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OUTREACH June 2018 THE ANGLICAN PARISH OF SHEPPARTON includes St. Augustine’s Church, Shepparton St. Luke’s Church Dookie Christ Church, Murchison St. Paul’s Church, Rushworth P.O. Box 471, Shepparton, Victoria 3632. E-mail: [email protected] Phone: 5821 7630, (ABN 5595 9844 318) Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path…” Psalm 119: 105

Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path ... · Outreach into the community: ZReachout [ has had wonderful success with its fundraising and donations. Where else is

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OUTREACH

June 2018

THE ANGLICAN PARISH OF SHEPPARTON

includes

St. Augustine’s Church, Shepparton

St. Luke’s Church Dookie

Christ Church, Murchison

St. Paul’s Church, Rushworth

P.O. Box 471, Shepparton, Victoria 3632. E-mail: [email protected]

Phone: 5821 7630, (ABN 5595 9844 318) “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path…” Psalm 119: 105

A VERY WARM WELCOME TO OUR SOON-TO-BE

ASSOCIATE PRIEST AND FAMILY

To the Parish of St. Augustine’s, Shepparton Warm, Warm greetings to you all! It has been a long journey to get ourselves from Cape Town onto a plane to Australia but we are pleased to say we are counting the days now. We are all excited and can`t wait to meet all the wonderful people of Shepparton, Dookie, Murchison and Rushworth. My sincere appreciation for your patience during this time as my family and I had to comply with all the visa requirements. Thank you for all the preparations in accommodating us. Special word of thanks to Archdeacon Clarence and Tim Williams for their part in all of this. Greetings from Elizabeth who has started to pack our suitcases already (winter clothes first), Ruth and Nathan writing their mid- year examination and myself, Victor. See you soon!

EASTER 2018

Thanks to Marg Rippon, Elizabeth Woodyard and Helen Malcolm

for the Easter photos.

FROM THE PRIEST-in-CHARGE – Helen Malcolm As you’ll see in this edition of Outreach, much has happened and is about to happen in the Parish. We had a very special Holy Week and Easter season – thank you to all those who assisted and all who attended.

We have welcomed our new Assistant Priest, Rev. Kasey Holyman, with husband Anthony and daughter James and are about to welcome our new full-time Associate Priest Rev. Victor Adams with his wife Elizabeth and children Ruth and Nathan on their long-awaited arrival from South Africa. You will also read about the Melanesian Brothers who are to set up a house in the parish. This new, fresh input of people with gifts, experience and a calling from God supplements the wonderful team of clergy and lay people who have been contributing in so many different ways to enable our liturgies and celebrations, our ministry to parishioners and others and our outreach into the community to continue. Now, more than half-way through our financial year, might be a good time to reflect on how we measure up against our Strategic Plan and where new ideas or more energy and application is needed. Many of the activities reported in this Outreach demonstrate our Strategic Plan lived out.

Build Christian values: I see evidence of the values of love, service, prayer, generosity, teaching, care for others and for the environment, but also the striving to give of our best to God – not only apparent in the more ‘visible’ things we do, but behind the scenes in all the preparation, meetings, communication and organisation. How can we build on this foundation to do even better?

Encourage fellowship: This is apparent in our weekly services, guilds and fellowship groups and special occasions. How can we extend this fellowship to those outside the walls of our buildings?

Nourish spiritual growth: Our services, Lenten study, Education for Ministry alumni, Children’s Church and soon to commence confirmation classes contribute to this. What else would you like to see?

Outreach into the community: ‘Reachout’ has had wonderful success with its fundraising and donations. Where else is there need that we can alleviate – whether physical, social, mental or spiritual?

How can we each contribute to a fuller realisation of our Strategic Plan? Please think and pray about this.

FROM THE ASSISTANT PRIEST – Gunnar Rippon The following is a prayer that appeals to me by virtue of its appealing to my longing to know if I am truly following our God.

