The Parish Magazine of
St Stephen’s Church
Guernsey
May 2016
A busy church like St. Stephen’s provides so much news each month – an editor’s dream. But wise words came from one contributor this month who also produces his own church magazine. The Rev. Murray George told us that “your magazine is only as good as your contributors”. How very true. We thank everyone who has provided “new topics” yet again. We can’t do without you but new material is always welcomed. Don’t be shy! We are going on holiday now and look forward to coming back to a bumper post. The deadline for the June issue is Thursday May 19th 2016. God’s blessings Val and Graham Moullin email [email protected]
HOPE FOR HUMANITY
As this issue of the Parish Magazine goes to print, Christians around the world are preparing to celebrate the Ascension of Christ and Pentecost. It is very easy to overlook the importance of the Ascension and to consider it simply as a ‘logical conclusion’ to the resurrection of Jesus (which in a way it is). But it is so much more than that. When our Lord ascended to heaven, the human life of the Son (in which God made himself visible and tangible) disappeared from the human world and was somehow absorbed into the endless life of God. The miracle of Ascension is also that our humanity, all of it, yours and mine, goes with Christ in his Ascension. In St Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, we were reminded that Jesus is the head of the church, ‘which is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all’ (1. 23). At his Ascension, our Lord rose in his perfect humanity, and he took with him our humanity, including all of the difficult, resistant and unpleasant bits. He took our humanity with him to the heart of the Father, who in his love waits to heal and transform us. How does God heal and transform us? He does so by the gift and presence of his Holy Spirit, whose coming we celebrate at Pentecost. For each one of us, the Ascension of Christ is a celebration of God’s capacity through his Holy Spirit to reach into those parts of our humanity that are far from glorious; that are rebellious, troubled and broken; and to then breathe life into them and make us new.
Church Diary for May 2016
Sun 1 Sixth Sunday of Easter 9.30am Mass with Hymns Fr John
11.00am Sung Mass Fr John
Mon 2 Phillip and James Apostles
Tue 3 Invention of the Cross 11.00am Mass in the Lady Chapel
Wed 4 English Saints & Martyrs of the Reformation 7.00pm Mass in the Lady Chapel
Thu 5 Ascension Day 7.00pm Sung Mass
Fri 6 William of Aebelholt Abbot 1203 7.00pm Mass in the Resurrection Chapel
Sat 7 Nilus of Sora Abbot 1508
Sun 8 Seventh Sunday of Easter 9.30am Mass with Hymns Fr John Presiding
11.00am Sung Mass Fr John Presiding
Fr Marc preaching at both services
Mon 9 Liberation Day
Tue 10 Antonio - Bishop, 1459 11.00am Mass in the Lady Chapel
Wed 11 Asaph - Bishop, C6th 7.00pm Mass in the Lady Chapel
Thu 12 Florence Nightingale - Nurse, 1820
Fri 13 Robert Bellarmine Archbishop Teacher 1621 7.00pm Mass in the Resurrection Chapel
Sat 14 St Matthias - Apostle
Sun 15 Day of Pentecost 9.30am Mass with Hymns Fr John
Whit Sunday 11.00am Sung Mass Fr John
12.30pm Baptism Aaliyah daugther of Lauren Rault
Mon 16 Caroline Chisholm - Social Reformer, 1877
Tue 17 Diego Friar Minor 1463 11.00am Mass in the Lady Chapel
Wed 18 Eric King of Sweden, 1161 7.00pm Mass in the Lady Chapel
Thu 19 Dunstan
Fri 20 Alcuin of York - Abbot of Tours, 804 7.00pm Mass in the Resurrection Chapel
Sat 21 Helena - Protector of Holy Places, 330 7.30pm Messiah at St James Gsy Choral Society
Sun 22 Trinity Sunday 9.30am Mass with Hymns Fr John
11.00am Sung Mass Fr John
Mon 23 Petroc, Abbot of Padstow C6th
Tue 24 John & Charles Wesley - Evangelists, 1791 & 1788 11.00am Mass in the Lady Chapel
2.30pm Mothers' Union Deanery Festival Service
Wed 25 The Venerable Bede, Monk, Scholar Historian 735 7.00pm Mass in the Lady Chapel
Thu 26 Corpus Christi 7.00pm Sung Mass
Fri 27 Juluis of Durostorum, Martyr 302 7.00pm Mass in the Resurrection Chapel
