings us to a place of wholeness, a place of possibility, a place of new life. New life that is grounded in hope and compassion. New life that is deeply connected to God’s love and is passionate about sharing that love with the world. New life that reveals God’s justice in ways that transform not only our lives, but the whole world. So, as we continue our journey remember the word “Lent” comes from the old English word from which we get “lengthen”, it means to grow. Lent is the Springtime of the soul; a time when, this year, we need to be kind to ourselves and prune away, through prayer, all that has caused us to be anxious and afraid, so that we anticipate the new life and growth of the Easter season.Can you feel the tingling anticipation of new life and hope growing?Have a blessed Easter!Yours as ever,JulesRev’d Jules WalkerInterim Team Vicar, Uttoxeter Area of Parishes.