Saint Eustachius - Tavistock Parish Church

The benefice of Tavistock, Gulworthy and Brent Tor The Anglican Diocese of Exeter

Search

  • Home
  • People
  • Services & Church Opening (updated 9 Apr)
  • Church
    • History
    • Church Gallery
    • Organisations
      • Bellringers
      • Brass Band
      • Choir
      • Coffee Rota
      • Companions Of The Melanesian Brotherhood
      • Electoral Roll
      • Fabric Team
      • Flower Arrangers
      • Friends of St Eustachius’ 2019
      • Green Team
      • Handicrafts Group
      • Holy Dusters
      • Intercessors’ Prayer Group
      • Mission Prayer Group
      • Prayer and Stillness Group
      • Social Committee
      • Stewards
  • News & Views
    • News
    • From the Ministers
    • From the Vicarage
    • From the Parish
  • Music
    • The Choir
    • The Organ
    • The Piano
    • Concerts
  • Venue Hire
    • Concert
    • Parish Centre
  • Contact Us
  • Feature Stories
  • Recent Video Services
  • Recent Virtual Vestry Groups
  • Virtual Messy Church
  • Diary
You are here: Home / 2021 / Archives for March 2021

Archives for March 2021

The Very Reverend Dr Christopher Hardwick writes …

31st March 2021 By Martin Pendle

From the Vicarage ….

There is no other day to compare with Easter Day.  It stands out from all the conflicts and turmoil of our broken world.  Early on the first Easter morning the power of God was revealed to a disbelieving world. Death is conquered – Jesus Christ has risen from the dead.  It was an event which not only altered the past but also shaped the future.  Nothing can be the same again. This is what makes Easter the greatest occasion for the Church and for the world. All our hopes for the future stem from this one event in our history.  Easter announces that there is a way forward out of darkness. Easter assures us that transformation is possible and that change can take place in our lives.

“Alleluia, Christ is Risen!” But how do people come to believe this is true?’  As a priest, I am constantly surprised by the sheer variety of stories people tell about what has led them to say: ‘I believe’ when they hear the Easter story.  The stories are enormously varied: some people find life and meaning in worshiping together, and that has persuaded them; some have experienced release from a problem or burden in their life that they have tried to shake off for ages – and then suddenly it has happened.  Some people have stories of disasters, lives torn apart by tragedy – events in which nobody could find any meaning – and then suddenly light comes out of darkness – a door opens to a different and brighter future – and all out of some great suffering or seemingly meaningless catastrophe.  There are some who bear with them the pain and memory of a recent bereavement, and I think this will be particularly true this year as a result of the ongoing pandemic, for which there are no quick or easy words of comfort.  What there is, is the Easter story and the promise of new life, and that is central to the Christian faith – it speaks of new life.

St.John records that the experience of one of the twelve disciples, Thomas. Thomas had not been with the other disciples when they told him they had seen Jesus, he could not believe them.  He was asking of them, and of himself, the question that millions have asked after him: Did Jesus really rise physically from the dead?  “Unless I can see him and touch him,” he said, “I will not believe.”  We make a huge mistake if we simply dismiss Thomas as a man of little faith.  He was not.  I do not think we can blame him for not accepting the disciples’ story without a shred of evidence.  Thomas had seen Jesus die. He, like the other disciples, was frightened, disheartened, and disillusioned, and he was unwilling to accept the word of others.

The scene is vividly described.  The doors of the upper room where the disciples were was locked, and Jesus came and stood among them. He said to Thomas, “Reach out your finger, and see my hands.  Reach out your hand and put it into my side and believing.”  This was the moment of transformation for Thomas, for, in this moment, and, without touching Jesus, he understood the truth. Jesus had risen from the dead. To believe in the resurrection is to trust that God has caught us up into living a new life in a transformed world.