A Prayer of Thomas Merton My Lord God

I have no idea where I am going I do not see the road ahead of me,

I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really know myself and the fact that I think

I am following your will does not mean that I am actually doing so.

But I believe that the desire to please you does in fact please you

and I hope that I have that desire in all that I am doing...

And I know that if I do this, you will lead me by the right road

though I may know nothing about it.

Therefore will I trust you always, though I may seem to be lost,

I will not fear, for you are ever with me and will never leave me to face my perils alone.

FROM OUR RECENT LOCUM PRIEST

Robyn & I would like to thank all of you for your warm welcome & friendship. It was a great blessing for us to be able to come back to a parish where we had enjoyed being before......even though this time my memory had been so much affected by my open heart surgery. I am sure that my memory started to improve during our time with you. So thank you again for your encouraging care of us.

It was also encouraging to see how our parish could function as effectively as it did under the wise leadership of the Rev. Helen, despite the non availability of a full time parish priest.

We have come back to a changing Diocese of Newcastle. When we left there was only one Bishop. A few days after we returned two more Bishops were consecrated. They are to be part of a team of three. There will be the Diocesan Bishop, plus his two assistant Bishops who will be responsible for particular regions in the Diocese. Similarly the role of the Archdeacons has changed. Also some of the Cathedral Canons have specialized roles in addition to their normal work as parish priests.

I write this to illustrate how the Church in various Dioceses is having to change the way they do things...not that all the changes will necessarily meet with our approval!! But they are attempting to do what they can with the resources they have, rather than just failing because of a shortage of money &/or full time clergy.

Once more can I thank you for all your kindness & for your care of us. Your brother in Christ, John (Fr John Southerden)

MELANESIAN BROTHERS TO ESTABLISH A COMMUNITY IN OUR PARISH In the next month or so we will be welcoming 2-4 young men from Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands to set up a Household of the Melanesian Brotherhood. They are an Anglican Brotherhood which started in the Solomon Islands in 1925 as an indigenous initiative within a colonial church. They now number over 400 and have households in Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and the Philippines. They were in Australia until 2004, with houses in the Torres Strait and Cape York. The Brothers follow the evangelical counsels under the vows of poverty, celibacy and obedience. They spend three year as novices and then take vows for terms of five years, which are renewable. The constitution of the brotherhood permits some brothers to take life vows, but most brothers serve from seven to twenty years and are released. The released brother goes back into the world, usually finds a wife and resumes life as a Christian layman within his community. They will be housed in the now vacant Church Unit and follow the rules of their own religious order, but also be involved in parish activities and services. Importantly they will undertake mission to the community of Shepparton (initially), being out and about in the city, reaching out to those who are currently not hearing the good news of the Gospel. This opportunity has been unanimously endorsed by vestry and Parish Council and enthusiastically supported by both current and visiting clergy. Tim Williams, Diocesan Registrar, who worked closely with the Brothers when with the church in Cape York and PNG spoke passionately to a vestry meeting about the ‘missing dimension’ in a diocese or parish if there is no religious community present. Having worked with the Medical Missionaries of Mary in Tanzania, I can endorse how rewarding it is to engage with members of a religious order – I found it spiritually enriching and it was the start of my journey to ordination. Rev. John Southerden strongly supported the plan and Rev. Barrie Slatter, who regularly travels to PNG to build churches (and heard about the plan from the ‘other end’ on his most recent visit there in April!), thinks it’s a wonderful idea. The exact ‘shape’ of the Brothers’ mission and activities both within and outside the parish will be worked out between them and the clergy and other parish leaders. We anticipate a visit from the Head Brother and another senior Brother towards the end of June and would appreciate an offer of accommodation from parishioners.

It is early days for this wonderful new venture – there are so many exciting options to use the Brothers’ gifts - if you have any questions, please ask Helen. Please pray for the Brothers as they prepare to join us – a different culture for them – and for the parish, as we prepare to welcome them.

The following prayer is taken from the Handbook of the Companions to the Brotherhood.

