Upcoming Events "Royal Visit to St. Clements, more information click here!" and scroll down.
Please see "Who is Who?" for further contact information!
Tuesday, 9th March, 17:00-20:00 (earlier or later by arrangement) Meet the Chaplain for a chat (coffee, tea and cookie included) at the Communio Center (Karolíny Svĕtlé 21, Prague 1)
Thursday 11th March, 19:00 Lent Seminar III, "Marriage", Klimentska 18, 1st floor. More information needed? Ask the Chaplain!
Sunday 14th March, 11:00 Sung Eucharist with Sunday School, followed by coffee hour.
Tuesday, 16th March, 17:00-20:00 (earlier or later by arrangement) Meet the Chaplain for a chat (coffee, tea and cookie included) at the Communio Center (Karolíny Svĕtlé 21, Prague 1)
Thursday 18th March, 19:00 Lent Seminar IV, "Ordination", Klimentska 18, 1st floor. More information needed? Ask the Chaplain!
Sunday 21st March, 11:00 Sung Eucharist, followed by coffee hour.
For your diaries:
Sunday 25th April - Our Annual General Meeting will take place in Church immediately following our Sung Eucharist that morning.
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Sending this out as a Midweek Message, (rather than one of the End-of-Week variety), does give me the chance to remind you of the second in our series of Lent Seminars on looking at the Sacraments and those ‘commonly called sacraments’.
Thursday 4th March at 7pm – Communion
What are we doing when we participate in a service that is variously known as ‘Breaking of Bread’, ‘Holy Communion’, ‘Eucharist’ or ‘Mass’? What did Jesus mean when he told his disciples at the Last Supper, “This is my body, broken for you” & “This is my blood, shed for you”? How should we understand what happens to the bread & wine when the Prayer of Consecration is said?
These are some of the questions we will explore in our second seminar. The venue will be the small meeting room on the first floor of Klimentská 18. This is both a central location and also one that is warm!!!! We will start at 7pm and probably finish around 8.30pm.
Topics and dates for the other three seminars are
Thursday 11th March – Marriage
Thursday 18th March – Ordination
Thursday 25th March – Confession/Absolution/Reconciliation
Next Sunday 7th March at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Third Sunday of Lent
Our Gospel Reading this coming Sunday is Luke 13 v1-9. It is a passage unique to the Gospel of Luke and does touch on the issue of so-called ‘innocent suffering’, a subject which I am sure is in the minds of many after the recent earthquakes in both Haiti & Chile. As I usually suggest, why not read the passage in advance of our worship on Sunday. There will be Coffee Hour in Klimentská 18 after the service.
Annual Church Meeting
This was originally scheduled to take place on Sunday 14th March but has now been postponed, (at the suggestion of the Archdeacon & with the consent of the Church Council), to Sunday 25th April immediately following our worship that morning. Therefore, new applications to join the Church Electoral Roll can still be received until Friday 11th April. The current Church Electoral Roll is displayed at the back of Church & underneath it are Electoral Roll Application Forms. Completed forms need to be handed in to me or the Churchwardens.
At the Annual Meeting, the Churchwardens and members of the Church Council are elected for the following twelve months. Please give serious thought and prayer as to who you want to serve in these capacities and whether you might offer yourself for election. All nominations need to be in writing, proposed and seconded by members of the Church Electoral Roll and with the consent of the person nominated and completed in advance of the Annual Meeting. There will be a form to do all of this on the noticeboard at the back of Church in the near future. The new Church Council will almost certainly face some difficult decisions in the coming year and it is important that it is fully representative of the views of the congregation as a whole.
Sunday 21st March at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Fifth Sunday of Lent
As some of you may already know, Their Royal Highnesses Charles, Prince of Wales & Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, are making a state visit to the Czech Republic between Saturday 20th – Tuesday 23rd March. As of this afternoon, more details of their visit programme has been published on the British Embassy website. You can find it here Programme of the Royal Visit
Now this information has been released, I am finally allowed to tell you all that the Prince and the Duchess will be joining us for our 11am Sung Eucharist on Sunday 21st March. As you will probably realise, I have known about this for several weeks. Since then, I have had a series of meetings with diplomats, private secretaries, staff from the Office of the Czech President, together with police and security personnel, sorting out the logistics and details of the visit.
What will this mean for you?
* Firstly, whatever you do, don’t use the Royal Visit as an excuse NOT to come to Church that day. The whole idea is that the Prince and the Duchess should join with all the regular congregation in their normal Sunday worship.
* Secondly, many of you will need to break a longstanding habit and actually be at Church BEFORE 11am!!!!! The Royal Party will arrive just before 11am, be greeted by me and the Churchwardens and then the service will commence promptly at 11am sharp! If you do arrive after the service has started, you may still be able to come into Church though I cannot guarantee that the Czech police will let you do so. But for reasons of etiquette, logistics and security, please leave home half an hour earlier than normal in order to reach St Clement’s Church no later than 10.50am.
* Thirdly, a short section of Klimentská will be closed to traffic before and during the service. Therefore, can I strongly suggest to those of you who normally drive themselves to Church, that you seriously look at using public transport on this occasion. If you do still choose to drive in, please recognise that you may have to park far further away from Church than you normally would do.
* Fourthly, try and avoid bringing any big bags to Church that day. Sadly, there are inevitable security concerns and if you do bring more than a small handbag, police may well ask to see all the contents.
Any questions – please just ask. There will be reminders and updates in the next two Midweek messages and also on our website Anglican Episcopalian Church Prague.
Midweek Activities Questionnaires
1) If you have completed one and handed it in – Thank you!
2) If you have completed one and not yet handed it in – please do so.
3) If you have a copy but have yet to fill it in – please do so and then continue as in 2 above.
4) If you have not yet received one, ask for one as you are welcomed at Church this Sunday – then proceed as in 3 above.