Sat 28 Lanfranc - Archbishop of Canterbury, 1089 1.00pm Wedding Toni-Jayne Flattery and James Turvey
Sun 29 First Sunday after Trinity 9.30am Mass with Hymns Fr John
11.00am Sung Mass Fr John
Mon 30 Josephine Butler - Social Reformer, 1906
Tue 31 Visit of the Blessed Virgin Mary to Elizabeth 11.00am Mass in the Lady Chapel
Looking ahead
June 4 Saturday 7.30pm GU 10 Concert in Community Centre June 5 Sunday 9.00am Baptism Thomas and Nicholas Guthrie June 11 Saturday 8.00pm Southbank Sinfonia Concert June 26 Sunday 4.00pm Thanksgiving for Marriage Service June 27 Monday 7.30pm Ladies’ College Leavers Service June 30 Thursday 11.00am Beechwood Leavers Service July 2 Saturday 1.00pm Wedding Dave Bamford and Lisa Gill
3.00pm Royal Afternoon Tea Party July 5 Tuesday Guernsey Choral Society Concert July 9 Saturday 3.30pm Wedding Shanti Bygott and Tim Henry
July 10 Sunday Memorial Service for Priscilla Bygott-Webb July 16 Saturday Noon Wedding Natalie Murray and Guy Mitchell
July 17 Sunday 12.30pm Baptism Oscar Marsh July 24 Sunday 12.30pm Baptism Connor Wilson
‘An Evening with GU10’ Seafood buffet & Sea shanties Saturday 4
th June at 6.30 for 7.00 p.m.
St Stephen’s Community Centre Tickets £15 As part of our fund raising efforts the Social Events Committee are hosting this concert. The buffet supper will be at 7.00 p.m. followed by the concert, and coffee and cakes will be served during the interval. Tickets will be on sale from the beginning of May. We will be looking for help with catering etc. from members of the congregation to make this evening a great success. Please speak to Barbara Amory or Ann Goss with offers of cakes etc. to use at this event.
BAROQUE IN GUERNSEY AT ST STEPHEN’S CHURCH Saturday 11 June | 8pm
Southbank Sinfonia Julian Perkins director Southbank Sinfonia, an orchestra of young professionals, is internationally recognised as a leading orchestral academy, providing graduate musicians from all over the world with a much-needed springboard into the profession. The orchestra enjoys a longstanding role in the cultural life of Guernsey, helping to foster the next generation of musical talent on the island through its successful visits over the past five years. This year, the whole orchestra travels to Guernsey for an evening of Baroque music rich in glowing drama. Directed by world-renowned harpsichordist Julian Perkins, the programme traverses the musical DNA of Europe, exploring the eighteenth century stylings of Britain, France, Germany and beyond, each with their own delights and nuances.
Programme includes works by Handel, Telemann and
Rameau. Free Admission Retiring collection Susan Lloyd who is organising the Guernsey side of this visit and concert has said they would appreciate any offers of accommodation for the musicians for the nights of June 10 and 11th preferably in or near town. Forms are available at the back of the Church.
THY KINGDOM COME
In the nine days leading up to Pentecost (6th – 15th May 2016), the Archbishops of Canterbury and York hope that there will be a great wave of prayer across the land, throughout the Church of England and other Churches. We are invited to pray: - that all Christians will deepen their relationship with Christ; - that all Christians will have confidence to share the Gospel; - and that all people will respond to the call of Jesus Christ to follow him as disciples, to live out the Gospel and to seek God’s kingdom from day to day.
At the heart of our prayers will be the words that Christ taught us – ‘Thy kingdom come, thy will be done.’ When we pray the Lord’s Prayer with sincerity and with joy, there is no imagining the new ways in which God can use us for his glory. Please consider giving some time and thought to this prayer initiative. On Sunday 1st May, Novena Prayer booklets will be made available to the congregations at St Stephen’s; and you may also want to take a copy of Fr. Marc Trickey’s very helpful booklet, ‘The Lord’s Prayer and Christian Witness’, which is already available at the back of the church.
