Saint Eustachius - Tavistock Parish Church

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

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You are here: Home / Archives for From the Ministers

Reverend Mike Loader writes…….

10th August 2020 By Martin Pendle

Sermon St Eustachius 9.45 Sunday 9 August 2020  9th after Trinity
1 Kings 19v9-18                        Psalm 85v8-13            Romans 10v5-15                        Matthew 14v22-33
May I speak in the name of God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, Amen

Do you not just love the prophet Elijah? He is one of my favourite Old Testament characters.
A prophet who performed amazing miracles and raised the dead, and yet he was so human in his emotions, just like you and me.

You will remember he went up mount Carmel to challenge the false prophets of Israel’s Northern kingdom under their wicket king Ahab and queen Jezebel.
They were unable to bring down fire upon the sacrifice on their altar, and Elijah taunted them saying of their god baal, ‘perhaps he is musing, or gone on a journey, or perhaps he is asleep and must be awakened’.
Then when Elijah called down fire from our one true God in heaven, he used the words, ‘O Lord, God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, let it be known this day that you are God, and I am your servant’.
We know the fire of God fell, the sacrifice and altar were consumed, and then Elijah was called upon by God to kill those false prophets.

With such a strong faith and demonstration of his belief in God, what could possibly go wrong? As our reading described, Elijah lost his courage and fled from Jezebel when she threatened to end his life. Is that not so much like our experience at times?
We see and experience God at work in our lives, in our church, in our community, and then one testing incident, and our faith just seems to vanish.

Elijah felt so threatened that he ran all the way from Carmel in the north, to Beersheba, about as far south as he could, some 120 miles, normally some six day journey. His fear seems to have given him some superhuman strength to run that journey. And fear can invoke in us energy that may best not be used.

Having left his servant, Elijah goes on for another day into the wilderness, and flops under the many branches and flowers of a broom tree. There he sinks into deep depression, and asks God that he may die, not a good prayer to offer, but Elijah was not in his normal state of mind.
I can remember on one occasion, when sailing in a small yacht across a very choppy English channel, I felt so uncomfortable that I could have identified with Elijah at that moment, my rationality had been suspended.

But God never leaves us even if we feel He is far away. God twice sent His angel to revive Elijah, with what would seem to be supernatural food, to sustain him for another revelation and opportunity to serve Him.
And so it is for us. God always has something new and sustaining if only we can but wait and hear Him speak to us. And like Elijah, return and keep us on the path of faith and trust in Him. But first that involved another journey.

In biblical picture language it had to be for forty days, invoking the memory of the Exodus, from the old to the new, and for Elijah, it was to take him to that same mountain of the Exodus.
Mount Sinai, or Horeb, the mountain of God, where God gave to Moses the ten commandments and other requirements of the law to serve Him. We shall not go into the debates as to which mountain and where is its true location, although I favour a location in present Saudi Arabia, rather than near St Catherine’s monastery in the Sinai peninsular, but after all that is more accessible by tourists. Which ever it was a long journey of around 250 miles.

Even after time for reflection along the journey, Elijah still seems to be in depression and self pity when the Lord asked, ‘What are you doing here Elijah’ “even I only am left, and they seek my life, to take it”. Hadn’t Elijah just gone that journey in the power of the food that God had recently provided? Could he not remember all the wonderful miracles God had performed through him? God had to make one last approach to get through Elijah’s remorse, a demonstration of His power.

Yet God was not in the wind, or in the earthquake, or the fire, where was he? How was God to speak to Elijah? In that beautiful way, that God still uses to speak to His servants, to you and to me today. God was in ‘the still small voice’. We just have to take care that we are listening, that we are away from all those things that may distract us, we need to take time to be still.
Perhaps that has been one of the blessings that has come out of our time of lockdown, we have been able to be still, but have we listened for that same ‘still small voice’. What has God been saying to you? What has God been saying to me?

Maybe it has been to give us a new vision of what God wants us to do next, just as He was calling Elijah to go and anoint new kings and a new prophet Elisha, to minister and show God’s power in his place.

We see that Peter also demonstrated his great faith in Jesus when seeking to walk on the water, but as soon as he begun to doubt, he started to sink and needed Jesus hand to support him.