For the Brothers ALMIGHTY God, your Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, by obeying you and offering himself, has shown us the true way of service; may the men of the Melanesian Brotherhood serve you in the way that he did, showing faithful love and being true to you alone, so that, by your power, the work they are called to do may bear good fruit and make your loving plan for all people come true, to the glory of your name; through the same your Son our Lord Jesus Christ, who lives and rules with you and the Holy Spirit, one God for ever and ever. Amen.

REMEMBERING DEACONESS ELSIE CLOAK This year marks the 30th anniversary of Elsie Cloak’s death. She was Deaconess at St. Augustine’s from when her new husband Doug. brought her to Shepparton in the 1970s until she stepped down due to ill health. The stunning window in the children’s corner depicts the natural world where Elsie loved to be – this was also reflected in her poetry. As well as creative writing and making ceramic jewellery, Elsie committed her time to the many organisations and clubs which she joined. We are grateful for Deaconess Elsie’s ministry to the people of the parish and to her husband’s generosity in donating the beautiful window in her memory.

THY KINGDOM COME Those parishioners who participated in the Archbishop of Canterbury’s global prayer wave from the Ascension to Pentecost found it very rewarding. From Eileen: My overwhelming reaction to TKC has been that it wasn't just me saying my prayers but that I am part of a worldwide crowd of thousands of people. What a power of prayer is going up, all following the same programme. It made me feel very privileged to belong to such a group. We each were asked to pray for five special people, but it felt as if we were praying for all the participants' five people which gave more intensity to the prayer. I was conscious of the last two lines of the hymn "The day Thou gavest". "The sun that bids us rest is waking our brethren 'neath the western sky, and hour by hour fresh lips are making Thy wondrous doings heard on high". From Helen: For me to take on a new activity it needs to be meaningful and not take up much time – Thy Kingdom Come was both. I found it straightforward to fit into my day and incredibly rewarding. The short videos and prayer prompts each day were thought-provoking and gave me new insights into what God was trying to get through to me over the clamour of other demands. GARAGE SALE THANK YOU The Garage Sale, Cake Stall and Sausage Sizzle on Saturday 19th May was a great success, raising about $1100. This will go into the Fair income in October. Many thanks to everyone who contributed and to Dorothy for the idea and the organisation. Well done! THANK YOU PRODUCTS During our Lenten studies we used ABM’s booklet that looked at the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. As we considered what we could do to help those in need overseas but also closer to home, we learned about Thank you products. This social enterprise commits 100% of its profit to end global poverty. The goods they make or distribute vary from bottled water to nappies to body care products. Search them out next time you shop – there are over 5,500 outlets in Australia, including all major supermarkets. I believe the Post Office sells the bottled water (if you MUST buy bottled water). If the supermarkets don’t sell the Thank you products, ask them why not?

https://thankyou.co/about

THINGS YOU KNOW BUT MIGHT HAVE FORGOTTEN Within the Eucharist service:

- Before the service, please be aware of people already in the Church and keep the level of noise in the Narthex down. Be aware especially of when the service is about to start, that there is silence while the sanctuary team gathers and prays.

- Clergy, Eucharistic Assistants and our accompanists are there to lead the service – please listen and follow their tempo. We have recently had the sound system adjusted – please let us know if there is a problem with volume.

- In the first sentence of the Creed there is a comma between ‘is’ and ‘seen’ – please respect it.

- Towards the end of the Creed there is a ‘comma-like’ pause after the first two of the four marks of the Church – one (united), holy (set apart for God), catholic (universal) and apostolic (traces its tradition from the Apostles).

- The appropriate greeting at the sharing of the Peace is a handshake and ‘Peace be with you’. Stories can be shared in the Narthex over a cuppa.

- During the Lord’s Prayer it is appropriate to remain standing. - At Communion, the Eucharistic Assistants will keep hold of the chalice to

avoid accidents. Please guide it so you can take a sip of the wine. - Please do not talk as you go up for and return from Communion or while

waiting until everyone has taken Communion – others are trying to pray. - It is appropriate to stand for the post-communion prayer. - Joining in congregation prayers and responses and singing as though you

mean what you are saying is encouraged. - If you want to give a message to the clergy on a Sunday or explain something

to them, please (a) put it in writing and (b) give it to them after the service, rather than interrupting their preparation for the service.

