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

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You are here: Home / 2021 / Archives for September 2021

Archives for September 2021

The Very Reverend Dr Christopher Hardwick writes …

30th September 2021 By Martin Pendle

From the Vicarage

Early into 2020 the Covid19 pandemic took hold and as a country we were asked to stay at home. The broadcast of Church services, Bible and study groups on-line, and video reflections and messages, became the new ‘norm”. “ZOOM” and “TEAMS” meetings replaced face-to-face gatherings. During the pandemic we have found new ways of worshiping and being together. With robust risk assessments in place, we have worked hard to worship and pray together and to care for one another in our community.  As the restrictions are gradually easing, I am pleased to see our full pattern of worship, prayer, and outreach to our schools, nursing homes, hospitals, and the wider community, returning across the Benefice.

Now, after nearly seven years as vicar of our four churches, I am to retire. My last service will be in in Tavistock Parish Church on Sunday, 17th October 2021 at 9.45 am. I extend an invitation to everyone to this service and hope it will be possible for you to come, and for me to say farewell to you in person. It has been a real privilege to be your vicar and to be part of the church in Tavistock, Gulworthy and Brent Tor. There are too many of you to name in person, but you know the invaluable part you take in making our Benefice the very special place it is, and how much I appreciate all that you do day-by-day. I have been fortunate to get to know faithful Christians in our parishes and to work with excellent colleagues, both ordained and lay. Together we have built a large and active ministry team across our four churches. I thank you all, each and every one of you, for your support, and I pray for discernment and wisdom as the process to select the next Vicar begins.

With my love, prayers, and God’s Blessing

Christopher Hardwick, Vicar

October 2021

Filed Under: From the Vicarage

Parish Magazine – October 2021

25th September 2021 By Martin Pendle

From the Vicarage – V. Revd. Chris Hardwick

Gulworthy Notes for October – Gill Reed

A Prayer for October

Tales from the Tower – Donna Baker

A Report on the Launch of the Archangel’s Way on Saturday 31st July 2021 – Christoper Pancheri

Rosie and Hazel’s Reflections and Thanks on their Ordination

Mission of the Month for October, Bible Society – Ian Silcox

Paul’s Letter to the Thessalonians – Ian Silcox

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

Please send any articles for the October online edition of the Parish Magazine to Martin Pendle, at m.pendle@icloud.com by Saturday 30th October.

Filed Under: Parish Magazine

Reverend Mike Loader Writes ………..

13th September 2021 By Martin Pendle

Sermon St E Evensong 12 September 2021 Year B T15         The wicket gate
Psalm 119v73-80                        Exodus 18v13-26                        Matthew 7v1-14
Let us pray:

Are you doing too much?
Joy tells me that I am, and as I approach my 78th birthday she is probably correct. Certainly Moses father in law, Jethro-the priest of Midian, thought that Moses was doing too much in trying to judge all the people on his own. Yet Moses, at the ripe old age of 80, had only just begun his forty year ministry to lead the Hebrew people out from their bondage in Egypt, across the wilderness, and into the land promised by God to Abraham that was to become their everlasting inheritance.
So it seems it is never too late to be called into the service of God, but we are not to take on too much, or as Jethro said to Moses, “You will surely wear yourself out”.

As we serve the Lord, in all our work we need to pray like the psalmist (119v76-77), “Lord, let your faithful love be my comfort. Let your tender mercies come to me, that I may live, for your law is my delight”.

Moses had been called by God not only to lead the people out of Egypt, and into that promised land, but also to judge the people, to arbitrate between their disputes, and there were certainly many of those. No wonder Jethro advised Moses to appoint helpers to share out that burden, and it was also to encourage the people to take some degree of responsibility for themselves. That was reminiscent of what Saint Paul said much later to the Philippian believers, and is true for us also (2v12), ‘work out your own salvation with fear and trembling’, and that salvation is to be ‘worked out’ in the light of what God has revealed to us in the scriptures.

But what form should that judgement to be exercised by Moses helpers take? It was to be a ‘right judgement’, a judgement showing no partiality. A form of judgement that was revealed to Moses when God gave to him the commandments at Sinai. And in our reading from the sermon on the mount Jesus speaks to us also concerning judgement.