Best wishes
Ricky
This week, I thought I’d give my email message a new title! Lent started last Wednesday, therefore…..
This Sunday 21st February at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the First Sunday of Lent
Our Gospel reading on Sunday is Luke 4 v1-13 which tells of the time Jesus spent in the desert or wilderness experiencing testing or temptation. As I frequently suggest, you might like to read the passage for yourself in advance of Sunday’s service. There will be Sunday School & the service will be followed by a Shared Lunch in the meeting room on the third floor of Klimentská 18.
Thank to everyone who signed up with Sue Anderson last Sunday and volunteered to help provide food for the Shared Lunch. She still needs a few more offers of help with the following.
Keeping the season of Lent in mind we propose a ‘frugal’ theme of baked potatoes in skins and a range of fillings - so you can raid the pantry.
Please let Sue know (psprincipla (at) riversideschool (dot) cz / 731 178 731) if you are able to contribute any of the following items.
Baked potatoes (individually wrapped in foil to keep warm would be great) in batches of 8-10
Fillings in quantities of 8-10 portions
Some suggestions
· Baked beans
· Grated cheese
· Tuna & mayonnaise
· Leek & bacon
· Chilli beans
· Whatever you choose!!
Mixed/green salad
Ketchup/mayonnaise/sour cream
Cakes 8-10 servings
It would be really helpful if each could bring juice/bottle of water to also share. Hot drinks will be provided.
Annual Church Meeting – Sunday 14th March, immediately following our Sung Eucharist
I do hope that all those on the Church Electoral Roll, will make every effort to be present at the Annual Church Meeting, in order to be made fully aware of the uncertainties that we face as a Church in the coming year and to elect Churchwardens and members of the Church Council. A repeat of last week’s reminder that, in order to be able to vote at the Annual Church Meeting and to be eligible for election to the Church Council, your name must be on the Church Electoral Roll. A copy of the current Church Electoral Roll is on display at the back of Church. If your name is on it, which hopefully you should know anyway(!), then you don’t need to do anything further.
If your name is not on it and you want to join the Church Electoral Roll, you need to be baptised, aged over 16, and declare that “I am a member of the Church of England (or of a Church in communion with the Church of England) and am normally resident in the area covered by the church”.
If you are not an Anglican, (and I am aware of how many ‘non Anglicans’ there are in the congregation), then you need to be baptised, aged over 16 and declare that
“I am a member in good standing of a Church (not in communion with the Church of England) which subscribes to the doctrine of the Holy Trinity and also declare myself to be a member of the Church of England and I have habitually attended public worship in the church during the period of six months prior to enrolment”. Realistically, the last phrase means you need to have been worshipping with us since before mid-September 2009.
Application forms to join the Church Electoral Roll are in a plastic wallet pinned to the noticeboard at the back of Church. Completed forms need to be returned to me or the Churchwardens no later than 26th February 2010 as we have to display a complete Church Electoral Roll for 15 days before the Annual Meeting takes place. Several people took forms to complete last Sunday. Please ensure that if you were one of them, that you return the completed form this Sunday!
Thursday Evenings during Lent
There is a very good longstanding tradition within many Christian Churches of giving more time to study during the season of Lent. Therefore in Lent this year, I am going to lead a series of seminars on what are known as the Sacraments. The usual definition of a Sacrament is ‘An outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace’. Strictly speaking, Anglicans only recognise Baptism and Holy Communion as sacraments whereas Roman Catholics would add five more. However, we can explore that issue as part of the course. Even if you don’t normally feel able attend a regular midweek Church event, why not commit yourself to turning out on five Thursday evenings during Lent?
Here are the dates and topics.
Thursday 25th February – Baptism & Confirmation
Nearly everyone reading this message will have been baptised, either as an infant or later in life as an adult. Some, but not all, will have also undergone the rite of Confirmation. Why do we baptise and confirm? What is the biblical background? Why do we baptise infants who cannot speak for themselves? Should baptism be by sprinkling of water or by full immersion? These are some of the things I will seek to explore in our first Lent Seminar.
My intention is to speak for a while about the topic based on a printed handout that I will produce for everyone attending. There will then be an opportunity both for questions and discussion. The venue will be the small meeting room on the first floor of Klimentská 18. This is both a central location and also one that is warm!!!! We will start at 7pm and probably finish around 8.30pm.
Future dates & topics will be;
Thursday 4th March – Holy Communion/Eucharist
Thursday 11th March – Marriage
Thursday 18th March – Ordination
Thursday 25th March – Confession/Absolution/Reconciliation
I do hope that many of you will avail yourself of this opportunity to explore these topics which are at the heart of our understanding of our Christian faith and of the life of the Church.
Want to talk?
From time to time, members of the congregation ask me either by email, phone or in person, whether they can meet with me to talk about something of concern to them. Just to say that I welcome the opportunity of doing this. So, if you have a question(s) about the Christian faith or something is bothering you, don’t be afraid to ask to meet with me at a mutually convenient time & place to discuss it. I can’t always promise a definitive answer but I do promise a listening ear.
Want to complain?
Many of you are frequently very kind and tell me that you enjoyed the sermon, or what I said about a certain topic, or that you appreciated a particular hymn. For all of you who do that – thank you! However, when someone or some people are unhappy about something I said or did, I almost always only hear about it second-hand. When this happens, I’m never exactly sure how serious the complaint is or whether it is one person who miss-heard something I said, or several people who are seriously unhappy.
Therefore, if you are upset or unhappy about something, don’t be afraid to tell me directly. From past experience I often find that the source of a problem is someone not understanding what I said or not knowing all the background information as to why something is done in a particular way. Quite often I am a fault for not explaining things properly or because I’ve expressed something badly which has then been misunderstood. Please – if you think something isn’t quite right, say so directly!