So if we have come to that same realisation as Jesus disciples after the storm, that “Truly you are the Son of God”, and if we have then, as Saint Paul say’s, “confessed with our lips that Jesus is Lord”, then we are saved. Saved not just to enjoy an eternity with God, not just to be partakers of the new creation and enjoy the ‘glory of God’, but to go on and to continue to serve God and build His kingdom in this our time left on earth.

May we see the power of God breaking through, the Holy Spirit working in new and unimagined ways, as we move forward after this pandemic eases.

Let us pray;         the shorter collect for this 9th Sunday after Trinity:-
Gracious Father, revive your Church in our day,
and make her holy, strong and faithful,
for your glory’s sake in Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

Filed Under: From the Ministers

Reverend Mike Loader writes………

21st July 2020 By Martin Pendle

Sermon St Eustachius 9.45 Sunday 19 July 2020         Trinity 6
Isaiah 44v6-8                        Psalm 86v11-end            Romans 8v12-25                        Matthew 13v24-30, 36-43

May I speak in the name of God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, Amen

Cast your minds back to that first Easter Sunday afternoon, and the road to Emmaus, Jesus draws near to two disappointed disciples on their way back home following the crucifixion, their hopes and dreams gone. Not recognising Jesus he proceeds to explain to them from all their scriptures, the Old Testament, the things concerning himself-the Messiah. Then after recognising him in the breaking of the bread after which he vanishes from their sight, they recall how their hearts had burned within them along the way listening to him.

In our short reading from the prophet Isaiah, I believe that we can see one of those scriptures that Jesus may well have referred to.
“Thus says the LORD, the King of Israel, and his Redeemer, the Lord of Hosts.”

Here I see the prophet first referring to God the Father, the Lord-Yahweh-the King of Israel, and then to Jesus-his Redeemer-the Lord of Hosts, the man seated at the Fathers right hand.
It is as Saint Augustine said, ‘Be prepared to find the Lord Jesus latent in the Old Testament, as he is patent in the New Testament’.

In this passage Isaiah also reminds us that the Lord God is the only God, he is in fact, ‘the first and the last’, he has been from eternity past and will be into eternity future. He is our eternal, unchanging, faithful and compassionate Father. Moses, the writer of the oldest psalm 90 (v2), expresses this very same thought, ‘Before the mountains were brought forth, or the earth and the world were formed, from everlasting to everlasting you are God’.

That phrase ‘I Am the first and I Am the last’, also contains the unmistakable identity ‘I Am’, revealed to Moses as the name of our one true God.
That same identity is picked up by Saint John in the introduction to his Revelation (Rev1v8) where he refers to the Lord God as ‘the Alpha and Omega, who is and was and is to come, the Almighty’.

Then at the conclusion to his Revelation, John records how Jesus himself takes on this same identity saying to John, ‘I am the alpha and the omega’ or maybe Jesus addressed John not in the Greek in which he wrote but in his natural language of Hebrew saying, ‘I am the aleph and the tav, the beginning and the end’, the first and last letters of the alphabet.
This glorious identification of Jesus with the Almighty God upon his throne, follows the great promise made by God, ‘Behold I make all things new’.
This is a promise which I trust we are all looking to be soon fulfilled, especially as we look around at the state of our hurting and decaying world.

It will be that long awaited time which the prophet Isaiah described like this (Is11v9), ‘They will neither harm nor destroy in all my holy mountain; for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea’.
What a transformation that will bring to the Holy City of Jerusalem, and not the bombs and stabbings that I witnessed when living there.

So with that exalted position of our Redeemer and Saviour Jesus in our minds, how ought we to be living out our Christian lives in this present time as followers and disciples of our Lord and God?

Well brothers and sisters, Saint Paul gives to us some direction as to how this can happen when writing to the Christians in our reading from Romans, Paul says, we have to change the way we live and think, ‘for if you live according to the flesh, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live’. Paul like John the Baptist, was no mincer of words!

Paul tells us what it is that makes us true ‘children of God’, what it is that enables us to call God Abba-Father, what it is to become joint heirs with our Lord Jesus to the Kingdom; it is when we allow the Holy Spirit of God into our lives and then to direct our ways.

