Sunday before Lent February 14th 2021

Beloved brothers and sisters in Christ

It is Valentine’s Day! In the midst of all the whiteness of dazzling snow, I hope you are overflowing with love, and able to share it with those around you and your special ones.  There are so many clichés, but it is good to express what you make of this most used word in the world. By the way, it is used 538 times in the New Revised Standard Version, which Bible translation most of us use! 

It gives me new energy to enter a vital season in our church, together. I think we are going to have a full and engaging 40 day journey of togetherness this Lent. Here are some of our initiatives: 

Our Lent booklets ‘LiveLent’ have arrived!  You will be receiving it, hand delivered by Tuesday. We think you will find it challenging and life-giving.  It has daily reflections so you can spend a little time each day in your personal, prayerful reflection

Together with LiveLent, you’ll be receiving two handouts:

1.   Shrove Tuesday, with a recipe for pancakes, so that you can indulge yourself and your family, enjoying the tradition we would have shared together, had we not been in lockdown. Our Zoom meeting continues at 7pm, for a relaxed virtual feast and open discussion. On Shrove Tuesday. If possible and even it’s a once-off, do try to join us. The link is through MoragAnne Elder https://us02web.coom.us/j/856-1019298

2.       A second handout in your pack will be for Ash Wednesday. It has an activity you can do in your own home. For those who can, do join us on for a Zoom service including a Eucharist at 8pm. The link is through Betty Evans, and it is:

https://us04web.zoom.us/j/2091141378?pwd=c0pJbXNqNWJUUDl4SnJUMXVBVVNEdz09

3.   Throughout Lent, the two Zoom groups will share a new weekly reflection and video in their usual Tuesday and Wednesday slots.  We will send you the link so that you can watch it on your own if you need to.

4.   On Wednesday, our Zoom group got to Chapter 15 of Mark’s Gospel.  We would like to finish reading it by Lent, so we will meet earlier on Tuesday, to read Chapters 15 and 16. We will be receiving a new link for this extra meeting.  If you’d like to come in with us, let us know.

Sunday services in Lent will be pre-recorded and online, from our own community. You will be receiving a link each week to watch the service. It will be comprised of contributions from the churches in Tayport and ourselves in Tayport and Newport. It will be a wonderful gathering of our communities.

World day of prayer is on Friday 5th March, and we will give you more details closer to the time.

READINGS FOR SUNDAY ARE:

2 Kings 5: 1-14; Psalm 40; 1 Corinthians 9: 24-27; Mark 1: 40-45

Two men with incurable ailments are cured.  Naaman finds it difficult to simply be obedient and accepting the power of God, being used to receiving the best of attention and indulgence in life.  He learned to trust and obey, as the old chorus says, ‘Trust and obey, for there’s no other way, to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.’ Are we capable of this simplicity in asking Jesus to cure us of our habit or dis-ease? The gospel reading takes us to a fascinating encounter.  Having asked to be cured, the blind man say that if Jesus is willing, he can be cured, as if the power, rightly, rests with Jesus.  Jesus assures him of his willingness, and cleanses him…  Then, friends, should we not be assured that Christ wants us to be aware of what needs healing, name it to him, and be assured that he wants to return us to perfect form and mind.  Let us do just that this Lent: bring our needs to the waiting and expectant Jesus, change our habits and live through 40 days in a new, refreshed and healthy way.

God bless you richly

Kathy Barrable

07552 503859

Second Sunday before Lent , February 7th 2021

Beloved brothers and sisters in Christ

May you feel the living Christ accompanying you on your journey. Let us pray:

Gracious God,
as we remember before you the thousands who have died,
surround us and all who mourn with your strong compassion.
Be gentle with us in our grief,
protect us from despair,
and give us grace to persevere
and face the future with hope
in Jesus Christ our risen Lord.

Amen.

As we travel through each day, let us lean in to a budding season, absorbing this day’s rain, just like your Word and Presence, to strengthen us for the best springtime of our lives, when slowly we will be able to move, meet and gather together.  Let us encourage one another as we do this.