Radio Praha
Some of you may already have seen or listened to an interview I did with David Vaughan for Radio Praha. If you haven’t seen or heard it yet you can find it here http://www.radio.cz/en/article/125088 . Bearing in mind what I’ve just written in the paragraph above, may I assure everyone that what Professor David Holeton suggests in the latter part of this article is not going to happen in the foreseeable future, nor is it part any hidden agenda for St. Clements. If you do have any further concerns, please feel free to speak to me about them.
Finally for this week……
As I have explained previously, a week today on Friday 26th February 2010, Sybille and I will be celebrating our ‘one hundredth birthday’. All those of you who have replied and said that you would like to join us and celebrate this major landmark in our lives, will be receiving an email later today giving details of the arrangements & venue for our birthday party. In making catering arrangements, we have allowed for a few more people than the current number of those who have said they will be attending. Therefore if you are one of those people who would like to join our celebration but have still not hit the ‘reply to this email button’ & said so, please do so ASAP!
Best wishes
Ricky
Not for the first time, my Midweek Message has become one of the End-of-Week variety. However…….
This Sunday 14th February at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Sunday next before Lent
Our Gospel reading on Sunday is Luke 9 v28-36 which tells the story of the Transfiguration. As I frequently suggest, you might like to read it for yourself in advance of Sunday’s service. There will be Sunday School & the service will be followed by Coffee Hour in the meeting room on the third floor of Klimentská 18.
Ash Wednesday 17th February at 7pm – Sung Eucharist with imposition of Ashes
Lent begins on Wednesday next week. Please make every effort to mark the beginning of this important season of the Christian Year by coming to worship at 7pm in the evening. There will be the opportunity to receive the imposition of ashes during the service. However, this is entirely voluntary and you are still most welcome to attend even if you do not wish to receive imposition. Because of this service, there will be no meeting of the Thursday study group the following evening. For details of our Lent Study Course, see further on in this message.
Sunday 21st February – First Sunday of Lent
Following our 11am Sung Eucharist, there will be our second Shared Lunch of 2010. Being in Lent, it will be of a slightly more frugal nature! Sue Anderson, who is kindly organising it, has asked me to pass on the following message.
We would like to invite you to our next Shared Lunch, after the service, on 21st February.
Keeping the season of Lent in mind we propose a ‘frugal’ theme of baked potatoes in skins and a range of fillings - so you can raid the pantry.
Please let Sue know (psprincipla (at) riversideschool (dot) cz / 731 178 731)if you are able to contribute any of the following items.
Baked potatoes (individually wrapped in foil to keep warm would be great) in batches of 8-10
Fillings in quantities of 8-10 portions
Some suggestions
· Baked beans
· Grated cheese
· Tuna & mayonnaise
· Leek & bacon
· Chilli beans
· Whatever you choose!!
Mixed/green salad
Ketchup/mayonnaise/sour cream
Cakes 8-10 servings
It would be really helpful if each could bring juice/bottle of water to also share. Hot drinks will be provided.
Sue will have a sign-up sheet this coming Sunday so there is no need to phone or email her if you are going to be in Church on Sunday 14th February.
Thursday Evenings during Lent
There is a very good longstanding tradition within many Christian Churches of giving more time to study during the season of Lent. Therefore in Lent this year, I am going to lead a series of studies on what are usually known as the Sacraments. The usual definition of a Sacrament is ‘An outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace’. Strictly speaking, Anglicans only recognise Baptism and Holy Communion as sacraments whereas Roman Catholics would add five more. However, we can explore that issue as part of the course. Here are the dates and topics.
Thursday 25th February – Baptism & Confirmation
Thursday 4th March – Holy Communion/Eucharist
Thursday 11th March – Marriage
Thursday 18th March – Ordination
Thursday 25th March – Confession/Absolution/Reconciliation
My intention is each week, to speak for a while about the topic based on a printed handout that I will produce for everyone attending. There will then be an opportunity both for questions and discussion.
The venue will be the small meeting room on the first floor of Klimentská 18. This is both a central location and also one that is warm!!!! We will start at 7pm and probably finish around 8.30pm. I do hope that many of you will avail yourself of this opportunity to explore these topics which are at the heart of our understanding of our Christian faith and of the life of the Church.
Midweek Activities after Easter
The last two Sundays, we circulated copies of short questionnaire to try and find out what Midweek activities, at what times & on what days, members of the St. Clement’s congregation might be interested in. If you took a questionnaire, please bring it back duly completed this Sunday. Further copies will be available in Church on the next couple of Sundays. The information gained from the completed questionnaires will help me in planning future Midweek activities so I can hopefully lay on what people are looking for at times when they are free to attend.
Church Electoral Roll and the Annual Church Meeting
In order to be able to vote at the annual meeting and to be eligible for election to the Church Council, your name must be on the Church Electoral Roll. A copy of the current Church Electoral Roll will be on display at the back of Church this Sunday. If your name is on it, which hopefully you should know anyway(!), then you don’t need to do anything further.
If your name is not on it and you want to join the Church Electoral Roll, you need to be baptised, aged over 16, and declare that “I am a member of the Church of England (or of a Church in communion with the Church of England) and am normally resident in the area covered by the church”.
If you are not an Anglican, (and I am aware of how many ‘non Anglicans’ there are in the congregation), then you need to be baptised, aged over 16 and declare that
“I am a member in good standing of a Church (not in communion with the Church of England) which subscribes to the doctrine of the Holy Trinity and also declare myself to be a member of the Church of England and I have habitually attended public worship in the church during the period of six months prior to enrolment”. Realistically, the last phrase means you need to have been worshipping with us since before mid-September 2009.
Application forms to join the Church Electoral Roll are in a plastic wallet pinned to the noticeboard at the back of Church. Completed forms need to be returned to me or the Churchwardens no later than 26th February 2010 as we have to display a complete Church Electoral Roll for 15 days before the Annual Meeting takes place.
