The Forerunner – August 2015

forerunner

Service Calendar for August 2015

 

Sunday    2nd Nailsworth

Kingscote

Nailsworth

Horsley

   8.00 am

   9.30 am

11.00 am

11.00 am

Holy Communion BCP

Morning Prayer BCP

All-age service

Holy Communion

Wednesday    5th Nailsworth 10.00 am Holy Communion
Sunday    9th Kingscote

Nailsworth

Horsley

   9.30 am

11.00 am

11.00 am

Holy Communion BCP

Holy Communion

Family Service

Wednesday 12th Nailsworth 10.00 am Holy Communion
Sunday 16th Kingscote

Nailsworth

Nailsworth

 

Horsley

 

   9.30 am

11.00 am

6.00 pm

 

11.00 am

Family Service and Baptism

Family Communion

‘One Voice’ service at Christ Church on Newmarket Road

Family Communion & Baptism

Wednesday 19th Nailsworth 10.00 am Holy Communion
Sunday 23rd Kingscote

Nailsworth

Horsley

Horsley

   9.30 am

11.00 am

11.00 am

6.00 pm

Holy Communion CW

Holy Communion

Messy Church

Evensong BCP

Wednesday 26th Nailsworth 10.00 am Holy Communion
Sunday 30th Kingscote 11.00 am Benefice service followed by shared Picnic Lunch*

* By kind invitation of Godfrey and Vivienne Ainsworth this will be held, weather permitting, in the garden at Kingscote House. In addition to your picnic, please bring available tables, chairs, rugs, gazebos etc. Some wine, tea, coffee and soft drinks will be available.

The next PCC meeting will be at 8.00 pm in the Village Hall on Tuesday 8 Sept.

 

     Diocesan News                 www.gloucester.anglican.org/news/publications

                                          www.gloucester.anglican.org/news/blog

    

     Nailsworth Benefice        www.stgeorgesnailsworth.org.uk

    

     Kingscote Community      www.kingscoteonline.co.uk

 

 

The Vicar’s Letter

 

Dear Friends,

 

As it is now holiday time for many people I am also taking a holiday from writing as there is some good news for us in our diocese about the arrival of our new Bishop.

For me it is exciting as we welcome to Gloucester the very first female Diocesan Bishop. Bishop Rachel is young and outgoing and should give us the kind of lead that we need as we seek to reach out in new ways into our communities. The Dean of Gloucester has sent round the letter below, which I now share with you.

 

The Dean of Gloucester Cathedral writes:

 

It is my pleasure to announce that Rachel Treweek will formally begin her new role as the Bishop of Gloucester on Saturday 19 September. We are expecting over 1,000 people to attend a special event in Gloucester Cathedral to mark this occasion which will begin at 4.30 pm.

 

Rachel will be consecrated as the 41st Bishop of Gloucester at Canterbury Cathedral on 22 July, but the service on 19 September will mark the formal start of Rachel’s ministry in the Diocese of Gloucester.

 

Invitations to attend the service will be sent across the diocese and beyond.

 

With every blessing,

Mike Smith

 

The Little Angels mothers and toddlers group will meet again in September.

 

 

Flower Rota

2nd August

9th and 16th August

23rd and 30th August

6th and 13th September

Tracey Pool

Lorna Reynolds

Carol Paton

Jenny Tibbert

No Weddings in August.

Lorna Reynolds

 

Cleaning Team

 

The next church cleaning session is at 2.30 pm on Monday 10 August.

Anyone interested and prepared to spare an hour in the afternoon on the second Monday of the month, occasionally or regularly, please contact me on Tel. 860 367.

 

Teresa Day

Village Hall Programme

 

There will be no events in the Village Hall until September but the hall facilities, including two table tennis tables and a pool table, are available if anyone wants to arrange an event during the school holidays. Please contact Pauline McTear on Tel. 861 311 for details.

Carol Paton

 

 

Grumbolds Ash Group

 

On Tuesday 11 August Angela Wooldridge has kindly invited us to an afternoon tea party at her home from 3.00 pm, for which we are most grateful.

 

It would be helpful if you informed Angela on Tel. 860 697 of your intention to take part, particularly if you would like to contribute some food.

Jutta Tubbs

Book Club at 8.00 pm

 

  • Wednesday 5 August Chemistry of Tears by Peter Carey and/or The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins at Teresa’s
  • September meeting to be announced later

 

New members always very welcome.

Angela Wooldridge

 

Free-range eggs for sale

 

Mrs Pat Cooksley of 2 The Windmill normally has some free-range eggs for sale at £1 for six. Best call afternoons.

 

Kingscote Parish Council

 

The next meeting of the Parish Council will be on Tuesday 13 October at 8.00 pm in the Hunters Hall.