Now that was not an easy path for Paul, and it may not be an easy path for us either. Paul described what following God had cost him when he wrote to the Christians in Corinth (2Cor11v25), ‘three times beaten with rods, once stoned, three times shipwrecked, in danger on his many journeys, sleepless nights and hunger, and his anxiety over all the churches that he had planted’, not something we would wish to emulate.

Yet how did Paul describe all this? ‘I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us’. Brothers and sisters, do we live out our lives with that thought always in the back, or preferably the front, of our minds? God has an unimaginable future ahead for each one of us who have invited Jesus into our lives, and who trust and follow him.

Saint Peter (1Pt5v6,7) expressed our walk with God in this manner, ‘Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, so that he may exalt you in due time. Cast all your anxiety on him, because he cares for you’.

And it is not just us who wait for the glory of God to be revealed when our Lord Jesus returns, and ‘thy kingdom comes on earth as it is in heaven’.
No, Paul tells us that the very creation itself, which at present is subject to decay, or as a Physicist I would say, ‘to a continual running down in entropy’, this our creation Paul says waits ‘with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God’. Are you looking forward to that revealing?

Brothers and sisters, it is you and me who are those ‘sons of God’. It is for you and me that God is going to make a new creation of our decaying earth, and it is you and me who God is to transform into new beings in the very image of our Lord Jesus. No wonder Paul could say our hope passes all that we can possibly imagine.

We may at present be going through hard and unusual times, we may even feel that our very bodies are in decay, but we have that most glorious of hopes to sustain us, and carry us through these times. That coming glory is yet to be revealed at the time of the return of our risen Lord Jesus. It will be a time in which each one of us will participate, and in which each one of us will have their own unique part to play.

So as we now come to gather once again around the table of our Lord Jesus to ‘remember him’, not in the normal way we have come to expect, but in a way where we shall still be fed, nourished and empowered by our Lord’s body, let us remember and live out our holy calling to follow Jesus, and to be faithful to him ‘until he comes’.

Let us pray;         the shorter collect for this sixth Sunday after Trinity:-

Creator God, you made us all in your own image;
may we discern you in all that we see,
and serve you in all that we do;
through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord.         Amen

Filed Under: From the Ministers

Reverend Mike Loader, Assistant Priest, Tavistock, Gulworthy and Brentor writes …

31st March 2020 By Martin Pendle

Sermon St Eustachius  Sunday 15 March 2020 ‘Peace’          Revd. Mike Loader

Readings         Exodus 17v1-7         Psalm 95         Romans 5v1-11         John 4v5-42

Once again the Lexionary has presented us with a beautiful and powerful set of linked readings from which we can barely scratch the surface this morning.

When Jesus, and his first five disciples, came to Jacobs well near Sychar, they were on their way back to the Galilee following the Passover feast in Jerusalem during the spring of AD 28, and little did they realise that new beginnings for them were soon to occur.

Although we read that Jews and Samaritans have nothing in common, they did not mix or interact, Jesus and the Samaritan woman met at the well and talked, and she was to become the first Gentile evangelist for Jesus ministry when she went back to her town and told the people there of her encounter, “can this be the Messiah”.

While the disciples had gone looking for food, Jesus broke with tradition in speaking to this foreign woman, and he sensed that her heart was not at peace, particularly being in her present relationship.

And peace is what I want us to reflect upon this morning. I believe ‘Peace’ to be particularly relevant at this time with much fear over the current corona virus pandemic.

There are many types of peace, peace between individuals, or communities or nations, and how we need to pray for all of those when we look around at the disturbed and desperate state of our world. But I wonder what do you understand and expect for the peace that we as Christians should be experiencing?

When we greet one another with those beautiful words of Paul, “grace, mercy and peace”, how do you envisage that peace?

What is the peace that we call for in that greeting? It is a peace that is to be the expected experience of us as believers in the one true and living God, and in His Son our Lord Jesus Christ.

As the Israelites journeyed with Moses during the exodus from Egypt, they saw and experienced the visible presence of the Lord God journeying with them in the pillar of cloud by day and of fire by night, but they still did not seem to know peace, and they were continually grumbling to Moses.

So what should peace be for us Christians who have God, by His Holy Spirit, journeying with us?

Let us start by asking what do we mean by peace? Peace can be defined as ‘harmonious relationships’ or as ‘a freedom from mental stress or anxiety’. How does that sit with each one of us in our everyday pilgrimage as Christians?