Fr. John Moore
“View from the Pew”
DARKNESS TO LIGHT The Easter Saturday Vigil
Drama came to St Stephen’s that evening when we were joined by the Dean of Guernsey, St Andrew’s Church, and priests from the Town Church and the Vale Church. With Fr John they lit their Paschal Candles from what seemed an explosion of fire bringing light to a darkened church. Share with us Heather’s impressions: After the forty days and nights in the desert, we come to the Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem (Palm Sunday) and the Last Supper when we feel the days beginning to darken again, the night of Gethsemane then Good Friday. There was deep darkness over all the earth, followed by the stillness of Saturday. Then a faint glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel, sitting in the darkness, watching and waiting, as we also did that night. Then a stronger flickering, candles being lit, suddenly everywhere was bright light accompanied by the organ at full volume. The ’Light of Christ’ – ‘Thanks be to God’ ringing out, awe inspiring and creating atmosphere in the Church. The Exsultet (Easter song of praise) so beautifully sung. The Testament readings, the choir interspersing with responsorial psalm or canticle, silence, prayer. The blessing of the water at the font, renewal of our promises made at our Baptism. Then on to the Eucharist, ‘What a wonderful service’ I’m sure that we all went home wanting to go out into the world sharing the good news.
“He is risen indeed” “Alleluia” ‘Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your people and kindle in us the fire of your love’
Heather Le Gallez
THE BLACK DOT
One day, a professor entered the classroom and asked his students to prepare for a surprise test. They all waited anxiously at their desks for the test to begin. The professor handed out the exams with the text facing down, as usual. Once he handed them all out, he asked the students to turn over the papers. To everyone’s surprise, there were no questions—just a black dot in the centre of the paper. The professor, seeing the expression on everyone’s faces, told them the following: “I want you to write about what you see there”. The students, confused, got started on the inexplicable task. At the end of the class, the professor took all the exam papers and started reading each one of them out loud, in front of the students. All of them, with no exception, defined the black dot, trying to explain its position in the centre of the sheet. After all had been read, the classroom silent, the professor started to explain: “I’m am not going to grade you on this, I just wanted to give you something to think about. No one wrote about the white part of the paper. Everyone focussed on the black dot– and the same happens in our lives. We have a white piece of paper to observe and enjoy, but we all focus on the dark spots”. HE CONTINUED: “Our life is a gift given to us by God, with love and care, and we all have reasons to celebrate—nature renewing itself every day, our friends around us, the job that provides our livelihood, the miracles we see every day… However, we insist on focussing only on the dark spot - the health issues that bother us, the lack of money, the complicated relationship with a family member, the disappointment with a friend. The dark spots are very small when compared to everything we have in our lives, but they’re the ones that pollute our mind. HE CONCLUDED: Take away the black dots in your life. Enjoy each one of your blessings, each moment that life gives you. Be happy and live a life filled with love!” Rev. Murray George Source: The Link Alsager & Congleton URC
AN INCREDIBLE WAY TO LOOK AT GOD
When GOD solves our problems, we have faith in HIS abilities. When GOD doesn’t solve our problems HE has faith in our abilities. God’s accuracy may be observed in the hatching of eggs……. -those of the canary in 14 days; -those of the barnyard hen in 21 days; -eggs of ducks and geese in 28 days; - those of the mallard in 35 days; The eggs of a parrot and the ostrich hatch in 42 days. (notice, they are all divisible by seven, the number of days in a week!) God’s wisdom is seen in the making of an elephant…. The four legs of this great beast all bend forward in the same direction. No other quadruped is so made. God planned that this animal would have a high body too large to live on two legs. For this reason He gave it four fulcrums so that it can rise from the ground easily. The horse rises from the ground on its two front legs first. A cow rises from the ground with its two hind legs first. How wise the Lord is in all His works of creation! Each watermelon has an even number of stripes on the rind. Each orange has an even number of segments. Each ear of corn has an even number of rows. Each stalk of wheat has an even number of grains. Every bunch of bananas has on its lowest row an even number of bananas, and each row decreases by one, so that one row has an even number and the next row an odd number. Amazing!! The waves of the sea roll in on shore twenty-six to the minute in all kinds of weather. All grains are found in even numbers on the stalks. God has caused the flowers to blossom at certain specified times during the day. Linnaeus, the great botanist. Once said that if he had a conservatory contain-ing the right kind of soil, moisture and temperature, he could tell the time of the day or night by the flowers that are open and those that were closed.