 

Planning Applications

 

  • St Bartholemew’s Church, Newington Bagpath, amended works to listed building.
  • Preliminary notice of possible future application to develop a solar farm at Woodleaze, Kingscote.

 

Planning Appeal

 

Anearobic Digester at Chavenage (Stroud District), Kingscote PC has joined with other neighbouringcommunities to produce a joint submission objecting to the scheme. More information is available on the Kingscote website.

Anna Davison, Tel. 860 244

Weekly Recycling – Green food boxes and wheelie bins

All current collection points – from 7.30 am on Fridays.

 

Fortnightly Recycling – Black boxes, White Bags and Blue bags

All current collection points – from 7.30 am on Fridays 7 and 21 August.

 

Fortnightly Waste – Grey wheelie bins to landfill

All current collection points – from 7.30 am on Fridays 7 and 21 August.

 

Bus Timetable Enquiries -Ring traveline on 0871 200 2233.

 

Mobile Library

 

The next visit will be on Friday 7 August when the van will park as usual in front of The Walled Garden from 9.30 to 11.30 am.

 

Magazine

 

Any materialwhich may be of interest for the next issue of the Forerunner should be sent by 20 August to H. Tubbs, 3 The Walled Garden, Tel. 860 194.

 

The Editor

Commercial Kingscote

 

The following US website www.houseofnames.com/kingscote-family-crest appears to offer a range of Kingscote branded goods such as coffee mugs and ceramic tiles carrying the Kingscote Coat of Arms.

 

The Editor has not used the website and can give no recommendation at all as to its integrity, but some residents might be interested in investigating it further.

 

 

The fall of English agriculture in the late Victorian era

 

An extract from the book ‘English Social History’

By G M Trevelyan

 

From 1875 onwards the catastrophe set in. A series of bad seasons aggravated its initial stages, but the cause was the development of the American prairies as grain lands within reach of the English market. The new agricultural machinery enabled the farmers of the Middle-West to skim the cream off virgin soils of unlimited expanse; the new railway system carried the produce to the ports; the new steamers bore it across the Atlantic. English agriculture was more scientific and more highly capitalised than American, but under the conditions the odds were too great. Mass production of crops by a simpler and cheaper process undercut the elaborate and expensive methods of farming which had been built up on well-managed English estates during the previous two hundred years.

The overthrow of the British landed aristocracy by the far distant democracy of American farmers was one outcome of this change of economic circumstance. An even more important consequence has been the general divorce of Englishmen from life in contact with nature, which in all previous ages had helped to form the mind and the imagination of the island race.

 

The other states of Europe, which still had peasantry and valued them as a stabilizing element in the social fabric, warded off the influx of American food by tariffs. But in England no such policy was adopted or even seriously considered. The belief in Free Trade as the secret of our vast prosperity, the unwillingness to interfere with the world-commerce on which our power and wealth seemed to stand secure, the predominance of the towns over the country in numbers and still more in intellectual and political leadership, the memories of the ‘hungry forties’ when the Corn Laws had made bread dear for the poor – all these circumstances prevented any effort to save the rural way of life.

 

Least of all did the Victorians see any need to grow food in the island to provide the necessities of future wars. After two generations of safety won at Waterloo, real national danger seemed to have passed away forever.

 

 

 

A WISH

 

Mine be a cot beside the hill;

A bee-hive’s hum shall sooth my ear;

A willowy brook that turns a mill,

With many a fall shall linger near.

 

The swallow, oft, beneath my thatch

Shall twitter from her clay-built nest;

Oft shall the pilgrim lift the latch,

And share my meal, a welcome guest.

 

Around my ivied porch shall spring

Each fragrant flower that drinks the dew;

And Lucy, at her wheel, shall sing

In russet-gown and apron blue.

 

The village-church among the trees,

Where first our marriage-vows were given,

With merry peals shall swell the breeze

And point with taper spire to Heaven.

 

                                                                                                            S Rogers

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s war on Centre Court, but tennis teaches us to love

 

(Taken from an article by the Rev Dr Lincoln Harvey published in The Times on 4 July)

 

The church is best placed to explain why the unnecessary but meaningful nature of tennis makes it so popular. That’s because the church teaches that we are (unnecessary) too. God created our world out of nothing, and – because there is only one God – Christians believe that his act of creation was completely unnecessary. It’s not as if there was a bigger God in the background, cracking the whip, forcing God to create a world which would meet their stringent demands.

 

Nor was the one God in anyway deficient, with some intrinsic need forcing him to act. Instead, the church proclaims that God is eternally complete in himself, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, perfectly fulfilled. Therefore, when this God creates, it is a completely unnecessary act. God created us freely. The church believes that God created the world in order to share the life of the Trinity, which is to say the meaning of creation is love.

