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Sunday 21st June, The Third Sunday after Trinity (Proper 7)10.00 am Sung Eucharisthttps://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/...
19/06/2026

Sunday 21st June, The Third Sunday after Trinity (Proper 7)
10.00 am Sung Eucharist
https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

How great is our God. Let 'em know.

It’s comforting to know that our Father in heaven is looking out for ‘mere’ sparrows, and that we are of more value than they. But then it becomes clear that divine expectation of us is commensurately higher.
We need to show our colours, and, as touched on last week in my homily, this can prove difficult: we’re bashful; tongue-tied; embarrassed to talk about our faith; or even fearful of ridicule if we ‘out’ ourselves or are ‘outed’ as Christians at school or in the workplace.
Jesus’s words which indicate schisms in families over faith, if necessary, and the language of upset rather than accord are deliberate, and we can’t discount that these are meant literally. I think it’s hyperbole (deliberate exaggeration for the sake of effect). Even so, I’m not going to take any chances.
As a youth, from High Church background (with a few bells and smells and lots of music) I think I was ill-prepared to talk about my faith in the way my more evangelical peers were able to. However, I reflected, what use was my faith if I’m unable to talk about it and spread the ‘good news’ as commanded to do.
Indifference, in my view, is the greatest damage to the Gospel message, not hostility towards it. I saw this from my days in rural Lincolnshire, if the pub or post-office shut in the village folks found ways of getting to the next ones as they needed the PO services and/or a pint and the company. If the village church had to close, that was it: the need and desire to worship and spend time with God in that way seemingly did not merit some ingenuity which may include the odd lift for those in need.
Our God is a passionate God. Let us reciprocate that and reflect it.
Fr A

Sunday 14th June 2026, The Second Sunday after Trinity (Proper 6)https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/...
13/06/2026

Sunday 14th June 2026, The Second Sunday after Trinity (Proper 6)
https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

MIssion, then and now is a tall order.

There’s a prize for anyone who can recall the poem I often use when talking about mission and sending out. I’ve used it often enough over the last 15 1/2 years. Can you remember what it is?
Given the ‘Jewish’ focus of Matthew’s Gospel, today’s gospel reading is something of a limited commission , as it doesn’t include ‘The Gentiles.’ The Apostles are not required, yet, to make disciples of ‘all nations.’ However, we are! It will involve speaking to others ‘outside the fold’ and, ideally, giving personal testimony about Who Jesus is for us.
There is an alternative I mention quite a lot too, which is that by our examples and inspired by us others may want to find out what it is that makes us ‘tick’. We may “use words if necessary” (St Francis of Assisi).
As a result of my recent appointment as Chair of Pride in Place for Clayton Vale, I was reminded of the centrality of churches as places for all people. Their prime function is for the praise and worship of Almighty God, easy to forget sometimes. Our worship should be inspired and informed by what we do in deed, word and prayer. How are we going to do this, if we are shy or get tongue-tied; or feel embarrassed about our faith in an indifferent and sometimes hostile world? The question and answer is Jesus, sent by the Father, who fills us with His Spirit. God gives us all we need, and the space to grow into what and who we are called to be.
Fr A
Image: "The sending of the Twelve" Duccio di Buoninsegna

Sunday 7th June, The First Sunday after Trinity.10.00 am Parish Sung Eucharisthttps://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/1586...
06/06/2026

Sunday 7th June, The First Sunday after Trinity.
10.00 am Parish Sung Eucharist
https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

Follow me

You might think that just as we touch down into a long period of Ordinary Time, there might be less disturbance as we fatten up ourselves for the lean times of Advent, just under six months away. But no.

The three readings today are rather disturbing: being caused to journey into the unknown; sticking to codes of rules and laws all the time does not guarantee success in the eyes of God; and God (in Jesus) is not particular about what groups of people He chooses as followers.

We are called to journey into the unknown: it tests our faith. It is our faith which trumps our good works, whether or not they conform to the club’s rules. God chooses those on the outside, the marginalised, to show what discipleship must be.