The lives of each of us may be ordered by the Lord in a beautiful way for his glory – if we will only entrust Him with our life. If we try to regulate our own life, it will only be a mess and a failure. Only God, who made our brain and heart, can successfully guide them to a profitable end. I pray God blesses you in ways you never even dreamed. When you carry The Bible, Satan has a headache; when you open it, he collapses; When he sees you reading it, he loses his strength, and when you stand on the Word of God, Satan can’t hurt you! And did you also know… That when you are about to send this to others, the devil will probably try to discourage you, but do it anyway! Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil – it has no point.
Jenny Tasker
His cat had got stuck up a tree and the vicar mounted a rescue operation. He climbed a ladder and tied a rope around the highest point of a tree he could reach; he then tied the other end to the tow bar of his car. Once in the car he very gently drove forward – and the inevitable occurred. The rope snapped catapulting the poor cat heavenwards. No more was heard of the cat. A few weeks later the vicar went to visit a young Mum and her young son, Jack. In the front room sitting on the mat was the vicar’s cat. “Wherever did you find such a lovely cat?” asked the vicar with thinly disguised innocence. “Well, Jack had been asking for a cat for months and in the end I took him into the garden to hang out the washing, I told him that the only thing we could do was to pray. So we put our hands together, looked up to the heavens, closed our eyes and prayed. Dear Jesus, send us a cat. Well vicar, you’ll never guess what happened next
THE WORLD IS MINE
Today on a bus, I saw a very beautiful woman and wished I were as beautiful. When suddenly she rose to leave, I saw her hobble down the aisle. She had one leg and used a crutch. But as she passed she smiled. Oh God, forgive me when I whine. I have two legs and the world is mine. I stopped to buy some sweets. The lad who sold them had such charm. I talked with him, he seemed so glad. If I were late it’d do no harm. As I left, he said to, me. “I thank you, you’ve been so kind. It’s nice to talk with folks like you. You see,” he said, “I’m blind” Oh God, forgive me when I whine. I have two eyes; the world is mine. Later while walking down the street, I saw a child I knew. He stood and watched the others play, but he did not know what to do. I stopped a moment and then I said “Why don’t you join them dear?” He looked ahead without a word, I forgot he couldn’t hear. Oh God, forgive me when I whine. I have two ears; the world is mine.
With feet to take me where I’d go… With eyes to see the sunset’s glow. With ears to hear what I’d know.
Oh God, forgive me when I whine.
I’ve been blessed indeed, the world is mine.
David Le Lievre
The vicar’s son had just passed his driving test in the family car. He asked if he could borrow the car on Saturday. “First go and get your haircut,” he was told. “Moses and Noah and even Jesus and his disciples had long hair,” the boy protested. “Yes,” was the reply and they walked everywhere they went”.
CHRISTIAN WITNESS – 3 In the first of these articles, we saw that it is our character which expresses so much about what we believe. In the second , it was the way in which we carry out the work we have to do, that we do it to the best of our ability. In this article, we go a stage further and consider grace and love as the means by which we commend the gospel to others. Grace and love go beyond doing what we have to; they are the working out of generosity and sensitivity; of being aware of the needs of others and seeking to meet them unasked. Some years ago my wife and I were both ill in bed feeling rotten. There was a knock at the door, and there was a friend who’d brought us a hot meal, unasked. That is grace. In the parable of the sheep and goats, Jesus suggests ways in which we can show grace and love – feeding the hungry, giving water to the thirsty, hospitality to the stranger, clothing to the naked, care for the sick, and friendship to the prisoner. Many of us already give to the Food Bank, and a recent letter in the magazine has shown how valuable that is, even in our affluent island. Grace and love can show themselves in all situations, if we’re alive to the possibilities. Being aware of others as we go round the supermarket – a warm smile for the mother struggling with her children; that older person unable to reach the top shelf; allowing the person behind you at the check-out with only a couple of items to go first; or it may be a simple ‘thank you’ to the tired waitress clearing the café tables. Grace shows itself by going beyond the call of duty. It may be in dealing with the public in a busy office and realizing that someone needs more help than would normally be given – going out of your way to meet that person’s needs. Or in an office, realizing that someone is going through a bad time and quietly doing what you can to ease their work and making allowances for their short temper. Behind all our daily dealings with others should be prayer, prayer that God will show us what he wants us to do as we start the day in the office, or enter the supermarket, or wait at the counter, or simply get on with things at home. We may seldom speak the name of Christ, but someone will ask why we’ve acted as we have, and then we can say. Fr Marc
Easter “New Life” Activity Afternoon (Messy Church)
We had a very successful afternoon on Holy Saturday. The families were encouraged to bring posies of flowers for the Easter Garden. The response was exceptional and the children loved putting their flowers in vases and hearing the Easter Story. The weather was very cold and windy with rain threatening and we held the Easter Egg Hunt in the church. The children tiptoed around the church quietly looking for the eggs (thank you to the congregation who have found the missing eggs in the pews). We then enjoyed a lot of craft activities in the Community Centre, making biscuits, decorating crosses, painting an Easter scene and much, much more. The room was buzzing with everyone taking part. Fr John joined us and helped the children make Easter Baskets. There were 20 families with 28 children, 5 families were not able to attend because of sickness.