Donations are welcome for the following: - candles in the Lady Chapel when you light one - postage for Outreach - flowers in memory of loved ones (see Calendar next to kitchen)

Email/other addresses: please make sure that the office has up-to-date addresses and phone numbers in case we need to contact you/ send you information. Rosters: if you aren’t available for rostered duties, please arrange a substitute AND let the office know who that is. For those cooking for the Parish Fair, all ingredients must be listed on your creations. If you haven’t already, please let the Parish Office or Mary Pearson know if you are happy to have your photo published in Outreach or The Advocate.

DIARY DATES

Sunday 3rd June 9.30am: Patronal Festival, Augustine of Canterbury

Combined parish service with the Most. Rev. Dr Philip Freier, Archbishop of Melbourne and Primate of the Anglican Church of Australia as our guest preacher. The service will be followed by brunch – please let the office know if you will be coming for catering purposes.

Saturday 16th June: Safe Church Awareness workshop

St. Augustine’s 9.30am – 4pm Compulsory for Parish Councillors, Eucharistic Assistants, Sunday School teachers, Lay Ministers, Pastoral ministers. Otherwise it will be difficult to support your continued ministry. BYO lunch; AM and PM tea provided. Everybody is welcome to do it – check with Helen if you’re not sure whether it is compulsory for you. Please put your name on the list in the Narthex or let Helen know. I hope to do a group booking and then retrieve half the registration cost from each of you (full registration is $35).

Sunday 22nd July: Confirmation and admission to first communion by

Bishop John Parkes Service time to be confirmed.

Last chance to add names of children or adults to the list of those wishing to be confirmed this year or admitted to first communion. Preparation will start on Sunday 3rd June at 4pm.

PARISH MONTHLY INCOME AND EXPENDITURE March 2018 Income: $17366.53 Expenditure: $17506.43 April 2018 Income: $23435.21 Expenditure: $28047.51 (includes Rectory ramp)

SAMARITAN’S PURSE OPERATION CHRISTMAS CHILD – SHOEBOXES My name is Marjorie Earl – I will again be coordinating the shoeboxes for the Parish. Hopefully we can have our shoeboxes filled and returned by August this year. It would be great if we can fill 100 shoeboxes in 2018. There are three ways you can participate in filling our shoeboxes and whatever you can do will be very much appreciated thank you. 1.Take a shoe box and fill it with items according to list below. You choose whether the box is for a girl or a boy and the age group of the child – 2-4 years, 5-9 years or 10-14 years. 2. It is difficult for some people to fill a box themselves so instead of taking a shoebox you may like to provide some items from the suggested list and these can be packed into shoeboxes by other helpers. For example we have a lady very kindly knitting small teddy bears, last year another lady sewed up some material shoulder bags, and others have given clothing, face washers, toothbrushes, combs, hair clips, balls, skipping ropes, small cars, coloured pencils, finger puppets and bangles. 3. You may be able to donate money for someone else to fill a shoebox on your behalf, or to help pay the postage costs of $10 per shoebox. PACK SOMETHING FROM EACH OF THE FOLLOWING 6 SUGGESTIONS FOR A CHILD IN NEED

1. SOMETHING TO WEAR - Tshirt, shorts, skirt, underwear, cap, socks, sandals,

thongs.

2. SOMETHING TO LOVE - teddy bear, doll, soft toy

3. SOMETHING SPECIAL - carry bag, bangles, stickers, necklaces, sunglasses, craft kits,

personal note from you, photo of yourself.

4. SOMETHING FOR SCHOOL – exercise book, pencils, coloured pencils, pencil case,

sharpener, eraser, chalk and duster, small blackboard.