And finally for this week……
Thank you to everyone who has responded and said that they will be coming to help Sybille and I celebrate our ‘100th birthday’ on the evening of Friday 26th February. Venue and other details will follow very shortly. If you haven’t yet responded, please just hit the reply button to this email and let us know. Thank you too for those people have let us know that they cannot come. A reminder once more that we want no presents – just your presence.
Best wishes
Ricky
Firstly this week, a big ‘Thank you’ to everyone who came last Sunday, both to the service and the many who stayed on for the most enjoyable shared soup and sandwich lunch that followed. Special thanks go to Sue Anderson who organised the lunch and to all who helped by contributing food and washing up afterwards. Our Archdeacon Patrick Curran has written to me this week to express his appreciation of the warm welcome he received from the St. Clement’s congregation last Sunday, as well as enjoying sharing worship & fellowship with us.
This Sunday 7th February 2010 at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Second Sunday before Lent.
Please join us for worship once again this coming Sunday. There will be Sunday School led by Diane Tvaroha and Coffee Hour following the service.
The period between the Feast of Presentation/Candlemas that we marked last Sunday, and the beginning of Lent, is known as ‘Ordinary Time’. Whilst the Feast of Presentation/Candlemas is a fixed date, 2nd February; the date of Ash Wednesday marking the beginning of Lent isn’t, simply because it is tied to the date of Easter which is a moveable feast. This year, Easter Day is quite early falling on the first Sunday in April. Therefore Ash Wednesday falls on 17th February meaning that this year we just have two weeks & therefore two Sundays of Ordinary Time.
Some advance dates for your diary
Wednesday 17th February at 7pm – Eucharist with (voluntary) imposition of ashes for Ash Wednesday
Sunday 21st February – Our next post-service shared lunch. Following the success of last Sunday’s shared lunch, we plan to hold one once a month through to June. This next one may need to be slightly more frugal bearing in mind it will be the first Sunday in Lent!!
Sunday 14th March – Our Annual General Meeting will take place in Church immediately following our Sung Eucharist that morning.
More details about all of these events in future Midweek Messages and via the Sunday Bulletin. However, please put all three dates in your diaries NOW and plan to be present if at all possible.
Midweek Activities
Last Sunday, we circulated copies of short questionnaire to try and find out what Midweek activities, at what times & on what days, members of the St. Clement’s congregation might be interested in. If you took a questionnaire last Sunday, please bring it back duly completed this Sunday. Further copies will be available in Church, the next couple of Sundays. The information gained from the completed questionnaires will help me in planning future Midweek activities so I can hopefully lay on what people are looking for at times when they are free to attend.
Haiti Earthquake
I forgot to put in my message a couple of weeks ago that, despite our financial problems, your Church Council felt it was right to honour its longstanding commitment of giving away 5% of its income to charitable causes, just as we encourage members of the congregation to give at least 5% of their income to the Church. We had already made some charitable donations earlier in 2009. We had originally planned to give the balance of our ‘tithe’ to the Czech charity Nova Škola, supporting the work of classroom assistants working with Roma children in mainstream schools. This is a project St. Clements has supported in previous years. Unfortunately, as far as Gerry Turner has been able to ascertain, this is not currently happening. Therefore, in view of the magnitude of the suffering of the people of Haiti following the recent earthquake, your Church Council decided to give the balance of our ‘tithe’ to Christian Aid to support relief work in Haiti. This is a course of action which has very much been recommended to us by Bishop Geoffrey and Bishop David.
So that this remains a ‘Midweek Message’ rather than one of the End-of-Week variety, I’d better finish here!
Best wishes and hoping to see many of you at worship this coming Sunday
Ricky
PS My usual disclaimer which I sometimes forget to include. Most people tell me that they enjoy receiving my regular email messages. My email contact list grows a little each week! But if you have left Prague or do not want to be a regular recipient in future, please let me know and I’ll delete you from my circulation list.
As promised last week, this week it really is a Midweek Message going out hopefully sometime on Wednesday afternoon.
This Sunday 31st January at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Feast of Presentation of Christ in the Temple
As I mentioned last week, strictly speaking, we should mark the Feast of Presentation or Candlemas, on 2nd February, forty days after Christmas Day. But I doubt if that many of you would choose to turn out on a cold dark Tuesday evening in February! Therefore, we are allowed to celebrate it two days early. The service will recall the events described by Luke in Luke 2 v22-40, when Jesus was presented back to God in the temple and his mother Mary received the rite of purification.
On Sunday 31st January, our preacher will be our Archdeacon Patrick Curran from Vienna. Patrick has the extremely difficult job of combining being Chaplain to the Vienna Anglican Chaplaincy with also being Archdeacon of the Eastern Archdeaconry of the Anglican Diocese in Europe. He tries to visit each of the Chaplaincies in the Archdeaconry, once every three years. He was last with us on Tuesday 28th October 2008 for my licensing, but this will be his first Sunday visit since the time of my predecessor, John Philpott. There will be Sunday School on Sunday, led by Veronika Newkirk.
Following the service, you are invited to a Shared Lunch at Klimentská 18, giving everyone the opportunity to meet Archdeacon Patrick. The lunch is kindly being organised by Sue Anderson and she has asked me to circulate the following message.
Shared Lunch
Thank you to all who signed up to contribute to the soup and sandwich lunch this coming Sunday. There are still some food items needed, so please contact Sue at psprincipal@riversideschool.cz or on 731 178 731 if you are able to bring something along!
Pan of soup 8-10 portions
Bread to accompany soup 8-10 portions
Plate of sandwiches 8-10 portions
Selection of crisps/savoury snacks
Dessert 8-10 portions
Soft drinks
Coffee
Teabags & milk
If you can help provide any of the above, please contact Sue by Friday afternoon so she knows what is still missing. Then Sue, Sybille & I can plug any remaining gaps.
Even if you cannot help provide food you are still very welcome to attend the lunch! There will be a basket for donations to cover any costs with the balance going to Chaplaincy funds.