The resurrection of Jesus from the dead affirms that death is not the end for us. There is a life beyond our mortal life in this world. Our existence is not limited by the cycle of birth to death. Easter is a turning point which invites us to live in an entirely new way that goes beyond the limitations of this world. We are challenged to become part of a new creation, inspired by the life of God. But, life depends on how we look at it. It can be seen as an empty tomb, full of bitterness and confusion, or it can be seen as full of joy and hope. The challenge for us is to appreciate God and to see his plan in the ordinary everyday events which surround us, and to place our faith and trust in the ultimate goodness of his purposes. The challenge is to open our hearts and minds to the risen Christ by allowing ourselves to be sent into the world to proclaim the Good News of this new life and new creation to all people.

Call our Father, we thank you for the joy of this Easter. May all who celebrate the resurrection of your Son experiences his power in their lives. We make this prayer through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

With more hours of daylight, the joy of spring, enjoy Easter, and please stay safe and well.

With every blessing this Eastertide.

Christopher Hardwick

Filed Under: From the Vicarage

Parish Magazine – April 2021

31st March 2021 By Martin Pendle

From the Vicarage – V. Revd Chris Hardwick

Gulworthy Notes for April – Gill Reed

A Prayer for April – Jenny Tremaine

St Luke’s Open Garden, Brentor – Sally Pancheri

Tales from the Tower – Donna Baker

This Lockdown Year – Terry Townson

Mission of the Month for April, Mothers’ Union – Jenny Tremaine

Paul’s New Testament epistle to the Romans – Ian Silcox

Here at this link is a printable version of the April Magazine if you wish to print it for yourself, or for a neighbour/friend without internet.

Please send any articles for the May online edition of the Parish Magazine to Martin Pendle, at m.pendle@icloud.com by 29th April.

Filed Under: Parish Magazine

Reverend Mike Loader Writes ……..

22nd March 2021 By Martin Pendle

Sermon St E Sunday 9.45 21 March 2021         5th Sunday of Lent Passiontide begins

Psalm 51v1-13            Jeremiah 31v31-34                        John 12v20-3                        Hebrews 5v5-10

Let us pray:- May I speak in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Amen

Have you noticed that there are certain scriptures which can be a bit of a puzzle? I am sure you have, and today we have at least three of them.

The first is when the prophet Jeremiah refers to ‘a new covenant’. Is that the new covenant we are familiar with, or does it refer to something different? The second is where the writer of the letter to the Hebrew Christians refers to Jesus having been made ‘perfect’. That raises the question, ‘was not the Son of God always perfect’? And the third is, just who was the elusive Melchizedek with which the priesthood of our Lord was compared?

So how are we to explain these texts?

Well, you all know by now that for me context is all important. Jeremiah was clearly writing about a new covenant that would be established in the future following the Hebrews return from their 70 year deportation to Babylon. Jeremiah specifically refers to this covenant as being between God and the house of Israel and Judah, so he was referring to the Jewish people, but just when in the future was that new covenant to be?

As Jeremiah specifically says that it will be a time when all of the house of Israel and Judah shall know Him, and that His laws will then be written upon their hearts, it must be speaking of a time that is still in the future, as at present the Jewish people do not yet fulfil that description.

Some suggest this is referring to us, and to the new covenant spoken of by our Lord at the last supper (Lk22v20), and by Paul in his Corinthian epistles (1Cor11v25, 2Cor3v6-7) and also by the writer of Hebrews (Heb8v8,13, 9v11,15, 12v24), but does that fit with the context?

This is a big topic, but having studied in Israel, I am not one to believe in what is called ‘replacement theology’, that the church replaces the Jewish people as ‘the new Israel’ of God and that the Old Testament promises made to Israel now apply to the Church. So to me Jeremiah’s reference is to a new covenant still to be enacted between God and the Jewish people; and the reference by Jesus and Paul, is clearly to the present new relationship that Jesus has made possible between all people who will put their faith and trust in him, following the shedding of Jesus most precious blood at Calvary.

Perhaps Jeremiah’s reference to ‘a new covenant’ is an early prophetic reference to the time Paul refers to in Romans 11 when he says of the Jewish people, ‘And this will be my covenant with them when I take away their sin’. Paul goes on to say it will be the time when ‘the fulness of the Gentiles has come in and then all Israel will be saved’. That time will be when the church is complete, and Paul says in Ephesians (3v16) that through the cross of Jesus we shall then, both Jew and Gentile, be made one. I suggest at that time there will indeed be a New Covenant that embraces both Jews, and us the Gentile church.