A very big thank you to the helpers. Jean Le Huray
Advance Notice
St Stephen’s Tuesday Luncheon Group
This is a new venture of reaching out to the community and providing friendship by coming together and having lunch at 12midday on a Tuesday once a month so that those who would like to attend the 11am Service may do so and then meet at the St Stephen’s Community Centre in the new meeting room. The first lunch will be held on Tuesday 13th September and every 2nd Tuesday of the Month at £6 per person to make it affordable to everyone. This is a non-profit making venture, it is for the sole reason of offering friendship. So if you know of anyone who would be on their own, please encourage them to come and be part of the family of St Stephen’s.
Please contact Jean Le Huray Tel 255207 for more details.
Advance Notice Royal Afternoon Garden Tea Party
Saturday 2nd July 2016 at St Stephen’s
This is a fund raising event instead of the usual Garden Fête. This will be a posh tea at £10 per person and quality raffle & musical entertainment. Tickets will be available before the event to encourage people to book in advance, which will help us to cater and know whether we need to have a second sitting, it will also help us to maximise our profit.
Jean Le Huray
Registers
Readings for May
Sunday 1st May
Sixth Sunday of Easter Acts Ch16 v9-15 Revelation Ch21 v10, 22-22.5 John Ch14 v23-29
Thursday 5th May
Ascension day Daniel Ch7 v9-14 Acts Ch1 v1-11 Luke Ch24 v44-53
Sunday 8th May
Seventh Sunday of Easter Sunday after Ascension
Acts Ch16 v 16-34 Revelation Ch22 v12-14,
16-17, 20-21 John Ch17 v20-26
Sunday 15th May
Day of Pentecost
Whit Sunday
Genesis Ch11 v1-9 Acts Ch2 v1-21 John Ch14 v8-17
Sunday 22nd May
Trinity Sunday Proverbs Ch8 v1-4, 22-31 Romans Ch5 v1- 5 John Ch16 v 12-15
Sunday 29th May
First Sunday after Trinity (Proper 4)
1 Kings Ch8 v22-23, 41-43 Galatians Ch1 v1-12 Luke Ch7 v1-10
March 24 Enid Eunice Buckingham aged 95 March 30 Doris Guille Higgins aged 86
April 3 Jack Leo Prigent April 10 Ethan Jack Gauvain
HYMN PROPER OFFERTORY
COMMUNION POST COMMUNION
9.30 Service
Ascension Day Hymn 128; Proper 689; Offertory 130;Communion 131; Post Communion 134;
Corpus Christi Hymn 305: Proper 732: Offertory 310,Communion 276; Post Communion 295:
MAY HYMNS SUNDAY 1
st
Easter 6
Rogation
8th
Sunday
after Ascension
15th
Whit
Sunday
22nd
Trinity
Sunday
29th
Trinity
1
HYMN
PROPER
OFFERTORY
COMMUNION
POST COMMUNION
256
688
285
493
265
332
omit *
690
345
499
443
Procession
139
1st Tune
691
137/140
S.29
S.28
Procession
148
692
351
S.13
146
324
693
216 (Tune 433)
276
486
9.30 Service
265
334
134
443
137
140
146
239
486
276
Ascension Day Thursday 5th
May – Sung Mass 7.00pm Hymn 128; Proper 689; Offertory 130; Communion 131; Post Communion 134;
Corpus Christi Thursday 26
th May – Sung Mass 7.00pm
Hymn 305: Proper 732: Offertory 310, Communion 276; Post Communion 295:
The Guild of Intercession
MAY THEY REST IN PEACE