Anyone interested in a house/flat/apartment swap holiday/vacation in the English Lake District?
I received an email some days ago, the text of which is below, from a husband & wife Anglican clergy couple in England. I have already written back to say it is if no interest to Sybille & I but that, as is suggested in the last paragraph, I would ask if anyone in the congregation would be interested.
I am contacting you about a possible house swap this summer. I live with my husband and two teenage sons in one of the most beautiful parts of England and friends have often enjoyed using our home for a holiday. We are hoping that we might be able to see something of Europe over the summer – and at present we are fairly open as to where we might go.
My husband (David) and I are both Church of England clergy, with PTO in Carlisle Diocese, but as neither of us are currently in stipendiary parish ministry we live not in a vicarage but in our own home, an attractive and roomy two bedroomed house 5 minutes walk from the centre of Keswick.
We have had positive experiences of house swaps as an enjoyable, interesting and economical way of arranging holidays and we are interested in exploring this possibility during the period Monday 16th August – Saturday 4th September. (These would be our preferred dates but we could possibly also look at the period Saturday July 17th – Saturday August 7th.)
If you are interested in exploring this possibility either for the whole period or a part of it, please do contact us and we can of course provide further details including photos of our house. If this is not something you are interested in for yourself but you can think of members of your community who may be interested, and whom you would be happy to commend, please feel free to pass on this information to them.
If anyone would be interested, please email me & I will put you directly in touch with the couple.
‘Our 100th Birthday Party’ on the evening of Friday 26th February. Thank you to everybody who has replied to say they will be attending. Thank you too, to the small number of people who have advised that they can’t attend because of previous commitments. It is still not too late to say that you would like to come. We both would certainly like you to! Just drop a quick reply to this email. Full details of venue etc will follow shortly. May we also say now – no presents please, just your presence!
Next Tuesday 2nd February
Just a note to say that I will NOT be at the Communio Centre, Karolíny Svĕtlé 21, (nearly opposite the Rotunda of the Holy Cross), Prague 1 between 4pm & 8pm next Tuesday as the Old Catholics are having a service to mark Candlemas, but instead of it being in the Rotunda of the Holy Cross, it will be in St. Lawrence Old Catholic Cathedral on Petrin Hill starting at 6pm. So Sybille & I will be there & you would be welcome to join us. But do wrap up warm!
Looking forward to seeing many of you in Church this Sunday at 11am!
Best wishes
Ricky
Once more, this has become an End-of-Week Message rather than one of the Midweek variety. I shall try to get back to the middle of the week, next week.
This Sunday 24th January at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Third Sunday of Epiphany
Our Gospel Reading this Sunday tells of Jesus’ first sermon in the synagogue at Nazareth. You’ll find it in Luke 4 v14-21 which you might like to read yourselves before coming to worship. There will be Sunday School this Sunday, led by Sue Anderson and Coffee Hour following-on after the service in Klimentská 18.
Sunday 31st January at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Feast of Presentation of Christ in the Temple
Strictly speaking, we should mark the Feast of Presentation or Candlemas, on 2nd February, forty days after Christmas Day. But I doubt if that many of you would choose to turn out on a cold dark Tuesday evening in February! Therefore, we are allowed to celebrate it two days early. The service will recall the events described by Luke in Luke 2 v22-40, when Jesus was presented back to God in the temple and his mother Mary received the rite of purification.
On Sunday 31st January, our preacher will be our Archdeacon Patrick Curran from Vienna. Patrick has the extremely difficult job of combining being Chaplain to the Vienna Anglican Chaplaincy with also being Archdeacon of the Eastern Archdeaconry of the Anglican Diocese in Europe. He tries to visit each of the Chaplaincies in the Archdeaconry, once every three years. He was last with us on Tuesday 28th October 2008 for my licensing, but this will be his first Sunday visit since the time of my predecessor, John Philpott. There will be a Soup & Sandwich Shared Lunch following the service, giving people the opportunity to meet Archdeacon Patrick. More details on about the lunch this coming Sunday & in next week’s Midweek Message.
Can you help?
I mentioned in last week’s message, our need for one or two more people to offer help with teaching in our Sunday School. That need still exists! If you would like to know more about what is involved, the teaching materials we use etc, then please speak with me or with Veronika Newkirk.
You will also know from our weekly bulletin and from our website www.anglican.cz , that we have a Prayer Chain of people willing to pray for any issue of concern that individuals might have. These days, the membership of the Prayer Chain has become rather small. I would welcome to add to the Prayer Chain anyone who would be willing to commit themselves to regular prayer and able to be completely confidential. If you would be willing help in this important work, please speak with me.
Chaplaincy Finances
At their meeting last Sunday, your Church Council was able to look at the draft accounts for the year 2009, thanks to some very quick work by our Treasurer Peter Broster. As you will know from the statement that appears on the back of the weekly Bulletin, it costs about 25,000 Kč per week to run St. Clements, or 1,300,000 Kč per year. The good news is that it cost slightly less than that in 2009 – to be precise 24,700 Kč per week or 1,288,000 per year.
However, the bad news is that we only got in 18,600 Kč per week in 2009, or 975,500 Kč for the whole year. This is a considerable improvement on the 2008 figure being up by 3,325 Kč per week or 173,000 Kč for the whole year. But it still left us with a shortfall of 312,500 Kč which has further eaten into our reserves.
Putting all of this into simple terms, in order to break even in 2010, we need to increase our weekly income by just over 6,000 Kč per week. If we fail to do this, then by the end of 2010, there will be no reserves and the Chaplaincy will no longer be able to function in its present form.
Due to this ongoing deficit, your Church Council has decided that it will review our financial situation in six months time, to consider necessary emergency measures. The only one that is really open to us is to sell the Chaplaincy Flat and realise our only asset. This would be a very drastic backward step but, unless we increase our income, then it may well be one that we are forced to take.