During Wednesday evening’s Zoom meeting, we have read up to Chapter 11 of Mark’s gospel.  Do join us even if you are at home.  We are enjoying the continuous reading, and many interesting questions are raised in terms of the content and also of the different translations we are using. The link is: https://us04web.zoom.us/j/2091141378?pwd=c0pJbXNqNWJUUDl4SnJUMXVBVVNEdz09

In 10 days’ time we will start the season of Lent, and here are our plans:

On Shrove Tuesday, you are invited to join the Zoom group at 7pm for a special service.  We plan to have pancakes to share virtually. The link is through MoragAnne Elder https://us02web.coom.us/j/856-1019298

On Ash Wednesday, you are invited to join us on Zoom for a service at 8pm. The link is through Betty Evans, and it is:

https://us04web.zoom.us/j/2091141378?pwd=c0pJbXNqNWJUUDl4SnJUMXVBVVNEdz09

LiveLent is a booklet with daily reflections, which we will purchase and distribute to you, and it is free!  We can travel through the days and hold each other in prayer, or if you would like, choose a friend to chat to about what your experience is. We intend delivering the booklets to your doorstep.

Through Lent, the two Zoom groups will share a weekly reflection and video.  We will send you the link so that you can watch it on your own.

Sunday services in Lent will be virtual, and you will be receiving a link each week to watch a service.  It will be comprised of contributions from the churches in Tayport and ourselves. It will be a wonderful gathering of our communities.

World day of prayer is on Friday 5th March, and we will give you more details closer to the time.

READINGS FOR SUNDAY ARE:

Isaiah 40:21-31; 1 Cor.9:16-23; Psalm 147: 1-12; Mark 1:29-39

Jesus’ ministry of healing is in full force.  People seem to wish for healing of their afflictions and ailments before understanding and the teaching of the gospel.  Jesus heals a range of ailments, yet he makes time for lengthy and personal prayer.  How could this apply to you and to me?  One view is that our world, country and neighbourhood, our friends and neighbours need prayerful nurturing whilst the rest of our lives might show the wear and tear of Covid and lockdown.  Let us stay in touch, healing where our prayers lead us, led by what comes from our personal prayers to God who walked the earth in the form of Jesus.  He is our first point of conversation, and that soothes and inspires us to do God’s will.

May God bless you richly

Kathy Barrable

07552 503859

Revd Katharine Ann Barrable M Ed., M Th

Grace and Peace be with you

Newsletter January 30th 2021

Beloved in Christ

Greetings in the name of our Lord. As it says in one of the week’s readings, ‘Grace, Peace and Mercy’!

It is a brighter day – and a beautiful one.  The sun is rising and setting higher in the sky, and there is crisp frost on the ground.  Everyone is walking their dogs, and greeting one another.  I don’t know of one 80+ year old who hasn’t been notified about, or received their jab! There seems to be some light at the end of the tunnel. Numbers of Covid cases are dropping, and there is even talk of children returning to school in March.  I am with my grandsons twice a week now, and re-learning how little minds work, sharing their delight in capering, climbing and clawing wetness and cold, and of course learning how clever they are to know terms about bears go into torpor, and male otters being called boars! Mostly, I rediscover the simple joys of childhood when one is invincible, immortal and all-powerful (and all loving!)  Bless you and your families, and let us take heart and pray for one another!

I have recently downloaded an app on my phone called, ‘Pray as you go’. It is about 12 minutes long, starts with music, a lectionary reading, and a reflection. I recommend it highly. Do ry it!

‘Join the Conversation’ Ecumenical Zoom on Tuesdays continues very well

This Wednesday’s Zoom will be moving to Thursday at 8, for this week only.  The link is:

https://us04web.zoom.us/j/2091141378?pwd=c0pJbXNqNWJUUDl4SnJUMXVBVVNEdz09

Join our Cloud HD Video MeetingZoom is the leader in modern enterprise video communications, with an easy, reliable cloud platform for video and audio conferencing, chat, and webinars across mobile, desktop, and room systems. Zoom Rooms is the original software-based conference room solution used around the world in board, conference, huddle, and training rooms, as well as executive offices and classrooms. Founded in 2011, Zoom helps businesses and organizations bring their teams together in a frictionless environment to get more done. Zoom is a publicly traded company headquartered in San Jose, CA.us04web.zoom.us

Should you be following from home, we read up to Mark Chapter 8.

Lent is coming up in February and we plan to purchase a booklet for every one of us, with contemporary reflections.  More news of that later!