Maybe one of our first responsibilities as Christians, if we are to know true peace, is to be in ‘harmonious relationships’, not just with our brothers and sisters in Christ, but with any and all of our neighbours. And that is where we may need the help, support and prayers of one another, and also of God’s grace, and of the Holy Spirit.

Paul reminded the Galatians (6v2) that we should bear one another’s burdens, and in so doing we then fulfil the law of Christ.

And do you Remember the words of our Lord from the sermon on the mount (Mtt5v9), “blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God”. Do you, do I, want to be found as one of God’s precious children? Then we are called to be people of peace.

Jesus then goes on to tell us how peacemaking is to be practiced (Mtt 5v23), “if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there and first go and be reconciled to your brother”. That reconciliation may not always be possible, but in as far as it is up to us, that is what is required of us to peruse as disciples of our Lord, and if it is not possible to effect a reconciliation, then we are discharged from our responsibility and can move on.

So where does true and lasting peace come from? We read in Luke (1v79) that John the Baptist’s father Zachariah prophesised of Jesus that he was to be the one “to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, and to guide our feet”, our feet into what, “into the way of peace”.

Some 600 years before Zachariah, the prophet Isaiah (Is 1v79) described God’s coming Messiah, our Lord Jesus, in these lovely words, “For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government will be upon his shoulder, and his name will be called ‘Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace'”.

So I believe that it is only through Jesus that we can know real peace.

We Christians await the coming of Jesus to rule and to reign, that is our hope.

So we now await with anticipation the peace that he, the Prince of Peace, will bring to us and to our hurting world.

But Isaiah also goes on to say, (Is 26v3) “God will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed-or focused, on God, because he trusts in God”.

So Isaiah gives to us this promise, set your heart and your mind fully upon God, and God in return will give you ‘perfect peace’.

From Isaiah’s perspective, peace comes from a purposeful decision on our part to set are minds upon God, to chose to have God always at the forefront of our minds.

And that same message was conveyed to the Roman Christians by Saint Paul (Rom8v6) when he wrote, “To set the mind on the flesh is death, but to set the mind on the Holy Spirit is life and peace”.

You may say, but how can I do that in troubling circumstances? Well here is a wonderful story that may help. How many of you have heard the lovely hymn, ‘When peace like a river, attendeth my way’?

An American lawyer, business man and committed Christian, Horatio Spafford, penned the words of that hymn following a great family tragedy. In 1873 he had planned to travel to England with his wife Anna and their four children, but sent them on ahead. Their ship was sunk at sea after a collision, and only Anna survived. Shortly after Spafford sailed to join his grieving wife, and when his ship passed near the spot where his daughter’s had been lost, he was inspired by the Holy Spirit to write these words:

When peace like a river, attendeth my way,

When sorrows like sea billows roll;

Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to know

It is well, it is well, with my soul.

Those words could only have come from the heart of a man who was at peace, and knew the peace of God in his heart.

Another person to my mind whose heart was indeed ‘stayed upon God’, was the old man Simeon in the Temple, when Mary and Joseph presented the 40 day old Jesus according to the requirement of the Jewish law. We often say the words of Simeon, the Nunc dimittis, at funerals to bring great comfort to those who have lost a loved one.

Simeon could see that this baby Jesus that Mary gave him to hold, was the Messiah, the one sent by God to bring Salvation and Peace with God to us all.

As Christians we can, and should know, two types of peace that those outside of the household of God, those of the world, can not, and do not know. ‘Peace with God’, and ‘the Peace of God’. I believe old Simeon had both of these, and so he could come to the end of his life in peace, and die without fear.

So the searching question we have to ask is, ‘Do I have peace with God’?

Peace with God comes when we confess our wrong doings, our shortcomings, our sins before God, and ask for His promised forgiveness, and put our trust, our faith, in Jesus. We then know that those transgressions have been forgiven, forgotten, and as the psalmist says (103v12), removed from us as far as the east is from the west, by our faithful Heavenly God and Father.

As Paul says to the Ephesians (2v13-14), “You who were far off have been brought near through the blood of Christ, foe Jesus himself is our peace”.

And Paul has a similar message for the Christians in Rome (5v1) who have put their trust in Jesus, “Therefore, since we are justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ”.