Your Church Council will write more formerly about all of this in due course but they were keen that the seriousness of our situation be made known now rather than waiting to the Annual Meeting which is provisionally scheduled for Sunday 14th March. However, particularly if you are relatively new to St. Clement’s and do not currently give either by regular standing order from your bank account or through the dated envelope scheme, please act now. The details you need to set up a standing order are;
Please make your standing order payable to the Volksbank Account Number 4030019472/6800 in the name of Farní obec Starokatolické církve pro věřící anglického jazyka v Praze and put your name in the message field so the Treasurer can identify your payments for tax purposes if you are a Czech taxpayer.
If you would like a set of dated stewardship envelopes which you can place in the collection basket each Sunday, then please speak with me at Church on any Sunday as we still have several sets for the current year sitting in the vestry.
I leave you with one other thought which came out of our discussions at last week’s Church Council meeting. We agreed that it would be so much easier to raise the necessary money that it costs to run St. Clements, if we had twenty more regular worshippers. There would be very little increase in costs and the burden would be more widely shared. Therefore, who do you know who might happily start worshipping at St. Clements if you only invited them? In this respect, may I thank several of you who did respond to my challenge in December and brought a friend or relative to the Carol Service. Why not try inviting them to come regularly on Sunday too?
Finally……
Thank you to everybody who has replied to say they will be attending our ‘100th Birthday Party’ on the evening of Friday 26th February. Thank you too, to the small number of people who have advised that they can’t attend because of previous commitments. But that still leaves a large number who haven’t responded either way. We are currently sorting out a venue but it would help to know more clearly the numbers we are looking at. Someone did say to us recently that they weren’t sure if they were invited. Why that should be left both Sybille & I completely mystified. Our invitation is to everyone at St. Clements. Just hit the reply button to let us know.
Best wishes
Ricky
I look forward to seeing many of you this coming Sunday at 11am, especially all those who absented themselves last Sunday because of the weather!!!!
Sunday 17th January at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Second Sunday of Epiphany
This Sunday, we welcome as our preacher Rev’d Petr Jan Vinš, who is a young Old Catholic priest and fluent English-speaker. Many of you will already have met Petr as he has been to St. Clement’s on a number of previous occasions with Bishop Dušan and has translated and interpreted for him. Petr was only ordained priest last July and is currently continuing his academic studies in Bern, Switzerland. However, he has been in Prague this past week and doesn’t return to Bern until Sunday evening and is therefore able to be with us on Sunday morning.
There will be Coffee Hour following the service in Klimentská 18 giving everyone the chance to meet & talk with Petr as well as share fellowship with each other. However, there will almost certainly not be Sunday School this Sunday as none of our regular Sunday School teachers are available. This highlights the real need we have for one or two more additional Sunday School teachers. If anyone would be interested in exploring the possibility of helping with the Sunday School, please speak with me or with Veronika Newkirk.
Collecting Used Stamps to support the work of the Intercontinental Church Society
Once again, may I thank everyone who has brought used postage stamps to Church and placed them in the collecting envelope at the back of Church. I sent off a large padded envelope full of used stamps last week and earlier this week received an email from Sylvia Leyton, the ICS organiser, advising me of their safe arrival and expressing her thanks to all of you. There is now, plenty of room in the collecting envelope…….
As you will know from my additional message last Friday entitled ‘Be careful’, a hacker got into an email account of one of our members and sent out scam emails trying to get money from her friends. Unfortunately, the hacker has so fouled up and compromised her old email address that she cannot use it any longer. She has therefore also lost her email address book.
She has asked me to let her St. Clement’s friends know via this message, that she now has a new email address. If you were previously in contact with Caroline by email, please delete her old email address from your address book and replace it with the new one.
As well as doing this, please also send her an email which will then give her your email address for her new address book.
Our ‘100th Birthday Party’
Thank you to all of you who have responded and said you would like to come to this event on Friday 26th February. If you haven’t yet responded and would like to come, please drop me an email so we have some idea of numbers. More details will follow shortly.
Finally for this week, your Church Council will be meeting for the first time in 2010 on Sunday after Coffee Hour. As Mark Newkirk said when giving the notices last Sunday, we would appreciate your prayers for this meeting as we grapple with a number of important issues.
Best wishes
Ricky
A Happy New Year to each of you associated with St. Clement’s, Prague!
It was good to see many regular faces back in the congregation last Sunday after being away over the Christmas period. I look forward to seeing many more of you, either tomorrow night (see below) or next Sunday morning. I was also very encouraged by the good number of people who came on to Coffee Hour at Klimentská 18 after last Sunday’s service. Coffee Hour is a wonderful opportunity for fellowship, for making visitors and newcomers welcome, as well as being able to ‘warm up’ after 75-80 minutes in a somewhat cold Church!
Wednesday 6th January at 7pm – Eucharist for the Feast of the Epiphany
As I have explained in a previous message, as Epiphany or Twelfth Night, falls right in the middle of the week, I thought to myself, “Why not hold a service?” So I’m going to! Following the service, there is an open invitation from me to as many as would like to join Sybille & I for a meal at a nearby bar-restaurant and have a little Twelfth Night partying.
Sunday 10th January at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the First Sunday after Epiphany
There will be parallel Sunday School & Coffee Hour following the service.
Tuesday 12th January – Meet the Chaplain in Prague city centre
I shall be resuming being available for a chat + coffee or tea & biscuits, between 4pm and 8pm at
Communio Centre
Karolíny Svĕtlé 21 (nearly opposite the Rotunda of the Holy Cross)
Prague 1
Karolíny Svĕtlé itself lies between Charles Bridge and Národní třída. The only time in that four hour slot I won’t be there is between 6pm and about 6.45pm when I shall be across the road in the Rotunda of the Holy Cross attending the Old Catholic Eucharist in an effort to improve my liturgical Czech! Why no drop by?