Lionel Wilfred de Sausmarez, 2/5/1901; Marc Anthony Bazille Corbin, 11/5/1908; Frank Overrand Romeril, 23/5/1912; Rachel Lihou Carre, 5/5/1915; Thomas Pepperdine Holmes, 19/5/1922; Mary Augusta de Sausmarez, 28/5/1922; Florence Ada Sharman, 7/5/1925; Henry Gratton Kane (Priest), 31/5/1927; Harriet Watts Gallienne, 6/5/1928; John Henry Moore (Priest), 7/5/1929; John Wilson Ravins, 16/5/1932; Peter Thomas Mignot (Priest), 30/5/1935; John Matthews, 17/5/1938; Georgina Croucher, 13/5/1941; John William Elliott, 22/5/1942; Jocelyn Duar Loaring, 31/5/1944; Sophia Elizabeth Hutchinson, 4/5/1949; John Henry Machon, 17/5/1949; Selina Jane Burgess, 17/5/1950; Emma Jane Warry, 19/5/1950; Albert Lewis Davis, 27/5/1950; Elsie Louisa Robert, 7/5/1952; Amy Elsie Gordon, 11/5/1953; Eva Mary Tanner, 27/5/1954; Annette Lucina Thornhill, 20/5/1955; Florence Ada Anstey, 26/5/1955; Dorothy La Trobe Bateman, 12/5/1956; Alexander George Sarchet, 23/5/1956; Grace Ann Mitchell, 16/5/1957; Seymour Victor Gunning Parker, 28/5/1957; Clara Annie Elizabeth Drummond, 30/5/1957; Alfred Edward Kelly, 3/5/1958; Fanny Seymour, 3/5/1958; Eli Jesse Warren, 15/5/1958; Ida Moore, 21/5/1958; Harold Roland Woodbury, 30/5/1958; George William Rowe, 16/5/1959; Peter Claude Eynon Bowen, 25/5/1959; Paul Chang Fong To (Priest), 27/5/1959; Annette Le Prevost, 5/5/1960; Wilfred Anderson Dowdney, 17/5/1960; Lacey James Hamon, 24/5/1960; Owen Henry Marquand, 26/5/1961; Olive Ellen Alice Bailey, 10/5/1962; Wilfred Charles Wellington, 22/5/1962; Elisa Hamon, 16/5/1963; Edward Francis Wood (Priest), 2/5/1964; Alan Hubert Walters, 13/5/1964; David Clifford Knight, 25/5/1964; Arthur Henry Davey, 26/5/1964; Lousie Victoria Bridle, 31/5/1966; Lucy Kemp, 13/5/1967; Roderick Noel Raleigh-King, 24/5/1967; Olive de Sausmarez, 1/5/1971; Frank Gahan, 25/5/1971; Anthony James Malzard, 2/5/1975; Rosa Mary Mauger, 28/5/1977; Reginald Charles Moore (Priest), 29/5/1977; Elsie Moore, 7/5/1981; Phyllis Dorothy Fawson, 1/5/1982; Elizabeth Maud Robin, 28/5/1983; Winifred Ada Tardif, 9/5/1984; Thomas Henry Robert, 14/5/1985; Lloyd Rex Stuart, 27/5/1986; Cyril Kenneth Alfred Kemp (Priest), 3/5/1987; Hilda Joyce Besnard, 8/5/1987; Eva Lilian Giles, 28/5/1987; Thomas John Saltwell, 6/5/1989; Reginald Thomas Warley, 11/5/1989; Nancy Hingston Hichens, 14/5/1989; Raymond William August Gargan, 24/5/1991; George Frederick Albert Horrell, 21/5/1994; Robert John Marquis, 8/5/1995; Vera Deborah Udle, 18/5/1996; Mary Evelyn Robertson Bruce, 30/5/1998; Alan Read Sarchet, 31/5/1998; Bernard Miller Cochrane, 4/5/2003; Margaret Christine Balfour, 20/5/2004; Cyril Henry Udle, 2/5/2006; Bryan Kevin Le Poidevin, 2/5/2006; Kay Elizabeth Sloan, 25/5/2006; Carol Diamond Dodd, 16/5/2008; Krystal Jane Emma Williams, 8/5/2009; Kathleen Joan Meyer, 16/5/2010; Enid Marjorie Waterman, 21/5/2010; Trudy Martha Ellis, 4/05/2011; Dorothy (Dot) Mary Hamon, 10/05/2011; Jane (Jean) Robert, 12/05/2011; Edward Alfred Roland 22/5/2013;
Year unknown: Nicholas Deighton, 1/5; Eliza Maude Allett, 30/5.