Here is a prayer by Thomas Merton, Cistercian monk:

My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going.

I do not see the road ahead of me.

I cannot know for certain where it will end.

Not do I really know myself,

And the fact that I think I am following your will

Does not mean that I am actually doing so.

But I believe that the desire to please you

Does in fact please you.

And I hope I have that desire

In all that I am doing.

I hope that I will never do anything

Apart from that desire.

And I know that if I do this

You will lead me by the right road,

Though I may know nothing about it.

Therefore I will trust you always, though I seem to be lost

And in the shadow of death.

I will not fear, for you are ever with me,

And you will never leave me to face my perils alone.

Readings for Sunday are:

Deut. 18:15-20; 1 Cor.8:1-13; Psalm 111; Mark 1:21-28

The demoniac shouts, ‘What do you want with us, Jesus..? Many of us call that out now, as our world is also turned upside down, and challenging our normal ways of thinking and being.  Jesus wants, should we ask, to heal us, make our lives right itself, communicate with us, journey with us, and listen to us.  Let us turn to him in prayers and petitions.

God bless you in every way

Kathy Barrable

07752 503859

Newsletter 24th January , Candlemas

Beloved in Christ

I will admit to you that this week I have really felt a personal lockdown – a feeling of living in liminal space, suspended in a sticky solution, unable to move much except in the fluid surrounding me. I can sense you around me, even see you, acknowledge the odd item posted through the letterbox, but for you as family, the flow I started feeling before Christmas has become sluggish. I wonder if you share these feelings?

To this end, I am asking you to share with this group, any pictures you may be taking of the winter wonderland, of our family, your hearthside. Could you also share what you are reading, reflecting on? And, share your thoughts and perceptions.  I would like to feel we are nourishing each other as family in Christ.

I have entered a virtual world, through Wassap and Zoom videos.  Have you? How do you feel about that?

At the end of the week, I feel Zoomed out! Let me share:

1.      ‘Join the conversation’ is doing so well, and there is an open and healthy exchange of ideas on the topics of ‘How God guides us?  Here are the questions we shared, so that you can join the conversation, even though you did not see the video:

      i.        In what ways and how differently do you pray to God and or the Holy Spirit?

    ii.         Do you believe in the counsel of ‘other saints’ or even those who have passed before you?

   iii.        ‘God can shut doors as well as open them’ How?

   iv.        ‘God can use our mistakes’. Do you see this in your own life?

1.   ‘CONNECTION’ on Wednesday evenings started us on a non-stop journey through MRK’S GOSPEL.  We reached Chapter 5 verse 35. Would you like to join us by reading along with us each week?

2.   CLERGY CONFERENCE. The Diocesan clergy had an 8 hour conference on Tuesday. Richard TIplady led the sessions, and we shared uplifting innovations, but also the harsh reality of our church in COVID, our people in LOCKDOWN and the trajectory of church in the world. I felt, at once, frustrated that our whole year of isolation with me not meeting some of you except over the wall; us anable to forge the benefit of personal contact; our churches by and large being empty; the lack of strategic planning, and the comfort of being together. Yet, buoyant because we HAVE kept going, wanting to join each other in worship, and even with the hindsight of wisdom in closing church after Christmas, thrilled that we are chatting and above all, have stayed healthy and safe, that our Zoom chats are happening, and we are linking with people in our villages as well.

3.   I feel that the clergy, with two Zoom sessions a week, are also holding together, caring for each other, engaging in ongoing topics and experiences, and that our Bishop cares for us.  To my great surprise, on Sunday evening, a hamper was delivered to my doorstep!  To mine and all clergy!  It was a thank you from the Bishop and an invitation to partake in a cocktail hour at 8pmWe gathered then, after a long day of information sharing, opened the hampers, had a quiz and a best pet competition, and laughed and unwound.

4.   Let me ask you: how can we engage those of us who are not able to enter Zoom discussions? Shall we form a Wassap group as well? Shall we have a midweek coffee hour? (mid morning?)

5.   LENT is coming up soon.  What would you like us to do or share then?  (We are all pretty sure that we will not be in church, but if we are, so much the better for Easter!) What requests/ideas do you have?  What would you most like to share together?  In this unprecedented time, let’s do something different!