Thursday 14th January at 7 pm
Supper and Study will resume, almost certainly at Sue Anderson’s flat in Prague 6. A light supper will be followed by Bible study continuing working our way through Mark’s Gospel and our session usually ends with a short time of prayer. We aim to finish around 9.15 pm. Confirmation of venue should be in the Weekly Bulletin this coming Sunday or alternatively phone me (233 310 266 or 737 039 082). New members are always welcome. If you want to know more, just ask!!!
Two reminders from previous Midweek Messages which are still current and valid
On the noticeboard at the back of Church is a collecting envelope for used postage stamps to support the work of the Intercontinental Church Society (ICS). As many of you know, ICS support St Clements both financially (they currently meet approximately 10% of our running costs) and also prayerfully. One of the ways ICS raises it’s own funds is by selling used postage stamps. Therefore, as you have been in receipt of Christmas cards from your friends and relatives scattered around the world, please cut out the postage stamps on the envelopes leaving a paper border around the stamp, and then bring them to Church and put them in the collecting envelope. All nationalities and varieties of used postage stamps are wanted with the only exception being standard British ones which only feature the Queen’s head.
Update – A big ‘Thank you’ to everyone who has done this recently. I intend to send them off to the ICS organiser in the next few days.
Can you help me?
The Chaplaincy computer on which I’m writing this message, was a gift from someone who was leaving Prague and didn’t want to take it with them. Unfortunately, that gift was given several years ago. The computer runs on Windows 2000 which is © Microsoft Corporation 1999 making it positively ancient in computer terms. It has become increasingly slow and difficult to use. Because it was a gift, we do not have any original CDs from which to re-load Windows and the other programmes which might otherwise help address the problems it has.
Your Church Council suggested that I should use this message to ask if anyone knows of a business who are currently upgrading their computers, who might be willing to pass on to the Chaplaincy, an old computer, still in good working order, but more advanced than what I’m currently working with. All I’m after is a computer – we have a modern flat screen monitor and a combined printer/photocopier/scanner. Something that has Windows XP as its operating system would be ideal. If anyone can help, please get in touch.
Update – In response to this appeal when it first went out, I have heard of a ‘possibility’ at the end of January. But it is only a ‘possibility’. Therefore any other offer would be most welcome.
And finally for this week….
As I explained in a previous message, near the end of February both Sybille & I have our respective birthdays. They fall two days, but ‘a few’ years, apart. On Friday 26th February 2010, our joint ages will total 100. Therefore on that evening, we are going to hold a 100th Birthday Party and all St. Clement’s people are invited! We are presently looking at possible venues but it would help enormously to know whether we need somewhere for four or forty people. Therefore, if you are free that evening and would like to join us to celebrate our joint 100th birthday, please could you simply reply to this email to let us know numbers attending. If you are not in a position to let us know yet, then you will still be welcome. But we do need some idea of numbers.
With my best wishes for 2010
Ricky
PS My usual disclaimer. My email circulation list grows week by week. Most people tell me how much they appreciate receiving this message that I send out most weeks. However, if you would prefer not to receive it in future, please write & let me know & I’ll remove your email address forthwith.
This message will be relatively short as I have unfortunately succumbed to the same cold/flu that kept Sybille away from Church last Sunday. Currently I am helping keep the manufacturers of paper tissue in business judging by the amount I’m going through constantly drying my runny nose!
Firstly, a big ‘Thank you’ …….
……to everyone who made last Sundays Service of Lessons & Carols such a great success, including
* Gerry & all the members of the choir.
* Bob MacGregor for his two solos
* Michal Novenko on the organ
* All those who read the lessons
* Everybody who responded to my appeal & helped provide refreshments
* Gerry for making the mulled wine & Sybille for making the hot apple juice
* Marshall, Fred & Marty who did the bulk of the washing up.
For many of you, last Sunday was your last Sunday (if you’ll forgive the tautology) as you will be travelling off to various far-flung parts of the world including Australia, South Africa, the UK, the US and probably others I’ve forgotten. My best wishes, both for the outward journey & in due course, a safe return to Prague. For those of you who will be in Prague over Christmas and the New Year, a quick reminder of our services.
Sunday 20th December at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Fourth Sunday of Advent
There will be Sunday School led by Lyle Frink and Coffee Hour following the service.
Christmas Eve at 11.30pm – Midnight Eucharist
Christmas Day at 11am – Family Eucharist
Sunday 27th December at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Feast of St. John
There will be NO Sunday School or Coffee Hour following the service
Sunday 3rd January at 11am – Sung Eucharist for the Second Sunday of Christmas
Sunday School will resume & there will be Coffee Hour following the service
Wednesday 6th January at 7pm – Eucharist for the Feast of the Epiphany
This is an experiment. As Epiphany or Twelth Night falls right in the middle of the week, I thought to myself, “Why not hold a service?” So I’m going to! Following the service, there is an open invitation from me to as many as would like to join Sybille & I for a meal at a nearby bar-restuarant and have a little Twelth Night party.
Meet the Chaplain on Tuesdays in Prague city centre
Health permitting, I will continue to be available for a chat + coffee or tea & biscuits, next Tuesday between 4pm and 8pm at
Communio Centre
Karolíny Svĕtlé 21 (nearly opposite the Rotunda of the Holy Cross)
Prague 1
Karolíny Svĕtlé itself lies between Charles Bridge and Národní třída. The only time in that four hour slot I won’t be there is between 6pm and about 6.45pm when I shall be across the road in the Rotunda of the Holy Cross attending the Old Catholic Eucharist in an effort to improve my liturgical Czech! Why no drop by?