5. SOMETHING TO PLAY WITH – tennis balls, cars, small animals, coloured balls,

skipping rope, marbles, yoyos, slinky, finger puppets, musical instrument. (No

battery operated items)

6. SOMETHING FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE - soap, face washer, toothbrush, hair brush,

comb, scrunchies, hair clips. (No toothpaste)

PROHIBITED ITEMS THAT CANNOT BE PUT INTO THE SHOE BOXES.

Items that leak or melt such as toothpaste, batteries, shampoo, playdough or

plasticine.

Breakable items such as glass, mirrors, or porcelain.

Items that may scare or harm a child such as pirate related or military figures, guns,

knives.

Gambling related items such as play money, playing cards and some games.

Religious literature. Every child is given an Operation Christmas Child evangelistic

book at an Outreach event.

Customs regulations state no food or lollies of any kind can be included and neither

can any used or damaged items including clothing or toys.

The shoeboxes will be available within the next 3 weeks and I will put a tub in the Narthex for donations of items for the shoeboxes. Please hand any donations of money into the Office please. I attend the 10am Service on a Wednesday in Shepparton and can be contacted on telephone 5828 3420 or by email [email protected]. Thank you so much for supporting this worthy cause.

LAY INVIGORATION DAY, BENALLA 28TH APRIL A very pleasing number of people from all centres of the parish attended the Lay Training Day in Benalla. One session covered the idea of ‘followership’ as opposed to ‘leadership’. We are all both leaders and followers in different spheres of our life but the concept was helpful to me. Lesly Lewis from Wangaratta outlined five key types of followers: Exemplary followers: independent, innovative, and willing to question leadership; critical to organizational success. Conformist followers: the “yes people” of the organization; will do the organization’s work and actively follow orders. Pragmatists: hug the middle road. Do a good job but won’t stick their necks out. Passive followers: rely on leaders to do the thinking for them…and require constant direction. Alienated followers: mavericks with a healthy skepticism of the organization; capable but cynical.

Good followers speak up and disagree with leaders. Ineffective followers fail to give honest opinions, and become “yes

people”. If a group is going down the wrong road, it will get there faster when

followers remain silent. Effective leaders respect, want and need followers who speak their minds rather than withhold key information. Barriers to effective followership:

Active Resisters: people who prefer to do things the way they have always done them.

Organizational Constipators: passive-aggressives who undermine change without active resistance.

Culture of mediocrity: do not strive for excellence. results in failure of followership. What type of follower are you? TEAM: Together Everyone Achieves More

Helen - with thanks to Lesley for her slides

GARDEN GROUP NOTES

Did you notice “Autumn” was in the garden wearing her best, Red, Gold, Russet and Bronze recently? How quickly we start looking for beanies and cloves, coats and jackets or even gumboots. But “Winter” is imminent, and like all Mothers ever Mother Nature needs a rest after seasonal pruning, prodding and picking of her finest bounty so the view can become cleaner or be changed as required. We supply warmth with mulching; food as fertiliser for bulbs etc., sometimes even relocation helps stimulate new energies to come. If the Mid-Year Garage Sale has cleared your location or schedule, you are most welcome to join our team of gardeners on our regular working-bees on the last Saturday of each month at 9am. There is always lots to do.

Beryl Bonfitto

GARDEN THERAPY Be like a bird that, halting in her flight awhile in boughs too slight, feels them give way beneath her and yet sings, knowing that she has wings. Viola, pansy, heartsease, violets, Johnny-jump ups, ladies delight- they all belong to one genus and the resemblance is easy to see in their cheeky face-like flowers - bright spots on cold winter days. Shakespeare gave emphasis to the meaning of pansies when he had Ophelia say “and there is pansies, that’s for thoughts”. In fact she was referring to a miniature form then known as heartsease. The name pansy is from a French word pensée meaning thought. The first true pansy that we know of today is believed to have been developed in a garden close to London about 150 years ago. Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old. It’s time to prune sasanqua camilias as they finish flowering. Sow quick growing annuals such as cosmos, calendulas, alyssum, nasturtium and nemesia for colour in frost free gardens.