All in all, we are required to keep our options open by taking risk, when it may seem more sensible to play it safe. However, we are not called to be reckless and irresponsible. We are required to love. As we follow in Christ’s steps, we do this more perfectly. As a ‘church’, in the narrow sense as a particular body of people meeting in a particular building or in the widest sense, as the Body of Christ on earth we must remember we are not an association of the most holy, righteous and moral, but a gathering of those, some more broken than others, who need each other, at home and abroad, in worship and prayer, to make us whole.

Fr A

Trinity Sunday, 31st May 2026, Holy Communion (Book of Common Prayer)9.00 am (said)10.00 am (sung)https://www.achurchnea...
30/05/2026

Trinity Sunday, 31st May 2026,
Holy Communion (Book of Common Prayer)
9.00 am (said)
10.00 am (sung)

https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

“Come to me now, disguised as everything.”

This is the contemporary poet and Anglican priest Malcolm Guite talking of God, in his sonnet O Sapientia (latin for ‘wisdom’) which he wrote for Advent, which of course means ‘coming’; but that’s basically December, and we’re in Spring. Don’t worry, there is a link.
It’s the Son for Whom we wait at Advent. For 50 days we waited for the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. Today we consider God as three persons; three persons one God; everything and more: Father, Son and Holy Spirit
Guite takes inspiration for his sonnet The Trinity from another Anglican priest from 400 years earlier, George Herbert, and his sonnet The Windows, how they are formed and work, a metaphor for the way God forms us. We are made and marked, not by a percussive, or beating force, but by love which is linked poetically to heat which, carefully applied, alters the structure of a substance, glass in this case, so that it can be changed in form and appearance, and beautified without breaking. This is perhaps more true of metals, but you get the point.
A similar idea is Aesop’s fable of the sun and wind, who have a competition to see who is the quicker in causing someone to remove their cloak. Both elements have tremendous power, but it’s how they apply themselves which makes the critical difference: gentleness and kind persuasion are more effective than brute force and bluster. The effect of God’s gentle fire and wind, expressed through the Persons of the Holy Trinity is infinitely more profound upon us.
Fr A

Manchester and Salford Whit Walk 2026https://www.facebook.com/ManchesterSalfordWhitWalk?locale=en_GBWe were there, with ...
25/05/2026

Manchester and Salford Whit Walk 2026
https://www.facebook.com/ManchesterSalfordWhitWalk?locale=en_GB

We were there, with our No1 banner resplendent in its new frame, a gift in memory of a grandfather the donor never met. The brass finials twinkled in the sun. The banner bearers did a wonderful job. The Rector caught up with some banter with the guest preacher, The Revd Kate Bottley, from about ten years before.
It was a fabulous morning of witness and worship. Thank you to all who joined us on a beatiful day, the heat eased by some breeze. God is good. Join us next year.

Sunday 24th May, Pentecost10.00 am Sung Eucharist.https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/Come, Holy...
23/05/2026

Sunday 24th May, Pentecost
10.00 am Sung Eucharist.
https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

Come, Holy Ghost, our souls inspire
For the last six weeks, from the Second Sunday of Easter, we’ve been hearing about the inspiration and action of the Holy Spirit on the lives of the Apostles, and how the was passed on to those the encountered in their teaching and healing. This week, the ‘reason’ is back-filled.
The Holy Spirit always was, just as Jesus always was. Because God the Father is gracious we are given the Birth of Jesus and the coming of the Holy Spirit to inform us in space and time, yet these events are still deeply, deeply mysterious. Note, we have Trinity Sunday next week too.
For the first time in a long while, the news media have drawn attention to this also being the time for the Jewish Festival of Shavuot, which of course it was in Acts 2, when Jews came from all over the known world with their different languages, some of them gathering together in that upper room. Those outside, had they known why they were there, would have regarded them as a continuation of that pesky sect whose leader needed to be dispatched.
Isn’t it remarkable that from these small, covert beginnings the Word spread so far and wide, and so quickly. Let’s pick up that momentum again.
We don’t need to be in a Pentecostal church to be ‘Pentecostal’ or Spirit-filled. All who are open to the Word of God, the Good News, are spirit-filled too.
Fr A
Image: the orphrey from our Pentecost altar frontal