6.   Here is some interesting information on the Anglo-Catholic tradition from Bishop Ian:

‘For most people Epiphany means Twelfth Night, 6 January, the last day of Christmas, when the decorations go back in the box and the Christmas tree is taken down for another year. But for others, including me, Epiphany is not just one day but a Season that goes from the Feast of the Epiphany to the Feast of Candlemas, and the Crib stays in place and the tree lights keep shining until 2 February.’ Epiphany means ‘revealing,’ the revealing of Christ for all people, and the Season is the enactment of the journey of revealing that begins with the Magi following the star, continues with the baptism by John, continues with the calling of the disciples, and ends at Candlemas with the recognition in the Temple by Simeon and Anna. Epiphany is the continuing of the Christmas journey, a time to reflect on the meaning of these events, the Epiphanies that reveal who Jesus is. And as we make the Epiphany journey year after year, the revealing is different because we are different, the world is different.

 Epiphany means ‘revealing,’ the revealing of Christ for all people, and the Season is the enactment of the journey of revealing that begins with the Magi following the star, continues with the baptism by John, continues with the calling of the disciples, and ends at Candlemas with the recognition in the Temple by Simeon and Anna. Epiphany is the continuing of the Christmas journey, a time to reflect on the meaning of these events, the Epiphanies that reveal who Jesus is. And as we make the Epiphany journey year after year, the revealing is different because we are different, the world is different.

The journey through Epiphany this year includes another journey, our continuing struggle with Coronavirus. Tragically, the journey has revealed inequalities and loss, and untold suffering. More than 100,000 in the UK have lost their lives, and more than 2 million worldwide. In Scotland, with a second period of Lockdown for most and ongoing restrictions for some, it is likely that greater restrictions may yet be needed. Vaccines and treatments are signs of journey’s end, but we still have some way to go. As this journey moves on, we have to keep on acting positively as churches. That does not mean exhausting ourselves (or our Clergy, Lay ministers and Vestry members) with anxious activism, even at a distance. It does mean attending to worship and witness in whatever ways are possible. Some strident voices have been heard demanding that the Government should allow churches to stay open for worship. Attending worship and attending to wellbeing are closely related, they argue, and rightly. But does that mean privileging places of worship over concert halls or sports grounds? All contribute to wellbeing, but all could potentially lead to transmission of the virus.’

Christmas and Epiphany celebrate the Incarnation, God with us as a human being among  human beings. I think this means that the Church, the Body of Christ, is called to identify with the precautions demanded by Lockdown, not seek to stand above them. In this second Lockdown, as in the first, we have to offer witness and service to society by having to worship and minister in a different way.

We have gained much experience which gives us confidence for the task. We have learned that ‘Stay at Home’ need not mean ‘Stay away from Church.’ We have discovered how to do on-line and on-paper worship, and to try and include everyone.

The SEC has developed and continues to offer online Eucharistic worship at 11.00am on Sundays, available via www.scotland.anglican.org. A number of churches also offer local worship online, listed at www.scotland.anglican.org/broadcast-sunday-worship/online-worship-from-around-the- scottish-episcopal-church/. And many clergy or ministry teams have found that people really value receiving weekly readings, reflections, and prayers on paper, use them at home For personal prayer and  devotion there are many resources available online, but I particularly recommend one which gives space for reflection and prayer based on a Scripture reading, and which I have been using every day. “Pray as You Go,” found at https://pray-as-you-go.org.

Much to consider and inspire here!

I see the neighbourhood is dark, lights down, but next year I would like to pick up on the Candlemass tradition, which is one that Christine Barker observes!  Apart from that, I’d like our lights to go up in Church at the beginning of Advent, so that we are aware of the Light for our journey!

READINGS FOR SUNDAY ARE

Jonah 3:1-5, 10;

1 Cor.7:29-31

Psalm 62: 6-14

Mark 1: 14-20

Interestingly, the readings last week from John, and now from Mark, invite us into discipleship, a different way of living, and a clear focus on learning from and sharing the teachings of Jesus. As Paul says to the Corinthians, ‘the world as we know it is passing away’. I think we are forced to accept that things will not be the same, ever again. So let us look at the opportunities as they are revealed and pray for one another by name as we move along this timeframe.  

Having shared with and prayed for each one of you, I feel more peaceful and ‘at home’.

God bless in all you do

Kathy Barrable

07552 503 859