In the meantime for us believers, the cup of wine that we drink, is to remind us of Jesus blood of the new covenant, shed for each one of us for the forgiveness of our sin.

So what of those verses from Hebrews (5v8-9) that we have read? “Although he was a Son, he learned obedience through what he suffered; and having been made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.”

Again very deep questions are raised here, so we can barely scratch the surface this morning. But let us look at the phrase ‘he-Jesus- learned obedience’. Throughout his earthly life I believe that Jesus was obedient to the will of his, and our God and Father. The gospels contain many references to Jesus referring to the will of his Father; in John 4 (v34) Jesus says “My food is to do the will of Him who sent Me and to finish His work”, and later in John 5 (v30) Jesus says “I do not seek My own will, but the will of Him who sent me”. Both these sayings show Jesus’ complete obedience to the will of God. Yet we also know that Jesus could have chosen to just follow his own human desire as we read in our gospel (Jn12v27), “Father, save me from this hour. No, it is for this reason that I have come to this hour.” And again Luke describes (Lk22v42) how in the garden of Gethsemane Jesus prayed, “Father, if you are willing, take this cup away from Me-nevertheless, not My will, but Yours, be done”.

Understandably, Jesus’ human nature longed for release from the agony of the cross that He knew lay ahead for Him, but Jesus remembered that His specific purpose for being here on earth was to go to the cross, and to show that complete obedience to the will of God the Father was indeed possible. In not giving in to that final temptation Jesus showed how He had learned obedience.

And here of course is a most profound lesson for all of us to take on board as we reflect at the start of passion-tide. Can we say that our lives have taught us to bow to, and become obedient to, the will of God? That perhaps is one of the major purposes for our earthly pilgrimage, and it is never too late for us to learn that same obedience as did our Lord and Master, and we have the promised Holy Spirit to help us.

But what then are we to make of that phrase “and having been made perfect”? I do not believe that Jesus was ever ‘not perfect’. He was the spotless lamb of God who, as a result, was the only one able to take away our sin. No, the word ‘perfect’ is to my mind perhaps better rendered as ‘complete’.

Jesus’ life of complete obedience to the will of God, showed that His life was complete; in all his ways Jesus fulfilled, completed the Torah. Remember in the sermon on the mountMatthew (5:17-18) records Jesus as saying, “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law, the Torah, or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to complete them.”

Because Jesus accomplished all that God the Father had asked of Him, he becomes the source of eternal salvation, of eternal life, for you and for me.

But there is also that little phrase completing the sentence that needs our attention where we read, ‘eternal salvation for all who obey Him’. And that is yet another lesson for us all this passion-tide, and part of our pilgrim existence here below. As Jesus’ desire was always to ‘obey the Father’s will’, so our desire should be to learn to also obey the will of our Lord and Master Jesus. Surely that is what gives our Lenten fast its special significance.

In a lovely passage from the prophet Hosea chapter 6 (v6) we read, “For I, speaking of God, desire loyalty and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings”.

From the beginning when God created human kind, He has looked for us human beings to know Him, and to walk with Him in companionship. God has only ever wanted us to be in an intimate and personal relationship with Him. But sadly we have all followed in Adam’s footsteps and disobeyed God’s commands, and so we have all became estranged from Him.

But we can now all rejoice, and even in Lent shout Alleluia, that through the obedience of Jesus to the will of God, and that did require His sacrifice at Calvary, we have the opportunity of a complete restored relationship with God through our faith in Jesus, and with it the hope of eternal life in the coming new creation.

So to our final puzzle, just who was that elusive priest Melchizedek? We first come across him as blessing the patriarch Abraham in Genesis 14(v18), then he is mentioned in psalm 110, and a number of times in Hebrews.