Because we then have ‘Peace with God’, we can also experience ‘the Peace of God’. So do you, do I, also experience that peace of God dwelling in our hearts day by day?

It is a peace that quietens our hearts and minds; a peace that helps us to overcome our fears.

Jesus described this peace to his disciples at the last supper (Jn14v27) when they were clearly anxious as to what was about to come, he said to them, “my peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid”.

When writing to the Christians at Philippi (Phil 4v7) Paul said that, “the peace of God passes all understanding”. So it is a peace that we cannot describe, explain or understand, but we can know and experience God’s peace deep within our innermost being. It is a peace that guards our hearts and minds as we walk our pilgrim path with our Lord and Master, Jesus.

When writing to the Christians in Galatia (5v16) Paul says that they, and we, should ‘walk by the Holy Spirit’, that means we should follow the leading and prompting of the Holy Spirit in our lives, for there can be no deep peace without God’s Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is graciously given to us as we humble ourselves, and as we allow the ‘fruit’ of God’s Spirit to become evident in our lives, those fruits of ‘love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control’.

It is God’s passion that we should each know the ‘fruit of His Holy Spirit’, and that we each experience that peace which the world cannot give, so let us be sure that today we are rejoicing in that peace.

Let us pray Give us honest hearts, O God, and send your kindly Holy Spirit to help us confess our sinsand bring us the peace of your forgiveness; in Jesus Christ our Lord.         Amen

Filed Under: From the Ministers

The Reverend Sue Tucker writes …

26th March 2020 By Martin Pendle

From Sue: “I still have connections from my days as rural officer. I feel this article below by Jemima Parker may give people something different to focus on and really look around at what God’s creation is doing at this time. Keep safe”

Where to Worship?

The woman at the well famously discussed with Jesus where was the right place to worship (John 4:19-24). Which mountain was the right one, the Temple Mount of Moriah in Jerusalem according to Judaism or Mount Gerizim according to Samaritanism? In this time with the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic when church services have been put on hold, where should we go to worship?

I know from my own experience that I feel closest to God when I am in my garden or out running or walking across the fields near my home. I can praise, pray, grieve and argue with Jesus as I feel the wind on my face and mud beneath my feet.

Connecting with God and being inspired to praise Him can be much easier in nature. Many people of no or little faith will talk of the awe and wonder of a sunset, a forest glade or the intricacy of a flower or beetle. Indeed the whole of the cosmos has been made by and for Jesus (Colossians 1:16).

So it should not surprise us to find ourselves draw into worship when we are in nature. Indeed all of the rest of the created order is praising God all of the time, not by choice as we do, but because it has been created to do so. The birds sing God’s praises, the trees lift their branches in adoration and the flowers lift their heads in love.

In this time of self-isolation, when we need to keep our physical distance to keep ourselves and others safe, we still can join with the whole communion of creation in worship. For some this may mean looking out the window or taking some time in the garden, for others, this could be going for a walk or getting to the park.

But what next? How can we turn a walk in the park into a journey of worship?

  1. Join in. Take time to notice nature. See how it is revering Jesus, its maker. Join in with your own praise and adoration, either silently or out loud (with physical distancing, this may be less embarrassing!). You can use the words of the Psalmists, hymns, liturgy or your own words as the Holy Spirit prompts you.
  2. Give thanks. Find 5 or 10 things that you can show gratitude to Jesus for in your surroundings. Remember that we are all completely depended on our relationship with creation for our everyday needs: air, water, food, mental health etc. And therefore, dependent upon our creator God.
  3. Surrounded by the beauty and creativity of nature, the shortcomings of humanity are often clearer, but so also in the power and timelessness of God. Bring before Him your own concerns and the needs of the natural world, suffering from our misuse and abuse.
  4. Be tactile. When we are having to be careful about our person to person contact, taking time to touch and connect with other parts of God’s creation can be enriching. Feel a sticky bud of a horse chestnut tree, smell a bluebell, let a woodlouse walk across your hand. (Be mindful of not touching surfaces than others may have touched). Rowan Williams once wrote, “Receive the word of God. Go for a walk. Get wet. Dig the earth.”
  5. Let the joy flow. God’s character is displayed in nature: good, creative, generous, humours and fun. Allow yourself to be playful in nature. Use a spotters guide, challenge a friend to a bird watching competition, play Pooh sticks, run and skip!