I do not take Jesus words, “Judge not that ye be not judged” to mean that we are never to judge, if that were to be the case then our society would soon degenerate into a form of anarchy. What the Lord does tell us is that we need to take care over how we judge, we are first to look into our own lives before we offer advice to others.
This of course is implicit in the golden rule, the royal law, described by Jesus during this discourse like this, “In everything do to others as you would have them do to you, for this is the law and the prophets”.
We are perhaps more used to this being phrased in the words we had last week from our reading from the letter of James, the Lord’s brother and leader of the Jerusalem Church. James clearly sets out as pre-eminent in his epistle ‘the royal law’, “You shall love your neighbour as yourself” (2v8), words we regularly use at our communion service.
This ‘royal law’ was fundamental to our Lord’s own teaching (Mk12v31), but it was not a new teaching, it had earlier been set out in the Old Testament in the book of Leviticus (19v18).
This ‘royal law’, together with our foremost duty to love God, is a complete summary of all that was given by God in the law to Moses and also to the prophets, which together with the Apostles teachings, are the foundation of our Christian faith.

Jesus then introduced some most significant words, some may say most disturbing words, but words that we all need to consider deeply. Words that show the path to our eternal inheritance with God. “Enter through the narrow gate”. Does that phrase bring anything else to your mind?

Those of you familiar with Bunyan’s ‘Pilgrims Progress’ will have made the link. When our pilgrim comes to ‘the wicket gate’ Christian asks Evangelist “Whither must I fly?” Then Evangelist directs Christian to the Wicket Gate and to the steep and narrow way beyond, just as Jesus described it would be. So what does that wicket gate represent?
It represents our Lord Jesus Christ who told us that he alone is the way, the truth and the life, and that is what our Lord was also saying in this discourse. The path that Christian had to follow up to the ‘eternal city’, and that same path that we as believers are called to follow, is hard, but it is the path that leads to life. But, as our Lord said, the sad and distressing thing is that there are few who find it.

How we need to pray that the media will once again open up to the gospel, that we shall see an awakening as in previous generations, and that our churches will once again be filled and our nation transformed for the good of all; and for the praise and glory of the one true and living God.
Let us Pray:
A prayer set for the end of our reading from psalm 119 in daily prayer:-            God our comforter, send your Holy Spirit
to reveal your hidden mercy even in our failures and troubles;
we ask this for the sake of Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour.            Amen

Filed Under: From the Ministers

Reverend Mike Loader Writes ………..

9th September 2021 By Martin Pendle

Sermon St Eustachius 29 August 2021 Year B Trinity13 P17 Halakah
Deuteronomy 4v1-2, 6-9 Psalm 15 James 1v17-27 Mark 7v1-8,14-15, 21-23
Let us pray

If I asked you to describe what you looked like, could you do that? And could you give an accurate picture of yourself to someone?
Well, Saint James, known as James the Just, our Lord’s brother, and the leader of the early Church in Jerusalem, clearly thought it was important. As I am poor at describing faces, I would be no good at all in describing myself, James’s analogy is a rather hard one for me to take, for what did he have say?

James said it was important not to immediately forget what we look like as we should remember just who we are following and not to forget that as followers of Jesus our Lord, we are not just to hear his words, but are called upon to put them into practice, and thereby hangs my dilemma. I do forget what I look like! Fortunately his comparison is but an analogy, and was used by James simply to spur us all on and into a deeper discipleship, a deeper and closer walk with Jesus.
As disciples, and so as followers of Jesus, we are not only called to look into the ‘perfect law of God’, but having looked into his law, to let God’s word, the scriptures, guide and direct our ways and our behaviour.

James letter, written from Jerusalem probably around the mid 40’s of the first century, is full of practical advice for living out our Christian lives. In Jewish tradition, the practical interpretation and working out of the laws, the Torah, that was given by God to Moses so the Hebrew people would know how to best live their lives, is called ‘halakhah’, the way.

So James’s epistle is often viewed as a type of Christian halakhah, and was written for the predominately Jewish believers of his time that were scattered throughout the Roman provinces to show them how to live out their lives for their new found Lord, and is of great value in giving us direction.

In this epistle James clearly sets out as pre-eminent ‘the royal law’, “You shall love your neighbour as yourself” (2v8), a statement fundamental to our Lord’s teaching, but also set out in the Old Testament in the book of Leviticus (19v18).
For James, if our faith does not show the love of God in action, it is a dead faith, it can bare no fruit. For him it is our works, motivated by our love for one another, that shows our faith to be real and not barren (2v18,20).

James had earlier in his epistle reminded his readers, and using some very challenging words, of the nature of ‘true religion’ (1v27), ‘Religion that is pure and undefiled is this, to visit orphans and widows, and to keep oneself unstained from the world’. The way that is to be practiced will vary for each one of us as we apply the thought behind those words to best suit our talents and situation.