There in Hebrews chapter 7 (v3) we are told that this Melchizedek was a king of peace, and also a priest of the Most High God, without father or mother, and having neither beginning of days nor end of life. You can see how a clear parallel with Jesus is being drawn as the writer to Hebrews describes Melchizedek as ‘resembling the Son of God’. But just who was this elusive Melchizedek? We really do not know. My guess is that he was indeed Jesus in one of Jesus’ preincarnate manifestations, but I leave it to you to speculate, and as with all I have said this morning, to draw your own conclusions.

So what can we gain from our readings this morning especially as our period of Lent draws to its close? Perhaps as the writer of Hebrews draws our attention to how Jesus offered up prayers and supplications to God the Father, so we can be encouraged to be fervent in our prayers, and never to lose heart.

God heard Jesus’ prayers, and He will also hear ours.

Let us pray: The shorter Collect for this 5th Sunday of Lent:

Gracious Father, you gave up your Son out of love for the world:
lead us to ponder the mysteries of his passion,
that we may know eternal peace through the shedding of our Saviour’s
most precious blood, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

 

Filed Under: From the Ministers

Pastoral Letter for Passiontide

17th March 2021 By Martin Pendle


The Parishes of Tavistock, Gulworthy and Brent Tor

The Vicarage, 5a Plymouth Road, Tavistock, Devon PL19 8AU Tel: 01822 617432 Email: veryrevdchristopher.hardwick@btinternet.com

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I write this as our parishes enter Passiontide. I hope and pray that everyone continues to be safe and well.

With regard to our services, these have continued during the third lockdown. At the time of writing, further guidance on singing is awaited from the Government, but sadly, it seems unlikely that the prohibition on congregational singing indoors will be lifted before Easter. I remain grateful, and express my thanks here, to our Director of Music in Tavistock and to all musicians across the Benefice who have been able to provide music for our services as the regulations have allowed since the third lock-down began. As a Benefice, we continue to review our COVID 19 protocols in accordance Government guidelines to ensure that everything we do is as COVID-safe as possible.  Where possible, services are recorded and streamed and can be followed on our Facebook pages and websites. For those without internet access the Church of England’s free national phone line continues to offer music, prayers and reflections, as well as full worship services, each day. The phone line, which is available 24 hours a day, is: 0800 804 8044.

For the time being, the opening hours for worship and private prayer remain:

St.Eustachius’, Tavistock

Sunday, 9.45 am Eucharist, and open for private prayer until 1 pm
Wednesday, 10.30 am Eucharist, and open for private prayer until 1 pm

St.Paul’s, Gulworthy

Sunday, 11.15 am Eucharist
Wednesday, 9 am until 3 pm open for private prayer

Christ Church, Brentor,

Sunday, 9.45 am service, and open daily for private prayer

St.Michael’s, Brent Tor

Open daily for private prayer

23 March: National Day of Reflection 

Next Tuesday will mark the anniversary of the first national lockdown. For many people it will be a significant anniversary. In Devon the death toll has topped the 1,000 mark. The restrictions that we have been living under have meant that many people have had to grieve without the comfort of friends and family around them. The Church of England, in partnership with Marie Curie, Hope UK, Care for the Family and other charities, have organised a National Day of Reflection to acknowledge grief and loss during the pandemic.

All our churches will be open on Tuesday 23rd for private prayer and reflection and at 12 noon a minute’s silence will be kept in remembrance of those who have died and the many who are mourning. For those unable to be present, Bishop Robert will be leading an act of reflection from the Cathedral beginning at 11.45 which will be broadcast live on Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/CofEDevon/live_videos/?ref=page_internal

The following prayer has been written to mark the anniversary:

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

Passiontide, Holy Week and Easter

The Church of England has produced resources for use at home during Passiontide, Holy Week and Easter. These include a series of meditations by Paula Gooder on the Stations of the Cross, and ideas for observing Good Friday, and making an Easter Garden with children. The link is:

https://www.churchofengland.org/resources/coronavirus-covid-19-guidance-churches/passiontide-holy-week-and-easter-2021

The following services will be held in our churches:

Palm Sunday Services:
9.45 am Tavistock
9.45 am Christ Church, Brentor
11.15 am Gulworthy

Maundy Thursday,
7.00 pm Gulworthy Eucharist
7.30 pm Tavistock (St. George’s Aisle) Eucharist followed by The Watch until 9 pm

Good Friday, 2.00 pm Tavistock (Nave) & Gulworthy
Reflections, Music & Prayers

Easter Day Services:
9.45 am Tavistock
9.45 am Christ Church, Brentor
11.15 am Gulworthy
6.00 pm St. Michael’s, Brent Tor

I will also broadcast a Service of Holy Communion according to the Book of Common Prayer on Easter Day at 8.00 am. This will be available on Facebook and our websites.