You may find it helpful to use outdoor prayer resources, such as those from the Sanctuary Centre www.thesanctuarycentre.org/resources/prayer-stations-god-revealed-in-creation.pdf

 

Paul saw how Jesus has revealed himself as creator and redeemer, writing in Romans 1:20 “For ever since the world was created, people have seen the earth and sky. Through everything God made, they can clearly see his invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature. So they have no excuse for not knowing God.”

Our church doors may be closed, but God’s sacred house is the whole of His creation and we can all find Him there.

 

Jemima Parker, Diocesan Environment Officer, Leeds Diocese. March 2020.

Filed Under: From the Ministers

The Reverend Judith Blowey writes …

29th November 2019 By Mandy Betts

Christ came down to earth from heaven, born for us on Christmas Day.

On a side table in our sitting room is a small host of Angels. The Angels were presents given to me when I was ordained, first as a Deacon and then as a priest. These angels are beautiful, all different but each one a reminder of God’s messengers. Angels, heavenly beings created by God. Cherubim and Seraphim. The word “an.gel.os” (angel) comes from a basic word that means “message- bearer”.  An angel is a messenger from God.

In the Bible only two angels are specifically named: the archangel Michael who is mentioned in Jude 9, Revelation and Daniel, and the angel Gabriel whom we find mentioned in the book of Daniel and who comes from God to speak to Daniel. The angel Gabriel is God’s messenger in the incarnation story; it is Gabriel who tells Zechariah “I am Gabriel. I stand in the presence of God and I have been sent to speak to you and bring you good news (Luke 1:19). Gabriel prepares Zechariah for the birth of his son, John, to his wife Elizabeth, Mary’s cousin.

It is Gabriel who was sent by God to Mary to tell her of God’s favour upon her. Mary received God’s message and reassurance, and accepted God’s message, ‘Here I am, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word’ (Luke 1.38). In Matthew 1 Joseph, described as a righteous man and unwilling to expose Mary to public disgrace, planned to dismiss her quietly. An angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, giving him God’s message: this baby will save God’s people from their sins. Joseph did as the Lord commanded and took Mary as his wife.

And so God’s plan for the world was put into place, aided by his angels. Mary’s baby, the Christ child, was born in Bethlehem and was called Jesus, the name given by God, told by the angel.   It was an Angel (thought to be Gabriel) who visited the shepherds in a blaze of God’s glory, the light of God’s presence and power, accompanied by the Heavenly Host praising God and saying ‘Glory to God in the highest heaven’ (Luke 2. 14).  To the least of earth’s inhabitants, the shepherds, the poorest of God’s people, to them first came the sound of the Christmas angel, a song of Good News.

The spirit of the Lord God is upon me,

Because the Lord has anointed me to preach good news to the poor,

To bind up the broken hearted

To proclaim freedom for captives and release darkness for the prisoners

To comfort all who mourn

And provide for those who grieve in Zion

(from Isaiah 61:1-3. Luke 4. 16-21)

The sound of the Christmas Angel was a chorus of Good News, and what good advice for us all.

What is the meaning of the Good News of the Christmas Angel? Is there a difference this Good News will make in our lives?

The good news spoken by the Christmas angel means that God has heard the cries of the world.  God has heard, and He has given, and because of that we can find meaning and hope, and our lives can be filled with peace and assurance.  No matter what crisis we face, Jesus Christ born long ago, God who became man and lived and died among us, knows us and how to meet our needs.

Mary said yes to the Angel, Mary said yes to God.

May we all say yes to God and make space to stop, to pray and listen and hear the Angels sing this Christmas tide. The sound of the Christmas Angel was not just Good News; it was the very best of News this world has ever heard.  Out of love God came down to earth from heaven, born for us on Christmas Day.

May God bless you this Christmastide.

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

General Enquiries

Parish Office (open M-F 10am to 12 noon)
01822 616673
Email: parishoffice@tavistockparishchurch.org.uk

Our Church Schools and Parish Churches

St Rumon's Infants School
01822 612085
https://www.strumonsinfants.co.uk
St Peter's Junior School
01822 614640
https://www.stpetersjunior.co.uk/tavistock-church-schools-federation/
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

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