But James’s words are clearly meant to show how our lives are to stand out, to be different from the values and practices of this materialistic world, and so they are to speak to our neighbours of the love and presence we experience of God.

James has much to say as to the hallmarks that should be seen in the lives of us as believers. Those hallmarks are humility (4v10), patience (5v7), lack of grumbling (5v9) and the judging of others (4v12). Hopefully we can recognise those traits in our lives; if not then we need to ask for God’s unfailing grace that they will come.

James also has something profound to say on how destructive that little member ‘our tongue’ can be (3v6). He describes it as what? As ‘a fire, and full of deadly poison’, graphic words. How we need to take much care over what comes out of our mouth, for it reflects on the true state of our heart. We have all been taught the rule of thumb, ‘count to ten’ before saying something that we may wish later we had not spoken.
But do we? Unfortunately, once said there is no recall, no way of taking those words back, the damage has been done. So James gives us some advice to help.

He gives us at least three pointers to keep in mind concerning our speech, perhaps you can find more. Let your ‘yes be yes and your no be no’, in other words, there is no need to add any qualification, but where it is appropriate to just speak the truth, and sometimes it may even be better to just keep quiet. I remember being in court on one occasion and asked to swear on the bible, but I pointed to what James and Jesus said so as to make that unnecessary. Jesus said similar words to James in his sermon on the mount (Mtt 5v34-37). “But I tell you, do not swear an oath at all: either by heaven or by the earth. All you need to say is simply yes or no”.

Then James gives us advice on how we should plan what we intend to do. As Christians we believe that all things are in God’s hands and so it is appropriate for us to say, ‘If the Lord wills, we shall do this or that’ (4v15). Perhaps some of you, like me, may be in the habit of saying, DV, Deo Volente, God willing.

And then James concludes his letter with some very practical advice concerning prayer, one of the most powerful things that can come out from our mouths. He says, ‘The prayer of a righteous person has great power in its effect’ (5v16). Do we believe that when we pray? Or are we so often like the person described by James at the start of his epistle (1v6), one who doubts? James says that person is like a wave of the sea, driven and tossed about, unstable.

These three practices, and much more in James’s letter, are good for us to adopt as we demonstrate the presence of God with us, which is our hope of glory.

James, like his brother Jesus, were both observant of the Jewish law, the Torah, but not in a purely legalistic or routine sense. You will remember how Jesus said in the sermon on the mount that he had not come to abolish the law but to fulfil or complete it (Mtt 5v17). He constantly affirmed the words God gave to Moses who in our reading from Deuteronomy (4v5) had said to the people, “keep the commandments of the Lord your God with which I am charging you”.

But Jesus saw the 613 commandments of that law, called mitzvot, not as a yoke to stifle the lives of the people, but given by God as a way to guard their lives against the distractions that could easily lead them into idolatry and into the worship of other Gods beside him the living Lord, Yahweh. Similarly, the commandments that Jesus has placed upon us his followers, are for our good and are a way for us to show our love and commitment to him, “if you love me, you will keep my commandments”, Jesus said to the disciples at the last supper (Jn14v15).

And those same sentiments of the way that we should live that James sets out in his letter, not only have many parallels within the sermon on the mount in Jesus teaching, but are also an echo of what our psalmist wrote (Ps15). ‘Speak the truth from the heart’, ‘bear no deceit on the tongue’, ‘do no evil to a friend’, ‘pour no scorn on a neighbour, and do not go back on your word to him’, and ‘take no bribe’. It is by doing these things the psalmist tells us that one shall never fall.

So what do all these point to for us as Christians? They point to the high calling that God has placed upon our lives now we have been adopted as his children. But we are now not just God’s children, but through our reconciliation to God made possible by the obedience of Jesus to the cross, Paul tells us in Romans (8v17) that we have become heirs with Jesus to the coming new creation. Now that is a thought for you to get your heads around during this coming week.

With such a promise and hope set before us, we have much to give thanks to God for, but also much to live up to.  We are now beholden to show to our generation the joy we possess in the life and power of the kingdom, and that comes through God’s indwelling Holy Spirit. I do trust that we all recognise the Holy Spirit in our lives.

So let us make sure we hold that hope, a hope that comes as we put our faith and trust in our Lord Jesus who is alone the way, the truth and the life.

Let us pray:
Father of mercy,
keep us joyful in your salvation and faithful to your covenant; and, as we journey to your coming kingdom, ever feed us with the bread of life, your Son, our Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen

Filed Under: From the Ministers

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The Ministry Team

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

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St Rumon's Infants School
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https://www.stpetersjunior.co.uk/tavistock-church-schools-federation/
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www.brentorvillage.org
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