Rosemary Mitchelmore

Baptisms 18th March: Elijah Ashton Alford 22nd April: Charlotte Lilly Lagudi

Funerals

15th March: Joan Elizabeth Harder 27th March: Zdravko Stojanovski 29th March: Gregory James McNay 10th April: Joyce Mabel Auldridge 18th April: Laurin Hector Taylor 26th April: Barbara Joan Philp 30th April: Peter Tomlinson 2nd May: Margaret Mary Smallwood 10th May: Josephine Backhouse Moyle

Weddings

7th April: Hayden Troy Powles & Courtney Natalie Tsorbaris 5th May: Sean Michael Dimitropoulos Stephanie Georgia Giankos

REGULAR PARISH SERVICES Please note that there are various occasions when these service times change. These are usually announced in advance in the weekly pewsheets, but please ring the Parish office on 5821 7630 to confirm service times for the following Sunday if you are not sure. Please note the TIMES for the Combined Services on the Fifth Sundays. St. Augustine’s, Shepparton: 1st – 4th Sundays: 8.30am Sung Eucharist 10.30am Family Eucharist 5th Sundays: 9.30am Combined Eucharist Rushworth: 1st – 3rd Sundays: 9am Eucharist 4th Sunday: 9am Morning Prayer Murchison: 1st – 3rd Sundays: 11am Eucharist 4th Sunday: 11am Morning Prayer Rushworth/Murchison: 5th Sunday: 10.30am Combined Eucharist, except final 5th Sunday for the year 5pm, alternating between towns. Dookie: 2nd Sunday: 8.45am Eucharist 4th Sunday: 9am Eucharist alternating between the Anglican Church and

the Uniting Church

OUR WEBSITE:

http://www.sheppartonanglican.com

KID’S PAGE

Weeping Window tribute at St Luke’s, Dookie.

Inspired by the wonderful outlay of poppies at The Tower of London, Hereford cathedral and Federation Square in Melbourne, we hope to contribute in a very small but meaningful way to show respect and commemoration to those

who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom. St Luke’s is the only Dookie church that in any way displays remembrance to our soldiers in WW1. We have an Honour Board which hangs in the rear of the church naming those who were connected to St Luke’s at the time of war who enlisted, a stained glass window given by the Alexander family who lost two sons

in this war, and a brass altar cross presented by the Stevens family in memory of their son and brother Keith.

The father of soldiers John and Edward Alexander,

Charles, built St Luke’s and also other Dookie structures: The Dookie Chateau, St Mary’s Catholic

Church, The Gladstone Hotel and the Dookie Memorial hall.

Not only did he build St Luke’s, but he was a bricklayer of the district and also hand made all the

pews, which we still sit on today.

As a token of respect we are endeavoring to create a mini version more in the form of a teardrop from our altar central stained glass window. We see this as a fitting and meaningful tribute. As we are such a very small congregation, we are asking for help from our other Shepparton Parish churches. We hope this will be a community effort, both within our Church and the local area as an outreach project. There will be some wool and patterns for poppies, both knitted and crocheted, in the Church foyer, along with a collection box for any poppies that you may be able to contribute for our project.

Poppies are made from red 8ply yarn. There is a Facebook page promoting larger efforts all over Australia, which you may like to visit for inspiration and interest. https://www.facebook.com/groups/5000Poppies/1894366660638184/ We will be ever so grateful for any help you may give us, as this is quite a challenge for so few of us. We intend to begin this in June as a work in progress and our hope to have it fulfilled by 11th November this year that depicts the end of The Great War.

Dianne Feldtmann St Luke’s Anglican Church.

Jan Phillips with nappies to donate and other goods ready to give to The Salvation Army. Photos Marg Rippon

Helen handing over a cheque to buy swags for local distribution to Captain Karyn Wishart from The Salvation Army. Photo courtesy of Tara Whitsed and

The Shepparton News.

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