Best wishes
Ricky
The Papal Apostolic Constitution allowing groups of Anglicans or Ex-Anglicans to enter into full communion with the Roman Catholic Church –Part 2
Introduction
In my first paper on this matter that I wrote last week, I concluded that relatively little would happen as a result of Pope Benedict’s initiative and described it as ‘much ado about nothing’. It would appear that the leader writer in the ‘Church Times’, the most widely read weekly Anglican newspaper in England, agrees with me. Last Friday he wrote,
‘On the Anglican side, the view appears to be gaining ground that, for those people who have been petitioning Rome repeatedly and insistently, the time for persuading them to stay passed some time ago. The issue for them has ceased to be how to fit into the Anglican set-up, but whether the Pope’s offer meets their desires. Just how many of these petitioners there are remains to be seen, of course. When those in “irregular marriage situations”, and those who were formerly Roman Catholics, and those who have difficulty accepting the Roman Catholic Catechism in its entirety, and those who object to the removal of lay people from government are excluded from the figures, there might well be fewer than expected’.
Anglicans receiving communion at a Roman Catholic mass
In view of what I wrote, several people raised with me the question of whether Anglicans should/can take communion at a Roman Catholic mass. The official Roman Catholic position is that only communicant Roman Catholics are allowed to receive communion at an RC mass. Only in very extreme circumstances can an exception be made. However, whilst that is the official view, the reality on the ground is often quite different.
As some of you may have experienced yourselves, if you ask a Roman Catholic priest whether as a communicant Anglican or as a communicant member of another Christian Church, he will admit you to receive communion, the answer quite often is “Yes”. Some will say “No”, upholding the official line. But many others, providing one can express some understanding of ‘real presence’ in the Eucharist, will happily allow you to receive. Sybille and I have a Roman Catholic priest friend in Spain who is a paid-up member of Opus Dei, who would be quite upset if we didn’t receive at a mass at which he was the celebrant!
About twenty-five years ago, an agreement was reached between the Anglican Church and the French Roman Catholic Bishops Conference. This allows for Anglicans in France, if because of distance they cannot regularly attend an Anglican Chaplaincy, they may with the agreement of the local Roman Catholic priest, receive communion from him. Quite how this squares with the official RC position emanating from Rome, I’m not sure!
Roman Catholics receiving communion at an Anglican Eucharist
Let me also take the opportunity to address this issue about which I’m also asked about from time to time.
The wording in our service booklets, which is the official wording of the Anglican Diocese in Europe, states quite clearly;
‘We invite to receive Holy Communion, all baptised persons who are communicant members of other Churches which subscribe to the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, and who are in good standing in their own Church’.
Therefore, communicant Roman Catholics are always welcome to receive communion when attending St. Clements, as I know many regularly do.
Of course, the official Roman Catholic position is that lay Roman Catholics shouldn’t, as the Roman Catholic Church does not recognize the validity of Anglican orders which therefore means that the sacrament is not valid! Once again however, the reality on the ground is quite different.
When I am asked by lay Roman Catholics whether they may receive communion in a service where I am the celebrant, I always draw their attention to the wording that appears in our service booklets. I usually also add that, “Whilst the Pope would not approve of you doing so, I suspect that God would!” It is then up to the conscience of the individual concerned.
At the recent Clergy Pastoral Conference in Cologne, I was talking to a female Anglican priest who works in a non-stipendiary capacity in one of the Chaplaincies in France. Her Chaplaincy, like many in France, uses Roman Catholic Churches for their services with the agreement of the local Roman Catholic hierarchy. She told me that, she has celebrated the Eucharist in a joint bilingual service with Roman Catholics, and has had local Roman Catholic priests receive communion from her and in turn, the priests then encouraged their laity to do the same.
The Anglican Chaplain in Barcelona has also told me a similar story. During the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, he and his congregation attend a mass in the nearby Roman Catholic Church where they are all invited to receive communion. Then later in the week, the Roman Catholic priest and his congregation attend a Eucharist at the Anglican Church where the priest and his flock all also happily receive communion. The Anglican Chaplain did ask his Roman Catholic colleague how he got away with doing so, knowing what the official position of the RC Church is. The priest’s response was, “Rome is a long way away!”
Rome to Canterbury
One thing I did mean to mention last week but forgot to do so.
Much is made by the sensationalist end of the media, about the number of clergy and laity who might ‘go over to Rome’ as a result of this recent papal initiative. As I’ve previously said, I believe it will be very few for the reasons I outlined and as extremely well expressed in the ‘Church Times’ leader article I quoted above. However, what the press hardly ever mentions is the traffic that comes the other way – those who travel ‘from Rome to Canterbury’.
Over the twenty years of my public ministry, I’ve known many Roman Catholics who have happily worshipped as Anglicans. I am aware of quite a number within the current St. Clement’s congregation. Some do take the formal step of being received into the Anglican Church but many do not. It is now perfectly possible to remain a lay Roman Catholic but be on the Electoral Roll of an Anglican Church or Chaplaincy. Anglicans are quite inclusive!
Whilst doing some internet research, I was particularly pleased to find a recent speech by Bishop Tom Butler, the Anglican Bishop of Southwark, to the first meeting of his newly elected Diocesan Synod. Commenting on the publication of the Papal Apostolic Constitution, he remarked that there has always been movement between the two Churches and that his own diocese had been well-served by several clergy who were former Roman Catholic priests.
How many former Roman Catholic priests are now working as clergy within the Anglican Church is a figure it seems no one can come up with. But within the Church of England alone it is probably at least two hundred at an educated guess. It may well be more. Some come across because of wanting to be married. Others do so because they cannot accept aspects of Roman Catholic doctrine or ecclesiology. But unlike any who ‘go over to Rome’, who the Pope insists must be ‘re-ordained’, (in reality as far as the official line of the Roman Catholic Church is concerned, ordained for the first time), those priests who travel ‘from Rome to Canterbury’ are just received into the Anglican Church. They do receive some training in Anglican ways but their original ordination and previous public ministry are regarded as being totally valid.
Ricky Yates – 20th November 2009
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