Copy deadline for the June Magazine will be
Thursday May 19th 2016
Contributions to Val or Graham in any form accepted. We are grateful for all your contributions.
We prefer email if possible
Our email address is [email protected]
GUILDS, CLUBS & ACTIVITIES AT ST STEPHEN’S
RAINBOWS Ellen Greer Tel: 721432
Wednesday 4:00pm – 5:00pm
Community Centre 5 -7 years old
BROWNIES Rosalyne Le Huray Tel: 257939
Wednesday 5:00pm - 6:30pm
Community Centre 7 – 10 years old
GUIDES Rosalyne Le Huray Tel: 257939
Friday 6:00pm – 7:30pm
Community Centre 10 – 14 years old
1st VICTORIA SEA SCOUT
GROUP
Group Scout Leader
Rosalyne Le Huray
Tel: 257939
Pierre Woodland Tel: 722210
Beavers Monday
5:30pm– 6:45pm
Community Centre 6 – 8 yrs old
Paula Woodland Tel: 722210
Cubs Monday
7:00pm – 8:30pm
Community Centre 8 – 10yrs old
Steve Greer Mob: 07781 450723
Sea Scouts Wednesday
7:00pm – 9:00pm
Community Centre 10 – 14yrs old
SUNDAY CLUB Jean Le Huray Tel: 255207 Sunday 11:00am Church/Vestry
ST STEPHEN’S GUILD
Marg Kaines Tel: 254858 As arranged Church
‘Housekeeping’
SERVERS Guild of the
Servants of the Sanctuary
Tony Kaines Tel: 254858
Monthly See notice board
Info: www.GSSonline.org.
uk
SOCIAL EVENTS
COMMITTEE
Tony Goss Tel: 266214 As arranged St Stephen’s
Vestry
ST STEPHEN’S PLAYERS
Steph Dragun Tel: 255654
[email protected] As arranged Community Centre
WEEKDAY MASSES
Tuesday 11.00am Common Prayer followed by prayers for healing Wednesday 7.00pm Common Worship
Friday 7.00pm Common Worship
Weddings, Baptisms or other Offices - Contact Fr John
SUNDAY SERVICES
9.30am Said Mass with Hymns and Sermon 11.00am Sung Mass with Sermon
ST STEPHEN’S CHURCH
Vicar
The Reverend Fr John Moore BA, MBA, DHECT
St Stephen’s Vicarage ▪ Les Gravées ▪ St Peter Port ▪ Guernsey ▪ GY1 1RN Tel: 01481-720268
E-mail: [email protected] website: www.st-stephens-guernsey.org
Honorary Assistant Priests
The Very Reverend Canon F Marc Trickey
The Reverend Leslie Craske
Vicar’s Warden David Le Lievre Tel: 255492
People’s Warden Tony Kaines Tel: 254858 Director of Music Felicity Millard Tel: 725660
Secretary (APCC) Mary-Carol Gales Tel: 712434
Treasurer Alan Bougourd Tel: 722334
Stewardship Officer
Community Centre Tony & Diana Renouf Tel: 711701
Flower Contacts Iris Dhanji Tel: 256528
Ann Goss Tel: 266214
Helping Hands David & Annie Tel 730688
Magazine Editors Val & Graham Moullin Tel: 268255
Safeguarding Officer Steph Dragun Tel 255654