 

With all this in mind, a simple equation presents itself. Creation is fundamentally unnecessary but deeply meaningful in character, and so are sporting events.Therefore when we are sitting down to watch tennis, we are witnessing an event that is itself unnecessary yet meaningful and therefore expresses something of our deepest identity as unnecessary-but-meaningful creatures. The tennis effectively provides an arena in which our fundamental nature can be celebrated,giving us chance to resonate with our core identity as creatures who are created freely for love.

 

Of course, this way of seeing things raises as many questions as it answers. However, it helps us to see that it is good that Wimbledon punctuates the seriousness of our working life, reminding us that we are playful creatures, unnecessarily but endlessly loved into existence by the one true God. That’s what is really going on amid the strawberries and cream of SW19. We are celebrating who we are.

The Editor

 

 

A General Thanksgiving

 

(From the Book of Common Prayer)

 

Almighty God, Father of all mercies, we thine unworthy servants do give thee most humble and hearty thanks for all thy goodness and loving kindness to us, and to all men;

 

We bless thee for our creation, preservation, and all the blessings of this life; but above all, for thine inestimable love in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ; for the means of grace, and for the hope of glory.

 

And, we beseech thee, give us that due sense of all thy mercies, that our hearts may be unfeignedly thankful, and that we shew forth thy praise, not only with our lips, but in our lives;

 

By giving up ourselves to thy service, and by walking before thee in holiness and righteousness all our days;

 

Through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost be all honour and glory, world without end.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Parish Directory

 

Vicar:                    Reverend Mike Smith, Nailsworth, Tel. 07840 260 182

 

Curate:                  Reverend Sue Sobczak, Horsley, Tel. 01453 833 526

 

Reader                  Sue White, Nailsworth, Tel: 01453 835 693

 

Churchwardens:   Harry Tubbs, 3 The Walled Garden, Kingscote, GL8 8YP Tel: 860 194

                            Godfrey Ainsworth, Kingscote House, Kingscote, GL8 8XY Tel: 861 683

 

Hon.Sec.PCC:        Georgina Harford, Ashcroft House, Kingscote, GL8 8YF Tel: 01453 860 227

 

Hon.Treas.PCC:    Jane Nichols, Asheldown, 3 Ashel Barn Cottages, Kingscote, GL8 8YB Tel. 01453 860 534

 

Members of PCC:   The Churchwardens, The Hon. Secretary, The Hon. Treasurer, Elin Tattersall,

                            Zoe Nichols, Chris Alford.

 

Flower and Clean Team: Teresa Day, Vivienne Ainsworth, Angela Wooldridge, Pauline McTear.

 

Nailsworth MU:     Trissa Jones,   Tel: 832 551

 

 

Editor of Forerunner: Harry Tubbs, 3 The Walled Garden, Kingscote GL8 8YP Tel: 860 194

 

Gift Aid and Envelopes:   Jane Nichols, 3 Ashel Barn Cottages, Kingscote Tel. 860 534.

 

Church Flowers Rota:      Lorna Reynolds, Tel. 860 231

 

Organist:               Rosemary Sims, 15 Badger’s Way, Forest Green, Nailsworth, GL6 0HE Tel: 832 446

 

Sidespersons:         Harry Tubbs, Rod Tibbert, Elin Tattersall,

Godfrey Ainsworth, Jane Nichols.

 

Electoral Roll:        Elin Tattersall, 3 Boxwood Close, Tel.01453 860 182

 

 

Mowing Team:      Harry Tubbs, Sebastian Cooper, Rick Bond, Roger Lucy, Godfrey Ainsworth, Ken Davies,

                            Brian McTear, John Moore, Tony Wooldridge.

 

Village Hall:       Bookings: Pauline McTear, Kingscote, Tel. 861 311

                            Secretary: Carol Paton, Bagpath, Tel. 860 649

 

Parish Council Chairman: Graham Nichols, Asheldown, 3 Ashel Barn Cottages, Kingscote Tel: 01453 860 534

 

Parish Council Clerk: Anna Davison, Bagpath Court, GL8 8YG, Tel. 860 244

 

Village Agent:        Aileen Bendall, Tel. 07810 630 156 or 01452 426 868

 

 

Printer of Forerunner: Godfrey Ainsworth, Kingscote House, Tel. 861 683                                                  

 

 

 

The Forerunner is published by the P.C.C. who are usually most willing to accept copy from village groups and individuals.

However, please note that the opinions and views expressed by the contributors within the Forerunner

are not necessarily those of the Church, P.C.C. or Editor.