The Seventh Sunday of Easter (The Sunday after the Ascension)10.00 am Sung Eucharist.https://www.achurchnearyou.com/chur...
16/05/2026

The Seventh Sunday of Easter (The Sunday after the Ascension)
10.00 am Sung Eucharist.
https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

God is gone up

“Jesus’ friends lived through the pain of parting not once but twice: the farewell discourses in St John’s Gospel tell of how Jesus prepared them for his coming death, and for his ascension back to heaven. Here he prays aloud , for their benefit, in words that are full of mystery and poetry, hope and comfort, reassuring them that they are already being drawn into the very love of God, and the closer they come to God, the closer they become to each other. To be at one with God is to be at one with one another.”
(Sunday by Sunday The Royal School of Church Music)

All very helpful, and sound theology, which needs to be tempered, if I may say, with I Peter’s cautions about the tribulations we will face. The tone and vocabulary of John 17, today’s Gospel, is as if the Ascension has already take place, but it’s not even Holy Week! The point is, that if we love one another, as Jesus commands, then we are risen with Him, and it is not so much that we ascend with him – as we think we may ascend ‘to heaven’ when we die - but that we have Heaven on earth. Fr A

Image: "The Ascension" Salvador Dali

We decided to mark Rogationtide by walking around the parish perimeter, as closely and as safely as possible. It's green...
10/05/2026

We decided to mark Rogationtide by walking around the parish perimeter, as closely and as safely as possible. It's greener than you might think. We were all obsessed with the Canada Geese and their goslings on and around The Rochdale Canal. Not many crops to bless these days, but hey! Eight of us set off (Dan was behind the camera). Eight of us returned over 5 miles, two hours thirty minutes later. Thanks to Cath for devising the route, and her phone for tracking our time and movement!

10th May, The Sixth Sunday of Easterhttps://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/Take comfortTo the right...
09/05/2026

10th May, The Sixth Sunday of Easter

https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

Take comfort

To the right is an image of a stone altar, the kind to which Paul refers in his speech to the Athenians. I guess it leaves us nonplussed. It looks like a garden ornament. But note the kindness with which Paul addresses the people, despite their indifference to him. He doesn’t say “please don’t tell me you worship something like this: look at what we’ve got.” He excites curiosity.

We can understand the bewilderment of ‘the Athenians’ who may well have been baffled when faced with Paul’s model of God which had no physical manifestation since the Ascension (which we mark on Thursday).

Cut to the Gospel Jesus tells us that in addition to him (in John always think ‘Word made flesh’) he will send comfort, an advocate in the form of the Holy Spirit, also described as the Paraclete, an ‘advocate’ who can be alongside us. We need this judge in the often hostile court of public opinion. We saw how that panned out for Stephen last week. Be brave. Remember, we are not left comfortless.

Fr A

The Fifth Sunday of Easter10.00 am Sung Eucharisthttps://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/"Use the di...
02/05/2026

The Fifth Sunday of Easter
10.00 am Sung Eucharist
https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15869/page/76853/view/

"Use the difficulty."
On Parkinson, a chat-show quite a few of you here will be too young to remember, great advice was shared by one of our greatest actors, Sir Michael Caine. It became a philosophy of His. It was advice he received from a play’s director after a prop ended up in the wrong place, blocking his entrance from the flaps.

"If it's a comedy fall over it if it's a drama pick it up and smash it."

As Shakespeare’s Jaques says in As You Like it 2.vii

" All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,"

Jaques then goes on to describe the seven ages of man.
Today, we encounter extreme difficulty in the reading from Acts leading to Stephen’s martyrdom; and other forms of stones, stumbling stones, in 1 Peter: then and a solution in John 14.
Another philosophy of Sir Michael is to avoid the difficulty if you can. It seems to me that with both philosophies, as disciples of Jesus, prayer is essential.
Fr A

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