Brent Tor Tableaux

From Palm Sunday to Easter Day a series of tableaux will be placed on the Tor and in the churches at St. Michael’s and Christ Church as a visual telling of the story of Holy Week and Easter. There will be multimedia links available giving further information about the events depicted. Further details are available on the church website.

Tavistock Easter Trail

From the 28th March until the 14th April follow an Easter trail to discover some of the churches around Tavistock and learn about Easter through craft activities, Gospel readings and prayer. Further information on Facebook @TavistockEasterTrail

A Message from Bishop Robert

As we come out of lockdown and return to our church buildings this Easter, we need to renew our confidence in the God who calls us into life. Our primary calling is to be more Christ-centred for the sake of God’s world. Looking back on the past year, there are lessons to be learned. Looking forward, there are opportunities to be grasped. Our worship and mission will not be the same; indeed, they should not be the same. We need to embrace a mixed ecology of how we do church, capitalising on the new contacts we have made during the pandemic and better tailored to those among whom we live and minister. 

Change comes not in response to informed pessimism or uninformed optimism, but in response to hopeful realism. And hope is born when we see the world through the lens of our Lord Jesus Christ. This is God’s world and we are God’s pilgrim people, and God invites us to be communities of grace that speak the hope of good news. Bishop Nick, Bishop Jackie and my colleagues on the senior staff join me in assuring you of our prayers for Holy Week and Easter. May our crucified and risen Lord renew us all with his grace.
With my thanks for our partnership in the Gospel, 
+ Robert Exon

Please continue to share and cascade the information contained in this letter to anyone you know who has little or no access to email, or to our social media sites as best you can. It remains vitally important to keep everyone informed of, and involved in, our ongoing Church life across the Benefice as we prepare to celebrate Easter together. Thank you.
With God’s blessing

Christopher Hardwick

Passiontide 2021

Filed Under: From the Vicarage

8581793241_531938854a_o (Medium) - Copy (2)

Categories

  • From the Ministers
  • From the Parish
  • From the Vicarage
  • News
  • Parish Magazine
  • Slider
  • Uncategorised

The Ministry Team

The Very Revd Dr Christopher Hardwick
The Reverend Mike Loader
The Reverend Sue Tucker
The Reverend Judith Blowey
The Reverend Dr Hazel Butland
The Reverend Rosie Illingworth
Mr Christopher Pancheri
Mrs Sally Pancheri
Mrs Wendy Roderick
Mrs Liz Bastin

General Enquiries

Parish Office
01822 616673
Email: parishoffice@tavistockparishchurch

Our Church Schools and Parish Churches

St Rumon's Infants School
01822 612085
www.tavistockcsf.org.uk/website
St Peter's Junior School
01822 614640
www.tavistockcsf.org.uk/website
St Paul's, Gulworthy
Christ Church, Brentor
www.brentorvillage.org
St Michael's, Brent Tor
www.brentorvillage.org

Useful Contacts

Churchwardens:
Mrs Mary Whalley or Mr Graham Whalley - 01822 481179
Director of Music:
Mr Scott Angell - 01752 783490
Pastoral Care Co-ordinator:
Mrs Elizabeth Maslen - 01822 613512
Children and Families Worker:
Ms Fiona Lang - families@tavistockparishchurch.org.uk
Magazine Advertising - 01822 616673
Parish Giving Officer:
Mr Peter Rowan - 01822 617999
Parish Safeguarding Officer: Miss Rita Bilverstone - 01822 614825 or safeguarding@tavistockparishchurch.org.uk

Social Media

  • 

Location Map

Copyright © 2021 Tavistock Parish Church